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Here Is Maggie Rogers’ ‘Summer Of ’23 Tour’ Setlist

Maggie Rogers just kicked off her Summer Of ’23 Tour to follow her Feral Joy Tour earlier this year. The pop star had in-person ticket sales to fight off bots and prioritize fans, and she has great guests like Del Water Gap, Alvvays, and Soccer Mommy joining her as openers on the stages.

So far, she’s been performing tracks from her two albums, 2019’s Heard It In A Past Life (which contains her Pharrell-approved hit “Alaska”) and 2022’s Surender (which has the Obama-favorited anthem “That’s Where I Am”). In May, the Harvard graduate also revealed that she finished working on her third album and would be playing songs from it for audiences on tour. “that’s a wrap on LP3 !!!! [star emoji] [butterfly emoji] written + recorded + off to mixing,” she wrote on social media. “so so so in love with these songs and cannot wait to start playing them for you this summer.”

Check out the setlist from Rogers’ Nashville concert at Ascend Amphitheater, according to setlist.fm.

1. “Anywhere With You”
2. “Want Want”
3. “Say It”
4. “Be Cool”
5. “Light On”
6. “Sick Of Dreaming”
7. “Overnight”
8. “Horses”
9. “Symphony”
10. “Shatter”
11. “Don’t Forget Me”
12. “Love You For A Long Time”
12. “Alaska”
13. “That’s Where I Am”
14. “Fallingwater”
15. “The Kill”
16. “Different Kind Of World”

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How Zaire Wade Got Comfortable With Making His Own Way

There are two sides to timing. When timing works, and it feels like the universe has opened a special door for you, replete with red carpet for your arrival, and when it doesn’t, and that door doesn’t just slam but splinters under your hands, the exact conditions for that moment in time gone forever. Zaire Wade knows, intimately, both sides of time.

After just 12 games into his 2021-2022 G League season with the Salt Lake City Stars, what Wade hoped would be his entry point into the pros, he felt his knee give out on an innocuous misstep. Wade could’ve looked at his injury as something that robbed the next nine months from him. Instead he used it to recalibrate, working with his dad, Dwyane Wade, on his recovery, conditioning, and steadily building back his strength.

Candid about what was one of the more difficult stretches of his life, on and off the floor, Wade lets out a big sigh when asked how the injury changed his perspective on his health, “It changed it tremendously,” Wade tells Dime over Zoom, where he’s just arrived back home to L.A. from South Africa.

“Being young, you don’t really pay attention to that. You think you’re kind of invincible and then when the day comes when something serious happens and you can’t play, or even walk at the time, you really start looking at things from a different perspective,” Wade says, “I took my health more seriously.”

Wade calls that time “a blessing in disguise,” doubling down on work ethic and becoming curious about supplements like Thorne, a NSF certified supplement brand he and his dad are currently ambassadors for. Wade had just turned 20 when he got hurt. His body, through playing professional basketball, was probably in the best shape he’d seen it, but he still wishes he had more sense of control, and committed to finding that as his career unfolded.

After being waived by the Stars following his injury, he wanted a different target to aim for. Criticized in the past for some of the moves he’s made thus far in his very young career being the product of nepotism, many of Wade’s pivots, or more untraditional decisions, have only borrowed from his father’s broader understanding of the basketball world as a whole. It’s common sense that, playing alongside athletes like Bronny James, Brandon Boston, and Ziare Williams at Sierra Canyon, Wade was not going to get as many minutes and by extension, exposure. He’d already played at two high schools prior to SCS, so a quick hop over to Brewster Academy in New Hampshire after his senior year was only going to add more runway. And it did, Wade got plenty of offers from Division 1 schools, but then came COVID.

“That whole college process was very tough because of the time, it was COVID. I think it was the first year that COVID really hit. It was kind of a bad time,” Wade recalls. “The transfer portal was huge that year, a lot of people were transferring and a lot of schools that did offer me spots, they were being taken because of that. So it was kind of tough finding the right fit somewhere, somewhere I would go and not just sit.”

It’s this theme of momentum, of wanting to be physically and mentally in the mix of the game through his own capabilities, that runs as an electrified thread through Wade’s decisions. His dad, obviously, knows this, and the decision to forego college and enter the G League Draft came through the two of them talking out what the younger Wade most wanted: to play basketball.

