A young daughter prepares to leave the family home with her mother’s blessing to start a new life. An expectant mother worries about the viability of her mate to help bring up their first child together. A grandmother’s wisdom jumpstarts her offspring’s learning of survival skills.
These scenes from the animal world are part of National Geographic’s six-part documentary series Queens, filmed over four years in remote locations on three continents. The Emmy-contending series, which premiered in March on National Geographic Channel, is now streaming on Disney+ and Hulu.
National Geographic says Queens is unprecedented in natural history filmmaking: the first time a series focuses fully on stories of female power, resilience, strength, and love, and boasts the first nearly all-female crew to shoot, produce and direct a wildlife documentary.
A herd of African elephants walks at sunset across the plains of Africa.
From magnificent African...
These scenes from the animal world are part of National Geographic’s six-part documentary series Queens, filmed over four years in remote locations on three continents. The Emmy-contending series, which premiered in March on National Geographic Channel, is now streaming on Disney+ and Hulu.
National Geographic says Queens is unprecedented in natural history filmmaking: the first time a series focuses fully on stories of female power, resilience, strength, and love, and boasts the first nearly all-female crew to shoot, produce and direct a wildlife documentary.
A herd of African elephants walks at sunset across the plains of Africa.
From magnificent African...
- 5/28/2024
- by Hillary Atkin
- Deadline Film + TV
“Fans say they want 2015 Vince,” Vince Staples says on “Etouffée,” a track from his sixth studio album, Dark Times. While the SoCal rapper’s career is an undeniable success story, far removed from his experiences as a teenage Crip that’s inspired much of his work, he’s still haunted by the possibility that violence might lie around every corner.
The album’s cover depicts a barely visible noose against a black background, and paranoia abounds on tracks like “Government Cheese.” The song’s refrain, “Don’t forget to smile,” starts to feel like sarcasm when a dejected Staples takes a phone call from an imprisoned friend: “Told him I was good, wonder if he believed it/Couldn’t tell him the truth.” He raps in a numb monotone throughout the track, like he’s pulling the words from his mouth.
Staples’s trust issues extend to romantic relationships as well.
The album’s cover depicts a barely visible noose against a black background, and paranoia abounds on tracks like “Government Cheese.” The song’s refrain, “Don’t forget to smile,” starts to feel like sarcasm when a dejected Staples takes a phone call from an imprisoned friend: “Told him I was good, wonder if he believed it/Couldn’t tell him the truth.” He raps in a numb monotone throughout the track, like he’s pulling the words from his mouth.
Staples’s trust issues extend to romantic relationships as well.
- 5/26/2024
- by Steve Erickson
- Slant Magazine
Ten years after the release of his Def Jam debut, the Hell Can Wait EP, Vince Staples occupies an ambiguous middle-ground, stuck between platinum-certified arena status and the ephemeral virality that defines too much of the mainstream rap industry. It’s a space that he shares with a handful of others – Maxo, Rapsody, Navy Blue, his onetime Odd Future colleague Earl Sweatshirt – and which allows him to craft densely thematic musical suites on a major-label platform without the pressure of landing a radio hit. He’s made good use of...
- 5/24/2024
- by Mosi Reeves
- Rollingstone.com
Austin City Limits will return in October with headlining performances from Dua Lipa, Tyler the Creator, Chris Stapleton, Blink-182, Sturgill Simpson, and Pretty Lights. The annual music festival, which will be held over two weekends, will also feature appearances from Reneé Rapp, Foster The People, Dominic Fike, the Marías, Leon Bridges, Kevin Abstract, Chappell Roan, and more.
Acl 2024 opens on Oct. 4 and runs through Oct. 6 before picking back up for its second weekend, scheduled for Oct. 11 through 13 at Zilker Park. The event will hold performances across nine different stages to accommodate dozens of artists.
Acl 2024 opens on Oct. 4 and runs through Oct. 6 before picking back up for its second weekend, scheduled for Oct. 11 through 13 at Zilker Park. The event will hold performances across nine different stages to accommodate dozens of artists.
- 5/7/2024
- by Larisha Paul
- Rollingstone.com
Austin City Limits has revealed its 2024 lineup, led by headliners Dua Lipa, Tyler, the Creator, blink-182, Sturgill Simpson, Chris Stapleton, Khruangbin, Leon Bridges, and Pretty Lights.
Other notable acts set to play the festival in Austin, Texas this fall include Carin León, Kehlani, Norah Jones, Reneé Rapp, Orville Peck, Foster the People, The Marías, Vince Staples, Tyla, Jungle, Chappell Roan, Something Corporate, Remi Wolf, Kevin Abstract, Santigold, Kenny Beats, The Beaches, Catfish and the Bottlemen, Mickey Guyton, Mannequin Pussy, Flo, Asleep at the Wheel, Hermanos Gutiérrez, and more.
Get Austin City Limits 2024 Tickets Here
Austin City Limits takes place over two weekends, October 4th-6th and 11th-13th, at Zilker Park. While a majority of the announced acts will play both weekends of the festival, there are a few exceptions — as detailed via the lineup poster below.
Tickets to Acl 2024, including three-day Ga, Ga+, and VIP passes, will go on sale beginning Tuesday,...
Other notable acts set to play the festival in Austin, Texas this fall include Carin León, Kehlani, Norah Jones, Reneé Rapp, Orville Peck, Foster the People, The Marías, Vince Staples, Tyla, Jungle, Chappell Roan, Something Corporate, Remi Wolf, Kevin Abstract, Santigold, Kenny Beats, The Beaches, Catfish and the Bottlemen, Mickey Guyton, Mannequin Pussy, Flo, Asleep at the Wheel, Hermanos Gutiérrez, and more.
Get Austin City Limits 2024 Tickets Here
Austin City Limits takes place over two weekends, October 4th-6th and 11th-13th, at Zilker Park. While a majority of the announced acts will play both weekends of the festival, there are a few exceptions — as detailed via the lineup poster below.
Tickets to Acl 2024, including three-day Ga, Ga+, and VIP passes, will go on sale beginning Tuesday,...
- 5/7/2024
- by Scoop Harrison
- Consequence - Music
Fans of Santigold will finally be able to catch the star in concert.
On Tuesday, the musician announced that she’ll be hitting the road for several spaced-out shows through June, August, and October this year after she canceled her Holified Tour in 2022, citing artist welfare and the mental-health and economic challenges plaguing those who make music for a living.
