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Salem Ilese says TXT’s verse for ‘PS5’ was the “perfection addition”

Salem Ilese has opened up about her experience collaborating with Tomorrow X Together (TXT) on her new single ‘PS5’.

  • READ MORE: Epik High – ‘Epik High Is Here 下, Part 2’ review: sharp, sensitive introspection from icons of Korean hip-hop

The American singer-songwriter had originally teased the track on TikTok prior to its release, and at the time, the song had only featured vocals from her. But for the final version, she reached out to Yeonjun and Taehyun of TXT, who she had previously worked with on the boyband’s 2021 viral hit ‘Anti-Romantic’.

“It was so great getting to collaborate again with Yeonjun and Taehyun,” Ilese told Consequence. “When it came time to get a feature on ‘PS5,’ I reached out to see if they would do it. I was so honoured they said yes and their verse turned out to be the perfect addition to the song.”

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Meanwhile, Yeonjun and Taehyun said that they felt “very lucky” to have the opportunity to sing in multiple languages”, having recorded their verse in English. “Salem created an irresistibly ear-catching, addictive song and it’s certain a lot of us will be playing the song on repeat,” they added.

‘PS5’, which was also produced by DJ Alan Walker, will appear on Ilese’s new EP ‘Unsponsored Content’, due out today (February 25). Aside from ‘Anti-Romantic’ and her own 2020 track ‘Mad At Disney’, Ilese has penned several other TikTok viral songs, such as Bella Poarch’s ‘Build a Bitch’.

n other TXT news, vocalist Hueningkai recently released a cover of Canadian singer Avril Lavigne’s early-2000s hit ‘Sk8er Boi’, shortly after Lavigne recently responded to a tweet by the idol, where he referenced the track.

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Firefly 2022 announces headliners Dua Lipa, Green Day and Halsey

Firefly festival has announced the line-up for its 2022 edition, with headliners Dua Lipa, My Chemical Romance, Green Day and Halsey.

  • READ MORE: Dua Lipa: “If somebody told me not to discuss issues I’m passionate about? I wouldn’t listen”

The Delaware festival will once again take place in September – the same as last year –  instead of returning to its previous June dates, on September 22-25 at The Woodlands in Dover.

In addition to the four headline acts, other names announced include: Weezer, The Kid LAROI, Big Sean, Zedd, Porter Robinson, Gunna, Avril Lavigne, Jamie xx, Charli XCX, Bleachers, The Head And The Heart, Jungle, SAINt JHN, Cordae, Willow, Benny The Butcher, Little Simz and more.

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General tickets for the festival go on sale Monday (February 28) at 10am EST, with a pre-sale beginning tomorrow (February 25) at 10am.

You can see the full line-up for Firefly below:

“After last year’s rapturous return, Firefly 2022 is packed full of everything that makes the festival so special – incredible sets from iconic artists, the best food and beverage offerings within the Delaware Valley, treehouse DJ sets, spirited drag brunches and a joyful pride parade; unique, moments that give Firefly its characteristic sense of fun, flare and community,” a statement announced.

It also notes that the festival will be presented in accordance with all applicable COVID-19 mandates, with more information available on its website.

Elsewhere, Dua Lipa will headline Sziget Festival 2022 alongside Arctic Monkeys, and Kings Of Leon.

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My Chemical Romance, meanwhile, are set to headline this year’s When We Were Young Festival with Paramore.

Halsey has announced details of a second show at the famous Red Rocks Amphitheatre for this summer.

The new show, set for July 7, comes the day after an existing concert at the Colorado venue. Support will come from The Marías and Abby Roberts.

The gigs come as part of Halsey’s Love And Power US tour in support of fourth album ‘If I Can’t Have Love, I Want Power’. Support for the tour comes from Beabadoobee, PinkPantheress, Wolf Alice, Abby Roberts and The Marías.

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Rihanna Embraced Boldness And Eased Into Her Next Act On Unapologetic

Welcome to New Retro Week, a celebration of the biggest artists, hits, and cultural moments that made 2012 a seminal year in pop. MTV News is looking back to see what lies ahead: These essays showcase how today’s blueprint was laid a decade ago. Step into our time machine.

By Jaelani Turner-Williams

With six albums and a multitude of artistic transformations under her belt, in 2012, Rihanna was the most daring mainstream act in pop music. An experimental vanguard of the genre, Rihanna was worlds away from the Bajan, honey-tressed sweetheart introduced to fans on her 2005 Caribbean-tinged debut album, Music of the Sun. At each of her musical eras, Rihanna defied expectations of what audiences presumed a Black female singer to be, eschewing “urban” marketing for crossover fanfare. Meeting her Unapologetic phase, Rihanna had one set vision: to reclaim her happiness.

Just five days prior to the album’s release, on November 14, the singer embarked on her now-infamous 777 Tour. With an assemblage of 150 journalists, select fans, and crew all aboard a Boeing airplane, the roadshow required trekking to seven countries in seven dates in celebration of Unapologetic, even as those plans invited impending chaos. On the tour’s inaugural day, headed to Mexico City, Rihanna poured glasses of Ace of Spades and D’Ussé for those onboard the jet, while journalists expected her to dole out interviews regarding her new songs.

As days turned into a full week, the media onboard grew tired of there being no Rihanna in sight, but it was likely that she wanted to create intrigue. For the singer and her team, it was all in good fun, as the flight stunt personified the in-your-face candor of Unapologetic. It was a deeper look into Rihanna’s raw, unfiltered self, which largely made way for a new trap-influenced sound that foreshadowed her long-awaited 2016 follow-up, Anti. On Unapologetic, she embraced boldness in a new way.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lWA2pjMjpBs

At the beginning of her career, Rihanna’s identity was arguably manufactured to follow the same route as bubblegum pop acts of the early 2000s but with an island twist. She was destined for a rebellious breakthrough. By 2007, the singer met the moment on her third album, Good Girl Gone Bad, with mystifying appeal, a sleek jet-black bob haircut and edgy reintroduction on the iconic single “Umbrella.”

Rihanna’s defiance as a global pop phenom made her a force of nature, closing in on an iconic bad gal status while still being nascent in her career. In November 2009, Rihanna entered a grim side on fourth album Rated R, which presented the singer through a gothic, desolate lens. The album metaphorically retraced Rihanna’s breakup with R&B singer Chris Brown, with controversy surrounding their turbulent relationship (Brown was convicted of felony assault for beating Rihanna in 2009.) The album was an unexpected turn in Rihanna’s sound, but it redefined who she was as a young woman, making her an international powerhouse and giving way to a self-assured rebirth.

On her following two albums, 2010’s Loud and 2011’s Talk that Talk, Rihanna evolved past the “good girl gone bad” motif — she embodied it. Her sound was fueled with sex positivity, amusing salaciousness, and women’s empowerment that arguably made her the femme fatale of pop. Along with high-grossing tours worldwide, modeling, and philanthropy work, the singer was also poised to make her full-length acting debut in the 2012 action film Battleship. Rihanna’s impact was accelerating: At a steady pace of releasing albums yearly, by 2012, Rihanna’s transition into Unapologetic territory was her most unexpected act yet.

Album opener “Phresh Out the Runway” recalled tantalizing Talk That Talk single “Birthday Cake,” but instead of alluding to sexual desires, Rihanna flaunted her designer drip from Givenchy to Bulgari. Co-produced by French DJ David Guetta, “Phresh Out the Runway” was a reunion between Rihanna and songwriter-producer The-Dream, who penned her 2007 reintroduction “Umbrella.” A week prior to the release of Unapologetic, “Phresh Out the Runway” made its primetime debut during the 2012 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show as Rihanna strutted down the catwalk, fearlessly asserting her pop domination.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JF8BRvqGCNs

Although Unapologetic was overrun with hip-hop and EDM soundscapes, there were moments where Rihanna’s vulnerability shined through. First Unapologetic single “Diamonds” was an orchestral, synth-heavy ballad that pulsated with euphoric devotion. Rihanna’s twelfth No. 1 song on the Billboard Hot 100, “Diamonds” was later certified sextuple platinum, becoming an instant signature classic and one of the best-selling singles of all time.

Piano-driven ballad “Stay” featured Nashville singer-songwriter Mikky Ekko, who laced the track with his melancholic narrative of harrowing love as Rihanna intimately matched Ekko’s somberness with stripped-down poignancy. In the visuals, Rihanna’s appearance is just as emotive as her vocals, with tears delicately streaking her face as she sinks into jade-hued bathwater. Receiving similar global reception as “Diamonds” and selling more than 10 million copies worldwide, “Stay” equally set the tone for Unapologetic, where Rihanna enlisted male features including Future (“Loveeeeeee Song”), Eminem (“Numb”), and even Chris Brown (reuniting on controversial track “Nobody’s Business”).

Rihanna seductively teased listeners throughout Unapologetic, whether getting blitzed on strip-club anthem “Pour It Up” or interpolating 1996 Ginuwine hit “Pony” on “Jump.” The tough-as-nails resilience of Unapologetic subtly recalled Rated R — even with Rihanna donning fringed locks on the album cover — but the singer ushered in a powerhouse disposition with her eyes on an entrepreneurial future.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ehcVomMexkY

Unapologetic shot to the top of the Billboard Hot 200, becoming Rihanna’s first No. 1 album and selling 4 million copies worldwide. Later nabbing a win for Best Urban Contemporary Album at the 2014 Grammys, Unapologetic solidified Rihanna’s defiant aptitude that made her an international pop dynamo. Along with dominating the charts, Rihanna’s influence on women’s streetwear made her a prominent fixation on Instagram and Tumblr as she eased into her next act: becoming a mogul of epic proportions.

Honored as a “national hero” of Barbados after the country officially became a republic in November 2021, Rihanna boasts a legacy that’s not just a testament to reaching stardom beyond music, but becoming a multi-hyphenate businesswoman. Aptly named after her 2012 song, Rihanna’s annual Diamond Ball has become a lavish event supporting her philanthropic Clara Lionel Foundation. 2017 marked the inaugural year for Fenty Beauty, Rihanna’s opulent cosmetics line that boasts a wide range of makeup, from lipwear to foundation, for various skin tones. In 2018, Rihanna made a splash in the fashion industry by founding lingerie brand Savage X Fenty, promoting self-confidence and body inclusivity for all genders with celebrity ambassadors including Normani, Kehlani, and Tinashe. Inspired by the success of Fenty Beauty, in 2020 Rihanna launched Fenty Skin, a clean and cruelty-free skincare brand with wellness in mind.

While Unapologetic arrived years prior to Rihanna’s entrepreneurial calling — and her 2016 magnum opus Anti — the singer still led the changing tides of pop music that has since grown more inclusive of Black women. At the heart of Unapologetic, Rihanna sought to remain true to herself, an effort that has poured over into her eponymous, multifaceted Fenty brand. A genre-bending pioneer, Rihanna and her enticing adaptability are ubiquitous with the legacy of Unapologetic, all in the name of good fun.

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Justin Bieber reportedly tests positive for COVID-19 and postpones show

Justin Bieber has reportedly tested positive for COVID-19, forcing him to cancel his scheduled show in Las Vegas this evening (February 20).

  • READ MORE: Justin Bieber – ‘Justice’ review: pop star finds his purpose again

Reports in TMZ suggest Bieber tested positive for the virus on Saturday (February 19), forcing him to postpone his show this evening at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Bieber also has shows scheduled for Glendale, Arizona on Tuesday (February 22) and Los Angeles on Wednesday and Thursday (February 23 and 24). It’s unclear yet as to whether these will go ahead.

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A statement read: “Due to positive COVID results within the Justice Tour family, we will unfortunately have to postpone Sunday’s show in Las Vegas. Justin is of course hugely disappointed, but the health and safety of his crew and fans is always his number one priority.

“The tour launch in San Diego was a massive success, and Justin is excited to bring this spectacular show to his Las Vegas fans as soon as possible.”
“The rescheduled date for Las Vegas will be Tuesday, June 28. Tickets for the original show will be honoured. Refunds available at point of purchase.”
NME has contacted representatives of Bieber for comment.

Justin Bieber
Justin Bieber performs at The Event hosted by the Shaquille O’Neal Foundation at MGM Grand Garden Arena on October 02, 2021 in Las Vegas Credit: Denise Truscello/Getty Images for RMG

Back in December, Bieber became the first artist in Spotify history to cross 90 million monthly listeners on the streaming service. According to Chart Data, the pop star reached 91million listeners per month.

Bieber released his sixth studio album ‘Justice’ last March; it spawned the singles ‘Holy’, ‘Lonely’, ‘Anyone’, ‘Hold On’, ‘Ghost’, and the global smash hit ‘Peaches’ featuring Daniel Caesar and Giveon. He followed this up with his ‘Freedom’ EP in April.

Last year also saw Bieber feature on a number of other tracks, including Skrillex‘s ‘Don’t Go’, posthumous Juice WRLD track ‘Wandered To LA’, and his huge collaboration with The Kid LAROI, ‘Stay’.

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In a four-star review, NME‘s Will Lavin called ‘Justice’ “Bieber’s redemption song, and a more fitting follow-up to ‘Purpose’”.

“Armed with a newfound optimism borne from a dark place, he understands he’s better when he’s tapping into his own experiences, projecting relatable human emotion and working out why he’s here,” the review said. “He’s singing about the things he cares about: his wife, his mental health, social injustice and so much more besides.

“With bangers, ballads and heartfelt moments, the hopeless romantic with a penchant for self reflection and tackling world issues is back.”

Bieber is due to tour the UK in 2023.

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Kid Cudi teams up with Nigo for euphoric new track ‘Want It Bad’

Kid Cudi has teamed up with DJ and Bape founder Nigo for a brand new single called ‘Want It Bad’ – listen to it below.

  • READ MORE: Kid Cudi – ‘Man On The Moon III: The Chosen’ review: an art piece of epic highs and honest lows

Produced by Pharrell, it’s the second preview of Nigo’s upcoming album, ‘I Know Nigo’. The first track to be released from the project was last month’s A$AP Rocky-featured ‘Ayra’.

On the euphoric ‘Want It Bad’, Cudi celebrates his successes and the grind it took to get to this point: “Lives fast, with high hopes/ Story of a kid who was feelin’ low/ To the life of me, lemme set the scene/ On my grind, I work hard/ Lord hit me, woah, tell ’em it’s a new mould/ Walk into a different zone, doin’ the impossible/ Too incredible.”

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Arriving with a flashy video shot in Paris, you can check out the Harrison Boyce-directed clip below:

Nigo first announced the forthcoming album back in December, revealing that the project was on the way and that he’d signed to Steven Victor’s Victor Victor Worldwide label, a joint venture between Victor and Universal Music Group.

Guest appearances will include Pharrell, Kid Cudi, A$AP Rocky, Lil Uzi Vert, Pusha T, Tyler, The Creator, Fam-Lay and Teriyaki Boyz, with more to be announced.

Outside of his work as the head of the streetwear brand A Bating Ape, Nigo has long had an interest and association with the world of music. He is the DJ for hip hop collective Teriyaki Boyz, who released debut album ‘Beef or Chicken’ in 2005 and follow-up ‘Serious Japanese’ in 2009.

Numerous artists that will feature on Nigo’s forthcoming album have appeared on previous Teriyaki Boyz cuts – Williams on ‘Cho L A R G E’ and ‘Work That!’, Pusha T and Fam-Lay on a remix of ‘Tokyo Drift (Fast & Furious)’.

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‘Want It Bad’ is Cudi’s first new music of 2022. His last album was 2020’s ‘Man On The Moon III: The Chosen’.

In a four-star review of the album, NME‘s Will Lavin called it a “cinematic masterstroke that electrifies the senses at every turn”.

The review continued: “Kid Cudi gives us every part of himself, laying out his insecurities and inner demons in the hope that it might help someone else, his words etched into a vivid backdrop of intoxicating melodies and palatial riffs. No one does mood music quite like Cudi.”

Kid Cudi
Kid Cudi. CREDIT: Edward Berthelot/Getty Images

In December, the vinyl version of the album broke a US chart record, re-entering the Billboard chart at Number Four, surpassing its previous peak of Number 10. In the week beginning December 17, the album sold 42,000 copies, 41,500 of which were on vinyl.

According to Chart Data, this means the album has broken the record for biggest vinyl sales week for both a male artist and a rap album in Nielsen history.

Meanwhile, Cudi has revealed plans to drop two separate albums this year, saying he has some “tasty surprises”.

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EXO’s Kai joins the line-up for upcoming K-pop festival in Europe this May

EXO’s Kai and AB6IX have been announced as the final K-pop acts to join the line-up of KPOP.FLEX, an upcoming K-pop festival that’ll take place in Europe.

  • READ MORE: Kai: “To me what’s important is my feelings, my emotions”

KPOP.FLEX announced yesterday (February 2) on social media that both the EXO member and boyband would be the sixth and final acts to be performing at the festival respectively, which is set to take place on May 14 at the Deutsche Bank Park in Frankfurt, Germany.

Both Kai and AB6IX will be joining other top K-pop acts, including MONSTA X, (G)I-DLE, ENHYPEN, NCT Dream and MAMAMOO at the highly-anticipated festival. Tickets to KPOP.FLEX are now available for purchase here.

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KPOP.FLEX will be the first K-pop multi-group concert to ever hit Europe, and it aims to grow the European K-pop listening audience through a five-year plan that will target the continent specifically, according to a press release.

Aside from performances, festival goers can also expect to view original artworks created by WINNER’s Kang Seung-youn, Ohnim and former SUPER JUNIOR singer Henry Lau. Limited edition prints of these artworks will also be available for purchase onsite.

Kai had recently made his first solo comeback in November last year with his sophomore mini-album ‘Peaches’, which includes a lead single of the same name. At a press conference for the release, the idol had shared that recording the album had not been a “relaxed process”.

“It took some time because we needed constant evaluation in order to make good songs and a good album. The tough thing was the conflict between not having enough time despite all the things I wanted to do,” he shared.

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When We Were Young festival adds second date after first sells out

Las Vegas emo festival When We Were Young has added a second date after its first sold out in just days.

Announced last week, When We Were Young will take place in October and be headlined by My Chemical Romance and Paramore, with fellow ’00s emo acts like Avril Lavigne, Jimmy Eat World and pop-punk revivalists Meet Me @ The Altar also playing.

  • READ MORE: 20 festivals to look forward to in 2022

After the initial date on October 22 sold out, When We Were Young will return with the same line-up the following day at Las Vegas Festival Grounds.

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Tickets for the second date are on sale now here.

Over the weekend, Live Nation, the company behind the When We Were Young festival, released a statement addressing safety concerns following the Astroworld tragedy.

After the announcement, fans took to Twitter to voice their concerns after realising Live Nation were also behind Travis Scott’s Astroworld, where 10 people tragically lost their lives during a crowd crush and hundreds more were injured.

The company has been named in a number of the nearly-300 suits filed in Harris County, but in December Live Nation and its subsidiary ScoreMore, Astroworld’s promoters, denied in filed documents all the allegations against them.

“The safety of fans, artists and staff is thoroughly planned for among event organisers and in coordination with local authorities,” Live Nation wrote in a statement in response to concerns about When We Were Young.

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“We have seen a lot of excitement around this festival and we look forward to putting on an incredible event for all of the fans this October. We encourage fans to check the festival website and socials for all of the latest updates.”

They added that the chosen venue for the festival, the Las Vegas Festival Grounds, “is a large event space that has held multiple other large scale events and festivals in the past”.

Live Nation itself is also behind Reading & Leeds, Download and Bonnaroo festivals.

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PENTAGON unveil sleek music video for new single, ‘Feelin’ Like’

K-pop boyband PENTAGON have made their much-anticipated comeback with ‘Feelin’ Like’.

  • READ MORE: PENTAGON – ‘LOVE Or TAKE’ EP review: a catchy if uninspired collection of tunes about springtime romance

The members of PENTAGON look suave in the cinematic new visual, which is set in a lavish art gallery filled with curious ornaments and sculptures. “You got me feelin’ like,” they sing, before launching into a series of intricate dance moves as the track shifts into its funky chorus.

‘Feelin’ Like’ is the title track of their 12th mini-album ‘IN:VITE U’, which was released at the same time. Notably, the R&B-inspired single was penned by members Wooseok, Kino and Jinho.

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The project also marks the first PENTAGON release to feature member Jinho since 2020’s ‘Universe: The Black Hall’, following the completion of his mandatory military service.

 

The six-track record was largely written and composed by the members of PENTAGON. In a press release, the group described the new record as an “invitation to a new world,” where they explore the definition of love through each of its tracks, such as the alternative rock-inspired ‘One Shot’ and glitchy synth-heavy ‘The Game’.

‘IN:VITE U’ is also the group’s first comeback in ten months, since last March’s ‘LOVE or TAKE’ mini-album.

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PENTAGON debuted under CUBE Entertainment as a ten member group with their self-titled EP in 2016. The group’s current line-up consists of Korean members Jinho, Hui, Hongseok, Shinwon, Yeo One, Kino and Wooseok, Chinese member Yan An and Japanese member Yuto, following the departure of E’Dawn in 2018.

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Ho99o9 return with new Travis Barker-produced track ‘Battery Not Included’

Ho99o9 have returned with a new song called ‘Battery Not Included’, which was produced by Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker.

The duo – comprised of theOGM and Eaddy – last released new material last August with their 3TEETH collaboration ‘Paralyze’.

  • READ MORE: Noise-punk masters Ho99o9: “The good thing with us is that we don’t give a fuck”

Now, Ho99o9 have shared a taste of their upcoming second album, which will arrive this spring. ‘Battery Not Included’ sees the band veer from full-on punk onslaught to something more tender and softer, and back again.

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“There’s only so much mental & physical affliction + oppression the human psyche can endure before they reach the pinnacle of no return,” theOGM said in a press release. “I think we’ve all had our moments where we’re fed up, our mind isn’t rational, our eyesight is only seeing red &, within that sequence, emotions can get the best of us.

“‘Battery Not Included’ is aimed to focus on when you’re past the conscious state of no return – anything is liable to happen when pushed past your limits.” Watch the video for the new track above now.

The song was produced by Barker and released on his label, DTA Records. The Blink-182 star began his production career back in 2018 when he worked on Fever 333’s ‘Made An America’ EP. Since then he has worked with the likes of Trippie Redd, Machine Gunn Kelly, Jxdn, LilHuddy and more.

Barker’s most recent production effort prior to Ho99o9’s ‘Battery Not Included’ was with Avril Lavigne’s latest single, ‘Bite Me’, which was also released on DTA Records. Barker worked on her full album, ‘Love Sux’, which will arrive on February 25.

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Meanwhile, since releasing their debut album ‘United States Of Horror’ in 2017, Ho99o9 have shared multiple mixtapes – including 2020’s ‘Blurr’ – EPs and singles. In July 2020, they put out the track ‘Pigs Want Me Dead’, which they called “a stark reaction to the horrors and everyday effects of police brutality against the black community”.

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When We Were Young festival promoters address safety concerns

Live Nation, the company behind the When We Were Young festival, has released a statement addressing safety concerns following the Astroworld tragedy.

  • READ MORE: 20 festivals to look forward to in 2022

Announced earlier this week, When We Were Young will be headlined by My Chemical Romance and Paramore, with fellow ’00s emo acts like Avril Lavigne, Jimmy Eat World and pop-punk revivalists Meet Me @ The Altar also playing.

The first date sold out instantly, as did the second. However, fans have taken to Twitter to voice their concerns after realising Live Nation were also behind Travis Scott’s Astroworld, where 10 people tragically lost their lives during a crowd crush and hundreds more were injured.

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The company has been named in a number of the nearly-300 suits filed in Harris County but in December, Live Nation and its subsidiary ScoreMore, Astroworld’s promoters, denied in filed documents all the allegations against them.

“The safety of fans, artists and staff is thoroughly planned for among event organisers and in coordination with local authorities,” Live Nation wrote in a statement in response to concerns about When We Were Young.

“We have seen a lot of excitement around this festival and we look forward to putting on an incredible event for all of the fans this October. We encourage fans to check the festival website and socials for all of the latest updates.”

They add that the chosen venue for the festival, the Las Vegas Festival Grounds, “is a large event space that has held multiple other large scale events and festivals in the past”. Live Nation itself is also behind Reading & Leeds, Download and Bonnaroo festivals.

When We Were Young takes place October 22 and 23.

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There’s also been some speculation that it will be impossible for all of the 65 bands on the When We Were Young line-up to play within the 13-hour timeframe of the festival.

“Set times will vary with earlier bands having shorter sets and the headliners having the longest. For many festivals it is typical for earlier acts to have 20-30 minutes, while headliners often perform longer, closer to 45 to 60 minutes or more,” explained Live Nation.

And according to the FAQs: “There will be multiple stages of varying sizes placed around the festival grounds with several bands performing at the same time. Full lineup details including set times and performances by stage will be released closer to the festival.”

 

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Blink-182’s Mark Hoppus joins A Day To Remember on new version of ‘Re-Entry’

A Day To Remember have released a new version of their single ‘Re-Entry’ featuring Blink-182‘s Mark Hoppus.

  • READ MORE: Five things we learned from our ‘In Conversation’ video chat with A Day To Remember

The release marks another major return to recording music for Hoppus since breaking the news that he was cancer-free last September. The singer and bassist had previously been diagnosed with 4-A diffuse large B-cell lymphoma.

On re-recording the song with Hoppus, A Day To Remember vocalist Jeremy McKinnon said: “When this song originally took shape it was without a doubt massively influenced by Blink-182, so when the idea came up to do a remix of sorts for it, Mark was immediately who we pictured.

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“We sent him the track with no second verse and said to do whatever he was inspired to do and what he sent back genuinely makes the song for me. My younger self still can’t believe it exists.”

You can hear the new version of ‘Re-Entry’ below:

Earlier today (January 20), Avril Lavigne spoke about the “huge honour” of collaborating with Hoppus on her forthcoming new album.

As announced last week, Lavigne’s seventh studio record ‘Love Sux’ – set to be released on February 25 – will contain a track called ‘All I Wanted’, which features the Blink-182 star.

During a recent conversation on the bassist’s Apple Music Hits show, After School Radio, the Canadian singer-songwriter said: “I was really excited to work with you. I mean, to be honest, you’re one of my favourite artists.”

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Back in November, Hoppus also gave an update on Blink-182, saying the band are open to the return of former frontman Tom DeLonge.

“We haven’t really talked about that, but I’m open to anything in the future,” Hoppus told GQ. ​“I don’t know how that would work if it’s all four of us. Like, we’re all going to live in the same house again?”

The pair recently made up after DeLonge learned of Hoppus’ diagnosis.

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Watch Travis Barker’s rocky cover of Adele’s ‘Easy On Me’

Travis Barker has shared a video of him performing a rocky drum cover of Adele’s recent hit single ‘Easy On Me’.

The Blink-182 drummer has given an unlikely makeover to the piano-led ballad, which marked the British pop star’s first new material in six years.

  • READ MORE: Adele’s voice has never sounded better than on her stunning new song ‘Easy On Me’

In a video posted to his Instagram page, Barker drummed along to the track, adding complex fills and a rock edge to it. Surging guitars can also be heard on the new version.

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At the end of the clip, one of the musician’s white drumsticks appeared to break. Watch the video below now.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by travisbarker (@travisbarker)

Barker’s drum cover of ‘Easy On Me’ follows Kanye West’s Sunday Service Choir recently giving their own take on the track. During a Sunday Service session in LA on November 28, the choir reworked the song to pay tribute to fashion designer, DJ and creative director Virgil Abloh, who had died earlier that day.

Go easy on me, father / I am still your child,” they sang on the gospel cover. “And I need the chance to / Feel your love around.

Upon its release in October, ‘Easy On Me’ broke the UK chart record for the highest first-week single sales in four years. It racked up 217,300 chart sales in its first week of release, the highest week one figure since Ed Sheeran’s ‘Shape Of You’ scored 226,800 chart sales in January 2017.

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In other Travis Barker news, the Blink-182 star appeared in Avril Lavigne’s video for her latest single ‘Bite Me’ in November. The track was co-produced by Barker and was released on his record label, DTA Records.

He also joined the Canadian pop-punk star as she performed the track on The Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon in the weeks after its release. Barker played the drums for the performance, which saw him, Lavigne and her band all dressed in red and performing from a room covered in graffiti.

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Yungblud and Willow are working on a collaboration in the studio

Yungblud has been pictured in the studio with Willow – you can check out the posts below.

Willow teamed up with Yungblud’s friend and collaborator Travis Barker on her fourth, pop-punk inspired album ‘Lately I Feel Everything’. It’s also been revealed that she’ll make a guest appearance on Machine Gun Kelly‘s upcoming record ‘Born With Horns’.

  • READ MORE: The NME Big Read – Willow: “Humans have never been good at accepting that people are different”

Yungblud – real name Dominic Harrison – was in attendance at Willow’s one-off show at the Electric Ballroom in Camden, London last week (December 9) and previously interviewed the LA artist on The Yungblud Podcast.

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Now, the pair have taken to Instagram to tease a forthcoming collaboration. Willow uploaded a snap of herself and Harrison posing together in the studio, with the latter sharing a similar image on his Stories feed.

“Red alert,” Yungblud wrote as the caption. Elsewhere, the Doncaster musician was photographed standing behind a microphone and sitting next to a mixing desk with a red electric guitar.

You can see the posts here:

Further information on the joint project remains under wraps. Speaking to NME at Reading Festival 2021, Harrison revealed that he had “two new albums ready to go”. His latest studio effort, ‘Weird!’, came out in December 2020.

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During a recent Big Read cover interview with NME, Willow spoke about her shift towards a heavier sound. “There’s a certain level of reckless abandon that comes with rock music,” she said.

“Specifically, I think the magnitude of oppression that any minority in America has historically experienced, it puts something inside of us that makes us want to growl a little bit and scream. I think pop-punk is a very beautiful expression of that.”

Willow also discussed how Radiohead reignited her passion for music, how she sees Avril Lavigne and Travis Barker as “pop-punk royalty” and the experience of living under the constant glare of the media.

Elsewhere in the chat, the singer opened up about the racism and sexism her mother was subjected to as a rock star in the ’90s and reflected on the pressures that came after releasing her 2010 hit ‘Whip My Hair’.

 

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Bobby Shmurda shares new single with Quavo and Rowdy Rebel, ‘Shmoney’

Bobby Shmurda has shared a new track featuring Quavo and Rowdy Rebel – listen to ‘Shmoney’ below.

  • READ MORE: The NME Big Read – Migos: “We show up with the goods and prove you wrong”

Shmurda dropped his first single in seven years in September, ‘No Time For Sleep’, after being released from prison back in February. It was followed by the songs ‘Splash’ and ‘Cartier Lens’.

Arriving today (December 17), ‘Shmoney’ is accompanied by an official video that finds Shmurda, Quavo and Rowdy Rebel hanging out at a lavish mansion as faux ‘$HMONEY’ banknotes fall from the sky.

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Tune in here:

Shmurda – real name Ackquille Pollard – served seven years behind bars for conspiracy and weapons possession. Over the summer, the Florida artist explained the delay between his release from prison and sharing new music.

“I’m Bizzy running round needed some time to breathe they had me locked up in the pins doing 23,” he said at the time.

Prior to the arrival of ‘No Time For Sleep’, Shmurda debuted new music during a five-track set at Rolling Loud Miami.

While his latest track sees Shmurda join forces with Quavo, the rapper promised that his long-awaited mixtape with Migos – reportedly titled ‘Shmigo Gang’ – was on the horizon in July.

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“We got all types of different music coming out,” he explained. “We got the Shmurda shit coming out. We got the ‘Shmigos’ shit coming out. It’s going to be a lit summer.”

Meanwhile, Bobby Shmurda has said that he wants to make a “strip club anthem” with Adele.

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Linda Fredriksson Juniper

One encouraging by-product of the recent jazz resurgence is the number of singer-songwriters who have recruited more adventurous musicians to open up their sound. Listen to the saxophones billowing all over The Weather Station’s “Ignorance” or Cassandra Jenkins’ “An Overview Of Phenomenal Nature”, to name two of this year’s finest – not to mention Modern Nature’s gradual co-option of the entire British free jazz scene. The idea of combining confessional songwriting with jazz freedoms is hardly a new phenomenon – Van, Tim and Joni, among others, might have something to say about that – but it’s certainly unusual to find an artist approaching this fertile ground from the opposite direction.

  • ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut

Saxophonist Linda Fredriksson is a product of Helsinki’s thriving contemporary jazz scene, epitomised by the label We Jazz. Their playful trio Mopo won the Finnish equivalent of a Grammy for 2014 album Beibe, and they’re also a member of the more avant-leaning Superposition. Two members of the latter play on Juniper, but this is very much a solo project in terms of vision and execution. While Fredriksson references sax greats Eric Dolphy and Pharoah Sanders, their approach here was equally influenced by Neil Young, Feist, and particularly Sufjan Stevens’ Carrie & Lowell, the 2015 album dedicated to his mother and stepfather. Touchstones don’t come more personal than that.

Fredriksson says they often write songs at home on their battered acoustic guitar before transposing them to the jazz idiom. But in this case, co-producer Minna Koivisto persuaded them that the demos were the essence of the whole project, and that they should build the recordings carefully around these scratch home recordings rather than simply overwriting them. Some tracks feature up to five additional musicians – Koivisto on synth, Tuomo Prättälä on keyboards, Olavi Louhivuori on drums, Mikael Saastamoinen on bass and Matti Bye on piano – but you can still sometimes hear the buzzing strings of Fredriksson’s old acoustic, the dry ambience of a living room and the glitching of the iPhone mic that recorded it. Other songs are enhanced by field recordings of seagulls or the sounds of wind on rocks, captured near Fredriksson’s family summer-house in Taalintehdas, on the Archipelago Sea. It makes for an album rich in small details, instantly welcoming and endearingly vulnerable, proud to wear its heart right on its sleeve.

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Frediksson actually only sings on one track, casually trilling a wordless melody on “Lempilauluni” (“My Loved Song”) as if humming along absent-mindedly to a half-remembered song on the radio. But strangely it feels like more, because the album works so hard to maintain the kind of crackly intimacy more commonly found on folk records. And you don’t actually need to hear Fredriksson singing lyrics to understand what they’re trying to say. It’s almost as if they are talking through their saxophone: every breath, every creak, every touch of the keys is captured as crucial punctuation between emotional bursts of melody.

