Weโ€™re still reeling from one of the best half-time performances weโ€™ve ever seen, starring Usher โ€œDONโ€™T-LEAVE-YOUR-GIRL-AROUND-ME-TRUE-PLAYER-FOR-REALโ€ Raymond IVโ€”made even better with appearances from mega-stars, like Alicia Keys, Ludacris, Lil Jon, Will.i.am, H.E.R., and an ill-dressed Jermaine Dupri. If you have any brainspace that isnโ€™t watching that damn Verizon commercial and listening to Beyoncรฉโ€™s new country music singles, โ€œTexas Hold โ€™Emโ€ and โ€œ16 Carriagesโ€ on repeat, in addition to the Biamp Portland Jazz Fest, happening at various venues around town, here are a few locally relevant music updates to get into.

MUST SEE:ย 

Upcoming local event(s) featuring local artist(s).ย  ย ย 

The Blacker the Berry: A Black History Month Event feat. Kingsley, Veana Baby and Olivia & Qiddist Ashรฉ

Thereโ€™s still a couple weeks more of Black History Month, so get out and support as many of those local events as possible. One show burning a hole in our calendar is the Blacker the Berry, at the Old Church next weekend. One-time Portlander and indie pop singer-songwriter Kingsley headlines the event, with special sets from soul singer Veana Baby, and DJ Ashรฉ, & Qiddist Ashรฉ, among other special guests. Last month Kingsley released a fresh single called โ€œMy Love,โ€ so expect to hear fresh material, and pray she performs highlights from her 2021 sophomore album Crying On Holidays, like โ€œIโ€™m Fine,โ€ and most importantly, the danceable and funky pop gem โ€œAll Me,โ€ featuring Haley Johnsen. (The Old Church, 1422 SW 11th, Sat Feb 24, 7:30 pm, $23, Buy tickets here, all ages)

MUST LISTEN:ย 

New release(s) from a Portland-relevant artist.ย 

โ€œTime Will Tell,โ€ Mal London

The sunshine-infused music video for Mal London’s single โ€œYikes,โ€ made our list of Portlandโ€™s Best Music Videos of 2023., and we’re excited to have another from the local artist. Shot and edited by Mal London and Dante Ammon, the visual for the smooth, bass-driven single, โ€œTime Will Tell,โ€ stars Portland-based celebrity hairstylist Miko Gemechu. Known in the Black beauty community for slaying natural-looking wigs, weaves, and extensionsโ€”along with other natural styles, like braids and hairstyles for male stars from Carmelo Anthony to Aminรฉ and moreโ€”Miko is also beautiful as a model, not to mention known for being one of the sweetest people to work with, should you be blessed enough to experience one of her hair care services. She appears in โ€œTime Will Tell,โ€ as the love interest to Mal London; it’s an instance of art imitating life, as the two have established themselves as a pair in real life for a while now. The song itself is rooted in sultry R&B with an infectious bass line and crisp beat providing runway for the multi-talented emcee’s seamless singing and rapping transitions.

ADDED TO THE QUEUE:ย 

Some upcoming music buzz to add to your radar.

โ€œBurial Ground,โ€ the Decemberists

On February 6, the Decemberists released a new song titled โ€œBurial Ground,โ€ marking their first new music in more than six years, since 2018โ€™s Traveling On. Co-produced with Tucker Martine, and featuring the Shinsโ€™ James Mercer, the jangly guitars, swelling horns, sing-song lyrics, and peace-and-love vibes of the track remind us of lateโ€™60s, early โ€™70s pop-rock. In a release sent to the Mercury, frontman Colin Meloy expanded on inspiration behind the song: “‘Burial Ground’ is in that time-honored pop song tradition, a paean to hanging out in graveyards… the melody hook came to me in a dream, and I hummed it into my phone on waking.” A couple days after the release, the band announced its 2024 tour, which kicks off in April! The Peaceable Kingdom Tour will make at least two stops in Oregonโ€”Bend on July 12 at Hayden Homes Amphitheater and the tour’s final date (at least of this leg) on August 3 at McMenamins Edgefield in Troutdate. (The latter is my favorite summer-time outdoor venue.) Get your tickets soon before they sell out. (Mcmenamins Edgefield, 2126 SW Halsey, Sat Aug 3, 6:30 pm, $53.50-202.50, tickets here, all ages)

Jenni Moore is a former music editor and hip-hop columnist and current freelancer at The Portland Mercury. She also writes about comedy, cannabis, movies, TV, and her hatred of taxidermy.