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  • Bruno Mars Gets His Groove Back On ‘I Just Might’

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    After five long….long….very long years, Bruno Mars is back.

    We’ve been “waiting on the other side” for some time now, but our patience has finally proven worth the wait. We had a sneaky feeling Bruno Mars would be dropping new music in 2026, but this new era is proving to be more exciting than we thought. Hey, a little groove hurt nobody.

    ‘I Just Might’ Gets Groovy

    Ahead of his highly anticipated album, The Romantic, releasing on Feburary 27, Bruno Mars gave us a little groovy gift. Queue outfits from the 70’s, colorful lights, and a whole lot of stylish instruments, and you’ve got ‘I Just Might.’ This new track is a Bruno Mars hit through and through. If you loved Bruno’s collaboration with Anderson .Paak on Silk Sonic, this new era of Bruno music is going to be your new favorite, afterall, “what good is beauty if your booty can’t find the beat?” We certainly like what we’re hearing and are eagerly waiting for more on the upcoming album.

    Stream ‘I Just Might’ with us here!

    The Romantic Arrives Feburary 27

    Hey, Mr. DJ – we’re getting a full album!? Come Feburary 27, 2026 (pre-save The Romantic here), Bruno Mars is dropping a new album after five years of heart-aching silence. We’re getting nine new tracks, including ‘I Just Might,’ which sits at track #3. Will we be getting more of the same 70s groovy sound? Or, will be getting more sad love ballads like ‘Talking To The Moon?’ Either way, we want them all!

    A new single and a new album. What else can we add to the tab? How about a stadium world tour…?

    Image Source: Courtesy of Atlantic Records

    The Romantic On Tour

    Bruno Mars hasn’t gone on a world tour in a long time. He’s been busy performing residencies in Las Vegas and keeping much else a secret from fans. The wait is over! We’re seeing Bruno Mars perform live in 2026 (hopefully more than once). The Romantic Tour spans nearly 40 stadium shows across North America, Europe, and the UK. The tour kicks off in Las Vegas (surprise, surprise) with some special guests. Of course, Bruno picked the best possible openers – Leon Thomas, Victoria Monét, RAYE, and Anderson .Paak. Um, is this a dream?

    Sign up for the fan pre-sale for your city here. Good luck getting tickets, honeybee! We’ll be fighting that Ticketmaster war along with you.

    Are you excited for Bruno Mars’s new album, The Romantic? Will you be getting tickets to the tour? Let us know in the comments below or hit us up on FacebookInstagram, and Twitter!

    Check out more trending news in music, honeybee!

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT BRUNO MARS:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | TWITTER | WEBSITE | YOUTUBE

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    Alana

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  • 2 Grammy-nominated superstars will headline Bank of America Stadium concerts

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    Bruno Mars will bring his ‘The Romantics Tour’ to Bank of America Stadium on April 29.

    Bruno Mars will bring his ‘The Romantics Tour’ to Bank of America Stadium on April 29.

    Live Nation

    Two Grammy-nominated superstars will be making their way back to Bank of America Stadium this year.

    Bruno Mars will be returning to the Queen City in his first global headline tour in nearly a decade. The Romantic Tour will include nearly 40 stops across the country — including an April 29 date in Charlotte.

    Mars will be supported by his Grammy Award-winning and Silk Sonic comrade Anderson .Paak, performing a DJ set, and R&B extraordinaire Leon Thomas — who received six nominations for the 2026 Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year and Best New Artist.

    Presale tickets go on sale Jan. 14 at 12 p.m. General sale goes live Jan. 15 at 12 p.m.

    Ticket information can be found at: https://www.brunomars.com/

    Chris Stapleton is also coming to Charlotte

    On June 20, Charlotte fans will have an opportunity to see Grammy Award-winning country music star Chris Stapleton perform.

    Stapleton will be supported by singer-songwriter Lainey Wilson and soul and R&B artist Allen Stone.

    This tour announcement comes after another four Grammy nominations for Stapleton, including Best Country Song.

    Pre-sale tickets go live on Jan. 13 at 10 a.m. General sale tickets go on sale Jan. 16 at 10 a.m.

