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Black History Month: Important 2010s albums by Black musicians (part 1)

Black History Month: Important 2010s albums by Black musicians (part 1)
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Nyck Caution: Anywhere but Here

Anywhere But Here, the album’s hollow interiority representative of the collective’s ongoing identity crisis. When Joey Bada$$ introduced his Murrow High schoolmates on 2012’s 1999, they arrived with the verve of eager theater kids who’d stumbled upon a shopworn copy of Enta da Stage. As the years passed, Pro Era strove to shake the revivalist tag but struggled to to distinguish themselves otherwise. On 2017’s All-Amerikkkan Bada$$, Joey flitted between street-corner chronicles and we-the-people generational spokesmanship, yet couldn’t quite commit to either; the group clung to a nebulous ideal of New York City as a cultural institution in hopes of ascribing their music with secondhand prestige. 2019’s supergroup outing

Let Nyck Caution Be Your Outlet: Interview

Brooklyn’s Nyck Caution has been through a lot. From his 2016 debut mixtape, Disguise the Limit, where he breaks down tales of his drug-addled Mill Basin neighborhood and deals with the passing of Pro Era’s Capital Steez, to 2017’s collaboration with fellow Pro Era rapper-producer Kirk Knight ( Nyck @ Knight), he’s been no stranger to introspective raps as coping mechanisms. In 2020, Nyck released Open Flame, a short and playful EP meant to tease his long-awaited debut album, Anywhere But Here. Well, the time is now, as the Brooklyn emcee finally drops the homegrown effort today, January 15. Anywhere But Here to deal with the untimely passing of his father. Several tracks, including the harrowing opener, “December 24th,” detail Nyck’s wrestling with traumatic loss. Much like 2016’s

UofL band members invited to perform at CFP Championship halftime

The Cardinal Marching Band shown in a pre-pandemic performance. Eleven members of the Cardinal Marching Band have been invited to be among nearly 1,500 nominated performers from 200 bands in 45 states and Puerto Rico participating in the College Band Directors National Association (CBDNA) Intercollegiate Marching Band (IMB) National Halftime Show on Monday, Jan. 11. Joining in unity during the worldwide pandemic when college marching bands have been forced to the sidelines, the IMB will keep the spirit alive by performing Beyonce’s “End of Time” at halftime during the College Football Playoff National Championship game between the Ohio State Buckeyes and Alabama Crimson Tide. The game begins at 8 p.m., Monday, Jan. 11; halftime is expected near 10 p.m.

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