“[Colleges] kind of were just saying that they essentially wanted me to be a player that came in the first year and learned from the [older] guys,” he remembers. “We were thinking well, if I was going to do that, I might as well learn from the pros. To get a head start at that.”

Wade wasn’t even supposed to travel with the Stars, he was originally a practice player. He wasn’t betting on an automatic shot at more minutes than he would’ve seen in college by entering the G League, he just knew he had a better shot to work for them. But timing, on Wade’s side through his few months in the G League, suddenly switched.

“I was kind of in the middle,” Wade says of that time, “I knew I wasn’t going to go back to the G League, simply because I wanted to prove myself on a different stage, one where I could play more or in a better position than I would in the G League again.”

In that stretch, Wade still got up every morning to train and put in reps regardless of not knowing what his next move would be, or when. There’s a Kobe Bryant quote he admittedly does not want to mess up, but the gist is that taking chances in life is crucial, but in order to be able to take advantage of chances, you have to be ready for when they come.

“The [BAL] Combine came out of nowhere. It was like,” Wade snaps his fingers, “throwing you in the fire. I came out of there great, but if I wasn’t ready? You’ve got to be ready at all times, no matter what it is.”

The Basketball Africa League, now in its third season, held its second Combine in Paris in January. There, with a few months of playing pro under his belt and a renewed focus, Wade breezed around the floor in his lilting, dancer-esque pace, as unbalancing to defenders as it is mesmerizing to watch for the way he tends toward floaty stutter-steps and long, reaching strides. He impressed NBA and FIBA scouts alike, but it was the Capetown Tigers that called him up the weekend of his 21st birthday and offered him a roster spot.

“That experience, I can’t even put it to words,” Wade says, smiling wide, when asked how his experience in the BAL has been thus far. “Learning different languages, going to different areas, talking to different people, seeing like, How did they grow up? What have been their struggles? The things they like to do or don’t like to do. It’s really just learning. And me being able to be myself. I think a lot of people over there, they wanted to see me for me with no strings attached to it.”

Growing up around basketball, Wade wasn’t a stranger to travel and the broader, global perspective it can lend. But he likens his time in Johannesburg (“Jburg”), where the Tigers practice, and Cape Town so far as taking a big breath of fresh air, all for himself.

“I think this was unique because it was solely mine this time. I was out there, I had to figure it out,” Wade says, noting everything from the playing style, to the professionalism of the league and the lifestyle of the guys he was playing alongside, as things he was happily adjusting to. “And my name, Zaire, is original to Africa, the DRC, so I was close to the DRC for a short time — so things like that, when I was a kid it’s never where I thought I was going to be.”

More and more, athletes are figuring out alternate paths either into the NBA, or into professional basketball abroad. Part of this is due to the game’s broadening global footprint and rise in popularity, and part is due to the staggering increase in talent and skill of hopeful young players overall. Even moves like Kemba Walker deciding to play abroad and signing with Monaco signal that there doesn’t have to be just one, linear line when it comes to making a career.

“I think it’s definitely something that’s going to help me in the long run, especially in furthering my career and seeing where I can take it. Now I’ve got eyes on the world to see how they play,” Wade says, when asked how he sees his path thus far as an asset. He also touches on the different approach to the game he’s noticed in international players, like Nikola Jokic or Giannis Antetokounmpo.

“It’s a whole different style of play. I was touching on it a little bit [this year], the passion,” Wade says. “And I wouldn’t say we Americans don’t have passion, because we obviously do, but you see guys like Jokic, and Giannis, they play for their respective countries. Versus, we play for our families or because we simply love the game.”

He comes back to a saying his Tigers teammates use before games, “Show what it means to be a South African.” Wade says really, it means to represent whatever it is you stand for, and aside from the physical play, it’s what he considers one of the biggest edges he’s taken from his time in South Africa so far.

Talking with Wade, and seeing secondhand the way his dad is — especially when it counts — his biggest fan, the way their relationship is oversimplified as either nepotism or a long shadow that Zaire will forever be working to escape from feels like a myopic and bleak categorization. It’s also a stale duality that, as more sons and daughters of former players enter the pros, is due for retirement. Dwyane Wade was certainly there to help Zaire navigate the hard and first time big decisions, like any parent would, but it was in making those decisions that let Zaire step out onto his own for the first time.

