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Dr. Dre Remains In The ICU As Doctors Investigate The Cause Of His Brain Aneurysm

Doctors at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center still don’t know why Dr. Dre had a brain aneurysm a week ago. …

TMZ reports Dr. Dre is still in the intensive care unit a week after being admitted. Doctors at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center still don’t know why Dr. Dre had a brain aneurysm a week ago and are running a battery of tests to determine the cause, lest Dre suffer another one. Dre projected that he’d be on his way home soon in his first post to social media after the initial news broke, but it looks like the real doctors wanted a second opinion.

In the meantime, Dre has received a wave of support from his fellow artists, who posted numerous messages expressing their well-wishes and asking fans to pray for the rap music pioneer. Unfortunately, not everyone was so altruistic when it came to Dre’s recent medical setback. Police arrested four individuals who apparently tried to break into Dre’s home in Brentwood while he was away after staking out the neighborhood thanks to some other recent thefts in the area.

Dre had an up-and-down 2020 before suffering his brain aneurysm, as his wife of 24 years, Nicole Young, filed for divorce after Dre’s seminal 1992 album The Chronic was included in the Library of Congress and he received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2020 Grammys.

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Artist Spotlight

North Shy leaves imperfection exposed with “i’ve” from the EP “aftermath”

North Shy

There is something deeply compelling about an artist willing to leave imperfections exposed, and in the “aftermath,” North Shy does exactly that. Created entirely by 24-year-old singer, songwriter, and producer Kieran Garing from his bedroom in Lafayette, Indiana, the six-track EP feels raw in the best possible way, intimate, restless, and emotionally unguarded. Rather than polishing away the pain, North Shy leans into it, allowing every song to sound like a late-night thought spiraling out of control.

From the opening seconds of “I Meant to call,” the EP immediately pulls listeners into its atmosphere. The track bursts forward with energetic drums and mild hi-hats before unexpectedly melting into a calmer, soothing rhythm. It is an impressive introduction that not only highlights North Shy’s textured, emotionally expressive vocal delivery but also establishes the project’s emotional unpredictability. The transitions feel natural, almost like emotional waves crashing into each other without warning.

What makes “aftermath” stand out is how cohesive the emotional storytelling feels across its 20-minute runtime. The project moves through obsession, regret, resentment, memories, and acceptance without ever sounding forced or overly theatrical. Instead, every moment feels lived-in. There is no attempt to romanticize heartbreak here. North Shy presents emotional exhaustion exactly as it exists, messy, repetitive, and difficult to escape.

One of the most memorable moments arrives with the closing track “i’ve,” opening with the striking line, “you said you never meant to hurt but you, yeah, you always do. It is the kind of lyric that instantly cuts through the noise because of its directness and relatability. The song closes the project beautifully, not with resolution, but with emotional honesty. With the “aftermath,” North Shy proves that great music does not require massive studios or industry machinery. Sometimes, all it takes is vulnerability, sleepless nights, and the courage to document the emotional wreckage left behind.

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Artist Spotlight

E.G. Phillips unveils where silence speaks the loudest on new release “Empathy for the Night Fly”

E.G. Phillips

The mood of E.G. PHILLIPS’s “Empathy for the Night Fly” is instantly cinematic, dark, introspective, and frozen in time. The track sounds like a scene from a late-night club where everything slows down just enough for feelings to come out. The arrangement is jazz-like in that it lets each part breathe. The arpeggiating Rhodes piano comes and goes, giving the impression that the music is thinking, as if it’s moving.

The song is really about recognition, which is when you hear something in someone else’s voice that reminds you of your own experience. It’s subtle, almost fragile, but it has a big effect on people. That emotional connection is what holds the piece together.

That choice seems deliberate, even defiant. It asks the listener to pay attention differently, not just passively. Every break is a part of the story. E.G. Phillips doesn’t just make the mood; he keeps it going. In that space, “Empathy for the Night Fly” becomes a quiet, powerful look at memory, connection, and shared feelings.

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