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Author: grungecake
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Pope Francis cause of death revealed
According to TMZ, today, Pope Francis (88) died from a stroke and a heart issue. The Vatican released the death certificate today. Before his death, he was in a coma and battled several health issues like double pneumonia and bronchitis. According to The Vatican, the Pope wants to rest in a tomb. His resting place is to be simple without particular ornamentation, bearing only the inscription reading “Franciscus”.
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Lil Wayne talks to Tony Hawk about ‘Pro Skater 3+4’, his career and more on Apple Music 1
Lil Wayne is back with a brand-new episode of Young Money Radio on Apple Music 1. This week, legendary pro skateboarder Tony Hawk drops in to talk about his journey as one of the first celebrity skaters to break into the mainstream, the highly anticipated release of his video game Tony Hawk’s ‘Pro Skater 3 + 4’ coming this Summer, and his vision for the future of the skating world.
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[/media-credit]Video | Lil Wayne & Tony Hawk: Skateboarding, Video Games & Stardom | Young Money Radio
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Tx_GQLHqTI&h=315]
Tony Hawk talks to Lil Wayne about not fully living in the moment during the height of his success
Lil Wayne: Now, were you able to actually enjoy the moment or was it all moving too fast? If you had the chance to run it back, what would you do differently?
Tony Hawk: If I had the chance to run it back, I would enjoy the camaraderie more. I was so hyper-focused on skating, getting better.
Lil Wayne: Getting better. Yeah.
Tony Hawk: And then at some point, my sponsors expected the most of me from competitions because I was leading the competitive circuit. So, it just became like I was a machine and I’d go to the contest, I’d hide new tricks, practice all day. Then, I’d come in with a strategy. And even that was sucking the fun out of it. And so if I could run it back, I would’ve just took more chances and had more fun with all the people around.
Lil Wayne: Have more fun.
Tony Hawk: Because I do see videos of all the skaters back then, Grasso and Lance and everyone. They’re having so much fun.
Lil Wayne: So much fun.
Tony Hawk: And you just see me on the deck, laser focused like, “I got to make all the tricks.”
Tony Hawk talks to Lil Wayne about becoming one of the first celebrity pro skaters and brining skating into a mainstream culture
Tony Hawk: Things were wild, especially when our video game got released and suddenly there people just knew my name. Not just associated with skateboarding, but associated with video games. And I was getting invited to all these different events and talk shows and it was wild. And at some point, I was like, “Oh, these people don’t know anything about skateboarding.”
Lil Wayne: Exactly.
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[/media-credit]Tony Hawk: And it’s up to me to explain it and to represent it realistically, fairly. It was weird because the video game was released, like you said. I was 31. I was already old for a skater in terms of what people considered skating then. And I was a vert skater, so it was like, “This dude? This old vert skater is going to represent us?” And I felt that, but at the same time I was happy to, because I embraced skating for all of it.
Lil Wayne: Every piece of it.
Tony Hawk: Hopping fences and for the renegade aspect. I did it because it set me apart from my schoolmates and my peers and people who played traditional sports. And I love that, that’s what it was. And it was the culture and the music and everything else. And so when I had a chance to be a spokesperson, I embraced it.
Tony Hawk talks to Lil Wayne about the upcoming release of Tony Hawk’s ‘Pro Skater 3 + 4’ and what fans can expect from the new game
Lil Wayne: Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 and 4 drops this summer. Wait, it’s 3 + 4. What that mean?
Tony Hawk: It’s a remake of 3 and 4. With some new surprises in there.
Lil Wayne: Okay. Now, what are you most excited for in this release? What are some of the new features and surprises fans should watch for?
Tony Hawk: Oh, man. Well, I’m just excited that we even still get to do video games, to be honest. And once we released 1 + 2, that was in 2020, it didn’t seem like 3 + 4 was going to happen. There were a bunch of hurdles that we had to overcome, and the group that made 1 + 2 got disbanded, and there was just all these challenges. And then I’ll never forget, I got the call from Activision head and it’s like, “I think we found the studio to do 3 + 4. And I was like, “We’re really doing it?
Lil Wayne: Fuck yeah.
