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Broken Record with Rick Rubin, Malcolm Gladwell, Bruce Headlam and Justin Richmond

Infinity Song: Live From Tribeca Festival

Broken Record with Rick Rubin, Malcolm Gladwell, Bruce Headlam and Justin Richmond

Pushkin Industries

Music, Society & Culture

4.54.2K Ratings

🗓️ 26 August 2025

⏱️ 73 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Great musical chemistry often starts at home. Think of family bands like Sly and the Family Stone, The Beach Boys, the Bee Gees, Haim, Oasis, AC/DC, and The Jacksons. Infinity Song, our guests today, carry on that tradition. Siblings Momo, Abraham, Angel, and Israel Boyd grew up between Detroit and New York City, sharpening their sound wherever they could: in church, in the park, on subway platforms, even around the kitchen table.

Their devotion to performing eventually carried them to bigger stages, guided by their father and manager John Boyd and supported by Jay-Z’s Roc Nation. Along the way, they’ve developed a unique blend of R&B and folk that they describe as modern-day soft rock.

For today's episode, Justin Richmond sat down with the Boyd siblings live at the Tribeca Festival in New York. They talked about the role music has always played in their family, the pivotal moment when their dad saved the day in a high-stakes meeting with Jay-Z, and they performed a couple of tracks from their album Metamorphosis Complete.

You can hear a playlist of some of our favorite tracks from Infinity Song HERE.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Pushkin.

0:10.8

It's my firm belief that our culture doesn't put enough stock in family bands.

0:15.1

I mean, just think about the groups that include siblings.

0:18.0

Sly in the Family Stone, the Beach Boys, the Bee Gees, Haim, Oasis, ACDC, the

0:23.5

Jackson's. It makes sense that Kin would develop a uniquely powerful musical chemistry.

0:29.0

After all, a love of music usually does start in the home. And the same is true of our guests

0:33.5

today, Momo, Abraham, Angel, and Israel Boyd of the group Infinity Song.

0:39.0

The four siblings were raised in musical households between Detroit and New York, honing

0:43.1

their sound wherever they could, in churches, in parks, subway stations, even around the

0:48.8

kitchen table. That devotion to performing carried them to bigger stages, guided by their father and manager John Boyd

0:55.8

and eventually Jay-Z's Rock Nation. And their fervent love of music fuels their unmistakable

1:01.7

blend of R&B and folk, a mix they proudly describe as modern-day soft rock. I spoke to the Boyd's

1:08.3

siblings at the Tribeca Festival in New York for a live Broken Record event.

1:12.5

We discussed the role of music in their family, how their dad came through in the clutch during a make-or-break meeting with Jay-Z,

1:18.4

and graciously they performed a couple of songs from their album, Metamorphosis Complete.

1:25.0

This is Broken Record. Real musicians, real conversations.

1:31.7

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1:36.4

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1:48.9

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1:51.6

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