    Ticket information can be found at: https://chrisstapleton.com/tour/

    Chris Stapleton
    Chris Stapleton Benjamin Robson

    Related Stories from Charlotte Observer

    Briah Lumpkins

    The Charlotte Observer

    Briah Lumpkins is the emerging news reporter for the Charlotte Observer. In this role, she finds important and impactful enterprise stories impacting the Charlotte-metro region. Most previously, Briah spent time in Houston, Texas covering underrepresented suburban communities at the Houston Landing. Prior to that, she spent a year at the Charleston Post and Courier for an investigative reporting fellowship through FRONTLINE PBS. When she’s not at work you can find her binge reading on her kindle or at the movie theater watching the latest premieres.

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    Briah Lumpkins

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  • Mariah Carey Is Here For It All—But Mainly Shade-Throwing and Throwing It Back

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    Though it goes without saying, Mariah Carey has no “need” to ever release another album of new music again if she doesn’t feel like it. Her entire mint now coming from the Christmas cash that rolls in for her every year like clockwork. Maybe that’s, in part, why it’s taken her so long to release another studio album after 2019’s surprisingly good Caution. But perhaps even more than waiting so long because she has such a fat sack of passive income is Carey’s undeniable need to still be deemed “the best” in her class of music. Which, of course, means charting at a certain level, ergo her carefulness about what she chooses to release.

    What’s more, over the past few decades, Carey has scarcely acknowledged even the mere existence of “other chanteuses” in her category, save for Ariana Grande, who she actually collaborated with three times in song form: “Oh Santa! (Remix),” “yes, and? (remix)” and “One Heart, One Voice” (on which they’re both “featured artists” of Barbra Streisand’s). With Here For It All, however, Carey seems keen to remind people why she still ought to maintain her crown for being Queen of the Octave Range. However, when it comes to being Queen of Lyrics About Non-Superficial Things, Carey can’t exactly claim the crown. In fact, there are a few instances where Mariah’s vocals, diva “self-parody” and icon status combine as the only “superpowers” to mitigate the reality that there are some real The Life of a Showgirl moments on the album in terms of fluff and speaking from the insulated perspective of being a rich bitch.

    Yet Mariah manages to “sneakily” pass it off as being tongue-in-cheek…but you know damn well she’s serious as cancer when she says shit like, “I don’t care about much if it ain’t about Mi/Let the money talk first, conversations ain’t free/I’m the D-I-V-A, that’s MC/I’m the hot toddy, hottie body, yeah, that’s tea.” This being the opening verse of track one on the album, called, what else, “Mi.” With Mariah further shortening her nickname, “Mimi” (as in, The Emancipation of…) to create a double meaning that turns the track into an anthem for being selfish and vain. This made further apparent in such verses as, “I don’t acknowledge time, I do whatever I please/Diamonds in my hair, yeah, that’s pure luxury/I’m a bad bitch, but I’m good company [conversely, Swift announces the opposite on “Eldest Daughter”: “I’m not a bad bitch”]/You would know that if you really knew me/In another class from those ladies/Welcome to my house, pink sand on my feet/Harry Winston diamonds and some Louis XIII/I ain’t checked the price since Emancipation Mi.” Though, of course, Mariah probably hasn’t been checking the price for a lot longer than that. Even if her “diva” persona wasn’t fully cultivated until 2005’s The Emancipation of Mimi. That was the year “MC” turned thirty-six (indeed, The Emancipation of Mimi was released on March 30th, just three days after said birthday).

    On “Mi,” however, she’s offering up some lyrics that make her sound much younger/less mature than that as she flexes, “I like my ice cold, I like my wrist froze/I wear my high heels walking on my tiptoes/Yes, I like my back rubbed in my hot tub” and “I stay on your mind, in your head rent-free/I don’t check the price, can’t nobody check me.” Despite all the braggadocio about having so much money, the trashy side of Mariah flickers in when she starts mentioning Cool Whip amidst Hermès and Veuve Clicquot. In another The Life of a Showgirl-y moment, Carey boasts, “I’m an empire, baby” (Swift instead sings, as a “mafioso type,” “The empire belongs to me”). While this might be said as a play on being “from the N-Y-C” (which exists in the “Empire State”)—even if Carey is actually from Long Island (a totally different animal)—it still sounds datedly capitalistic. Yet, for as ultimately banal as the lyrics are, it took Carey and six other songwriters (Ray Romulus, Jonathan Yip, Luke Milano, Jeremy Reeves, Jeff Baranowski and Felisha King) to come up with them. Surely something Beyoncé could understand.

