What we're listening to: Bad Bunny, The Weeknd, FKA twigs and more
In What We're Listening To, Engadget editors and writers discuss the new music we can't get enough of.
You don't need me to tell you to go listen to Bad Bunny's DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS — if you're on the internet enough, you've been told to do so already. But I'll add to the pile-on and say that this is Bad Bunny's most personal work yet. It showcases how modern pop, rap and R&B can be seamlessly combined with old-school, traditional sounds from different cultures (in this case, Puerto Rico) in a way that celebrates both camps. Bad Bunny has always been deeply connected to his island home and it's come through in his music, but DTMF is on a whole other level.
For me, there are no skips on this album — but if you're going to listen to just one song, make it the salsa hit 'BAILE INoLVIDABLE.' Aside from that, my favorites are 'NUEVAYoL' (if you live in the five boroughs, be prepared to hear this all summer long), 'KETU TeCRÉ,' 'CAFé CON RON' and 'EoO.' — Valentina Palladino, Deputy Editor, Buying Advice
The Weeknd is certainly going out with a bang with Hurry Up Tomorrow. Supposedly the pop star's final record under his current pseudonym, Hurry Up Tomorrow also completes the trilogy that started with 2020's After Hours and continued with 2022's Dawn FM. It's a massive (literally, at 22 tracks), cinematic album that serves as The Weeknd's magnus opus, and without a doubt, his most personal project yet. His attitudes toward fame, legacy, suicide, past substance abuse, the fear of being alone and much more are all laid bare for listeners to hear, but in typical Weeknd fashion, he disguises it all in moody synths, thumping bass and top-tier vocals.
The first things I noticed during my initial listen were the transitions: they're beyond smooth on this album, and they're one of the reasons why the first five tracks make up one of the most energizing sequences I've heard start an album recently. I'd personally extend that to include the next two tracks, the final of which is 'Open Hearts,' a song that's cut from a similar cloth as 'Blinding Lights' and will, no doubt, be a standout single from the record. My other top tracks are 'Wake Me Up,' 'Cry for Me,' 'São Paulo,' and 'Niagara Falls.' — V.P.
FKA twigs is truly in a league of her own. I've been mentally prepared to be changed by the new album ever since she released the genuinely jaw-dropping 'Eusexua' music video back in September (which features two tracks, 'Drums of Death' and 'Eusexua'), but it's even more magnificent than I was ready for. FKA twigs has described the state of 'eusexua' as 'pure presence. It's a moment of nothingness. Or it's the moment before a really incredible idea… it's this ego-less presence which is just filled with this kind of tingling clarity.' Call me corny, but listening to this album is a spiritual experience every time.
Eusexua ebbs and flows over the course of its 11 tracks, starting out almost angelic with the title track before transporting you right onto a throbbing, disorienting club dance floor with 'Drums of Death' and 'Room of Fools,' then back down to a softer, emotionally raw place with 'Sticky.' 'Childlike Things' feels like the onset of unexpected joy, almost out of place in between 'Keep It, Hold It' and 'Striptease' but in a way that's really grown on me.
'Perfect Stranger,' toward the beginning, and the penultimate song '24hr Dog' almost feel like two sides of the same coin, the latter hitting like the vulnerable comedown from the former. I love every song on this album, but I especially can't stop listening to 'Girl Feels Good,' which sounds like it's been transplanted into 2025 from the '90s and hits me in just the right way. Eusexua has kind of taken over my personality for the time being. — Cheyenne MacDonald, Weekend Editor
Honorable mentions: A bunch of singles have come out lately that have me so hyped for albums we're going to see later this winter and spring. I'm apologizing in advance for the person I'll become when Lady Gaga's Mayhem drops, because 'Abracadabra' has reawakened something in me. On the opposite end of the spectrum, I've been obsessively listening to Bria Salmena's brooding indie track, 'Stretch the Struggle,' ahead of her debut album's release at the end of March, along with 'Sugar in the Tank' by Julien Baker and Torres, who have a country-leaning collaboration album coming out in April that I cannot wait for. All of the new SZA from SOS Deluxe: Lana (Deluxe?) has been a real treat too. — C.M.