Wade is comfortable with the comparison. He laughs when he shares how he teases his dad about where he might be if he knew as much about health and wellness and the two do now, or in acknowledging there’s no escaping becoming your parents. Part of what he liked so much about their shared Thorne campaign was getting to work alongside each other.

“‘Cause I feel like he’s an older me, right? Just kind of looking at myself, how I’m going to be personality wise. Just the way he approaches business as well. Like we joke around, but he knows when to get serious. He’s a role model for me as far as that goes,” Wade says, recalling how he watched his dad closely on set when they recorded their campaign commercials, how he moved and interacted with everyone.

There’s another finer, harder to pin down point that automatically citing basketball nepotism tends to bulldoze over. There’s a reclamation of time in the Wade’s relationship. The best case scenario is that Zaire is able to figure out his own path, but save on some of the missable mistakes his father made. Timing, in this way, doesn’t have to split. It can align in what the two want for each other.

The summary of this — and the way Zaire Wade’s approached his career — came in an answer he gave, when it came to how overwhelming the world of supplements, health and wellness can be for people who aren’t pros.

“You’re perfectly fine,” he said, “you just have to find something for you.”

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Roy Woods’ New Album ‘Mixed Emotions’: Everything To Know Including The Release Date And Tracklist

Roy Woods has been a slow-burner since signing with Drake’s OVO Sound imprint, releasing his Say Less LP in late 2017 and the six-song EP Dem Times in May 2020.

“After an almost three-year wait, one would expect a full-length project to emerge from Roy Woods as it did with his labelmates. Instead, Dem Times serves as the segue between chapters, one filled with anticipation and energetic sounds that would have performed well in the summer that once was. The EP doesn’t shine as brightly as his debut album did, but its components give hope in the Brampton native’s future,” Uproxx’s Wongo Okon surmised while reviewing the EP.

And now, it has been another three years since Dem Times, and Woods is finally primed to deliver Mixed Emotions the full-length that his fans have been expecting.

Below is everything to know ahead of the album’s release.

Release Date

Mixed Emotions is out this Friday, July 28, via OVO Sound/Warner Records.

Tracklist

1. “Made Mistakes”
2. “Young Boy Problems”
3. “Don’t Love Me”
4. “Hate Me” Feat. Coi Leray
5. “Test What I Know”
6. “Down Like That”
7. “That Thing” Feat. Jada Kingdom
8. “Dime”
9. “Insecure”
10. “Bad Bad”
11. “Don’t Mind Me”
12. “Unsettling” Feat. Vory
13. “Touch You”
14. “Gas Out The Window”
15. “You Ain’t In Da 6”
16. “Thought It Was You”
17. “I Just Wanna Love”

Features

Woods didn’t tap his fellow OVO artists like Dvsn or PartyNextDoor. Instead, he went with Coi Leray, Jada Kingdom, and Vory.

Artwork

Singles

So far, Woods has released “Don’t Love Me,” “Don’t Mind Me,” “Test What I Know,” and “Young Boy Problems.” The most recent single is “Test What I Know,” which arrived last week. In an Instagram video, Woods explained the track “finishes the series of this love story that I speak about” and is “one of my most favorite songs.”

Tour

As of this writing, Woods has not yet confirmed a supporting tour but could very well take Mixed Emotions out on the road later this year.

Mixed Emotions is out 7/28 via OVO Sound/Warner Records. Find more information here.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Ron DeSantis’ Campaign Is Such A Dumpster Fire That Biden Reportedly Wants To Run Against Him, Not Trump

Things aren’t going great for Ron DeSantis.

The very normal Florida governor’s team recently fired a campaign staffer who shared a video featuring a neo-Nazi symbol. His plan to “sic” kook conspiracist Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. on the FDA and CDC is being side-eyed by fellow Republicans. And his big-money donors are telling him to stop doing “stupid stuff.” No wonder his unfavorable rating keeps rising.

How grim is the outlook for ol’ Meatball Pudding Fingers (which sounds like the name of a baseball player from the 1880s)? Joe Biden is privately hoping he wins the nomination over Donald Trump because he knows he’ll have a better chance at becoming the first two-term president since Barack Obama.

Rolling Stone reports that “some of Biden’s closest confidants have in recent weeks told the president that DeSantis has performed so poorly in the primary, that the governor would likely be notably weaker than Trump in a match-up against Biden.” Biden has allegedly agreed with this assessment.

