Kent Rocks Music Festival

Kent Rocks Music Festival The Kent Rocks Music Fest is produced by the Crooked River Arts Council in conjunction with Main Street Kent and promotional support from Wayside Furniture.

Shakira is one of those artists where the more you actually look into her story, the more interesting it gets beyond the...
05/29/2026

Shakira is one of those artists where the more you actually look into her story, the more interesting it gets beyond the obvious surface stuff. She was writing her own material at eight years old in Barranquilla, heavily shaped by the Lebanese heritage on her father's side, and that mix of Colombian coastal culture and Middle Eastern musical sensibility became the foundation of something genuinely unlike anything else in pop. What she built wasn't borrowed from an existing template — she essentially created a crossover lane that hadn't existed before she walked into it, bridging Spanish and English-speaking audiences at a time when that kind of transition usually meant watering yourself down for one market or the other. She refused that compromise entirely. What's also worth noting is how she handled the very public personal difficulties of recent years — rather than going quiet or playing the victim narrative, she channeled everything directly into the work, and the music that came out of that period had a sharpness and specificity to it that clearly connected with people on a massive scale. That's not a calculated move, that's just someone who has always processed life through songwriting because it's genuinely how they're wired. Decades in, with the whole world having an opinion about her life, she still seems most herself when she's just making

"Susanna" is one of those names that carries weight across so many different corners of music and culture that it almost...
05/29/2026

"Susanna" is one of those names that carries weight across so many different corners of music and culture that it almost depends on which version of the story you grew up with. As a name woven into songs, it has this long, wandering history — from old American folk traditions all the way through to modern interpretations — and every artist who has ever wrapped their voice around it has brought something completely different to the table. There's something about the name itself that seems to invite a certain kind of longing in the writing, like it was always meant to sit inside a melody rather than just exist on paper. Beyond the musical thread, Susanna as a figure — whether in literature, history, or song — tends to represent something quietly resilient, someone whose story gets told and retold because there's always another layer worth finding. What's interesting is how a single name can become almost a vessel for collective feeling across generations, passed from one songwriter to the next like something too good to leave behind. That kind of staying power isn't accidental — it says something about how certain sounds and certain stories just refuse to finish being relevant, no matter how much time piles up around them

Dua Lipa is one of those rare cases where the second album didn't just outperform the first — it genuinely redefined wha...
05/29/2026

Dua Lipa is one of those rare cases where the second album didn't just outperform the first — it genuinely redefined what people thought she was capable of. She grew up between London and Pristina, Kosovo, which gave her this interesting cultural in-between-ness that you can actually hear if you pay attention, a kind of European sensibility layered over very polished pop instincts. What she pulled off with her second record was something a lot of artists attempt and very few land — she reached back into the sound of a different era, the disco and dance-pop of the late seventies and early eighties, and rather than just borrowing the aesthetic she actually understood why that music worked emotionally and rebuilt it for right now. The result felt both nostalgic and completely fresh at the same time, which is genuinely difficult to do. Beyond the music, there's a sharpness to how she carries herself publicly — she doesn't come across as someone whose image was assembled by a team of people in a conference room. She moved to London as a teenager alone, chased this down herself, faced a fair amount of early skepticism, and built something real out of it anyway. That backstory isn't incidental — it's pretty much written into everything she makes.

Ella Langley is one of those names that country music feels like it was quietly waiting for without knowing it. She came...
05/29/2026

Ella Langley is one of those names that country music feels like it was quietly waiting for without knowing it. She came up through small venues and years of just grinding it out the honest way, and that background shows up in her music in the best possible sense — there's no polish that feels applied from the outside, it all sounds like it came from somewhere real. What sets her apart in a genre that can sometimes play it very safe is that she writes with a kind of emotional directness that doesn't dress itself up in clever metaphors just to sound deep. She just says the thing, and somehow that takes more courage than people give it credit for. Her collaboration with Riley Green brought her to a much wider audience, but anyone who dug into her earlier work already knew something special was building there. She has that quality that's genuinely hard to manufacture — the ability to make a listener feel like the song was written about a specific moment in their own life, not just a general feeling. Country has always rewarded authenticity over spectacle, and Ella Langley seems to understand that instinctively in a way that suggests she's just getting started