    On the next track, “Play This Song,” it took about as many people to land on something like, “At the drive-in eating with your little friend/I used to buy you steaks and scrimps/Don’t act like you don’t miss me.” This part sung largely by Anderson .Paak, who Carey is now purported to be dating. For she’s not one to stay single for very long, nor one to date someone who isn’t at least a couple decades younger. At any rate, the sound they’ve come up with is one that seems designed to serve as their own answer to Bruno Mars and Lady Gaga’s only slightly more cornball “Die With a Smile,” which is accompanied by a very 70s-inspired video. In point of fact, Mariah noted of her Anderson collaboration, “…when we got into the studio, we decided we wanted to do something that was kind of 70s, and we did give you that kind of vibe. So we started working on ‘Play This Song,’ and it was just one of those ones that I really loved. Working with him in the studio, he’s a great companion in terms of making music.” And clearly, a great companion in other ways for her as well.

    To lend a somewhat more modern feel for at least one occasion on this record, the track that follows is “Type Dangerous,” which served as the lead single that launched Carey back to a number one position on the Billboard charts, even if the more niche “Adult R&B Airplay” category. Throughout the track, Carey conveys the same “full of myself and feelin’ myself” aura that she started with on “Mi,” particularly when painting the picture, “I came in the door, dripped in Balenci/Cropped leather coat and some nine-inch Fendis/The crowd opened up and I started to strut/I need my space, but I’m signing autographs and such.” Mariah’s penchant for telling off other would-be competitors who would dare to either 1) steal her spotlight or 2) claim to be on the same level as her also comes to light again when she sings, “Hit the little girls’ room to powder my nose/Then came in three hatin’ ass hoes/They don’t know the meaning of water nor soap/I don’t have time for the rigamarole.”

    But, in truth, Mariah very much has time for it. Especially when it comes to ensuring the proper amount of shade is thrown. Something that occurs in a more general form on “Sugar Sweet” featuring Shenseea and Kehlani. As the second single from Here For It All, it offers a mid-tempo pace that finds Mariah playing a long game when it comes to “securing the ring,” as it were. For this is, evidently, a renewed interest for formerly independent women, if RAYE’s “Where Is My Husband!” is anything to go by (which it definitely is). Thus, Mariah shruggingly sings of her ability to not go off on a man she’s trying to “lure in” for the long haul, “Hate it when you have to leave/But I don’t say a thing/‘Cause I will absolutely get the ring/No hurry, no worries/Oh baby, baby, baby, baby, I’m/Gonna use my expertise [a sexual innuendo if ever there was one]/I’ma keep it nice, I’ma keep it neat/I’ma keep it sugar, I’ma keep it sweet.” Though, of course, anyone who has seen Mariah at her shadiest knows that isn’t exactly true.

    Nor does she keep it “sugar” or “sweet” on “In Your Feelings” (whereas Lana Del Rey and Drake preferred to name their songs “In My Feelings”), during which she gets rather accusatory with the lyrics, “I thought I was yours/Then again, you pretend, so I didn’t know for sure/I thought we could fly/Guess you’re probably scared of heights, I’ll let you go.” Of course, she won’t let whoever this person is go without throwing some major shade, while also throwing it back. For the sound of “In Your Feelings” (co-produced by Carey, Anderson .Paak, Rogét Chahayed, Alissia Benveniste) has an extremely throwback feel to the Mariah ballad heyday of the 90s, particularly on albums like Emotions and Music Box. At the same time, there’s a hint of Whitney Houston’s “I Have Nothing” to the sound and intonation of Carey’s voice. Which wouldn’t be out of the realm of her intentions, considering she’s been more keen of late to pay homage to her erstwhile “nemesis.” Whatever her “aim” with it, however, “In Your Feelings” does start to feel rather redundant, therefore, much longer than its three minutes and twenty-two seconds.

    “Nothing Is Impossible” runs a second longer than that, but somehow comes across as being less belabored. Yet, as far as “empowering anthems” go, it’s fairly generic. With Carey essentially confirming the “one size fits all” nature of the track with her comment, “I think it’s something, if anything, it would help somebody get through something.” And sure, it’s “something” all right, awash in the vocal range she’s known for and expected to deliver. Yet somehow, it just doesn’t land on the “authenticity” front and, in a way, it’s almost like it wants to serve “Beautiful” by Christina Aguilera, but doesn’t quite land it. This even if the themes of each song are quite different, as Mariah discusses resilience in the face of incredible struggle (so wait, maybe it is pretty similar to “Beautiful”—not “#Beautiful”—in that sense). While she might be talking about any number of the personal struggles she’s endured, including the death of her mother and sister on the same day in 2024, nothing specific at all comes through, as though Carey is trying too deliberately to make the lyrics as “catch-all” as possible. Apart from referring back to her “Butterfly” lyrics, “Spread your wings and prepare to fly,” with, “I knew deep down inside that I could fly.” A sentiment that, to be honest, conjures far too close of an association with R. Kelly declaring, “I believe I can fly.”