It wasn’t always this way. As recently as late last year, there was a widespread feeling among Team Biden and prominent Democrats that the governor was the more formidable candidate than the twice-impeached former president. But the more they’ve seen of DeSantis running a presidential campaign, the less concerned they’ve become about whether he can be beaten.

As a senior Biden administration official told Rolling Stone, “I guess I could explain to you the… current position by asking a question: Have you seen what Ron DeSantis has been up to lately?” Unfortunately, yes.

(Via Rolling Stone)

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The ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem’ Reviews Absolutely Love Seth Rogen’s Take On The Classic Heroes

The first reviews for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem are rolling in, and critics are loving Seth Rogen‘s “fresh” and “unexpectedly funny” take on the classic heroes in a half-shell.

After several live-action attempts, Rogen and director Jeff Rowe decided to roll with a well-received animated approach that brings the Turtles back to their indie comics route. While the film definitely appears to give off heavy Spider-Verse vibes, Mutant Mayhem surprisingly distinguishes itself thanks to the all-star voice cast and Rogen and writing partner Evan Goldberg’s script.

You can see what the critics are saying below:

Mike Ryan, Uproxx:

It has a surprising edge for an animated film that the other “live-action” movies don’t have. Also, the other ones – I mean both the ’90s films* and the Michael Bay-produced movies – I guess they have their moments but they are mostly forgettable and phony. There’s a sense of personality and life in the Turtles in Mutant Mayhem that the other movies just seem to try and force. This is the first theatrical Turtles film that comes anywhere close to that feeling in the mid-’80s of something that was weird and underground and a little edgy.

Frank Scheck, The Hollywood Reporter:

The film directed by Rowe (The Mitchells vs. the Machines) and co-directed by Kyler Spears features vibrantly distinctive visuals that perfectly suit the rambunctious and frequently violent proceedings. The dialogue proves consistently amusing (not surprising considering Rogen’s participation), and the fact that the young actors voicing the TMNTs were actually teenagers when they recorded their performances infuses a welcome youthful energy to the goings-on. The celebrity performers seem to be having a blast as well.

Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian:

This new animated origin story for the chelonian adventurers is unexpectedly funny, with a rather stylish crepuscular design. You’ve heard of the Spider-Verse; this is the Turtle-Verse.

Pete Hammond, Deadline:

Rogen’s and long time partner Goldberg’s script is heavy on pop culture humor in all the best ways, but taking a page as well from the youth emphasis of the Tom Holland Spider-Man as well as the hit animated versions. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem is young to its core, virtually reinventing the concept right down to the casting of the voice actors in the four title roles. Fans will not be disappointed with any of the decisions here, notably the scattershot animation that feels rough around the edges, stylish, anti-CGI blandness, and visually surprising and satisfying.

Kate Erbland, IndieWire:

“Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem,” the latest entry into the half-shell canon, is another fresh, funny animated outing that breathes serious new life into a classic franchise, proving that even old IP has its legs (claws?). Directed by Jeff Rowe and scripted by Rowe, Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg, Dan Hernandez, and Benji Samit (Rogen and Goldberg also produced through their Point Grey banner, while Rogen voices the iconic mutant warthog Bebop in the feature), “Mutant Mayhem” will inevitably draw comparisons to the “Spider-Verse” franchise. But it ably stands on its own as a genuinely entertaining film for the whole family.

Germain Lussier, io9:

If a movie can make you smile so much it hurts, it’s probably a good movie, and that’s absolutely the case with Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem. The film is dynamite, perfectly blending a modern, childlike wonder, with a healthy dose of 1990s nostalgia, wrapped in a heartfelt, relatable story about growing up and feeling different.

Clarisse Loughrey, The Independent:

Refreshingly, these teenage turtles are now actually voiced by teenagers. As a result, Leonardo (Nicolas Cantu), Donatello (Micah Abbey), Michelangelo (Shamon Brown Jr), and Raphael (Brady Noon) sound convincingly young and dumb. When Leonardo claims he’s got “rizz” (for the oldies, that means “flirtatious charm”), it doesn’t sound four years out of date – a near-miracle in the world of studio filmmaking. And when they all start chanting “bacon, egg, and cheese”, it’s with the impenetrable chaos of four siblings so close that they’ve concocted their own dialect.

