.png)
August 11, 2025
The Soul Train Awards and Hip-Hop Awards, two cornerstone events celebrating Black music and culture, have been suspended by BET. The news was confirmed by BET CEO Scott Mills in an interview with...
Read more.png)
August 11, 2025
When Memphis rapper GloRilla's October 2024 debut album Glorious, one track left everyone talking; "Rain Down on Me," featuring gospel heavyweights Kirk Franklin, Maverick City Music, Kierra...
Read more.png)
August 11, 2025
When the Kansas City Chiefs' three-peat dreams collapsed at Super Bowl LIX, the real drama wasn't just on the field it was in Travis Kelce's VIP box where Taylor Swift and Machine Gun Kelly were...
Read more.png)
August 10, 2025
In a powerful fusion of music and philanthropy, some of today’s most celebrated artists are stepping onto the stage not just to perform, but to make a difference. Stand Up To Cancer (SU2C) returns...
Read more.png)
August 10, 2025
The Juno Awards are officially recognizing the powerful rise of Latin music in Canada. Starting in 2026, the annual awards ceremony will feature a brand-new category: Latin Music Recording of the...
Read more.png)
August 7, 2025
Read more.png)
August 7, 2025
Guitarist, songwriter, and frontwoman of Covet, Yvette Young, is known for her intricate tapping technique, genre-bending sound, that creates a calm presence. But in a new interview, the math rock...
Read more.png)
August 7, 2025
A June 13, 2025, Baptist News Global article highlights the long-standing conflicts between traditional Black gospel music and contemporary Christian music (CCM), which are exacerbated by racial...
Read more.png)
August 7, 2025
In April 2025, The Who unexpectedly fired long‑time drummer Zak Starkey during a Royal Albert Hall show, reportedly over performance issues. Starkey, son of Beatles legend Ringo Starr, had been...
Read more.png)
August 7, 2025
The 2025 MTV Video Music Award nominations have been announced, boasting a diverse lineup with 33 first-time nominees. Pop icons Taylor Swift and Beyoncé even earned artist of the year nods without...
Read more.png)
August 7, 2025
From church pews in Northampton to crowds in Zimbabwe, DC3 is more than just a popular TikTok artist; he is a devout musician who is setting a new standard for UK rap. Through ingenious videos...
Read more.png)
August 7, 2025
Under the blazing Chicago sun, HYBE’s rising stars KATSEYE and BOYNEXTDOOR didn’t just perform at Lollapalooza—they owned it. From viral on-stage chemistry to career-defining sets, the two groups...
Read more.png)
Drunk calls. Crying in the dark. Lingering heartbreak. Conan Gray’s new single “Vodka Cranberry” isn’t just a song—it’s a full-blown emotional unraveling, and fans are already bracing themselves for what’s coming next.
Set to appear on his upcoming album Wishbone, out next month, “Vodka Cranberry” is a gut-punch of a track. It captures the worst kind of heartbreak—the kind that doesn't come with clean endings. “Got way too drunk off a vodka cranberry / Called you up in the middle of the night / Wailing like an imbecile,” Conan sings, with a brutal honesty that makes you want to hug him… and maybe text your therapist.
The music video, a direct continuation of “This Song,” is cinematic sadness at its finest: dim lights, late-night phone calls, aching silences. It’s not just a visual—it’s a feeling you’ve had at 2 a.m. but never had the words for.
What makes this moment even more powerful is the backstory. Conan confessed that Wishbone wasn’t even meant to be an album. These songs were written in secret—scribbled in journals, whispered in hotel beds between tour stops, kept from his own label and friends. “I didn’t know I was making anything,” he wrote. “And I had no plan to release any of it.”
That’s what makes Wishbone feel different. It’s not calculated. It’s not curated. It’s honest. And if “Vodka Cranberry” is any sign, it’s going to be messy, heart-wrenching, and incredibly, unapologetically real.
So if you’ve ever cried over someone who never gave you closure, or spiraled after a drink or three—this one’s for you. And Wishbone? That might just be the album we didn’t know we needed this year.