Friday, May 29, 2026

Young MC, the Commodores and Morris Day Back Away From Freedom 250 Concert

An editorial graphic shows Freedom 250’s throwback concert lineup after several announced performers publicly backed away from the Great American State Fair. The controversy turned names tied to “Bust a Move,” “Brick House” and Morris Day’s Minneapolis funk legacy into the center of a dispute over politics, consent and the cost of putting old-school stars on a modern political stage.
A celebration built around nostalgia has become a warning about what happens when old-school music, national symbolism and modern politics collide before the first note is played.

Young MC, Morris Day and the Time, the Commodores, Martina McBride and Bret Michaels are among the artists who have pulled out of or backed away from Freedom 250’s Great American State Fair, a 16-day event scheduled for June 25 through July 10 on the National Mall. The event was promoted as part of the nation’s 250th birthday celebration, with a lineup that leaned heavily on throwback acts, country crossover and patriotic spectacle.

Then the bill started falling apart.

Young MC, Morris Day and The Time, The Commodores, McBride and Michaels are among the artists who have since pulled out of or publicly backed away from the event. The rollout quickly turned into a public dispute over politics, consent and what some artists said they were told before their names appeared on the flyer.


Young MC, best known for the 1989 hit “Bust a Move,” said he had informed his agents that he would not perform at the Freedom 250 event. In a statement, he said artists were not told about political involvement with the concert and said he hoped to perform in Washington in the future at an event that was not “politically charged.”

Morris Day made his position even clearer. The longtime frontman of the Time posted that he and the band would not perform at the Great American State Fair, adding a short caption that cut through the confusion: “It’s a no for me.”

The Commodores also said they would not appear. The group, whose catalog includes “Brick House,” “Easy” and “Three Times a Lady,” said its music had always been its voice and that it would not publicly affiliate with any single political party.

McBride said she initially believed she had agreed to a nonpartisan celebration of the states. In a statement to fans, the country singer said what she had been told was not what was happening and that she would not perform June 25. Michaels later stepped away as well, saying the event had become more divisive than what he agreed to join and citing threats and safety concerns involving his fans, band, crew and family.

Freedom 250 has described itself as a nonpartisan organization focused on commemorating America’s 250th anniversary. Its official event page bills the Great American State Fair as a national exposition running from the U.S. Capitol to the Washington Monument, with live music, carnival rides and hands-on partner activations meant to showcase the states and territories.

That framing did not stop the backlash.

AP reported that Freedom 250 was launched by President Donald Trump late last year and that Trump appointed Keith Krach, a former under secretary of state, as the organization’s CEO. That connection became central to the controversy as artists faced questions from fans about whether their appearances amounted to support for a Trump-linked event.


The confusion was still visible on the event’s own ticket pages. As of Friday, Freedom 250 pages continued to list McBride, Young MC, C+C Music Factory, Milli Vanilli, the Commodores, Morris Day and the Time, and Michaels even after several of those artists had publicly pulled out, denied involvement or disputed what their participation meant.

For legacy performers, the issue is bigger than one booking. Their names carry decades of audience memory. A listing on a public lineup can imply alignment, endorsement or participation before a performer says a word. In the social media era, that can become a reputational problem almost instantly.

The Milli Vanilli listing carried its own confusion because the name has a complicated history. Rob Pilatus and Fab Morvan were the public faces of the act during its late-1980s pop explosion, but the group’s recordings were performed by studio vocalists. Pilatus died in 1998. Morvan has continued performing and, according to AP, said he would appear at the Great American State Fair.

That does not mean everyone tied to the Milli Vanilli legacy is part of the event. Jodie Rocco, a singer associated with the Real Milli Vanilli side of the group’s history, told AP that she, her sister Linda Rocco and other current group members had not been asked to perform and were surprised to see the name on the bill. The distinction matters: Morvan represents the public-facing Milli Vanilli name most audiences remember, while singers tied to the group’s actual recorded vocals say they are not involved in the Freedom 250 appearance.

The C+C Music Factory listing also became complicated. Freedom Williams, the rapper whose voice helped define the group’s “Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)” era, publicly discussed the booking while distancing himself from Trump politically. Robert Clivillés, who co-founded C+C Music Factory with the late David Cole, has disputed Williams’ authority to represent the group as a whole.

Vanilla Ice appeared to remain on the bill, with a representative telling AP he was proud to help celebrate America’s 250th anniversary. Flo Rida was also listed in the original announcement, though the status of the lineup remained fluid as artists continued responding publicly.

That uncertainty is the story now. A concert series marketed as unity became a test of how quickly nostalgia can turn political when the wrong context surrounds the stage.

Young MC, Morris Day, the Commodores, C+C Music Factory and Milli Vanilli are not just names on a flyer. They are part of the soundtrack of an era when rap, funk, R&B, dance-pop and MTV-driven spectacle crossed into the mainstream in ways that still shape old-school parties and throwback festivals today.

These artists built careers around movement, memory and mass appeal. Their records were made to get people on the floor, not to place them in the middle of a national political argument.

Freedom 250 may still hold the Great American State Fair. It may revise the lineup. It may continue presenting the event as a nonpartisan celebration. But the first wave of music announcements has already become a cautionary tale about transparency, artist consent and the risk of using familiar names to sell a complicated moment.

Before anyone could “Bust a Move” on the National Mall, the question became who knew what, who agreed to what and who wanted no part of the room once the lights came up.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Drake Passes Michael Jackson With 14th Hot 100 No. 1

A sequined glove, invoking the imagery of Michael Jackson, is featured in the promotional artwork for Drake's album "Iceman." The Toronto rapper surpassed Jackson this week for the most No. 1 singles by a solo male artist in Billboard Hot 100 history following the debut of his track "Janice STFU."
Drake may have lost the battle for hip-hop’s cultural crown, but his overwhelming streaming dominance has officially secured him the Billboard throne.

