Ruby Shabazz
Artist
06/06/2026
June 2026! 🔥Cash me outside 🙌🏽 😘
6/6 Today! Family Fun Day 🫶🏽
6/18 NEBG Summer Series 🌺
6/20 BWINH Juneteenth ✊🏽
6/28 BLM Manchester Black Pride 🌈
More info to come…
05/30/2026
Next Saturday! I’ll be in Boston 🙌🏽 joining a great line up and performing some R&B classics and originals. 😍The event is also for a great family and a great cause. 🫶🏽
Boston, join us for the 5th Annual Daddy & Me Family Fun Day on Saturday, June 6, 2026 from 11AM–4PM at Martini Memorial Shell Park.
A day centered around family, community, music, culture, and connection — with live entertainment, activities for all ages, and unforgettable moments throughout the day.
Featuring:
Tim Hall
Ruby Shabazz
Bakari J.B.
Pheonix-Out-The
BigTunez The DJ
Boston Rhythm Riders
Origination
Marlon Carey
Bring your family, invite your friends, and come experience one of Boston’s favorite community celebrations.
Martini Memorial Shell Park
1015 Truman Parkway, Boston, MA 02136
Register:
2026daddyandmefamilyfunday.eventbrite.com
Boston
This Monday! The Evolutionists at Jimmy's Jazz & Blues Club Let’s get it!!!
DJ Myth
Fee the Evolutionist
05/12/2026
Did you get your tickets yet? 🎟️ 😊
05/05/2026
Official Lineup Drop!
Joining & I on May 18th at will be:
✨ (Bass): A veteran of the Boston and New England jazz scene, bringing deep, “thick” bass grooves that hold the pocket with undeniable precision.
✨ (Guitar): A masterful guitarist known for his versatile, melodic touch that glides effortlessly between soulful jazz and gritty blues.
✨ (Turntables): A true turntablist and hip hop veteran, providing the scratches and sonic textures that keep our sound rooted in the culture.
✨ (Drums): The heartbeat of the band, a powerhouse drummer who blends high-energy funk rhythms with surgical jazz timing.
The evolution will be televised... well, actually, it’ll be live in Portsmouth. Don’t miss out 😉 🥂🔥
Points of Light Lantern Celebration Festival yesterday! Thank you for having me. 🫶🏽 Shout out to Lowell High Synergy dance club. 🙌🏽 And all the amazing talent.
05/03/2026
What an amazing audience at the festival yesterday. 🫶🏽Shout out the the youth performers also. The choreography, the poetry, the messages were outstanding. 🙌🏽
Grateful & Thankful 🙏🏽
04/19/2026
Stay True to Yourself! 🎙️❤️
From New Hampshire Magazine
April 22, 2025
Being an R&B artist in New Hampshire has been challenging but also fulfilling. I grew up in the inner city of Roxbury, Mass., where I spent a lot of my childhood years listening to my parents’ Motown vinyl collection.
I would take Stevie Wonder’s “Songs in the Key of Life” or Michael Jackson’s “Off the Wall” album and play them on my Fisher-Price record player. I was in love with soul music, but I didn’t know hip-hop yet, as it was still a burgeoning art form.
In my pre-teen years, R&B and pop music were starting to show the influence of hip-hop with songs from Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston, who were embracing the art form, and I knew their songs by heart. In my late teens, the mix of hip-hop and R&B was undeniable with artists like Mary J. Blige and Lauryn Hill playing on the radio, which made a huge impression on my style today.
I attended college at UMass Lowell, where I was introduced to different forms of music such as rock and alternative, and I got into artists like Fiona Apple and Alanis Morissette. I loved their angst and vulnerability, and their styles ended up having an influence on my writing later in life. I started performing with a live band in college but stuck to my R&B roots. I thought nothing of performing R&B songs because it was a lot of what I knew, and the musicians I played with also knew the music.
When I moved to Nashua, NH, I found that fewer musicians knew or performed the R&B and hip-hop music that I grew up on and was familiar with, so that became a challenge. While performing, I’d always have someone ask me to sing a song in a genre that I wasn’t familiar with. I always tried to be open-minded and tasked myself with learning different genres of music to fit in, but I struggled with feeling true to myself. I used to feel self-conscious about it. Now I have come to realize that people should understand that different people grow up differently. That includes music, culture, food, etc. The good thing is that it forced me to build a repertoire of music and be well rounded as a performer.
There came a point when I even struggled with wanting to perform my own original songs versus singing cover songs. Writing music became a journey of finding myself, and I had to dig a little deeper and stick with my conviction to sing original songs that have meaning to me.
At first, I experimented with dance music before I released the R&B and neo-soul sound that I am known for now, realizing that I had to tell my own truth and be vulnerable. That took a slower, more serious approach. I started to study the greats in R&B as well as the early jazz singers such as Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald and Etta James. I studied their melodies, delivery and cadences, then incorporated some of that style into my own sound.
Staying true to my roots and putting in all the hard work has paid off. Recently, I have been recognized for my music, not just in New Hampshire but in New England, and that has special significance as a Black woman. It’s important to feel seen and heard and to know that my voice and point of view matter. In 2024, I was recognized by the New England Music Awards as the R&B Soul Artist of the Year! I was also recognized by the New England Songwriters Competition in the category of Hip Hop/Urban and R&B for my song “Thank You.” It was such an honor, because I felt appreciated and supported where I didn’t always feel that way in the past.
It is imperative for me to recognize other organizations that are highlighting Black voices and for me to connect with the Black communities in the area, especially with Black women. I have met so many important leaders and peers in organizations like Black Women in New Hampshire Social Club, the We Are One and the Concord Multicultural Festival.
Connecting with other Black women and organizations has allowed me to learn so much about myself and my history. I’ve learned that there are other people of color in New Hampshire who are using their voices to be heard and who are making history right now.
There are still so many people of all races and backgrounds that I have yet to meet, and I’m looking forward to doing so through music. It’s all about staying true to myself and knowing that my music will connect with the right people.
This article was featured in 603 Diversity.
04/16/2026
I’m so excited to announce I’ll be performing at Points of Light Lantern Celebration in Lowell! 🏮✨
This is such a beautiful celebration of unity and culture, and I’m honored to be part of the music lineup. Come catch my set, then stay for the magical lantern launch on the canal!
🎤 Performance: Saturday, May 2nd @ 7:30 PM
📍 Where: Ecumenical Plaza / Western Canal, Lowell
🎟 Admission: Free & open to all!
There will be amazing food, art, and community vibes all night.
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.
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Nashua, NH
03060-03061-03062-03063-03064