The new run of shows includes appearances at Redondo Beach’s Beachlife Festival in May and Seattle Pride in June. She’ll also stop at New York’s Terminal 5 and Toronto’s Rebel in August,...
On Tuesday, the musician announced that she’ll be hitting the road for several spaced-out shows through June, August, and October this year after she canceled her Holified Tour in 2022, citing artist welfare and the mental-health and economic challenges plaguing those who make music for a living.
The new run of shows includes appearances at Redondo Beach’s Beachlife Festival in May and Seattle Pride in June. She’ll also stop at New York’s Terminal 5 and Toronto’s Rebel in August,...
- 4/2/2024
- by Tomás Mier
- Rollingstone.com
On Thursday, February 8, National Geographic celebrated the highly anticipated new documentary series “Queens” with a red carpet premiere and afterparty at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles. Gold Derby associate editor Latasha Ford and senior editor Denton Davidson were on the red carpet to interview narrator Angela Bassett, executive producer Vanessa Berlowitz, showrunner and writer Chloe Sarosh, producer/director Faith Musembi and director of photography Justine Evans. They also chatted with special guests Bobi Wine and Barbie Kyagulanyi (“Bobi Wine: The People’s President”), Cesar Milan (“Better Human Better Dog”), Symone (“RuPaul’s Drag Race”) and Jordyn McIntosh (“Reasonable Doubt”). Watch the exclusive red carpet interviews above.
The wildest places on the planet have always been home to powerful leaders, but this is a story of a new hero – fierce, smart, resilient and … female. “Queens” features matriarchies and female leaders around the world to tell a story of sacrifice...
The wildest places on the planet have always been home to powerful leaders, but this is a story of a new hero – fierce, smart, resilient and … female. “Queens” features matriarchies and female leaders around the world to tell a story of sacrifice...
- 2/9/2024
- by Latasha Ford and Denton Davidson
- Gold Derby
BeachLife Festival has revealed its 2024 lineup featuring headliners Sting, Incubus, and My Morning Jacket, plus Devo, Trey Anastasio & Classic Tab, Fleet Foxes, Zz Top, Local Natives, and Courtney Barnett.
The three-day music festival takes place May 3rd-5th, 2024 in Redondo Beach, California.
The lineup also boasts Santigold, Margo Price, Chevy Metal, Dirty Heads, Seal, Sugar Ray, City and Colour, St. Paul & The Broken Bones, Steel Pulse, Kevin Seconds, Jordana, Surfer Blood, Pepper, and more.
Tickets to BeachLife Festival, including single-day and three-day passes, are now on sale.
Editor’s Note: Sign up for our weekly live music email digest.
BeachLife Festival Reveals 2024 Lineup with Sting, Incubus, Devo & More
Scoop Harrison...
The three-day music festival takes place May 3rd-5th, 2024 in Redondo Beach, California.
The lineup also boasts Santigold, Margo Price, Chevy Metal, Dirty Heads, Seal, Sugar Ray, City and Colour, St. Paul & The Broken Bones, Steel Pulse, Kevin Seconds, Jordana, Surfer Blood, Pepper, and more.
Tickets to BeachLife Festival, including single-day and three-day passes, are now on sale.
Editor’s Note: Sign up for our weekly live music email digest.
BeachLife Festival Reveals 2024 Lineup with Sting, Incubus, Devo & More
Scoop Harrison...
- 1/19/2024
- by Scoop Harrison
- Consequence - Music
Sting, Incubus, Devo, and My Morning Jacket will shake the sands of Redondo Beach, California’s waterfront, this spring at the fifth installment of the BeachLife Festival. Other performers include Seal, Dirty Heads, Local Natives, Santigold, Trey Anastasio, Fleet Foxes, Zz Top, and Courtney Barnett. Tickets for the three-day fest, which kicks off May 3, are available now.
The lineup spans a variety of genres, including reggae (Steel Pulse, Pepper), punk (performances by members of the Vandals, All, 7 Seconds), and mambo (Tito Puente Jr.) Additionally, the Samples, Surfer Blood, Chevy Metal,...
The lineup spans a variety of genres, including reggae (Steel Pulse, Pepper), punk (performances by members of the Vandals, All, 7 Seconds), and mambo (Tito Puente Jr.) Additionally, the Samples, Surfer Blood, Chevy Metal,...
- 1/19/2024
- by Kory Grow
- Rollingstone.com
Building on the success of the 200 million minutes that listeners spent with Talkhouse productions in 2022, the award-winning podcast network has defied industry decline with another banner year of growth, expansion and increased production across a variety of mediums. In 2023, hit shows such as How Long Gone, Solicited Advice with Alison Roman and the brand new Odb: A Son Unique – which recently entered the Top 20 on Apple Podcasts – contributed to 148% increase in total listens across the Talkhouse Podcast Network. In addition, its unique audience reach soared by 148%, while ad revenue surged exponentially, further cementing Talkhouse as a leading partner for first-person, artist-focused storytelling.
From the Talkhouse Podcast Network to Talkhouse.com's daily digital publication, year-round Talkhouse Live events and a just-launched print zine called Talkhouse Reader, the company continues to prioritize authenticity, credibility and creativity with every step forward. Each Talkhouse production brings its audience deeper and more directly into the minds of its favorite musicians,...
From the Talkhouse Podcast Network to Talkhouse.com's daily digital publication, year-round Talkhouse Live events and a just-launched print zine called Talkhouse Reader, the company continues to prioritize authenticity, credibility and creativity with every step forward. Each Talkhouse production brings its audience deeper and more directly into the minds of its favorite musicians,...
- 12/19/2023
- Podnews.net
Gwyneth Paltrow is ringing in the holidays with a little help from her friends.
The Oscar-winning actress was joined by pals like Chelsea Handler and Laura Harrier at the G. Label By goop Holiday Celebration on Monday (December 11) in Los Angeles.
More attendees included Santigold, Emma Grede, Rachel Zoe, Arielle Vandenberg, Jennifer Meyer, Kelly Sawyer Patricof, Estee Stanley, Molly Sims, and Tinx.
The brand says that guests left with personalized beanies by unsubscribed, a consciously made slow-fashion brand, plus some of goop’s most popular beauty products, including Microderm Instant Glow Exfoliator, Dark Spot Exfoliating Sleep Milk, Lift + Depuff Eye Masks, Clean Nourishing Lip Balm and Colorblur Glow Balms.
