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  • The Charlotte rapper's new album, Laughing so Hard, it Hurts, is more direct in thought and intention than his debut, more open and vulnerable, letting his observations guide his insights.
  • Desire, I Want to Turn Into You is a natural next step in the adventurous songwriter's series of evolutions, one that embraces ridiculousness and beckons pop toward a rigorous, maximalist sound.
  • Take a little bit of laughter, a whole lot of spiritual boldness, and an expectation that God still does miracles – and you have the ingredients for a “Healing and Miracles Event” with Joan Hunter. The FREE two-day event will be Feb. 11-12 at the Ronald Reagan Community Center in El Cajon. The minister from Tomball, Texas, has been described as ‘Carol Burnett with the anointing of Jesus’. She brings joy and faith to her interactive meetings. Her focus is to train and equip believers of Jesus Christ to take the healing power of God beyond the four walls of the church and into the four corners of the earth. Healing and Miracles will be held over the course of three sessions: Friday, Feb. 11 at 7 p.m.; Saturday, Feb. 12 at 10 a.m.; and Saturday, Feb. 12 at 7 p.m. The event is hosted by El Cajon minister Paula Bornsen and her sister Sandy Furst. Both women have gone through Hunter’s complete healing school and been ordained with her ministry. For more information, visit joanhunter.org or call Paula at 619-452-6402.
  • Trump-appointed federal judge Matthew Kacsmaryk ruled that free birth control for teens from a federal program violates Texas law and parental rights. For now, it's still available in other states.
  • In the aftermath of an early-pandemic breakdown, Combs sought solace in a regular songwriting routine. The result is a beautiful, intimate album that grapples with personal and existential questions.
  • Free admission From the gallery: "Crossing the Line" features the artwork of 29 artists whose work considers the notion of boundaries and borders. The exhibition brings together a range of media and individual artworks articulating a breadth of concepts weaving together narratives that touch on communication, the duality and perception of borders, identity, and migration. Whether interpreting these ideas in relation to material or process, social and cultural expectations, or socio-political factors, the work in this exhibition represents expansive approaches and perspectives. Crossing the Line is organized by the SDSU Art Galleries. The exhibition is juried by Guusje Sanders and Alexandro Segade. Crossing the Line and related events are sponsored by the School of Art and Design and the College of Professional Studies and Fine Arts. Featuring work by current faculty and alumni of the School of Art and Design: Juan Cabrera, Claudia Cano, Remi Dalton, Yvette Dibos, David Fobes, Natalie M. Godinez, Christian Garcia-Olivo, Chitra Gopalakrishnan, Meredith Habermann, Matthew Hebert, CJ Heyliger, Zac Keane, Neil Kendricks, Aleya Lanteigne, Rianne Elyse Magbuhat, Chaz Martinsen, Jennifer Moore, Caitlin Petersen, Luciano Pimienta, Kerianne Quick, Michael Rybicki, Sage Serrano, Aren Skalman, Kline Swonger, Kelly Temple, Christiana E. Updegraff, Mary Cale Wilson, Tessie Salcido Whitmore, Tyler Young On view March 7 – May 4, 2023 Gallery Hours: Tuesday – Thursday from 12:00 – 4:00 p.m. and by appointment Related events: All events are free and open to the public Opening Reception with Artists: Thursday, March 2 from 4:00 – 7:00 p.m. University Art Gallery For more information about the exhibition, events or parking, please contact the SDSU Art Galleries at artgalleries@sdsu.edu or 619-594-5171. Directions and parking: For SDSU campus interactive map, click here. Once parked, you can use the “wayfinding” tool in this map from your parking spot to the “SDSU Art Gallery” to find your route. Visitors may pay to park in Parking Structure 12 in any Student/Visitor space on levels 3–8. Parking passes can be purchased on level 8 in person. Once on campus, visitors may also purchase passes with the Pay by Phone app or calling 1-800-515-7275 (use the code 28512 for Parking Structure 12). University Art Gallery School of Art + Design Art North Building 4th-Floor Courtyard 5500 Campanile Drive San Diego, CA 92182 619-594-5171
  • We talk to five people who are forging their own path in the industry, and bringing their unique experience to the world of video games.
  • After three weeks, NPR's Leila Fadel speaks again with Assalah Shikhani, a Syrian refugee who lost family members and her home when an earthquake shattered parts of Turkey and Syria.
  • Since their self-titled debut album seven years ago, Ibeyi’s stunning parallel harmonies and integral minimalist Latin percussion has shared a message of power and possibility across airwaves around the globe, cutting through an individualist framework that emphasizes self over society and success over soul. Ibeyi’s artistic expression of visuals and sound broke through the cultural zeitgeist to become one of the most original and recognizable sounds of our time. An ever evolving duo, they are unafraid to be in their multitudes, at once daughters, sisters, icons, philosophers, composers, singers, fashion gods, and prophets. It is no surprise then that "Spell 31" speaks to us as a prophecy, one we are on the cusp of realizing if only we dared to embrace the magic and step into the supernatural that Ibeyi so easily inhabits. Their former albums were portals. Ibeyi worked through grief, dismay, family and love with gothic gospel frequencies; it was a confrontation with the personal. "Ash," their second album, grappled with the realities of race and gender, it examined the human condition, weaving West African and Yoruban tradition into its message. It grappled with the political. "Spell 31" embraces the whole. It is the other side of the portal, an anchor when we feel our most aimless and adrift. With the world still reeling in the aftermath of a pandemic, another racial reckoning, climate fueled existential dread, and moral decay accelerated by crumbling democratic structures, Ibeyi’s "Spell 31" is their boldest offering yet, an antidote to apathy in a divided world. Ethereal, crystalized signature Ibeyi harmonies are fused with gospel, persuasive percussion, momentous deeply resonant bass, and electronic neo soul expressions, transporting us into a sublime rawness that is refined by Richard Russell’s precise hand and synthesized into astonishing clarity. "Spell 31" casts with conviction, transmuting nihilism into sangoma, binaries into endless dualites, moral austerity into abundance. A subversive and halcyonic manifesto from queens of a sovereign land, Ibeyi occupies the liminal, the space between life and death, past and present, right and wrong, and calls for the interior revelations that create the systemic revolutions we long for. We are invited into a new world where the hewers of wood and drawers of water are sacred, where the divine heals the divided, and growth is worth more than gold. The prophecy is a call to action: it is not yet too late to be the person you always thought you could be. "Spell 31" is spirit setting, reminding us that the meaning of life can only be achieved through the magic of living. Madison McFerrin is a singer-songwriter based in Brooklyn. In December 2016, her solo debut EP, "Finding Foundations: Vol. I," introduced her soulful take on a cappella to the world. After one listen, Gilles Peterson signed up her standout track, ‘No Time to Lose’, for his Brownswood Bubblers compilation. Madison bears the torch of three generations of vocal pioneers. As the LA Weekly noted, she employs her jazz virtuoso father, Bobby McFerrin’s vocal techniques “to more soulful ends”, and her use of electronic music stylings reflects the influence of her brother, Brainfeeder producer, Taylor McFerrin. With her latest release Finding Foundations: Vol. II, Madison intends to explore more ways to create experiences that engage and empower her community. As a female, independent artist of colour, she sees this as vitally important to her practice. An “understated, compelling testament to the power and dexterity of the human voice” – Pitchfork. ibeyi on Instagram
  • Sterling K. Brown and Regina Hall play a Southern Baptist pastor and his wife trying to redeem their legacy in the wake of a public scandal in Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul.
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