    Switching from the maudlin and ballad-y back to her other spectrum, cunty and R&B-tinged, “Confetti & Champagne” is the next offering. And arguably the shadiest track of Here For It All. Directed at an ex she wants to goad in her distinctly Mariah way, she once again brags about her status and wealth with such verses as, “Find me in the crowd/With diamonds all around” and “I stay surrounded by/Confetti and champagne/Bright lights like a big game.” In a certain sense, it mirrors Madonna’s “fuck you” to an ex (and yes, also a much younger one) on 2015’s “Unapologetic Bitch,” during which she gloats, “I’m poppin’ bottles that you can’t even afford/I’m throwin’ parties and you won’t get in the door/Said it, get it, love it, hate it, I don’t care no more/Tell me how it feels to be ignored.”

    There are other elements in the song that evoke certain comparisons as well. For instance, a backbeat that channels major Janet Jackson energy (think: The Velvet Rope era), or the fact that Carey repeats, “Look at me now/Yeah, look at me now” in such a way as to remind one of Chris Brown’s 2011 song of the same name. However, when Mariah sings the post-chorus, “Cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers, cheers/To me, not you, just me/That confetti and champagne/Clink, clink, clink, pow/Look at me now,” it is uniquely her.

    Having clearly hit her stride with the shade-throwing, she continues down that path for “I Won’t Allow It,” which, has a certain sound to it that makes it almost deserving of being called “Type Dangerous (Part II).” Once again radiating the sonic touch of Anderson .Paak, there’s more than a slight tinge of 70s-ness to it as Carey repeats the phrase, “I won’t allow it.” And what she won’t allow is being made to feel like shit by someone so clearly “lesser than” her. In this way, too, there’s echoes of Madonna’s “Unapologetic Bitch,” which also offers such lyrics as, “You know, you never really knew how much you loved me till you lost me/Did you?/You know, you never really knew how much your selfish bullshit cost me/Well, fuck you.”

    Carey has some choice words for her own ungrateful, “fame fucker” (an Olivia Rodrigo nod) of an ex when she asks, “Whatcha gonna say when we go our separate ways/And you see me outside with my billion dollar bae?/Please enjoy your Chick-fil-A.” An insult that has the same “kapow” effect as Regina George telling Jason in Mean Girls, “You can go shave your back now.” Mariah then continues the “Unapologetic Bitch”-meets-“vampire” motif by adding, “Wanted the fame, used my name/Bet you thought you could do that/I won’t entertain all your narcissistic ways.” Because, to be sure, the only “narcissistic ways” Carey will entertain are her own.

    Slowing it down yet again for “My Love,” Carey provides her listener another “90s signature” of her albums: the cover song (hear also: “Without You,” “I’ll Be There” and “Against All Odds.” As far as choices of songs to cover go, it does align with Carey’s usual love of “reinterpreting” ballads with her own vocals. But, in this case, as Mariah tells it, “It’s more an homage to my childhood, because I remember being a little girl and riding on the back of a motorcycle with my mother’s friend’s daughter and her boyfriend. This was their song, and they were in love.” As far as lyrics to love songs go, however, this one is pretty sparse, mostly repeating, “It’s in the hands of my love/And my love doеs it good.”

    As for a “real” reason Carey might have covered the song, there’s no denying it’s something worth checking off her “I’m a true legend” list to be able to get Paul McCartney to collaborate on the track in some way. For she herself remarked, “I’m still hoping that Paul McCartney might play something on it, which would be amazing. He is one of the greatest of all time, ever, and I just asked before I recorded the song, would he mind if I recorded it? I had a conversation with him, and he was like, ‘No, give it a shot, send it to me.’ And I’m like, ‘How do I do this?’ Because I really want him to be on this song doing background vocals, something.” Ah, such a testament to Mariah’s diva-ness to think that Paul McCartney ought to provide her with background vocals.