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Concerts to see this week: The Weeknd, ZZ Top, Pryes Block Party
Concerts to see this week: The Weeknd, ZZ Top, Pryes Block Party originally appeared on Bring Me The News. It may go underappreciated just how many opportunities there are to take in free concerts around the Twin Cities this summer. I don't have any nice stats about how the region compares to other cities, but it's nonetheless impressive. It's not just the quantity of free shows. There's quality there, too. The below listings don't have everything that's happening, but scanning the list, there's Minneapolis' music in the park series, shows on venue patios, the Stone Arch Bridge Festival, the Pryes Block Party (more on that shortly), and outdoor series in Rochester and Edina. Music lovers could almost certainly see live music every day of the summer without paying an admission fee. (Though, there are good reasons to pay a cover. We don't get the quality part of the equation if musicians can't make a living, and, as a study revealed last year, musicians in Minnesota are underpaid.) Whether you're grabbing a blanket and heading to a show in the park or shelling out for pricey tickets at U.S. Bank Stadium, here are some of the best shows you can catch around the Twin Cities this week. Monday, June 9, at The Fillmore For the first time in more than decade, Bloc Party is coming to the Twin Cities, and it'll feel like a throwback in more ways than one. The English group will be going back to the beginning, playing its debut, Silent Alarm, in its entirety. When the show was initially announced, Metric was lined up to play its 2009 record, Fantasies. They've since dropped off the tour, and the show moved from The Armory to The Fillmore. However, fans probably aren't going to complain about getting a more intimate show. Blonde Redhead and Family Dinner open. Wednesday, June 11–Saturday, June 14, at Wagon Wheel Ridge in Karlstad This isn't in the Twin Cities. It's not even close. But the Minnesota music festival draws big names in country music to northern Minnesota, making it a destination fest for many fans. This year's headliners include veterans Little Big Town, Grammy-nominated songwriter Tyler Childers, the Eli Young Band, Chayce Beckham, Kiss guitarist Ace Frehley, and others. Meanwhile, in St. Paul, Ben Harper & the Innocent Criminals will headline the Palace Theatre on June 12, at Ledge Amphitheater Waite Park will be home to a night of classic riffs as ZZ Top alights at The Ledge with a repertoire of songs you remember from KQRS, or, at least, from KQRS before that recent change. The Texas blues rock trio, now more than half a century deep into its career, will bring guitars, "La Grange," and swinging beards to venue that's a bit of a hot spot for splashy shows this summer. The group, which will have The Wallflowers opening, have carried on touring after the 2021 death of bassist Dusty Hill. Founding members Billy Gibbons and Frank Beard are now joined by the band's long-time guitar tech, Elwood Francis, on bass. After ZZ Top gets the week going, the Ledge will stay busy. Chicago hits the stage on Friday. On Sunday, "One Week" hitmakers the Barenaked Ladies arrive with fellow '90s radio rock groups Guster and Fastball. For those not ready to head to the suburbs, long-running Johnny Cash tribute group The Church of Cash will headline the Dakota. In St. Paul, Lowertown Sounds launches its summer series of free concerts at Mears park with a lineup that features the Flamin' Oh's and Faith Boblett. Saturday, June 14, at U.S. Bank Stadium The Weeknd is accompanying his new album, Hurry Up Tomorrow, with a tour that brings him to the Twin Cities for the first time since 2017. He's promised that the show includes a 'never-before-seen production' and a setlist focused on the album trilogy that wrapped up with this new album and a film of the same