Tuesday, January 20, 2026

A$AP Rocky Takes 'Don’t Be Dumb' on the Road With First Major Tour in Years

A$AP Rocky performs during a live concert appearance in support of his new album, “Don’t Be Dumb.” The rapper announced a 42-date world tour for 2026, marking his first major headlining run in several years.
A$AP Rocky is taking his new album on the road.

The Harlem rapper announced the “Don’t Be Dumb World Tour” today, confirming a 42-date run across North America, Europe and the U.K. that will mark his first major headlining tour in years. The tour formally launches the live phase of “Don’t Be Dumb,” Rocky’s first full-length album in nearly eight years, and places the project squarely in front of audiences rather than allowing it to live solely online.

Promoted by Live Nation, the tour opens May 27 at the United Center in Chicago and moves through major North American arenas, including Los Angeles’ Kia Forum, Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena and Houston’s Toyota Center, before wrapping its U.S. leg July 11 at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey. The European and U.K. run begins Aug. 25 in Brussels and continues through cities including London, Milan, Stockholm and Berlin, closing Sept. 30 at Accor Arena in Paris.

The global on-sale begins Jan. 27 at 9 a.m. local time via asaprocky.com, with multiple presale windows preceding it. North American artist presales begin Jan. 23, while EU and U.K. artist presales open Jan. 21. A Cash App Visa Card presale will offer early access to U.S. dates, along with limited merchandise and vinyl incentives tied to the tour.
 

The announcement arrives just days after the release of “Don’t Be Dumb,” which landed last Friday following one of the longest gaps between studio albums in Rocky’s career. Billboard, reviewing the project, wrote that the album “not only rewards patience but adds new wrinkles to the rapper’s approach — an evolved relationship with melody and a wiser lyrical slant,” framing it as a work shaped by time rather than trend-chasing.

That patience had already translated into measurable anticipation. Ahead of release, “Don’t Be Dumb” surpassed 1 million pre-saves on Spotify, a figure widely cited by the platform and Rocky’s camp as unprecedented for a hip-hop album. The buildup was fueled by a year in which Rocky remained highly visible outside of music, starring in two A24-produced films, co-chairing the 2025 Met Gala and taking on creative leadership roles with Ray-Ban and Chanel.

What distinguishes this moment, however, is the speed with which Rocky has moved from release to performance. Rather than spacing out appearances or limiting the album to festival slots, the tour positions “Don’t Be Dumb” within a traditional album cycle — one centered on rooms, crowds and repetition.

Rocky’s last studio album, “Testing,” arrived in 2018 and was followed by sporadic performances rather than a sustained tour. In the years since, his public profile has expanded well beyond music. This run places the emphasis back on the work itself, asking how the new material holds up night after night.

For an artist whose early reputation was forged as much onstage as on record, the tour represents more than a victory lap. It is the clearest signal yet that “Don’t Be Dumb” is not a standalone event, but the opening chapter of an album era designed to be lived — and judged — in real time.

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Rare Demo Cassette From Tupac’s Baltimore Years Offered in Landmark Auction Tupac Shakur’s Pre-Fame “Born Busy” Tape Hits Auction Block

Tupac Shakur appears in a 1988 yearbook photo from the Baltimore School for the Arts, taken the same year as newly surfaced recordings that capture the future rapper performing with his early group Born Busy, years before his commercial breakthrough.
A rare piece of hip-hop history has surfaced — not as a remaster or reissue, but as an original artifact from the very beginning of Tupac Shakur’s creative life.

A cassette tape containing what is believed to be some of the earliest surviving recordings of Tupac is being offered at auction, documenting the rapper years before his commercial debut and long before his name became synonymous with modern hip-hop mythology. The recordings date to 1988, when Tupac was approximately 16 years old and performing under the name MC New York as part of his pre-fame rap group, Born Busy.

The tape was recorded at the Baltimore home of Gerard “Ge-ology” Young’s parents. Young, who would later become a producer and DJ, was a close friend and creative collaborator of Tupac during that period. The cassette captures Tupac alongside fellow Born Busy members Gerard Young (DJ Plain Terror), Darrin K. Bastfield (Ace Rocker) and Dana “Mouse” Smith (Slick D), rapping acapella in informal sessions that doubled as a learning tool.

Rather than recording finished songs, Young would tape acapella performances so he could study the verses and later construct beats around them — a reversed production process that predates Tupac’s later studio work and offers a rare look at his earliest creative instincts. The sessions include freestyles, song ideas, samples, laughter and conversation, preserving an unguarded snapshot of a young artist still forming his voice.