Fyi: Gwyneth is wearing G. Label By goop.
Browse through the gallery for 20+ photos from the holiday party…...
The Oscar-winning actress was joined by pals like Chelsea Handler and Laura Harrier at the G. Label By goop Holiday Celebration on Monday (December 11) in Los Angeles.
More attendees included Santigold, Emma Grede, Rachel Zoe, Arielle Vandenberg, Jennifer Meyer, Kelly Sawyer Patricof, Estee Stanley, Molly Sims, and Tinx.
The brand says that guests left with personalized beanies by unsubscribed, a consciously made slow-fashion brand, plus some of goop’s most popular beauty products, including Microderm Instant Glow Exfoliator, Dark Spot Exfoliating Sleep Milk, Lift + Depuff Eye Masks, Clean Nourishing Lip Balm and Colorblur Glow Balms.
Fyi: Gwyneth is wearing G. Label By goop.
Browse through the gallery for 20+ photos from the holiday party…...
- 12/13/2023
- by Just Jared
- Just Jared
Everyone’s talking about Amazon’s new revenge thriller series, Wilderness. Adapted from the bestselling novel of the same name by B.E. Jones, and starring Jenna Coleman, Oliver Jackson-Cohen, Ashley Benson, and Eric Balfour, Wilderness landed on the streamer just in time for the rainy season and made a splash thanks to its complex heroin and dark subject matter.
Wilderness follows Liv Taylor (Coleman) as she tries to cope with finding out that her dashing husband Will (Jackson-Cohen) is cheating on her. After marrying Will and choosing to leave her old life in England behind so that they can move to America to advance Will’s career, Liv then snaps when their dream life together falls apart.
Having been raised by a toxic, narcissistic mother, and therefore having entered adulthood as a people-pleaser, Liv cannot bear that she simply wasn’t enough for the one person she was finally able to feel vulnerable with,...
Wilderness follows Liv Taylor (Coleman) as she tries to cope with finding out that her dashing husband Will (Jackson-Cohen) is cheating on her. After marrying Will and choosing to leave her old life in England behind so that they can move to America to advance Will’s career, Liv then snaps when their dream life together falls apart.
Having been raised by a toxic, narcissistic mother, and therefore having entered adulthood as a people-pleaser, Liv cannot bear that she simply wasn’t enough for the one person she was finally able to feel vulnerable with,...
- 9/18/2023
- by Kirsten Howard
- Den of Geek
Los Angeles, Aug 15 (Ians) Tina Knowles shut down rumours that her daughter Beyonce travels with personal toilet seats while on tour.
“That is so ridiculous,” the mom of two told TMZ, reports pagesix.com.
Tina explained that the leaked backstage picture of a black container labeled “Beyonce Toilet Seats” was merely a part of the singer’s Renaissance World Tour set.
“Those are stands that you put fans on, they’re called toilet seats,” she said.
Tina, 69, added that the idea of her daughter requesting her own custom toilet seat for the bathroom was “too much”.
The rumours about Beyonce’s tour rider started earlier this month when a source told the US Sun that the “Cuff It” hitmaker can get anything she wants.
“Beyonce is such an elite performer she can literally request anything,” the insider claimed.
“Her team makes great effort to ensure she has her own comforts...
“That is so ridiculous,” the mom of two told TMZ, reports pagesix.com.
Tina explained that the leaked backstage picture of a black container labeled “Beyonce Toilet Seats” was merely a part of the singer’s Renaissance World Tour set.
“Those are stands that you put fans on, they’re called toilet seats,” she said.
Tina, 69, added that the idea of her daughter requesting her own custom toilet seat for the bathroom was “too much”.
The rumours about Beyonce’s tour rider started earlier this month when a source told the US Sun that the “Cuff It” hitmaker can get anything she wants.
“Beyonce is such an elite performer she can literally request anything,” the insider claimed.
“Her team makes great effort to ensure she has her own comforts...
- 8/15/2023
- by Agency News Desk
- GlamSham
“Obviously, there’s a lot of parts of this country where people don’t feel safe so we have to band together to make people as safe as we can,” country music star Orville Peck told the audience at the WeHo Pride’s Outloud music festival on Saturday, referring to the wave of anti-trans and anti-drag legislation that is upending lives and spreading fear in states across the country, including Texas and Florida. But, noted Peck, a judge in Tennessee had just a day earlier ruled that the state’s recently passed law forbidding drag performances in public is unconstitutional, drawing cheers from the thousands in the crowd.
That scene, mixing politics, purpose and performance, was one of many similar ones that unfolded throughout the second annual WeHo Pride, held over the weekend of June 2-4 in West Hollywood, California.
On Sunday, at the WeHo Pride Parade, Melissa McCarthy topped...
That scene, mixing politics, purpose and performance, was one of many similar ones that unfolded throughout the second annual WeHo Pride, held over the weekend of June 2-4 in West Hollywood, California.
On Sunday, at the WeHo Pride Parade, Melissa McCarthy topped...
- 6/5/2023
- by Degen Pener
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
WeHo gays, this one’s for you. Rolling Stone can exclusively reveal that the 2023 Outloud lineup will feature Carly Rae Jepsen and Grace Jones in the headlining slot for this year’s West Hollywood Pride festival between June 2 and 4.
Jones will headline Saturday’s festival, while Jepsen will close the event on Sunday. Friday’s lineup — announced on April 11 — is set to feature Idina Menzel, Jessie Ware, Tinashe, along with drag queen Shangela and queer pop star Jordy.
Among the performers that fans can expect to see on Saturday are masked country star Orville Peck,...
Jones will headline Saturday’s festival, while Jepsen will close the event on Sunday. Friday’s lineup — announced on April 11 — is set to feature Idina Menzel, Jessie Ware, Tinashe, along with drag queen Shangela and queer pop star Jordy.
Among the performers that fans can expect to see on Saturday are masked country star Orville Peck,...
- 4/11/2023
- by Tomás Mier
- Rollingstone.com
Exclusive: How Long Gone, the culture podcast from Jason Stewart and Chris Black, has signed with the Talkhouse podcast network.
The move sees Stewart and Black, who record three podcasts a week, join the likes of Bjork and Santigold, who also have deals with the podcast company.
The deal will see Talkhouse handle distribution, ad sales, marketing and podcast-relevant partnerships and marks the first such deal for How Long Gone, which is currently on episode 473. The company said that the podcast has 500,000 monthly listeners.
