Monday, June 15, 2026

Fred Alexander Jr., Drummer for Funk and R&B Band Lakeside, Dies

Fred Alexander Jr., longtime drummer for Lakeside, sits behind his drum kit in a photo shared by The Original Lakeside - Unfiltered. The group remembered Alexander as “our friend, our family and our band member of over 40 years.” (Photo Credit: The Original Lakeside - Unfiltered/Facebook)
Fred Alexander Jr., the Lakeside drummer whose pocket helped carry “Fantastic Voyage” from the funk era into old-school R&B memory, has died.

Alexander’s death was announced by bandmate Stephen Shockley in a social media post. A cause of death and funeral arrangements were not immediately announced.

“Today is a Very Sad Day for our band Lakeside because we lost Fred Alexander,” Shockley wrote, calling him “The little General” and “The Backbone to all of our Records.”


Alexander’s role in Lakeside went beyond the drum kit. He was the drummer, the timekeeper and, later, one of the people helping keep the band’s business and road life together.

Alexander joined Lakeside in 1977, just as the Dayton-born band was moving into the stretch that would define its recording legacy. Lakeside had come through the Midwest funk circuit, early label stops and industry false starts before finding its place with Dick Griffey’s Solar Records, the Los Angeles label that also became home to acts including the Whispers, Shalamar, Midnight Star and Klymaxx.

That Solar run made Lakeside one of the most reliable self-contained funk and R&B bands of its era. The group’s records were not built only around lead vocals or studio polish. They moved because the band could play.

Alexander was part of that engine.


On “It’s All the Way Live,” the band’s 1978 breakthrough, Lakeside turned a stage command into a groove. On “Fantastic Voyage,” its signature record, the group built a party anthem that became bigger than its original chart moment. The song reached No. 1 on Billboard’s R&B chart and later found another life in 1990s hip-hop when Coolio used it as the foundation for his own “Fantastic Voyage.”

Alexander’s role also extended into the group’s survival after its main chart years. A 2025 Truth in Rhythm interview described him as Lakeside’s general manager, and Shockley’s tribute pointed to the administrative weight Alexander carried inside the organization.

Friday, June 12, 2026

Cheryl 'Salt' James Brings Gospel Lift to Solo Rollout With 'Overcomers'

Cheryl “Salt” James appears in artwork for “Overcomers,” her new single featuring Erica Campbell. James, one half of Salt-N-Pepa, is building toward her debut solo album, “Salty N Lit,” after a run of major legacy honors for the pioneering rap group. (Photo Credit: Cheryl “Salt” James/Bandcamp)
Cheryl “Salt” James has spent four decades in hip hop history as part of a group voice — sharp, playful, direct and impossible to write around.

Now she is building a solo chapter in her own name.

James, one half of Salt-N-Pepa, released “Overcomers” on Friday, a new single with Grammy-winning gospel singer Erica Campbell. The song is the latest step toward James’ forthcoming debut solo album, “Salty N Lit,” which has been announced for spring/summer 2026.


On her Bandcamp page, James described “Overcomers” as “an anthem for my seasoned Queens,” framing the record around women who have carried struggle, faith, self-love and survival into another season of life.

That tone is not a break from the Salt-N-Pepa story so much as a narrowing of the lens. Salt-N-Pepa’s best records were never just party records, even when they filled the floor. “Push It,” “Expression,” “Let’s Talk About Sex,” “Shoop,” “Whatta Man” and “None of Your Business” moved through clubs, radio and video countdowns while pushing women’s voices deeper into rap’s center.

The solo material shifts the setting but not the spine. “Chosen” opened the rollout last year. “Kings & Queens” followed in January, with a video filmed at The Hip Hop Museum in the Bronx. “Diamonds in the Light” arrived in March. “Overcomers” brings Campbell into the frame, giving the project its clearest gospel connection yet.


The timing matters. James is releasing solo music after a run of institutional honors that has placed Salt-N-Pepa’s influence back in formal record. The group was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2025 in the Musical Influence category, with Missy Elliott presenting the honor. The Rock Hall describes Salt-N-Pepa as the first major all-female rap group to go both gold and platinum and the first to win a Grammy.

Salt-N-Pepa, with DJ Spinderella, also received the Hall of Fame honor at the 2026 NAACP Image Awards. At that ceremony, James did not simply keep the focus on the past. She used the moment to perform the opening verse of “Kings & Queens,” folding the solo work into the larger arc of the group’s legacy.

