
By the second day of Ithaca Reggae Fest, one thing had become clear: events like this don’t simply happen. Behind every performance is an army of volunteers directing traffic, keeping the grounds clean, and setting up gear so thousands can simply enjoy the weekend—along with the vendors, food trucks, nonprofits, and staff who make it run. Their efforts often go unnoticed, but they deserve as much applause as the musicians on stage.
Sunday’s lineup was another reminder that Ithaca Reggae Fest isn’t only about big names—it’s just as committed to introducing artists you’ve never heard. One of the afternoon’s first highlights came from Mosaic Foundation. Fronted by the immensely talented Cha Cha, the band delivered a beautiful blend of roots reggae and sharp musicianship. Cha Cha owns a voice that commands attention—powerful, smooth, soulful—making it one of the day’s best early sets.

Between performances, DJ Art V and RDF spun reggae classics, dub, dancehall, and lovers rock, while Roadman added another strong set—one continuous celebration rather than a string of concerts.
Then came one of my biggest surprises of the weekend. I’d never heard iGNITE! before stepping into Stewart Park, but by the time their set ended, I understood why. They didn’t just perform—they threw a party, every musician sharp, the harmonies keeping the crowd dancing, start to finish. They left with plenty of new fans.
The surprises continued with Strykers Posse. All-female reggae bands remain a rarity, making their set even more refreshing. Traveling from Baltimore, they owned the stage—thunderous riddims, undeniable confidence, and beautiful harmonies. Their chemistry was unmistakable, and by the end, they’d won an entirely new audience.





I’ve been contributing to this column for over eight years, but until this piece, I haven’t delivered a full review of a record by Albert Ayler, who’s one of my favorite jazzmen, though I have included him in this site’s New In Stores column and in at least one group review. As this omission is remedied, I feel it should be immediately qualified that the term jazzman isn’t necessarily a tidy fit for Ayler’s brilliance.

So I asked him what the Lord’s favorite Byrds songs are, and he said, “Well, you’d think it would be ‘The Christian Life,’ but he actually doesn’t like that one very much. Says it’s a straightedge bummer. No, the song that always gets him is ‘Wasn’t Born to Follow’ or, if he’s been partaking of the magic mushrooms that are everywhere up here, ‘Eight Miles High.’ Says it can turn the most twisted trip into a Holiday Inn of the Mind.”
Hagerstown, MD | Browse More Than 20,000 Records At Maryland’s Largest Record Store: If you love music, Hub City Vinyl in Hagerstown, Maryland is a place you absolutely need to visit. With more than 20,000 records spanning every genre imaginable, it holds the title of Maryland’s largest record store. Located at 28 E Baltimore St, this one-of-a-kind shop combines a massive vinyl collection with live music events, vintage finds, and a welcoming community vibe. Whether you’re a lifelong collector or just curious about the world of vinyl, Hub City Vinyl has something special waiting for you. …The collection covers an incredible range of genres—rock, jazz, soul, country, classical, and plenty more. New releases sit alongside rare vintage pressings, giving shoppers of all tastes something exciting to discover. Every visit feels like
SG | Everyone has Spotify. So why are Singapore’s record stores packed? …Singapore’s vinyl scene reflects the broader resurgence across Asia-Pacific, where the market was worth an estimated US$518 million in 2024. But while the numbers tell one story, the revival is perhaps best seen on the ground. Spend a weekend afternoon in Haji Lane or Joo Chiat, browse a flea market, or wander into one of the country’s independent record stores, and you’ll find people happily flipping through crates of vinyl, admiring album artwork, and chatting with fellow collectors. Singapore has quietly become, as Curated Records founder Tremon Lim puts it, “




And as a male adolescent of the time, I could actually relate to the Raspberries in a way that I probably wouldn’t have related to the heartbreaking nostalgia of “September Gurls” or “Thirteen” because I was too young to be nostalgic, and all I wanted to do was go all the way, which was just about the only thing Eric Carmen sang about. He was the Dante Alighieri of Teenage Lust and as such gave voice to every shrieking hormone in my adolescent zit suit.
The Mekons formed in Leeds in 1976 under Jon Langford and Tom Greenhalgh and have outlasted nearly every other band to emerge from that same British punk explosion, shapeshifting through country, folk, dub, and art-punk without ever settling into one shape for long. Before joining, Timms recorded the experimental film score Hangahar with Pete Shelley of Buzzcocks in 1980 and fronted the all-female outfit the Shee Hees.
1. Ronnie is widely credited as having invented the “Sign of the Horns.” Under patent law, you are legally obliged to pay Ronnie 15 cents every time you use it. Per hand.
Miami, FL | This Miami record store helps you recycle old vinyl records: Sweat Records is among 11 independent record stores participating in a new vinyl take-back pilot program launched by Warner Music Group. The vinyl industry has experienced a historic boom in the last few years, with sales breaking $1 billion for the first time since 1983. Nationwide initiatives like Record Store Day, younger generations’ fascination with physical media, and growing digital fatigue have created fertile ground for an industry that once survived thanks to hardcore, punk, and cult rock records to flourish once again with pop and mainstream releases. But what happens to all those old records with deep scratches, dents, or warping that make them unplayable? …Warner Music Group and Sweat Records are
Franklinville, NJ | Beloved N.J. mall-era music store gets new life as vinyl albums, CDs make a comeback: For many New Jersey shoppers who came of age in the 1970s and 1980s, a trip to the mall often meant a stop at Wall to Wall Sound & Video, where rows of records, cassette tapes and later CDs offered hours of browsing and discovery. More than three decades after the regional chain disappeared following a 1990 bankruptcy filing, the Wall to Wall name has returned—this time as 















































