clipping. @ Rialto Theatre

clipping. @ Rialto Theatre

Rialto Theatre-Tucson, 318 Congress St, 85701 Tucson Kort

mið. 05.08.2026 20:00

Doors 7PM | Show 8PM | GA Standing | CHILDREN UNDER 6 NOT PERMITTED | Public On Sale - 10/10 10AM ______ Prices include all fees. ALL SALES ARE FINAL. The Rialto Theatre does not grant refunds or exchanges for currently scheduled shows. The Rialto Theatre Foundation has a clear bag policy in place at Rialto Theatre and 191 Toole. The policy limits the size and type of bags that may be brought into our venues. The following is a list of bags that will be accepted for entry: Bags that are clear plastic or vinyl and do not exceed 12in x 6in x 12in One-gallon clear plastic freezer bags (Ziploc bag or similar) Small clutch bags, approximately 5in x 7in All bags subject to search. Clear bags are available for sale at the box office.

Flytjendur

  • Clipping.
    Clipping.

    Clipping: make party music for the club you wish you hadn't gone to, the car you don't remember getting in, and the streets you don't feel safe on.

  • Open Mike Eagle
    Open Mike Eagle
    BLU & EXILE 2026 BIO
    In 2007, while headlines were dominated by Kanye West vs. 50 Cent and the industry fixated on
    first-week sales, two artists on the West Coast were quietly crafting something timeless. Blu and
    Exile weren’t chasing the spotlight — they were building their own gravitational pull.
    On July 17, 2007, they released Below the Heavens — a debut that felt more like a sacred
    document than a first statement. Soul-soaked, sample-driven production. Raw, unfiltered
    vulnerability. No gloss. No gimmicks. Just truth pressed into wax.
    Early believers recognized it immediately. Underground purists and tastemakers hailed it as an
    instant classic. Limited to just 3,000 physical copies and leaked prematurely online, its scarcity
    only strengthened its mythology. If you had it, you understood. If you didn’t, you were already
    behind.
    Blu’s everyman reflections — grappling with faith, doubt, love, frustration, and ambition —
    resonated deeply over Exile’s warm, golden-era-inspired soundscapes. Static in the samples.
    Dust in the drums. Pain and poetry in every bar. For the Okayplayer generation and beyond, it
    became a defining statement of West Coast underground hip-hop.
    The chemistry was organic. Introduced through Aloe Blacc of Emanon, Exile first witnessed Blu
    command a Los Angeles stage — hungry, electric, undeniable. One session became “Party of
    Two.
    ” Then “Maintain.
    ” Then a vision. A full-length statement. They knew it was special.
    By 2009, Blu’s momentum earned him a place in the XXL Freshman Class alongside Wale, Kid
    Cudi, B.o.B, and Charles Hamilton — proof that the underground could crown its own stars.
    But they never stopped building.
    The Albums That Followed
    After Below the Heavens, Blu & Exile continued to evolve together across four full-length
    releases, each expanding their sonic universe while preserving their unmistakable chemistry:
    Give Me My Flowers While I Can Still Smell Them (2012) — A triumphant return five
    years later, balancing maturity and hunger, gratitude and grit.
    Miles (2020) — A sweeping, jazz-infused opus inspired by the spirit of Miles Davis,
    blending live instrumentation with expansive storytelling.
    Love (the) Ominous World (2023) — A darker, textured meditation on love and
    uncertainty, layered with lush, cinematic production.
    Across these releases, the duo proved Below the Heavens wasn’t lightning in a bottle — it was
    the foundation of a lasting movement.
    Meanwhile, Blu expanded his catalog with one-producer masterpieces alongside Madlib,
    Evidence, and Nottz, while collaborating with artists such as Anderson .Paak, Talib Kweli, Your
    Old Droog, and Rome Streetz.
    Exile solidified his reputation as a producer’s producer with the modern classic Boy Meets World
    for Fashawn, experimental projects like Exile Radio, and production credits for Mobb Deep, 50
    Cent. Big Sean, Wiz Khalifa, and Snoop Dogg.
    Now, with nearly two decades of growth, experimentation, and refinement behind them, Blu &
    Exile return not as hungry newcomers — but as master craftsmen of their own lane. Their latest
    offering doesn’t feel like just another release; it feels like culmination.
    For longtime listeners, it’s a reunion charged with nostalgia and elevation. For new fans, it’s an
    invitation into a world where lyricism and soul still reign supreme.
    The foundation is solid. The chemistry is proven. And history has shown: when Blu and Exile
    connect, something timeless follows. Album Announcement on the way.