Tony Hawk: Amazing. Yeah. And now we’re pretty close. It’s going to be released this Summer. I can’t say much about it, but it’s the best of three, it’s the best of four and new stuff that I think people were going to be pleasantly surprised about.
Tony Hawk talks to Lil Wayne about the challenges of becoming pro skater then vs now and the future of skateboarding
Lil Wayne: Well, now what does it take to go pro now compared to when you were coming up and what new challenges do today’s skaters face that you didn’t?
Tony Hawk: Well, it’s just a sea of talent. So to rise above it, you got to do something truly special.
Lil Wayne: Yeah. Social media.
Tony Hawk: Either through competition or through social media. You could be as much of a personality as you are a good skater, and that could cut through the noise. I think it’s just you got to have a brand. I hate that whole idea, you got to be an influencer, you got to have a brand, but you can have a very specific style of skating, and if no one else can really touch it, that’ll rise above.
Lil Wayne: When you say that, it makes me think of… It made me think of little Ayssa.
Tony Hawk: Oh, Rayssa. Yeah, amazing.
Lil Wayne: Yeah, I remember she-
Tony Hawk: Her whole thing started with the heel flip in a tutu.
Lil Wayne: With the tutu.
Tony Hawk: Yeah.
Lil Wayne: That’s exactly what I was saying.
Tony Hawk: That was it. I didn’t know her name, but I reposted it myself. I was like, “I don’t know what’s going on here, but I love it.”
Lil Wayne: Look, that’s beautiful. Exactly.
Tony Hawk: Now, she’s the best female street skater.
Tony Hawk talks to Lil Wayne about Stacy Peralta pioneering skateboarding content with Bones Brigade videos
Lil Wayne: Now, before there was YouTube, the Bones Brigade videos gave Skateboard fans a better looking to the world you guys created. Do you think you guys pioneered a lot of the sports content creating now?
Tony Hawk: I would credit Stacey Peralta with that.
Lil Wayne: Okay.
Tony Hawk: Stacy Peralta was the one who wanted to make skate videos. Right. When videotapes came out, when home videos just started, he started making skate videos.
Lil Wayne: Skate videos.
Tony Hawk: And people started buying them for VCRs. He was a pioneer in that whole movement. So, I credit him. And also the idea that he wanted to create this feature length movie about us chasing this mythical character. We didn’t get it. We were in because we trusted Stacy, but we didn’t know. We’re not actors, we’re skaters.
Lil Wayne: You didn’t know that it was going to be what it became?
Tony Hawk: Oh, no. I never knew that it would be endlessly quoted.
Lil Wayne: Yeah. It’s still the Holy Grail. Just so you know.
Tony Hawk: I look at it, it’s fun. And I’m still skating with those guys. It’s crazy. Cab McGill are at my ramp all the time. Lance is still skating backyard pools. Rodney is still skating at midnight. Tommy’s still cruising. It’s wild.
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Girlfriend’s ‘Bon Voyage’ with Tierra Whack lyrics
Read the lyrics to Missippian burgeoning singer-songwriter and rapper Girlfriend’s new single ‘Bon Voyage’ with Tierra Whack in English.
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[/media-credit][Pre-Chorus]
Bon voyage with you
I gotta make it move
Can we catch a flight for two?[Chorus]
Tell me that it’s right for you, yeah
Bon voyage with you, maybe we could rendezvous?
Wanna get next to you
Open up your schedule, baby[Verse]
I’m so sick of long-distance
Talking through FaceTime, it’s like something missing
Trying to fake smile, it’s a dumb mission
And kissing you through the phone, it just won’t get it
I’m jealous of all of the pillows that you lying next to
I just wanna find out
What’s the price to get you right here next to me?
I’m cool with sexting, but it’s the second-best thing
Baby, you know, you know
They might copy, but they ain’t you though, you though
Can I just be honest with you? Is the time change when I go to LA?
I ain’t got no time to be staying up late for you
But we can get a foreign, Aston Martin, Coupés with doors in
Miss you more than work so I can give you the stars
We can’t leave the Earth, so we just look up in this car now
‘Cause you’re my baby
And you know you drive me crazy
And I ain’t talkin’ no Mercedes
I be watchin’ your location
I’m countin’ down the time
So, I can finally get to see your face
And tell you that I’m glad you made it
So why we texting when I’d rather just
Bon voyage with you
I gotta make it move, can we catch a flight for two?[Chorus]
Tell me that it’s right for you, yeah
Bon voyage with you, maybe we could rendezvous?
