Entertainment
The Unconventional Rise of Swiss Artist MURDOKK
Published
9 months agoon

The Swiss music scene has long been a melting pot of artistic expression, yet somehow, it still yearns for something fresh. Enter Roberto Carlos Gomes, better known as MURDOKK, who’s doing something utterly fascinating in Rheinfelden AG. He isn’t just another musician trying to make it big—he’s quietly revolutionizing what it means to be an artist in Switzerland. With a creative arsenal that spans videography, writing, animation, and music production, MURDOKK has become something of an artistic Swiss Army knife.
Picture this: while most artists flock to expensive recording studios, MURDOKK sits in his home studio—if you can even call it that—armed with little more than a laptop and raw determination. There’s not even a pop filter in sight. It’s this stripped-down approach that gives his music its unmistakable authenticity, a quality that stands in stark contrast to today’s world of over-produced, polished tracks.
The story of MURDOKK’s evolution is particularly intriguing. He cut his teeth in the industry under the name “No Tobacco,” back when music was just another hobby in his creative repertoire. But something changed. Maybe it was frustration with the status quo, or perhaps it was just artistic restlessness, but he felt compelled to dig deeper. “In Switzerland, you can make money from music, but you can’t make a living from it,” he observes, with a hint of determination in his voice. “The scene is not fully developed, and that’s exactly the challenge I’m taking on.”
While MURDOKK handles nearly every aspect of his musical creation, he does make one notable exception. The beats that form the backbone of his tracks come from two carefully chosen producers—one German, one Swiss. These collaborations provide the canvas for MURDOKK’s storytelling, each beat carefully selected to complement his narrative-driven lyrics.
His music? Well, it’s not your typical background soundtrack for a casual dinner party. MURDOKK’s sound hits you like a technicolor explosion of audio—dense, complex, and wonderfully overwhelming. “It’s not designed for passive listening,” he admits, seemingly aware that his creation might be too rich for some listeners to digest in one sitting. His tracks often find their most appreciative audience among fellow musicians and producers who can unravel the intricate layers he weaves into each piece.
MURDOKK’s musical DNA is fascinating—a blend of influences that spans decades and genres. His brother played the role of musical mentor, introducing him to sounds that would shape his artistic journey. But it’s his eclectic mix of inspirations—from Michael Jackson’s perfectionism to Falco’s Austrian flair, from Jim Morrison’s poetic prowess to Future Hendrix’s innovative spirit—that truly sets him apart. These influences don’t just inform his music; they’re woven into the fabric of his artistic identity.
Right now, MURDOKK is pouring his creative energy into “iDUNNO,” a project that started as a collaboration with artist Yungness but has grown into something much more ambitious. It’s evolving into what he calls a “full experience”—an album, yes, but also a music video and a comprehensive campaign that ties everything together in typical MURDOKK fashion.
Looking ahead, MURDOKK has his sights set on what could be a game-changing collaboration. He sees Red Bull as the perfect partner to help reshape Switzerland’s musical landscape. “Red Bull has the vision, the reach, and the cultural influence to truly make an impact,” he explains, his enthusiasm palpable. It’s not just about getting sponsored; it’s about finding a partner who shares his vision for pushing boundaries and creating something unprecedented in Swiss music.
Through his work, MURDOKK isn’t just making music—he’s crafting experiences that stick with you long after the last note fades. His approach challenges listeners to engage more deeply with music, to find meaning beyond the melody. As Switzerland’s music scene continues to evolve, MURDOKK stands ready to lead the charge, promising to deliver something that’s genuinely “real, raw, and unforgettable.”
Under the banner of Wake’n’Bake Gang Records, MURDOKK is doing more than just releasing music—he’s building a movement. His label serves as a platform for his unique artistic vision, one that could potentially reshape how music is created, produced, and consumed in the years to come. The impact of his work extends beyond just the sounds he creates; it’s about challenging the status quo and proving that there’s room for innovation everywhere.
For those intrigued, you can dive deeper into his world through his various online platforms. Follow his journey on Instagram, explore his universe at murdkk.ch, or stream his latest releases on Spotify. Every platform shows a different side of an artist who isn’t just dropping tracks – he’s painting a vision of what music could be, and that vision is spreading way beyond any borders.
This article contains branded content provided by a third party. The views expressed in this article are solely those of the content creator or sponsor and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or editorial stance of Popular Hustle.

