Sublime’s surviving members — Bud Gaugh and Eric Wilson — reunited for a set at Coachella with original lead singer Bradley Nowell’s son, Jakob.
The band’s first public performance with Jakob went down at Coachella’s main stage beginning around 6:05pm local time on Saturday. The trio ran through Sublime’s biggest hits, including “Santeria,” “Wrong Way,” “Garden Grove,” “What I Got,” and “Doin’ Time.” Watch video of their performance below.
Get Sublime Tickets Here
Sublime’s Coachella set with Jakob Nowell occurred four months after the late singer’s son first joined Wilson and Gaugh for a private benefit show in Los Angeles. Guagh and Wilson had previously formed Sublime with Rome in 2009 with singer Rome Ramirez, but Guagh left the band two years later. After Gaugh and Wilson performed with Nowell in December 2023, Sublime with Rome disbanded.
Discussing his decision to reunite Sublime with his later father’s bandmates,...
The band’s first public performance with Jakob went down at Coachella’s main stage beginning around 6:05pm local time on Saturday. The trio ran through Sublime’s biggest hits, including “Santeria,” “Wrong Way,” “Garden Grove,” “What I Got,” and “Doin’ Time.” Watch video of their performance below.
Get Sublime Tickets Here
Sublime’s Coachella set with Jakob Nowell occurred four months after the late singer’s son first joined Wilson and Gaugh for a private benefit show in Los Angeles. Guagh and Wilson had previously formed Sublime with Rome in 2009 with singer Rome Ramirez, but Guagh left the band two years later. After Gaugh and Wilson performed with Nowell in December 2023, Sublime with Rome disbanded.
Discussing his decision to reunite Sublime with his later father’s bandmates,...
- 4/14/2024
- by Paolo Ragusa
- Consequence - Music
Jakob Nowell stepped into his role as the lead singer of Sublime before thousands of fans on Saturday night, as the reunited band rocked out on the Coachella stage.
The legendary ska group first disbanded following the tragic death of lead singer Bradley Nowell in 1996. Nearly 30 years later, Nowell’s son took over his vocal and guitar duties, dutifully performing the songs his father wrote alongside drummer Bud Gaugh and bass player Eric Wilson.
The revived Sublime kicked off their 50-minute set with “April 29, 1992 (Miami)” — which Jakob commanded with a snarling punk charisma,...
The legendary ska group first disbanded following the tragic death of lead singer Bradley Nowell in 1996. Nearly 30 years later, Nowell’s son took over his vocal and guitar duties, dutifully performing the songs his father wrote alongside drummer Bud Gaugh and bass player Eric Wilson.
The revived Sublime kicked off their 50-minute set with “April 29, 1992 (Miami)” — which Jakob commanded with a snarling punk charisma,...
- 4/14/2024
- by Ethan Millman and Suzy Exposito
- Rollingstone.com
There is an upcoming documentary film titled The Third Strike that deserves some attention.
Not to be associated with the baseball term after which the nuisance law is named, The Third Strike comes from first-time filmmaker Nicole Jones and offers an inside look at the devastation wreaked by the "three-strike" laws.
For those unfamiliar with the term, the three-strike laws add another layer of punishment to felons who have been convicted of felonies three times.
There is a federal law, housed under the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, and state laws can be found in about half of the states, and most came into existence between 1994 and 1995.
The federal law addresses triple federal convictions for serious violent felonies or drug-related trafficking offenses.
States vary by whether the law applies to felonies, misdemeanors, or both; the specific crimes that fall under the law, and the severity of the punishment.
Not to be associated with the baseball term after which the nuisance law is named, The Third Strike comes from first-time filmmaker Nicole Jones and offers an inside look at the devastation wreaked by the "three-strike" laws.
For those unfamiliar with the term, the three-strike laws add another layer of punishment to felons who have been convicted of felonies three times.
There is a federal law, housed under the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, and state laws can be found in about half of the states, and most came into existence between 1994 and 1995.
The federal law addresses triple federal convictions for serious violent felonies or drug-related trafficking offenses.
States vary by whether the law applies to felonies, misdemeanors, or both; the specific crimes that fall under the law, and the severity of the punishment.
- 5/21/2020
- by Carissa Pavlica
- TVfanatic
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