That is the more interesting story than a veteran rapper “stepping into a solo era.” James is not trying to outrun Salt-N-Pepa. She is working from inside the authority that catalog gave her, using it to speak more directly about faith, age, survival and purpose.

Hip-hop has not always known what to do with women who helped build the form and then refused to disappear into tribute packages. “Salty N Lit” arrives in that space: not as a comeback, exactly, and not as nostalgia. It is a late-career statement from an artist whose voice helped make room for women in rap to be funny, sexual, outspoken, spiritual, stylish, political and grown.

With “Overcomers,” James is not asking whether she still belongs in hip-hop’s story.

She is writing from the position of someone who already does.

Monday, June 8, 2026

Talay Riley, British Hitmaker Who Toured With Usher and Wrote for H.E.R., Dies at 35

British R&B singer and songwriter Talay Riley smiles in an undated photograph. Riley, 35, who helped bridge the gap between 2000s R&B and the modern streaming era, died Friday following a stabbing in East London. (Photo: Family Handout)
Talay Riley, a British singer, songwriter and producer whose real name was Mark Orabiyi, died Friday after a stabbing in east London. He was 35.

The Metropolitan Police said officers were called around 9 a.m. Friday to reports of a stabbing on Pankhurst Avenue in Silvertown. Riley was found with stab wounds in the garden of a nearby property on Rayleigh Road. Police said he was pronounced dead at the scene.

Another man in his 20s was taken to a hospital with multiple stab wounds. Police said his injuries were not believed to be life-threatening.
Three people were arrested on suspicion of murder. A 27-year-old man has been released on bail pending further inquiries, while a 24-year-old man and a 25-year-old woman were released with no further action after police questioning, according to British news reports. The investigation remains ongoing.

Riley belonged to the part of R&B history that often hides in the credits. Before some listeners knew his name, they knew the records: Khalid’s “Young Dumb & Broke,” H.E.R.’s “Lights On,” Kehlani’s “Out the Window” and Chip’s “Oopsy Daisy.” Riley’s work moved through the writing rooms and vocal sessions that helped shape the sound of R&B, pop and hip-hop after the 2000s arena era.

Riley’s death drew grief from across the British and American music worlds, where he was known as both an artist and a writer whose reach extended well beyond his own recordings.

His brother Michael Orabiyi, the producer and songwriter known professionally as Scribz Riley, confirmed the loss in an Instagram tribute.

“My heart is shattered! This doesn’t feel real. It feels like a bad dream,” he wrote.

Scribz Riley said the brothers had spoken before Talay went to sleep about the future, staying positive and everything they still had left to do.

“I never imagined that would be our last conversation,” he wrote.

He described his brother as “a friend to many, a mentor, an inspiration, and a light in so many people’s lives.”

“He loved deeply, gave freely, and touched countless people through his talent, kindness, and spirit,” Scribz Riley wrote.

The tribute drew condolences from artists who understood the reach of Riley’s work. Stormzy wrote, “I’m sorry bro.” Khalid wrote, “I’m so sorry bro … I’m sending you so much love.” Kehlani wrote, “Big hugs Scribs I’m so sorry.” Wretch 32 called Riley “a gem” and said he would be “missed + never forgotten.”

In a family statement reported by British news outlets, relatives remembered Riley as “a beloved son, brother, uncle and friend.”

“We will always cherish his kindness, beautiful spirit and remarkable talent,” the family said. “His presence touched many lives, and his memory will remain in our hearts forever.”

Riley’s career connected several eras of R&B and pop. He signed his first major publishing deal at 18 and later wrote Chip’s U.K. No. 1 single “Oopsy Daisy.” He also worked on records connected to Tinie Tempah, Jessie J, Britney Spears, Craig David, Khalid, H.E.R., Kehlani, the Chainsmokers and others.

For listeners who came up on the Usher and Trey Songz era, Riley also belonged to the bridge between 2000s R&B showmanship and the global songwriting economy that followed. He toured with Usher, while his later credits placed him inside the streaming-era sound of artists such as Khalid and H.E.R.

Riley received a writing credit on H.E.R.’s “Lights On,” which appeared on the singer’s self-titled album “H.E.R.” The album won Best R&B album at the 2019 Grammy Awards.

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