Wanna get next to you, open up your schedule, baby[Verse] [Tierra Whack]
We should meet up, chill, kick our feet up
Jump in the back of the whip, push the seat up
Late nights when I be up, I need you closer
I just bought some new sheets
Babe, can you come over?
We done played long enough, I′m through with the texting
I can show you something, make you never wanna exit
I can show you something, make you regret your exes
Waking up together, now, I can make you breakfast
I stand for your love
When we link, it’s a vibe
Have you sprung in the Spring
Boy, you need me by your side
Tell you been trippin’, I’m lookin’ for a vacay
Come to the crib, boy, you can be my baby
Kids? Hmm? Maybe just one
Oh, what I would do to get you under the sun
A flight ain’t nothin’, I can see you in my future
Time and a place and I’m comin’ right to yaADVERTISEMENT
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[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3K-iloOJg90&h=315]
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Watch Girlfriend ride in the back of a moving truck with love on the brain, co-starring Tierra Whack

Last week, Girlfriend released the official music video to her song ‘Bon Voyage’ with Tierra Whack. In the back of a moving truck, the young singer-songwriter and rapper born Kenya Edwards stands in a beige pea coat, updo, red lip, black shirt and matching boots to plead her case about feeling distant from her partner and making an effort to be in their midst. As Girlfriend continues to sing her mind, the young artist represents herself well, wearing a brown lumberjack shirt, graphic tee, and three-quarter shorts to express how stressful long-distance relationships can be.
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[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3K-iloOJg90&h=315]
Eventually, the Mississippian burgeoning artist changes into another boyish outfit — wearing a Carhartt overall set and a tee. Watch the three-minute visual below to hear what she’s jealous of: There’s a hint. It isn’t a human being. Before today, Girlfriend has teamed up with fellow artists like Bay Swag for ‘Tell Me Again’ and Maiya the Don for ‘Feelin’.
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Snoop Dogg is on 2025 TIME’s 100 Most Influential People list
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[/media-credit]Snoop Dogg, the West Coast Rap legend turned global cultural icon, has been named one of TIME magazine’s 100 Most Influential People of 2025. This recognition honours his expansive influence across music, business, media, and community activism. As profiled by journalist Hoda Kotb, Snoop Dogg—born Calvin Broadus Jr—has remained consistently current and effortlessly authentic throughout his career. From his roots in Gangster Rap to his collaborations with Martha Stewart, Snoop Dogg has connected with every generation.
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Beyond music, Snoop’s ventures include the Snoop Youth Football League, which has impacted thousands of children in underserved communities, and Doggyland, a children’s media brand promoting positivity and education. Snoop’s inclusion in the TIME100 list underscores his role as a unifying figure in culture, business, and community engagement. His ability to evolve whilst staying true to his roots exemplifies the power of authenticity and adaptability in shaping global influence.
Thank you. @TIME #TIME100 pic.twitter.com/nPQnQntpYz
— Snoop Dogg (@SnoopDogg) April 16, 2025
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Listen to Westside Gunn’s latest track ‘Egypt’ from his new EP ‘Heels Have Eyes’
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[/media-credit]Today, Westside Gunn released a new track called ‘Egypt’. At the start of the record, you can hear a young person expressing their adoration for the late MF DOOM and the Buffalo-bred music-making entrepreneur Westside Gunn. On the nostalgic-feeling track, he raps about his lifestyle, his relationship with Virgil Abloh, and people he knows praying on his downfall. Outside of that, the same person says she feels like the underdog and wants people to stop playing with her. We aren’t sure where the original clip sits, but we believe that once the woman hears the song, she will say something about being sampled for his latest release. ‘Egypt’ is out now on all streaming platforms along with his brand new project, ‘Heels Have Eyes’. Check it out below.
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[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AjSXFm_QGtk&h=315]
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Bonnaroo shares complete 2025 performance schedule: See the lineup
Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival has unveiled the complete schedule for this year’s edition of the internationally acclaimed camping festival, taking place June 12-15, 2025 on the Bonnaroo Farm, located just sixty miles southeast of Nashville in Manchester, Tennessee.
