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Luke Combs Saddles Up for a Major Comeback with New Single ‘Back In The Saddle’

Luke Combs is officially “Back in the Saddle” with the release of his highly anticipated new single. 

Out now, the song appears to be autobiographical as it tells the story of a man who is making a major comeback after he’s been “gone a little too long.”  

“I’ve been waitin’ on a drummer to kick off a comeback song/ I’ve been waitin’ in the wings like a dog on a chain,” Combs growls as the song’s intensity builds. 

Luke Combs - Back In The Saddle
Luke Combs – Back In The Saddle

The lyrics, written by the North Carolina native alongside frequent collaborators  Dan Isbell and Jonathan Singleton, use cowboy-themed imagery to paint a picture of man who’s ready to reclaim what’s his. 

“‘Cause I’m back in the saddle like some old cowboy/ Who dug his way out of his grave/ Pulled up his boots, put his pistol on his hip/ Climbed up and took hold of the reins/ Don’t worry where I’ve been/ I’m back in the saddle again,” he declares on the chorus. 

This radio-ready anthem mirrors Combs’ personal life and is about him getting back to his roots and reigniting the passion that started his musical journey. 

“It’s about just me getting back to what I did when I first started doing music, saddling up, hitting the road, getting after it, just kinda getting back to it,” he explains. 

The 11-time CMA Awards winner paired the song’s debut with a high-octane music video, starring  NASCAR legends Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Richard Petty. 

Directed by Tyler Adams, the clip features Dale Jr. racing around a track as Combs takes his place as the flagman. Later, Petty appears and tells Dale Jr., “Let me show you how it’s done.” 

“So much work goes into making these songs—so much time we spend making them, from the studio writing them to the videos. I got to make the video with Dale Jr. and Richard Petty, which is a total dream come true. My grandpa would be rolling over in his grave in a good way if he knew that I got to hang out with Richard Petty and Dale Jr,” Combs shares. 

“Back In The Saddle” arrives as “Back Up Plan,” Combs’ duet with Bailey Zimmerman continues its rise up the charts. It follows Combs latest solo single the heart-pounding chart-topper “Ain’t No Love In Oklahoma,” and will likely appear on his highly anticipated, yet-to-be-announced new album. 

Combs has spent the past several months on an extensive festival run, bringing his high-energy live show to festivals such as Bonnaroo and New Orleans JazzFest. Next up, he’ll hit the stage at the Newport Folk Festival in Newport, Rhode Island.         

The post Luke Combs Saddles Up for a Major Comeback with New Single ‘Back In The Saddle’ appeared first on Country Now.

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R&B

Kool & The Gang Release ‘Kool Summer’ EP

Legendary hitmakers Kool & The Gang, recently inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, have released a brand new remix EP, Kool Summer, that reimagines some of the most beloved tracks in their discography. The six-track EP is available today on all major streaming platforms.

Kool Summer features remixes that transform some of the band’s biggest hits into high-energy tracks built with modern dancefloors in mind. Collaborators on the project include a cohort of global producers and remixers: DJ Crazy, who played a key role in bringing Baltimore club music to the mainstream; Prince Hakim, who hails from a long line of musicians, including his father, Robert “Kool” Bell of Kool & The Gang; The Reflex, a London-based DJ who’s soundtracked for stars like Louis Vuitton and Karl Lagerfeld; Adam Ten, an underground trendsetter with hits such as “3 Days Later” and “Spring Girl”; and Young Franco, an Australian producer and DJ packing venues around the world.

Prince Hakim, who remixed the hit “Fresh,” feels that projects like these help introduce catalog tracks to younger audiences. “I mean, that era is the best music ever made,” he says. “And I don’t know if we’re ever going to get back to it again, but we have the power to preserve it. So doing projects like this, when you get to remix it, it brings a song back that’s fresh.”

For “Celebration,” says DJ Crazy, “It was all about keeping the essence. I sampled some of the parts and manipulated them, and put a new groove over the song to make it real warm and fat.” The collaboration holds special meaning for DJ Crazy, who grew up surrounded by Kool & The Gang’s music at family gatherings, making his role in reimagining “Celebration” feel like a full-circle moment. “Working on the EP was surreal,” he adds. “I was raised off this. This is one of the songs I saw my uncle blow the dust off the vinyl and put on the turntable… For me, years later, to be touching it? It’s crazy.”

The Reflex, who did his own remix of “Celebration” as well as “Jungle Boogie,” echoes this sentiment. “It’s been a privilege to rework an iconic band with two of their biggest tracks, from two very different eras that both changed the game musically for them and everyone else,” he says.

When asked about the project, Robert “Kool” Bell, who’s celebrating his 75th birthday this October, says, “We try to keep the music ‘Fresh’ and exciting. It’s been great hearing the DJs put their spin on our platinum songs; celebrating while we ‘Get Down On It’ the 2025 way. Here’s hoping everyone has a ‘Kool’ Summer.”

Listen to the Kool Summer EP now.