“Janice STFU” debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, giving Drake his 14th career chart-topper and moving him past Michael Jackson for the most No. 1 singles by a solo male artist in Hot 100 history. The record breaks a tie that linked two very different kinds of dominance: Jackson’s tightly controlled reign over the MTV, radio and blockbuster-album age, and Drake’s command of a modern system built on streaming volume, constant visibility and fan-driven chart pressure.

That distinction matters. Passing Jackson does not end any debate about cultural weight, performance, artistry or influence. Jackson remains one of the most transformative entertainers in American history. But Billboard records are about chart performance, and on that field, Drake has built one of the most overwhelming statistical runs popular music has ever seen.

The latest milestone came from a release strategy almost designed to test the limits of the charts. Drake released three albums at once — “Iceman,” “Habibti” and “Maid of Honour” — and all three debuted at Nos. 1, 2 and 3 on the Billboard 200. According to Billboard, it marked the first time one artist held the chart’s top three positions simultaneously in its 70-year history.

“Iceman” opened at No. 1 with 463,000 equivalent album units in the United States, followed by “Habibti” with 114,000 and “Maid of Honour” with 110,000. The sweep also gave Drake his 15th Billboard 200 No. 1 album, moving him past Jay-Z among rappers and tying Taylor Swift for the most No. 1 albums among solo artists.

The Hot 100 takeover was even more extreme. Drake placed 42 songs on the chart in the same week, breaking Morgan Wallen’s previous single-week record of 37. Forty of those Drake songs were debuts. The surge pushed Drake to 402 career Hot 100 entries, making him the first artist to cross the 400-entry mark in the chart’s 67-year history.

“Janice STFU” led the avalanche. The “Iceman” standout interpolates Lykke Li’s “I Follow Rivers,” turning a moody 2011 indie-pop hook into the center of a Drake record built for replay, reaction and debate. The track also helped give Lykke Li her first Hot 100 credit at No. 1, another reminder of how one Drake single can pull older sounds, outside influences and unexpected collaborators into the middle of the mainstream.

Drake nearly locked down the entire top 10, placing nine songs in that region. The only non-Drake song in the top 10 was Ella Langley’s “Choosin’ Texas,” which held the No. 5 spot and kept the week from becoming a complete sweep.

Drake marked the moment on Instagram with Michael Jackson-inspired artwork showing Jackson with “Iceman” blue braids in a snowy scene. His caption read, “Neck broke from carrying the chain Back broke from carrying the game Records broken carry on my name Carry on carry on.”

The image was pointed. The comparison was unavoidable. But the real story is not simply Drake versus Michael Jackson. It is what the comparison says about how music power has changed.

Jackson’s records were built in an era when a single album could freeze the culture in place. Drake’s latest records come from a different machine: a massive catalog, a relentless release pace, streaming-era math and an audience trained to treat every drop like a real-time event. One model made icons feel unreachable. The other makes dominance feel measurable by the hour.

That does not make one era cleaner than the other. It does make the achievement more complicated than a number on a chart. Drake has not replaced Jackson’s place in pop history, and no Billboard statistic can do that. But with “Janice STFU,” he has claimed a record Jackson held for decades — and he did it in a week that showed, more than ever, how completely Drake understands the new rules of the game.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Jazz Titan Sonny Rollins Dead at 95

Jazz legend Sonny Rollins performs with his tenor saxophone in 1974. Rollins, a towering figure in the development of modern jazz, passed away on Monday, May 25, 2026, at age 95.
Sonny Rollins, the tenor saxophonist whose commanding improvisations and robust tone are credited with helping shape the trajectory of modern jazz, died Sunday at his home in Woodstock, New York. He was 95.

His death was confirmed Monday through a statement released by his family on social media.

"It is with deep sorrow and profound love that we announce the passing of Sonny Rollins," the statement read.

While a specific cause of death was not provided, Rollins had been managing a respiratory illness that prompted his retirement from public performance in 2012.

Widely revered as the "Saxophone Colossus" — a moniker cemented by his landmark 1956 album of the same name — Rollins stood as one of the last living architects of the post-World War II jazz landscape. His capacity to weave complex, extended musical narratives during live solos forever shifted the paradigm of the instrument.

Born Theodore Walter Rollins on Sept. 7, 1930, in Harlem, New York, he came of age in a culturally rich environment alongside future peers like Jackie McLean. By the 1950s, he had firmly established his presence in the bebop and hard bop scenes, sharing the stage and studio with titans including Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk, Charlie Parker and Max Roach.

Rollins contributed heavily to the definitive jazz songbook, penning enduring compositions such as the calypso-inspired "St. Thomas," "Oleo," "Doxy" and "Airegin." His extensive catalog is highlighted by defining works like "Tenor Madness," "Way Out West" and "The Bridge." The latter project famously materialized after a rigorous, self-imposed sabbatical where Rollins spent hours practicing alone on the pedestrian walkway of the Williamsburg Bridge to refine his technique.

A perpetual student of his own craft, Rollins was celebrated with the highest honors in American art, receiving a Grammy Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2004, the National Medal of Arts in 2010 and Kennedy Center Honors in 2011.

He is survived by his nephew, Clifton Anderson, and an expansive global community of musicians influenced by his sound. His wife and longtime manager, Lucille Pearson Rollins, died in 2004.


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