People often talk about ABBA as a whole, and fairly so, but there's a quiet argument to be made that Agnetha Fältskog wa...
05/29/2026

People often talk about ABBA as a whole, and fairly so, but there's a quiet argument to be made that Agnetha Fältskog was the emotional spine of everything that group produced. She was writing her own songs as a teenager in Sweden before ABBA was even a thought — had a number one hit there at seventeen, actually — which tells you a lot about where that instinct for melody came from. When she sang, something in the phrasing always felt slightly fragile, like the feeling behind the words was just barely held together, and that tension is honestly what made songs land the way they did. What a lot of people don't fully appreciate is that after ABBA ended, she didn't chase the spotlight the way someone with that level of fame easily could have. She stepped back, lived quietly, raised her kids, and returned to music only when she genuinely felt like it — including a solo album in her early sixties that reminded everyone she hadn't lost a single thing. There's a certain kind of artist who doesn't need constant validation to know their own worth, and Agnetha has always struck me as exactly that kind of person. The voice aged beautifully too, which feels almost unfair given everything else.

There's something about Shakira that just refuses to be boxed in — she grew up in Barranquilla, Colombia, writing poetry...
05/29/2026

There's something about Shakira that just refuses to be boxed in — she grew up in Barranquilla, Colombia, writing poetry before she even hit her teens, and that raw creative instinct never left her. What makes her genuinely fascinating isn't just the voice or the dancing, it's the fact that she built her own lane entirely from scratch, blending Arabic musical influences from her Lebanese heritage with Latin rhythms in a way nobody had really done before her. She didn't follow a formula — she kind of invented one. Even through the personal storms and very public life chapters she's lived through in recent years, she responded the way she always has: by making music that felt honest and unfiltered rather than carefully managed. That's a rare thing in an industry that tends to sand everything down until it's smooth and safe. Decades into her career, she still sounds like someone with something real to say, and that's honestly what keeps people coming back

Agnetha Fältskog's story is one of those that rewards anyone willing to look past the ABBA headline, because what's unde...
05/29/2026

Agnetha Fältskog's story is one of those that rewards anyone willing to look past the ABBA headline, because what's underneath it is a portrait of an artist who was deeply serious about her craft long before the world had any particular reason to pay attention. She was barely out of her teens when she scored her first Swedish chart hit with a song she'd written herself, which in the mid-sixties was not exactly the standard path for a young woman in pop music anywhere, let alone in a small Scandinavian country still finding its footing in the modern music industry. When ABBA eventually took shape and then exploded globally after Eurovision in 1974, she brought something to that group that went beyond technical ability — there was an emotional transparency in her voice that made even the most polished, produced recordings feel strangely personal, like she was singing slightly closer to the microphone than everyone else in terms of pure feeling. The ballads especially carry her fingerprints in a way that's hard to articulate but immediately recognizable, that quality of sounding genuinely moved by the material rather than simply performing it convincingly. What came after the group's dissolution is equally worth sitting with — she chose distance over continued exposure at a moment when most artists would have done the opposite, lived quietly and privately, and seemed to approach the whole concept of fame with a kind of healthy suspicion that's genuinely unusual in that world. The music she eventually returned with carried that same unhurried authenticity, no attempt to recapture a former moment, just an artist still interested in making something honest. That consistency of character, across decades and very different circumstances, is its own kind of remarkable.

Alissa White-Gluz is the kind of vocalist who genuinely expanded what a lot of people thought was possible within heavy ...
05/29/2026

Alissa White-Gluz is the kind of vocalist who genuinely expanded what a lot of people thought was possible within heavy music, and that's not a small thing to say in a genre that already had decades of boundary-pushing behind it before she arrived. She came up through the Montreal metal scene with The Agonist, building a reputation on the road through relentless touring and a live presence that was genuinely hard to look away from — and then when she stepped into the Arch Enemy role in 2014, taking over from a vocalist as iconic as Angela Gossow, the scrutiny was intense in the way it only gets when a fanbase is deeply protective of something they love. What followed was not someone shrinking under that weight but someone who made the position unmistakably her own, contributing to some of the band's most focused and ferocious work without trying to erase what came before. Her vocal range is the thing that keeps surprising people even after repeated listens — the ability to move between melodic clean passages and absolutely devastating extreme vocals within the same song, and to do both with genuine control rather than just raw aggression, puts her in a very short list of performers who can credibly claim mastery of both. She's also been consistent and outspoken about animal rights over many years, which feels like a genuine personal conviction rather than an image accessory, and that kind of authenticity tends to deepen the connection people feel with an artist over time. In a genre that sometimes struggles to push forward, she's been a genuinely forward-moving presence