Stewart and Back recently signed with CAA as part of a push to further its Hollywood credentials. The pair joke regularly on the show about the new opportunities that the talent agency is bringing them with much chat about a potential How Long Gone television show.
The podcast has featured interviews with the likes of Jeremy O. Harris, Whitney Port, Lili Anolik, Lena Dunham, Bret Easton Ellis,...
The move sees Stewart and Black, who record three podcasts a week, join the likes of Bjork and Santigold, who also have deals with the podcast company.
The deal will see Talkhouse handle distribution, ad sales, marketing and podcast-relevant partnerships and marks the first such deal for How Long Gone, which is currently on episode 473. The company said that the podcast has 500,000 monthly listeners.
Stewart and Back recently signed with CAA as part of a push to further its Hollywood credentials. The pair joke regularly on the show about the new opportunities that the talent agency is bringing them with much chat about a potential How Long Gone television show.
The podcast has featured interviews with the likes of Jeremy O. Harris, Whitney Port, Lili Anolik, Lena Dunham, Bret Easton Ellis,...
- 3/28/2023
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
Aap Rocky’s Long.Live.Aap was released in January 2013, and to celebrate its 10th year anniversary, the rapper has released a reworked “Angels” music video dubbed “Angels Pt. 2.”
The Awge and Sam Lecca-directed visual finds a young Aap Rocky alongside his crew as a look back while giving it a new frame: it houses unreleased Los Angeles footage shot a decade ago and features the late Aap Yams with a halo floating above his head.
Director Lecca tells Rolling Stone the pink-themed footage was filmed in Los Angeles on Jan.
The Awge and Sam Lecca-directed visual finds a young Aap Rocky alongside his crew as a look back while giving it a new frame: it houses unreleased Los Angeles footage shot a decade ago and features the late Aap Yams with a halo floating above his head.
Director Lecca tells Rolling Stone the pink-themed footage was filmed in Los Angeles on Jan.
- 1/17/2023
- by Althea Legaspi
- Rollingstone.com
If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Rolling Stone may receive an affiliate commission.
There’s something startling about Los Angeles’ Beastie Boys exhibit. It feels like walking into someone’s bedroom or sneaking into a green room while the band’s on stage, except the dirty T-shirts, the scuffed posters on the walls and the worn cassette tapes are behind glass cases. And instead of a tiny, dimly-lit room, where most of this stuff was found, you’re in a 4000-square-foot...
There’s something startling about Los Angeles’ Beastie Boys exhibit. It feels like walking into someone’s bedroom or sneaking into a green room while the band’s on stage, except the dirty T-shirts, the scuffed posters on the walls and the worn cassette tapes are behind glass cases. And instead of a tiny, dimly-lit room, where most of this stuff was found, you’re in a 4000-square-foot...
- 1/14/2023
- by Charisma Madarang
- Rollingstone.com
Santigold, aka Santi White, may have nixed her North American tour, but those missing her live set can tune into a special one via NPR’s Tiny Desk performance.
The set hearkens back to White’s roots when she was in the punk band Stiffed. “What’s really interesting and special about this is that it gave me an opportunity when I was thinking, you know, what am I gonna do, like I’m not really an unplugged artist… And I was like, punk — which is kinda my roots as...
The set hearkens back to White’s roots when she was in the punk band Stiffed. “What’s really interesting and special about this is that it gave me an opportunity when I was thinking, you know, what am I gonna do, like I’m not really an unplugged artist… And I was like, punk — which is kinda my roots as...
- 11/21/2022
- by Althea Legaspi
- Rollingstone.com
Dan Reynolds, the lead singer for Imagine Dragons, has been recovering after both spraining his knee on tour and “struggling with hemorrhaged vocal cords and a nodule.” Because of these health concerns, the band decided to push back shows in Latin America they were supposed to be doing right this moment through November 4.
>Get Deals On Imagine Dragons Concert Tickets Now!
In the wake of the cancellations, Reynolds wrote on Instagram, “I’ve never canceled a tour in over a decade of touring. And only a few shows. My voice and knee are a little better every day thanks to rehabilitation and good doctors.”
He also added a thirst trap on his Instagram Story which showed his muscles and the knee brace he has to wear while he recovers from this sprain.
Like many bands, Imagine Dragons had been on an extended hiatus from performing during the Covid-19 pandemic. But...
>Get Deals On Imagine Dragons Concert Tickets Now!
In the wake of the cancellations, Reynolds wrote on Instagram, “I’ve never canceled a tour in over a decade of touring. And only a few shows. My voice and knee are a little better every day thanks to rehabilitation and good doctors.”
He also added a thirst trap on his Instagram Story which showed his muscles and the knee brace he has to wear while he recovers from this sprain.
Like many bands, Imagine Dragons had been on an extended hiatus from performing during the Covid-19 pandemic. But...
- 11/3/2022
- by Jacob Linden
- Uinterview
Santi White wants you to know the truth — the kind of truth that helps you make sense of the world, even when it’s clunky and difficult to understand. The “Nothing” artist, who recently sat down with Rolling Stone, frames her new podcast Noble Champions as a reimagined salon, a hallowed space for intimate conversations for today’s audience, and explores current issues with leading fellow artists, activists, and progressive thinkers.
The inspiration for the podcast’s title comes from a quote by Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky, who wrote in...
The inspiration for the podcast’s title comes from a quote by Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky, who wrote in...
- 10/25/2022
- by Charisma Madarang
- Rollingstone.com
In another universe, Santi White might be about to hit the road for her Holified Tour right now. Instead, the musician — who performs as Santigold — is talking to Rolling Stone about what she calls a “cultural crisis.” As she was preparing to tour on the heels of her new album, Spirituals, Santigold came to the sound realization that the trek was unsustainable, both financially and for her mental health. She made the difficult decision to cancel the run, and she was far from alone. Shawn Mendes, Justin Bieber, Animal Collective,...
- 10/19/2022
- by Althea Legaspi
- Rollingstone.com
Santigold has canceled her upcoming North American tour. In a lengthy note to fans posted to her website, the singer explained that the reality of being on the road following the pandemic is not sustainable for musicians, noting that “the landscapes we are re-entering are not the same.”
“As a touring musician, I don’t think anyone anticipated the new reality that awaited us,” Santigold wrote. “After sitting idle (not being able to do shows) for the past couple years, many of us like everyone else, earning no or little income during that time,...