The cassette’s track list includes early recordings such as “Check It Out!,” “That’s My Man Throwin’ Down,” “I Saw Your Girl,” “We Work Hard,” “Born Busy LIVE Freestyle,” “Babies Having Babies” and “Terror’s On The Tables (Dedication to DJ Plain Terror).” None of the material was ever commercially released.

What elevates the tape beyond a compelling curiosity is its provenance. The cassette has remained in Young’s possession since it was recorded, preserved and archived privately for decades. The uninterrupted chain of custody places it among the rarest surviving audio documents from Tupac’s formative years, offering a direct line to his earliest recorded performances.

The auction also includes additional artifacts from the same period, including handwritten lyrics, archival photographs from Baltimore cyphers and gatherings, and personal ephemera connected to Tupac’s youth before his rise to global fame.

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

NAACP Image Awards Nominees Spotlight a Year of Black-Led Film, TV and Music

Teyana Taylor, nominated for Entertainer of the Year at the 57th NAACP Image Awards, is among a field that also includes Kendrick Lamar, reflecting a year in which music, film and performance-driven storytelling converged across Black culture.
The NAACP on Monday announced the full list of nominees for the 57th NAACP Image Awards, placing this year’s ceremony squarely in the middle of an awards season already shaped by Black-led film, television and music.

Cynthia Erivo, Doechii, Kendrick Lamar, Michael B. Jordan and Teyana Taylor were nominated for Entertainer of the Year, one of the Image Awards’ most closely watched categories. The ceremony will air live Feb. 28 from the Pasadena Civic Auditorium at 8 p.m. (ET/8 p.m. PT on BET), with a simultaneous broadcast on CBS.
SIDEBAR: Who’s leading the 57th NAACP Image Awards

The 57th NAACP Image Awards reflect a year in which Black storytelling dominated across film, television and music — not just in volume, but in cultural reach.

Kendrick Lamar leads the music categories with six nominations. In film, “Sinners” leads the motion picture categories with 18 nominations. On the television side, “Bel-Air” tops the field with seven nominations. Netflix leads all platforms with 47 nominations overall, according to the NAACP.

The Entertainer of the Year nominees — Cynthia Erivo, Doechii, Kendrick Lamar, Michael B. Jordan and Teyana Taylor — underline how performance, authorship and cultural impact increasingly move together.

Full nominee list + public voting: naacpimageawards.net

Film and television categories reflect a year of sustained visibility across platforms. “Sinners” leads the motion picture field with 18 nominations, followed by “Highest 2 Lowest” with nine. In television and streaming, “Bel-Air” tops the list with seven nominations, while “Abbott Elementary,” “Reasonable Doubt” and “Ruth & Boaz” earned six nods apiece. Netflix led all networks with 47 nominations overall.

Teyana Taylor emerged as one of this year’s most broadly recognized nominees, earning six nominations across film and music, including Entertainer of the Year, acting nods for “One Battle After Another” and “Tyler Perry’s Straw,” and recognition for her album “Escape Room.” Erivo received four nominations, including Entertainer of the Year and a nomination for her performance in “Wicked: For Good.”

In the music recording categories, Kendrick Lamar received the most nominations with six. Cardi B. and Leon Thomas earned four nominations each, while Doechii and Taylor followed closely with three apiece. RCA Records led all labels with eight nominations. In literary categories, HarperCollins topped publishers with eight nominations, followed by Penguin Random House with six.

This year also marks a structural expansion for the Image Awards themselves. The NAACP introduced two new categories: Outstanding Literary Work – Journalism, honoring nationally distributed journalism that reflects Black experiences and social impact through a lens of equity and justice; and Outstanding Editing in a Motion Picture or Television Series, Movie, or Special, recognizing the craft of post-production in shaping narrative and emotional clarity.

Nominations were announced live on “CBS Mornings” by comedian Deon Cole and NAACP President and CEO Derrick Johnson, with additional reveals streamed on YouTube and NAACPPlus.

“The NAACP Image Awards is our declaration to our community that ‘We See You,’ affirming Black creativity, excellence and humanity across every space where our stories are told,” Johnson said in a statement. “From film, television and music to literature and beyond, the voices of all of our nominees tell stories that honor our past, celebrate our identity and move culture forward.”

BET President Louis Carr echoed that sentiment, calling the nominees “the heartbeat of culture” and emphasizing the awards’ role in elevating storytelling rooted in authenticity and purpose.

Public voting is now open in select categories at naacpimageawards.net and runs through Feb. 7. Winners will be announced during the live broadcast Feb. 28, with additional honors presented during the NAACP Image Awards Creative Honors events later that week.

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