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2026 Album Release Calendar: Puscifer, Mumford & Sons, Gorillaz, BTS & More
Culture, Events Calendar, Music, News

2026 Is Already Trying to Melt Our Speakers: The Album Release Calendar That’s Giving Us Trust Issues (In a Good Way)

If 2025 was about surviving, 2026 is about soundtracking the comeback. From long-awaited returns to surprise drops, here’s the album release calendar that proves next year isn’t playing around.

2026 Is Already Trying to Melt Our Speakers: The Album Release Calendar That’s Giving Us Trust Issues (In a Good Way) Read Post »

Articles, Business, Live, Music

Governors Ball 2026 Pulls Out the Big Guns: Lorde, A$AP Rocky, Kali Uchis & a Lineup That Refuses to Behave

Governors Ball 2026 just dropped a lineup that feels like a Spotify algorithm gained sentience—and honestly, we’re not mad about it. Lorde, A$AP Rocky, Kali Uchis and friends are taking over NYC this June.

Governors Ball 2026 Pulls Out the Big Guns: Lorde, A$AP Rocky, Kali Uchis & a Lineup That Refuses to Behave Read Post »

Cher Jokes Kristen Bell Can Do Better Than Dax Shepard
Articles, Arts, Interviews, News, TV & Movies

Cher Roasts Dax Shepard, Praises Kristen Bell, and Proves She’s Still the Funniest Legend in the Room

Cher stopped by Dax Shepard’s Armchair Expert podcast and did what Cher does best: tell the truth, crack jokes, and casually remind everyone why she’s still untouchable. Along the way, she crowned Kristen Bell the superior half of the relationship, praised good parenting, and even tossed in a little legal drama for flavor.

Cher Roasts Dax Shepard, Praises Kristen Bell, and Proves She’s Still the Funniest Legend in the Room Read Post »

Mariah Carey’s Christmas Takeover Is Now a Historical Event
Articles, Culture, Music, TV & Movies

Mariah Carey Breaks the Internet (Again): “All I Want for Christmas Is You” Hits 20 Weeks at No. 1 and We’re Not Mad About It

Love it or hate it, Mariah Carey has officially turned Christmas into a competitive sport. With “All I Want for Christmas Is You” now sitting at No. 1 for 20 weeks, the Queen of Holiday Pop just rewrote chart history — again.

Mariah Carey Breaks the Internet (Again): “All I Want for Christmas Is You” Hits 20 Weeks at No. 1 and We’re Not Mad About It Read Post »

Steve Cropper: Legendary Soul Guitarist & Booker T. Member Dies at 84
Articles, Music, News

Steve Cropper: The Quiet Guitar God Who Shaped Soul — And Played “Dock of the Bay” With Justin Timberlake Like It Was Nothing

Steve Cropper: The Quiet Guitar God Who Shaped Soul — And Played “Dock of the Bay” With Justin Timberlake Like It Was Nothing

Meta Title:
Steve Cropper: Legendary Soul Guitarist & Booker T. Member Dies at 84 | Static Live Magazine

Meta Description:
Soul architect Steve Cropper — guitarist for Booker T. & the M.G.’s and co-writer of “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay” — has died at 84. Static Live breaks down his legacy, the hits he carved into music history, tributes from across the industry, and that unforgettable “Dock of the Bay” performance with Justin Timberlake. Read more on StaticLive.com.

Excerpt:
Steve Cropper didn’t just play guitar — he built the Memphis soul sound. From “Green Onions” to co-writing “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay,” Cropper shaped an era. Static Live honors the legend with a look back at his life, legacy, and viral performance with Justin Timberlake.

Full Static Live Article

If there’s a Mount Rushmore for American musicians who were too cool to brag about being legends, Steve Cropper is carved dead-center and probably holding a Telecaster.

The Booker T. & the M.G.’s guitarist — the man whose riffs built the scaffolding of Memphis soul, the Stax sound, and half the songs your parents slow-danced to — has died at 84. One of music’s most respected architects just left the building.

Cropper wasn’t loud, flashy, or constantly trying to drop a surprise album like half the industry today. He was the opposite — that guy in the corner making everyone else sound better. And because the universe has a sense of humor, he did it while creating hits like it was a casual Tuesday.

The Guitar Behind a Thousand Hits

Let’s be clear: “Green Onions” didn’t just chart — it rewired American radio. Booker T. & the M.G.’s hit No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 and became the soundtrack for every diner, bar, pool hall, and Tarantino movie montage that followed.

Cropper wrote or co-wrote some of the biggest songs in soul history:
• “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay” – Otis Redding’s posthumous No. 1
• “Knock on Wood” – Eddie Floyd
• “In the Midnight Hour” – Wilson Pickett
• Quoted by name in Sam & Dave’s “Soul Man” — the ultimate musician flex

He didn’t just shape songs — he shaped entire eras.

The Stax Engine Room

Born in Missouri and raised in Memphis, Cropper jumped into Stax Records before most kids even figured out how to change guitar strings. First the Royal Spades. Then the Mar-Keys. Then Booker T. & the M.G.’s.

Basically he got promoted every five minutes because everyone realized:
“Yeah, we need that guy.”

As Stax’s A&R director, his influence wasn’t just on-stage — it was behind the mixing board too. Memphis soul may not exist as we know it without him. That’s not hyperbole. That’s fact.

Years Later… Enter Justin Timberlake

And because legends stay legendary, one of Cropper’s most beloved later-life moments was performing “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay” with Justin Timberlake — a generational mashup so good even the YouTube comments section couldn’t be toxic.

We’ll be embedding that video in this article because honestly?
That performance still gives us chills.

JT fans, you’re welcome. (#JustinTimberlake added to the SEO pantry.)

Beyond Stax: The Blues Brothers & Everything After

Before every boomer dad on Earth bought a fedora for their Blues Brothers Halloween costume, Steve Cropper was the actual guitarist behind the iconic band.

He toured. He recorded. He even survived being in two movies with Dan Aykroyd.
A true warrior.

He worked with John Prine, Tower of Power, Ringo Starr, Rod Stewart — the kind of names that make Spotify’s algorithm sweat.

His final solo album, Friendlytown, dropped just last year. Because even at 83, the man had more groove than half the Billboard charts.

A Legend Leaves, But the Sound Stays

Tributes are pouring in — from soul icons to rock legends — all echoing one message:

Steve Cropper wasn’t just a guitarist. He was a foundation.

A cornerstone of soul.
A quiet giant in an industry filled with noise.
A man whose riffs will outlive all of us.

From all of us at Static Live Magazine, we send love, respect, and deepest condolences to the Cropper family and the Stax community.

And if you want to explore the soundtrack of Steve’s life?
Our Static Live Music Calendar App is always updating, always free, and always connecting you with the musicians carrying that torch next.

Download it at StaticLive.app — serving Daytona Beach, Ormond, New Smyrna, Flagler, and soon… much more.

Steve Cropper: The Quiet Guitar God Who Shaped Soul — And Played “Dock of the Bay” With Justin Timberlake Like It Was Nothing Read Post »

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