“As a touring musician, I don’t think anyone anticipated the new reality that awaited us,” Santigold wrote. “After sitting idle (not being able to do shows) for the past couple years, many of us like everyone else, earning no or little income during that time,...
- 9/27/2022
- by Emily Zemler
- Rollingstone.com
Santigold returns to her punk roots in the new visual for “Fall First,” the closing track on the singer’s recently released LP Spirituals.
The “video vignette” keeps with the punk aesthetic in both its DIY approach — it was seemingly filmed with no budget, just a band playing in an empty lot — as well as its runtime: While the album version of “Fall First” clocks in at over four minutes, the video itself lasts less than half that.
The artist born Santi White, who sang in the Philly punk act...
The “video vignette” keeps with the punk aesthetic in both its DIY approach — it was seemingly filmed with no budget, just a band playing in an empty lot — as well as its runtime: While the album version of “Fall First” clocks in at over four minutes, the video itself lasts less than half that.
The artist born Santi White, who sang in the Philly punk act...
- 9/21/2022
- by Daniel Kreps
- Rollingstone.com
Madonna appeared on The Tonight Show to chat with host Jimmy Fallon about her career and took the opportunity to reimagine her 2000 single “Music” with classroom instruments.
Performing with Fallon and the Roots, Madonna gave the pop song a surprisingly club-ready vibe. The pop singer played a triangle while Fallon kept the beat on a wooden block as the Roots shared in the backing vocals.
During her interview with Fallon, Madonna discussed her wardrobe mishap at the first MTV Video Music Awards and revealed that she would be a schoolteacher...
Performing with Fallon and the Roots, Madonna gave the pop song a surprisingly club-ready vibe. The pop singer played a triangle while Fallon kept the beat on a wooden block as the Roots shared in the backing vocals.
During her interview with Fallon, Madonna discussed her wardrobe mishap at the first MTV Video Music Awards and revealed that she would be a schoolteacher...
- 8/11/2022
- by Emily Zemler
- Rollingstone.com
Santigold has shared her resilient new track “Shake,” the fourth single from her upcoming new album Spirituals, as well as its video inspired in part by the “strength and fortitude” of young civil rights protestors.
“‘Shake’ is one of those songs that was just floating around me for the taking, Santigold said of the track in a statement. “What I mean is that there are some songs that basically write themselves, and all you have to do as the artist is be open enough to reach out and pull it in and say thank you.
“‘Shake’ is one of those songs that was just floating around me for the taking, Santigold said of the track in a statement. “What I mean is that there are some songs that basically write themselves, and all you have to do as the artist is be open enough to reach out and pull it in and say thank you.
- 8/10/2022
- by Daniel Kreps
- Rollingstone.com
Beyoncé and Madonna have teamed up for a royal collaboration, “Break My Soul (The Queens Remix).” The latest remix of Beyoncé’s Renaissance single arrived on Friday, just in time to get the weekend party started.
The percolating remix interpolates Madonna’s “Vogue” with Beyoncé flipping the script for the iconic spoke-sung section of the 1990 song, where the Material Girl lists Hollywood stars from the Golden Age. In Bey’s take, she pays homage to both current and past influential Black women who have been game-changers for the culture — from Aaliyah,...
The percolating remix interpolates Madonna’s “Vogue” with Beyoncé flipping the script for the iconic spoke-sung section of the 1990 song, where the Material Girl lists Hollywood stars from the Golden Age. In Bey’s take, she pays homage to both current and past influential Black women who have been game-changers for the culture — from Aaliyah,...
- 8/5/2022
- by Althea Legaspi
- Rollingstone.com
Santigold is back with another new song, “Nothing,” which will appear on her upcoming album, Spirituals, out Sept. 9.
The track is an exploration of how it feels to be invisible, Santigold explained in a statement written during the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests. Writing the lyrics, she continued, allowed her to “release a heaviness” she didn’t know she was carrying: “Being Black and being a woman, particularly one who has chosen the creative path that I have chosen, I have always felt invisible to a degree. People see only what they think they know,...
The track is an exploration of how it feels to be invisible, Santigold explained in a statement written during the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests. Writing the lyrics, she continued, allowed her to “release a heaviness” she didn’t know she was carrying: “Being Black and being a woman, particularly one who has chosen the creative path that I have chosen, I have always felt invisible to a degree. People see only what they think they know,...
- 7/13/2022
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Santigold has announced she will embark on “The Holified Tour” this fall. Tickets for the North American trek go on sale Friday, June 24 at 10 a.m. local time.
The 19-date jaunt launches in Atlanta, Georgia before heading up the East Coast and through the Midwest in October, with West Coast dates through November.
Santigold heads out on the road one month after she releases her fourth studio album, Spirituals, which arrives on Sept. 9 via her own label, Little Jerk Records. The singer recently dropped two songs from the upcoming LP with accompanying video shorts,...
The 19-date jaunt launches in Atlanta, Georgia before heading up the East Coast and through the Midwest in October, with West Coast dates through November.
Santigold heads out on the road one month after she releases her fourth studio album, Spirituals, which arrives on Sept. 9 via her own label, Little Jerk Records. The singer recently dropped two songs from the upcoming LP with accompanying video shorts,...
- 6/22/2022
- by Althea Legaspi
- Rollingstone.com
Santigold gets in the interrogation room with herself in the new short video accompanying the arrival of her latest song, “Ain’t Ready.” The track will appear on the musician’s new album, Spirituals, set to arrive Sept. 9.
“Ain’t Ready” feels at once atmospheric and heavy, with Santigold’s falsetto vocals filling the spaces between the pounding drums and industrial synths. The short video accompanying the song matches the defiant tone of Santigold’s lyrics — “I know those fools boy ain’t ready/Still they spill their lies and...
“Ain’t Ready” feels at once atmospheric and heavy, with Santigold’s falsetto vocals filling the spaces between the pounding drums and industrial synths. The short video accompanying the song matches the defiant tone of Santigold’s lyrics — “I know those fools boy ain’t ready/Still they spill their lies and...
- 6/15/2022
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Santigold has returned with a jittery blast of future punk, “High Priestess,” which marks her first solo release in four years.
“High Priestess” is pure energy with its blend of restless percussion and new wave synths (a video short for the song was also released). Santigold largely crafted the track with the Berlin-based producer/DJ Boys Noize, though she brought in a handful of other collaborators — including Ray Brady, Psymun, and Ryan Olson — to help her fine-tune the exact sound she wanted.