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Bonnaroo 2025 will boast a spectacular assortment of can’t-miss highlights over four unforgettable nights, with bonus fun starting Wednesday in the campgrounds. Spanning multiple main stage performances on Thursday, June 12 (including a headline set by Luke Combs, Bonnaroo’s first-ever country headliner), three completely unique sets across various stages from the one and only King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, an array of appearances by John Summit (including a Friday, June 13 performance on the main WHAT Stage), and of course, Bonnaroo’s world-famous SuperJam, this year hosted and curated by Remi Wolf and set for the THIS Tent on Saturday, June 14 at 8:45 PM, along with many more unforgettable performances.
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The upcoming Bonnaroo will also feature more opportunities to dance the night away than ever before, with a star-studded After Hours lineup featuring late-night live performances from Dom Dolla, Glass Animals, Justice, Insane Clown Posse, Megadeth, Arcade Fire Presents ‘Santa Pirata’, JPEGMAFIA, and an epic sunrise set from Gorgon City, along with pop-up parties, surprises, and shenanigans – including the hugely popular Frick Frack Blackjack and the Super Queer Ultra Gay Pride Party (presented by House of Yes with Boyyyish)—guaranteed to keep the action going around the farm long after midnight and into the early hours of the morning.
Late nights will also be lit up by this year’s debut of “The Infinity Stage”, a brand-new, one-of-a-kind venue – presented in partnership with Polygon Live—boasting spatial sound, synchronised lights, and an unprecedented three-dome, open-air design to create the world’s largest, most immersive, 360° spatial audio experience. This year will further see a special lineup of undiscovered artists and rising stars performing on the influential WHO Stage, now located at Outeroo’s Plaza 7. -
Watch R&B futurist Jae Stephens’ audition-styled music video for ‘SMH’
The newcomer will support Flo on their ‘AAA’ tour this Spring.
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[/media-credit]Yesterday, R&B futurist artist Jae Stephens released the official video for her spicy new track, ‘SMH’, an abbreviation for ‘So Many Hoes’. In the playful, audition-style video, the Dallas singer-songwriter prowls for the perfect man from her pack and discovers she doesn’t need them. At her disposal, she could choose to engage or swap anyone out. Making sure they don’t fall in love (like some men tend to do to the women they encounter), Stephens sings the following lyrics:
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“I hope thеy don’t fall in love
‘Cause I don’t want no drama
Last boy asked me what it was
Got taken off the roster, ugh”[media-credit name=”Instagram” link=”https://www.instagram.com/p/DIRvWybSR18/?hl=en” width=1440 align=”none”]
[/media-credit]Check out the visual for the song produced by Rykeyz. It is out now through Raedio/Def Jam Recordings. It follows her acclaimed ‘Sellout’ EP.
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w1Qyv9uXWGM&h=315]
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Vybz Kartel tells Apple Music about making music whilst in prison, feuding with Movado, collaborating with Buju Banton and more
Vybz Kartel sits down with Ebro Darden to discuss performing in America for the first time in twenty years, recording music whilst incarcerated, the impact and influence of Caribbean culture on music and more.
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Video | Vybz Kartel: Freedom, Faith & Viking (Vybz Is King): 10th Year Anniversary | The Ebro Show
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUdk8srPCFI&h=315]
Vybz Kartel tells Apple Music about being diagnosed with Graves Disease
Ebro: Was that [Graves Disease] something that you always known you had? Did you learn that you had this when you were locked away?
Vybz Kartel: I didn’t know I had it, but apparently it’s genetic. So, when I was diagnosed with Graves Disease in 2014, whilst I was incarcerated, the doctor said to me, these illnesses are hereditary, “Has anyone in your family ever suffered from it?” I didn’t know. So, I asked my dad and he was like, “Yes, your aunt”, which would be his sister. And I was like, “Oh, I didn’t know that.” So, yeah. Yeah, apparently it’s hereditary.
Ebro: And now that you’re aware of this, I know you have children, other brothers and sisters and family, is this something that now everyone is making sure that they’re getting checked about? Is that something that, because being proactive, I’m sure is a key here, right?