Juniper documents a difficult but ultimately transformative few years for Fredriksson. “Nana – Tepalle” is a moving elegy for their grandmother, composed during the agonising period as she lay dying; “Transit In The Soft Forest, Walking, Sad, No More Sad, Leaving” is an ode to the restorative powers of nature, and the isolated places where Fredriksson would flee to escape the cumulative microaggressions of city life. But during these solitary sojourns, as Juniper was taking shape, Fredriksson began to see new horizons opening up. As a result, the album is also a celebration of “the beginning of something new”, the precise nature of which is hinted at by the cautiously joyful “Neon Light (And The Sky Was Trans)”. After four minutes of tracing the song’s graceful topline, Fredriksson’s sax can’t contain itself any longer, twirling and bouncing off solid walls of synth in a frenzy of pure excitement.

The way Fredriksson tells a story with their instrument bears some comparison with the work of Shabaka Hutchings, particularly his last album with the Ancestors. But often Juniper really does sound like it could be the new album by Sufjan or Feist, except with all the vocal lines played on sax – and losing none of the detail or emotional impact in the process. It’s beautiful, clever and unique. Whether solo or with one of their bands, via words or instrumentals, Linda Fredriksson feels like an artist with plenty more to say.

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SEVENTEEN’s Vernon surprise releases new solo song, ‘Bands Boy’

Vernon of K-pop boyband SEVENTEEN has surprised fans with a brand-new solo song, ‘Bands Boy’.

  • READ MORE: SEVENTEEN live in Seoul: a powerful celebration of their return to the stage

The trap-driven track features lyrics written by the K-pop idol, who also co-composed the track with producer Cribs. ‘Bands Boy’ is Vernon’s first solo release since 2015, when he dropped the digital single ‘Lotto’, as well as the songs ‘B Boy’ and ‘Lizzie Velasquez’ on SoundCloud.

“Always counting, boy band make bands boy / Gave daddy a heart attack / Got expensive, average boy / Sealed the deal, we’ve been grown / Yeah, 10 years we’ve been bros / When all’s said and done, we run it back up,” he raps on the braggadocious track.

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Earlier this month, Vernon and fellow SEVENTEEN member Joshua performed the song ‘2 Minus 1’ during an appearance on Genius’ ‘Open Mic’ series. The track is a cut from the digital version of the boyband’s recently released mini-album, ‘Attacca’.

The duo also revealed in an interview with Forbes that ‘2 Minus 1’ was inspired by Avril Lavigne. “I was like, ‘Yeah, this is like definitely a way for us to express emotions and the messages that we want to put out.’ Pop-punk was the perfect style for that,” said Joshua.

Moreover, Joshua also spoke about how ‘2 Minus 1’, which is entirely in English, was a lot easier for him to contribute to. “During ‘2 Minus 1’, I was very confident because English [is] my first language, so I could tell you guys exactly what I wanted for this song and my ideas,” he said.

SEVENTEEN also revealed in an interview with Rolling Stone for its The Breakdown series that ‘Rock With You’ had undergone “endless revisions”, due to “conflicting opinions” from everyone involved in its conception, including the group’s 13 members, their label Pledis Entertainment and their team of producers.

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“Thinking about it now, it was probably a tedious process,” said Vernon, to which Woozi, who was largely involved in the production of ‘Rock With You’, agreed, but went on to state that it was “worth it for the quality”.

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Justin Bieber adds more UK dates to ‘Justice’ world tour due to high demand

Justin Bieber has added more dates to the UK leg of his upcoming ‘Justice’ world tour due to high demand.

  • READ MORE: Justin Bieber – ‘Justice’ review: pop star finds his purpose again

The pop star announced a run of UK dates last week which included two shows at London’s O2 Arena, along with further gigs in Manchester, Birmingham, Sheffield, Glasgow and Aberdeen.

Bieber has now confirmed a third night at the O2 in London, and second nights at Manchester’s AO Arena and Birmingham’s Resorts World Arena. He will perform a total of 10 UK shows as part of the tour which kicks off next year, however he won’t be hitting British shores until February 2023.

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The tour – his first international outing since the Purpose World Tour in 2016 and 2017 – was originally supposed to kick off this past summer, but the dates were pushed back to next year due to COVID-19 restrictions.

“We’ve been working hard to create the best show we’ve ever done, and we can’t wait to share it with fans around the world. I’ll see you soon,” Bieber said of the tour in a statement.

He will also take the tour to the rest of Europe, Mexico and South America on top of his previously announced north American tour next February. The first show kicks off in San Diego on February 18, 2022, with new stop-offs recently added in Jacksonville, Orlando, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and Austin.

You can buy tickets here and you can see the full list of UK dates below:

FEBRUARY 2023

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8 – Glasgow, OVO Hydro
11 – Aberdeen, P&J Live
13 – London, The O2
14 – London, The O2
16 – London, The O2
22  – Birmingham, Resorts World Arena
23  – Birmingham, Resorts World Arena
25 – Manchester, AO Arena
26 – Sheffield, Utilita Arena

MARCH 2023

4 – Manchester, AO Arena

In a four-star review of Bieber’s new album ‘Justice’, NME‘s Will Lavin wrote: “’Justice’ is Bieber’s redemption song, and a more fitting follow-up to ‘Purpose’.

“Armed with a newfound optimism borne from a dark place, he understands he’s better when he’s tapping into his own experiences, projecting relatable human emotion and working out why he’s here. He’s singing about the things he cares about: his wife, his mental health, social injustice and so much more besides.”

The review adds: “With bangers, ballads and heartfelt moments, the hopeless romantic with a penchant for self reflection and tackling world issues is back. Beliebers rejoice!”

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Listen to Willow’s new ‘Transparent Soul’ remix featuring Kid Cudi

Willow has shared a new remix of ‘Transparent Soul’ featuring Kid Cudi – you can listen to it below.

  • READ MORE: The musical evolution of Willow Smith: how a child star became a pop sensation

The pop-punk-inspired single appears on the singer’s fourth studio album, ‘Lately I Feel Everything’, which came out back in July.

Willow’s new take on the track boasts contributions from Cudi and Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker, the latter of whom appeared on the original track.

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“I am so grateful for this song because it was created during such an introspective time during quarantine,” Willow explained in a statement. “The solitude allowed me to introspect and really let go of the insecurities I had about making a project in this genre.

“I am humbled and grateful that Kid Cudi is now able to bring his magic to this remix.”

Willow is set to return to the UK next month for a one-off headline show at the Electric Ballroom in Camden, London. Tickets are now sold out.

Next year, the Los Angeles artist will support Billie Eilish at a number of US shows on her ‘Happier Than Ever’ world tour. Both singers appeared at Las Vegas’ Life Is Beautiful festival in September.

In a four-star review of ‘Lately I Feel Everything’, NME wrote: “With [this album], the child star-turned-music-innovator sends a fond farewell to adolescence. It was a risky move, switching from conscious R&B star to grungy punk beau, but Willow has knocked all doubts out of the park – again.”

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The album also contains a team-up with Avril Lavigne, ‘Grow’. Its Dana Trippe-directed official video arrived last month.

Meanwhile, Kid Cudi has collaborated with Ariana Grande on a forthcoming track called ‘Just Look Up’. The song will appear on Netflix’s Don’t Look Up, which comes out next month.

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Bop Shop: Songs From Dijon, Bibi, Camp Cope, Taylor Swift, And More

The search for the ever-elusive "bop" is difficult. Playlists and streaming-service recommendations can only do so much. They often leave a lingering question: Are these songs really good, or are they just new?

Enter Bop Shop, a hand-picked selection of songs from the MTV News team. This weekly collection doesn't discriminate by genre and can include anything — it's a snapshot of what's on our minds and what sounds good. We'll keep it fresh with the latest music, but expect a few oldies (but goodies) every once in a while, too. Get ready: The Bop Shop is now open for business.

  • Taylor Swift: "All Too Well (10 Minute Version)"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sRxrwjOtIag

    The song that claimed the season of fall, the song that romanticized the light in the refrigerator, the song that has left us feeling OK but not fine at all is back and longer than ever. Coming in at a painstaking 10 minutes and, you guessed it, 13 seconds, the newly released Taylor's Version of “All Too Well” is the result of Swifties begging Taylor Swift to crush their hearts even more by unearthing this hidden gem from the vault. And she did not disappoint.

    Beginning with a chilling spin on the original melody, the guitar strings cut through that familiar sound that we know, dare I say, all too well, and sets up what will become a carefully crafted roller coaster of emotional heartbreak and meticulous storytelling. Swift pleads her vivid lyrics with a deeper voice, controlling inflection, and jarring details — leaving nothing to the imagination of what a 21-year-old Taylor was going through as she wrote these words in her journal over a decade ago.

    There are a ton of new lyrics to unpack in this version of one of Swift’s most acclaimed songs, but the most hurtful one of all might just be, “You said if we had been closer in age, maybe it would have been fine, and that made me want to die.” That’s something we would expect from the song that also gave us, “You call me up again just to break me like a promise / So casually cruel in the name of being honest.” —Alissa Godwin

  • Nilüfer Yanya: "Stabilise"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mWdIFrDUWOs

    London's Nilüfer Yanya made one of the best albums of the 2019 by channeling anxieties about the modern world through a fictional futurescape — and crafting some of the most interesting guitar work to pair with it. She returned this week with "Stabilise," a somehow even more frantic entry, though one that's also a whole lot of fun. Echoes of The Drums and Radiohead's beloved "Weird Fishes/Arpeggi" abound, but Yanya's core sound — a whisper-like voice and relentless spindly plucks — promises to make Painless, her follow-up LP, likewise a classic. —Patrick Hosken

  • Mel 4Ever: "Jennifer's Bodice"

    “You fucked up Jennifer’s bodice,” a demonic Mel 4Ever snarls in the chorus of this horror-infused hyperpop track off Tranic Attack, her debut EP. Part Promising Young Woman and part Jennifer’s Body, the visceral cut includes a verse about the Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter devouring and shitting out her abuser. How’s that for a revenge fantasy? —Sam Manzella

  • Twice: "Scientist"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vPwaXytZcgI

    Twice can make K-pop stans care about science. As the second single off their new album Formula of Love: O+T=<3, “Scientist” is a cheerful, spirited track with a retro vibe and campy feel. “Scientist” is accompanied by a bright and colorful music video filled with test tubes and vials, chalkboards covered in equations, and, as always, multiple incredible dance breaks. The song builds its way up to a fun and catchy chorus, with lyrics like “Love ain’t a science / Don’t need no license,” and “Don’t try to be a genius / Why so serious?” that I can already picture fans singing along to. As a group, Twice is consistently creating music to uplift and entertain their fans. This time around, the superstar girl group encourages their listeners to take it easy and follow their hearts, which is a message we could all use right now. —Sarina Bhutani

  • Bibi: "The Weekend"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DL3sBisNSTg

    Smooth as silk but plagued by self-doubt, Bibi's "The Weekend" is an ode for those suffering through unwelcome romantic head games. But performing it live at 88rising's recent Head in the Clouds festival, Bibi transformed it into something with real power. Just look at the crowd lose themselves in it. —Patrick Hosken

  • Mitski: "The Only Heartbreaker"
    https://youtu.be/LmXFF_whkVk

    The second single off Mitski's upcoming album Laurel Hell swaps the singer's sometimes reserved indie-rock musings on the pains of love for a retro synth-pop sound. And yet her lyrics, co-written with Semisonic's Dan Wilson, remain as self-aware as ever, as she takes the entirety of the blame for being the "bad guy," "the only heartbreaker," in a torched relationship. She twirls in the ashes after setting the romance ablaze. —Coco Romack

  • Avril Lavigne: “Bite Me”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Py0KMhyT6Bw

    Avril Lavigne is back! Fresh off her nostalgic and banging collab with Willow, the 2000s punk-pop princess has released her first single from fellow early aughts pioneer Travis Barker’s label DTA Records. “Bite Me” marks a return to form for an artist who’s experimented with different genres and producers throughout her career; all it takes is her opening war cry to remember why she will always be a trailblazer for a generation that grew up on Hot Topic, Myspace, and prep-school ties as a fashion statement. Barker’s signature, ear-blasting drums provide the perfect backdrop for the song’s sharp lyrics. “You should’ve known better to fuck with somebody like me / Forever and ever you’re gonna wish I was your wifey,” she bellows, reminding us all why no one does Avril quite like Avril. —Carson Mlnarik

  • Dijon: "The Dress"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ws5K_5G_xvI

    There's something infectious about Los Angeles vibe master Dijon's excellent debut album Absolutely. From its very title, the collection resounds with affirmations. On longing ode "The Dress," the singer's voice recedes delicately until the almighty chorus, where it thickens up to deliver a series of tender pleas: "We should go out and dance like we used to dance / We should go out and hold hands." Hard to say no to that. —Patrick Hosken

  • B.I: "Cosmos"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r9h4gRZAGv8

    It’s not often you hear a K-pop song that immediately recalls ‘80s rock, but when it comes to B.I, you learn to simply expect the unexpected. Vastly different from the soloist’s sentimental “Illa Illa,” new single “Cosmos” tells a much happier story. Accompanied by a bright and airy music video that travels through space and time, “Cosmos'' unapologetically describes an out-of-this-world love, juxtaposing sweet, romantic lyrics with a high-energy melody filled with strong drum beats and retro electric guitar sounds. (I know it’s hard to imagine jumping around to lyrics like “Please live and breathe in my imagination / Like the intangible depth of the unknown galaxies / So I can love you forever,” but trust me: B.I makes it more than possible.) This effervescent title track officially introduces fans to B.I’s new world and marks the start of a fun, interesting, and spirited comeback. —Sarina Bhutani

  • Camp Cope: "Blue"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OaMEgk3IKt8

    Beloved Aussie "power emo" trio Camp Cope have returned with a tune that sounds as blue as its title. Singer Georgia Maq's voice mines the depths of depression over plunging guitar chords, but there's a lovable buoyancy keeping "Blue" afloat. It's more akin to slowly reaching a single arm up to the sky — you're still a ways from carefree, but you've taken that important first step toward liberation. —Patrick Hosken

  • Dave Gahan and Soulsavers: "Always on My Mind"
    https://youtu.be/u_9QOy0xoDI

    "Always on My Mind" was first sung by Gwen McRae as "You Were Always on My Mind" but later made popular by Elvis Presley in 1972. Presley recorded the track a few weeks after separating from his wife Priscilla, and it's a common misconception that the song was inspired by his marital strife. Longtime Depeche Mode frontman Dave Gahan seems to nod to the organic life of the music in his take with Soulsavers — out today on the cover album Imposter — which sounds like it's been nearly hollowed out. Gahan's full-throated vocals, sparse piano keys, and choral backing are the only instruments here, reverberating as if through in an empty wedding chapel. —Coco Romack

  • Michelle: "Mess U Made"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5LTUbTdRjQ0

    New York collective Michelle (who style their name in all caps) can be hard to sum up, but "Mess U Made" is the perfect introduction to both their sprawling talent — four vocalists who join together for the big moments, like a pop group — and their impeccable sensibility. The tune itself, delicate R&B-pop, is beautiful, and in this live performance recorded in September, Michelle's singers make it a little edgy, shouting a cuss for effect and releasing a gleeful scream to punctuate the music's seeping emotion. You might yell, too. —Patrick Hosken

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Lily Konigsberg’s Spunky Songs Of Sadness

By Ted Davis

If you follow underground rock music, there’s a good chance that you have at least heard the name Palberta. For 10 years, the New York City band worked hard to carve a niche for themselves in the indie scene, touting an angular, sludgy sound that falls somewhere between The Raincoats and Palm. At its front is Lily Konigsberg, a quirky songwriter whose energy and charisma carry the act’s distinctive attitude. Palberta’s work is minimal and lo-fi, but Konigsberg’s wonky musicianship and spunky vocals helped make them one of the most prolific and playfully bizarre outfits to emerge from the Northeast’s thriving punk circuit.

Although Konigsberg has stayed busy making records and touring with Palberta, she carved out time on the side to write solo material. Where her work with the band is sweaty and freewheeling, her solitary output is sunnier and more outwardly cheeky. Drawing from early 2000s radio pop, Konigsberg’s solo debut, Lily We Need to Talk Now, is a surprising departure. Citing childhood favorites like Michelle Branch, Avril Lavigne, and Liz Phair as key touchstones for the record, many of the perky tracks return to mind long-lost cuts from the soundtracks to movies like 10 Things I Hate About You or 13 Going on 30.

“I loved good-quality pop,” Konigsberg told MTV News over Zoom, reflecting on her favorite music from when she was younger. “I loved those rom-com songs that would come in at the end of the movie and you’d associate that song with the movie and you’d know all the lyrics.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=okD91PCPKAo

But while Konigsberg was listening to bubbly, nostalgic singles while writing Lily We Need to Talk Now, out today (October 29), she wasn’t quite able to eschew the darkness in her life. Conceived in the throes of relationship turmoil, as she simultaneously battled an addiction she’s since kicked, the record’s sonic optimism belies an intensity lurking beneath. “I went through a breakup during COVID, or it was expedited by COVID,” she said. “There were a lot of songs that were a different aspect of the grief and the anger and the sadness and blaming yourself.”

The mall-pop, acoustic guitar-driven “Sweat Forever” is written in a nonsensical style that captures the gravity of Konigsberg’s mental turbulence. With lyrics like, “I was right / The last time that I saw you / Said goodbye / Knowing it would be forever,” the track juxtaposes the DayGlo elation of its instrumental with depressed musings. “I’m just a little too much of an oddball to write a perfect early 2000s pop gem, but I’m still really influenced by it, and you can tell that,” Konigsberg said.

Produced by Water From Your Eyes multi-instrumentalist Nate Amos, the album came to life after the two decided to record “Sweat Forever” at his house together. Amos took the reins, shaping the songs on Lily We Need to Talk Now as the two also played together in the duo My Idea. While they worked closely over the pandemic, they wrote over 50 songs in the course of just a few months. You can hear the push and pull of their partnership in Konigsberg's solo work, grounded in her straightforward rock songwriting yet toying with Amos's whimsical electronic experimentation.

“We just found a musical partner that was equal in their pop sensibility,” Konigsberg said, describing their unique creative chemistry. "We were a once-in-a-lifetime musical partnership. We had to do it."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TpQ6ZF1v9SI

Amos, a lifelong bluegrass player with a penchant for warm psychedelia, stepped outside of his sonic comfort zone behind the boards. “Don’t Be Lazy With Me” centers on washes of organic ambience, driven by pianos, synths, and horns. “Alone” is syncopated and dancey, and feels a bit like the work of an early 2010s PBR&B artist. Meanwhile, “Hark” is stripped back and shuffling, with just a wink of outlaw attitude. Like every Konigsberg endeavor to date, there’s something unplaceable about the album, even though it evokes a specific era.

Lily We Need to Talk Now isn’t all cheery instrumentals and spirited melodies, though. “True” dabbles in chaotic post-punk and surf rock. “Bad Boy”’s chunky, churning instrumental brings to mind the exciting early years of Palberta. Meanwhile, “Proud Home” is a downright ripper, with its ’90s-indebted riffing and motorik groove. “I’m not a painfully depressed person, but I feel like a pretty complex person,” Konigsberg said. “Not to say that everyone isn’t complex. I think everyone is. But I have a lot of darkness in me, and I also have a lot of light in me.” You can hear this duality when listening to the record in full. At times, it’s inviting and chipper. At others, it’s severe, even stoic.

“Addicts don’t really know when they’re addicts sometimes, like, how that’s affecting their writing or anything like that,” she continues. “I’m sure being at the peak of my addiction was an influence.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZmuYe0-fPU

The release of Lily We Need to Talk Now coincides with a turning point for Konigsberg. After a decade of playing shows with Palberta, the band decided to take an indefinite hiatus. “We’re gonna take a break because, honestly, it’s really hard to be in so many projects,” she said. “You really can’t grow enough in each one while you’re doing so much.” Although Konigsberg insists they’ll be back, Lily We Need to Talk Now heralds a new phase in her career where she’ll be focusing on performing her solo work and writing for My Idea. As she leaves bad habits in the rearview and puts these emotionally heavy songs out into the world, Konigsberg’s new concoctions may embrace a new tone.

“For my next album, the influence will really be my friends and love and being grateful,” Konigsberg said, musing about how she thinks brighter times might shape her upcoming music. Lily We Need to Talk Now plays like the work of someone trying to recapture the spirit of youth. When listened to closely, though, it’s more adult. As Konigsberg heals in tandem with the world around her, it seems as if her mindset might finally mirror her newfound aesthetic disposition.

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Ailee unveils dazzling music video for new single ‘Don’t Teach Me’

Korean-American singer-songwriter Ailee has dropped the music video for her single ‘Don’t Teach Me’, from her newly released studio album ‘Amy’.

  • READ MORE: IU’s ‘Strawberry Moon’ is a sublime offering by one of K-pop’s reigning queens

In the lavish visual, Ailee steps into a ballroom and begins belting the beginning verses of ‘Don’t Teach Me’, turning the heads of masked guests at an extravagant party. “Please don’t teach me / Stop pretending to know / Please Don’t teach me / I’m not myself for you,” she sings on the chorus of the swing-inspired single.

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The album, out today (October 27), is titled after the Korean-American singer’s English birth name, Amy. The 12-track project was first announced earlier this month through a series of teaser images on the official Instagram account of THE L1VE. The label has since shared the tracklist for the album, which includes songs such as ‘New Ego’, ‘#MCM (Man Crush Monday)’ and ‘Make Up Your Mind’.

‘Amy’ marks Ailee’s third full-length album and first-ever release under THE L1VE, which was founded by VIXX’s Ravi. The singer had become the first artist to sign with the label back in July, with MAMAMOO’s Wheein following soon after.

In other K-pop news, former 2NE1 leader CL has unveiled a teaser previewing the upcoming video for ‘Let It’, the fifth track from her recent debut album ‘ALPHA’. The music video is set to drop on October 27 at 1pm KST.

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Travis Barker announces ‘House Of Horrors’ Halloween livestream with Machine Gun Kelly, Mark Hoppus

Travis Barker has announced details of a new Halloween livestream show featuring Avril Lavigne, Machine Gun Kelly, Mark Hoppus and more.

‘Travis Barker’s House of Horrors’ will take place via the digital platform NoCap on October 28 at 7pm PST/10pm EST/midday BST.

Also set to feature on the stream are Blackbear, Iann Dior, JXDN and more, with the event dubbed “an exclusive Halloween broadcast from a private Haunted Estate.”

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See a preview of the event below, and get tickets here.

The ‘House Of Horrors’ is set to be Mark Hoppus’ first public event since he revealed he was cancer free this week.

The Blink-182 bassist took to social media on Wednesday (September 29) to explain that he received the good news after visiting his oncologist. He confirmed in July that he’d been diagnosed with 4-A diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, subsequently telling fans that “chemo [was] working!”.

“Just saw my oncologist and I’m cancer free!!” Hoppus wrote this evening. “Thank you God and universe and friends and family and everyone who sent support and kindness and love.”

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Elsewhere, Machine Gun Kelly and Travis Barker recently teamed up to perform ‘Papercuts’ at this year’s MTV Video Music Awards at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.

The performance also seemingly paid tribute to Nirvana, with the trees and flowers from the ‘Heart-Shaped Box’ video, and Kelly smashing his guitar at the song’s conclusion.

Baker released ‘Papercuts’, the lead single from his forthcoming album ‘Born with Horns’, in August. He also announced the album last month, with he and Barker getting matching forearm tattoos to mark the occasion.

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Van der Graaf Generator The Charisma Years 1970-1978

As Mark E Smith once told Peter Hammill, it wasn’t Van Der Graaf Generator’s lyrics that sparked his love for the band, or the specifics of their music, nor even their academic complexity. It was the sheer power of the thing that drew him in. “He said, ‘You just have to go with the power,’” recalls Hammill today. “And I agree with that. Mark did like an aspect of noise, something Van Der Graaf have always liked. Sometimes that’s just noise brutality, and sometimes it’s noise in the musique concrète style.”

  • ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of the November 2021 issue of Uncut

Even Van Der Graaf Generator’s detractors would be hard-pressed to deny their intensity. Here was a four-piece with often no electric guitar or bassist, just drums, organ (plus bass pedals), saxophone and a singer issuing the most infernal noises –choirboy coos, banshee wails and demonic grunts – from his slender frame. “He does seem like a normal person,” organist Hugh Banton said of Hammill in a 2016 issue of Uncut, “but evidently he isn’t…”

Formed as an R&B outfit in Manchester at the height of psychedelia, they soon began to concoct a menacing, very European mix of the avant-garde, curdled folk music, angular rock and operatic drama. The constant was chaos – in the tumult of Guy Evans’ savage drumming, in David Jackson’s electronically processed saxophones and especially in Hammill’s untutored guitar and keyboard playing, an elemental counterpoint to Banton’s scholarly skills on the organ. That Charisma allowed them to make such a mess unhindered was certainly heroic, if not fiscally wise.

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They reformed in 2005 for a fruitful final act, but here, collected for the first time across 18 hours, 122 tracks and a disc of video performances, is Van Der Graaf’s original voyage, a stop-start revolution beginning with hippie-ish sci-fi balladry and concluding with a live album that predicted the weirdest post-punk.

We begin with February 1970’s The Least We Can Do Is Wave To Each Other, opener Darkness (11/11) confidently floating in on spacey organ and wind noise. Very Floyd, and yet the Syd-less group themselves were just finding their feet in early 1970, while Genesis and Yes were still stumbling around. Perhaps the only group who’d already made a classic prog record were King Crimson. It’s apt, then, that one section of the 11-minute After The Flood echoes the manic rush of 21st Century Schizoid Man and that Robert Fripp would guest on December’s H To He, Who Am The Only One, and 1971’s Pawn Hearts.

The latter is one of their masterpieces, three deranged tracks of vaulting ambition and strangeness. Twelve-minute opener Lemmings (Including Cog), especially, is a gloriously ugly delicacy that must have sent less adventurous listeners rushing back to the shop to return their LP. Man-Erg begins as a grand piano ballad, before a thoroughly cacophonous section appears like sludge rising to a lake’s surface. By the end of the song, the two sections are being played simultaneously. Back Street Luv this was not. Pawn Hearts peaks with the side-long A Plague Of Lighthouse Keepers. A modular tale of death, despair and redemption, it’s highly experimental, including one part where 16 Van Der Graafs play different songs at once.

Such inspired madness chimed with the mood across Europe in the days of the Baader-Meinhof group and Brigadi Rossi. The group were frequently met by riots on the Continent, on one occasion driving their van through the glass wall of a venue to escape the mob. All this intensity led to a temporary split, and when Godbluff appeared in 1975, things were very different. Hammill, his hair shorn, was now playing electric guitar or violent clavinet, and the group were recording live, with none of the cut-up complexity of their previous work. Here were four long songs, tortuous and brutal, led as always by Hammill’s crooning and screeching. “From what tooth or claw does murder spring?” he bellows on The Sleepwalkers. “From what flesh and blood does passion?” At times his performances on Godbluff suggest David Bowie under the sway of the demonic forces he’d been drawing pentagrams to banish, though Diamond Dogs’ Sweet Thing/Candidate/Sweet Thing (Reprise) suggests the flow of influence went only one way.

1976’s Still Life was a quieter affair, the title track informing us that death, though awful, is at least preferable to eternal life, “ultimately bored by endless ecstasy”. After the tepid World Record – Meurglys III, a reggae-tinged epic about Hammill’s favourite guitar, is not their finest 21 minutes – Banton and Jackson left the band, no longer able to survive the financial penalty of being so uncompromising. Things could have gone very wrong for Van Der Graaf then, with punk’s dust cloud appearing on the horizon, but the next two years saw a brave move further towards pummelling noise that put them in step with the coming storm. 1977’s The Quiet Zone/The Pleasure Dome seems to invent Muse, while ’78’s Vital, an in-the-red live set with John Lydon in the crowd presumably picking up tips for PiL, is a highlight of the box, a distorted medley of …Lighthouse Keepers and The Sleepwalkers, white-hot.

Sprinkled among these album tracks are radio sessions – including an amusing Top Gear interview in which Hammill reveals that an early member left to join blues-rockers Juicy Lucy, and an electrifying Peel session from the Godbluff era. Other treats include an early studio version of Killer, a first mix of Theme One, and The Boat Of A Million Years, a typically breezy B-side about Ra’s solar barque.

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Live In Rimini 1975 is worthwhile, mainly because it includes the Hammill solo tracks (In The) Black Room… and A Louse Is Not A Home, intended for the scrapped Pawn Hearts follow-up, but the quality is grainier than a ’70s macrobiotic diet. Much better is a crystal-clear 1976 set from Paris’ Maison Mutualite, one of the classic lineup’s last stands. They’re tight, especially on the closing Killer and Man-Erg, but there’s always a sense that they’re teetering on a knife edge – that chaos, again.

Though it’s not new material per se, the jewels in the box are the four new stereo remixes of their core albums, H To He…, Pawn Hearts, Godbluff and Still Life, which enhance the clarity and sense of space in the music. H To He…’s Killer and The Emperor In His War Room are fuller, more vibrant, while A Plague Of Lighthouse Keepers reveals new instrumental layers and improves the crossfades between sections. Godbluff is alternately harder hitting and more intimate: during the hushed intro of The Undercover Man, it’s as if Hammill is right there whispering in your ear, the type of hallucinatory voice that so often afflicts his damaged protagonists.

The Charisma Years isn’t a revelatory box – there are only a few gems here that haven’t already been brought to light elsewhere, notably the Parisian live set. It is, though, a comprehensive survey of a revelatory group. Listened to in the wrong mood, Van Der Graaf Generator can sound ridiculous, the lyrics overdone, the distorted saxes painful, Hammill’s astounding vocals too extreme; but, entered into wholly, this is music with a gnomic power, that can incite riots and assorted psychic disturbances. As Mark E Smith would attest, that power is hard to resist.

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Little Simz Sometimes I Might Be Introvert

Rap is so often a study in braggadocio – the voice of the strutting peacock, the narcissist with a hunger to conquer. Rappers play the role of the alpha male or the queen bee – they brag, they boast, they rhyme endlessly about themselves. But rap also attracts some nerdy, introverted types, drawn to the way in which rap uses poetry as a defensive carapace. One of them is Simbiatu Abisola Abiola Ajikawo – the north London actress, musician and singer who performs as Little Simz.

  • ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of the November 2021 issue of Uncut

Ajikawo was rapping from the age of nine and, within a few years, was creating her own mixtapes, initially influenced by Lauryn Hill and the Fugees. Hill would later become one of the many big names to invite Little Simz on tour and heap praise upon her, as have the likes of Jay Z, Kendrick Lamar, Nas, A$AP Rocky, Stormzy and Gorillaz. Despite this praise Ajikawo had trouble getting signed to majors so she set up her own imprint, Age101, self-releasing a host of mixtapes and EPs before completing her first full-length in 2015. Her third LP of wonderfully weird narrative hip-hop, 2019’s Grey Area, was an expansive, varied and often thrilling collection of brittle funk grooves, lavish string arrangements and minimal grime beats that earned her an Ivor Novello and a place on the Mercury shortlist.

The follow-up, Sometimes I Might Be Introvert, is an even more ambitious conceptual album that finds her sharing her insecurities, praising her heroes and going on a fairytale voyage over 19 tracks. Ajikawo’s delivery owes much to her background in grime music: she raps in a tight-throated, London-accented drawl, with a jagged, percussive delivery. But, where grime tends to operate at a frenetic pace of 140 beats per minute, Little Simz’s music tends to play at the more relaxed, sub-100bpm tempos you associate with funk; and, where grime tends to operate within a restrictive and minimal electronic sonic palette, Little Simz’s grimey, staccato patter is set against organic, live musical backdrops that explore multiple musical genres from around the African diaspora – from symphonic soul to Nigerian afrobeat; from black British gospel to electro funk.

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These backdrops are the work of Ajikawo’s co-writer and producer, Inflo, aka Dean Josiah Cover, also the shadowy figure behind the London collective Sault. In a hip-hop context he’s particularly good at constructing grooves that sound like samples of classic soul songs.

There appears to be only one actual sample here – a Smokey Robinson quiet storm soul snippet that provides the basis for the woozy celebration of love, Two Worlds Apart – but elsewhere, multi-instrumentalist Inflo creates readymade soul classics, often lavishly arranged for full orchestra by cellist Rosie Danvers. You could swear that the spacious strings and Hammond that underline the feminist anthem Woman were taken from a Roy Ayers song, or that the choral intro to Little Q was sampled from Rotary Connection; you’d be forgiven for thinking that the bombastic backing to Standing Ovation came from one of Dennis Coffey’s Blaxploitation soundtracks, or that the digi-funk of Protect My Energy is sampled from some obscure ’80s Jam & Lewis track, but all are the work of Inflo.

There’s a heavy West African groove in places too (a nod, perhaps, to Ajikawo’s Yoruba heritage): on Point And Kill, Inflo enlists a four-piece horn section (featuring members of Kokoroko and SEED Ensemble) and British-Nigerian vocalist Obongjayar to create a slow-burning Afrobeat groove. It segues into the explosive Fear No Man, where Ajikawo bobs and weaves confrontationally, a feminist Muhammad Ali, over a nine-piece bata drum troupe.

Where hip-hop lyricists are often egotists, singing entirely from their own point of view, Ajikawo’s lyrics constantly shift viewpoint. I Love You, I Hate You sees her singing about her absent father (“my ego won’t fully allow me to say that I miss you/A woman who hasn’t confronted all her daddy issues”); Little Q is narrated from the POV of her estranged cousin, the victim of a knife attack, somehow managing to empathise with his attacker (“I could’ve been the reflection that he hated/The part of him he wishes God didn’t waste time creating”); on Miss Understood she paints an apologetic story of how she fell out with her sister, intriguingly adopting her sister’s standpoint. Ajikawo also writes for other voices: the cut-glass RP tones of actor Emma Corrin – best known as Princess Diana in Series 4 of The Crown – serves as a narrator, an angelic presence throughout the LP. “Your introversion led you here,” she intones on the epic opener, Introvert. “Intuition protected you along the way….” She serves as an astral guide, a Disney princess, reassuring the insecure rapper that everything will be all right.

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Hailey Bieber, Travis Barker, Billy Porter, And More Will Present At The 2021 VMAs

We're just a few days away from the 2012 MTV VMAs, and as always, the awards show has wrangled an all-star lineup of performers to help boost the party into the stratosphere. Today (September 8), that roster expands to include the presenters, who have the important duty of either delivering Moonperson trophies or introducing the performances from the stage. And what a list of presenters it is.

Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson, AJ McLean, Ashanti, Avril Lavigne, Billie Eilish, Billy Porter, Conor McGregor, Cyndi Lauper, Fat Joe, Hailey Bieber, Halle Bailey, Ja Rule, Lance Bass, Megan Fox, Nick Lachey, Rita Ora, Simone Biles, and Travis Barker will all present at this year's VMAs.

Additionally, Barker will pull double duty when he joins Machine Gun Kelly during his previously announced performance of "Papercuts." The two paired up at last year's show for an unforgettable burst pop-punk goodness, so this year's smash will surely have to top it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FdRpZlm5Rrw

Barker and MGK join a very stacked list of performers for the ceremony, including Justin Bieber, Camila Cabello, Chlöe, Doja Cat, Jack Harlow, The Kid Laroi, Lil Nas X, Shawn Mendes, Kacey Musgraves, Ozuna, Olivia Rodrigo, Tainy, and Twenty One Pilots. Kim Petras, Swedish House Mafia, and Polo G will perform during the pre-show.

Doja Cat will host the show. Find all the nominees right here.

The VMAs will air live on Sunday, September 12, at 8 p.m. ET/PT on MTV. This year’s awards will debut a newly redesigned Moonperson statue from fine artist Kehinde Wiley. They will also honor the victims of the 9/11 attacks by collaborating with the nonprofit 9/11 Day on a series of events to promote awareness and positive action around the day’s 20th anniversary.

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Olivia Rodrigo chooses her fighters in ’Brutal’ video

Olivia Rodrigo has shared an angst-filled new video for her song ‘Brutal’ – scroll down the page to watch it now.

The track features on the US pop star’s debut album ‘Sour’, which was released earlier this year.

  • READ MORE: Olivia Rodrigo: “It’s important for me to be taken seriously as a songwriter”

The ‘Brutal’ video was directed by Petra Collins and takes inspiration, in part, from Clueless. It also features Rodrigo breaking her ankle in a ballet lesson, being dragged down the hallways of a high school and having a meltdown on Instagram Live.

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The visuals begin with the different versions of the star being shown on a mock video game screen, which asks you to choose your player. Watch it below now.

“Had the best time ever making this,” Rodrigo wrote on Instagram earlier today (August 23).

“So so so grateful for Petra Collins, who constantly inspires me and who directed this video so incredibly. Hope you guys love the vid and all my teen angst lol.”

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A post shared by Olivia Rodrigo (@oliviarodrigo)

Earlier this month, Avril Lavigne became the latest star to heap praise on Rodrigo. “I think it’s important for people like Olivia to give an honest voice to so many young women who are still discovering themselves,” she said in a recent interview.

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“Her songs are her truth, and you can really feel that. You can tell it’s real by the way all of her fans grab onto every single word she says.”

In a four-star review of ‘Sour’, NME said: “When your first release is a track as ubiquitous as ‘drivers license’, it must be tough going to make a whole album that matches up.

“For the most part, Rodrigo has passed the bar she set on that single, sharing with us an almost-masterpiece that’s equal parts confident, cool and exhilaratingly real. This is no flash-in-the-pan artist, but one we’ll be living with for years to come.”

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Justin Bieber announces three-day Vegas weekender with Kehlani, Jaden Smith and more

Justin Bieber has announced a three-day festival for Las Vegas this October, boasting a lineup including The Kid LAROI, Jaden Smith and more.

  • READ MORE: Justin Bieber – ‘Justice’ review: pop star finds his purpose again

The event will take place between Thursday October 7 and Sunday 10, with the festivities split between the Wynn Las Vegas’ XS Nightclub and Encore Beach Club. It’ll kick off with an opening party at XS on the Thursday night, followed by a pool party on the Friday, and a “skate park takeover” and headline set from Bieber on the Saturday.

The first batch of artists announced for the weekender – dubbed Justin Bieber & Friends – also includes David Guetta, Kehlani, TroyBoi and Eddie Benjamin.

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A press release notes that a second “phase” of acts is set to be announced in the coming weeks, with the event also featuring a variety of “special guests”.

Passes for the weekender are on sale now via tech startup Pollen, through which it’s being organised. They’re offered in three tiers, each of which includes three-night accomodation and event access for two punters, priced between $1,099 and $1,399.

Bieber released his sixth album, ‘Justice’ back in March, flanked by the singles ‘Holy’, ‘Lonely’, ‘Anyone’, ‘Hold On’ and ‘Peaches’. In a four-star review of the record, NME’s Will Lavin called it “Bieber’s redemption song, and a more fitting follow-up to ‘Purpose’”.

“Armed with a newfound optimism borne from a dark place,” Lavin wrote, “he understands he’s better when he’s tapping into his own experiences, projecting relatable human emotion and working out why he’s here. He’s singing about the things he cares about: his wife, his mental health, social injustice and so much more besides.”

Last week, Bieber was nominated for seven awards at the 2021 MTV VMAs, including one for Artist Of The Year.

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John Mayer shares comically nostalgic video for new song ‘Wild Blue’

John Mayer has shared a video for his latest single, ‘Wild Blue’ – you can watch the colourful new clip below.

  • READ MORE: John Mayer – ‘Sob Rock’ review: guitar hero mines nostalgic gold

The new track, which was produced by Don Was, is taken from the singer-songwriter and guitarist’s eighth studio album ‘Sob Rock’, which was released last month.

Wild blue deeper than I ever knew/ Wild blue on a bed of grey/ Oh baby, what a wild blue/ I found myself when I lost you,” Mayer sings on the Dire Straits-tinged track, as he walks a path of self discovery after the end of a relationship.

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Much like the videos for his previous two singles – ‘Last Train Home’ and ‘Shot In The Dark’ – Mayer turns up the nostalgia, playfully poking fun at music videos from the ’80s.

The video begins in a swimming pool before a door at the bottom of it opens to reveal the song’s title. Rocking a tan trench coat, cowboy boots and tortoiseshell sunglasses, Mayer performs in front of a green screen as various symbols, animals and other items float across the backdrop.

Like a mashup of Prince‘s ‘Raspberry Beret’ and Deee-Lite‘s ‘Groove Is In The Heart’, you can watch the video for ‘Wild Blue’ below:

Mayer recently announced a North American tour in support of ‘Sob Rock’ which kicks off next year.

Beginning in Albany on February 17 and ending in Chicago on April 28, the tour will include stops at New York City’s Madison Square Garden (February 20), and two nights at the Forum in Inglewood, California (March 13 and March 15), among others. You can see a full list of dates below.

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See Mayer’s upcoming tour dates below. Visit here for any remaining tickets and more information.

‘SOB ROCK’ NORTH AMERICAN TOUR 2022 DATES:

FEBRUARY 2022
17 – Albany, NY – Times Union Center
18 – Philadelphia, PA – Wells Fargo Center
20 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden
23 – Washington, DC – Capital One Arena
25 – Pittsburgh, PA – PPG Paints Arena
27 – Toronto, ON – Scotiabank Arena

MARCH 2022
1 – Belmont Park, NY – UBS Arena
4 – Boston, MA – TD Garden
11 – Las Vegas, NV – Grand Garden Arena
13 – Los Angeles, CA – Forum
15 – Los Angeles, CA – Forum
18 – San Francisco, CA – Chase Center
22 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena
25 – Salt Lake City, UT – Vivint Arena
27 – Denver, CO – Ball Arena

APRIL 2022
2 – Sunrise, FL – BB&T Center
5 – Tampa, FL – Amalie Arena
8 – Atlanta, GA – State Farm Arena
11 – Charlotte, NC – Spectrum Center
13 – Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena
20 – Austin, TX – Moody Center
23 – Houston, TX – Toyota Center
24 – Dallas, TX – American Airlines Center
28 – Chicago, IL – United Center

In a four-star review of ‘Sob Rock’, NME‘s Will Lavin said: “Mayer’s willingness to poke fun at himself lends itself perfectly to the satirical foundation of ‘Sob Rock’. It is by all means a stimulating body of work with ample substance, but it doesn’t take itself too seriously.”

The review added: “Less focused on his innate individuality, it’s a John Mayer passion project that toasts to the good old days, when musicians were more inclined to follow instincts and feelings than clicks and likes.”

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Michelle Branch Is Back In The Spirit Room, 20 Years Later

By Jack Irvin

Michelle Branch likens the whirlwind road to success of her debut album The Spirit Room to that of fictional band The Wonders in the 1996 film That Thing You Do! “The band is recording, then they leave the studio and [their song is] on the radio, and next thing you know, they’re being chased down the street by fans,” she tells MTV News over the phone. “It was not dissimilar to that.”

Upon the release of The Spirit Room in 2001, Branch was everywhere — pun intended. Almost entirely self-written, the album and its singles “Everywhere,” “All You Wanted,” and “Goodbye to You” soared to the upper tiers of the Billboard charts and launched a lasting career for the then-teen singer/songwriter. As The Spirit Room turns 20 on Saturday (August 14), she’s decided to celebrate its anniversary by re-recording the album and pressing it on vinyl for the first time. It’s a new take on the legacy of the album that seemed destined to launch her career from its earliest inception.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HLCasyAh7ic

Growing up in Sedona, Arizona, Branch begged her parents for a guitar for years and finally received one at 15 years old. Within a couple weeks, she wrote her first song and immediately began refusing to attend school, determined to pursue music full time. “My parents were really frustrated with me,” she says. “We came to an agreement that I could do correspondence courses, finish school that way, and spend time working on my music.” Recognizing her instantly impressive songwriting chops, they supported Branch’s artistry, helped her land local gigs, and record a demo tape to sell at shows featuring “I’d Rather Be in Love,” “Sweet Misery,” and “Goodbye to You,” which would all end up on The Spirit Room. Then, on a summer afternoon at home, she received a sudden, life-changing call from a family friend who sold timeshares.

“[They] said, ‘There’s someone from Los Angeles here, and they said they work in the music business. I’m giving them a timeshare tour. Get down here.’” But Branch’s parents were at work, and she didn’t have a driver’s license, so she asked to borrow a neighbor’s Harley Davidson golf cart and drove to the condominium, demo tape in hand. “I didn’t have any [headshots] or anything,” she recalls, “so I literally cut a picture of myself out of a family portrait and stuffed it into the tape.”

She arrived, met the man, Jeff Rabhan of Maverick Management, and gave him the tape, which he annoyedly accepted (her impression, anyway) before embarking on his eight-hour trip back to L.A. During the drive, Rabhan has since told her, he got into an argument with his then-girlfriend and played the tape to fill awkward silence. Stunned by her songs, he contacted Branch, offered to manage her, and helped her expand the demo into a full-length independent album titled Broken Bracelet, featuring the aforementioned Spirit Room tracks as well as “If Only She Knew.” After sending it out to a few industry executives, he landed her a spot opening for Hanson at The Wiltern, attended by Maverick Records A&R rep Danny Strick, who offered her a record deal moments after she finished her set. “It all happened so easily and quickly,” she says with a laugh.

Soon, Branch began meeting with potential producers for what would become The Spirit Room. Strick connected her with John Shanks, who had worked extensively with Melissa Etheridge and Fleetwood Mac. He was producing Stevie Nicks’s album Trouble in Shangri-La at the time. In their first studio session, they wrote and recorded “You Set Me Free” in a few hours. Shanks was taken aback by the then-17-year-old’s writing skills and unique vocal stylings — “Michelle-isms,” he calls them, referring to her tendency to elongate words at the end of lyrical phrases. “I said to her, ‘This might be our only day working [together], but I’m going to tell you something,” he recalls. “You are gifted, and you are special… What you’re bringing to this vocal is what’s selling the song.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=crkEBHrQSdc

They sent the record to Strick, who was impressed and expanded Branch’s budget to work with Shanks on a total of three songs. Shanks recalls Branch playing him “All You Wanted,” her favorite track on the album to this day, in its entirety on acoustic guitar. “She finished and said, ‘What?’ And I’m like, ‘I don’t have any notes. My job is to not screw it up when we record it,’” he says, noting that the top-10 hit’s lyrics and melody are nearly identical to her original rendition. Then, he asked her to play any song ideas she was looking to flesh out. “She goes, ‘Well, I have this “Everywhere” song, but [the label executives] don’t really like it.’” Despite Branch’s hesitancy to go against the label’s direction, Shanks heard the song’s potential and insisted they finish it, subtly tweaking its melody to achieve an explosive hook.

When he told the executives they’d worked on “Everywhere,” they weren’t thrilled. But once he played it for them, they were sold. “That was the green light,” he says. “That was like, ‘You guys can do whatever you want.’” Maverick again increased Branch’s budget to make seven songs with Shanks. But unbeknownst to the label, the pair was working fast and completed “the bare bones” of The Spirit Room’s 11 tracks in “three-and-a-half to four weeks” — quicker than they could even process Shanks’s invoices. “The label was not involved at all. We made it so quickly that nobody knew it was happening,” Branch says. “John and I worked so great together. I never felt like I was being undermined. I always felt supported by him.”

While the album was being mixed and mastered, Maverick held a meeting for key executives to hear a few of the tracks. Branch recalls being warned by Shanks, Rabhan, and Strick that the attendees would likely refrain from outwardly praising the music, as their jobs are strictly to strategize its promotional plan. “We were nervous playing it for them because it was our baby, and the first song we played was ‘Everywhere,’” she says. “I remember the minute the song stopped, [Ted Volk, Maverick’s then-head of promotion] screamed out loud, ‘Holy shit, this is a fucking hit song!’”

Volk was right. Branch’s career immediately skyrocketed upon its release in July 2001. “Everywhere” reached No. 12 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 5 at Top 40 radio, and its Liz Friedlander-directed video earned a Moonperson for Viewer’s Choice at the 2002 VMAs — thanks in part to its popularity on TRL, where she performed the track and even co-hosted. “MTV was hugely instrumental in the record being what it was,” she says, remembering moments like the time she asked host Carson Daly out to the VMAs. “Someone [recently tweeted] that they remember watching MTV [on September 11, 2001], and they were playing the ‘Everywhere’ video when they cut to the footage of the Twin Towers. I was like, ‘Fuck.’ That’s the craziest memory of those days.”

“Everywhere” set The Spirit Room up for its eventual double-platinum success, serving as a launching pad for the equally huge follow-up singles “All You Wanted” (No. 6 on the Hot 100) and “Goodbye to You” (No. 21 on the Hot 100). A majorly surreal part of the promotional cycle, Branch says, was when she performed the latter track live in episodes of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Charmed. “I was like, ‘I was just watching these in my bedroom in Sedona, Arizona not that long ago. This is crazy.”

The Spirit Room’s impact went far beyond Branch’s own career, as its guitar-heavy pop-rock sound sparked a wave of teen pop artists following suit, from Avril Lavigne to Lindsay Lohan and Ashlee Simpson, all of whom also worked with Shanks. At the time, Branch and her peers were often grouped together and discussed as “anti-Britney” pop stars, a pointlessly sexist contrast that she simply chalks up to the fact that she wrote her own songs and didn’t dance onstage. “I was a Britney Spears fan, so it wasn’t like I was anti-Britney at all,” she says. “It was just people trying to find clickbait before there was clickbait.”

Branch’s debut has even inspired artists past the early aughts, as Taylor Swift once told her she bought a blue Taylor guitar because of her. Of course, Swift would go on to inspire Olivia Rodrigo, a main player in reviving the 2000s teen pop-rock genre Branch was instrumental in crafting. “Music is cyclical,” Branch says. “To be able to pass the torch in that respect, especially to younger women, is amazing.” While Swift is currently re-recording her first six albums in order to own the masters, Branch’s motivation for revisiting The Spirit Room is different; inspired by Alanis Morissette’s acoustic 10th anniversary edition of Jagged Little Pill, she’s reimagining the songs of her debut in the sonically stripped back, “bare-bones way” she performs them live today.

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Justin Bieber and Ariana Grande’s ‘Stuck With U’ raises over $3.5 million for charity

Justin Bieber and Ariana Grande‘s collaborative 2020 single ‘Stuck With U’ has raised over $3.5 million (£2.5 million) for the First Responders Children’s Foundation.

Released back in May 2020 during the coronavirus-enforced lockdown, all net proceeds from the single went to the foundation.

  • READ MORE: Ariana Grande: Excuse Me, I Love You review: a close-up look at an electric performer with a whole lot of heart

The First Responders Children’s Foundation has subsequently redistributed the donations to the families of first responders in the US, including healthcare workers, firefighters, paramedics and EMTs, throughout the pandemic.

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“The generosity and support that Ariana Grande, Justin Bieber and Scooter Braun [who manages both Grande and Bieber] have shown the men and women on the front lines of this ongoing pandemic has been a surreal and humbling experience for us,” Jillian Crane, president of First Responders Children’s Foundation, said in a statement.

“As an organisation, we have been able to help the everyday heroes who have been on the frontlines of the pandemic, and their family’s immediate needs with the support that has only been made possible due to the collective effort of everyone involved, which we are thankful for.”

Shauna Nep of SB Projects, which is run by Braun, added: “As the world was shutting down, we were looking for ways we could make a tangible impact as it has always been Scooter’s priority that SB Projects and our artists give back.

“We were so thrilled to partner with the First Responders Children’s Foundation who have been supporting those on the frontlines of the pandemic, as well as their families. Over a year later, we are so proud to see how much has been raised and what has been accomplished. We thank the Foundation for their leadership and commitment to this work.”

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Last weekend Grande urged her fans and followers on social media to get vaccinated against coronavirus.

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New NFTs to be released of Chris Cornell’s last ever photoshoot

Two NFTs of photographs from Chris Cornell‘s final ever photoshoot are set to be made available tomorrow (August 5).

Just prior to his death in 2017, Cornell was photographed by legendary Hollywood photographer Randall Slavin.

‘The Last Session’ features never-seen-before photos from the shoot, with the two photos entitled ‘Until We Disappear’ and ‘White Roses For My Soul To Keep’.

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The two separate auctions will take place tomorrow (August 5) at midnight EST (5am BST), on Cryptograph.co.

Proceeds from the auctions will benefit Phoenix House California, a charity and rehab centre that helps people overcome drug and alcohol abuse and provide mental health services in southern California. It’s a charity that Cornell supported across his life.

See the two images set to be sold as NFTs tomorrow below:

Cornell
‘White Roses for My Soul to Keep’. Credit: Randall Slavin.
Cornell
‘Until We Disappear’. Credit: Randall Slavin.

A statement about the forthcoming release said: “These unquestionably unique Cryptographs titled ‘The Last Session’ are an intimate portrayal of Chris Cornell that would ultimately prove to be the rock icon’s final photoshoot. It has now, however, been eternalised in NFT form.

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“The immaculate monochromatic images were captured by Randall Slavin — the acclaimed, award-winning Hollywood photographer, collaborator and friend of Cornell. When Chris arrived at Randall’s studio in 2017, no one knew that this momentous shoot would be his last.

“After his tragic passing, Randall decided to shelve the photos for years, as the loss of his friend weighed too heavy on him. But at long last, the time has come to unveil this historic session and breathe new life into these stunningly palpable photographs — forever immortalising the legacy of a bona fide legend.”

Elsewhere, Cornell’s family recently reached a confidential settlement with the singer’s doctor, whom they sued for negligence and wilful misconduct in 2018.

The lawsuit was first filed in November 2018 by Cornell’s widow Vicky and their children Toni and Christopher Nicholas, roughly a year and a half after Cornell’s death, which was ruled a suicide. According to Rolling Stone, the suit accused Dr Robert Koblin of never administering any follow-up medical examinations, lab studies or clinical assessments on Cornell after prescribing him Oxycodone.

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Bop Shop: Songs From Jamila Woods, Syd, Kyle, And More

The search for the ever-elusive "bop" is difficult. Playlists and streaming-service recommendations can only do so much. They often leave a lingering question: Are these songs really good, or are they just new?

Enter Bop Shop, a hand-picked selection of songs from the MTV News team. This weekly collection doesn't discriminate by genre and can include anything — it's a snapshot of what's on our minds and what sounds good. We'll keep it fresh with the latest music, but expect a few oldies (but goodies) every once in a while, too. Get ready: The Bop Shop is now open for business.

  • Syd: "Fast Car"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oXgA3koewAo

    Syd's "Fast Car," while not a Tracy Chapman cover, may yet become likewise iconic. Its steamy video opens with Syd and a partner acting out the lyrics — getting romantic in the front seat — even as fellow travelers in traffic stare. "Hope they're all watching / Help me take my seatbelt off," Syd sings, "We gon' piss some people off / But right now that's where we belong." Much like its 1988 namesake, "Fast Car" revels in its title location as a shelter, a safe haven, and a powerful place; where Chapman "had a feeling that [she] belonged," Syd repeats a simple desire: "Take me there." That hazy sense of desire is echoed by Syd's scorching guitar squalls that resound through the nighttime California sky. —Patrick Hosken

  • Jamila Woods: "Fast Car" (Tracy Chapman cover)

    Here's an actual Tracy Chapman cover — a heart-swelling take on the folk-pop hit that subs out sighing acoustic guitar for wounded keyboard. Jamila Woods, the Chicago artist known for her neo-soul explorations, keeps the urgency of the original intact; she repeats the chorus-ending "be someone" multiple times, upping the drama, even as the general vibe remains sedate. It's a fitting tribute to Chapman's legacy and appears on the upcoming Join the Ritual album honoring the artists that inspired the Jagjaguwar label, out in September. —Patrick Hosken

  • Tanerélle: “Good Good”
    https://youtu.be/LH_3v0V0W1Y

    If a song is like a tapestry, Tanerélle's voice is the silk that weaves notes and lyrics together. Her latest track "Good Good" is a slow and mellow mood-setter about catering to a partner. With a steady bass accompanied by simple chords, she lays out the blueprint for prioritizing your significant other, maximizing pleasure, and making them "feel good." She sings, "Let's wash off your day and get right," and later adds, "Take a hit of me and get high." And we are floating on cloud nine, somewhere between the airy chorus and the passion of summer. —Virginia Lowman

  • BTS: “I’ll Be Missing You” (Puff Daddy, Faith Evans, 112 cover)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EN5Ga6OMwhA

    With their cover of the 1998 classic “I’ll Be Missing You,” international superstars BTS leave an emotional mark on the BBC Live Lounge. With a song so emotionally charged (penned in remembrance of legendary rapper Biggie Smalls) and wholeheartedly beloved by a generation, the Bangtan Boys had the eyes of the world on their stage. But as expected, the group delivered a riveting performance expertly executed. While still paying homage to the original, the addition of rappers Suga and J-Hope’s Korean verses, as well as Jimin’s angelic vocals, added some artistic flair to the performance, while fellow members RM, Jin, V, and Jungkook held it down with the English rap, melody, and ad-libs. Touching the hearts of music-lovers around the world, BTS’s performance further proves that music is universal and knows no bounds, borders, or language. —Sarina Bhutani

  • Leadr: “I’m Alright”

    After surviving a toxic relationship, queer Vietnamese-American singer Leadr is here to take back their control with this empowering breakup anthem. “You pushed me in the deep end / And I found mysеlf there / I didn’t drown,” he sings. Despite the hurt from the abuse, they have something to say to their ex-partner: “Your words, they try to burn me / Never did you wrong / You gave me many reasons / Taught me how to move on.” In the end, Leadr is completely all right and better off with a more mature mindset. If you’re going through the end of a terrible relationship, this is the perfect song for you. —Athena Serrano

  • Miss Madeline: “Bad Girls”

    “I found God in the basement of a rave,” proclaims Miss Madeline on this heavenly hyperpop cut. For one of the “Bad Girls,” the Slayyyter-approved pop singer paints a damn good picture of a sexy post-vax night out. Press play to be instantly transported to your dimly lit dance floor of choice, no clubbing attire or $50 Uber ride home required. —Sam Manzella

  • Will Joseph Cook ft. Chloe Moriondo: “Be Around Me”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HGy1BNNaEn8

    Will Joseph Cook and Chloe Moriondo are effortlessly effervescent from the start of their colorful collab “Be Around Me.” Over a drum beat that won’t quit, a sly bassline, and an assortment of handclaps, the duo take turns trading compliments, outdoing the other’s effusiveness line by line: “Oh my god, did you call me baby / Maybe / Oh / Is that OK? / Yeah it’s cool.” Though each lyric reads like a text you’d nervously send to a crush, the track’s addictively sweet chorus lingers long after the first listen. Sometimes it’s just as simple as “I’m around, be around / Come around, be around me.” —Carson Mlnarik

  • Kyle: “Love Me Like You Say You Love Me”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TSghtE_7SsU

    We’ve all had that moment when being in love seemed too hard but breaking up was even harder. If you’ve ever needed the right words to let that love go, Kyle has you covered with this melodic heartbreak single. Taking a step outside the box, the Los Angeles rapper tapped into his emotional side, recently mentioning he was “back at it again with the love songs.” —Taura J

  • Parisalexa: “...Better Than Being in Love”

    Parisalexa throws it back to the ’90s with this confident R&B anthem. “I love me / Heard they don’t like me / Well I just don’t care, yeah,” she sings. Parisalexa is aware why she might have haters: “I understand why you act that way / And if I were you I’d be bitter too.” But really, she doesn’t give a damn that you’re mad at her because she loves herself — and has no time for you. Overall, Parisalexa brings an influential message that self-love is often better than being in love. —Athena Serrano

  • Drinking Boys and Girls Choir: "There Is No Spring"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-q_xru3TiSQ

    In 2019, Daegu punk trio Drinking Boys and Girls Choir told MTV News that the freedom to play shows helped liberate them from the grueling churn of their day jobs. "If anybody listens to my song, and I can play, I'm just really happy," bassist and vocalist Meena said at the time. In fact, the band's rousing live shows are their cornerstone; when the pandemic took them away, DBGC instead suped up their studio sound on new album Marriage License, an exhilarating and elevated pop-punk masterstroke that's not afraid to get chunky. Standout "There Is No Spring" is melodious as an April breeze, arch and playful, and the exact amount of frenetic needed to sustain the energy and the accompanying freedom. —Patrick Hosken

  • Willow and Avril Lavigne ft. Travis Barker: “Grow”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jKmM46695sU

    Spanning bombastic pop and moody neo-soul, Willow has proven herself as a chameleonic artist. But her recent embrace of her mom’s rock roots on Lately I Feel Everything is perhaps her most interesting turn yet. Her voice sounds both wizened and authoritative on “Grow,” a drum-driven, 2000s pop-rock-inspired anthem that harkens back to a sound honed by the greats like Avril Lavigne. It’s only fitting that both Lavigne and Blink-182’s Travis Barker are featured on the track — which absolutely shreds. “I hope you know you’re not alone / Being confused ain’t right or wrong,” Willow sings, before asserting, “You’ll find that you’re your own best friend / And no, that ain’t a fuckin’ metaphor.” The track radiates the same inspiration and wisdom Jimmy Eat World espoused with “The Middle” 20 years ago this month, and it’s nice to hear it again through Willow’s modern lens. —Carson Mlnarik

  • Dirty Nice: “Tulips”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lC6O5aPOnA8

    London alt-pop duo Dirty Nice deliver a whimsical, playful love song that is great to listen to with your summer fling. “We just wanna make it worth our while / Food stuck in our teeth when we smile,” vocalists Charlie Pelling and Mark Thompson sing. They know life flies by so fast, but they are eager to buy you some tulips and watch fond memories bloom. —Athena Serrano

  • Octavio the Dweeb: “Slow Drag”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ebd2ii0YPBQ

    “Stress is more dangerous than smoking that cig,” Octavio the Dweeb sings about a relationship that took a turn for the worst. He’s trying to take a breather to remind myself everything will be fine and he should find something to distract and heal from the breakup. Just take a slow drag and breathe out. —Athena Serrano

  • Indigo De Souza: "Hold U"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZstVTHCCcGs

    Asheville singer-songwriter Indigo De Souza grounded her 2018 debut, I Love My Mom, in confessional guitar tunes and an overall airiness. The result was a collection of memorable probes into her psyche. For her follow-up, Any Shape You Take (out August 27), she's bulked things up; on "Hold U," a kinetic rhythm runs throughout, changing slightly to match the unfolding intimacy of Indigo's lyrics. By the end, buried under layers of motion, the whole thing feels airy in a new way, and no less potent. —Patrick Hosken

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Dua Lipa Brings That ‘Je Ne Sais Quoi’ Energy In Pop Smoke’s ‘Demeanor’ Video

Dua Lipa is the new female alpha in the palace in the new music video of “Demeanor,” a collaboration with the late hip-hop rapper Pop Smoke which premiered Thursday (July 29).

The video begins with Lady Dua at the dressing table, applying makeup as her lady-in-waiting whispers to her. The footage then shows a large castle overlooking a red sunset and pans toward the window of the great hall, displaying a lavish feast. The song enters with Smoke’s vocals as guests donned in extravagant Rococo and Baroque outfits and wigs are having a good, old time. The video pays tribute to the late rapper in a ghostly cloud seated at the head table and in a wall-motion portrait immortalizing him as a Roman emperor.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UBjTdLGV8L0

“I'm feelin' on your baba treesha / Shorty said she like my demeanor / And she look like a eater / I’m off the Perky geekin’,” the Brooklyn rapper sings on the chorus.

Dua harmonizes with Smoke on the lyric “My demeanor is meaner than yours” and makes a grand entrance to the party in her metallic gold ruffled gown within the second verse. She, her ladies, and her butlers do a fabulous court dance to the camera.

“Female alpha and I practice what I preach, I devour / Tell me, can you take the heat?,” she sings. “You can touch with your eyes only / I know you like what you see / That je ne sais quoi energy / Baby, get on your knees.”

The “Levitating” singer struts across the room as she sings the iconic line “You can’t say Pop without Smoke” and performs several dances with different partners on the floor. Toward the end, she raises her glass with the guests to give a toast. Clap for the encore.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CR6teMnnLQj/

On Instagram, Dua Lipa showed appreciation for Smoke’s family. “Thank you to the team and Pop’s family for having me on this song. Thank you to my friends for making this video with me,” she said in her latest post, honoring the rapper who was slain in a home invasion in Los Angeles in February 2020.

“Demeanor” is the lead single and 16th track on Pop Smoke’s posthumous second studio album Faith, which was released earlier this month on July 16, four days before what would have been the rapper’s 22nd birthday. The album follows his other posthumous 2020 album Shoot for the Stars, Aim for the Moon. Faith peaked No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums charts and is still going.

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Dreamcatcher set the stage for their return with intense ‘BEcause’ MV teaser

K-pop girl group Dreamcatcher have shared a first look at their upcoming album with a teaser for the music video for title track ‘BEcause’.

  • READ MORE: Chinese SEVENTEEN fan saved from severe floods after using group’s lightstick to alert rescuers

The teaser, uploaded yesterday (July 27), features the K-pop act performing the upcoming single in various creepy locations, including an abandoned amusement park and smoke-filled hotel, clouded in smoke. Dreamcatcher’s upcoming mini-album ‘Summer Holiday’, which will feature ‘BEcause’, is due out July 30.

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‘Summer Holiday’ will include a total of 6 tracks, a number of which were co-written by the group’s members, specifically Siyeon and Yoohyeon and JiU. The girl group have also released a “highlight medley” for the forthcoming project.

The upcoming mini-album will be Dreamcatcher’s first release since their sixth mini-album ‘Dystopia: Road to Utopia’ alongside its title track ‘Odd Eye’ that dropped in January this year. Their previous release also marked the highly-anticipated of Chinese member Handong after a year of inactivity due to her participation in the Chinese reality TV programme Youth With You. 

The group’s first full-length album, ‘Dystopia: The Tree of Language’, was previously named as one of the best Asian albums of 2020 by NME. The 12-track record experimented with a number of genres, including EDM and rock on ‘Scream’ and jazz on ‘Jazz Bar’.

Dreamcatcher originally made their debut as a five-member group known as MINX in 2014. They later re-debuted as Dreamcatcher in 2017 with their first single album ‘Nightmare’. During this time, they rebranded with a new rock-inspired sound and darker image. New members Handong and Gahyeon also joined the group following their rebranding.

Dreamcatcher originally made their debut as a five-member group known as MINX in 2014. They later re-debuted as Dreamcatcher in 2017 with their first single album ‘Nightmare’. During this time, they rebranded with a new rock-inspired sound and darker image. New members Handong and Gahyeon also joined the group following their rebranding.

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BTS’ Jin on the pressure to succeed: “I worked through some things”

Jin of K-pop boyband BTS has opened up about the pressure he feels to succeed and how he has since “worked through” them.

  • READ MORE: BTS’ ‘Permission To Dance’ cements their status as kings of the feel-good summer smash

In a brand-new interview with WeVerse Magazine, the singer spoke about the success of their English-language single ‘Butter’, which was released in May, and how he feels about its domination on the Billboard Hot 100. The song has so far spent eight non-consecutive weeks at Number One on the chart, tying Olivia Rodrigo‘s ‘Drivers License’ for the longest chart-topping hit of 2021.

Jin admitted that he now feels “less pressure” over how well a song does on the charts as compared to 2020’s ‘Dynamite’ and was able to enjoy the promotional activities for ‘Butter’ more. The singer also cited the online nature of many award shows due to the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as a reduced use of the internet, as reasons for the way he felt.

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“You could say that I cleared my mind, or that I worked through some things,” Jin said. “I’m pretty sure I am doing better than then. I’m keeping a pretty regular routine now that I’m getting accustomed to commuting life, even though my schedule is sometimes a bit erratic.”

He also added that when he had to “keep working without a single day off” in the past, he felt “really tired” due to added personal responsibilities aside from his work. “Now after cycling through this routine for a while I’m a little healthier and I’m getting a little more sleep, too,” he reassued.

Fellow BTS member J-Hope also spoke to WeVerse Magazine yesterday (July 27) about feeling a “sense of responsibility” that came with the group’s booming international success. “Whenever I try to embrace an unintended success, in my mind I’m always like … It’s like half happiness, half a feeling that makes me think seriously about what I accomplished,” he said.

In other BTS news, the group recently made their debut on BBC Radio 1 Live Lounge, where they performed a cover of Puff Daddy and Faith Evans‘ 1997 hit ‘I’ll Be Missing You’. The group also performed live versions of ‘Butter’ and ‘Permission To Dance’ during their appearance on the programme.

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Standon Calling cancelled due to heavy rain and flooding

Standon Calling festival has been cancelled halfway through its final day due to heavy rain and flooding.