name. Playboi Carter and Mike Dean open. Saturday, June 14, at Pryes Brewing Pryes Brewing's 8th annual block party is free and packed with exciting local artists. This year's installment is headlined by the high-energy indie rock of Kiss the Tiger. Imbibers will also be treated to Chicago-based Americana songwriter Nathan Graham, Mary Bue, Of the Orchard, The Shackletons, The Roe Family Singers, and Fiddle and Flannels. It's a nice mix of indie rock and roots-infused locals. The show will kick off at noon and run until 10 p.m. outside at the Minneapolis on Monday, June 9: Bloc Party plays Silent Alarm with Blonde Redhead at The Fillmore Mei Semones with John Roseboro at 7th St. Entry Cafe Accordion Orchestra at The Dakota Annabelle Nicholson, Avery Seed, and Sylvia Dieken at Amsterdam Bar & Hall Anna Devine, Hyer, sandalwood, and Macy Moose at Underground Music Cafe Mudfoot Baker and Dick Williams Folk at 331 Club (free) Roe Family Singers at 331 Club (free) Mumblin' Drew's Oldfangled Orchestrators at The White Squirrel Bar (free) Concerts on Tuesday, June 10: Judy Collins at The Dakota Green Jelly with From This Day Forward at Zhora Darling J-Mo on the Beat, Sammie Jean Cohen, The Black notes, and Topiary Blush at Green Room Johnny Lied and Dylan Hicks at Aster Cafe International Reggae Allstars at Bunker's NOTEable Singers: When Worlds Collide: Songs of Stage and Screen at Normandale Bandshell (free) DL4 at The White Squirrel Bar (free) Doyle Turner at 331 Club (free) John Magnuson Trio+ and Frannie Crego at 331 Club (free) Sawtooth Witch with Taylor James Donskey at The White Squirrel Bar (free) Concerts on Wednesday, June 11: Ben Harper and the Innocent Criminals at Palace Theatre Kick'n Up Kountry Festival with Little Big Town, Tyler Hubbard, Eli Young Band, Chayce Beckham, and others in Karlstad Teddy Swims at The Armory The Kooks with Lovely the Band at Varsity Theater Ashe at First Avenue Emmy Woods, Lake Davi, Tomboy, and Pine & Fire at Turf Club An Evening with John Gorka at The Parkway Theater Faster Pussycat with Supersuckers, The Rumours, and The Lonely Ones at Hook and Ladder Sleep Theory at The Fillmore Moxen with Heliocene, APHID, and Homunculus Rex at Pilllar Forum Ted Olsen: Violette album release with Eric Mayson at The Cedar Cultural Center The Get Together with Nothing But Joy, Honeymoon Madness, and Wizards of SoL at 7th St. Entry Freedom to Listen (Feat. Peter Brendler, Jon Irabagon, and Mark Ferber) at Berlin Al Scorch, Advance Base, Little Mazarn, and Walker Rider at Cloudland Theater Judy Collins at The Dakota Blondshell with meg elsier at Fine Line Raegan Boehmer and Rachel Bearinger at Aster Cafe Twine at Bunker's Clay Fulton & The Lost Forty with Poppa Bear Norton at Cascade Lake Park in Rochester (free) Innocent Reggae Band at Marjorie McNeely Conservatory (free) Paul Bergen & Friends at The White Squirrel Bar (free) Way Way Back Wednesdays at Day Block Brewing (free) Said in Stone at 331 Club (free) Mike Wolter and Friends at Palmer's Bar (free) Lords of the Universe at The White Squirrel Bar (free)Concerts on Thursday, June 12: ZZ Top with The Wallflowers at Ledge Amphitheater Kick'n Up Kountry Festival with Little Big Town, Tyler Hubbard, Eli Young Band, Chayce Beckham, and others in Karlstad The Current Happy Hour feat. Blondshell at Surly Brewing (free) Søndergård conduct Rachmaninoff at Orchestra Hall Molly Brandt and Mojohand at 7th St. Entry Church of Cash at The Dakota Jessie Reyez with Raahiim at The Fillmore Dusty Forever, Aldrich, and Canary Room at Zhora Darling Dead Larry with Socktopus, Sam Licari and the Sweet Tease, and Lost Island Society at Tuf Club Gasoline Lollipops, Clarence Tilton, and Becky Kapell at Uptown VFW The Twins of Franklin with Ty Pow of The Holy North at Icehouse Milo Fine and Anthony Cox at Zion Community Commons Red Maker, Fine Dials, and Ne Regard at Amsterdam Bar & Hall Pelicant, Lenwood, and