“The energy I was looking for couldn’t...
“High Priestess” is pure energy with its blend of restless percussion and new wave synths (a video short for the song was also released). Santigold largely crafted the track with the Berlin-based producer/DJ Boys Noize, though she brought in a handful of other collaborators — including Ray Brady, Psymun, and Ryan Olson — to help her fine-tune the exact sound she wanted.
“The energy I was looking for couldn’t...
- 5/18/2022
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
At this point, it’s a given that we’re living in the “golden age” of television; somewhere in the neighborhood of 500 new scripted series drop each year. With so much to choose from, that means TV can get daring, specific, and sometimes, weird as hell. Superheroes trapped inside an I Love Lucy pastiche? A creepy animatronic doll calling a murderous game of Red Light, Green Light? In the era of peak TV, grade-a oddity is only a mouse-click away.
But no show in 2021 is more weirdly specific — and specifically weird — than Centaurworld.
But no show in 2021 is more weirdly specific — and specifically weird — than Centaurworld.
- 12/7/2021
- by Jenna Scherer
- Rollingstone.com
To mark the 10th anniversary of the death of Amy Winehouse, Mark Ronson has shared a clip from his upcoming docuseries Watch the Sound With Mark Ronson, in which he recalls the making of the late singer’s classic, “Back to Black.”
In the video, Ronson remembers spending a long night trying to come up with not just the right chords for “Back to Black,” but the right way to present them on tape. “I was like, ‘Okay, what can I do to make this instantly evocative of the music she likes?...
In the video, Ronson remembers spending a long night trying to come up with not just the right chords for “Back to Black,” but the right way to present them on tape. “I was like, ‘Okay, what can I do to make this instantly evocative of the music she likes?...
- 7/23/2021
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Mark Ronson digs into the process and evolution of sound creation in the new trailer for his upcoming docuseries, Watch the Sound, premiering July 30th on Apple TV+.
Ronson sets the stage for the show in the opening moments of the clip, saying, “I’ve always been obsessed with how things sound. It’s the great song and an iconic recording… Whenever someone sits down to play me a song, I’m already thinking about the sound.”
The trailer goes on to show Ronson chatting with an array of artists...
Ronson sets the stage for the show in the opening moments of the clip, saying, “I’ve always been obsessed with how things sound. It’s the great song and an iconic recording… Whenever someone sits down to play me a song, I’m already thinking about the sound.”
The trailer goes on to show Ronson chatting with an array of artists...
- 6/23/2021
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Late reggae great U-Roy and Santigold teamed up for a rendition of the reggae standard, “Man Next Door,” which will appear on the upcoming posthumous album, Solid Gold U-Roy, out July 16th via Trojan Jamaica/BMG.
“Man Next Door” was originally written by John Holt and first released in 1968 by his group the Paragons, while U-Roy previously sampled the song on his own 1982 track, “Peace and Love in the Ghetto.” This new version boasts a quick pace and steady organ stabs; U-Roy and Santigold don’t lose any dub-y magic...
“Man Next Door” was originally written by John Holt and first released in 1968 by his group the Paragons, while U-Roy previously sampled the song on his own 1982 track, “Peace and Love in the Ghetto.” This new version boasts a quick pace and steady organ stabs; U-Roy and Santigold don’t lose any dub-y magic...
- 5/20/2021
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
The copyright bonanza in the music business continues. On Monday morning, Concord Music Publishing announced the purchase of Downtown Music Holdings’ entire portfolio of 145,000 owned and co-published music copyrights.
Here are just some of the stars with songs included in the deal: Adele, Aretha Franklin, Beyoncé, Blake Shelton, Bruno Mars, Carrie Underwood, David Bowie, Eric Clapton, the Grateful Dead, Jay-Z, Lady Gaga, Madonna, Maroon 5, Marvin Gaye, Mary J. Blige, Mos Def, Mötley Crüe, New Order, Rage Against the Machine, Ray Charles, Santigold, Sam Smith, Stevie Wonder, and The 1975.
To be clear,...
Here are just some of the stars with songs included in the deal: Adele, Aretha Franklin, Beyoncé, Blake Shelton, Bruno Mars, Carrie Underwood, David Bowie, Eric Clapton, the Grateful Dead, Jay-Z, Lady Gaga, Madonna, Maroon 5, Marvin Gaye, Mary J. Blige, Mos Def, Mötley Crüe, New Order, Rage Against the Machine, Ray Charles, Santigold, Sam Smith, Stevie Wonder, and The 1975.
To be clear,...
- 4/26/2021
- by Samantha Hissong
- Rollingstone.com
Santa Fe art collective Meow Wolf — which counts Game of Thrones writer George R.R. Martin as one of its creative contributors and financial backers — debuts Omega Mart inside Las Vegas’ AREA15, an experiential retail and entertainment complex, on Feb. 18.
Omega Mart is an intensely theatrical, immersive art experience encompassing 250 unique projects that invite discovery, showcasing contributions from more than 325 art, music and digital creators including artists Alex and Allyson Grey, known for the Chapel of Sacred Mirrors; musician Brian Eno; pop group Beach House; and singer Santigold.
“This is the culmination of 13 years of work as ...
Omega Mart is an intensely theatrical, immersive art experience encompassing 250 unique projects that invite discovery, showcasing contributions from more than 325 art, music and digital creators including artists Alex and Allyson Grey, known for the Chapel of Sacred Mirrors; musician Brian Eno; pop group Beach House; and singer Santigold.
“This is the culmination of 13 years of work as ...
- 2/16/2021
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
Santa Fe art collective Meow Wolf — which counts Game of Thrones writer George R.R. Martin as one of its creative contributors and financial backers — debuts Omega Mart inside Las Vegas’ AREA15, an experiential retail and entertainment complex, on Feb. 18.
Omega Mart is an intensely theatrical, immersive art experience encompassing 250 unique projects that invite discovery, showcasing contributions from more than 325 art, music and digital creators including artists Alex and Allyson Grey, known for the Chapel of Sacred Mirrors; musician Brian Eno; pop group Beach House; and singer Santigold.
“This is the culmination of 13 years of work as ...
Omega Mart is an intensely theatrical, immersive art experience encompassing 250 unique projects that invite discovery, showcasing contributions from more than 325 art, music and digital creators including artists Alex and Allyson Grey, known for the Chapel of Sacred Mirrors; musician Brian Eno; pop group Beach House; and singer Santigold.