Vybz Kartel: I teach it to my kids, especially my daughter, because they say it affects women more than men, slightly more than men. So, I talk to her about her eating habits and what to eat, what not to eat. So, I mean, stuck up upon that good salt.
Vybz Kartel tells Apple Music about song ‘God Is The Greatest’
Ebro: Bringing more spirituality into some of your songs at this stage of your careers is very important to you.
Vybz Kartel: It is very important to me. But I mean, I’ve always been doing songs like this. But now I take it more personally. For me, this part of my life and me singing about God and singing about positivity and it’s blessing. There ain’t no capping in this. I’m doing it for real. I always had songs like, “Thank you Jah”, classics and dance, so on and so on. But yeah, man, God is the greatest for me. That’s my mantra right now. That’s what I’m living by. So, it means a lot. And the fans, they accepted because it’s actually the biggest of the new songs of the album in terms of views, in terms of streaming and so.
Ebro: I think people obviously saw what you went through, right? And locked away in Jamaica, 14 years and maintaining your innocence, even though the world was accusing you and everybody was accusing you of things that you said, “No, that’s not what I did. That’s not what happened.” So, I think to some regard, people like yourself see how much God has brought you through.
Vybz Kartel: Because if it was left up to mankind, I wouldn’t even be here. I mean, I think divine intervention took place. Even when the case went back to England and the British Privy Council said, “Okay, we squash the conviction, but we’re sending it back to Jamaica to let them decide.” So, you can imagine how nerve wracking that is, not just for me, but for my family and everyone involved, because closure is a part of being a human being. So, regardless of how it was going to go, we didn’t want to drag it out for another two years, three years. And I was so blessed that it took two months, I think less than three months. Yeah. And I got out…God is the greatest man.
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[/media-credit] Vybz Kartel tells Apple Music about most requested songs from fans and his popularity with the new generation
Vybz Kartel: Summertime, those classics, the Clarks, the Romping Shop, I mean, the Fever and all those songs, they liked the songs that I did in the era with me and Movado when we were feuding, the original Vybz Kartel fans, that’s what they request. Now, the kids, they’re logging onto it basically because of social media. TikTok, a lot of them have been introduced to Kartel over the last decade, and they love it. So, they have their own special requests that they want as well. So, it’s a blessing. I always tell my manager, I have the biggest youngest catalogue in Dancehall because my catalogue is like 23 years old and it’s huge. You know what I mean? So, it is crazy, man. It’s a blessing to just be here at the right time when all of that has manifested itself.
Vybz Kartel tells Apple Music about his old conflict with Movado and how it contributed to the culture of Dancehall
Ebro: So, as long as I’ve known you throughout the years, you’ve always been a positive person. You’ve always been about having a good time, cracking jokes, talking shit…but then you and Movado–did that start as more of a competition? Or were there street politics that unless you were really, really in it, you would know? Was it more competitive at first?
Vybz Kartel: Movado as a young artist at the time, was defending Bounty Killer. Because remember, we were in the Alliance with Bounty Killer, the great Rodney Price. So, when me and Bounty Killer had that altercation over the Beenie Man situation, going to the wedding, I left the alliance…Movado, you know how Dancehall is. I left the alliance, turned around, fired some shots and F that. So, he was young and upcoming, ego and energy, and he replied to me, so that’s when it started, man. But I always respected the fact that he was brave though. You know what I mean? So, especially then, not many people would want to feud with Kartel then. He was brave. And I mean, I liked it for Dancehall. Now looking back in hindsight, I think it was good for the culture of Dancehall, that hardcore culture. But on the flip side of it, the feud was so big. That’s when we even found out we had so many fans in Africa, because remember we’re talking about 2005, 2006. So when the little internet that we were getting off the YouTube and the MySpace and so on, it was like, whoa, Africa, they love us. You know what I mean? So for me, on the musical side of it and the cultural side of it, I think it was a good thing.
Ebro: I’m sure there’s some business ramifications though, because when you talk about not having a Visa and these things now you see these fans around the world, the Jamaican government and Visas and all that. They seeing the streets activate. And that’s not enabling you guys to go touch the fans.