Jeff Goldsmith at Underground Music Cafe Nathan Hanson's Rope Ladder at Berlin Caribou Gone at Aster Cafe Flamin' Oh's, Faith Boblett, and Lonesome Dan Kase at Mears Park for Lowertown Sounds (free) Jennifer Marie at The White Squirrel Bar (free) Front Porch Swingin' Liquor Pigs at Palmer's Bar (free) Concerts on Friday, June 13: Kick'n Up Kountry Festival with Little Big Town, Tyler Hubbard, Eli Young Band, Chayce Beckham, and others in Karlstad Nur-D, Smells Like Nirvana, Lighter Co., and Daphne Jane at the Minnesota Zoo Chicago at Ledge Amphitheater Søndergård conduct Rachmaninoff at Orchestra Hall Worlds Greatest Dad, 12th House Sun, and Allergen at Cloudland Theater Broadway Rave at Fine Line Theory of a Deadman at Canterbury Park The Federales, Becky Kapell & the Fat 6, Michael Gay and His Dang Band, Stardust, and Uncle Kenny at Palmer's Bar Shaun Johnson Trio at The Dakota Solomon Parham Sextet at Berlin Rage Against the Regime (RATM tribute) feat. Diane at Turf Club Florry with Lily Seabird at 7th St. Entry Zippy Laske, Mama Rose, and Chastity Brown at Green Room The Maeflies at Aster Cafe Early Evening Jazz: Tacheny Family Players at Berlin (no cover) The Teardowns with GUP! At The Plaza at Nolan Main's in Edina (free) The Belfast Cowboys at Lake Harriet Bandshell (free) Pretty Pretty Please and The Grieving Pines at 331 Club (free) Concerts on Saturday, June 14: The Weeknd with Playboi Carter and Mike Dean at U.S. Bank Stadium Pryes Block Party feat. Kiss the Tiger, Nathan Graham, Mary Bue, The Shackletons, and more at Pryes Brewing Kick'n Up Kountry Festival with Little Big Town, Tyler Hubbard, Eli Young Band, Chayce Beckham, and others in Karlstad Søndergård conduct Rachmaninoff at Orchestra Hall Julia Wolf with Worry Club and Ellis at Turf Club The Great Northern + The Strolling Clones at The Cedar Cultural Center Watchhouse with Two Runner at Palace Theatre Wort Tour '25 with Gully Boys at Insight Brewing I'm with Her at The Fitzgerald Theater Sleigh Bells with Sophie Hunter at Fine Line Rich Mattson & the Northstars, Annie & the Ban Band, Sidewalk Diamonds, The Customers, and Lovehouse at Palmer's Bar My Kid Banana, Unattractive Giant Monster, and Busey at Zhora Darling Steve Cole at The Dakota Doug Collins and the Receptionists CD release show with Miss Georgia Peach at Terminal Bar The Stone Arch Bridge Festival w/ various artists at the Stone Arch Bridge in Minneapolis (free) Michael Cain Trio (with Barbara Cohen and Terrell X) at Berlin Chutes, Social Cig, and Mike Kota at Green Room Mae Simpson with Feed the Dog and Rebel Queens at Hook and Ladder Night of the Living Darts with Black Widows and Fret Rattles at Cloudland Theater Early Evening Jazz: Jazz Flux at Berlin (no cover) Concerts on Sunday, June 15: The Barenaked Ladies with Guster and Fastball at The Ledge Amphitheater Jet with Band of Skulls at First Avenue Nona Invie residency with Enhancement and Dungeon Synth Sunday Crew at Berlin Erik Koskinen and Molly Maher at The Hewing Hotel's rooftop Peter Mulvey with Ben Weaver at The Cedar Cultural Center Heatbox Father's Day Festival at Hook and Ladder Creeping Death and Kruelty at Turf Club SiR at The Fillmore Jim Messina at The Dakota Father's Day Badfinger Night: A Tribute to Joey Molland at The Parkway Theater Drekka with Boy Dirt Car, Karl J Paloucek, and Timmy the Tapeworm at Zhora Darling Samantha Crain with Quinn Christopherson at 7th St. Entry Switchyard at 331 Club (free)Just announced concerts: July 3: Tommy Stinson with Ruby at Turf Club July 5: Obi Original and The Black Atlantics with Kwey and DJ Goldilocks at Turf Club July 31: The Holy North, Jillian Rae, and The Foxgloves at Turf Club Aug. 20: Lil Wayne with Tyga and Belly Gang Kushington at Target Center Aug. 20: Dave Hill at The Parkway Theater Aug. 22: Baby Tron with ShittyBoyz at First Avenue Sept. 22: NBA YoungBoy at Target Center Sept. 22: Glare