Chat to me! A great live show doesn’t just sound good, it rewires how you hear the album afterward. We're back with a reggae concert recap, where Keznamdi brought his Blxxd And Fyah tour to SOB’s New York City and turned a standing-room venue into a shared choir of lyrics, riddim and message. After his 2026 Grammy win for Best Reggae Album, watching him lead his own band and hold the room with ease feels like growth and greatness in one.   We talk through the night like a real-time conce...

The Style & Vibes Podcast

Mikelah Rose | Style & Vibes

How Keznamdi’s Blxxd And Fyah Tour Lit Up SOB’s

JUN 1, 202616 MIN
The Style & Vibes Podcast

How Keznamdi’s Blxxd And Fyah Tour Lit Up SOB’s

JUN 1, 202616 MIN

Description

Chat to me!A great live show doesn’t just sound good, it rewires how you hear the album afterward. We're back with a reggae concert recap, where Keznamdi brought his Blxxd And Fyah tour to SOB’s New York City and turned a standing-room venue into a shared choir of lyrics, riddim and message. After his 2026 Grammy win for Best Reggae Album, watching him lead his own band and hold the room with ease feels like growth and greatness in one. We talk through the night like a real-time concert review: arriving solo, catching the set right as he hits the stage, and hearing how songs from Skyline Volume 1 and Bloodline land next to the newer Blxxd & Fyah material. The intimacy of SOB’s matters here, because you can see the details and feel the engineering work that keeps his voice clear and the band tight. When the crowd sings back every word, the call-and-response becomes part of the arrangement, especially on heavier tracks like Colonial Bondage and River Of Jordan, plus a powerful Forever Grateful performance moment. We also get into what separates a good set from a memorable one: not rushing between songs, adding personal storytelling, controlling the energy from high to slow to high again, and delivering a Blxxd & Fyah freestyle flip that feels made for NYC. And when special guests like Runkus, Marlon Asher, and Hector Roots Lewis step onstage, it turns into the best kind of artist discovery. Festival season is here, and with AI rising, we make the case for seeing your favourite reggae artists live while you can. Subscribe for more reggae interviews and show reviews, share this with a friend who loves live music, and leave a rating or review. What concert should we cover next? Support the showStyle & Vibes: Website |  Newsletter | Youtube  |  Instagram |  FacebookProduced by Breadfruit Media