​Discover more about the world’s greatest R&B artists | uDiscover Music

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R&B

Seattle Pop Festival: Remembering “The Forgotten Woodstock”

Seattle Pop Festival 1969 featured image 1000

It’s been 50 years since thousands gathered in upstate New York to celebrate three days of peace and music at the first Woodstock festival, and yet there was another three-day festival that year, held just three weeks prior to Woodstock, that often gets forgotten: Seattle Pop Festival.

From 25 to 27 July 1969, local promoter Boyd Grafmyre staged Seattle Pop at Gold Creek Park in Woodinville, Washington, just a few miles outside of Seattle. It was the second successful major rock festival to occur in Washington within less than a year, after Grafmyre had previously helped organize the historic Sky River Rock Festival in 1968.

Listen to the Summer Of ’69 playlist on Spotify.

The year of the music festival

1969 was the year of the musical festival: Denver Pop Festival was followed by Atlanta Pop Festival and then Seattle Pop Festival, all leading up to Woodstock.

The concept behind Seattle Pop was to have 25 acts play over three days. Sometimes going to great lengths to achieve his ambitious goal, Grafmyre chartered a helicopter to fly The Doors from Seattle’s airport to the festival grounds, while renting a Cadillac convertible for Chuck Berry – the rock’n’roll pioneer’s preferred method of transportation.

For $6 a day – or $15 for the whole weekend – you could catch Led Zeppelin breaking America, and marvel at homegrown legends The Byrds, blues icon Bo Diddley, The Flying Burrito Brothers, Tim Buckley, The Guess Who, Santana, Ike, and Tina Turner, Vanilla Fudge, Alice Cooper, and Chicago Transit Authority (who later became Chicago), among many other rock luminaries and psychedelic acts of the day.

An estimated 50,000-70,000 festivalgoers descended upon Gold Creek Park to enjoy relative peace, music and “a certain amount of nudity”, said Grafmyre. As one of the first festivals to forego hiring police or off-duty officers as security, Grafmyre enlisted The Black Panthers to patrol Seattle Pop – a much smoother operation than Hells Angels’ provided at Altamont just a few months later, in December.

‘Sunday night was supposed to belong to The Doors’

The Seattle Pop Festival’s line-up was a mix of established acts, native groups from the Pacific Northwest, and even jazz legend Charles Lloyd. Some acts, like Led Zeppelin, went on to become rock legends, while others faded into obscurity, such as Crome Syrcus, a psychedelic Pacific Northwest band that broke up in 1973 and remain best known for their singles “Love Cycle” and “Take It Like a Man.”

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While The Doors, The Byrds, and The Ike And Tina Turner Revue were among the most highly-anticipated acts of the festival, it was really Led Zeppelin who emerged as the highlight. England’s hottest new act were just on the cusp of fame in America when they played Seattle Pop.

“Sunday night was supposed to belong to The Doors but it was stolen right out from under them by the great English blues group, Led Zeppelin,” wrote Patrick MacDonald for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.

“Coming onstage after the forced extravaganza of The Doors, the Zeppelin faced a jaded and uncomfortable audience that had been standing in the cold all evening. But the electricity of lead singer Robert Plant and guitarist Jimmy Page quickly warmed them up.

“Plant has a voice that is controlled hysteria. Anguish pours from his every note; his voice is an epitome of the blues. Page is an amazing guitarist. His runs and fingering are magnificent, his control of the instrument pure genius.

Few who experienced it will forget Led Zeppelin’s performance, especially their smashing encore of ‘Communication Breakdown’.”

The “forced extravaganza” MacDonald writes of refers to one of Jim Morrison’s less-inspired performances, in which The Doors frontman spent the show heckling the crowd and shouting obscenities before ending the set’s finale, “The End,” in a Christ-like pose.

A watershed moment for the counterculture

Morrison’s antics aside, the rest of the performances were equally electrifying. The Flying Burrito Brothers played a blistering set, still riding high off their landmark debut album, The Gilded Palace Of Sin. Shortly after Seattle Pop Festival, however, the Burritos’ bassist Chris Ethridge left the band, turning their performance into an essential document of their original line-up.

Dressed in a daring fishnet dress, Tina Turner ripped up the stage with her signature moves, while Chicago’s producer Jimmy Guercio reportedly parachuted onto the field for the band’s performance, recalled Grafmyre.

1969 was not only a watershed moment in the countercultural movement, but a turning point for many artists who either continued their upward trajectory, such as Alice Cooper and Santana, or fell to the wayside – like Vanilla Fudge who disbanded nine months later.

While Seattle Pop Festival remains a footnote in rock history, it was an important milestone on the road to Woodstock, and one of the greatest rock festivals of all time to be held in the Pacific Northwest.

In just a few short months, at the dawn of the 70s, it would seem as though peace and love were all but a memory.

The end of the 60s saw a burst of creativity that cemented the decade’s importance in music history. Explore some of the greatest albums of the era, including classics from The Rolling Stones, The Who, and The Allman Brothers Band, on our Summer Of ’69 store page.

Looking for more? Discover the full story behind Woodstock’s “three days of peace and music.

​Discover more about the world’s greatest R&B artists | uDiscover Music

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