    By way of explanation for him not doing any such thing, she added, “I don’t think that’s where he’s at right now, but he might lay something [down] for the deluxe version. I would be thrilled out of my mind. But yeah, if you talk about the emotion when I’m singing it, it’s definitely about finding someone that you really revere and care for.” Someone of which you would say, “Don’t ever ask me why/I’ll never say goodbye to my love/It’s understood.”

    Perhaps for the time being, Carey has found that with Anderson .Paak. Or perhaps she’ll have to settle for finding it with Jesus. As she seems to indicate on the penultimate track of Here For It All, “Jesus I Do” featuring the Clark Sisters. And while it’s not a secret that Carey has no issue releasing gospel-y, Jesus-lovin’ fare, with “Jesus I Do,” she’s perhaps gone too far this time (in other words, one will take “Thank God I Found You” featuring 98 Degrees over this any day of the week). An upbeat, 70s-sounding (yet again) number, Carey does her best to fill her listener’s soul with the spirit of the good lord, Jesus Christ. But, like Taylor Swift failing to read the room in terms of releasing certain material in a climate like this, it just doesn’t work. For Swift, it was opting to put out a record about being rich and in love at a time when the world is at a nadir; for Mariah, it’s releasing a song that’s ultra-Christian at a time when the U.S.’ so-called Christianity is exactly what has it in the fucked-up state that it’s in.

    Even so, Mariah and the Clark Sisters act like they’re nuns married to Jesus when they say shit like, “I, I thought I would never find/A true love like You/Now I can never turn You loose, loose, loose.” The cringily romantic fetishizing also shows up in such verses as, “When I am down in misery/I call Your name [“Like A Prayer” much?] and I receive/The joy I need to set me free/From all of life’s atrocities/Jesus, I do, ooh/I do, Jesus, I do.” The “I do” loosely alluding to these women believing they’re married to Jesus (just like most nuns do). And while it’s a technically “good” song, it doesn’t really have a place on the album, sticking out like a sore thumb and begging to be put on its own separate Mariah record, perhaps a gospel-themed one.

    Even so, Mariah seems to want to make it “gel” by then leading into the title track, which is also gospel-tinged at a certain point. Placed as the last song on the album (this done, Mariah insists, so that everyone would have to listen instead of skipping over it—as if that’s really controllable), “Here For It All” takes up the most “space” on the record, clocking in at six minutes and thirty-eight seconds. Deemed by Mariah to be the song she’s most proud of on the album, it’s clear she wants to conclude by showing her octave range (complete with piano notes that have shades of “Hero” to it). In addition to her range when it comes to being simultaneously “humble” and braggadocious (case in point, “And baby, I’m here for it all/Red carpets in Cannes and applause/Bugattis, whatever they’re called/Yeah, baby, I’m here for it all/Our virtual sleepover nights/That kept me from losing my mind/Through things I don’t care to recall/Still baby, I’m here for it all”).

    At about the four-minute mark, the song starts to shift and morph into something else, with a new musical opening that briefly recalls the sound of “We Belong Together.” Carey then proceeds to go off on the kind of musical tangent she perfected on Caution’s “Giving Me Life,” which also enters the six-minute range. A track that, incidentally, suggests, “So, then maybe if the stars align/We’ll fix our minds on another tangent.” With Here For It All, though, the only tangent Mariah has fixed her mind on is one focused on throwing shade and throwing it back. In other words, reliable fare. But nothing “earth-shattering” (or, in Mariah’s vocal case, “glass-shattering”).

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • The Return of NxWorries Feels Worth the Wait – Houston Press

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    “Houston, I love y’all!” yelled an energetic Anderson .Paak, draped in all white with a white plush crown like hat atop his head. He paced in front of the stage length screen flashing spinning images of the word “NXWORRIES.”

    “Give it up for Knxwledge!”

    Above, seemingly floating on top of the screen, stood Knxwledge working the turntables as he filled the room with music through the speakers at the House of Blues.

    As the room filled with thunderous applause, Anderson .Paak began to pace faster. The night had been filled with flashing lights, images of Ninja Turtles, and the Oxnard, California native crooning through hits from the duo’s two albums.

    “This means the world to us. This is our first ever national tour. This is for our fans and the people that have been rocking with us from day one. Me and my brother go back ten years plus in this band and in this industry, and this industry can make you real f—king sad sometimes. But somehow we messed around and got a Grammy! And it ain’t over.”

    As .Paak stepped to the side of the stage, Knxwledge began to play, taking the crowd through a mix of music from artists like H-Town, Anita Baker, Khruangbin, Mobb Deep, and more. Video clips of characters like Peggy Hill and Marge Simpson dancing alongside Waluigi doing yoga were superimposed over classic music videos. The Why Lawd? Tour had touched down in Houston.

