Julieta Venegas brought her brilliant pop ballads – and some powerful political messages – to the Billboard Latin Women in Music 2026 special, which aired live on Thursday (April 23) on Telemundo.
Starting at her piano, the Tijuana-born star, with her hair tied back in a ponytail and wearing gold earrings, performed “La Línea,” a song originally in collaboration with Yahritza y Su Esencia that was released on April 9. The deeply emotional track captures the nostalgia and feelings of separation brought about by the border, also known as “la línea,” a colloquial term also referring to the Tijuana-San Ysidro border crossing…
Born in Kutaisi, Georgia and raised in Belfast and London, Ketevan Melua became the UK’s best-selling female artist within 3 years of the release of her debut, 2003’s Call Off the Search.
The album went six times Platinum and spent 6 weeks at #1 on the UK charts.
“The Closest Thing to Crazy”, written by producer Mike Batt (writer of Art Garfunkel’s “Bright Eyes” and the beautiful “Railway Hotel“) went to #10 in the UK.
As a long-time wedding DJ I curated lengthy lists of songs suitable for the various events of the wedding reception, including choices for the bride’s dance with her father and the groom’s dance with his mom.
When couples asked for suggestions, I had many, but was commonly disappointed when they almost invariably went on to choose “Because You Loved Me”, “What a Wonderful World” or (hack, spit) “Butterfly Kisses”.
Seemed a great way to make a special moment cliched and generic.
I always thought Brother Ray’s “Don’t Change On Me” would’ve made a great choice if someone was looking to stray from the usual.
I even shared that thought with my daughter, telling her if the occasion arose and she let me choose the song, this obscure old nugget would be my choice.
Well, my daughter’s wedding was a surprise affair. I was invited to bring my mom to a “summer party” and had no idea it was anything more than a picnic in the local community park until we arrived and saw chairs set up facing a little white arch.
The modest ceremony was followed by lunch in a small adjacent indoor facility, and sometime after I was surprised to be instructed to join my daughter in the center of the room while the groom cued up a recording on a small portable sound system.
And though the wedding had been a casual, secular celebration, there was Brother Ray bringing a little “church”.
It had been years since I’d mentioned it. But she hadn’t forgotten.
And moments like that, Emily, are why I love you just the way you are.
The Dear Hunter: Act IV: Rebirth in Reprise (2015)
The Dear Hunter are rather like the Suave Shampoo of rock bands.
You’ve seen Suave in your supermarket hair care aisle, in myriad varieties packaged to mimic more expensive brands. It accomplishes the same goal–squeaky-clean hair–without the extra cost.
Providence, Rhode Island progressive rock band The Dear Hunter display great ambition, masterful songwriting, engaging melodies, stellar vocal performances adorned with rich harmonies and compelling orchestration, all in a wide variety of styles.
In other words, they’re a great band–but without the recognition factor of the “name brands”, none of the love-’em/hate ’em preconceived notions of those legends in the Rock Hall or on the cover of Rolling Stone. (They do still put rock bands on the cover of Rolling Stone, right?)
The band known as The Dear Hunter originated in 2006 as a side project of Casey Crescenzo, whose day job had involved another group called The Receiving End of Sirens, with whom he’d come to a parting of the ways. Crescenzo soon after released the first volume of a planned six-album concept project telling the story of the life of a boy (known as “The Dear Hunter”) born at the dawn of the 20th century. Yes, this guy is telling a story that will be six albums long. Take that, Ian Anderson.
To literally make a long story short, installment IV, Rebirth in Reprise, was released in 2015 and was unequivocally one of the best rock albums released that year.
Crescenzo is a confident composer who possesses a deft hand at complex orchestral arrangement à la Brian Wilson, whose Beach Boys harmonies seem to echo here and there on the album as well. At other times you may hear a touch of ELO as backing vocal wallpaper, or the quirky pop smarts of 10cc, or the over-the-top theatricality of Queen, or the genre-flouting intrepidity of Swedish prog band A.C.T. This album veers and careens stylistically in dizzying, spectacular fashion.
It’s a heady mix, but requires a bit more patience than the average rock record. Rebirth in Reprise is a 74-minute musical bounce castle of an album that probably won’t reward the typical listener fully before at least half a dozen plays. (Twice that if you have kids in the car.)
But as with all great records, the time investment yields a substantial payoff–at least, if you consider unrelenting earworms to be a desirable thing.
The elegiac ballad “The Line”, one of the album’s quieter and most sublime moments, is not to be missed. With its moody, acoustic guitar-driven arrangement, plaintive vocal and theme of denouement, it’s reminiscent of the perennial Kansas concert encore and Bic-magnet “Dust in the Wind”. Majestic, sad and elegant.
With other projects, such as the multi-volume Color Spectrum collection, continually pulling his attention away, it remains to be seen whether Crescenzo ever completes the intended 6-part saga.
But even if you only hear this portion of the story, or disregard the story altogether, the great musical moments here make for an impressive melodic progressive rock record.
Listen to: “The Old Haunt“
Listen to: “Waves”
Listen to: “Is Anybody There?”
Listen to: “The Squeaky Wheel”
Listen to: “The Bitter Suite IV and V: The Congregation and the Sermon in the Silt”