Schoolboy Q teased a new track that would arrive the next day. In a new Instagram video, the rapper previews brand-new music within the studio. “2morrow night we again at it,” the caption reads. Watch it go down below.
Q’s final full-length album, Blank Face LP, arrived in 2016. In the last 12 months, he appeared on 21 Savage’s I Am > I Was and joined TDE artists Kendrick, SZA, Jay Rock, and others for the Championship Tour. He additionally collaborated with Kamiya (“Addicted to Ballin”) and Future and DJ Esco (“Code of Honor”). Free Cake for Every Creature—the band headed via Philadelphia-primarily based singer-songwriter Katie Bennett—isn’t greater. Bennett introduced herself on Facebook, saying she was “determined to quit” the project “on high notice.” “I’m keen to move on to other tasks; however, gambling with loose cake becomes the satisfactory way I may want to have spent half of my 20s,” she persevered.
Bennett also introduced two last Free Cake indicates on May’s stop in New York City and Philadelphia. See her full announcement and the show dates beneath. Bennett first began a self-freeing track as Free Cake for Every Creature in 2013 with her first complete-period shitty beginnings. She signed Double Double Whammy in 2014 and shared Pretty Good with a full band. Free Cake dropped their sophomore album, Whispering of Anything With You, in 2016—their remaining album, The Bluest Star, arrived in 12 months.
An Oregon concert promoter had sued Goldenvoice in 2018, who claimed anti-accept as true with damages in April 2018; Coachella organizers Goldenvoice has been hit with a lawsuit that alleged the pageant’s restrictive radius clause become in violation of anti-believe law. Oregon-based promoter Soul’d Out Productions claimed that the Coachella settlement legally forbids artists from playing any other North American festival from December 15 to May 1—harm their annual Soul’d Out Music Festival. The presiding judge within the case has completely dismissed the lawsuit, as Billboard reviews.
In the original lawsuit, Soul’d Out organizers claimed that SZA and Daniel Caesar had to turn down their festival due to the clause. In a rebuttal, Coachella organizers stated they might “vigorously shield towards this lawsuit, which calls into question an extended-standing enterprise exercise this is important to our ability to maintain providing fans the unrivaled revel in for which Coachella has to turn out to be recognized.” In October 2018, U.S. District Court Judge Michael Mosman brushed off the lawsuit but allowed the claims to be refiled with technical tweaks. Mosman has now determined that no anti-accept as true with harm turned into made against Soul’d Out with the aid of Goldenvoice due to the radius clause.
Read “Coachella’s Controversial Radius Clause Isn’t That Hard to Get Around” on the Pitch.