with Cloakroom, JiveBomb, and Destiny Bond at Amsterdam Bar & Hall Sept. 27: Nile with Cryptopsy, the Last Ten Seconds of Life, and Cognitive at Studio B at Skyway Theatre Oct. 4: Pool Kids with Truth Club and PONY at Amsterdam Bar & Hall Oct. 4: Swervedriver with Porcupine at Turf Club Oct. 19: moe. at The Fitzgerald Theater Oct. 25: Steve Forbert + Peter Holsapple at The Parkway Theater Nov. 2: Yellowcard and A Day to Remember with The Wonder Years and Dinosaur Pile-Up at The Armory Nov. 16: Pace Live presents a Celtic Christmas at The Fitzgerald Theater Nov. 25: Lola Young at Palace Theatre Nov. 29: Atreyu with Norma Jean and Zero 9:36 at The Skyway Theatre Dec. 5: Adventure Club with Jessica Audiffred at Skyway Theatre Jan. 24: Cate Le Bon at Fine Line Jan. 29: Dean Lewis at Palace Theatre March 20: Gregorian: Pure Chants World Tour at The Fitzgerald TheaterThis story was originally reported by Bring Me The News on Jun 8, 2025, where it first appeared.


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Shakira, Blackpink and more: 10 must-see Southern California concerts this summer
Craving a break from the desert heat? Or just missing the desert music festival season? This summer, let the music guide you to cooler temperatures with concerts that are well worth the drive to Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego counties. From The Weeknd's soulful anthems to Linkin Park's dynamic energy, Southern California has something for fans of all music genres this season. Here are 10 concerts that The Desert Sun recommends checking out. After gaining popularity by posting covers of songs on Instagram and TikTok, Riverside resident and Mexican music singer-songwriter Ivan Cornejo performed at the Lollapalooza and Austin City Limits festivals in 2023, and at the 2025 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival. For those who can't get enough of his songs "RELOG" and "Baby Please," he'll perform on June 14 at Pechanga Arena. If you go: 8 p.m. Saturday, June 14, Pechanga Arena, 3500 Sports Arena Blvd., San Diego. Tickets are available at Remember that time when Shakira was going to perform two shows last November at Acrisure Arena but pulled a "Whenever, Wherever" and canceled over an "unprecedented demand," shifting the tour to stadiums? Well, it makes sense considering she's a superstar and it's been seven years since her last U.S. tour. If you're still up for seeing the Colombian singer-songwriter, she'll perform at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood on June 20. If you go: 7:30 p.m. Friday, June 20, SoFi Stadium, 1001 Stadium Drive, Inglewood. Tickets are available at The Weeknd has been busy over the past five years. He's evolved his sound since the 2020 synth-pop driven album "After Hours," the experimental "Dawn FM" in 2022, and "Hurry Up Tomorrow" released in January, which might be the singer's final album under The Weekend persona. The Weeknd will perform four concerts June 25-29 at SoFi Stadium. If you go: 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 25 through Sunday, June 29, SoFi Stadium, 1001 Stadium Drive, Inglewood. Tickets are available at Blackpink in our area! The renowned female K-pop band featuring Jisoo, Jennie, Rosé and Lisa is on tour this summer and performing two dates at SoFi Stadium July 12-13. Lisa and Jennie both performed solo sets at Coachella 2025 following Blackpink's headlining performance in 2023. For those who have never seen the band, expect an energetic performance full of pyrotechnics and surreal moments. If you go: 8 p.m. Saturday, July 12 and Sunday, July 13, SoFi Stadium, 1001 Stadium Drive, Inglewood. Tickets are available at Pop star Katy Perry didn't get the public response she expected in April after joining TV personality Gayle King and journalist Lauren Sanchez to visit outer space on a Blue Origin space mission. But as she sings in "Firework," you