Vybz Kartel: The feud was so big that even the government got involved. Twice. Even they actually thought Movado and I were selling the buttons. Because in those days, even Masicka said it, he had his Vybz Kartel button because at the time he was going to school. And it was a big thing. They were graffitiing all over the country. Gaza or Gully on the walls, on the road, on the pavement. So, it was crazy, man.
Vybz Kartel tells Apple Music about the Beenie and Bounty Verzuz
Ebro: Beenie and Bounty Verzuz. Did you see that?
Vybz Kartel: Yes, sir. Which is, to us in Jamaica, that’s the biggest Verzuz. Yeah, I watched it.
Ebro: How did that feel for you, knowing everything you know from them and coming up and everything you went through? How did that feel to see them two having fun together?
Vybz Kartel: I mean, it was like, oh, it’s a good thing. When they were in their feud, I didn’t act a fool because you see now they friends. You understand? So, I did the right thing is what I’m saying. But yeah, for me to see that is amazing. It actually gave me flashbacks on the me and the Movado situation because we had our moment like that too. Not so big, but in a more personal setting. When we went to King’s House where the politicians are and we was talking, I was like, “Oh, look where our music brought us. These people have to talk to us now.”
Ebro: That’s right.
Vybz Kartel: You know what I mean? So, we had that moment and after that, that was the second time. The second and the last time they had to call us in because after that we started, you know what, let’s plan this now. You know what I mean? So, he would do a song and then I would do it. So, we did it on a more organised level. So, that’s why that organisation culminated with us being on the West Kingston show. That’s when the public saw now that we was like, oh, these guys cool. So it was crazy. But yeah, that moment of Bounty and Beenie on that big world stage, it was amazing.
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Vybz Kartel tells Apple Music about song ‘AmOut’ and teaches Ebro Jamaican slang
Ebro: Now what is amout? How do you use amout?
Vybz Kartel: ‘AmOut’, this is also another slang. In Jamaica, we speak broken English. So, sometimes we would disregard certain letters. So, we would say for our mouth, we would say it’s amout. But also if you’re leaving, you can say, yo, I’m out. So, I always say, “What is under me nose?”
Ebro: Amout.
Vybz Kartel: Thank you. And everybody was like, they love it. You know what I mean? Because the vibes, the energy.
Ebro: Well, you’re Vybz Kartel.
Vybz Kartel: Exactly. So anywhere we go, we like to light up the room and I mean, hold the vibe. So that slang actually became more popular than the, it’s a tape, but I mean their both crazy. The people vibe off the stuff I do. You know what I mean? Even people tell me, going on your Instagram, it’s like my daily bread. I mean, yeah, because we bring that vibe and that energy.
Vybz Kartel tells Apple Music about potentially collaborating with Buju Banton
Ebro: Do you see yourself collaborating with any of other legends or where is it at in the music that’s being planned and recorded from Vybz Kartel? What can we expect to see?
Vybz Kartel: I would like to collaborate with Madonna.
Ebro: Musically, we speak.
Vybz Kartel: Oh, I mean like legends in Dancehall or just legends, period.
Ebro: Dancehall, whatever you want to do for Jamaica, music…
Vybz Kartel: You know Buju Banton is my favorite DJ of all time.
Ebro: Many of us. Well, because he took it to another place.
Vybz Kartel: Yes. He literally took it to another place. Because remember before Ninjaman, he had the Super Cat, the Josey Wales…Nice music. But then this kid called Ninjaman came and he was like…Mind-blowing to us as kids. We were like, bro, who is that? And then Buju Banton came out, blew my mind again, because I’m like, what?
Ebro: It sounded like a tuba.
Vybz Kartel: Bro. I’m telling you.
Ebro: He coming through.
Vybz Kartel: Coming through and when you see him. Because like I said, those days in the nineties, Jamaica, not much. No internet stuff.
Ebro: Not a lot of cameras.
Vybz Kartel: So when you heard the artist first, you had to imagine how they look by how they sound. Boy was waiting for a trick because Buju Banton sounded like a giant, but he was just a tall, skinny kid. And he could move too. Yeah. I love Buju Banton. Right? We were talking about this yesterday.
Ebro: Yeah. Still get them knees up.
Vybz Kartel: Man, that’s my all time favorite DJ, Mark Myrie.
Ebro: Yeah.
