Katherine spoke to the principals (Ash Avildsen, Josh Bernstein and Matt Pinfield) of the new Hit Parader brand here!
Katherine spoke to the principals (Ash Avildsen, Josh Bernstein and Matt Pinfield) of the new Hit Parader brand here!
Check out Katherine’s latest piece featured in Variety!
How Yacht Rocker Christopher Cross Almost Sank The 1975’s New Album
Check out Katherine’s piece from the LA Times about the new collaborative album by Cherie Currie, formerly of the Runaways, and Brie Darling of Fanny.
Clad in overalls, a red plaid shirt and a straw cowboy hat, Xavier Amin Dphrepaulezz proudly picks up one of his laying hens, Bessie. Then, smiling, he shovels horse manure for fertilizer and, later, displays voluptuous strawberries on the vine. Thanks to Dphrepaulezz, hope is growing in Oakland, a city that saw 5,685 violent crimes in 2017. That’s where the urban farm he calls Revolution Plantation — home of Bessie and her feathered kin — is flourishing and giving hope to the community.
Dphrepaulezz, better known as multifaceted musician Fantastic Negrito to his NPR-listening fans and Bernie Sanders supporters (he played several rallies for the candidate), is not merely local in his efforts to elevate. His music, soulful, groove-heavy, sonically layered with intense lyrics, is exemplified on his latest album, “Please Don’t Be Dead,” and his Grammy-winning 2016 record, “The Last Days of Oakland.” With a singing voice that’s powerful and a little wild, he creates albums that speak to his experience in and of America. Negrito’s music is as cathartic, elemental and therapeutic — for both creator and listener — as having hands in the soil.
Read the rest of this piece on Fantastic Negrito here: https://altaonline.com/fantastic-negrito
Katherine was recently interviewed by Larry Milburn for the Roadie Free Radio podcast.
Check it out here: Katherine Turman on Roadie Free Radio with Larry Milburn