  • READ MORE: 10 brilliant UK festivals to look forward to this summer

The Hertfordshire festival, which began on Thursday (July 22) and was due to be headlined by Primal Scream this evening (July 25), was hit with thunderstorms and torrential rain earlier today forcing organisers to first suspend the event and then later cancel it altogether.

“Unfortunately due to flooding we will no longer be able to proceed with the festival,” the festival announced on its official Twitter account this evening. “If you can safely leave the site this evening please do so as soon as possible. We are working on getting everyone off site as safely and quickly as possible.”

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Offering refuge for those stuck and unable to leave the site safely – whether due to the weather, lack of public transport or because they are intoxicated – Stanton Calling tweeted: “If you are unable to leave site safely (for example if you are intoxicated, your lift cannot get to you or you can’t get to your public transport this evening) please head to the Campsite Office in the Village Green (or reception if you are in boutique or Lavish Lands) where we will be providing details on the provisions we will be making for you.

“In the meantime please stay as warm, hydrated and dry as possible. We will post the latest updates straight to the Campsite Office as well as on twitter and our web page.”

A number of festival-goers found themselves having to leave their belongings on site, which they asked organisers if they could return for it at a later date.

“What if our tents and belongings are there and we can’t get in to get them? Can we come tomorrow??” one attendee tweeted, while another asked: “We’ve had to leave all belongings and our tents behind – can we come back to get them tomorrow as we can’t make it back tonight??”

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A Met Office weather warning was placed over Standon earlier today, which has since been upgraded to a yellow warning, signalling: “Heavy showers and thunderstorms may lead to flooding and transport disruption in places today.”

A number of roads are expected to be closed in the area due to further flash floods, and there are fears that some homes and businesses will be flooded.

You can see footage and pics from Standon Calling below:

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Skepta reveals features on new EP and confirms it’ll arrive this week

Skepta has officially confirmed that his new EP, ‘All In’, is set to arrive later this week.

  • READ MORE: Exclusive – Skepta on A$AP Rocky arrest: “They’ll make an example out of us black artists”

The rapper first announced the five-track EP last month, after hinting back in March that he might be retiring after one more song.

Last week, Skepta took to Instagram Live to refute claims that he’s retiring from music. “I could never quit music,” he told fans. “I don’t know who’s pushing that narrative, pushing that agenda that Skeppy is stopping music and all that. How? I am music.”

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He then seemingly revealed that his new project will come out on July 30, the week after Dave’s new album ‘We’re All Alone In This Together’. “I’m going to let Dave’s album come out this week then I’m going to drop it the week after,” he said.

Earlier today (July 25), the ‘Shutdown’ rapper shared the official tracklist for ‘All In’ – which includes features from Kid Cudi, J Balvin and Teezee – and confirmed that the project will indeed br released on Friday (July 30).

See the announcement below:

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Skepta (@skeptagram)

 

Skepta’s most recent music came in the form of new track ‘Lane Switcha’, a collaboration between the Tottenham rapper, A$AP Rocky, Juicy J, Project Pat, and the late Pop Smoke, taken from the Fast & Furious 9 soundtrack.

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Before that, he appeared on Kid Cudi’s most recent album, ‘Man On The Moon III’, on the track ‘Show Out’, also featuring Pop Smoke.

In a four-star review of Cudi’s album, NME‘s Will Lavin wrote: “A surprising moment arrives when Cudi teams up with Skepta and, posthumously, New York’s Pop Smoke for the drill-infused ‘Show Out’. Venturing into new territory, Cudi’s drill excursion is more about letting off steam than it is about indulging toxic energy.

“He proclaims that he ‘ain’t no bitch’, his bravado running rampant over the whirring baseline and menacing hi-hats, standing triumphant with a crew whom Skepta claims carry ‘guns same size as Kevin Hart’.”

Meanwhile, Skepta will headline this year’s Wireless Festival alongside Future and Migos.

The annual festival is moving to south London’s Crystal Palace Park for this year’s event, which is set to run from September 10-12.

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PENGSHUi share video for rip-roaring new track ‘Little Brother’

PENGSHUi have shared the video for their rip-roaring new track ‘Little Brother’ – you can watch it below.

The band’s new record follows previous singles ‘Eat The Rich’ and ‘Move The World’, and hears them take listeners on a rollercoaster ride of emotions while exercising impeccable control of tension and release.

“‘Little Brother’ is about what we would say to the young versions of ourselves,” frontman Illaman said of the track. “A reminder to remember where we have come from and the strength we never knew we had. Those moments when we thought we would never make it through a life event or trauma. A reminder of our wins and successes.”

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Watch the Daisy Chain-directed ‘Little Brother’ video below:

PENGSHUi – comprised of MC Illaman, drummer Prav, and guitarist Fatty – released their self-titled debut album last year.

Thanks to its soundclash of punk, grime, dub and drum ‘n’ bass, the band have picked up a few new famous fans, from JME to Enter Shikari, and were even invited to work on a remix for The Prodigy.

Meanwhile, The Prodigy have shared a new version of their 1996 classic single ‘Breathe’, featuring vocals from Wu-Tang Clan‘s RZA.

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Having teased the track earlier in the week of release, the new version (dubbed the ‘Liam H And René LaVice Re-Amp’) features production from the band’s Liam Howlett alongside Canadian producer René LaVice. It’s taken from the soundtrack to Fast And Furious 9.

The original ‘Breathe’, which appeared on the Essex band’s seminal 1997 album ‘The Fat Of The Land’, also features a sample of Wu-Tang’s ‘Da Mystery Of Chessboxin”.

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Travis Scott and Meek Mill reportedly got into a heated altercation at July 4 party

Travis Scott and Meek Mill are reported to have got into a heated exchange at a lavish Independence Day party in the Hamptons on Sunday (July 4).

  • READ MORE: Mosh pits, Grammy flare-ups and Stormi – Travis Scott’s chaotic and candid Netflix film Look Mom I Can Fly is here

According to PageSix, the 1.30am stand-off all but ended the party held by Philadelphia 76ers owner Michael Rubin. Famous faces at the party included JAY-Z, Lil Uzi Vert, James Harden, J. Balvin and Alex Rodriguez.

Video footage from the scene of the incident appears to show members of both Scott and Mill’s entourages trying to calm the situation, with the rappers heard shouting at one another off camera. At one point, Meek is seemingly heard saying: “Don’t touch me, bro!”

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Another clip posted on PageSix hears Mill allegedly shout: “We don’t give no [expletive] about Travis Scott.”

It’s not clear what led to the two rappers having the apparent argument.

The pair last collaborated on music together in 2013 with ‘I’m Leanin’ and ‘Bandz’.

Elsewhere at the party, a clip of Lil Uzi Vert breakdancing went viral. In the same clip, Mill and Nets superstar James Harden were also spotted tickling one another.

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Last month, Travis Scott honoured the memory of the late Pop Smoke with his latest Dior collection.

Earlier this year Meek Mill shared a new track, rapping on the same beat used by Drake and Rick Ross for ‘Lemon Pepper Freestyle’.

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Megan Thee Stallion, Jamie xx, Disclosure and more added to Manchester’s Warehouse Project 2021

The full line-up for this year’s Warehouse Project season in Manchester has been revealed – check out the full schedule below.

A handful of acts including Nile Rodgers & Chic were announced back in May as the festival confirmed its 2021 return, and they’ve now added a huge list of acts stretching from mid-September to post-Christmas.

Among the acts heading to Warehouse Project at the Mayfield Depot in Manchester this year are Megan Thee Stallion, Jamie xx, Disclosure, Migos, Caribou, Four Tet and many, many more.

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The series kicks off with a show from Megan Thee Stallion alongside Princess Nokia, Shygirl and more on September 10. The following night, Migos will then perform with Pa Salieu among the support acts.

Nile Rodgers & Chic then play on Friday September 17, with the likes of Peggy Gou and Daniel Avery playing part one of the ‘Welcome To The Warehouse’ weekend on September 25.

Elsewhere, Disclosure will be joined by India Jordan and more on October 23 for a special show, before the season wraps up on December 27 with a Kaluki 15th birthday celebration.

See the full list of shows for Warehouse Project 2021 below:

The Warehouse Project
The Warehouse Project (Picture: Press)
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SEPTEMBER
___

Friday September 10
Megan Thee Stallion
Times: 19:00 – 23:00

Depot:
Megan Thee Stallion
Tion Wayne
Princess Nokia
Shygirl
Jordss

______________

Saturday September 11
Migos
Times: 19:00 – 23:00

Depot:
Migos
Pa Salieu
Tiffany Calver
Yung Omz

Friday September 17
Nile Rogers & Chic Live (SOLD OUT)
Times: 19:00 – 02:00 (Chic on-stage at 22:00)

Depot:
Nile Rodgers & Chic
Horse Meat Disco
House Gospel Choir
Craig Charles
Gina Breeze
Supernature

Concourse:
La Discothèque Presents
Norman Jay Mbe
DJ Paulette
Veba
Joe Motion

______________

Saturday September 18
Repercussion Festival (SOLD OUT)
Times: 14:00 – 04:00

DJ Shadow | Floating Points | Jordan Rakei | Soul Il Soul
Laurent Garnier | DJ Koze | George Fitzgerald Live | Jayda G
Gilles Peterson | Kamaal Williams | Moses Boyd | Tom Misch DJ
Ben Ufo | Moodymann | Virgil Abloh | DJ Seinfeld | Channel Tres
Mr Scruff Presents Keep It Unreal | Benji B | LTJ Bukem | Children Of Zeus
Antal | Call Super | Josey Rebelle | Zed Bias | Jamz Supernova
Sassy J | Mafalda | Greg Wilson | Kampire | Anz | Shy One | Jon K
Space Afrika | Annabel Fraser | Krysko | Rich Reason | Danuka
Tarzsa | Sno | Greg Lord | Andrea Trout | Aletha

______________

Friday September 24
Metropolis (SOLD OUT)
Times: 20:00 – 04:00

Depot (A-Z):
Andy C
Sub Focus
Wilkinson

(A-Z):
High Contrast
North Base B2b Mark Xtc B2b Mollie Collins
Sasasas
MCs: Tonn Piper, Mc Id, Ad-apt Mc, Lowqui

Concourse: Dnb All Stars (A-Z):
Friction
Goddard B2b Alcemist
Hype B2b Randall
Kanine
Kaz B2b Disrupta
Nia Archives B2b Ej Kitto
René Lavice
Turno B2b K Motionz
Mcs: Linguistics, Eksman, 2 Shy

Archive (A-Z):
Break
DJ Marky
Drs – In:Session
Dub Phizix B2b Chimpo Feat Strategy
Ed Rush & Optical
Lsb B2b Technimatic
Mefjus B2b Calyx & Teebee
Stature B2b Kleu
MCs: Gq, Drs, Strategy, Jakes, Carasel

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Saturday September 25
Welcome To The Warehouse Part 1 (SOLD OUT)
Times: 14:00 – 02:00

Depot:
Carl Cox | Peggy Gou
Modeselektor – DJ
Daniel Avery B2b Haai
Jasper James | Brame & Hamo
India Jordan | Krysko | Greg Lord

Concourse:
The Blessed Madonna | Honey Dijon
Hunee | Chaos In The Cbd
Dan Shake | Bradley Zero
Space Afrika | High Hoops

Archive:
Skream | Special Request
Partiboi69 | Sherelle
Bklava | Darwin | Effy
Interplanetary Criminal | Zutekh DJs

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OCTOBER
______________

Friday October 1
Eric Prydz presents (SOLD OUT)
Times 21:00 – 03:30

Depot:
Eric Prydz
Artbat
Cristoph
Franky Wah
Ammara

Concourse:
Reinier Zonneveld (Live)
Anfisa Letyago
Greg Lord

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Saturday October 2
Welcome To The Warehouse Part 2 SOLD OUT
Times: 19:00 – 04:00

Depot:
Jamie Jones | Joseph Capriati
Michael Bibi | Joey Daniel
Ben Sterling | Pirate Copy | Alisha

Concourse:
The Martinez Brothers
Seth Troxler | Kerri Chandler
Cassy | Jaden Thompson | Fleur Shore

Archive:
Archie Hamilton | East End Dubs
Rossko | Jesse Calosso
Manda Moor | Lubò | Pach

______________

Friday October 8
Fisher
Times: 20:00 – 04:00

Depot & Concourse:
Fisher
Nic Fanciulli
Lee Foss
Danny Howard
Guti – Live
wAFF
Blond:ish
Ben Hemsley
SYREETA

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Saturday October 9
Curated by Four Tet
Times: 14:00 – 02:00

Depot:
Four Tet | DJ EZ | Hunee
Avalon Emerson | Goldie
Boys Noize | Joy Orbison
Special Request B2B Chloé Robinson
SHERELLE | Koreless – Live
Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs (Dj)
Anthony Naples | TSHA | Champion
Anz | Sofia Kourtesis | Effy
Jossy Mitsu | Mr Mitch | Aletha
Plus 5 Hour Opening Set In Concourse From 13:30
Floating Points & Ben UFO

A WHP & Eat Your Own Ears Presentation

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Friday October 15
The Ape 15th Birthday
Times: 19:00 – 04:00

Depot:
Rudimental – Live
Shy FX | David Rodigan | My Nu Leng
Bou | Barely Legal | Emerald | 2Fox

Concourse: Rinse Fm
Skream (UKG Set)
Mike Skinner | MJ Cole | Todd Edwards
DJ Q | Wookie | Oneman
Hatcha | Eliza Rose | Tañ

Archive:
Goldie | Hazard | General Levy
Dillinja | Danny Byrd
Bryan G B2B DJ Die B2B Jumpin Jack Frost
The Heatwave | Mungos Hi Fi
Chimpo & Salo
North Base B2B Mark XTC B2B Sappo B2B Exile

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Saturday October 16
Adam Beyer Presents Drumcode
Times: 18:30 – 04:00

Depot:
Adam Beyer | Alan Fitzpatrick | DJ Rush
Ida Engberg | Ilario Alicante | Joel Mull
Joyhauser | Kölsch | Layton Giordani
Lilly Palmer | Luigi Madonna | Mark Reeve
Raxon | Rebūke | Richie Hawtin
Thomas Schumacher | Wehbba (Live) | Victor Ruiz

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Friday October 22
Worried About Henry
Time: 20:00 – 04:00

Depot:
Chase & Status (DJ Set) & Rage
Hybrid Minds (DJ Set) | Dimension (DJ Set)
Bou W/ Trigga & Inja | Hazard | North Base B2B Gray

Concourse:
Holy Goof | My Nu Leng
Alexistry B2B Ama | Bklava
Flava D | Sammy Virji B2B Higgo | TS7

Archive:
Ben Snow & Duskee | DJ Zinc
Fabio & Grooverider
Harriet Jaxxon | Kaz B2B Kara
Serum B2B Randall
T>I B2B Limited
Voltage B2B Bladerunner

______________

Saturday October 23
Disclosure
Times: 19:00 – 04:00

Depot:
Disclosure
Kink | Folamour | Palms Trax
Artwork | Moxie | Lone
Baba Stiltz | Eclair Fifi | Jamz Supernova
India Jordan | Harrison BDP
Anz | Bklava | Amy Becker
Salute | Niks | DJ Streaks | Joe Motion

______________

Wednesday October 27
Caribou Live
Times: 19:00 – 23:00

Caribou
Plus Special Guests

______________

Friday October 29
Higher
Times: 19:00 – 04:00

Depot:
Solardo
Paul Woolford | Nic Fancuilli
Sosa | Syreeta

Concourse:
Pan-pot
Fjaak | Eli Brown
Nancy Live | Obskur

Archive:
Waff | Rich Nxt | Rossi
Lauren Lo Sung | Pach

______________

Saturday October 30
HALLOWEEN AT THE WAREHOUSE PROJECT
Times: 19:00 – 04:00

Depot:
Annie Mac
Eats Everything B2B Skream
Denis Sulta | Folamour | 2manydjs
Mella Dee | Krystal Klear | Kettama
Propsa | Brame & Hamo | Big Miz
Absolute | Dance System | Jaguar
Adelphi Music Factory
Manami | Mark Blair | Holly Lester

______________

NOVEMBER
______________

Friday November 12
Curated By Jamie xx
Times: 19:00 – 04:00

Jamie xx
Honey Dijon | Overmono – Live
Skee Mask | Josey Rebelle | Bradley Zero
DJ Python | OK Williams | Gene On Earth
D Tiffany | Loraine James | Acemo
Krysko | Sno

______________

Saturday November 13
Fac51 – The Hacienda
Times: 19:00 – 03:00

Hacienda Classical
David Morales | Roger Sanchez | Tony Humphries
Greg Wilson | Roy Davis Jr
K Klass | Graeme Park
Mike Pickering | DJ Paulette
Jon Da Silva | Tom Wainwright
Peter Hook | Hewan Clarke

______________

Friday November 26
Whp & Circus Present Radio 1 Dance
Times: 19:00 – 04:00

Camelphat
Hot Since 82 | Alan Fitzpatrick
Pete Tong | Yousef | Heidi
Rebūke | Catz ‘n Dogz | Eli & Fur
Jaguar | Chelina Manuhutu | Lauren Lo Sung
Sarah Story | Ewan Mcvicar | Meg Ward
Tommy Farrow | James Organ

______________

Saturday November 27
XXL
Times: 19:00 – 06:00

A-Z:
Amelie Lens | Charlotte De Witte | Helena Hauff
Jeff Mills | Nina Kraviz

A-Z:
AEIT | AIROD | Blasha & Allatt
Blawan | Cera Khin | Clara Cuve
Cleric | DJ Stingray | FJAAK
Gabber Eleganza | Hector Oaks
Imogen | Kander | KI/KI
Nene H | Rebekah | Wallis

______________

DECEMBER
______________

Friday December 3
Worried About Henry & Metropolis Joint Birthday
20:00 – 04:00

Depot:
Crucast
Crucast Featuring A-Z
Bad Boy Chiller Crew
Darkzy | Kanine | Lazcru | Mc Ad
Skepsis | Window Kid | Zero
Plus Special Guests A-Z:
Kings Of The Rollers | Macky Gee

Concourse: Hospitality
High Contrast
Camo & Krooked B2B Mefus + Daxta
Metrik | Etherwood B2B Unglued | Degs & Lens
S.P.Y | Makoto B2B Nutone – Tempza
This Is Inja | Euponique B2B Kaz

Archive A-Z:
Benny L B2B Dillinja | Born On Road Ft Kelvin 373 / Aries
Congo Natty | Jungle Cakes – Ed Solo – Deekline – Benny Page – Navigator
Nicky Blackmarket B2B Kenny Ken
North Sappo Mark XTC Splice
Taxman B2B Original Sin B2B Sub Zero
Voltage B2B Serum

______________

Saturday December 4
Bicep Live At The Warehouse Project
Times: 18:30 – 04:00

Bicep – Live
Jon Hopkins (DJ) | Mall Grab | Mr G – Live
Haai B2B Saorise | Kelly Lee Owens – DJ Set
India Jordan | Conducta | Hammer
Anz | Manami | Club Fitness
Holly Lester | Interplanetary Criminal
Krysko | Nite School

______________

Saturday December 11
DEFECTED
Times: 14:00 – 02:00

Depot: Defected
Gorgon City | Basement Jaxx (DJ Set)
Eats Everything | Sam Divine | Low Steppa
Melé | Monki | Dunmore Brothers

Concourse: Glitterbox
Purple Disco Machine | Dimitri From Paris
Simon Dunmore | The Shapeshifters Live With Teni Tinks
Kiddy Smile | Melvo Baptiste

Archive: Classic Vs Faith
Eli Escobar | Luke Solomon | Gina Breeze
Rimarkable | Terry Farley & Pete Heller
Krysko

______________

Monday December 27
KALUKI 15TH BIRTHDAY
Times: 19:00 – 05:00

Marco Carola | Loco Dice
Richy Ahmed | Alan Fitzpatrick
Ilario Alicante | Archie Hamilton
East End Dubs | Rich NXT | Seb Zito
Joey Daniel | Latmun | De La Swing
Chris Stussy | Ben Sterling
Pirate Copy | Rossi | Wheats
Alisha | Manda Moore | Sho
Luke Welsh | Mike Morrisey | Calvin Clarke

“The Warehouse Project’s 2021 season marks the long-awaited return to the dancefloor that everyone has been waiting for: a return to music, to dancing and to weekends,” a WHP press release said. “Defining moments and shared experiences with everyone under one roof again for a full-spectrum of music and cultural immersion.”

All restrictions on live events in the UK are set to end on July 19 following a new speech from Prime Minister Boris Johnson yesterday (July 5).

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Listen to a snippet of The Kid LAROI and Justin Bieber’s new collab, ‘Stay’

The Kid LAROI has delivered a teaser for his highly anticipated collaborative single with Justin Bieber, ‘Stay’.

  • READ MORE: The Kid LAROI: Aussie rap’s teenage superstar closes in on global success

In a 20 second clip, captioned with “STAY. THE MOVIE”, clips show both LAROI and Bieber singing in empty streets, on rooftops and levitating in what looks like an apartment.

Watch the snippet below.

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LAROI confirmed the track would land next Friday, July 9 in a tweet earlier this month.

He posted a screenshot of a text conversation with a person who seems to be Ron Perry, the CEO of his label Columbia Records, who confirmed the release date after having his phone blown up by LAROI’s fans.

“Thanks for messing w me,” the exec wrote. “I have 10,000 unread DMS.”

It follows a pair of Tweets from Bieber and LAROI earlier in the week, both hinting at the July 9 release. The song can be pre-saved on Spotify and Apple Music ahead of its release here.

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‘Stay’ comes as the second collab between Bieber and LAROI, after the duo first linked up for the track ‘Unstable’, from Bieber’s sixth full-length effort ‘Justice’, back in March. NME writer Will Lavin highlighted the track in his review of ‘Justice’, noting its “beautifully sparse soundscape”.

Though a tracklist for the project is yet to be unveiled, it’s likely ‘Stay’ will appear on The Kid LAROI’s forthcoming long-form release, tentatively titled ‘F*ck Love 3’. Last month, LAROI appeared to tease the project’s release in July, following a series of teases on social media that a new album was in the works.

‘F*ck Love 3’ will serve as the first project from LAROI since he signed to Scooter Braun’s management company, SB Projects, at the start of June.

The Kid LAROI released his debut mixtape, ‘F*ck Love’, last July. He followed up with a deluxe version of the record later that year, titled ‘F*ck Love (Savage)’, which contained seven new tracks including his hit ‘Without You’. He made his debut on Saturday Night Live in May, performing a version of ‘Without You’ with Miley Cyrus.

NME gave ‘F*ck Love’ a four-star review upon its release, writing that LAROI “shows off his extensive musicality and emotional depth on this promising debut”.

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RZA announces new album ‘RZA vs Bobby Digital’ and shares new single

RZA has announced full details of a new album and shared its latest track – listen to ‘Saturday Afternoon Kung Fu Theater’ below.

The track is the latest preview of ‘RZA vs Bobby Digital’, out on August 6 and executive produced by DJ Scratch.

The Wu-Tang Clan leader last released music under the Bobby Digital name – which sees him take on the alter-ego first presented in his 1998 debut solo album ‘Bobby Digital in Stereo’ – in 2008.

  • READ MORE: Five things we learned from our ‘In Conversation’ video chat with RZA
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Originally teased as an album called ‘Bobby Digital: Digital Potions’ earlier this year, the album was previewed by first song ‘Pugilism’.

Listen to new track ‘Saturday Afternoon Kung Fu Theater’ below.

Discussing the new album in a statement, RZA said: “Lyrically the hip-hop part of me had a chance to re-emerge during quarantine. Giving Scratch the reins as a producer and me taking the reins as an MC, that’s what frees me up creatively and lets me play more with lyrical gags and lyrical flows because I don’t have to be focused on everything.

“He (Scratch) delivered tracks that resonated and brought me back to a sound that I felt was missing. For me it was really natural for me to flow and write to these songs.”

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Elsewhere, The Prodigy recently shared a new version of their 1996 classic single ‘Breathe’, featuring vocals from RZA.

The new version (dubbed the ‘Liam H And René LaVice Re-Amp’) features production from the band’s Liam Howlett alongside Canadian producer René LaVice. It’s taken from the soundtrack to Fast and Furious 9.

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Willow Smith confirms release date for her new album ‘Lately I Feel Everything’

Willow Smith has confirmed the release date for her forthcoming new album ‘Lately I Feel Everything’.

The follow-up to 2020’s ‘The Anxiety’ – which was a collaborative record with Tyler Cole under the moniker The Anxiety – has already been previewed with the Travis Barker collaboration ‘t r a n s p a r e n t s o u l’, which came out back in April.

Posting on Instagram last night (June 23), Willow confirmed that ‘Lately I Feel Everything’ will be released on July 16 – you can watch the first teaser clip for the album below.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by ∴ WILLOW ∴ (@willowsmith)

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‘Lately I Feel Everything’ will be released next month via MSFTSMusic/Roc Nation/Polydor, with further details about the album set to be announced very soon.

A recent press release previously revealed that Willow will “channel the alt rock, pop-punk and emo heroes she adored as a teenager, like Avril Lavigne, My Chemical Romance and Paramore,” on her new album. 

“I thought this was a really dope outlet for a new energy I wanted to bring to my music,” she said in a statement.

Willow revealed in an interview earlier this month that her new album features a collaboration with Avril Lavigne.

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“I am going to be having a lot more features on this album,” Willow told V Magazine. “On my previous albums, I was in the studio by myself a lot. It was a very insular process for this album. I wanted to open myself up a little bit more and not just be so anti-social in the studio.

“I’m so excited that I’m going to be having a song on the album with Avril Lavigne. She is so iconic. From [ages] 13 to 16, she was my idol. It’s really nice to be able to have a quintessential pop-punk record with the pop-punk queen.”

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Listen to The Prodigy’s new version of ‘Breathe’ featuring RZA

The Prodigy have shared a new version of their 1996 classic single ‘Breathe’, featuring vocals from Wu-Tang Clan‘s RZA.

  • READ MORE: Keith Flint, 1969-2019: the twisted face of rave, the beating heart of The Prodigy

Having teased the track earlier this week, the new version (dubbed the ‘Liam H And René LaVice Re-Amp’) features production from the band’s Liam Howlett alongside Canadian producer René LaVice. It’s taken from the soundtrack to Fast and Furious 9.

The original ‘Breathe’, which appeared on the Essex band’s seminal 1997 album ‘The Fat Of The Land’, also features a sample of Wu-Tang’s ‘Da Mystery Of Chessboxin”.

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The new take on ‘Breathe’ looks set to be followed by new original Prodigy music, after the duo shared a snippet of new material last month, which would be their first new music since the death of frontman Keith Flint in 2019.

Last year, the band’s ex-dancer Leeroy Thornhill revealed that Howlett was working on a new album to honour Flint’s memory. “I know Liam wants to finish The Prodigy album he was doing,” Thornhill said. “I don’t know how far along he is.”

Then last month, the band shared a short teaser of new music from the studio.

Elsewhere, the group recently confirmed that they are working on their first feature-length music documentary, with help from the studio behind drama Gangs Of London.

Provisionally titled The Prodigy, the Paul Dugdale-directed project is set to be produced by the group’s founding members Howlett and Maxim.

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The film is described as “the raw, uncompromising and emotional story of a gang of young outlaws from Essex who came together in the vortex of the late ’80s UK rave scene.”

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Nipsey Hussle to receive star on Hollywood Walk of Fame

Nipsey Hussle has been announced as one of a select few musicians to be honoured with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame this year.

  • READ MORE: Nipsey Hussle, 1985-2019 – a musician who gave a voice to the voiceless and changed the face of indie rap

Hussle is one of eight acts in the ‘Recording’ category to be honoured in 2022, with the likes of DJ Khaled, Avril Lavigne, Black Eyed Peas, George Clinton, Ashanti, Los Huracanes Del Norte and Martha Reeves.

38 people in total will be given stars, including Michael B. Jordan, Tessa Thompson, Francis Ford Coppola, Willem Dafoe, Salma Hayek, Macaulay Culkin, Tracee Ellis Ross, Kenan Thompson and more.

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Hussle will not be the only person to posthumously receive the honour, with Carrie Fisher also receiving a star in the ‘Motion Pictures’ category.

Nipsey Hussle was shot and killed in front of his Marathon Clothing store in Los Angeles in 2019. Earlier this week, a posthumous verse of his featured on a remix of Maroon 5‘s ‘Memories’ alongside YG.

In other news, according to producer Mr. Lee, the third track in Hussle‘s ‘Blue Laces’ series has been completed and is coming soon.

The Grammy Award-winning Houston producer, who produced both Nipsey’s 2010 track ‘Blue Laces’ and its 2018 follow-up ‘Blue Laces 2’, revealed in December that the third track in the series was in the making.

Earlier this year, it was revealed that Hussle had two albums in the works before his passing.

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The Prodigy tease new version of ‘Breathe’ with Wu-Tang Clan’s RZA

The Prodigy have announced that they will release a new version of their 1996 classic ‘Breathe’, with Wu-Tang Clan‘s RZA contributing vocals.

  • READ MORE: Keith Flint, 1969-2019: the twisted face of rave, the beating heart of The Prodigy

The band posted a snippet of the new track on Instagram, with RZA rapping over the classic instrumental, along with a release date of this Friday (June 18). You can take a listen below.

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Dubbed the ‘Liam H and Rene Lavice re-amp’, the track comes one month after the duo shared a different snippet of new music, their first since the death of Keith Flint.

This new music comes after their ex-dancer Leeroy Thornhill revealed last year that Liam Howlett was working on a new album to honour Flint’s memory.

Flint passed away on March 4, 2019 after taking his own life at the age of 49.

“I know Liam wants to finish The Prodigy album he was doing, I don’t know how far along he is,” Thornhill said.

In September last year, the group subsequently confirmed that they are continuing work on their first new material since 2018’s ‘No Tourists’ – their seventh album and the final one to feature Flint.

Elsewhere, the group recently confirmed that they are working on their first feature-length music documentary, with help from the studio behind drama Gangs Of London.

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Provisionally titled The Prodigy, the Paul Dugdale-directed project is set to be produced by the group’s founding members Howlett and Maxim.

The film is described as “the raw, uncompromising and emotional story of a gang of young outlaws from Essex who came together in the vortex of the late ’80s UK rave scene.”

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Willow Smith says she used to get bullied for being a Black girl who liked rock music

Willow Smith has revealed she used to get bullied in school for being a Black girl who liked rock music.

  • READ MORE: Nova Twins: “Being black women doing punk music is political”

The actor and singer, known mononymously as Willow, released her new single ‘Transparent Soul’ – a pop-punk outing featuring Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker – back in April.

Speaking at the time of its release, Smith said the song was the beginning a new era with her career and that she was “so grateful and excited to start this new journey”.

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Speaking about her formative years as a rock and metal fan in a recent interview with V Magazine, Smith told Alexis White of metal core band Straight Line Stitch that she used to get bullied in school for being a Black girl who was a fan of Paramore and My Chemical Romance.
“But being a Black woman in the metal crowd is very, very different on top of the pressures that the music industry puts on you,” Smith said. “Now, it’s like an added pressure of the metal culture, the metal world, and just rock in general. I used to get bullied in school for listening to Paramore and My Chemical Romance.”
White responded: “Yeah, there’s a lot of,“Hey, you’re Black. You’re not supposed to listen to that.”
“Exactly! And it’s not okay,” Smith continued. “Just through the music that I’m putting out right now and the representation that I can bring to the mix, I just hope that the Black girls who are listening to my music and listening to this album see that there’s more of us out there. It’s a real thing, you’re not alone. You’re not the only Black girl who wishes she could flip her hair to the side, and wear black eyeliner, you know what I mean?”

Elsewhere in the interview, Smith talked about her forthcoming album and how it will include a lot more guest features than her previous record, 2019’s Willow, including one from Avril Lavigne.

“I’m so excited that I’m going to be having a song on the album with Avril Lavigne,” Smith said. “She is so iconic. From [ages] 13 to 16, she was my idol. It’s really nice to be able to have a quintessential pop-punk record with the pop-punk queen.”

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Slayyyter, Pop Provocateur, Shows Off Her Real Self

By Danielle Chelosky

A couple years ago, a burgeoning underground pop star worked as a receptionist at a hair salon in St. Louis, Missouri. “I wasn’t the best employee,” the 24-year-old Slayyyter, who more formally goes by Catherine Slater, tells MTV over the phone in early April. “My music started to blow up and I was so preoccupied with that. I would just sit at my desk and be on my phone like all day.” She’d read what publications like The Fader or Paper magazine posted about her; she was helping people with their appointments by day and “having this little underground pop thing going on at night.”

That was her last minimum-wage job. It afforded her the ability to buy beats from producers and visuals from artists while living with her mom and her sister. That was all she needed to make her chaotic club anthems about sexuality and internet culture that subsequently exploded on Soundcloud and Twitter. “Mine” was one of her first hits — a song with a traditional structure that involves a lot of infectious repetition and memorable lyrics. She gained momentum primarily through Stan Twitter; she knew how to get posters’ attention because she was one. And now she’s a full-time singer, unveiling her debut album Troubled Paradise on June 11 via Fader Label.

She also dropped out of college for this. Briefly attending the University of Missouri for a year, Slater studied marketing while trying to learn about the music industry whenever she could. She skipped classes to watch Max Martin’s songwriting workshops on YouTube, absorbing how the magic of a successful pop song unfolded into a simple formula. Gradually, she realized that one of the keys to pop stardom was her persona — allowing her physical self to dissolve and materialize into what she describes as a “blonde bimbo Barbie,” something that intrigued people, making them wonder if she was even real. “I got really into Y2K culture,” she says about this character she took on. “[Nostalgic celeb social account] Pop Culture Died in 2009 was a big influence on me — with Lindsay Lohan and all. I wanted to create my own identity of being a pop star from that era.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P4re72YUPXI

Those marketing notes came in handy when cultivating a devoted following online. Her fans were suddenly doing all the work for her, recommending her music to Charli XCX and seeing Charli put one of her songs on a public playlist when Slater had only a few singles out. It was clear that she fit in with this current era of pop stars — like the innovative Kim Petras or eccentric Caroline Polachek — especially during the experimental era of hyperpop. Her hit “Daddy AF” encapsulates the internet’s obsession with hedonism (“I been fuckin’ models / I been poppin’ bottles all night”) and its need for succinct, catchy, memeable mantras: “Daddy as fuck / I feel daddy as fuck” (she says that phrase 42 times in under three minutes).