“This is the culmination of 13 years of work as ...
- 2/16/2021
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Brian Eno, Beach House and Santigold are among the musical artists contributing to upcoming Las Vegas exhibit Omega Mart, as Brooklyn Vegan reports. Produced by Santa Fe-based arts and entertainment group Meow Wolf, the permanent exhibition will open in experiential complex AREA15 on February 18th.
The supermarket-themed exhibition is described as “an extraordinary supermarket” where visitors to the interactive and immersive art exhibit can “discover portals leading to surreal worlds full of unexpected art-filled landscapes in which to play.”
The musical artists, which also include Amon Tobin, Pleasure Corporation and El Búho,...
The supermarket-themed exhibition is described as “an extraordinary supermarket” where visitors to the interactive and immersive art exhibit can “discover portals leading to surreal worlds full of unexpected art-filled landscapes in which to play.”
The musical artists, which also include Amon Tobin, Pleasure Corporation and El Búho,...
- 2/10/2021
- by Althea Legaspi
- Rollingstone.com
“Every single week of quarantine, I’ve executed a contract by signing it on my phone,” says Sony/Atv Nashville CEO Rusty Gaston. His sentiment is echoed by many other music publishers — which, even as their label counterparts slow down on new signings, are ramping up deals.
Labels are feeling the need to be protective of their resources during this uncertain and unprecedented period, and developing a new artist can appear quite risky given the current (and rather desolate) landscape. But veteran artists who are already signed need more material...
Labels are feeling the need to be protective of their resources during this uncertain and unprecedented period, and developing a new artist can appear quite risky given the current (and rather desolate) landscape. But veteran artists who are already signed need more material...
- 5/13/2020
- by Samantha Hissong
- Rollingstone.com
Netflix’s “Self Made: Inspired by the Life of Madam C.J. Walker,” the story of America’s first self-made female millionaire, takes place between 1908 and 1918. But the music, instead of focusing on the early jazz that might be expected, runs the gamut from ragtime to hip-hop.
“Madam C.J. Walker is a central, seminal historical figure who I had heard about from my mother, who heard about it from her mother,” says music supervisor Morgan Rhodes. “Her story has been part of the fabric of black history down through the years — one that belongs to generations of women.”
Octavia Spencer plays Walker, the daughter of freed slaves who created a line of specialized hair products for African American women. Her entrepreneurial skills and intense drive made her one of the country’s wealthiest and most powerful women. When she died in 1919, she lived near the Astors and the Rockefellers on...
“Madam C.J. Walker is a central, seminal historical figure who I had heard about from my mother, who heard about it from her mother,” says music supervisor Morgan Rhodes. “Her story has been part of the fabric of black history down through the years — one that belongs to generations of women.”
Octavia Spencer plays Walker, the daughter of freed slaves who created a line of specialized hair products for African American women. Her entrepreneurial skills and intense drive made her one of the country’s wealthiest and most powerful women. When she died in 1919, she lived near the Astors and the Rockefellers on...
- 3/26/2020
- by Jon Burlingame
- Variety Film + TV
In June 2012, Bonnaroo broke its attendance record, selling 100,000 tickets. The four-day, camping-only Tennessee festival featured Radiohead, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Phish, Childish Gambino, Ludacris, Santigold — and, maybe most surprisingly, Kenny Rogers.
The festival had a history of booking left-field country veterans at its smaller “Other Tent,” including Loretta Lynn and Kris Kristofferson. Rogers reveled in the opportunity to play for a younger audience, grinning through a 21-song set of hits that included “Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In)” and a guest appearance by Lionel Richie...
The festival had a history of booking left-field country veterans at its smaller “Other Tent,” including Loretta Lynn and Kris Kristofferson. Rogers reveled in the opportunity to play for a younger audience, grinning through a 21-song set of hits that included “Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In)” and a guest appearance by Lionel Richie...
- 3/22/2020
- by Patrick Doyle
- Rollingstone.com
The title of Netflix’s miniseries “Self Made: Inspired by the Life of Madam C.J. Walker” implies that it’s not entirely a factual retelling of the pioneering entrepreneur, philanthropist, and activist’s life. In fact, the influence fundamental to Walker’s remarkable story barely exists in this rather underwhelming jumble.
The one thing that’s clear is that writers Nicole Jefferson Asher and Elle Johnson (working from a bio written by Walker’s great-great-granddaughter A’Lelia Bundles) and directors Kasi Lemmons and DeMane Davis want to tell a story that inspires and entertains. The degree to which they succeed in doing that is what’s ultimately in question. It’s pointless to critique creative license here, as many critics continue to do, so don’t expect much of a deep dive into the itinerant history of Walker’s business, which is highly abridged in the series, as are her philanthropic and social work.
The one thing that’s clear is that writers Nicole Jefferson Asher and Elle Johnson (working from a bio written by Walker’s great-great-granddaughter A’Lelia Bundles) and directors Kasi Lemmons and DeMane Davis want to tell a story that inspires and entertains. The degree to which they succeed in doing that is what’s ultimately in question. It’s pointless to critique creative license here, as many critics continue to do, so don’t expect much of a deep dive into the itinerant history of Walker’s business, which is highly abridged in the series, as are her philanthropic and social work.
- 3/20/2020
- by Tambay Obenson
- Indiewire
Paul Klimson, a veteran audio engineer who’s worked with artists like Justin Timberlake, the Roots, and Eric Clapton, was putting together a docket of upcoming shows across multiple venues last week. Then, suddenly, they were all axed in one go. A “text came through that wiped out $11,000 in gigs between now and at least April 8th,” Klimson tells Rolling Stone.
Klimson is one of thousands of behind-the-scenes figures in the live music business who’ve found themselves in limbo as the rising tide of Covid-19 cases cancels and postpones tours,...
Klimson is one of thousands of behind-the-scenes figures in the live music business who’ve found themselves in limbo as the rising tide of Covid-19 cases cancels and postpones tours,...
- 3/16/2020
- by Samantha Hissong
- Rollingstone.com
In our new series, we look at eight cities where live music has exploded — from legendary hubs like Chicago and Nashville, to rising hot spots like Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Portland, Maine. We also look at some far-flung destinations where the music the music is worth the journey. One of those places is Port Antonio, Jamaica, a formerly sleepy spot that features rum bars, street parties, and some of the best music in the world.