    NxWorries is the genre blending duo of singer, rapper, and drummer Anderson .Paak and producer Knxwledge, both accomplished artists before joining forces. The pair formed in the mid 2010s, bringing together .Paak’s soulful rasp and charismatic storytelling with Knxwledge’s sample heavy production rooted in vintage soul, gospel, and hip hop. Their chemistry was immediate, a seamless blend of texture and rhythm that turned small studio sessions into something much larger. Signed to Stones Throw Records, NxWorries quickly gained attention for their timeless sound and effortless groove, reviving the feeling of classic R&B while keeping a distinctly modern edge.

    Their breakout came in 2015 with the single “Suede,” a slow burning, funk driven track that captured the duo’s signature feel, playful, intimate, and sonically rich. The success of “Suede” led to the release of their debut album Yes Lawd! in 2016, a project praised for its warmth and fluid storytelling. The album showcased .Paak’s charisma and Knxwledge’s ear for nostalgic yet forward thinking production, earning widespread critical acclaim. The following year, they released Yes Lawd! Remixes, a full reinterpretation of the original album that highlighted Knxwledge’s versatility and commitment to experimentation.

    After several years focused on solo endeavors, NxWorries reunited for their long awaited sophomore album Why Lawd? released in 2024. The project marked their return to the spotlight and displayed a more mature, reflective tone while maintaining the soulful core that defined their debut. The album featured collaborations with artists like H.E.R., Thundercat, and Earl Sweatshirt and went on to win Best Progressive R&B Album at the 2025 Grammy Awards. In support of Why Lawd? the duo launched the Why Lawd? Tour, their first national headlining run, bringing their decade long creative partnership from the studio to stages across the country.

    The response to the show has been evident, with the duo selling out multiple venues, including the House of Blues Thursday night. The almost decade long wait between critically acclaimed projects has helped build a fan base that eagerly looks for anything by the band. That excitement was clear from the merch line, which grew so long it wound through the crowd and filled the room. Knxwledge provided the foundational sound to Anderson .Paak, who powered through crowd favorites like “Lyk Dis,” “Suede,” and “Link Up.” The stage almost played as a third member with the gigantic screen projecting laser light shows, flashing real time video of .Paak and Knxwledge, showing absurd art and music videos. The room responded in kind, belting out hit after hit, at times even drowning out. Paak.

    NxWorries has always been about balance. Anderson .Paak brings the showmanship and swing while Knxwledge supplies the soul and texture underneath it all. Together they have built a sound that feels familiar but never dated, pulling from R&B, hip hop, and funk without chasing trends. What makes their work hit is how natural it feels, two artists who know exactly who they are and what they sound like when they are locked in. Nearly ten years later, that chemistry still feels effortless.

    Setlist:
    ThankU
    Wngs
    Kutless
    What More Can I Say
    MoveOn
    Fall Thru
    KeepHer
    Distractions
    Where I Go
    Best One
    Lyk Dis
    Battlefield
    Suede
    OutTheWay (with Rae Khalil)
    More Of It
    FromHere
    jstfrends (Knxwledge song) (Knxwledge DJ set)
    Link Up
    Droogs
    I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me) (Whitney Houston cover)
    Suede
    Everybody Gets Down
    Don’t Be Afraid
    Daydreaming

    Encore:
    WalkOnBy (with Rae Khalil)
    Scared Money

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    DeVaughn Douglas

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  • Questlove Is Back With Season 3 Of “Quest For Craft”

    Questlove Is Back With Season 3 Of “Quest For Craft”

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    Producer, songwriter, DJ, actor extraordinaire Questlove is not short of accomplishments. As the frontman and drummer of the band, The Roots, you may know Ahmir Thompson from The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon– where his personality shines through, leading his band and cracking jokes with the host himself. Questlove has become such a personality in the industry that fans hang onto his every word- whether it be waiting for his quips with Jimmy, listening to his podcast, Questlove Supreme, or through his music.


    The Philadelphia native’s prolific career includes six GRAMMY awards, a BAFTA, and an Academy Award…producing for the likes of Amy Winehouse, John Legend, and Elvis Costello. Questlove is an enigma- a vat of knowledge in the music industry who can provide unique insights and witty commentary without bias.