Tomris Laffly, The Wrap:

Rogen and his co-writers—Rowe, Goldberg, Dan Hernandez and Benji Samit—invitingly nod to the essence of the classic “TMNT” and freshen it up with a teen spirit, an inclusive cast and a few amusing internet pop-culture references. These range from funny to tired—one that debates for the millionth time which famous Chris is the best Chris. (Sorry, Evans fans)—and on rare occasion, to SNL-level unfunny. Yet, on the whole, it leaves the right wise-cracking aftertaste that you come to these movies for.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem slices into theaters on August 2.

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LeBron James Thanked Fans For The Outpouring Of Support For Bronny And Says ‘Everyone Doing Great’

The sports world woke up to shocking news earlier this week that Bronny James had gone into cardiac arrest during practice at USC on Monday and had to be taken to the ICU. By Tuesday morning, Bronny had been moved out of the ICU and was in stable condition, per the family’s official statement.

In the immediate aftermath, fans and other athletes sent the James family messages of love and support, including Bills defensive back Damar Hamlin, who offered to provide support for Bronny throughout his recovery process having gone through the same thing earlier this year. There had been no official updates or statements from the James family for the past 48 hours since the initial news was released, but on Thursday LeBron took to Twitter to thank everyone for the outpouring of support they’ve gotten and to provide a brief update, noting “everyone doing great.”

As James notes, the whole family is now together “safe and healthy,” which is obviously terrific news, and he notes they’ll have more to say in the future once they are ready. For now, he wanted to let everyone know they had seen all the love and appreciated it immensely, and hopefully the updates will continue to be positive on Bronny’s recovery from a terrifying situation.

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Jessie Ware Invited Róisín Murphy To Her Disco-Pop ‘That! Feels! Good!’ Party, Spicing Up ‘Freak Me Now’

Jessie Ware dropped That! Feels! Good! in April, a shimmering pop-disco record primed to thrive during the summer months and tapped by Uproxx as one of the best pop albums of 2023 so far.

Ware said that “Pearls,” a February single, was “inspired by divas like Donna Summer, Evelyn Champagne King, Teena Marie, and Chaka Khan.” On Thursday, July 27, Ware invited “the queen of disco” Róisín Murphy to her That! Feels! Good! party to spice up the already-infectious track “Freak Me Now.”

“It is a huge honor to have the queen of disco, Róisín Murphy on ‘Freak Me Now.’ I messaged her hoping she may be interested in featuring on the song, and before I knew it, she was in the studio,” Ware said in a statement via press release. “She recorded all her vocals for the track and sent them over to us. I have admired her work for so many years [and] respect her so much.”

Ware continued, “To have her on one of the most fun tracks on That! Feels Good! Is amazing. I can’t wait for us to do this together live in the future! I know my fans are gonna go crazy about this, as am I. I still can’t quite believe we are on a track together and have done a bonkers video together. She is graceful, she is generous, she is pioneering, she is Róisín Murphy and she is on ‘Freak Me Now!’”

Murphy added, “Jessie is just brilliant, a super talented songwriter and an amazing singer. She’s truly beautiful, but she’s also very funny and never takes herself too seriously. We’ve been talking about working together for a while. When she sent me ‘Freak Me Now,’ I just adored it and felt it was perfectly right for me to be on the song. We had mad fun dressing up on the day of the video, it was fashion chaos! Like a high-class jumble sale, behind the scenes. We laughed at our ridiculousness and we were very silly all day! Just love her and loved everything about working with her.”

The accompanying video will premiere on YouTube here in the coming hours.

In the meantime, listen to Ware’s updated “Freak Me Now” with Murphy and check out Ware’s upcoming headlining dates below.

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No One Knows What Marjorie Taylor Greene Was Talking About With Her Latest Philosophical Classic On People Who ‘Unthink Unconsciously’

Marjorie Taylor Greene somehow did not make a big deal out of that congressional hearing on UFOs that freaked so many others out. Instead, she kept up her calls for President Biden to be impeached, and dang, the congresswoman from Georgia has boundless energy. She also has an abundance of verbal gaffes in her roster, ones that she would surely not let Biden drop without accusing him of crimes against humanity or something.

