Happy National Pancake Day!
We’re flipping for flapjacks.
Prince’s legacy thrives at five-hour tribute show
Prince may have died nearly six months ago, but his spirit lived on in the Twin Cities Thursday night.
Marquee names in rock ‘n’ roll, funk and pop music all took the Xcel Energy Center stage during a nearly five-hour tribute to the late Minnesota-born music legend. Stevie Wonder, Chaka Khan, Jessie J (a last-minute addition), Tori Kelly, The New Power Generation and many others paid respect by providing more than 45 tracks from the multi-decade catalog of His Royal Badness to the thousands attending.
“It is an emotional night for me and I’m just trying to keep it together because I miss him,” Wonder, a 1989 Rock and Roll Hall of Fameinductee, told the crowd during the final hour of the show. “We talked about so much … so many plans just to make the world a better place.”
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Savannah College of Art and Design made chalk great again with their 35th annual Sidewalk Arts Festival last week.
(Photos: Justin Chan, Dylan Wilson, Justin McKinnon)
Who’ll inherit Prince’s millions? It’s complicated.
It’s Jazz Fest in New Orleans! Music, skywriting and love honor Prince at the annual New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. Coachella performers also remembered Prince this weekend. These photos by AP and FilmMagic.
Legendary musician Prince has died at the age of 57.
Prince has recorded a song for Baltimore – release plans are not set, but this is what the art will look like.
An official statement from spokesperson Yvette Noel-Schure said that the song “addresses the unrest in Baltimore and the socio/political issues around the country in the wake of a slew of killings of young black men.”