Making Troubled Paradise was a challenge. Not only because of the pandemic, but because putting together a full, cohesive collection of songs wasn’t something Slater was used to. Though she already has a self-titled project from 2019, it’s technically considered a mixtape. “[The music industry] isn’t like it used to be, where people spent years and years crafting these perfect albums and then they put it out and it’s a smash success,” she says. “You have to be so fast with everything now because of TikTok trends and just trends in music. It’s been commodified like fast-food consumption in a way.” People enjoy her songs — and any pop or hyperpop songs — because they’re a quick spurt on a playlist, probably best enjoyed at a club or a party. They’re more vibes than they are individual pieces of music.

However, this new record forced her to experiment with her process, testing out new techniques she’s picked up since her earliest days of making music at night after her salon gig. Tracks like the single “Cowboys” or the Gone Girl-esque anthem “Serial Killer” have storylines and arcs. She even let her genuine darker feelings spill into some songs, like on “Clouds”: “I wish they knew what goes on in my head / Sometimes feels like I’d be better off dead.” There’s also the more persona-filled cuts like “Throatzillaaa,” which she points out, laughing, is “literally a disgusting song about sucking dick.” Even though she built a career off of using the typical formula she studied to churn out superficial, clubby pop songs, she allowed depth to seep into Troubled Paradise.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h3zkjOr__UY

And she deserves that ability to let her character go for a song or two. She works hard — so hard that she started developing her next record immediately after finishing this one. Burnout is a familiar sensation for her, and she doesn’t mind. “I feel like overall it keeps me on my toes, keeps me working fast on different things,” she says. The pandemic didn’t impede on the process of actually making Troubled Paradise; a bunch of tracks still needed to be done when quarantine started, and she was stuck in a studio apartment Airbnb in Glendale, California with time on her hands. Still, she was extremely familiar with making music with producers remotely, thanks to her early days on Soundcloud — it was like a return to form.

It was inevitable that this record would contain more than Slater’s signature sound. As someone who creates excessively, she never wants to do the same thing over and over. “I definitely had some Avril Lavigne influence,” she says, and points to “Villain,” a synthy sass anthem, which reckons with the way the music industry treats women: “I’m no villain / But they want me to be one.” She thinks her fans will like her expansion into different genres, which includes a lot of fuzzy pop-punk and some intriguing synthwave, though it’s hard to tell with stans — they’re pretty unpredictable.

“On one hand, I feel like I love [stan culture] so much because I feel like the memes and the jokes are what put my music on the map,” she says. “But there’s also a side where you’re put under certain criticisms and it’s a bit more ruthless than other fanbases.” She’s tried to keep her real name private, withholding it from the media in an attempt to keep fans and press away from her family. But as her star has grown, so has her presence: She has her own Wikipedia page and fan forums dedicated to her. “I used to always say that my last name was Slater, and that my name is Catherine Slater. I still might legally change my name to that one day. Who knows,” she says. “But I think at this point privacy has gone out the window a little bit.”

Still, once an artist has climbed to a high enough rung on the ladder of internet fame, they’re often afforded more breathing room. Slater is using hers to open herself up to the world with this new era. She knows it’s time for her to step out of the digital realm as the character she is and stand before everyone as a three-dimensional real person whose songs are only getting better from here. “I feel like there’s always room to be emotional and to be funny and have different facets of my personality shine through,” she says. Now fans will get to know more about who’s behind the character.

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Listen to Little Simz’ soulful new single ‘Woman’ featuring Cleo Sol

Little Simz has shared a new track called ‘Woman’ – you can listen to it below.

  • The NME Big Read: Little Simz: “People expect Black people to have all the answers”

The song, which also features Cleo Sol, is the second to be showcased off the London rapper’s upcoming fourth album, ‘Sometimes I Might Be Introvert’.

Following on from the politically charged ‘Introvert’, Simz’ latest single is described as “a soulful love letter to women around the world”.

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“I love it when I see women doing their thing and looking flawless; I’m here for that!” she explained. “It’s empowering, it’s inspiring; I wanted to say thank you and I wanted to celebrate them.”

The rapper has also made her directorial debut with the extravagant ‘Woman’ video. Filmed in a lavish country manor, the clip contains cameos from “unapologetically powerful women” such as Jourdan Dunn, Joy Crookes and Denai Moore.

According to a press release, each cast member – including Simz’s cousins Paij and Caroline – has personal significance to the rapper.

Little Simz previously said ‘Sometimes I Might Be Introvert’ was written largely in lockdown (in London and later Berlin), and that it explores her difficulty in opening up about her personal life in an industry where everyone is expected to be “an extrovert”. It will be released September 3 via AGE 101.

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She added: “I wanted to just let people know like, yo, I’m actually this way inclined…being this introverted person that has all these crazy thoughts and ideas and theories in my head and not always feeling like I’m able to express it if it’s not through my art.”

You can see the full tracklist below, and pre-order/pre-save the record here.

1. ‘Introvert’
2. ‘Woman’ ft. Cleo Sol
3. ‘Two Worlds Apart’
4. ‘I Love You, I Hate You’
5. ‘Little Q Pt 1 (Interlude)’
6. ‘Little Q Pt 2’
7. ‘Gems (Interlude)’
8. ‘Speed’
9. ‘Standing Ovation’
10. ‘I See You’
11. ‘The Rapper That Came to Tea (Interlude)’
12. ‘Rollin Stone’
13. ‘Protect My Energy’
14. ‘Never Make Promises (Interlude)’
15. ‘Point and Kill’ ft. Obongjayar
16. ‘Fear No Man’
17. ‘The Garden (Interlude)’
18. ‘How Did You Get Here’
19. ‘Miss Understood’

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IZ*ONE’s Miyawaki Sakura on the group’s disbandment: “I’ve prepared myself”

Miyawaki Sakura of girl group IZ*ONE has shared her thoughts on the group’s disbandment.

  • READ MORE: Kang Daniel on vulnerable new mini-album ‘Yellow’: “All I have is myself and my story”

Yesterday (April 28), the Japanese K-pop singer talked about her time with the girl group during her Bay FM radio show, Tonight, Under The Sakura Tree, ahead of IZ*ONE’s official disbandment at 12am KST on April 29. The group had consisted of members from a variety of labels and were formed in 2018 through the reality competition Produce 48, under a two-and-a-half-year contract.

Miyawaki explained that over the past year-and-a-half she “did [a] lot of thinking” about the group’s eventual disbandment. “I looked back on all the memories I made, slowly arranging my thoughts and feelings,” she said, as translated by Allkpop. “I don’t exactly feel it yet, but I’ve prepared myself.”

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However, she added that, despite the group going their separate ways, it doesn’t “erase the fact that I was a member of IZ*ONE”. The singer also gave a special shout out to the group’s fanbase (called WIZ*ONE), saying that “those things will be forever”.

“You could even say that the real fight starts now. In order to make sure that IZ*ONE is remembered as a great group, it is up to us to do our best from [here] on,” Miyawaki continued. “For the IZ*ONE of the past to shine, we have to put in more effort in the future. It’s the end, but it’s also a new beginning.”

Prior to the group’s disbandment, the members and their various labels had been in talks about a possible extension of the group’s contract. However, the discussions seemingly fell through sometime last month, as the group’s management agencies Off The Record and Swing Entertainment confirmed on March 10 that IZ*ONE would disband in April as planned.

Despite the official announcement from Off The Record and Swing Entertainment, IZ*ONE fans have banded together to launch Parallel Universe Project, an initiative to raise money in order to relaunch the group. The crowdfunding project reached its funding goal of ₩1,000,000,000 (roughly US$900,000) within the first 20 minutes, and has since raised over ₩3,100,000,000 (US$2,800,000) at the time of reporting.

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Enhypen’s Dazzling Mini-Album Border: Carnival Is Verified Vamp Vibes

By Tássia Assis

When MTV News connects via Zoom with Enhypen (stylized all-caps), the South Korean pop group’s seven members sit split into two neat rows: Heeseung, Jake, Jay, and Sunoo in the front, followed by Jungwon, Sunghoon, and Ni-ki right behind them. Their outfits are carefully coordinated in neutral hues, and their hair is styled with boyish side-parts, with the exception of Ni-ki, whose forehead is covered by a precisely placed ash-blonde fringe. Ranging from 15 to 19 years old, it’s only been five months since they debuted with their first project, Border: Day One, the highest-selling release of all the work put out by last year’s rookies. Yet despite their ages, the artists carry themselves with an air of poise — and maybe a little mystery.

Across their lavish music videos and allegorical lyrics, Enhypen have crafted an intricate universe filled with vampires and Shakespearian odes. They aren’t simply mystifying performers, sitting in this conference room to talk about their second mini-album, Border: Carnival, which is out today (April 26); they are both the creators of and creatures within a multidimensional fable that was laid out last year. Formed by Belift Lab, a joint venture between South Korean entertainment companies CJ ENM and HYBE Corporation (formerly known as Big Hit), Enhypen came together through the survival show I-Land. The program’s opening scene featured a quote from the German writer Hermann Hesse’s novel Demian that might also be applied to the group’s own story: “The bird fights its way out of the egg. The egg is the world. Who would be born must first destroy a world.”

If Border: Day One cracked the shell, now the artists are ready to spread their wings. The six-track Border: Carnival tracks their arrival to the dazzling, dizzying world of fame in three distinct versions — “Up,” “Hype,” and “Down” — with distinct visuals filtered through the sugary highs and crashing lows of visiting such a colorful festival. These themes are captured in the music video for the galloping pop-rock single “Drunk-Dazed,” where they throw a house party that quickly devolves into a chilling nightmare. The psychedelic “Intro: The Invitation” offers a deliciously dramatic first taste of this journey, while the hip-hop and rock sounds of “Mixed Up” reflect their vulnerable experience growing up in the public eye. Throughout, there are symbols to be deciphered with seemingly endless interpretations — Victorian attire, crimson blood — but all signifying a world waiting to be discovered.

https://youtu.be/3-OuEDkHiCk

MTV News: Congrats on your second mini-album! Now that you've crossed Border: Day One, how does it feel to step into this Carnival, as you’ve named it?

Jungwon: Border: Carnival is where we’re still sort of confused, but these are honest feelings of us trying to enjoy this moment. We’re looking forward to [our fans] Engenes to also enjoy this new album, and we’re really excited about our new music and showing our performances.

MTV News: Your debut happened only five months ago, but how have you changed since then?

Jake: Like you said, it’s only been five months, so I think we’re still at the very early stages of our careers. But we feel like we have taken a huge step as artists, and that we grew a lot as a team, especially on this album. We hope that our fans will be able to see that chemistry on stage as well as off stage.

MTV News: How do you feel when you look at your achievements so far? Is it challenging to think you have so much responsibility at a young age?

Heeseung: I can’t really say that we achieved a lot. There’s still a lot that we need to do, a lot that we need to learn, a lot that we need to grow. That’s something we’ll continue to build together, both with the members and with our fans. The support and the love from Engenes are what drives us to keep achieving those things.

MTV News: The pandemic has been hard for everyone, but groups like Enhypen, who debuted after it all started, haven't had many opportunities to meet their fans. What are you learning from these trying times?

Sunghoon: Unfortunately, we haven’t had a lot of chances to meet our fans, but still, we have received a lot of love and a lot of support. That made us learn how precious our fans are, and we want to give back to them. We want to keep on working hard so that someday we can meet face to face, perform, and sing. It just happens that we have to wait a little bit more.

Belift Lab

MTV News: Your main concept for this comeback is "carnival," and your title track is named "Drunk-Dazed." Did you intend to capture these feelings of astonishment and excitement that you experience at a festival? 

Jay: After we debuted, what we experienced are things I never experienced before, and I believe it’s the first time for all the other members too. Everything seems really elaborate, really glamorous, but also very unfamiliar. I think that’s what you would experience at a carnival, in regards to unfamiliarity, but also all the fanciness, the glitter and glamour. It’s like all these emotions and feelings melted down into one song.

MTV News: Can you talk about the music video for "Drunk-Dazed" and share some memories of the shoot?

Heeseung: I remember practicing the chorus part on the set. There was this moment when we were all in the center, and it was great. Then, we saw how it was turning out and it was really amazing. It was also the first time we were doing the choreography outside of the practice studio. All the staff was giving us positive feedback, and that made us feel really great. It was a fantastic experience.

MTV News: What are the tracks you most relate to in this album and why?

Jungwon: The song that resonated with me the most is the fourth track, “Mixed Up,” because it’s about things that I didn’t experience as a trainee. After I-Land and after our debut, I started to receive all this attention from a lot of people, so this is when the whole environment changed for me and brought up these feelings of being mixed up.

Jake: For me, it has to be our title track, “Drunk-Dazed,” because it expresses the overall theme and message of the album really well. It’s one of my favorites.

https://youtu.be/Fc7-Oe0tj5k

MTV News: Engenes all over the world want to know: What's the relation between Enhypen and vampires?

Jay: Oh, that’s funny.

Heeseung: [To Jake:] What do you think?

Jake: Actually, we’re very curious about that. What do you think?

MTV News: For me, it seems like there are two different stories happening simultaneously. One is Enhypen as you are now, as idols, and the other is a more fantastical one. 

Jake: I think the theory you have is a really good one.

MTV News: Are you aware of the theories that Engenes create?

Jake: We do know that a lot of Engenes come up with their own theories, and it’s really exciting to look at them and all their ideas.

MTV News: So what’s the real story behind it?

Jay: It’s open.

Jake: Yes, we want to leave it for the fans to interpret it themselves.

Heeseung: If you interpret or try to divide the storyline using our title tracks as the center of it, I think it will be easier to discover more about our world.

MTV News: Jay, you love rock, so how do you feel about the sounds and visuals in this album?

Jay: The tracks “Mixed Up” and “Drunk-Dazed,” as well as the “Hype” version of the album, really express that rock sensibility. There are a lot of new, fresh, and challenging things that appeal to me. Those themes are similar to how I dress, the kind of clothes that I like, so I really enjoyed it.

Belift Lab

MTV News: Heeseung, you once said, "The more time you spend on your work, the less time there is to invest in yourself." How do you separate your time between work and investing in yourself?

Heeseung: These days, I’m mostly spending time on work, but focusing on work is part of investing in myself. I don’t think those two are very different for me.

MTV News: Jake, where do you feel like you have grown the most for this comeback? 

Jake: Now that we have spent more time together as a team, I think our chemistry has definitely improved, as well as having a deeper understanding for one another. But also, in terms of singing and dancing, as well as facial expressions on stage, everything has gotten a lot better.

MTV News: Jungwon, you're the leader, but how do you stay focused?

Jungwon: I talk to the other members a lot and they give me feedback about what I’m doing and how things are going. That allows me to take an objective view of myself, fix up what I’m doing, and keep on track.

MTV News: Sunoo, you can adapt to any concept easily. What is that process like for you?

Sunoo: There are three concepts in this album, so I had to think a lot about how to adjust [to each of them]. But once we got on set and tried on the outfits, we did a lot of preparations, and I was able to easily adapt to the different atmospheres. Also, especially for the “Up” version, me and the other members studied images and videos of outfits that were similar to that theme, so those efforts made up for it.

MTV News: Sunghoon, Jake, and Heeseung are introverts according to the MBTI personality test. Sunghoon, when do you think it's an advantage to be introverted?

Sunghoon: There are good and bad things for both personalities, introverted and extroverted. The fact that we have both in Enhypen gives us an advantage, a synergy. I think it’s a good thing that we have a mix of different personalities.

MTV News: Ni-ki, coming from Japan and being the youngest member, how do you feel about growing up with Enhypen?

Ni-ki: The other members always look out for me, and if there’s something I don’t know or that I can’t figure out, they are always right there. They really help me a lot. I feel like I have a family here in Korea.

MTV News: Can you share something about Enhypen's next adventure, as foreshadowed in "Outro: The Wormhole"?

Ni-ki: I can’t spoil too many details, but I can tell you that we will be back again with great music and great performances that all Engenes can look forward to. So please, look forward to that.

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Listen to Vic Mensa and Chance The Rapper’s new acoustic version of ‘SHELTER’

Vic Mensa and Chance The Rapper have shared an acoustic version of their recent single ‘SHELTER’ – listen to it below.

  • READ MORE: Vic Mensa – ‘I Tape’ EP review: Chicago rapper channels the voice of the voiceless

The original track, which also features Wyclef Jean, is taken from Mensa’s recently released ‘I TAPE’ EP. Other tracks on the project include collaborations with Jeremih and Tish Hyman.

Examining mass incarceration as well as the impact the coronavirus has had on the Black community, ‘SHELTER’ is inspired by Mensa’s relationship with Oklahoma inmate Julius Jones, who in 2002 was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death at the age of 22. Mensa is working to save the now 40-year-old, who has always maintained his innocence, from death row. You can learn more about the campaign to free Jones here.

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The stripped back rendition of ‘SHELTER’ is accompanied by a new video directed by Chance, marking the ‘No Problem’ rapper’s directorial debut.

Mensa said of the track’s new version: “By stripping the song to its most bare form we were really able to bring out a new depth of beauty and meaning, in a time when we as a people are searching for it.”

He added: “Chance’s directorial focus on simplicity shows strength in showing the world just as it is.”

You can watch the video for the acoustic version of ‘SHELTER’ below:

In a three-star review of ‘I TAPE’, NME‘s Will Lavin called it “a statement record that fuels action and turns the volume back up on the Black Lives Matter chants that dominated social commentary last year.

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“For some, the fight for equality might have been a hashtag – but not for Mensa; he’s still swinging.”

Last month, Chance The Rapper shared the official music video for his new song, ‘The Heart & The Tongue’.

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Logic and Madlib form new duo MadGic and share first track ‘Mars Only Pt.3’

Logic and Madlib have joined forces to form a new duo called MadGic – listen to their first track below.

  • READ MORE: Logic – ‘No Pressure’ review: positive rapper bids farewell with an elegiac and heartfelt swan song

The surprise team up comes after Logic announced last year that he would be retiring from music following the release of his latest album, ‘No Pressure’, which arrived in July.

However, the Maryland rapper did joke in a previous interview that Madlib would be the only person who could bring him out of retirement.

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To accompany the announcement, the pair have shared a new track, ‘Mars Only Pt.3’. Incorporating funky basslines, boom bap drums and Madlib’s trademark soul samples, the record hears Logic hint that he and the acclaimed producer have a full album together.

Logic and Madlib is MadGic, your catalogue tragic/ Fuck a underground, fuck a pop sound/ Made this whole album in a lockdown, hip hop is our town/ Hairline like Doc Brown but I’m killin’ it,” Logic raps.

Whether the project will be released and when is not yet known.

Listen to ‘Mars Only Pt.3’ below:

This isn’t the only new music Logic has released since his retirement. Earlier this month, he shared ‘Tired In Malibu’, a one-minute track that hinted he might be coming out of retirement.

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Last September, he dropped ‘TwitchTape Vol. 1’, a beat-tape that featured samples including Roy Ayres’ ‘Everybody Loves The Sunshine’ and ‘Fo’TheKids’ by Ahwlee.

Logic has also promised to release a new mixtape if a petition calling for him to do so hits a million signatures.

In a four-star review of Logic’s ‘No Pressure’, NME‘s Will Lavin wrote: “Logic’s contribution to hip-hop is deep-rooted in inclusivity and compassion, and ‘No Pressure’ continues the trend even as he bids farewell to the art form that raised him and gave him a platform to speak his truth.”

Meanwhile, Madlib has revealed that Kendrick Lamar wanted him to work with him on ‘To Pimp A Butterfly’.

The 2015 album was Lamar’s third and featured production from a host of stars including Thundercat, Flying Lotus, Pharrell Williams and more.

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H.E.R. shares new Chris Brown collaboration ‘Come Through’

H.E.R. has shared a visualiser for her new single featuring Chris Brown, ‘Come Through’.

  • READ MORE: The mysterious H.E.R. is the empowering and vulnerable voice that R&B needs right now

The new track arrives on the back of H.E.R. winning two Grammys last month, as well as bagging an Oscar nomination for ‘Fight For You’, her Golden Globe-nominated contribution to Judas and the Black Messiah.

The ‘Damage’ singer and Brown toured together during the latter’s ‘Heartbreak On A Full Moon’ tour in 2018, and went on to collaborate on ‘Come Together’ from Brown’s ninth studio album ‘Indigo’ in 2019, which topped the Billboard 200 chart upon its release.

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‘Come Through’ marks another R&B slow jam for H.E.R., finding the artist in reflective mood: “I look good even though I feel shitty/ I just got back out this way/ You already got plans for the city.” Watch the video below.

Last month (March 17), H.E.R. said she plans to go “full throttle” with her ambitions to become an actor.

Alongside her blossoming music career, H.E.R. recently appeared in her debut film role, appearing alongside Jennifer Garner in new comedy Yes Day.

“I’ve been so focused on making music but I think it’s time now for me to go full throttle with acting,” she told Entertainment Weekly. “I’m working on that right now, following my passion for acting.”

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Earlier this week (April 20), meanwhile, a sexual assault lawsuit against Brown was dismissed after the singer settled out of court.

In 2018, an unknown woman identified as Jane Doe filed a lawsuit against Brown, alleging that she was raped multiple times by a man named Lowell Grissom Jr. while attending a party at the singer’s home in February 2017.

According to legal documents obtained by The Blast, Jane Doe filed a dismissal last week for all parties involved. Pitchfork confirmed the dismissal via documents filed in the Los Angeles Superior Court on April 16.

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Jackson Wang assures GOT7 fans that the group “will continue”

Jackson Wang has reassured fans that GOT7 will continue to be a group despite having left their longtime label, JYP Entertainment.

  • READ MORE: BENEE, Jackson Wang, No Rome and more featured on Forbes’ 30 Under 30 Asia list 2021

In a recent interview with Harper’s Bazaar Korea, the Hong Kong-born singer talked about the future of the boyband. He assured fans that, despite the increased amount of solo activities from him and his fellow GOT7 members, the group are set to stay together for the foreseeable future.

“GOT7 will continue, and nothing has changed,” Wang said, as translated by Soompi. “Before, I had to do solo activities, team activities and company management in 24 hours, but now, I just have a bit more leeway.”

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During the interview, the singer also revealed his desire to start a solo career in Korea, after being unable to do so while under JYP. “I think I’ll finally release an album in Korea this year. I want to do well. After all, I became a singer in Korea,” he said.

Despite their departure from JYP Entertainment in January this year, several members of GOT7 have reiterated that the group will not disband. While the members have signed to several agencies as soloists, they still intend on releasing music together in the future.

Wang recently teased his upcoming English-language album during an appearance on The Late Late Show With James Corden. He hinted that the album will have a “very new sound” and be “something people don’t expect from [him]”.

Last month, the singer released the single ‘LMLY’, which is expected to appear on his upcoming album. The music video, which was inspired by ‘90s Hong Kong and Chinese films, was scripted and co-directed by Wang.

In other GOT7 news, member Mark Tuan recently revealed that he is trying to find his “sound” as a soloist. Tuan also cited Justin Bieber and blackbear as his current inspirations while he works on his upcoming music.

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Listen to ‘Founders Remix’ of Gang Starr’s ‘Glowing Mic’

DJ Premier has shared a ‘Founders Remix’ of Gang Starr track ‘Glowing Mic’ – you can listen to it below.

  • READ MORE: Gang Starr’s DJ Premier on life after Guru: “We still have a lot of unreleased material”

In 2019, the iconic rap duo released ‘One Of The Best Yet’, their first album in 15 years and the first since the death of co-founder Guru.

The album was previewed by advance singles ‘Family and Loyalty’, featuring J. Cole, and ‘Bad Name’. The former track got a poignant music video that features Premier, Cole and Guru’s son Keith Casim.

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They followed it up last year with an instrumental version, which featured ‘Glowing Mic’ as a bonus track. The new remix version of the record features a new verse from Gang Starr Foundation rapper Big Shug.

Accompanied by a video starring comedian and former NFL player Spice Adams and Guru’s son Keith Elam, you can listen to ‘Glowing Mics (Founders Remix)’ below:

Speaking on his decision to release ‘One Of The Best Yet’ in instrumental form, Premier said last year: “The DJ market, especially for instrumentals has never waned. I have always stayed in tune with my consumers because I am one of them. I like to release what I would buy and it seems like I am not alone.

“I feel totally satisfied knowing I made so many people happy; including Guru’s family, his fans and peers who love him and Gang Starr.”

In a three-star review of ‘One Of The Best Yet’, NME‘s Will Lavin called the album “a celebration of life, love and legacy”.

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Meanwhile, Public Enemy returned last year with an explosive new protest song, ‘State of the Union (STFU), produced by DJ Premier.

The emotive track sees P.E. take “a fiery return to the frontlines as they take on Donald Trump and his fascist regime,” according to a new press release.

It continues: “An unflinching statement about the destruction the current administration has unleashed on the country and its people, ‘State of the Union (STFU)’ speaks truth to power while urging people to fight against racism, injustice and oppression with their vote.”

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Busta Rhymes announces special 25th anniversary version of ‘The Coming’

Busta Rhymes has announced he’s releasing a special 25th anniversary edition of his debut album ‘The Coming’.

  • READ MORE: Busta Rhymes on ‘Extinction Level Event 2: The Wrath of God’: “It’s my duty to start conversations”

The album – which was originally released on March 26, 1996 – will feature remastered audio, instrumental tracks, and a number of hard-to-find remixes. The digital-only release will be reissued on April 16.

The 36-song tracklist includes previously-unreleased instrumental versions of the album’s original 12 tracks, as well as newly remastered versions of each.

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Among the highlights there are eight bonus versions of the classic hip-hop anthem ‘Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check’, including a ‘World Wide’ remix that features a verse from late Wu-Tang Clan rapper Ol’ Dirty Bastard, and a ‘Jay-Dee Bounce Remix’ produced by the legendary J Dilla. You can listen to the latter below.

‘The Coming (25th Anniversary Deluxe Edition)’ tracklist:

01. ‘The Coming’
02. ‘Do My Thing’
03. ‘Everything Remains Raw’
04. ‘Abandon Ship’ (Featuring Rampage The Last Boy Scout)
05. ‘Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check’
06. ‘It’s A Party’ (Featuring Zhane)
07. ‘Hot Fudge’
08. ‘Ill Vibe’ (Featuring Q-Tip)
09. ‘Flipmode Squad Meets Def Squad’ (Featuring Jamal, Redman, Keith Murray, Rampage The Last Boy Scout, Lord Have Mercy)
10. ‘Still Shining’
11. ‘Keep It Movin’’ (Featuring Rampage The Last Boy Scout, Dinco, Milo And Charlie Brown)
12. ‘The Finish Line’
13. ‘End Of The World (Outro)’
14. ‘Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check (The World Wide Remix)’ (Featuring Ol’ Dirty Bastard)
15. ‘Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check (The Jay-Dee Bounce Remix)’
16. ‘Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check (The Jay-Dee Other Shit Remix)’
17. ‘It’s A Party (Allstar Remix)’ (Featuring SWV)
18. ‘It’s A Party (The Ummah Remix)’ (Featuring SWV)
19. ‘The Coming (Instrumental)’
20. ‘Do My Thing (Instrumental)’
21. ‘Abandon Ship (Instrumental)’
22. ‘Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check (Instrumental)’
23. ‘It’s A Party (Instrumental)’
24. ‘Hot Fudge (Instrumental)’
25. ‘Ill Vibe (Instrumental)’
26. ‘Flipmode Squad Meets Def Squad (Instrumental)’
27. ‘Still Shining (Instrumental)’
28. ‘Keep It Movin’ (Instrumental)’
29. ‘The Finish Line (Instrumental)’
30. ‘Do My Thing (DJ Scratch Remix)’
31. ‘Abandon Ship (DJ Scratch Remix)’
32. ‘Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check (DJ Scratch Albany Projects Remix)’
33. ‘Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check (Fila Mix 4)’
34. ‘Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check (Fila Mix 3)’
35. ‘Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check (Acapella)’
36. ‘It’s A Party (Acapella)’ (Featuring SWV)

Last year, Busta Rhymes released his 10th studio album, ‘Extinction Level Event 2: The Wrath of God’. In a four-star review, NME‘s Will Lavin called it “arguably one of the best produced hip-hop albums of the last five years”.

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Meanwhile, a new song from A Tribe Called Quest‘s Phife Dawg has been released posthumously, titled ‘Nutshell Pt.2’ featuring verses from Busta Rhymes and Redman.

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New Age Steppers Stepping Into A New Age

Founded by visionary producer Adrian Sherwood and Slits singer Ari Up, aka Munich-born Ariane Daniela Forster, New Age Steppers were a loose collective featuring a rich talent pool: among them, Mark Stewart and Bruce Smith from The Pop Group, reggae crooner Bim Sherman, Aswad bassist George Oban, experimental improviser Steve Beresford, future pop queen Neneh Cherry, drummer Lincoln “Style” Scott and more. Notable for releasing both the first ever single and album on Sherwood’s long-running underground label On-U Sound, the Steppers relished the seemingly infinite new possibilities and fertile tensions opened up by post-punk, blending covers of obscure Jamaican imports with psychedelic dub sonics, free jazz, industrial funk and musique concète collage, mostly cooked up in a cramped dungeon studio below east London’s Berry Street.

Reissued both as individual albums and as a five-disc boxset, this lavishly repackaged retrospective confirms the Steppers, 40 years on, as tireless analogue explorers and forerunners to sci-fi soundscape masters like Burial, Andrew Weatherall and Flying Lotus. Released in January 1981, their self-titled debut still crackles with Ari’s thrillingly untamed vocals, all hard Teutonic consonants and crazy-paving tangents, which sound beautifully incongruous on swooning lovers rock serenades like Sherman’s “Love Forever”. Elsewhere, Stewart’s anguished political sermon “Crazy Dreams And High Ideals” gets lost in Sherwood’s Radiophonic fog of echo, hiss and clank.

The covers-heavy Action Battlefield, also released in 1981, and its 1983 sequel Foundation Steppers nudged the band towards more conventional melody and production. Ari Up effectively took charge, living and recording in Jamaica before bringing tapes back to London for Sherwood to finish. Alongside Ari’s mellow reggae numbers and ramshackle renditions of standards like “Stormy Weather”, a teenage Neneh Cherry makes her studio debut on the sweetly wonky bluebeat doo-wop skank “My Love”. Bim Sherman also lends his velvet croon to several tracks, notably the sublime “Misplaced Love”.

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In October 2010, Ari died of breast cancer at the cruelly young age of 48. Posthumously completed by Sherwood and released in 2012, the final Steppers album, Love Forever, is both sombre memorial and refreshing restatement of the band’s progressive manifesto, adding dubstep, trip-hop and bashment elements to the fissile mix. Meanwhile, Ari’s riot grrrl howl on kinetic dub-punk beasts like “My Nerves” and “Musical Terrorist” recall her Slits heyday.

The most welcome and useful disc here is Avant Gardening, a newly compiled retrospective of rare mixes, B-sides and restored offcuts from the early 1980s. Sherwood’s sonic alchemist side is strongly represented, not least on the magnificent title track, a trippy inner-space odyssey of deconstructed dubtronica, wistful melodica and haunted music-hall piano. The sole “new” addition is Ari’s slight but warm-hearted take on Atlantic Starr’s bittersweet break-up ballad “Send For Me”, salvaged from a long-lost 1983 John Peel session.

Four decades later, many of these innocent youthful experiments still radiate more forever-fresh futurism and genre-dissolving ambition than most 21st-century avant-rock artists.

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Freddie Gibbs flips Nas classic for new track ‘Big Boss Rabbit’

Freddie Gibbs has shared a new track called ‘Big Boss Rabbit’ – you can listen to it below.

  • READ MORE: Nas on being a hip-hop legend: “I’m rapping the same way I did when I was on the block”

The Indiana rapper’s latest cut flips the same Rodriguez ‘Sugar Man’ vocal sample that Large Professor used when producing Nas’ 2001 classic ‘You’re Da Man’.

Opening with a Mike Tyson interview excerpt from the boxer’s post-fight interview after his second bout with British heavyweight Frank Bruno in 1989, Gibbs then jumps straight into the track’s chorus.

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Slammin’, big MAC-11, back of the sеven on some boss shit/ I put that Prеsident on my wrist and I got frostbit/ Stack it like Pringles, you want a single? It’s gon’ cost you/ Slow on that heroin, I don’t sell them bitches too often,” he ferociously raps.

Watch the video for ‘Big Boss Rabbit’ below:

The new track follows Gibbs’ 2020 album ‘Alfredo’, created in collaboration with producer The Alchemist, which picked up a 2021 Grammy nomination for Best Rap Album.

Losing out to Nas’ ‘King’s Disease’, it’s the first time Nas has ever won a Grammy after being nominated at the annual awards show 14 times.

In a four-star review, NME‘s Will Lavin called ‘King’s Disease’ “an acutely perceptive and culturally relevant body of work that finds its author willing to try out new ideas.”

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The review added: “There’s a genuine conversation to be had about whether it’s the best rap album of the year so far.”

Last week, Nas shared a luxurious video for his new track ‘EPMD’ featuring producer Hit-Boy.

Taken from the soundtrack to Judas And The Black Messiah, the biographical drama about the betrayal of Black Panther chairman Fred Hampton, the track hears Nas pay homage to New York rap duo EPMD (Erick Sermon and Parrish Smith).

Meanwhile, Nas has weighed in with his opinion of the contemporary rap scene, admitting that none of the newer generation are “keeping [him] up at night”.

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Nas celebrates Black excellence in ‘EPMD’ video with Hit-Boy

Nas has shared a luxurious video for his new track ‘EPMD’ – you can watch it below.

  • READ MORE: Nas on being a hip-hop legend: “I’m rapping the same way I did when I was on the block”

Taken from the soundtrack to Judas And The Black Messiah, the biographical drama about the betrayal of Black Panther chairman Fred Hampton, the Hit-Boy-produced cut hears Nas pay homage to New York rap duo EPMD (Erick Sermon and Parrish Smith).

EPMD, we back in business,” he raps on the chorus, referencing the former Def Jam group’s 1997 comeback album. “I visualise what it is, not what it isn’t/ We at the mafia table next to the kitchen/ Eatin’ Michelin Star, countin’ a million.

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The video – which also pays homage to EPMD with Nas and Hit-Boy kitted out in the duo’s trademark bucket hats and matching outfits – celebrates success, ownership and Black excellence.

“Reclaim our cultural ownership,” a message reads as the video begins. It’s then followed up with further messages: “Don’t compromise”, “Don’t cross over”, and “Respect to the kings. Love to the queens”.