    Now, Questlove sits inside Electric Lady Studios- the studio commissioned by Jimi Hendrix where David Bowie, Stevie Wonder, and Led Zeppelin have recorded- alongside a glass of The Balvenie Scotch whisky to talk with some of the greatest in the entertainment industry for his digital series, “Quest For Craft.”

    Available exclusively on The Balvenie’s YouTube, Questlove brings a refreshing take on creativity. He talks to stars in their industries to delve into how they got to where they are today. Running since 2021, “Quest For Craft” has hosted an impressive crowd: Mark Ronson, Michael Che, Misty Copeland, and many more. Questlove says,

    “I’ve been an obsessive student of creativity my whole life,” explained Questlove. “I’m interested in howpeople make things, how creators move from one medium to another, what makes work better — andwhat allows creators to hold onto the passion that inspired them in the first place. And surprisingly, itturns out I have a lot in common with a 131-year-old whisky based in rural Scotland.”

    It’s never not exciting to watch how Questlove wiggles into the mind of some of our favorites in the entertainment industry. You can watch the trailer below:

    Here’s a preview of some of Questlove’s iconic digital series, “Quest For Craft”, out now!

    • Chapter 9, Craft and Joy with 8-time GRAMMY Award Winning Artist, Songwriter and Record Producer Anderson .Paak – The musical duo explore how they each bring happiness to their fans through their craft and creativity.
    • Chapter 10, Craft and Connection with American Cellist Yo-Yo Ma – Questlove and Yo-Yo Ma discuss how seeking to make a genuine connection with their audience affects the act of creation.
    • Chapter 11, Craft and Voice with Emmy Award Winning Writer, Actress and Producer Lena Waithe – The history-making creator and Questlove delve deep into the topic of infusing their work with their individual perspectives and points of view.
    • Chapter 12, Craft and Commitment with Actor and Peabody Award-Winning Comedian Fred Armisen – Fred Armisen and Questlove explore the comedian’s commitment to the surprising, unexpected characters he has crafted throughout his career.

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    Jai Phillips

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  • The Iconic Brasstracks On His New Single “Indigo”

    The Iconic Brasstracks On His New Single “Indigo”

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    One thing about Brasstracks is that he can make a collaboration with just about anyone and it’s a guaranteed hit. But you don’t really need me to tell you that, ask his Grammy awards for songs like Chance The Rapper’s “No Problems” or Harry Styles’ “Watermelon Sugar.” He’s collabed with big names across all genres like Anderson .Paak, Khalid, and Mac Miller, and his recent singles are no exception.


    Brasstracks came back with yet another hit in “Anesthesia” with the ever-talented Mandy Lee of Misterwives for a fast-paced, hard-hitting single that gets you up and moving. He followed it up with “Indigo”, which features the smooth vocals of Adelaide James and also reveals the name of his album. “Indigo” is the perfect representation of Brasstracks’ album: complementary beats paired with talented vocalists, hard sounds and soft words.

    “Indigo” is about something we can all relate to: being a night owl and its consequences. It has all the makings of a hit: lyrics that make you want to scream along, a catchy back beat, and a signature Brasstracks feel. You can listen to the single here:

    Brasstracks has already had a noteworthy, iconic career helping others create hits…but his own music is equally worth the hype. He sat down with Popdust to talk about those collaborations, his new album, and more! Check it out below.

    PD: Congratulations on your new single, “Indigo”, do you have a favorite memory making this track?

    Thank you!!! Yes I do – I remember the moment that we decided to make the chorus sound pitched up, or “chipmunk-esque” to some. After writing the chorus, we slowed the song down a whole bunch and also pitched it all down. We recorded the vocals at this new key and tempo, and it felt like we were swimming through molasses. We had our fingers crossed the entire time, hoping that when we brought it back to the original key and tempo it would sound like what we wanted, and to our surprise, it sounded better than anything we could have imagined. I think I settled on the album name being “Indigo” just a couple days later.

    PD: “Indigo” is about not being a morning person and that edgy feeling you get when you wake up. How does this song set the tone for the rest of your album?

    It goes a bit deeper than that- it’s about being a habitually nocturnal person deeply interested in someone who is maybe a bit socially healthier than you. The twist is, that person hates their life as a “socially healthy” person and would rather spend their time with you. It’s definitely a “fuck mornings” anthem, but it also touches on some of that “the grass is greener on the other side” energy- which pops back up in other records like Anesthesia, Knee Deep, I’m Only Me, Nobody’s Fool. There are a lot of themes of jealousy through the whole album.