Shakira is one of those rare artists where the full picture only gets more impressive the closer you look, because the s...
05/28/2026

Shakira is one of those rare artists where the full picture only gets more impressive the closer you look, because the surface-level fame — the massive hits, the stadium tours, the Super Bowl moments — actually undersells what she's built over three decades. She started writing songs as a child in Barranquilla, Colombia, driven by something that clearly had nothing to do with industry calculation and everything to do with genuine compulsion, and that original hunger never really left her even as the scale of everything around her grew almost incomprehensibly large. What separates her from a lot of artists who successfully crossed over into global pop is that she never allowed the crossover to flatten her sound into something universally digestible and culturally vague — there's always been rock, always been Latin rhythm, always been something that traces back to where she actually comes from. Her voice is a whole conversation on its own, that distinctive wavering intensity that audio engineers apparently used to consider unconventional and that turned out to be precisely what made her unforgettable on record. Then came a very public and personally difficult chapter that most people would want to quietly survive, and instead she walked into a recording session and made something sharp and self-possessed and completely unbothered by how it might land — and it landed everywhere. That instinct, to create from the center of a hard moment rather than waiting for the dust to settle, is what distinguishes artists who endure from those who simply have a good run. Shakira has always known the difference

Dua Lipa is one of those genuinely interesting cases where the second album didn't just outperform the first — it comple...
05/28/2026

Dua Lipa is one of those genuinely interesting cases where the second album didn't just outperform the first — it completely reframed what kind of artist she was going to be, and that doesn't happen as often as people think. Her debut had moments but felt like it was still searching for a lane, and then Future Nostalgia arrived in the middle of a global lockdown and somehow became the album everyone needed without anyone planning it that way. The disco and funk influences running through that record weren't random trend-chasing either — she's talked openly about digging into that era deliberately, studying what made those grooves work, and you can hear the difference between that kind of intentional approach and someone just layering in retro aesthetics for the aesthetic. What she also pulled off, which is harder than it looks, is maintaining a very specific coolness without ever tipping into being cold — her public presence has stayed genuinely likeable through a level of fame that tends to make people either overexposed or weirdly distant. She grew up between London and Kosovo, carries that dual cultural identity without making it a marketing angle, and there's a groundedness to her interviews and choices that feels real rather than carefully managed. Radical Optimism showed her pushing further into her own instincts rather than chasing the Future Nostalgia formula again, which is exactly the move a serious artist makes even when the safer path is obvious. She's still in the middle of building whatever this career ultimately becomes, and that's actually the most exciting part of it.

Susanna Hoffs is one of those artists who never quite gets the full credit she deserves, probably because the Bangles we...
05/28/2026

Susanna Hoffs is one of those artists who never quite gets the full credit she deserves, probably because the Bangles were so good as a unit that people sometimes forget to look at the individuals holding the whole thing together. She co-founded the band in Los Angeles in the early eighties when the Paisley Underground scene was buzzing with this beautiful collision of jangly guitars and sixties pop worship, and from the very beginning there was something about her presence — on stage, on record — that drew the eye and ear in a way that went beyond just being the frontwoman. Her voice has this warm, slightly breathy intimacy to it that works just as well on a delicate acoustic moment as it does cutting through a full band arrangement, and that versatility is something a lot of singers spend entire careers chasing without finding. "Eternal Flame" remains one of those songs that somehow still sounds fresh despite being genuinely inescapable for years, and a big part of why it holds up is the way she delivers it — completely unguarded, no armor, just the song. Her solo work showed a different side of her songwriting sensibility, more personal and less filtered through a group dynamic, and it rewarded anyone who paid attention. What's also quietly admirable is how she's carried herself across decades in an industry that has a well-documented habit of forgetting women the moment a particular era passes — she kept making music, kept showing up, stayed genuinely connected to the craft rather than the mythology around it. That kind of longevity doesn't happen by accident

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