Shot on the grounds of a sun-lit mansion, you can watch the video below:

Last month, Nas won his first-ever Grammy Award, after being nominated at the annual awards show 14 times.

During that livestreamed event, Nas was announced as the winner of Best Rap Album for his 13th studio record ‘King’s Disease’. He beat fellow nominees D Smoke (‘Black Habits’), Jay Electronica (‘A Written Testimony’), Freddie Gibbs and the Alchemist (‘Alfredo’), and Royce Da 5’9” (‘The Allegory’) to collect the award.

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In a four-star review, NME‘s Will Lavin called ‘King’s Disease’ “an acutely perceptive and culturally relevant body of work that finds its author willing to try out new ideas.”

The review added: “There’s a genuine conversation to be had about whether it’s the best rap album of the year so far.”

Meanwhile, Nas has weighed in with his opinion of the contemporary rap scene, admitting that none of the newer generation are “keeping [him] up at night”.

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Someone’s mashed up Linkin Park, Slipknot and Eminem into one incredible track

YouTuber Daniel Schwind, aka XYClanKILLER2 has mashed up tracks from Linkin Park, Slipknot and Eminem into a single song entitled ‘Until I Bleed’.

The track makes use of Linkin Park’s ‘Victimised’, ‘Don’t Stay’, ‘Points Of Authority’ and ‘One Step Closer’, Eminem’s ‘Till I Collapse’ and ‘Soldier, and Slipknot’s ‘Wait And Bleed’.

You can take a listen to ‘Until I Bleed’ below which comes along with an ‘official’ music video comprising of archive live footage of all three artists, painstakingly synced with the track’s various vocals.

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It’s not Schwind’s first mash-up. The YouTuber has previously combined Linkin Park and Slipknot’s music to make other tracks, and has also used music by the likes of Bring Me The Horizon and Avril Lavigne.

The internet has been proving fertile ground for music mashups of late. Last month, YouTuber Bill McClintock combined Van Halen’s ‘Unchained’ with Stevie Wonder’s ‘Uptight’ to create a new track which he titled ‘Chained Uptight’.

Last week, meanwhile, fans of late Linkin Park singer Chester Bennington paid tribute to the late singer on what would have been his 45th birthday.

His widow Talinda Bennington also posted a heartfelt message. “You would have been 45 and yes, Tyler would have you doing this dance again!” she wrote alongside a video of Chester dancing with their son. “This life without you never gets easier or less painful.

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Last year, Linkin Park revealed that they still have unreleased material featuring Bennington, who passed away in July 2017 at the age of 41 having taken his own life.

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Big Sean celebrates birthday with live performance of ‘Lucky Me’ and ‘Still I Rise’

Big Sean celebrated his birthday this week with a live performance of new tracks ‘Lucky Me’ and ‘Still I Rise’ – watch it below.

  • READ MORE: Big Sean: “God has taken away all these special people – there has to be a reason I’m still here”

The rapper turned 33 on Thursday (March 25), and to celebrate he shared a video of him performing a couple of tracks from his recent album ‘Detroit 2’.

Shot by Topshelf Junior, the video sees Sean joined by producer Hit-Boy and a backing band as he raps moving around a performance space.
Man, lucky me/ I was diagnosed with a heart disease at 19/ Could barely stand on my feet/ Doctors said they had to cut it open, put a pacemaker on it to put it back on beat/ ‘Til my mama took me to holistic doctors and they prescribed me magnesium for two weeks,” Sean raps on ‘Lucky Me’.
Went back to the regular doctors and they said, ‘Huh, damn, looks like we don’t need to proceed’/ That’s how I know that western medicine weak.
Watch the video for ‘Lucky Me’ and ‘Still I Rise’ below:

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In a three-star review of ‘Detroit 2’, NME‘s Will Lavin wrote: “Although it can be overblown, Sean’s passion is unreserved here, the record peppered with Instagram-worthy captions that urge listeners to take inspiration from their surroundings while keeping friends and family close.”

The review continued: “This is why Sean’s name continues to stay on the lips of rap connoisseurs almost a decade after his debut.”

Meanwhile, Big Sean has announced that his 2012 mixtape ‘Detroit’ is finally coming to streaming services.

The acclaimed project, which won Mixtape Of The Year at the 2013 BET Hip Hop Awards, features the tracks ’24K’, ‘Mula’ and ‘Sellin Dreams’, and includes guest appearances from Kendrick Lamar, Royce Da 5’9″ and Chris Brown.

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Alan Horne on the resurrection of Postcard Records

The current issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here, with free delivery for the UK – features a rare and exclusive interview with mercurial Postcard Records founder Alan Horne as he shares his personal selection of photos, artefacts and ephemera from deep within the label’s vaults.

The most inspirationally DIY of the UK’s original post-punk indie wave, Postcard was dreamed into life in the Glasgow of 1979 by Horne, then an ambitiously bored 20-year-old, who famously ran the business out of the sock drawer in his tenement bedroom. Under the banner of its impudent logo – the mischievous kitten banging a toy drum – Postcard was low on resources, audaciously high on insolence and ideas.

Spearheaded by Edwyn Collins, Horne’s co-conspirator in setting up the label, Postcard only had four actual bands – the Scottish trio of Collins’ Orange Juice, Edinburgh’s Josef K, the teenaged Roddy Frame’s Aztec Camera, plus Australians The Go-Betweens – and only really existed for one 18-month blur across 1980–81. Yet it left behind an example, an attitude, that has been inspiring misfits ever since.

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Horne followed Postcard in the mid-1980s with the equally short-lived Swamplands label. After lying low several years, he next resurfaced in Glasgow in 1992 to unexpectedly reactivate Postcard, issuing some archive recordings, but focusing primarily on two stunning new albums by an elusive figure who had been part of the Postcard gang since the first: Paul Quinn. Instant cults, the original Postcard albums now change hands for eye-watering amounts. And after making them, Quinn, Horne and Postcard simply vanished.

Until today. So why, after “25 years wandering around in some other parts of the forest”, is Horne rousing the slumbering Postcard from its long cat nap? The answer, again, is Paul Quinn. The sole reason for reviving Postcard this time is to issue Unadulterated/Unincorporated, a lavish vinyl box gathering all Quinn’s Postcard records, alongside unreleased material and live cuts.

Made with the same hands-on approach that once saw Orange Juice colouring record sleeves with felt tips, it’s a labour of love available in an excruciatingly limited edition of only 300 copies. But why now? “Well – I just never tire of Paul’s voice,” Horne says. “I didn’t have a problem with the idea of the original records being hard to get hold of, not being yer mass-market sort of a bloke. But then one thing led to another and I just started to enjoy putting this box together, as an art project. Having never attempted anything on this scale, it turned out great, especially the book of notes and photographs and things in there. The access to technology now makes doing what I did back then – the whole DIY thing – so much easier. I mean there’s now absolutely no conceivable excuse to be whoring yourself off to any crooked corporate malarkey and having to put up with all the usual morons.

“Simply put, though, Paul’s recordings sounded so great back then, and so wonderfully out of step with the times – which, if you remember, were truly dreadful. They sound even better now. As for the times? Mmm…”

You can read much more from Horne, along with some of his snaps from the Postcard scrapbook, in the May 2021 issue of Uncut with The Velvet Underground on the cover – buy a copy here!

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Justin Bieber releases ‘Justice’ deluxe edition featuring Lil Uzi Vert, DaBaby and more

Exactly one week after releasing latest album ‘Justice’, Justin Bieber has shared a deluxe edition titled ‘Justice (Triple Chucks Deluxe)’.

  • READ MORE: Justin Bieber – ‘Justice’ review: pop star finds his purpose again

The new edition features six additional tracks, all but one of which (‘Lifetime’) include a guest vocalist.

‘There She Go’ features Lil Uzi Vert, while Jaden Smith appears on ‘I Can’t Be Myself’. Quavo, DaBaby and Tori Kelly feature on new cuts ‘Wish You Would’, ‘Know No Better’ and ‘Name’ respectively.

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Listen to ‘Justice (Triple Chucks Deluxe)’ below:

The original version of ‘Justice’, Bieber’s sixth album, arrived last Friday March 19 and was already a relatively star-studded affair. Across its 16 tracks, guests include the likes of Khalid, Chance the Rapper, the Kid Laroi, Dominic Fike, Burna Boy and Benny Blanco.

On the day of the album’s release, Bieber shared a music video for track ‘Peaches’, which features verses from both Daniel Caesar and Giveon.

In a four-star review of ‘Justice’, NME‘s Will Lavin praised the record as a step up from last year’s ‘Changes’, emphasising its focus on Bieber’s personal experiences.

“Armed with a newfound optimism borne from a dark place, [Bieber] understands he’s better when he’s tapping into his own experiences, projecting relatable human emotion and working out why he’s here. He’s singing about the things he cares about: his wife, his mental health, social injustice and so much more besides.”

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Over the weekend, Bieber performed album track ‘Hold On’ live for the first time while appearing as a guest on The Late Late Show with James Corden.

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Beyoncé Set A Flawless Precedent With One Big Surprise

By Hilary Hughes

An eponymous album marks a major moment in an artist's career. For women, owning one's work, body, and artistry can be especially powerful, even political. Throughout Women's History Month, MTV News is highlighting some of these iconic statements from some of the biggest artists on the globe. This is Self-Titled.

Beyoncé is queen of the epic entrance (as anyone who watched her 2018 Coachella headlining set can attest), but Beyoncé, her fifth, self-titled album, made its debut quietly — and in the middle of the night.

At first, only those who happened to be scrolling through the iTunes Store after midnight on December 13, 2013 noticed a new addition to its offerings in the form of a simple, striking cover featuring the name of the artist, all caps and in petal pink, emblazoned across its front. Word soon spread across social media — and from Beyoncé’s accounts, no less — that she had not only unveiled a surprise album, but one featuring corresponding music videos for each of its 14 songs.

In the early hours of that December morning, one thing was clear: Beyoncé had pulled off a revolutionary hat trick. Yes, she had completely shocked the world by releasing a new album without so much as a whisper of promotion or warning in the months leading up to it. Yes, she had gone above and beyond by putting out never-before-heard music and a collection of musical film shorts that introduced a new standard for multi-format domination. And yes, she had completely redefined the possibilities for what an album or a music video could do — and what a pop star can achieve by dropping either unexpectedly. Beyoncé wasn’t just another chart-topping addition to Queen Bey’s discography: It was a cultural event, and one that took place at the zenith of her career.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x-xY-MwDzlE

To appreciate Beyoncé and the feat its creator pulled off requires rewinding a bit — not to 2013, but 2012, one of the most transformational years of her life. Her 2011 album, 4, (and her fourth to hit No. 1 on Billboard’s albums chart), yielded a crop of beloved singles, from the beat-savvy “Run the World (Girls)” to affectionate confection “Love on Top,” which went on to win Best Traditional R&B performance at the 55th Annual Grammy Awards. At the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards, she revealed she was expecting her first child with husband Jay-Z to a national audience while lovingly caressing her baby bump as she performed the latter hit.

Her daughter, Blue Ivy Carter, was born on January 7, 2012, and Beyoncé took a well-deserved maternity leave, nesting and embracing her newfound role as a mother after a particularly demanding and lucrative professional stretch. When she returned to the mic the following January, it was for two of her most significant performances to date: She sang the national anthem at the second presidential inauguration of Barack Obama, and then delivered one of the most superlative Super Bowl halftime shows in the event’s history a couple weeks later. The premiere of Life Is But a Dream, a documentary about her life she co-directed and produced, followed on HBO, and with it came Beyoncé’s ascension from pop queen to multi-format auteur.

Life Is But a Dream not only served as Blue’s on-screen debut, but a video diary and scrapbook of the off-the-record moments that had shaped Beyoncé’s private life, from childhood home movies to revisiting the miscarriage she suffered to never-before-seen footage from her and Jay-Z’s wedding Though her flair for visuals and impeccable style shaped her many memorable music videos up to this point, the documentary was a new and different medium for her — choreographed and polished to shine, but personal, multi-faceted, vulnerable. Beyoncé has always been heralded for her awe-inducing talent and triple-threat performances, but with Life Is But a Dream, she stressed that she was a storyteller, too, one who thought about the best possible ways to ensure her audience could hear, and see, what she needed them to understand — and for them to reach that understanding down a path of her making.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1JPKLa-Ofc

Between Blue’s birth and this inviting glimpse into her private life, Beyoncé started working on the follow-up to 4. In the summer of 2012, she, Jay-Z, and baby Blue decamped to the Hamptons, where a number of producers and collaborators convened to write, record, and experiment with new sounds. “We had dinners with the producers every day, like a family,” she told Vogue in a 2013 interview about the sessions that would ultimately shape Beyoncé. “It was like a camp. Weekends off. You could go and jump in the pool and ride bikes... the ocean and grass and sunshine. ... It was really a safe place.”

Frank Ocean, Justin Timberlake, Sia, Pharrell Williams, Drake, Ryan Tedder, Timbaland and producer Boots rounded out the A-list team of collaborators she assembled to usher in this era, and the result is one of her most vivid and eclectic releases. Beyoncé opened with soaring power ballad “Pretty Hurts,” an empowering rejection of damaging beauty standards; she closed with “Blue,” a lush ode to her daughter that featured the voice of the littlest Carter, too. Resonant pop and R&B abounded, from the romantic “XO” to “Superpower,” her mesmerizing duet with Frank Ocean, as did hip-hop bangers thanks to the instantly iconic Bey-Jay duet “Drunk in Love,” the sly and sexy “Partition,” Drake duet “Mine,” and “Flawless,” which fused the hallmarks of teaser single “Bow Down” with segments from Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s “We Should All Be Feminists” speech.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IyuUWOnS9BY

While the songs themselves made for easy repeat-listening, the videos astounded audiences from the jump — and were just as vivid and varied. Each clip explored fresh aesthetics and presented eye-catching contrasts, many getting more up close and personal to the star than her previous visuals had. Instead of embodying a mid-century go-go girl (“Get Me Bodied”) or flexing the robo-glove of Sasha Fierce (“Single Ladies [Put a Ring on It]”), Beyoncé played herself and the multitudes she contains. Clips like “Drunk in Love” needed little more than an empty beach, a bottle of bubbly, and the Carters dancing together in the surf to deliver a captivating romp, while “XO” was splashed with the neon of Coney Island as she rode the Cyclone with friends and goofed off at Brooklyn’s landmark fun park over the sounds of her serenade. Some, like the candy-colored pageant treatment of “Pretty Hurts” or the lavish, lingerie-clad “Partition,” were full-blown productions, each with their own narrative that translated beautifully to the screen but never disguised her under the guise of fantasy.

And though many of her music videos had become cultural icons themselves prior to Beyoncé, the sheer depth, breadth, and volume of the material she released all at once set a new standard — and precedent — for what came next. When Beyoncé hit the road following Beyoncé’s release on the Mrs. Carter Show World Tour in 2014, elaborate visuals played a huge part in her updated live show and featured fresh narration from Queen B herself — a direct tie to the documentarian she became with Life is But a Dream and the imaginative, maximalist vibe of Beyoncé. (The platinum edition of Beyoncé includes several performance clips from this tour on its digital version.) Two years later, the world rejoiced when she released Lemonade, her second surprise visual album, in 2016: Another audio-visual stunner, Lemonade built on Beyoncé’s foundation while further mining her personal life to showcase its muses, catharsis, and breakthroughs in her music. Like Beyoncé, it was critically adored, a commercial juggernaut , an award-winner, and a feast for the eyes and ears. But unlike Beyoncé, it was a successor: Lemonade was proof that she’d perfected her medium of choice.

In the years since, Beyoncé has continued to embrace sensory overload to the delight of her fans. The music video for “Apeshit,” the lead single off the Carters’s collaborative 2018 album Everything is Love, retains the epic grandeur of her cinematic embrace, and she employed it once more with the release of another exceptional visual album, Black is King, in 2020. Countless artists have taken a page from her surprise playbook as well, and dropped full albums with little to no notice, from Drake to Taylor Swift and beyond. Seven years after Beyoncé’s arrival, its ripple effect across the industry is undeniable, both in her own creative story and that of the industry at large — and nearly a decade later, we still bow down.

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Martin Luther King Jr’s daughter thanks Justin Bieber amid backlash over album samples

Martin Luther King, Jr’s daughter Bernice King has thanked Justin Bieber for his support of the King Center and its Be Love campaign, amid backlash over the pop star’s use of samples the civil rights leader on his new album ‘Justice’.

  • READ MORE: Justin Bieber – ‘Justice’ review: pop star finds his purpose again

Released Friday (March 19), the pop star’s latest record opens with a recognisable quote from the civil rights leader: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere”. It also features an ‘MLK Interlude’, using samples from King’s 1967 sermon, ‘But If Not’.

Hours before the album landed on streaming services, Bieber announced a campaign to raise awareness for social justice organisations, naming Anti Recidivism Coalition, Alexandria House, the Compton Pledge, Baby2Baby, the Equal Justice Initiative, LIFT, Self Help Graphics and Art, This Is About Humanity, the Poor People’s Campaign and the King Center as charities he’d be supporting.

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“In honor of #Justice I’m supporting organizations that embody what justice looks like in action,” he wrote.

Bernice, the King Center’s CEO, responded to Bieber’s support on Twitter, sharing a public message of thanks for the singer.

“Each of us, including artists and entertainers, can do something,” she responded.

“Thank you, @justinbieber, for your support, in honor of #Justice, of @TheKingCenter’s work and of our #BeLove campaign, which is a part of our global movement for justice.”

With Martin Luther King, Jr listed as a songwriter on the album and the King estate having to approve and license any use of his papers or speeches, it would appear they supported Bieber’s inclusion of his work, however, listeners were critical of the samples.

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“Who in the hell let Justin Bieber walk out the studio with an album called Justice w two samples of MLK and every track got him having a grand ol white ass time singin bout his wife over synthesized pop beats… my blood pressure gets higher every day, on god,” wrote Twitter user @greendrawblin, adding “idc if his daughter approved the samples lol”.

“I don’t know her & she don’t speak for all black people. I don’t gotta agree w her on how I feel about a clear reflection of big industries commodifying & commercializing the pain of our community.”

In an op-ed for Insider, write Callie Ahlgrim called Bieber’s sampling of King’s speeches “performative”.

“Instead of examining and engaging with King’s message, much less educating himself on the radical progress that King actually fought for, Bieber isolates and bastardizes his words,” she wrote. “He attempts to conflate them with his own personal views on romance, sex, and domesticity.”

Bieber’s new album ‘Justice’ received a four-star review from NME, who said “here he’s back at his best, tapping into his personal experiences – with powerful results”.

“’Justice’ is Bieber’s redemption song, and a more fitting follow-up to ‘Purpose’,” wrote NME’s Will Lavin.

“Armed with a newfound optimism borne from a dark place, he understands he’s better when he’s tapping into his own experiences, projecting relatable human emotion and working out why he’s here.”

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Talib Kweli and Diamond D as Gotham share new single with Busta Rhymes

Gotham, the recently formed super duo comprising Talib Kweli and Diamond D, have shared a new single called ‘The Quiet One’ featuring Busta Rhymes.

  • READ MORE: Busta Rhymes on ‘Extinction Level Event 2: The Wrath of God’: “It’s my duty to start conversations”

The pair’s upcoming self-titled debut album as Gotham is set to arrive on April 16. In addition to Busta, it features collaborations with Skyzoo, John Forte, NIKO IS and Nire’ Alldai. You can pre-order the album here.

‘The Quiet One’ follows the recent tracks ‘On Mamas’ and the A.F.R.O. assisted ‘Far Out Bar Out’.

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Listen to the pair’s latest track below:

 

This isn’t the first time Kweli has been a part of a super group/duo. He has already worked on collaborative projects with the likes of Yasiin Bey – fka Mos Def – (Black Star), Hi-Tek (Reflection Eternal), Madlib (Liberation), 9th Wonder (Indie 500) and Styles P (The Seven).

Discussing his Gotham team up with Diamond D, he said: “One of the first well-known producers to ever show me love in this music business was the legend Diamond D.

“I was raised on his music, from his solo work to the incredible contributions he’s made on the albums of others like Big L, Yasiin Bey, A Tribe Called Quest, Fat Joe, Fugees and many others. As a Bronx native, his sound represents the best, most original hip-hop in the world, New York City.”

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He continued: “My city, in the DC Universe, Gotham, is located somewhere in New Jersey. But in real life, the Gotham from the Batman comics is 100 per cent based in New York City. New York City was nicknamed Gotham before Batman was created, and this Gotham project is dedicated to Old New York.

“This documentation is necessary, especially in these pandemic lockdown times. The great cities of the world will never be the same after what we are currently experiencing. It’s the duty of those who actually lived it to tell these stories. New York will never not be great, but the New York we are talking about in Gotham is not for everybody. If it’s for you, then you are down by law.”

Meanwhile, Busta Rhymes released his first album in eight years in November, ‘Extinction Level Event 2: The Wrath Of God’.

In a four-star review, NME‘s Will Lavin called it “arguably one of the best produced hip-hop albums of the last five years.”

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Watch Justin Bieber perform ‘Hold On’ on ‘The Late Late Show With James Corden’

Justin Bieber appeared on The Late Late Show With James Corden on Thursday night (March 18) to perform new single ‘Hold On’ – watch it below.

  • READ MORE: Justin Bieber – ‘Justice’ review: pop star finds his purpose again

Appearing on the show to promote his new album ‘Justice’ – which was released on Friday (March 19) – it was the first time Bieber performed the song live.

Set against the backdrop of a green screen image of a winding road, and dressed in all white, Bieber belted out the track while backed by his band.

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Watch Bieber’s performance of ‘Hold On’ below:

On Friday (March 19), Bieber marked the arrival of ‘Justice’ with a music video for the track ‘Peaches’, featuring Daniel Caesar and Giveon.

In a four-star review of ‘Justice’, NME‘s Will Lavin called it “Bieber’s redemption song, and a more fitting follow-up to ‘Purpose’”.

The review continued: “Armed with a newfound optimism borne from a dark place, he understands he’s better when he’s tapping into his own experiences, projecting relatable human emotion and working out why he’s here. He’s singing about the things he cares about: his wife, his mental health, social injustice and so much more besides.

“With bangers, ballads and heartfelt moments, the hopeless romantic with a penchant for self reflection and tackling world issues is back. Beliebers rejoice!”

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Last Sunday (March 14), Bieber picked up his second career Grammy, as he took the prize for Best Country Duo Or Group Performance for ‘10,000 Hours’ with Dan + Shay.

It comes after he took to Instagram in November to share his feelings about his last album ‘Changes’ being classified as pop in the 2021 Grammy nominations.

Meanwhile, Bieber was recently hit with a cease and desist order from dance duo Justice over the cover art of his new record, with the pair saying it bears striking resemblance to their logo.

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Yungblud shares new version of ‘Parents’ with 19-year-old fan from TikTok

Yungblud has shared a re-worked version of his track ‘Parents’, featuring a 19-year-old fan from TikTok.

  • READ MORE: Yungblud: “I wanted to write my ‘Urban Hymns’ or ‘Back To Black'”

The new version features Liverpool-based Chloe Noone, who was invited to Liverpool’s Parr Street Studios by Yungblud to collaborate on the track after being chosen from a list of thousands.

Speaking about the process of choosing Noone for the appearance and creating the track together, Yungblud said: “Parents is very much the anthem for my fan base and when I saw it was re-emerging on TikTok I asked them if I should get an artist to remix it and who should that artist be. Then it occurred to me, this song is about us, it is a celebration of individuality and a celebration of the determination of my generation so i thought fuck it I’m gonna release a record with one of my fans because this song is about my fans.

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“I found Chloe Noone, a 19 year old from Liverpool who in her verse is singing so passionately about equality for women, it just jumped out to me and especially right now is something people need to hear!

“I love Chloe and her family are amazing, I can’t wait to bring her out on stage to sing it with me. Yungblud is about destroying the barriers between me and my fan base, we are one!”

Listen to the new track and watch a video about its creation below:

Of the experience, Chloe added: “This whole experience has just been surreal. I have been a fan of Yungblud for a while now but I never expected my verse in the ‘Parents’ duet to get much attention let alone being called up by Yungblud and asked to feature on the track. I honestly thought it was going to be a very long time before I was part of something this professional and legitimate.

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“I’m so grateful to Yungblud and his whole team for making my dream of being an artist see the light sooner than I expected. Thank you from the bottom of my heart!”

The new version of Yungblud’s ‘Parents’ comes after he shared a new collaboration with KSI called ‘Patience’ last week. Elsewhere, the singer appeared with Avril Lavigne to perform ‘I’m With You’ on The Yungblud Show.

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Russ shares moody new video for recent track ‘Hard For Me’

Russ has shared a new video for his recent track ‘Hard For Me’ – you can watch it below.

  • Read more: Russ – ‘Shake The Snow Globe’ review: Atlanta rapper finds success on his own idiosyncratic terms

The Atlanta rapper’s latest release hears him talk about wanting the same type of devotion he gives to other people.

Tired of goin’ hard for people who don’t go hard for me/ And when you love somebody, the truth gets hard to see/ They gon’ knock the wind out, make it hard to breathe,” Russ raps on the chorus.

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If I go hard for you, please go hard for me/ Tired of goin’ hard for people who don’t go hard for me/ And when you love somebody, the truth gets hard to see/ They gon’ knock the wind out, make it hard to breathe/ If I go hard for you, please go hard for me.

Directed by Joan Pabon, the song’s moody video brings the introspective lyrics to life in a beautiful manner.

Watch the video for ‘Hard For Me’ below.

The video for ‘Hard For Me’ follows last month’s ‘Misunderstood’, and recent singles ‘Ugly’ featuring Lil Baby and his collaboration with Kehlani, ‘Take You Back’.

The rapper’s 14th album, ‘Shake The Snow Globe’, was released in January last year. In a four-star review, NME‘s Will Lavin called it “unique” and heralded Russ for “finding success on his own terms”.

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The review continued: “Consistent from start to finish, it’s a more complete body of work than 2018’s ‘Zoo’. People often hate those who march to their own beat, and Russ knows this. But that doesn’t stop him asking for his accolades while he’s still living (“I want roses when I’m living, not just roses when I die”). And, boy, has he earned them with this album.”

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Olivia Rodrigo calls Taylor Swift “the kindest individual in the whole world” after being gifted ‘Red’ ring

Olivia Rodrigo has revealed that Taylor Swift sent her a ring matching the one she wore around the time of her 2012 album ‘Red’, along with numerous other gifts.

  • READ MORE: Olivia Rodrigo: inside the Taylor-endorsed mega-hit ‘Drivers License’

Rodrigo, whose hit ‘Drivers License’ is approaching its eighth week at the summit of the UK Singles Chart, spoke about her admiration for Swift during an appearance on SiriusXM on Wednesday (March 3).

“She is absolutely the kindest individual in the whole world,” Rodrigo said. “Actually last night, like literally 12 hours ago, I got a package from her with this handwritten note.

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“She gave me this ring because she said she wore one just like it when she wrote ‘Red’ and she wanted me to have one like it. And [also] like all of this amazing stuff, she’s hand-wrapped these gifts.”

“I truly don’t understand where she finds the time,” Rodrigo continued, showing off the ring to the camera. “I feel so lucky that I just was born at the right time to be able to look up to somebody like her. I think she’s incredible.

“All of her support and genuine compassion and excitement for me is just been so, so surreal.”

The ring in question is a yellow gold ‘Love’ ring by Los Angeles jeweller Cathy Waterman and is worth $3,200 (£2,315). Swift frequently wore a diamond-studded version during the ‘Red’ campaign.

Swift’s habit of sending lavish personal gifts to fans is well known. Last September, for example, she sent a handwritten letter of congratulations and personalised presents to one lucky fan to celebrate the completion of his PhD.

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In December, meanwhile, she donated $13,000 (£10k) each to two mothers struggling to pay rent and bills due to Covid-19.

Last month, Rodrigo shared an 18-song playlist to mark her 18th birthday. As well as Swift, it features the likes of Fiona Apple, Black Sabbath and The White Stripes.

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Adam Levine says he feels like “there aren’t any bands any more”

Adam Levine has said in a new interview that he is disappointed that there “aren’t any bands any more”.

The Maroon 5 frontman was speaking to Apple Music’s Zane Lowe this week following the arrival of the band’s new collaboration with Megan Thee Stallion, ‘Beautiful Mistakes’.

Levine spoke in the interview about Maroon 5’s breakthrough in 2002 with their debut album ‘Songs About Jane’, telling Lowe that he had been re-watching old music videos from that era with his daughter.

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“It’s funny how you go back and re-watch like these old videos, and listen to these old songs, and I’ve been playing her a lot of Avril Lavigne records. Like, dude, ‘I’m With You’ is like — it’s, yeah, that gives you tears,” he said.

Maroon 5 Adam Levine
Adam Levine of Maroon 5 performing in Sao Paolo on March 1, 2020 (Picture: Mauricio Santana/Getty Images)

“It’s crazy, because you don’t remember it in the same way, because you took it for granted, because it was like when you were growing up, and it was just part of what you had on the radio. But there’s some really great songs that I didn’t understand how good they were back then.”

Levine then said he remembers how “when the first Maroon 5 album came out there were still other bands”, adding: “I feel like there aren’t any bands any more, you know?”

“That’s the thing that makes me kind of sad, is that there were just bands,” he continued. “There’s no bands any more, and I feel like they’re a dying breed. And so I kind of, in a weird way, as far as … I mean, there still are plenty of bands, and maybe they’re not in the limelight quite as much, or in the pop limelight, but I wish there could be more of those around.”

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In response to Levine’s comments, Garbage‘s Twitter accounted tweeted: “What are we Adam Levine? CATS?!?!?”

Back in January, Levine teamed up with Jason Derulo for the single ‘Lifestyle’.

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Russ addresses media scrutiny on new track ‘Misunderstood’

Russ has released a new track called ‘Misunderstood’ which hears him address some of the media scrutiny he’s received over the years – listen to it below.

  • READ MORE: Russ – ‘Shake The Snow Globe’ review: Atlanta rapper finds success on his own idiosyncratic terms

The rapper’s second single of 2021 tells a story of how disappointing it is to have the media and industry continuously make assumptions about him based on framed soundbites and click bait titles.

‘Misunderstood’ also hears Russ talk a lover failing to understand him despite all he’s done to accurately reflect who he is.

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“It’s disappointing to hear how continuously people in the industry and world at whole have a skewed picture of me and they misunderstand me, almost by choice it seems,” he said. “At the same time dealing with a personal relationship where I feel like she didn’t want to understand where I was coming from.”

He added: “In both respects feels like I’ve done all I can and then some to show all of me but it’s frustrating when people choose to only focus on a fragment of me.”

Listen to ‘Misunderstood’ below:

Russ’ new track follows last month’s ‘Ugly’ featuring Lil Baby, and recent singles ‘Hard For Me’ and his collaboration with Kehlani, ‘Take You Back’.

The Atlanta rapper’s 14th album, ‘Shake The Snow Globe’, was released in January last year. In a four-star review, NME‘s Will Lavin called it “unique” and heralded Russ for “finding success on his own terms”.

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The review continued: “Consistent from start to finish, it’s a more complete body of work than 2018’s ‘Zoo’. People often hate those who march to their own beat, and Russ knows this. But that doesn’t stop him asking for his accolades while he’s still living (“I want roses when I’m living, not just roses when I die”). And, boy, has he earned them with this album.”

 

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Cuba: Music And Revolution Experiments in Latin Music 1975-85, Vol 1

Cuba is the island that taught America how to dance. For much of the 20th century it provided the United States (and, by extension, the Western world) with every key dance craze: the mambo, the rumba, the cha-cha-cha, the charanga, the bugalu. When jazz moved into the concert halls it was the Afro-Cuban influence that kept bebop on the dancefloor. And, throughout the 1940s and ’50s Havana was where American hedonists went to party.

But then came Fidel, and Che, and the 1959 revolution, and the Bay Of Pigs invasion, and the Cuban Missile Crisis. And that cultural dialogue between Cuba and the US came to a halt. Cuba carried on in isolation, besieged by US sanctions, no longer visited by jazz royalty, no longer the playground of American playboys and gangsters. Its most famous musicians – singer Celia Cruz, bassist Cachao, percussionist Mongo Santamaria – defected to the States, never to return. Cuban music was rebadged as “salsa”, and its biggest stars were now in Miami and New York.

For many, 1959 is where Cuba’s music history ends, a narrative perpetuated by Ry Cooder’s celebration of pre-revolutionary music, Buena Vista Social Club. The real story is, of course, rather more complex, and explored by Cuba: Music And Revolution, compiled by DJ Gilles Peterson and Soul Jazz Records founder Stuart Baker (it accompanies a lavish hardback book of the same name).

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It shows us how, from the 1960s onwards, Cuban music continued under the watchful eye of the Communist Party. The island’s formidable musical conservatoires specialised in Western classical music (something also encouraged by Cuba’s communist allies), creating thousands of highly trained Cuban musicians. But what could they play? Cuba’s nightclubs, tainted by association with the pre-revolutionary leader Batista, were closed; dance music was regarded as suspiciously decadent; rock’n’roll and US R&B were banned as cultural weapons of Yankee imperialism; and even the term “jazz” had to be renamed “música moderna”. “We wanted to play bebop,” said trumpeter Arturo Sandoval, from the legendary Cuban band Irakere, “but we were told that our drummer couldn’t even use cymbals, because they sounded too jazzy. We eventually used congas and cowbells instead. It helped us to come up with something new and creative.”

The two remarkable tracks from Irakere that bookend this compilation bear this out, placing fiery Afro-Cuban hand percussion under fearsome Brecker Brothers-style jazz-rock horn arrangements and distorted Fender Rhodes solos. Irakere’s rambunctious Latin jazz has been winning Grammys for 40 years and they’ve long been regulars at Ronnie Scott’s and on the European jazz festival circuit, but they’re one of only two bands on this compilation we might be familiar with. The other is Los Van Van, a funky charanga group founded in 1969, who mix descarga piano with percussive strings and florid horn solos – like a baroque version of a Philly disco band.

This compilation uncovers many other gems. Some are pre-revolutionary artists whose careers were given a funky reboot in the 1980s, like the sprightly son montuno band Conjunto Rumbavana, or the all-female vocal trio Las D’Aida (featuring Buena Vista Social Club star Omara Portuondo, here in a surprisingly proggy setting). There are three tracks from Grupo Monumental, all spiky horns, squeaky Farfisa organs and sly invocations of American funk. There is Los 5 U 4, a quartet featuring three blind members who are as close to an Anglo-American band as you’ll find here, performing a slow-burning Latin-rock ballad that climaxes in a heavily distorted guitar frenzy. There are two pieces of hypnotically funky prog from Los Reyes 73, featuring swirls of organ, wah-wah guitar and angular horn riffs.