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Tullia Ferraro Shines as a Co-Star Opposite Thorsten Kaye on The Bold and the Beautiful
Published
1 day agoon
October 13, 2025
The actress steps into CBS’s iconic daytime drama, appearing opposite one of soap opera’s most recognizable leads.
By Emily Brown
In stepping into the world of CBS’s venerable daytime drama The Bold and the Beautiful, Tullia Ferraro takes her place among television’s most enduring ensemble casts. Her scenes opposite Thorsten Kaye—who portrays Ridge Forrester, a character synonymous with soap-opera gravitas—demonstrate her ability to adapt seamlessly to a fast-paced production alongside one of the genre’s most recognizable leads.
Since its 1987 debut, The Bold and the Beautiful has become one of the world’s most watched daytime dramas, broadcasting in more than 100 countries. Its smooth production schedule, global syndication, and daily viewership make it a unique platform for actors to reach a wide, loyal audience. The show is known for glamorous fashion storylines, complicated love triangles, and the cliffhangers that keep viewers returning day after day.
Thorsten Kaye has portrayed Ridge Forrester since 2013, inheriting one of the show’s most iconic roles from Ronn Moss, and has earned critical attention in the genre, including Daytime Emmy recognition. His presence brings both dramatic weight and credibility to every scene—placing Ferraro in dialogue with not only a lead but a touchstone in daytime drama.
In her appearance on The Bold and the Beautiful, Ferraro shared a brief but memorable scene opposite Thorsten Kaye. Even in a short exchange, timing and presence are crucial in the fast-paced world of daytime drama, where production moves quickly and scenes are often filmed in a single take. Ferraro delivered her lines with clarity and ease, supporting the emotional tone of the moment and fitting seamlessly into the show’s established rhythm. Her ability to adapt quickly to the production environment and interact naturally with a lead actor underscores a professional ease that can make even a brief appearance stand out.
While many daytime actors rotate in and out, The Bold and the Beautiful is currently embracing location shoots and renewed narrative ambition. In 2025, the show filmed in Naples and Capri, Italy, injecting fresh visual spectacle into longstanding storylines and demonstrating its commitment to ambitious production. Those episodes are already generating buzz among fans, both for the romantic settings and the tensions that unfold overseas.
For an actress like Ferraro, being part of a soap in such a moment offers both challenge and opportunity: to perform amid location variation, outdoor dynamics, and in scenes that may find resonance well beyond a studio set. It is precisely during these high-visibility stretches that supporting actors can stand out—when lighting, setting, and narrative pressure combine to focus attention.
Ferraro’s role on The Bold and the Beautiful may have been brief, but it reflects her ability to step into an established world, work alongside respected leads, and bring professionalism to a tightly run production. In the high-volume, high-visibility world of daytime drama, even a short appearance can become part of the show’s ongoing narrative fabric.
Entertainment
Awakening Through Music: An Interview with Tryphon Evarist
Published
1 day agoon
October 13, 2025
When Vitaly Bulavin, creator of the entrepreneurial training program “Space for Development”, traveled with his team to Tanzania, he met musician Tryphon Evarist at the Sauti za Busara festival — one of the key components of the training program. Tryphon’s performance deeply impressed Vitaly and the entire team, inspiring them to share this remarkable musician’s talent with the world, beginning with the release of his debut album. Vitaly and his group of participants raised the necessary funds, and in May 2025, Tryphon’s debut album AMKA was released.
Since 1991, Vitaly Bulavin has been leading programs aimed at developing entrepreneurial capacity in individuals and organizations. He is the author of the training program “Openness to the New”, launched in 2003 at the request of a major company and later conducted in Moscow, Kenya, Tanzania, and several European cities. He also founded the initiative “ART for Management” — exploring what entrepreneurs can learn from artists.
Vitaly graduated from the Moscow Institute of Fine Chemical Technology, later studied entrepreneurship at the Moscow School of Management, and completed internships in the USA, Japan, and Germany. In 1991, he founded the business school “Arsenal Managers’ School”, which he successfully sold in 2010 — completing the full cycle from business creation to sale.
What follows is our conversation with Tryphon Evarist about his journey, inspirations, and the meaning of AMKA.

