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MARVIN Music News: The Warning Ignite “Kerosene,” Gorillaz Map Out The Mountain Tour, Rosalía’s LUX Era Goes Global, and Harry Styles Drops Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally.

The Warning Strike the Match With “Kerosene”

Mexico’s hard-rock trio The Warning return with a volatile new single, “Kerosene,” released March 6 — a track that burns with the band’s signature blend of precision, grit, and stadium-ready momentum. Built on a tense guitar riff that eventually detonates into a full-throttle chorus, the song leans into the group’s ability to balance melodic hooks with explosive instrumentation.

“Kerosene” feels engineered for maximum ignition. The verses simmer with restrained intensity before erupting into a chorus that carries the same arena-filling energy that’s defined the band’s recent rise. It’s another reminder that The Warning continue to refine their sound without dulling the edge — a controlled blaze rather than a chaotic fire.

The single also signals the band’s next creative chapter, following a year of relentless touring and a steady stream of heavier, more polished material. If “Kerosene” is the first spark, the rest of this era could very well be a wildfire.

Gorillaz Head for Higher Ground With The Mountain Tour

Photo by Frazer Harrison

Gorillaz are heading back on the road — and this time, the concept stretches toward the peaks. The animated collective has officially announced The Mountain Tour, a sprawling run of live dates that promises a new stage concept and a refreshed audiovisual spectacle built around the band’s ever-expanding universe.

While exact production details remain under wraps, the tour announcement suggests a show designed with cinematic ambition. Historically, Gorillaz tours blend massive visual installations with live instrumentation and a rotating cast of collaborators — turning each show into a hybrid concert-art piece.

With the band continuing to evolve musically and visually, The Mountain Tour looks positioned to push that immersive experience even further. If past tours have been digital playgrounds, this next chapter might feel more like a summit.

Rosalía Enters the LUX Era as Tour Launch Approaches

Photo via Getty Images

The next global chapter for Rosalía officially begins March 16, when the singer launches the LUX tour — a new live era expected to expand the theatrical ambition she’s become known for.

Rosalía’s tours have historically blurred the line between concert and performance art, combining flamenco roots, avant-pop production, and sharply choreographed staging. The LUX tour promises another reinvention. Early teasers suggest a more luminous aesthetic — one that trades the stark intensity of her previous visuals for something sleeker and more futuristic.

What remains consistent is Rosalía’s command of spectacle. Whether she’s moving between intimate vocal moments or maximalist production, her shows rarely settle into predictability. As LUX prepares to go global, the expectation isn’t just a concert — it’s a full-scale artistic environment.

Harry Styles Spins the Mirrorball on Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally.

Photo via The New York Times

Harry Styles has officially unveiled his new album, Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally., a shimmering, rhythm-forward project that leans confidently into dance-floor textures while maintaining the emotional clarity that’s defined his solo work.

Across the record, Styles threads glossy disco pulses, breezy pop songwriting, and soft-focus romance into a cohesive late-night soundtrack. The album moves with intention — basslines glide, guitars shimmer, and the production favors groove over bombast. It’s a sound that feels both nostalgic and deliberately modern, echoing classic disco warmth while staying firmly planted in contemporary pop.

If previous eras positioned Styles as a chameleon of modern pop, Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally. feels like his most carefree and rhythmically liberated project yet. The mirrorball is spinning again — and Styles seems perfectly comfortable standing right beneath it.