Never forget, as well, about the “gazpacho police” debacle and the “peach tree dish” menace from Greene. She also appears to be (intentionally?) statistically challenged, but Greene has a new hit on her hands. It’s sad to say that the context doesn’t matter all that much on this video clip because Greene could have dropped this word salad about any one of her favored topics.

Here, she’s possibly arguing for more military funding while bashing education that mentions the word “gender,” which led to this philosophical little ditty: “This type of funding should not go to… educating people about how they unthink unconsciously without knowing how they think.”

Double negative aside (and I do love a good double negative for effect when it’s intentional, which this was not), this is like Goop’s “conscious uncoupling” on partisan steroids. Let’s just say that responses including “Move over Kant” and “She definitely does not unthink what she’s thinking that she shouldn’t have thunk about thunking” were only the beginning of the WTF factor here.

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The Author Accusing Taylor Swift Of Stealing Her Book Design For ‘Lover’ Has Dropped The Lawsuit

Last year, Taylor Swift was sued by author Teresa La Dart, who claimed that the pop star stole the design from her 2010 self-published book Lover for her 2019 LP of the same title.

According to Billboard, La Dart has dropped her lawsuit after Swift’s lawyers said the case “never should have been filed.” They demanded the case be dismissed, saying it was “legally and factually baseless.”

In August of last year, La Dart’s lawyer shared a statement with Pitchfork. “It has been a bizarre day as this was filed less than 24 hours ago,” It read. “Glad to provide some insight as many commentators seem to think this was poorly undertaken. Initially, it is important to note Miss La Dart feels strongly that her full work needs to be compared with that of Miss Swift’s before a conclusion is made here.”

“Secondly, this decision was not made nor taken lightly considering the other side is quite formidable. Lastly, this was a recent consideration and this filing was made ostensibly to reserve Miss La Dart’s rights (primarily at this point) since yesterday was the date the statute of limitations closed. Hope the masses can understand these issues from her perspective, in other words.”

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Pink And Brandi Carlile Covered ‘Nothing Compares 2 U’ In A ‘Bittersweet Moment’ Honoring Sinéad O’Connor

Sinéad O’Connor has passed away at 56 years old. The Dublin-born singer’s death was first reported by The Irish Times on Wednesday afternoon (July 26) and later included a statement from her family, reading, “It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of our beloved Sinéad. Her family and friends are devastated and have requested privacy at this very difficult time.”

The London Inner South Coroner’s Court has since confirmed O’Connor was found “unresponsive” at her London home and “pronounced dead at the scene,” as reported by the BBC. An autopsy will be performed to determine O’Connor’s official cause of death.

On Wednesday night, Pink brought her recently launched Summer Carnival tour to Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati, Ohio, and used the stage to honor O’Connor alongside Brandi Carlile, one of her tour openers.

“When I was a little girl, my mom grew up in Atlantic City and I used to go down to the Ocean City Boardwalk with my $10 and I would make a demo tape,” Pink told the crowd (as relayed by Billboard). “I would make a little cassette tape and imagine it was my demo for the record company.”

She continued, “And it would always be either ‘Greatest Love of All’ by Whitney Houston or ‘Nothing Compares 2 U’ by Sinéad O’Connor. So in honor of Sinéad, and in honor of my very, very talented friend Brandi Carlile I asked her if she would come out here and sing this song with me.”

Someone in attendance captured the moment and posted video to Twitter:

Carlile and Pink also posted about O’Connor in their respective Instagram Stories. Carlile posted a black-and-white throwback portrait of her with the message, “She was right the whole time. I hope she found peace,” as well as video of her duet with Pink alongside the note, “Bittersweet moment.”

Meanwhile, Pink resurfaced her performance of “Nothing Compares 2 U” for the BBC Radio 2 Piano Room from earlier this year.

O’Connor cracked No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 for four weeks in 1990 with “Nothing Compares 2 U,” a power ballad written by Prince. (Prince’s estate denied the use of the song in O’Connor’s documentary last fall.)

In January 2022, O’Connor shared that her 17-year-old son, Shane, died by suicide. She reportedly admitted herself to hospital the following week after expressing suicidal ideation online.

Most recently, on July 17, an unverified Twitter account linked to O’Connor’s professional account wrote, “Been living as undead night creature since. He was the love of my life, the lamp of my soul. We were one soul in two halves. He was the only person who ever loved me unconditionally. I am lost in the bardo without him.”