Even though he grew up in Kingston, Shaggy had never been to Port Antonio, the town...
Even though he grew up in Kingston, Shaggy had never been to Port Antonio, the town...
- 2/3/2020
- by David Browne
- Rollingstone.com
Tyler, the Creator wanders around a luxurious mansion as his alter-ego Igor in the new video for “A Boy Is a Gun.”
The visual follows Tyler — decked out in a blonde wig, sunglasses and several colorful outfits — as he gazes from the home’s balcony, runs through a maze-like garden and reclines in a bathtub. At the climax, he appears to be in some kind of emotional turmoil, screaming and falling to the ground as a man swims alone in a pool and eventually rides away in a car.
“A...
The visual follows Tyler — decked out in a blonde wig, sunglasses and several colorful outfits — as he gazes from the home’s balcony, runs through a maze-like garden and reclines in a bathtub. At the climax, he appears to be in some kind of emotional turmoil, screaming and falling to the ground as a man swims alone in a pool and eventually rides away in a car.
“A...
- 9/16/2019
- by Ryan Reed
- Rollingstone.com
There is certainly no pigeonholing Dee Rees, as the writer/director continues to surprise with her project choices, since her 2011 acclaimed indie debut feature, “Pariah.” In addition to the WWII drama “Mudbound,” Rees’ recent credits also include directing an episode of the Amazon sci-fi series “Electric Dreams,” based on the work of author Philip K. Dick, and an upcoming adaptation of Joan Didion’s political thriller “The Last Thing He Wanted.” Now she’s set to leave her mark in another genre, directing a musical fantasy titled “The Kyd’s Exquisite Follies” from her own script.
To be produced by Cassian Elwes, who was also a producer on Rees’ “Mudbound,” the project is described as “a swirling, futuristic roller coaster journey of a young musician who catapults herself from the anonymity of her hometown of Same Ol’, Same Ol’ to the bright lights and plastic sights of the fabled It City,...
To be produced by Cassian Elwes, who was also a producer on Rees’ “Mudbound,” the project is described as “a swirling, futuristic roller coaster journey of a young musician who catapults herself from the anonymity of her hometown of Same Ol’, Same Ol’ to the bright lights and plastic sights of the fabled It City,...
- 6/18/2019
- by Tambay Obenson
- Indiewire
“Mudbound” director Dee Rees will direct independent movie musical fantasy “The Kyd’s Exquisite Follies” from her own script.
“The Kyd’s Exquisite Follies” will be produced by Cassian Elwes, one of the “Mudbound” producers. Santigold is set to compose the music, with Lucasfilm’s Industrial Light & Magic creating the film’s visual effects. Endeavor Content is repping the project.
Rees has been in post-production on the Netflix political thriller “The Last Thing He Wanted for Netflix,” with Anne Hathaway, Willem Dafoe, Toby Jones and Ben Affleck starring. She teamed with Elwes as a producer on the project.
“The Kyd’s Exquisite Follies” centers on a young musician in search of stardom who catapults herself from the anonymity of her hometown of Same Ol’, Same Ol’ to the bright lights of the fabled It City.
Santigold is a singer, songwriter and record producer who has released four albums. She has...
“The Kyd’s Exquisite Follies” will be produced by Cassian Elwes, one of the “Mudbound” producers. Santigold is set to compose the music, with Lucasfilm’s Industrial Light & Magic creating the film’s visual effects. Endeavor Content is repping the project.
Rees has been in post-production on the Netflix political thriller “The Last Thing He Wanted for Netflix,” with Anne Hathaway, Willem Dafoe, Toby Jones and Ben Affleck starring. She teamed with Elwes as a producer on the project.
“The Kyd’s Exquisite Follies” centers on a young musician in search of stardom who catapults herself from the anonymity of her hometown of Same Ol’, Same Ol’ to the bright lights of the fabled It City.
Santigold is a singer, songwriter and record producer who has released four albums. She has...
- 6/17/2019
- by Dave McNary
- Variety Film + TV
Exclusive: Dee Rees has been set to direct The Kyd’s Exquisite Follies, a musical fantasy based on her own original script. Rees’ previous film, 2017’s Mudbound, got four Oscar nominations including one for her adapted script, and her Bessie Smith HBO biopic Bessie got her two Emmy noms for writing and directing, with the film winning Outstanding Television Movie among its four Emmys.
Rees will reteam with Mudbound producer Cassian Elwes, and Santigold is set to compose the music, with Lucasfilm’s Industrial Light & Magic creating the film’s visual effects. Endeavor Content is repping the project. Rees most recently wrapped The Last Thing He Wanted for Netflix, with Anne Hathaway and Ben Affleck starring.
The filmmaker announced herself as a voice to watch with her Sundance debut Pariah, and I watched her wage what then was an uphill battle to get awards season attention for her Netflix film Mudbound,...
Rees will reteam with Mudbound producer Cassian Elwes, and Santigold is set to compose the music, with Lucasfilm’s Industrial Light & Magic creating the film’s visual effects. Endeavor Content is repping the project. Rees most recently wrapped The Last Thing He Wanted for Netflix, with Anne Hathaway and Ben Affleck starring.
The filmmaker announced herself as a voice to watch with her Sundance debut Pariah, and I watched her wage what then was an uphill battle to get awards season attention for her Netflix film Mudbound,...
- 6/17/2019
- by Mike Fleming Jr
- Deadline Film + TV
Having finished her second Netflix feature The Last Thing He Wanted, filmmaker Dee Rees has chosen her next project — the fantasy musical The Kyd’s Exquisite Follies.
The movie, which is based on her original idea and script, will follow a young musician who catapults herself from the anonymity of her hometown of Same Ol’, Same Ol’, to the bright lights and plastic sights of the fabled It City in search of stardom. Singer-songwriter Santigold will compose the music.
Cassian Elwes, who worked with Rees on her previous feature, Netflix's Mudbound, will produce the movie, which is being repped by ...
The movie, which is based on her original idea and script, will follow a young musician who catapults herself from the anonymity of her hometown of Same Ol’, Same Ol’, to the bright lights and plastic sights of the fabled It City in search of stardom. Singer-songwriter Santigold will compose the music.
Cassian Elwes, who worked with Rees on her previous feature, Netflix's Mudbound, will produce the movie, which is being repped by ...
- 6/17/2019
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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