Q: Could you tell us a bit about your background and your professional path in music?
A: “I grew up in Kizimbani, a village in Zanzibar, surrounded by music and traditional arts. In 2013 I joined the Dhow Countries Music Academy, where I studied accordion, qanun, drums, dance, and theory. After graduating with a diploma and ABRSM Grade 5 in Music Theory, I stayed on as a teacher. Today I’m the Artistic Director at DCMA — which means I spend my days performing, composing, and guiding young musicians.”
Q: How did you first come to songwriting and performing?
A: “Honestly, it all started with learning from my teachers — masters of instruments like the accordion and qanun. Soon after, I began playing at festivals such as Zanzibar International Film Festival and Sauti za Busara. From there, the journey just kept growing — I was lucky to perform in Kenya, Switzerland, Uganda, the UAE, and even the Comoros.”
Q: What inspires you the most in your creative process?
A: “For me, inspiration comes from the tradition itself. Taarab is part of who I am, and I feel responsible to keep it alive while also letting it grow. I love mixing Swahili heritage with modern sounds, finding new ways to express it. And I always remind myself — commitment, hard work, teamwork, and believing in yourself can take you anywhere.”
Q: Can you tell us about your team — who is beside you on this journey, and what role do they play?
A: “My team is really the community at DCMA and the ensembles I work with. On stage, it can be up to 14 people — singers, guitar, violin, saxophone, keyboards, accordion, qanun, drums. Each person adds their own voice and energy. It feels like a family that carries Swahili music forward together.”
Q: What are your current projects, concerts, or events you’re preparing for?
A: “The biggest news is my debut album AMKA, which came out in May 2025. Before that, I had released a few singles — Pambana, Sofia, Maneno Ya Kuambiwa, Nitakuoa, and Mbalamiago. And just recently I was back at Sauti za Busara, which is always special — it’s like performing at home, but with the whole world watching.”

Q: Your debut album AMKA has just been released. What does this album mean to you personally?
A: “The Amka album means a lot to me, because firstly it is my first music album in my life, but it is also an album that I have launched after 12 years since I joined the Zanzibar College of Music DCMA. Secondly it is an album that has given me great respect, in showing my musical greatness and my greatness in organizing such events. Thirdly it has marked me as the first musician from Zanzibar to hold a big and prestigious launch.”
Q: Can you tell us about the story or message behind the title AMKA?
A: “Amka means wake up, this is an album that has launched with a mission to awaken listeners. Named after one of its standout tracks, AMKA — the album challenges the dominance of mainstream music promoted by TV and radios. It encourages audiences to open their ears and minds to the richness, uniqueness and depth of alternative musical styles. The album invites listeners to recognize and appreciate music beyond the commercial sphere, offering a fresh, powerful blend rooted in cultural authenticity and creative fusion.”
Q: Which track on the album feels the most personal or powerful for you, and why?
A: “All the songs that are on the Amka album have a realistic feel to them. But on my side, there is a song that when I sing it, I sing with a lot of emotion. The song is called Nivushe. Means Pass me. Because it is a song that I pray to my God to guide me safely through my life journey, so that I can fight and overcome all the obstacles that I face.”
Q: You’ve been praised for blending traditional Taarab with new elements. How does AMKA reflect that fusion?
A: “I am a musician who is currently responsible for flying the flag of traditional Taarab and Afro fusion music. So in any case, in some of my Fusion songs you will be able to hear the taste of Taarab even if it is a little bit, for example in the song Nivushe. I was able to use an instrument that is used in Traditional Taarab. But also even in the album itself, I did not stop showing the traditional music of where I come from, because the album was only for Afro fusion, but I also included my Traditional Taarab song. Not only that but even in my writing/lyrics I always look at all times. That is, the past, the present and the future.”
For Bulavin and his team, supporting Tryphon’s creativity became a natural extension of their philosophy: to foster growth, creativity, and the realization of meaningful projects.
Official links of Tryphon Evarist:
Entertainment
An Oxford Collective Is Rethinking What Happens When Genres Collide
Published
1 day agoon
October 13, 2025
Most musicians spend their careers mastering one tradition. They pick a genre, learn its rules, and stay there. But what if the more interesting question isn’t which tradition to follow, but what happens when you stop treating them as separate territories? That’s the question driving Floyds Row, a British-American ensemble that’s been testing the boundaries between early music, classical, folk, bluegrass, and world traditions since their formation in Oxford.
The group takes its name from a small street off St Aldate’s, running between the University of Oxford’s Faculty of Music and the Thames Valley Police station. It’s a fitting location for a project built on creative tension.