gotta ignite the light and let it shine. She'll perform on July 13 at the Honda Center in Anaheim as part of "The Lifetimes Tour." Expect a spectacle featuring dazzling costumes, choreography and colorful production that Perry is renowned for. If you go: 7 p.m. Sunday, July 13, Honda Center, 2695 E. Katella Ave, Anaheim. Tickets are available at If you're a fan of electronic and hip-hop music, you'll love the HARD Summer music festival being held Aug. 2-3 at Hollywood Park. The 2025 lineup features headliners Dom Dolla, Gesaffelstein and Kaytranada. Sean Paul, Juvenile, Four Tet, Floating Points and more are also on the lineup. HARD Summer has become a renowned Southern California festival for its eclectic lineups, and the immersive visuals and themed areas at the festivals. If you go: Saturday Aug. 2 to Sunday, Aug. 3, Hollywood Park, 1011 Stadium Drive, Inglewood. Festival passes are available for purchase at with GA passes starting at $199 and VIP at $395, single-day GA passes at $139 and VIP at $239. Venezuelan conductor Gustavo Dudamel is wrapping up his tenure with the Los Angeles Philharmonic before he departs to become the music and artistic director of the New York Philharmonic in 2026. After Dudamel and the orchestra performed at Coachella in April, the season at the Hollywood Bowl began. On Aug. 5, Dudamel will conduct a performance of music at the Hollywood Bowl by French composer and pianist Maurice Ravel and jazz great Duke Ellington based on Ravel's 1928 visit to Harlem and jazz clubs in upper Manhattan and Ellington's jazz symphony "Black, Brown and Beige." If you go: 8 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 5, Hollywood Bowl, 2301 Highland Ave., Los Angeles. Tickets are available at and cost between $13 and $151. Australian psychedelic-rock band King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard has a reputation for performing highly energetic sets that electrify late-night crowds at music festivals, but on Aug. 10, the band will perform a unique set with the Hollywood Bowl orchestra and conductor Sarah Hicks at the Hollywood Bowl. Expect to hear cuts from the new album "Phantom Island" and other songs from the extensive discography of progressive rock, folk, thrash metal and more. If you go: 7 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 10, Hollywood Bowl, 2301 Highland Ave., Los Angeles. Tickets are available at and cost between $24 and $184. After the death of Linkin Park's frontman, Chester Bennington, in 2017, the band returned last year with a new female vocalist, Emily Armstrong — much to the delight of many fans. Linkin Park will perform on Sept. 13 at the Intuit Dome as part of the From Zero World Tour. The show was originally going to be at Dodger Stadium but was switched to the Intuit Dome due to low ticket sales. But the tour features stunning visuals and Armstrong's debut during the band's 2024 performance at the KIA Forum in Los Angeles was well-received. If you go: 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 13, Intuit Dome, 3930 W. Century Blvd., are available at A music festival founded by Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder set against the serene backdrop of Doheny State Beach in Dana Point? Yes, please! Ohana Festival returns Sept. 26-28 featuring headliners Vedder, Kings of Leon, Hozier, Leon Bridges, Green Day and Cage the Elephant. Other notable performers include The Chats, Margo Price, Garbage and more. If you go: Friday, Sept. 26 through Sunday, Sept. 27, Doheny State Beach, 25-300 Dana Point Harbor Drive, Dana Point. Tickets are available at and GA festival passes are $530, VIP $1,589 to $10,255. Single day GA is $198 and VIP is $624. Brian Blueskye covers arts and entertainment for the Desert Sun. He can be reached at This article originally appeared on Palm Springs Desert Sun: Hollywood Bowl concerts and more: 10 SoCal concerts to see this summer