    PD: What was it like working with Misterwives’ Mandy Lee for “Anesthesia?”

    A dream. I went to high school with Mandy, and we were friendly but not close. We were in a songwriting class together- generally I was slacking off noodling on instruments while Mandy was seriously presenting full songs to the class every week. Total badass. We reconnected in 2017 playing on the same bill, and man it was so nice to see her. Her energy is infectious, and we exchanged info and just stayed in touch. Both of us went through some rocky label situations a few years ago, and she felt like a lifeline. When I had the idea for “Anesthesia” I hit her up expeditiously, and she breathed some of that infectious energy into the song. We’re big fans of each other, and we want each other to win big time. If music was a gambling game (it often is) I’d put all my money on Mandy and Misterwives.

    PD: This certainly isn’t your first collaboration. You’ve worked with some of the biggest names in the industry like Miley Cyrus and Mark Ronson, Mac Miller, and BTS. Does your writing process change depending on who you’re collaborating with?

    Yes and no. Gotta be clear here – I haven’t been lucky enough to “write write” with a lot of these folks yet. I think a big part of my strength comes from being not just a producer and multi instrumentalist, but being a songwriter… I’m just coming into my own now though. It’s taken me years. But I’ve helped on records with all of these folks, and it comes down to making the best record possible in the moment. Putting your ego aside is tough but it has to be done, especially if you’re contributing as a horn player. Working for any of the above listed, it was always important to be a good listener, and if they said they wanted a certain style or era of playing or producing, I was all ears. I’ve studied a lot of different kinds of music, so shifting gears is kind of part of my process. So I’m pivoting based off of who I’m working for, but that is a general part of my process…. I don’t know, complicated question!

    PD: You’ve won Grammy’s for working on “No Problems” with Chance The Rapper and “Watermelon Sugar” with Harry Styles, which were easily the biggest songs of their respective year…can you talk about working with those artists a little bit and how it felt creating those tracks?

    Chance The Rapper is one of the most talented artists of this generation, easily. I watched him damn near freestyle the hook to “No Problem”. I couldn’t believe what I was seeing – that was early in my career. Harry Styles is obviously stupidly talented, and filled to the brim with charisma. My favorite thing about Harry is how he treated me and my friends when I met him. We were playing with Harry on SNL the night Watermelon Sugar came out. Before the show, he came up to our dressing room and spent a bit of time thanking me and my horn players for being there, which was unheard of in itself – but the man INTRODUCED himself to us, like we didn’t know exactly who he was!! He’s a different kind of humble, a different brand of kind. I’ll never forget how he treated us. Meant the world to me and my friends.

    PD: You’re now ready to release your second album, how will this feel different from any of the collaborations you’ve done? And how did it feel different from the process of the first?

    This is the first time I’ve been able to let off an album that conceptually makes sense to me. Everything else has been compilations of songs pretty much. No real concept, just good songs put on a project. Being able to talk about different angle of one concept over the course of 12 tracks is a crazy feeling. I’m stupidly proud of this one. And I feel like I’ve shed some skin- a version of myself that I wasn’t in love with. Releasing this one is important to me to grow as a human.

    PD: What are your favorite tracks off the album and why?

    That’s a tough question. I love every song. I’m excited for folks to hear the most unexpected things from me – I’m Only Me, Tragedy, Knee Deep all come to mind. I’m also excited to display some of the best songwriting that’s ever been attached to Brasstracks- Home Improvement, Cowboy, Nobody’s Fool…. All of them are special!! Rothstein put me on the path of “Make the SONGS good, not just the productions” and I really feel like I’m on that wave now. I take it with me everywhere I go. Indigo is the first time I said “fuck it, I’m making a pop banger” and Addy (Adelaide James) was right there by my side ready to do this thing with me. Good Morning, NY is special because my best friends from high school are doing the skits for it, Matt and Darryl. They’ve been my rocks for 17 years. I’m really proud of all of these records, and I’ve bonded more with every single feature on here because of what we did together. I can’t say the same for a lot of the songs I’ve made in the past. I cherish this one.

    PD: What’s next for you this year? Any tours coming?

    I’m not allowed to talk about it just yet, but we have a couple fun things coming up. In the meantime, I’ll just be promoting the SHIT out of these records, because creating the music is only half the battle. I’m thankful to have people listening to the music I’m putting out and I will never, ever, ever take it for granted.

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    Jai Phillips

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