Vybz Kartel: Yeah, man. Buju. Influencing.
Ebro: And even his spiritual journey as well. I mean, obviously from what he was doing when he was young to becoming Rasta to, you know what I mean? His spiritual journey has been there.
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Vybz Kartel: Well, hold on. That’s crazy because think about this. Now that you brought that up, he was in prison.
Ebro: That’s right.
Vybz Kartel: I was in prison. Ninjaman is still in prison. That’s crazy. Those are my guys I looked up to, maybe I looked up to them too much. I’m joking.
Ebro: Yeah. Trying to follow in their footstep.
Vybz Kartel: Yeah, trying to follow, a little too much, is what I’m saying. Yeah. But it’s crazy, man. Yeah. But big up Buju Banton. Free Ninjaman. Yes.
Ebro: Is there a collab with you Buju?
Vybz Kartel: I’m not at liberty to say.
Ebro: Okay. I like that answer. Can’t confirm nor deny.
Vybz Kartel: I cannot confirm nor deny these allegations, sir. Yes.
Vybz Kartel tells Apple Music about being incarcerated and how making music helped him survive
Ebro: I’ve heard you talk about being incarcerated and how much privilege you had because of who you are when you were incarcerated and you said the one thing I could not do was walk out the door. Did that give you any perspective of having access to so much whilst incarcerated, but still not having your freedom? What did that do to how you perceive freedom and things that money can’t buy?
Vybz Kartel: Exactly. That was, I was going to say, there are certain things that money really can’t buy because even people with no money still could have access to certain things because they weren’t famous. So it wouldn’t be an issue with the society. But if Vybz Kartel were to get those privileges, it would look like, oh, he’s only getting it because his Vybz Kartel. You know what I mean? Because remember back in the day too, they also had those programs back in the day where prisoners could go out for a weekend. Fully monitored and everything.
Ebro: Weekend passed.
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Vybz Kartel: Yeah, weekend pass. Especially if you were married or you had a common law relationship. But so certain things I couldn’t get simply because I was me. But everything else I got because I was me. So, it was bittersweet.
Ebro: How did that hit right here though? How did that feel?
Vybz Kartel: I never gave it much thought, because from the moment I got locked up, I was scheming on how to get out. I mean, during that time, yes, I had to, I wouldn’t say survive, but I had to, my version of surviving is being able to do music and I figured out how to do that. So, I was halfway chill. So, now I’m like, the next thing I’m working on getting out. But whilst I’m working on getting out, I’m going to drop these bangers. The Viking album was done in prison…I mean the album with King of the Dancehall with ‘Fever’ on it. It’s also done in Prison… The album that’s nominated for a GRAMMY was done in prison…The To Tanesha album was done in prison. That’s the album that dedicated to my baby mom’s, my kid’s mom. So, yeah, I was putting in that work still. So, I didn’t give much thought to what you said. I’m focused man. I was sick as hell too, recording these songs. I was sick. Literally suffering from a life-threatening illness. But what am I going to do? Yeah, man. Man up. So, that’s it.
Vybz Kartel and Ebro talk about the influence of Caribbean culture on music globally
Ebro: Well, and I also too, while I have you, you’ve expressed to me how important Dancehall, reggae music, and Jamaican culture is to you. And we all know, I think this tiny island in the Caribbean has impacted the globe.
Vybz Kartel: True.
Ebro: Bob Marley.
Vybz Kartel: Immensely. Right?
Ebro: Like you said, Super Cat, Buju.
Vybz Kartel: Jimmy Cliff… And even outside of music, because we’re still talking about the culture. We gave the world Marcus Garvey. Man, that’s one of the greatest Pan-Africanists ever.
Ebro: That’s right.
Vybz Kartel: Like Mao Zedong spoke highly of Marcus Garvey.
Ebro: That’s right.
Vybz Kartel: Patrice Lumumba in the Congo. All these guys.
Ebro: They read all his teaching.
Vybz Kartel: Exactly. So, the culture is big man. We gave the world five world-class genres. Mento, Ska, Rocksteady, Reggae, Dancehall. Still had a hand in Hip-Hop.
Ebro: Kool Herc, yes.
Vybz Kartel: Still had a hand in Reggaeton.