Best of all are the tracks by Grupo de Experimentación Sonora del ICAIC, led by the cosmopolitan classical guitarist and composer Leo Brouwer. Commissioned by the fêted film director Alfredo Guevara to provide movie soundtracks, they had the cultural clout to be a bit more avant-garde than other Cuban acts.

You’ll hear unusual time signatures, heavy-duty psychedelic organ solos, FX-laden guitars and touches of atonalism: imagine an Afro-Cuban blaxploitation soundtrack played by an incarnation of Soft Machine who just happen to have sensational Latin-jazz chops. This adventurous spirit is shared by the band’s sidekicks who also feature on this compilation, like the bassist Eduardo Ramos or the remarkable pianist Emiliano Salvador.

One can only hope that this LP will be accompanied by other Soul Jazz releases delving deeper into these discoveries. It’d be great to hear more by the Grupo de Experimentación Sonora del ICAIC, and also more by the hippie-ish “nueva trova” singers who often recorded with them, like Pablo Milanes (also a gifted scat vocalist) and Silvio Rodriguez. They were effectively state-sanctioned protest singers who managed to smuggle slyly subversive messages onto records controlled by a brutal police state. It’s effectively what every track on this compilation does musically.

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Nancy Sinatra Start Walkin’: 1965-1976

Quentin Tarantino scored the opening moments of 2003’s Kill Bill: Volume 1 to Nancy Sinatra’s forlorn performance of “Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)”. It’s a canny pick, even if the title of the Sonny Bono-penned number made it an obvious choice for Hollywood’s pre-eminent record-nerd auteur, who’d just given his viewers their first glimpse of Uma Thurman’s character as she’s shot in the head by her unseen lover. While Sinatra’s voice possesses a delicacy that starkly contrasts with the bloodshed to come, the lyrics hint at darker things, as do the feelings of love, hurt and resignation she conveys so chillingly alongside the trembling tremolo of Billy Strange’s guitar.

As the first of the 23 songs on Start Walkin’: 1965-1976, “Bang Bang” is again being used to begin a story about a woman who should not be underestimated. The compilation inaugurates a reissue campaign by Light In The Attic that continues later this year with newly remastered editions of Sinatra’s 1966 debut long-player Boots, 1968’s majestic Nancy & Lee and 1972’s more autumnal Nancy & Lee Again.

Covering Sinatra’s most productive years with her primary collaborator Lee Hazlewood (already the subject of his own lavish Light In The Attic campaign), Start Walkin’ relates a narrative arc that may be familiar to those who’ve long considered the Chairman of the Board’s eldest daughter to be one of the coolest women to walk the Earth. But the choice of opening note here is as significant for the compilation’s purposes as it was for Tarantino’s. Like the tale of Thurman’s assassin, this one is about earning some payback. This time it’s for a performer whose versatility and artistry have long been overshadowed by the contributions of her illustrious collaborators and by Sinatra’s own celebrity. Indeed, by leading with “Bang Bang” and closing with little-heard marvels made after the hits ran out, Start Walkin’ presents a wider, richer view of a singer who may finally be regarded as more than Hazlewood’s modeling clay or, worse yet, a well-born starlet remembered for those thigh-high go-go boots.

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At the very least, the new collection trumps the umpteen greatest-hits albums that preceded it. If Start Walkin’ were more like those sets, it would’ve opened with the song that made Sinatra a star. Initially released at the tail end of 1965 and a chart-topper in the US and UK soon afterward, “These Boots Are Made For Walking” followed Sinatra’s run of singles for her father’s label Reprise that had some chart success in Europe and Japan but made little impact at home. It was Sinatra Sr who connected the singer with Hazlewood, then best known for his work with Duane Eddy. Though the rangy Oklahoman had no lack of opinions, the “skinny Italian girl” – as Hazlewood initially called her to Strange, cheekily avoiding the surname – had a will of her own. It was she who convinced Hazlewood that the lyrics to “Boots” were brutal when he sang them but empowering if she did instead (she also had to lobby to make it an A-side.) The result was a natural-born No 1, its swagger fuelled in equal part by Sinatra’s fierce yet playful delivery and the indelible double-bass hook by Chuck Berghofer, one of the Wrecking Crew greats indispensable during Sinatra’s imperial phase.

The song remains an irresistible display of pop-feminist bravura. As such, it provided a formula for the many similarly strident numbers that can be found throughout the six Sinatra albums that arrived in quick succession through 1966 and 1967. Yet Start Walkin’ emphasises the team’s many deviations from the mean, demonstrating how inventive and subversive Sinatra’s music could be even before her music with Hazlewood took a more avidly idiosyncratic direction with Nancy & Lee. Just consider the decidedly weird nature of 1966’s “Sugar Town”, a dreamy shuffle that hit the Top 10 in the US and the UK which Sinatra later described as Hazlewood’s own “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds” due to its coy acid references.

The same year’s “Friday’s Child” captures Sinatra in a more dramatic mode, casting herself as a distraught diva in a smoky cabaret. Her power as a vocalist will surprise anyone who figured her skill set was limited to ethereal softness and Sunset Strip sass. After going the full Shirley Bassey on her 1967 Bond theme “You Only Live Twice” – included here in the punchier version cut with the Wrecking Crew in LA rather than John Barry’s orchestra in London – she trumps even the shrieking strings on “Lightning’s Child”, a 1967 single whose synthesis of Wagnerian grandeur and cowboy-musical panache would be campy if not delivered with such ferocity.

On songs like these, Sinatra is indisputably the star of the show. It’s harder to assert that for some of her most famous pairings with Hazlewood. While she’s an amiable sparring partner on their version of “Jackson”, her partner’s bullfrog voice and drawling delivery gives Sinatra less room to manoeuvre in 1966’s “Summer Wine”, the first of their duets to hit the charts, and “Some Velvet Morning”, the mythopoetic masterstroke that Hazlewood originally wrote for the most Ingmar Bergman-esque sequence in 1967’s Movin’ With Nancy TV special.

That’s why some of their lesser-celebrated duets are the greater standouts on Start Walkin’. Shimmering and cosmic, “Sand” is an astonishing demonstration of the balance they could achieve with two voices that no-one in their right mind would have paired. The selections from 1972’s Nancy & Lee Again are similarly extraordinary as examples of how deeply she immersed herself in the songs’ characters. In the almost unbearably poignant “Arkansas Coal (Suite)”, she deftly shifts between the roles of three women in a family blighted by tragedy. And her breakdown at the end of “Down From Dover” – perhaps the most wrenching of the many heartstring-pullers written by Dolly Parton – could make a stone cry.

Sinatra was herself heartbroken when Hazlewood abruptly departed for Sweden in 1968, reportedly fleeing his problems with the IRS and the prospect of a draft letter for his son. Though Sinatra’s career never really recovered from the end of the team’s original run, Start Walkin’ shows she was hardly down for the count. Produced by Jimmy Bowen for her 1972 album Woman, “Kind Of A Woman” has much of the same magic of yore, and the outtake “Machine Gun Kelly” is even better. Released as a single in 1976, Sinatra and Hazlewood’s gorgeous cover of French singer Joe Dassin’s hit “(L’été Indien) Indian Summer” was one in the series of reunions that continued with their tours in the ’90s and 2004’s Nancy & Lee 3.

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Knowing that the music business found her “passé”, Sinatra largely left it behind in the ’70s, devoting her energy to her young family instead. The latter-day contents of Start Walkin’ invites thoughts of the music that might’ve been. Given her affinity for then-emergent country-music talents like Mel Tillis and Mac Davis, it’s certainly easy to imagine Sinatra in rhinestones as a strong yet soft-hearted songstress in the vein of Parton and Loretta Lynn. Any further adventures with Hazlewood through the decade would only have gotten weirder if the hypnagogic haze of “Indian Summer” was a fair indication.

But those stories are only of the speculative variety. More compelling by far is the one that’s told here, in 23 concise chapters that are thrilling, surprising and sometimes sublime. You could call the whole saga ‘Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood’ if Tarantino hadn’t gotten there first.

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10 Years Ago, James Blake’s Self-Titled Debut Album Made Him A Star

By Grant Sharples

No one knew James Blake could sing. Before his 2011 debut album, released 10 years ago today (February 4), the electronic songwriter-producer had primarily become known for his sample-driven, minimalist dubstep arrangements. Apart from a brief 20th-century spiritual singing clip, Blake’s 2009 debut single “Air & Lack Thereof” featured zero vocals, much like its counterpoint instrumental track, “Sparing the Horses.” Following up this single with a string of three acclaimed EPs, 2010’s The Bell Sketch, CMYK, and Klavierwerke, Blake further cemented himself in London’s electronic music scene. But it wasn’t until his self-titled, full-length debut that he became James Blake, the songwriter-vocalist, in addition to James Blake, the producer.

Its contemporary Pitchfork review forecasted that this collection of songs would “soon make Blake a star.” This statement couldn’t have been more prescient; in the past decade, Blake has become an unlikely celebrity. The quiet, precocious producer, only 22 years old at the time of the album’s release, would eventually go on to work with megastars such as Beyoncé, Kendrick Lamar, André 3000, Travis Scott, Anderson .Paak, and Vince Staples, and he’d even acquire a couple of features on Lamar’s curated soundtrack for the Marvel blockbuster Black Panther. Music aside, he’d begin dating actor Jameela Jamil, to whom he dedicated his fourth album, 2019’s Assume Form. Blake’s first album thrust him into the spotlight, and he continually gained even more attention with each new record.

Not only could Blake sing, but he could sing well. For an artist who had previously used his voice only as a sample, it was surprising to hear that he had impressive chops and prowess. His flourishes and inflections, spaced out across the album’s 11 tracks, placed him a grade above other English producers of his ilk. On top of that, it turned out he was also an excellent keyboard player. It’s as if his earlier recordings are suggestive artifacts of a different James Blake, one that mainly composes instrumental electronic tracks rather than full-fledged songs. His 2011 debut, in a strange way, was the first glimpse at who Blake truly was as an artist — one who played with pop structures and warped them to fit his own vision.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oOT2-OTebx0

This pop-centric emphasis gave Blake the liberty to reimagine others’ work in his own style. His cover of Canadian indie-pop songwriter Feist’s “The Limit to Your Love” is an immediate standout. Where Feist’s version is built on light drums, piano, and backup harmonies, Blake takes the sparse piano lick and builds his own sonic setting. Replete with hushed, wobbling bass and reverberating, electronic percussion, it’s technically a cover, but it feels entirely like Blake’s own. His version is more of a complete reimagining than it is a faithful rendition.

“Limit” isn’t the only older song on this album that’s been repurposed. Blake’s father, James Litherland, is also a musician and a founding member of the prog-rock outfit Colosseum in the late 1960s. In 2006, Litherland released a guitar-led soft-rock jam called “Where to Turn,” which Blake pays homage to on his album by flipping it into a new creation. Known as “The Wilhelm Scream,” Blake restructures his father’s song, using a handful of stanzas and building something new out of them. Gone are the guitars, acoustic drums, and piano; they’re replaced with ambient pads, arpeggiated synthesizers, and a drum machine. Litherland’s version follows a traditional song structure, but his son creates something more akin to a loop that builds on itself ever so gradually, almost imperceptibly.

These two covers show that Blake doesn't care to mimic others’ styles, but rather adapt them to his own to reinforce his own creative approach. They even foreshadowed his covers that would become notably popular later in his career, such as his version of Frank Ocean’s “Godspeed” that rose to ascendancy on TikTok. “The Wilhelm Scream” and “Limit to Your Love” helped move Blake away from the sample-heavy dubstep his EPs were laden with; they helped strengthen his artistic identity as a minimalist indie-pop songwriter-producer.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MVgEaDemxjc

His self-titled album is also the point where he identified himself as a deceptively talented lyricist. “I Never Learnt to Share” is built on just a handful of lines, but they’re all the more poignant as they burrow deeper with each repetition. “My brother and my sister don’t speak to me,” Blake sings with his signature vibrato, “but I don’t blame them.” He adds layer upon layer as the track progresses, building emotionality, even as he would late admit it’s “sort of an in-joke” to his life as an only child. Opener “Unluck,” which also consists of just a couple of stanzas, dives further in, describing his isolation as an only child (“Only child, take good care / I wouldn’t like you playing, falling there”). Blake takes a minimalist approach to his lyrics, just as he does with his music, yet each track is imbued with melancholy, such as the lament of “To Care (Like You)” and the remorse in “Give Me My Month.” This sense of gloom would soon become a key trait in his music. This is the Blake that fans know now, and he arrived at the perfect moment.

In an interview with Clash magazine a few months after his debut album’s release, Blake talked about how The xx “warmed the seat” for him, and that the British indie-pop trio changed the way “people listen to that brand of sparse electronic music.” The explosion of The xx heralded Blake’s arrival to the scene that also saw the burgeoning popularity of similar artists like Oneohtrix Point Never and Mount Kimbie. Although The xx would subsequently abandon the minimalism with 2017’s I See You and producer Jamie xx’s solo effort In Colour, Blake expanded on his initial foundation. On his next two records, Overgrown and The Colour in Anything, he used the sonic palette first explored on his debut to branch off into untrodden, more ambitious territory. 2013’s Overgrown rings like a more elevated version of James Blake, while 2016’s The Colour in Anything is his most grandiose work yet, even featuring a cameo from his big-indie contemporary Bon Iver on “I Need a Forest Fire.” Some critics wrote off 2019’s Assume Form as self-indulgent, but this is the most sensible trajectory for Blake, as he has continually widened his artistic scope with each new record.

Without James Blake, the artist simply wouldn’t be the James Blake as he’s currently known. Maybe he would have gone on to continue making sample-based instrumental tracks. Maybe he would have been an underground collaborator or ghostwriter instead of an artist in his own right. He’s worked with household names several times, but never at the expense of his own work or identity. Blake remains in the spotlight himself, something he made sure to clinch on the album's closer, “Measurements.” “Testing sounds for the deaf and the forest cold,” he sings, doubling his voice until there's an entire choir. But they're all him.

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Maggie Lindemann Refuses To Let Paranoia Hold Her Back

By Jack Irvin

Maggie Lindemann has always considered herself a paranoid person. As a kid, it was the reason she’d ask her mom to stay in her room until she fell asleep. As an adult, it’s why she began sleeping with a switchblade under her pillow.

“It just gave me bad vibes, which is weird because it was a brand new house,” the 22-year-old singer-songwriter tells MTV News about her then-home in a Los Angeles neighborhood. Combined with the copious amount of horror films Lindemann watched at the time, nights when her roommate wasn’t home left her scared, to say the least. “Two stories are too much for me… I need to know every inch of the house. He would be gone, and I would just freak out and need to sleep with a knife under my pillow like every night — and in all my drawers.”

Her sharp response to fear came in handy as a direct inspiration for “Knife Under My Pillow,” the pop punk-inspired first single from her debut, Paranoia, out this Friday on Caroline Records and Swixxzaudio. While the EP may be the singer’s first-ever project, she is by no means a newbie in the music industry. Growing up in Texas and performing with her local church choir, she always dreamed of singing professionally, and she moved to Los Angeles at 16 to pursue it. Like many other teenagers at the time, she started posting cover videos online — not on YouTube, but on Keek, a now-defunct video platform that launched in 2011.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8LGghW2g7JM

After picking up a following, her fans flocked to her Tumblr and Instagram pages, turning her into a full-blown influencer before the term — which she despises — even existed. “I hate when people call me an influencer, ‘cause that is not how I make my money,” says Lindemann, who amassed nearly a million followers before releasing her first single, the downbeat “Knocking on Your Heart,” in 2015. “I always wanted to sing. I didn’t want to just be a pretty girl on Instagram.”

Lindemann expressed a similar sentiment in 2016’s aptly titled “Pretty Girl,” an empowering, anthemic pop track that became an international hit and caught the attention of 300 Entertainment, the record label she signed to that year. Considering the track has been streamed well over a billion times to date, and its follow-up, infectious dance bop “Obsessed,” boasts nearly 100 million streams, you’d think the singer would have followed up the immense success with an album. But behind the scenes, she wasn’t a fan of the music she was putting out.

“I hated being this bubblegum-pop girl. I just didn't ever feel like that was me,” she says. “The lyrics were me, but the vibe wasn't, and I felt like that started to become a constant theme in my music. I loved the lyrics, but the production, I always just didn't like it.”

Brandon Arreaga

She decided to shift her sound to better reflect her own music taste, citing acts like Sleeping With Sirens and Avril Lavigne as major inspirations. “I love heavy drums, heavy electric guitars. I always wanted to scream. I used to practice my screams when I was young,” Lindemann recalls. “I felt like my whole life was pop-punk, and then I was pop, and it just felt so weird.” In 2018, she released the emo, melancholic “Would I” and “Friends Go,” a No Doubt-influenced track that received a hardcore remix from Blink-182’s Travis Barker. But just as she was finally settling into a sound she identified with, things took a dark turn.

On June 21, 2019, she was asked to leave the stage during a performance in Malaysia, where she was then arrested by immigration police for not possessing the correct work permit visa. The incident was reportedly due to negligence on behalf of the visa agent, who was later fined over $7,000. After the show, Lindemann was put in jail for 24 hours before getting released to her hotel room, where she was forced to stay for five days before she could fly home. “It’s all such a blur, but basically we had to go and be like, ‘Look, we had no idea. We don’t book these things,’” she details. “We were facing possibly five years in prison for being there illegally and possibly deportation. It was just horrifying.”

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The Avalanches We Will Always Love You

If, after suffering hardship, you’ve become particularly attuned to the everyday miracles of earth and sky, awed by the wonder of existence, then you’re already intimate with the hopeful air of We Will Always Love You.

Drenched in mechanised shimmer and kinetic beats, The Avalanches’ third studio effort is at its core a beatific vision born of life’s darker turns, that neither weaponises nor romanticises pain. Instead, We Will Always Love You recognises the arc of pain as one of humanity’s strongest connective tissues, an acknowledgement that doubles as an exorcism, a non-verbal expression that intones, “I feel you, pain, and now I am setting you free.”

Fitting neatly at the junction between curiosity and maturity, the record may disappoint those fans with a particular long-simmering and perhaps unfair desire; it is not the anarchic and astonishing Frankenstein’s monster that was 2000’s Since I Left You or, to a lesser extent, 2016’s Wildflower, not an infinitely layered statement with WhoSampled pages that unravel like Kerouac’s On The Road scroll. It is more pop-oriented and far less mysterious. It is the sound of a group who want more from life than the fetishisation of dusty discs.

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Though it retains the same deconstructionist form that made The Avalanches a household name, it does so through a reliance on original collaborations with guest vocalists that are then chopped, refracted and stitched with samples of cult records, obscure historical recordings, warbled YouTube clips and alien frequencies. It’s a less intensive template than Since I Left You, one that fulfils a few practical purposes: less time spent digging and chasing sample clearance, and core members Robbie Chater and Tony Di Blasi’s desire to work in a more standard album-tour cycle, one that doesn’t prompt a 16-year absence between records. In keeping with their liking for concept albums, they’ve crafted a record loosely based on the relationship between ‘science communicators’ Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan, and their ‘love note’ on Voyager’s Golden Record.

Druyan’s face appears on the cover, and she was originally planned to appear on the album; though it didn’t happen, the record is certainly not short of other contributors. While it’s fair to see names like Perry Farrell and Rivers Cuomo and be suspicious, the beauty of We Will Always Love You lies beneath the elder statesmen on the shiny hype sticker. It is here that Karen O whispers some of the last and most profound words written by David Berman, over the crackle of static and a light twinkle of piano (“Pink Champagne”). It is here that pop luminary Dev Hynes meets folk luminaries The Roches and soul legend Smokey Robinson in an elegiac symphony built for headphones (“We Will Always Love You”). It is here that Johnny Marr’s guitar again shimmers with a Smiths-era glimmer (“The Divine Chord”), and a crack modern soul upstart, Cola Boyy, is bolstered by none other than OG sampler Mick Jones (“We Go On”). It is here that a sample of Vashti Bunyan, taken from 1970’s “Glow Worms”, flutters on a wave of psychedelic soul (“Reflecting Light”).

Though sonically We Will Always Love You is unlike the group’s first two albums, its spirit of discovery, and subtle championing of the oblique, forgotten and underrepresented, is familiar territory. The album is neither stuck in the past nor barrelling recklessly towards the future, and, in this sense, it’s a lavish genre-agnostic mixtape. On paper it lacks focus, but in practice it is representative of the aural quilts crafted by modern, omnivorous listeners. Anti-pop sentiment has largely fallen out of vogue among serious music heads, and The Avalanches have long advocated for such progress.

Through its adventuresome twists and well-considered combinations, this record acts as a necessary treat amid a turbulent and uncertain climate; it embraces the promise of love, the wonder of outer realms and the connective quality of music across genres and understanding. A reminder of the energy of bodies at one with a beat, and the soothing quality of a quiet hour alone with one’s thoughts, it’s a hopeful guide to a world where everyone is welcome.

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J.Lo At 20: Celebrating The Album That Made Jennifer Lopez An Icon

By Yasmine Shemesh

When Jennifer Lopez began recording her sophomore album, J.Lo, in 2000, she was in the midst of an incredible career high. With a $1 million salary for 1997’s Selena, she’d become the highest-paid Latina actress in Hollywood history and had no less than three new movies in the works. “Waiting for Tonight,” her dance-infused 1999 single, had become an anthem for the new millennium and was nominated for a Grammy. And she was about to make fashion history, thanks to a certain plunging Versace dress. In hindsight, given how long she’s been a multihyphenate, Lopez’s early ambidextrousness wasn’t one bit surprising. In fact, as she told Rolling Stone the following year, she felt like she hadn’t even started yet. “I’m looking forward to the ninth album, the 30th movie. I want to write more songs, tour, find the right roles, have my own family. That’s why I have so much energy. I know what lies ahead.”

Lopez brought the same resolve into acting, and her title performance in Selena served as the perfect jumping-off point into the pop-music sphere. Starting with the sultry, groovy single “If You Had My Love,” her debut, On the 6, also made Lopez — alongside Ricky Martin, Marc Anthony, and Enrique Iglesias — an important contributor to 1999’s Latin Explosion, which saw a substantial increase in the mainstream visibility of Latin music.

With everything she already accomplished, Lopez proved she could evolve artistically and do it well. But J.Lo represented the most significant turning point for Lopez yet, securing her status as an icon. Released on January 16, 2001, the same week The Wedding Planner opened in theaters at No. 1 at the box office, J.Lo debuted on the Billboard 200 at the very top spot. She was already a star; this — the only double No. 1 debut of its kind to date — made her intergalactic. With four singles, subsequent smash Murder Inc. remixes featuring Ja Rule, and a refreshed image that presented Lopez through a glamorous-yet-still-relatable lens, J.Lo became an influential catalyst that positioned its star  to define nearly every corner of Y2K pop culture.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4kGvlESGvbs

The shift was imminent when J.Lo’s lead single, “Love Don’t Cost a Thing,” dropped in December 2000. Sparkling and bass-heavy, with empowered lyrics that dismissed lavish gifts as the glue holding Lopez’s love in place, it was more confident than anything she’d released before. The press speculated the song was a wink at Lopez’s high-profile relationship with Sean “P. Diddy” Combs, who also co-wrote and produced four tracks on J.Lo. The music video saw Lopez — draped in gold jewelry, a cream duster, and caramel-gradient sunglasses — tearing off her luxuries until she was just about bare on the beach. J.Lo, the nickname given to her by fans, had arrived.

As a producer and co-writer, Lopez had creative control over J.Lo and leaned into R&B and hip-hop. On the 6 did too, but J.Lo was distinctly shaped by the influences and yielded some impressive collaborators. Lopez breathlessly yearns for a lover on the Diddy-produced slow jam “Come Over.” “Play,” co-written by Christina Milian with the singer on background vocals, combines a funky groove with ’80s dance sensibilities. Hip-hop meets Latin pop over a subtle sample of the Sugar Hill Gang’s “8th Wonder” on “I’m Going to Be Alright,” while Mambo-inspired “Cariño” and “Si Ya Se Acabó,” with flutters of flamenco guitar, fully embrace Latin sounds — another formative influence on J.Lo.

Hip-hop played an even larger role on the album through Murder Inc. remixes, particularly with “I’m Real” featuring Ja Rule. The song was a standout in its original iteration (with its now-infamous sample of Yellow Magic Orchestra’s “Firecracker,” which Mariah Carey planned to use for “Loverboy”), but the remix — an entirely new track, written by Ja Rule with backup vocals from Ashanti and a melody sampled from “Mary Jane” by Rick James — was a spectacular hit, becoming a signature for Lopez and carving out a place in the cross-genre prism of featuring rap on a pop song.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sjx9oSJDAVQ

The model gained massive traction through the decade with, for example, Carey’s “Fantasy” remix featuring Ol’ Dirty Bastard and Aaliyah’s “Are You That Somebody?” featuring Timbaland. But as “I’m Real” dominated the airwaves and received critical acclaim, Lopez’s duet with Ja Rule helped cement the lasting power of the pop/hip-hop composite. Over the next decade, everyone from Beyoncé (“Crazy in Love” featuring Jay-Z) and Usher (“Yeah!” featuring Lil Jon and Ludacris) to Justin Timberlake (“Like I Love You” featuring Clipse) tapped in. The success of “I’m Real” led to other J.Lo remixes, including “I’m Gonna Be Alright” with Nas and “Ain’t It Funny” with Ja Rule and Cadillac Tah. "It's gonna put her in another zone,” Ja Rule told MTV at the time. “After this one, they gonna be expecting hot crossover R&B joints from J. Lo."

Lopez kept them coming after J.Lo: “All I Have” featuring LL Cool J; “Jenny from the Block” featuring Jadakiss and Styles P; “Get Right” featuring Fabolous. With 2018’s “Dinero,” pairing her with DJ Khaled and Cardi B, and 2019’s “Medicine” featuring French Montana, Lopez continues to bridge pop and hip-hop today. She’s also still blazing genre-crossing trails, dipping pop into trap and reggaetón: “Te Guste,” a 2018 duet with Bad Bunny, was described as a “trap-pop gamechanger,” and her two-track collaboration with rising Colombian star Maluma, “Pa’Ti” and “Lonely,” appears on the soundtrack for the forthcoming romantic comedy, Marry Me.

While J.Lo was contributing to the trajectory of early 2000s music, Lopez herself was making her mark in fashion and beauty. After wearing the palm-print chiffon Versace dress to the 2000 Grammys — and inadvertently spurring the invention of Google image search — Lopez’s style quickly permeated into the era’s aesthetic. Athleisure, nude tones, fur-lined puffer jackets, hoop earrings, French-tip nails, and high-heeled Timberland boots proudly channeled her Nuyorican roots and fused them with Hollywood glamour. Lopez rocked the looks in her music videos, which now serve as chic time capsules, from the pink terrycloth shorts set in “I’m Real (Remix)” to the long fur coat and taupe bucket hat in “Play.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFuw-YZaTNo

Months after J.Lo was released, Lopez launched her clothing line: J.Lo by Jennifer Lopez reflected her own style and included sweatsuits, bedazzled tops, and denim. “The voluptuous woman is almost ignored,” Lopez said during a press conference. “I want to offer clothes that are wonderfully designed and will fit women of all sizes.'' It’s hard to overstate how the visibility of Lopez’s body inspired a cultural shift. The ’90s, especially, were the era of “heroin chic,” an impossible standard of beauty that excluded anyone who wasn’t 5’10” and a size zero. With so much attention fixed to her natural curves, Lopez — repeatedly asked to lose weight early in her career (she refused) — undeniably contributed to the media’s more inclusive view of all body types. Her clothing line was a physical realization of that.

Lopez, of course, is now at the helm of a multimillion-dollar empire spanning film, television, music, fashion, and beauty. She is one of the most versatile, influential, and recognizable artists in the world, not only increasing Latin representation in the entertainment industry through the strides she took in the early 2000s but helping to redefine the entire media landscape along the way. She’s an icon — an important one. And J.Lo, with the reverberating impact it made, was a vital stepping stone in that path: Because of that album, those three letters are forever embedded in the vernacular of contemporary pop culture.

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Machine Gun Kelly shares trailer and release date for ‘Tickets To My Downfall’ musical ‘Downfalls High’

Machine Gun Kelly has shared a teaser trailer for his forthcoming ‘Tickets To My Downfall’ musical Downfalls High – watch below.

  • READ MORE: Machine Gun Kelly: “I’ve been jumping up and down on the table, believing in myself, for-fucking-ever”

The clip features appearances from Trippie Redd, blackbear and Iann Dior and goes on to reveal that it is due to drop on January 15. The musical will be narrated by Kelly and Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker, who contributed to and executively produced MGK’s recent album.

Speaking to NME in a Big Read cover feature last year, Kelly called the musical a “pop-punk Grease“ and it emerged from a running joke he had with his collaborator Mod Sun where they make excuses to leave situations by saying they need to go and watch Grease 2.

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“I just shot it in four days with Mod Sun,” Kelly confirmed in the interview. “It was my first time directing. It was almost like shooting 14 music videos back-to-back, but with a narrative that’s outside of my personal life stories.

“It focuses on other characters, and then me and [Barker] are just the narrators. It’s an interesting concept because it hasn’t been done for an album ever, maybe outside of like Pink Floyd’s The Wall.”

Meanwhile, Barker recently confirmed that he is working on new music with Kelly.

MGK and Barker also shared a joint cover of Rage Against The Machine’s ‘Killing In The Name’ over the summer in support of the Black Lives Matter movement. Its accompanying video saw the musicians take to the LA streets to protest against police brutality towards African Americans in the wake of George Floyd’s death.

In other news, Avril Lavigne also recently teased new music set to land in 2021, featuring Kelly.

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Sharing photos from the studio, featuring MGK playing guitar and singing alongside Lavigne and Mod Sun, Lavigne wrote: “So are we ready for new music in the new year or what? Lemme know.”

In a four-star review, NME said ‘Tickets To My Downfall’ “not only proves MGK can do whatever the hell he likes, but that also maybe pop-punk still has something important to offer the world.”

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Kid Cudi announces deluxe edition of ‘Man On The Moon III’

Kid Cudi has announced a deluxe edition of his new album ‘Man On The Moon III: The Chosen’ is on the way.

  • Read more: Kid Cudi – ‘Man On The Moon III: The Chosen’ review: an art piece of epic highs and honest lows

Made up of 18 tracks, the rapper’s seventh studio album, which features guest appearances from Pop Smoke, Skepta, Phoebe Bridgers and Trippie Redd, was released on December 11,

The follow-up to 2016’s ‘Passion, Pain & Demon Slayin” landed at Number Two on the Billboard 200 chart, one place behind Taylor Swift’s ‘Evermore’.

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On Monday (December 28), Cudi revealed that he is gearing up to release a deluxe edition of the album, with “a nice amount” of extra tracks.

Asked by a fan if he plans on putting out an extended version of the album, Cudi replied: “Yeap, its called The Cudder Cut, and will feature a nice amount of new jams, some were cut for length, and a few surprises ;).”

Cudi hasn’t yet revealed when the deluxe edition of ‘Man On The Moon III: The Chosen’ will arrive.

In a four-star review of Cudi’s new album, NME‘s Will Lavin called it a “cinematic masterstroke that electrifies the senses at every turn.”

The review continues: “Kid Cudi gives us every part of himself, laying out his insecurities and inner demons in the hope that it might help someone else, his words etched into a vivid backdrop of intoxicating melodies and palatial riffs. No one does mood music quite like Cudi.”

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Meanwhile, Kid Cudi has broken a US chart record with ‘Beautiful Trip’, the opening song of his new album ‘Man On The Moon III: The Chosen’.

The track only lasts for 37 seconds and features a brief instrumental, backing vocals and a sample of a voice counting down: “Three, two, one.”

Despite that, ’Beautiful Trip’’s short running time has helped it set a new record on the Billboard Hot 100. It is now the shortest song to ever chart on the Hot 100, taking the 100th place last week.

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Uncut’s Best Reissues & Compilations Of 2020

30 GRANDADDY
The Sophtware Slump: 20th Anniversary Collection
DANGERBIRD

Two decades on, the ‘American OK Computer’ (or one of them, anyway) got a deluxe vinyl box, featuring two LPs of rarities and B-sides and a full 2020 re-recording of the album on piano. The latter, rush-recorded during lockdown in Jason Lytle’s LA apartment, was a surprise highlight, actually shining new light on the 11 songs that made up the original record.

29 BRIAN ENO
Film Music 1976 – 2020
UMe

While Eno busied himself with a collaborative project alongside brother Roger (Mixing Colours, Luminous), the reissue of his back catalogue continued apace. The Jah Wobble (Spinner) and John Cale (Wrong Way Up) LPs arrived in August along with a Record Store Day release for his Rams OST. This survey of his film scores highlighted the range and depth of his cinematic endeavours: richly textured and immersive, these were more than just movie cues but recognisable compositions in their own right.

28 BESSIE JONES
Get In Union
ALAN LOMAX ARCHIVE

South Georgia-born Jones was a veritable expert in African-American song, learning slavery-era songs from her grandfather and picking up others throughout her life. This digital-only release from the Alan Lomax Archive, expanding on a previous 2CD set, compiled 60 songs she recorded solo and with the Georgia Sea Island Singers between 1959 and ’66. An incredible and important collection.

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27 ROBERT WYATT
His Greatest Misses
DOMINO

Such is the compact nature of his catalogue, all Wyatt’s albums are pretty much essential purchases – if a ‘best of’ is required, though, one can barely improve on this, reissued on vinyl this year after a CD release in 2004. The hits were present – “I’m A Believer” and “Shipbuilding” – but some of his fine lesser-known work was showcased too, from “Arauco” to “Worship”.

26 KEVIN ROWLAND
My Beauty
CHERRY RED

Roundly criticised on its release 21 years ago, Rowland’s second solo album was seemingly just ahead of its time, as this remastered version proved. His glorious version of Springsteen’s “Thunder Road” was reinstated, while takes on The Four Seasons’ “Rag Doll” and George Benson’s “The Greatest Love Of All” were alternately grooving and uncompromising.