The collective started from a series of concerts at the University of Oxford. Chris Ferebee organized these initial collaborations, bringing together musicians including Alistair Anderson, Andrew Arceci, and various guest performers. What began as experimental performances evolved into something worth documenting, resulting in their debut album, “The Oxford Sessions,” released on Centaur Records.

What makes Floyds Row unusual is their approach to historical material. They’re grounded in historical awareness, tracing how folk tunes evolved across centuries and continents, but they deliberately avoid strict authenticity. The goal isn’t to recreate period performances. It’s to treat centuries-old music as raw material for something current. Their performances incorporate improvisation, reflecting both historical practices and contemporary freedom, with a rotating lineup that brings together musicians from different backgrounds using various notation systems and approaches.
The response to their debut has been striking. Divide & Conquer praised the opening track, noting how “Drive the Cold Winter Away” from John Playford’s English Dancing Master captures a “beautifully haunting” quality. Early Music America called the work “gorgeous and haunting,” while the Viola da Gamba Society in the UK threw out a particularly enthusiastic endorsement: “If this is fusion music then ‘Long Live the Protean Viol’ – every home should have one!”

The Viola da Gamba Society of America highlighted how the musicians handle both performance and composition with elegance and feeling. But it’s their refusal to stay in one lane that really stands out. The North Potomac Times captured this well: “No two shows are alike, but the performances guarantee an eclectic mix of traditional pieces from composers of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, covers from modern folk singers such as Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, and the Grateful Dead, as well as original compositions.”
This past fall, the collective wrapped up a New England tour that included singer-songwriter Chris Moyse and arrangements from Hailey Fuqua (soprano), Asako Takeuchi (violin), Jacques Lee Wood (cello and banjo), Andrew Arceci (bass and mandolin), and George Lykogiannis. Several venues sold out, including House of Play in Newton, Massachusetts, and the Winchendon Music Festival. The tour also hit spots across New Jersey, New Hampshire, and Maine, culminating in a lecture-recital at Berklee College of Music in Boston.
Fanfare Magazine’s reviewer went so far as to call the recording balance “the best single release I have heard from the Centaur label.” RootsWorld kept it simple: “Give a listen and prepare to be enchanted.”

The collective isn’t slowing down. Plans for a 2026 tour are already in motion, along with discussions about another recording project. Culture Spot-Montgomery County labeled them a “genre-fusing ensemble,” which is accurate but maybe misses the deeper point. Floyds Row treats music as a living tradition rather than a museum piece. They’re not preserving folk tunes under glass. They’re asking what those tunes become when you let them breathe in a room with a banjo, a viola da gamba, and whatever else happens to be around.
Maybe that’s the real experiment here. Not whether these traditions can coexist, but whether the walls between them were ever really necessary in the first place.
Those curious can explore more about the ensemble and their work, stream “The Oxford Sessions” on Spotify, or follow their tour updates on their official website and Facebook.



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