Ebro: That’s right.
Vybz Kartel: Hence the name Reggae at the front.
Ebro: That’s right.
Vybz Kartel: And influenced Afrobeat, like come on. And then, next door in Trinidad, we got the Calypso.
Ebro: That’s right. The Soca.
Vybz Kartel: Yeah, the Soca. So man, trust me, the Caribbean culture is powerful.
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ZZ Top adds new dates to North American tour: See dates
[media-credit name=”Instagram” link=”https://www.instagram.com/p/CgU8G9Thme7/” width=1780 align=”none”]
[/media-credit]According to iHeart News, ZZ Top was “the most active touring Classic Rock band in 2024” playing ninety-nine shows. The legendary Texas trio plans to one-up itself and do at least one hundred. In anticipation of breaking the record, ZZ Top announced their fifty-one-date North America ‘Elevation’ tour. It starts on June 1 in Victoria, British Columbia and ends in Terre Haute. The trio has played twenty-three this year, and a twelve-date tour of Australia and New Zealand beginning on April 26. You can look at the list below to see if the group will come to your city.
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ZZ Top 2025 North American ‘Elevation’ Tour Dates
June 1: Victoria, BC – Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre
June 3: Kelowna, BC – Prospera Place
June 4: Tsuut’ina, AB – Grey Eagle Resort and Casino
June 6: Enoch, Alberta – River Cree Resort & Casino
June 7: Saskatoon, SK – SaskTel Centre
June 8: Winnipeg, MB – Canada Life Centre
June 10: Moorhead, MN – Bluestone Amphitheater
June 12: Wait Park, MN – The Ledge – Waite Park Amphitheater
June 13: Carlton, MN – Black Bear Casino Resort
June 14: Davenport, IA – Rhythm City Casino Event Center
June 18: Windsor, ON – Caesars Windsor
June 20: Pickering, ON – Pickering Casino Resort
June 21: Great Canadian Toronto, ON – The Theatre
June 22: Hamilton, ON – FirstOntario Centre
June 25: Laval, QC – Place Bell
June 26: Quebec, QC – Agora Du Port Du Quebec
June 27: Moncton, NB – Casino New Brunswick
August 2: Sioux City, IA – Hard Rock Sioux City
August 4: Morrison, CO – Red Rocks Amphitheatre
August 6: Salina, KS – Stiefel Theatre for the Performing Arts
August 7: Washington, MO – Town & Country Fair
August 8: Arcadia, WI – Ashley for the Arts
August 10: Lincoln, NE – Pinewood Bowl Amphitheater
August 13: Salt Lake City, UT – Red Butte Concert Series
August 14: Pocattello, ID – Portneuf Health Trust Amphitheater
August 17: Eugene, OR – The Cuthbert Amphitheater
August 22: Coquitlam, BC – Great Canadian Casino Vancouver
August 23: Richmond, BC – River Rock Casino
August 24: Auburn, WA – Muckleshoot Casino Resort
August 26: Troutdale, OR – Edgefield Amphitheater
August 28: Saratoga, CA – Mountain Winery
August 29: Murphys, CA – Ironstone Amphitheater
August 30: Costa Mesa, CA – OC Fair & Event Center
September 3: Midland, TX – Wagner Noel Performing Arts Center
September 7: Tuscaloosa, AL – Mercedes-Benz Amphitheater
September 11: Selbyville, DE – Freeman Arts Pavilion
September 13: Asbury Park, NJ – Sea Hear Now Festival
September 17: New York, NY: Beacon Theater
September 19: Danville, VA – The Pantheon at Caesars Virginia
September 21: Bethlehem, PA – Wind Creek Event Center
September 23: Binghamton, NY – Visions Memorial Arena
September 24: Albany, NY – Palace Theatre
September 26: Providence, RI – Veteran’s Memorial Auditorium
September 27: Hampton, NH – Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom
Sept. 28: West Springfield, MA – The Big E Arena
October 2: Barco, NC – Morris Farm
October 3: Winnsboro, SC – Field and Stream Music Fest
October 5: Athens, GA – The Classic Center
October 7: Knoxville, TN – The Tennessee Theatre
October 9: Northfield, OH – MGM Northfield Park
October 10: Terra Haute, IN – The Mill