25 THE GO-BETWEENS
G Stands For Go-Betweens Vol 2: 1985–1989
DOMINO

Something of a motherlode, the second Go-Betweens box included their bona fide classics Liberty Belle And The Black Diamond Express and 16 Lovers Lane, alongside a host of bonus material, including demos for their abandoned seventh album. Some of those songs turned up on Robert Forster’s Danger In The Past, also reissued in fine form this year.

24 GLOBAL COMMUNICATION
Transmissions
EVOLUTION

This sumptuous 7LP boxset collected work done by Mark Pritchard and Tom Middleton, from their Eno-like 1993 reimagining of Chapterhouse’s Blood Music album to their own 76:14 the following year, and a load of bonus tracks. Enigmatically and beautifully packaged, the attention to detail mirrored the transportative, finely wrought electronics within.

23 SOLOMON BURKE
The King Of Rock ’N’ Soul: The Atlantic Recordings (1962-1968)
SOULMUSIC

Across three packed CDs, this set captured the peak of the ‘bishop of soul’’s career, from his early hit “Cry To Me” to his work with the likes of Chips Moman, Dan Penn and Spooner Oldham. “Maggie’s Farm” and “By The Time I Get To Phoenix” are just two highlights of this collection, which also featured alternate takes and new liner notes.

22 JOHN COLTRANE
Giant Steps 60th Anniversary
RHINO

A year after making history on Miles’ Kind Of Blue, Coltrane did it again with his fifth album as band leader. The original seven pieces, from the rapid-fire title track to the lovestruck “Naima”, were here joined by copious outtakes and new sleevenotes, all shedding light on the birth of this masterpiece.

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21 NINA SIMONE
Fodder On My Wings
VERVE

After an unfulfilling experience making 1978’s Baltimore, Simone grasped the reins on the follow-up, recorded in Paris and released four years later. It remained largely obscure, though, which made this reissue, with a rejigged tracklisting and new artwork, a welcome addition to her legacy. Switching from English to French, Simone sang of grief and loss, and, most curiously, her dislike of the Swiss.

20 JON HASSELL
Vernal Equinox
NDEYA

Hassell had served a long apprenticeship by the time he released his debut album, performing with Terry Riley, La Monte Young and Marian Zazeela, which probably accounted for the record’s confidence and dexterity. Reissued 43 years on, its mix of jazz, ambient and world music remains completely unclassifiable, Hassell’s electronically treated trumpet conjuring up a singular soundworld.

19 ARETHA FRANKLIN
Aretha
RHINO

Tough as it is to sum up a career like Franklin’s in just one release, Aretha gave it a good go with a 2LP set and a 4CD boxset. The new artwork burnished the music within, most of it understandably taken from her Atlantic days, but there were choice alternate takes, work tapes and demos tucked away here too.

18 PJ HARVEY
To Bring You My Love
UMC/ISLAND

The vinyl reissue of all Harvey’s albums plus attendant demos inevitably set the bar high early on with Dry and Rid Of Her. But third album To Bring You My Love marked her first big stylistic shift and gave her a mainstream breakthrough with “Down By The Water”. The accompanying demos brought greater intimacy and intensity to the songs’ religious imagery and vamped-up delta bluesology.

17 ONENESS OF JUJU
African Rhythms 1970-1982
STRUT

This invigorating anthology shone a light on one of the funkiest catalogues of the entire 1970s. It followed Plunky Branch’s collective through its various incarnations, from the righteous spiritual jazz of Juju via the earthy Afro-funk of Oneness Of Juju to the cosmic boogie of Juju & The Space Rangers, its powerful messages of black pride and spiritual unity always front and centre. Also worth seeking out are the albums Space Jungle Luv and Live At The East, reissued separately.

16 PYLON
Pylon Box
NEW WEST

Everything the curious listener might need for their journey into the
work of this most underrated of post-punk groups was here: their two remastered albums, a rarities collection, rehearsal tape and a huge book. It uncovered a group who were at once pioneering, good-humoured and brilliant performers, and crucially, one that sound just as exciting today.

15 JONI MITCHELL
Archives Vol 1: The Early Years (1963-1967)
RHINO

While Mitchell’s recovery continued apace, she also dug back into her past – with last year’s reprint of a 1971 private press book Morning Glory On The Vine and also her Archives project, the first in a series of deep dives into her storied career. This inaugural 5CD set brought together unreleased demos, radio sessions and live recordings to shine a light on Mitchell’s remarkable folknik years. Essential listening.

14 BLACK SABBATH
Paranoid
UNIVERSAL

Sabbath’s 1970 saw them split one setlist over two albums of hard, swinging blues rock. While their debut revealed their capacity for horror, Paranoid showed that Sabbath could shock: quiet bits (“Planet Caravan”), political comment (“War Pigs”), and most notably a hit single (the title track). This deluxe vinyl retained all that over five LPs, adding a quad mix and live shows from Montreux and Brussels. The brilliant “Fairies Wear Boots” is in here four times, but fans will wonder if they couldn’t perhaps have fitted in a couple more.

13 THE REPLACEMENTS
Pleased To Meet Me (Deluxe Edition)
RHINO

If the original album captured a snapshot of the band teetering on the fence between mainstream rock stardom and the snotty punk underground, this deluxe reissue attempted to tell the whole story of the ’Mats’ most divisive era: there was a remastered original album, a disc of rough demos and one of alternate mixes and session curios.

12 BOBBIE GENTRY
The Delta Sweete Expanded Edition
UMC

Though Gentry herself has been silent for decades, the music she made on the cusp of the ’70s has only improved with the passing years. This deluxe reissue of her 1968 tour de force added unheard versions, demos and suchlike, while the original tracks remained equally swampy and sophisticated, with Gentry examining her Southern heritage through originals such as “Okolona River Bottom Band” alongside well-chosen covers.

11 TOM PETTY
Wildflowers & All The Rest
WARNER RECORDS

Released to mark what would have been Petty’s 70th birthday, this expanded set of his 1994 solo album illustrated the care currently being shown to Petty’s catalogue. The entry-level version was the 25-track double album Petty originally intended, scaling up to a 5CD Super-Deluxe edition with studio outtakes, home demos, alternative cuts and live recordings, some previously unreleased. What the 25-track version chiefly revealed, however, was a master songwriter at the top of his game.

10 BEVERLY GLENN-COPELAND
Transmissions: The Music Of Beverly Glenn-Copeland
TRANSGRESSIVE

Interest in Beverly Glenn-Copeland has been building since the rediscovery of his stunning 1986 synth-folk cassette Keyboard Fantasies by the likes of Four Tet a few years ago. But this anthology, spanning 50 years of releases, revealed the unique artist’s full range: from his early, Joni-esque singer-songwriter material to the rousing gospel-house of more recent work, all unified by those instantly affecting vocals.

9 THE ROLLING STONES
Goats Head Soup
UNIVERSAL

This 1973 album was the moment the Stones’ sound of the late 1970s and ’80s was born – an exotic fusion of rock, funk and top-dollar tunes. The appearance of “Scarlet” – cut with Jimmy Page on guitar – among the outtakes and rarities posed an existential question – what if the Stones decided to groove more like Zeppelin? Meanwhile, the addition of the Brussels Affair bootleg offered the most compelling account out there of the Stones at their Mick Taylor-era live peak.

8 GILLIAN WELCH
Boots 2: The Lost Songs
ACONY

Consisting of 48 previously unreleased tracks recorded at home by Welch and David Rawlings in the early 2000s, Boots No 2 – released in three digital parts, and also now as a physical boxset – was truly a treasure trove. As if the likes of “Picasso” and “Valley Of Tears” weren’t enough, the box included a hefty book with lyrics and chords for each song.

7 NEW ORDER
Power Corruption & Lies (Definitive Edition)
WARNER MUSIC

Inspired by their adventures in New York clubland, New Order’s second album was their first classic, finally escaping the shadow of Joy Division to emerge, blinking, into a luminous electropop future. Beyond the remaster, this pink-boxed ‘definitive edition’ also gave you unheard embryonic versions of “Blue Monday” and “Thieves Like Us”, stacks of rare live footage, some quasi-erotic photos of ’80s synths and Tony Wilson in the bath.

6 LOU REED
New York Deluxe Edition
SIRE/RHINO

“Faulkner had the South, Joyce had Dublin, I’ve got New York,” said Lou Reed to this reissue’s sleevenote-writer David Fricke. On his classic 1989 album, Reed’s poetic excavations of NYC’s underbelly acquired a political bite that proved eerily relevant in 2020 (“They ordained the trumps/And then he got the mumps”). A disc of work-in-progress versions showed Reed locking in with new guitarist Mike Rathke, while a slew of live tracks found them stretching out.

5 IGGY POP
The Bowie Years 
UMe

Focusing on Pop’s fecund ’70s run, the subtitle here underscores the importance on these recordings of Iggy’s erstwhile housemate. The Idiot and Lust For Life are given handsome polish – arguably, they’ve never sounded this good. While the inclusion of four discs (out of seven) of live material might feel like padding, they give a vivid snapshot of Iggy live in ’77. A rarities disc showcased alternative edits, although any home recordings Iggy and Bowie made probably remain safely under lock and key in the latter’s archive.

4 TREES
Trees
FIRE

Cultivating the land that Fairport’s Liege & Lief hacked clear, these short-lived British folk-rockers left behind two 1970 albums that have proved quietly influential. This lovely 4LP 50th-anniversary boxset told their unlikely story, and demonstrated why the music they made, from the eerie “The Garden Of Jane Delawney” to the visionary “Murdoch”, remains spectacular.

3 RICHARD & LINDA THOMPSON
Hard Luck Stories 1972-1982
UMC

The six albums the Thompsons created during their decade of marriage were included here, in all their mystical and miserable glory, but the main draws on this 8CD boxset were the buried treasures. From embryonic material, including unheard songs, to the previously unreleased spiritual and jazzy workouts from their 1977 tour, the duo’s magical work had never before been catalogued like this.

2 NEIL YOUNG
Homegrown
REPRISE

With the pandemic putting a proposed Crazy Horse tour on hold, Young spent the year moving between livestreamed Fireside Sessions, an EP of protest songs and a slew of projects including Archives Volume 2. Homegrown, which arrived in June, was peak Archives: an unreleased album hailing from his golden ’70s run. It didn’t disappoint: this was folkie Neil on the way to the ditch, sharing the introspective qualities of On The Beach with the vérité nakedness of Tonight’s The Night.

1 PRINCE
Sign O’ The Times: Super Deluxe Edition
WARNERS

According to the first of the newly unearthed ‘vault’ tracks, chronologically ordered on this abundant 8CD Super Deluxe Edition, Prince started work on Sign O’ The Times back in 1979. The early demo of “I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man” already sounds like a wiry new wave smash, although when it finally emerged eight years later at the end of Sign’s dazzling third side, it had been lavishly kitted out with an air-punching synth hook, a wailing guitar solo and a moody jazz-funk coda. On paper, it sounds fatally overcooked – but Sign O’ The Times is one of those rare occasions when more really is more.

Prince scholars have long tried to impose an overarching narrative on his 1987 career peak, but given that it consolidated songs originally intended for at least three other projects, perhaps there really was nothing holding it together besides Prince’s unshakeable belief that everything he touched at this point would turn to gold. Lascivious machine-funk rubbing up against smouldering gospel-raga, bombastic synthpop, exquisite soul balladry and psychedelic schoolyard nostalgia? Why not? Titling the album after the jaw-droppingly stark “Sign O’ The Times” gave purpose to this fantastical voyage, and its aura of social awareness and black pride, however post-factum, resonated strongly in 2020.

The Super Deluxe Edition’s ladling on of 45 previously unreleased tracks is entirely in keeping with this maximalist celebration. Obviously they’re not all classics, but this being Prince, all are intriguing pieces of the puzzle. And some are downright stunning: the breezy, faintly oriental groove of “It Be’s Like That Sometimes”; the florid candy-pop
of “Cosmic Day”; the lush free-jazz intro to “Power Fantastic (Live In Studio)”, complete with Prince instructing his band to “just trip”. You’re unlikely to be able to consume them all in one sitting without feeling a bit sick, but think of it as less of a banquet and more like an opulent buffet.

Where will those diligent Prince Estate archivists start digging next? The “I Could Never Take The Place Of Your Man” demo suggests there’s plenty more gold to be mined from the Dirty Mind era; or maybe they’ll attempt to force a critical re-evaluation of an underrated later album, like 3121 or The Gold Experience? Whatever they come up with, this boxset is unlikely to be matched for extravagance – a fitting tribute to Prince’s genius at his most effusive.

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The Strokes’ Julian Casablancas is curating a new ‘Grand Theft Auto’ radio station

Julian Casablancas is set to curate a radio station for the forthcoming Grand Theft Auto Online game, The Cayo Perico Heist.

The Strokes frontman will feature as part of an update due to drop on December 15, which will bring the game’s classic car-jacking mischief to a lavish island.

  • The NME Big Read: The Strokes: “Journalists kiss your ass to your face and talk shit when they’re writing the article”

The station – K.U.L.T. 99.1 Vespucci Beach, Low Power Beach Radio – will also feature appearances by Mac DeMarco and comedian David Cross, as well as music from Joy Division, The Velvet Underground, Danzig, and an exclusive premiere of a new Voidz song ‘Alien Crime Lord’.

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The update will also feature another new station from the UK producer Joy Orbison dubbed Still Slipping Los Santos, which promises a mix of house, techno, drill, and drum-and-bass and a new feature to the game called The Music Locker, an underground club that features DJ sets from Moodymann, Keinemusik, and Palms Trax.

The heist itself takes place on a private island, and tasks players with infiltrating what Rockstar calls “one of the most secure private islands in the entire world”. It features heavily armed security guards, and players will have the option to either “neutralise” these forces or evade them with stealth.

A host of artists have featured on radio stations on various versions of GTA in the past including one featuring Frank Ocean, Skepta and Headie One.

Meanwhile, The Strokes recently shared their new video for ‘The Adults Are Talking’, the opening track on their latest album, ‘The New Abnormal’.

Directed by Oscar-nominated filmmaker Roman Coppola, who also helmed visuals for Strokes classics ‘Someday’ and ‘Last Nite’, the video features the New York band donning The Strokes-brand baseball uniforms before facing a robotic pitcher, followed by others taking on robots in tennis and boxing.

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Casablancas also recently said he became “sick” of playing old songs live, saying “the music doesn’t move you” when playing the same songs repeatedly.

He added: “When you’re growing up and imagining playing music, it is for the excitement, but the one aspect of doing it for a living that is a sadness you don’t anticipate is that you play songs so much, you become sick of them.

“We hadn’t played for a while,” Casablancas says about returning to live performing earlier this year, “so it was still fun, but when you start playing 30 or 40 shows, the music doesn’t move you. You feel phoney. To some extent, that’s why I play with Voidz. I couldn’t care less about playing ‘Last Nite.’”

He continued: “Really, it’s similar to listening to a song. I get sick of songs quickly. Even Beethoven’s ‘Moonlight Sonata.’ You listen to that enough, you will get sick of it.”

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Juicy J wants to take on Pharrell Williams in a ‘VERZUZ’ battle

Juicy J has said that he wants to take on Pharrell Williams in a VERZUZ battle.

  • Read More: Timbaland and Swizz Beatz on VERZUZ battle series: “We want to celebrate the architects of good music”

Speaking in an interview with Houston radio station 97.9 The Box, the producer was asked about the series, which pits producers, songwriters and artists against each other in a rap battle style format on Instagram Live and Apple Music.

“See, I got such a long [back catalogue], I could easily kill somebody in a VERZUZ battle,” Juicy J said.

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“I could pull up that old Three 6 [Mafia] and pull up my new catalogue and smash you with my middle catalogue. I mean, there’s three decades of music. I think you can only play 20 records. I got so many hits.”

Asked who he thinks would make a good match-up, Juicy J said: “You know what, I’ma tell you something. A match-up: me and Pharrell. He a artist, I’m a artist; he a producer and I’m a producer. He can pull up shit he produced, and I can pull up some shit I produced.”

Earlier this month, the virtual series’ co-founder Swizz Beatz revealed that a battle between A Tribe Called Quest and OutKast is in the works.

Kicking off in March after Timbaland and Swizz Beatz issued challenges to one another, artists that have taken part so far have included T-Pain, Alicia Keys, John Legend, Brandy, Monica, Rick Ross, DMX, Snoop Dogg and many more.

The second series of ‘VERZUZ’ kicked off earlier this month, with Gucci Mane facing off with Jeezy.

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Meanwhile, Juicy J released his fifth studio album ‘The Hustle Continues’ today (November 27). In a three-star review, NME’s Will Lavin called it “a solid addition to Juicy’s already cemented legacy as one of the most influential artists of pop culture’s modern era.”

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Lambchop Trip

On first acquaintance it would be easy to imagine that Trip was Kurt Wagner’s lockdown project. The glitchy beats, pulsing electronics and digitally processed vocals heard on 2016’s FLOTUS and last year’s This (Is What I Wanted To Tell You) have largely been muted. Yet neither does Trip really return to the Glen Campbell-meets-Curtis Mayfield country-soul of early Lambchop triumphs such as Nixon, Uncut’s album of the year exactly 20 years ago.

All of the songs are covers and we get just six tracks. The feel is loose and amiable, with an immediacy that has not always been Lambchop’s forte. Just the sort of thing you might record at home in Nashville to keep up the spirits while a global pandemic makes the world outside seem an inhospitable and unwelcoming place.

Yet although Trip was conceived by Wagner as an alternative to taking Lambchop on the road, it transpires that the album predates coronavirus. Contemplating a tour in the fall of last year and concluding that it was economically unviable, Wagner instead invited the band to Nashville to make a record that would provide them with an income to compensate.

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They arrived in early December 2019 and each band member brought with them one song to cover. Over six days they set about recording a track per day with everyone taking it in turns to direct the band, although Wagner’s rich baritone remains the lead voice throughout.

Lambchop have often recorded covers before, of course. Yet Wagner’s own elliptical, singular songwriting has always been at the core of Lambchop’s creative aesthetic, so Trip stands apart from anything they’ve recorded before. The methods adopted also suggest an attempt at a more democratic impulse, and the band here is a typically fluid incarnation.

Long-serving allies Tony Crow on piano and bassist Matt Swanson are augmented by more recent arrivals Matthew McCaughan (Bon Iver/Hiss Golden Messenger) and touring drummer Andy Stack (Wye Oak) plus homecoming pedal-steel maestro Paul Niehaus, who last played on 2006’s Damaged before defecting to Calexico and whose welcome return provides some of the finest moments.

The album opens with Wilco’s “Reservations”, chosen by McCaughan, which of all the covers most faithfully echoes the original. The simple piano splashes and Wagner’s aching vocal closely follow the take that closed Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, although the song here is effectively done and dusted in three-and-a-half minutes, after which the track builds into a blizzard of swirling electronic ambience that lasts for another 10 minutes of eerie beauty.

George Jones’s “Where Grass Won’t Grow” was chosen by Niehaus as a song with “the right amount of pity, hard luck and redemption for a proper Lambchop cover”. Wagner sings it like Scott Walker crooning “No Regrets”, while the combination of Niehaus’s sublime pedal steel, Crow’s lambent piano and the laid-back groove evoke the spirit of David Crosby’s If I Could Only Remember My Name.

Mark Swanson brought in “Shirley”, a genuine obscurity rescued from a 1975 single that was the only release in the brief lifetime of Cleveland psych-garage pioneers Mirrors. With a riff that sounds not unlike Cat Stevens’ “Matthew And Son”, it’s as upbeat as Lambchop get, albeit with a deep and sombre vocal from Wagner, before it fades into a dreamy, Calexico-style coda, courtesy of Niehaus’s swooning pedal-steel licks.

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Niehaus shines again on Stack’s choice of Stevie Wonder’s “Golden Lady”, the tender melancholy of which is perhaps the closest Trip gets to the sound of early country-soul Lambchop. Crow suggested Holland-Dozier-Holland’s “Love Is Here (And Now You’re Gone)”, although his inspiration was not the Supremes hit but the version by the 12-year-old Michael Jackson, recast here complete with brassy clavinet arpeggios while Kurt’s deadpan vocal fearlessly deconstructs both the King of Pop and Diana Ross.

Only on the sixth and final day of recording did Wagner allow himself a song of his own choosing, pulling out of his bag the previously unrecorded “Weather Song”, written by Yo La Tengo bassist James McNew, an old friend whose “It’s Not Alright” was included on What Another Man Spills. Over a chiming baroque arrangement, its elegiac melody inspires Wagner’s most heartfelt vocal on the album.

There’s no brave new frontier here – and perhaps in these strange times many of us don’t really want to be challenged. Rather, these simple pleasures, full of reassurance and a satisfying indulgence, will keep us warm while we adjust to the ‘new normal’ – whatever that may eventually turn out to be.

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Big Sean scores third consecutive Billboard Number One album with ‘Detroit 2’

Big Sean has scored his third consecutive Billboard Number One album with the recently released ‘Detroit 2’.

  • Read more: Big Sean – ‘Detroit 2’ review: unreserved passion from a generational rap talent with an upbeat message

Released last week (September 4), the sequel to Sean’s acclaimed 2012 mixtape features guest appearances from Anderson .Paak, Post Malone, Nipsey Hussle, Travis Scott, Stevie Wonder and more.

The rapper’s sixth studio album ended Taylor Swift’s six-week run at the top of the Billboard 200 with her eighth album ‘Folklore’, selling the equivalent of 103,000 units.

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Celebrating the achievement on Instagram, Sean wrote: “Thank you! I sacrificed my privacy, I put so many emotions and lessons I learned the hard way into this music and gave a honest glimpse into my heart! it wasn’t easy, nights I thought of Offing myslef cause Life was too heavy, but the lock in was worth it! Had to remember if I’m still here and so many aren’t, it’s for reason.”

He added: “My goal was to inspire YOU to turn yourself up in all ways, Mind, Body, n Soul. Life isn’t promised as we can see, so HAVE FUN and thank you so much for the #1 album for a 3rd time in a row! Let’s KEEP GOING, Why Would I stop?!”

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Thank you! I sacrificed my privacy, I put so many emotions and lessons I learned the hard way into this music and gave a honest glimpse into my heart! it wasn’t easy, nights I thought of Offing myslef cause Life was too heavy, but the lock in was worth it! Had to remember if I’m still here and so many aren’t, it’s for reason. My goal was to inspire YOU to turn yourself up in all ways, Mind, Body, n Soul. Life isn’t promised as we can see, so HAVE FUN and thank you so much for the #1 album for a 3rd time in a row! Let’s KEEP GOING, Why Would I stop?! #Detroit2 ??✊???????

A post shared by BIGSEAN (@bigsean) on

‘Detroit 2’ is Sean’s fifth consecutive Number One debut on the Rap chart, his fourth consecutive Number One debut on the R&B/hip-hop chart, and third consecutive Number One debut on the Billboard 200 album chart.

In the weeks leading up to the release of album, Sean teased several tracks, including ‘Deep Reverence’ featuring Nipsey Hussle, ‘Don Life’ featuring Lil Wayne, and ‘Lithuania’ with Travis Scott.

Eminem also appears on the album on the 10-minute posse cut ‘Friday Night Cypher’. Delivering a dizzying verse, Slim Shady joined Sean, Tee Grizzly, Boldy James, Drego, Sada Baby, Kash Doll, Cash Kidd, Payroll, 42 Dugg and Royce Da 5’9″.

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In a three-star review of ‘Detroit 2’, NME‘s Will Lavin said: “Although it can be overblown, Sean’s passion is unreserved here, the record peppered with Instagram-worthy captions that urge listeners to take inspiration from their surroundings while keeping friends and family close. This is why Sean’s name continues to stay on the lips of rap connoisseurs almost a decade after his debut.”

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Dave East accuses Delta airlines of “racist harassment”

New York rapper Dave East has accused Delta airlines of “racist harassment.”

  • Read more: Harlem’s Dave East on what’s missing from modern New York rap: “Nobody’s really painting pictures about their own life”

The rapper shared a new video on Instagram, showing an in-flight confrontation he was involved in.

“Fucc Delta! Racist Ain’t Even The Word!” East wrote in the caption of the piece. This Jamaican Man Defending me and He dont even know me!!!! He watched the racist harassment!!!!

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“Delta Airlines Y’all Need To Stop Hiring these racist, stupid, ignorant TRUMP supporters that get nervous when they see a PERSON OF COLOR in first class!!! Bitch just ask me what I want to drink and keep it pushing!!!! Shit got me Ho.”

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Fucc Delta! Racist Ain’t Even The Word! This Jamaican Man Defending me and He dont even know me!!!! He watched the racist harassment!!!! Delta Airlines Y’all Need To Stop Hiring these racist, stupid, ignorant TRUMP supporters that get nervous when they see a PERSON OF COLOR in first class!!! Bitch just ask me what I want to drink and keep it pushing!!!! Shit got me Hot

A post shared by SHOOTER ? (@daveeast) on

Last month, Dave East shared ‘Karma 3’, the third edition of his ongoing mixtape series. In a four-star review of the new mixtape, NME‘s Will Lavin wrote: “A charged effort with dynamic results, ‘Karma 3’ may not be as flawless a spectacle as ‘Survival’, but it’s not all that far off. And it’s definitely the best entry in the ‘Karma’ series.

“East remains consistent, unapologetically flying the flag for New York hip-hop. His sharpened pen game flourishes over beds of captivating soul samples, airy synths and bass kicks so hard they’ll bottom out any cheap speaker.”

Earlier this year, East spoke to NME about his mentor Nas, fatherhood and what’s missing from modern New York rap.

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“I’m a fan of what was going on in New York and I feel that shit is missing right now,” he said. “There’s nobody that’s really painting pictures about their own life. All the people I grew up on, that’s the type of music they made. Nas, Jay[-Z], Cam[‘ron], they all brought you into their world.”

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The Rolling Stones: “We started to feel the pressure”

The new multi-format and deluxe reissues of The Rolling Stones’ 1973 album Goats Head Soup are out on Friday (September 4), and the band talk extensively about the album’s fraught but thrilling gestation in the current issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to order online by clicking here.

“We had a lot of problems by the time we made Goats Head Soup, extraneous problems in all kinds of directions,” explains Mick Jagger. “Tours – were they going to go or were they not? Would we get a visa to go to the US, or not? We couldn’t get visas at that point because of all the drug busts.”

Abandoning England in April 1971 for the South of France – “We were broke and we owed loads of money to the Inland Revenue,” says Jagger – by 1973, the Stones held ‘persona non grata’ status in several European countries. For a band who had been positioned at the start of their career as the anti-Beatles, being bad had become a self-fulfilling prophecy. Strung out in Jamaica – one of the few countries left that would take them – the Stones cooked up the grimmest funk.

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“We started to feel the pressure of being in exile on this album,” says Keith Richards. “When we made Exile On Main Street in France, we’d just left home and had stuff to do. We just carried on. But Goats Head Soup was the first album where we had to learn to work differently, to work apart and put songs together while actually being in exile.”

Not for the first time, The Rolling Stones demonstrated their ability to play resourcefully the cards they were dealt. This is where the Stones’ sound of the late 1970s and ’80s was born – an exotic, soulful fusion of rock and funk – but for all the gouched-out wah-wah pedals and clavinets, Goats Head Soup is still unambiguously the work of the musicians who made “Jumping Jack Flash”.

“Exile… was overwhelming in a way,” says Richards. “Because it was a double album, it was still pretty relevant when we were doing this one.”

“We spent so much time on Exile…,” adds Jagger. “This is different. A different studio, different attitude to playing. It’s done in a shorter time. All these things affect it. Maybe it was simpler, in some ways…”

You can read much more from The Rolling Stones in the October 2020 issue of Uncut, out now!

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1200 Slim Impresses Hip-Hop Fans With Latest Joint ‘Tik Tok’

So often in music, unique life experiences have led to powerful artistic expression. Artists like 1200 Slim are here to offer musical depictions of their lavish lifestyle and fun personality, an attitude that stems from the many ups and downs they went through in their existence. Choosing to take life by its ‘carpe diem’ side is what 1200 Slim has been trying to express on “Tik Tok” and we must say, his flow is flawless. 

He was born and raised in Louisiana, but is also extremely familiar with Atlanta where he spent a lot of time and calls the city his second home. 1200 Slim is about to drop a new album, Revelations, with “Tik Tok” being the first track released from the full collection scheduled drop in the coming weeks.  

sta rap has soul and personality, so make sure to listen to it below: 

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Cursive recruit mailman from ‘Cheers’ for video sharing support for USPS

Cursive frontman Tim Kasher has commissioned the mailman from Cheers to share a new message supporting the US Postal Service.

The new video sees John Ratzenberger, who played Cliff Clavin on the iconic sitcom, to take on the character once again in support of the USPS.

“An important message from none other than Cliff Clavin himself, asking us all to help keep USPS in business!! (thank you for your service, Mr. Ratzenberger),” Kasher tweeted.

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“Why not translate the dollar amount you’re gonna pay for Aunt Tilly’s new hat and just buy her that amount of stamps — Easy to carry, easy to mail, easy to ship — and it’s worth something,” Ratzenberger says in the video.

“It’ll be worth something for a long time. And how many times is Aunt Tilly gonna be wearing that hat? Once, twice? But, how many times will be she using those stamps? That’s right. Always thinking. So help your local post office; go down there and buy something.”

Kasher then added to his followers: “Spent a lot on that Cameo, gotta get my money’s worth USPS haaaaa.”

Kasher is the latest figure in the entertainment world to openly share their support for the US Postal Service after President Donald Trump said he was unwilling to make a deal with Democrats on a coronavirus stimulus bill including USPS funding because it would prevent universal mail-in voting during the election, harming his re-election bid.

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Yesterday (August 17), David Lynch interrupted one of his iconic weather reports to share his support for the system, while Taylor Swift openly criticised Trump’s move, tweeting: “Trump’s calculated dismantling of USPS proves one thing clearly: He is WELL AWARE that we do not want him as our president. He’s chosen to blatantly cheat and put millions of Americans’ lives at risk in an effort to hold on to power.”

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Morrissey thanks fans for support following mother’s death: “I send you what remains of my love”

Morrissey has thanked fans for their support after his mother died last week.

Elizabeth Anne Dwyer, who is thought to have been in her eighties, passed away after the singer previously pleaded with fans to pray for his mother, warning that “there is no tomorrow” without her.

In a new post on MorrisseyCentral, the singer shared photos of the flowers left outside his mother’s home, and shared a lengthy message to thank fans for their support.

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“The flowers of solace, comfort and consolation that have arrived at Beechmount – my mother’s home for over 30 years, and now, her premature place of rest, are all so Hindu sundar; so beautiful; so expensive; so lavish; so glamorous; so much more than I ever expected that anyone anywhere would bestow on my mother,” he wrote.

Morrissey
Morrissey CREDIT: Getty Images

“For my own life I don’t care anything, but how my worldwide friends have regarded my mother with such great respect and faithful love is a gift to me that no success, triumphs or riches could match.

“I send you what remains of my love, and I hope that we all survive so that one day, one way, the halls of music and free expression will never again hold the power to exercise their malicious deception that keeps us apart.”

The singer had previously posted on the site to inform fans of his mother’s ill health last week.

Sharing a photo of them together when he was in The Smiths, Morrissey wrote: “With this broken voice I beseech you, my friends, to offer prayers of hope and prayers of intercession for the recovery of Elizabeth Anne Dwyer, who is my mother, who is in trouble, and who is the sole reason for all the good and motivational things in my life.

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“She is me, and without her vahaan koee kal hal … there is no tomorrow. I ask no more of you… for there could be no more to ask.”

Morrissey was born to Dwyer and his father Peter Morrissey in Davyhulme, Lancashire, and grew up in nearby Manchester.

Dwyer was also a constant presence at his gigs – most recently attending a show at the London Palladium in 2018.

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Billie Eilish has been announced to play at the 2020 Democratic Convention

Billie Eilish is set to perform at the forthcoming 2020 Democratic Convention in the US.

  • Read More: Every single Billie Eilish song ranked in order of greatness

The singer was announced alongside The Chicks, John Legend, Leon Bridges, Jennifer Hudson and Common to appear at the live stream event from August 17-20.

“These artists are committed to engaging with, registering and mobilizing voters to get us over the finish line in November,” said Stephanie Cutter, 2020 Democratic National Convention Program Executive.

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At the convention, former Vice President Joe Biden is expected to accept the Democratic Party’s nomination for president.

Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris
Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris (Picture: Scott Olson/Getty)

He recently selected Senator Kamala Harris as his vice-presidential running mate.

She is the first Black woman and South Asian American vice-presidential candidate for a major party.

Taylor Swift, Mindy Kaling and Black Panther star Chadwick Boseman all celebrated Harris’ nomination earlier this week.

Meanwhile, Cardi B also recently said to Biden that if he wants people to vote for him “we don’t want no false promises”.

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The official live stream for the 2020 Democratic National Convention will be hosted on DemConvention.com.

Eilish meanwhile, recently expressed her admiration for Childish Gambino, describing him as “one of my all-time favourite creators”.

This comes after the singer cited Avril Lavigne as an essential artist from her younger years, hailing ‘Losing Grip’ as her “favourite Avril song ever, a very big song from my childhood”.

Meanwhile, the recently-released ‘My Future’ serves as Eilish’s first new music since her record-breaking Bond theme ‘No Time To Die’, which followed up on last year’s ‘Everything I Wanted’.

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Listen to Russ honour his mother on new song ‘Live From The Villa’

Russ has shared a new song that honours his mother and offers advice to upcoming artists – listen to ‘Live From The Villa’ below.

  • Read more: Russ – ‘Shake The Snow Globe’ review: Atlanta rapper finds success on his own idiosyncratic terms

The Atlanta rapper’s latest track follows the release of his third studio album ‘Shake The Snow Globe’, which features the platinum-selling hit single ‘Best On Earth’.

Produced by Illmind, ‘Live From The Villa’ hears Russ celebrate his mother and list the lessons he has learned from her over the years.

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And could you focus if your parents goin’ through it?/ And you tryna make a hit to save ’em in the other room/ It’s pressure that’s gon’ either make you pop or make you pop,” he raps.

My mama cried a lot, I made it stop, we on a yacht/ She always gives me game, gives me gems I don’t question/ Like give without remembering, receive without forgetting/ Disarm ’em with your charm, use your kindness as a weapon/ Everyone you meet, be a blessing, not a lesson.

Watch the video for ‘Live From The Villa’ below:

Elsewhere on the track, Russ offers some words of wisdom of his own.

I see a lot of skeptics, lot of doubters, but I’m smart/ I know that y’all are really just dreamers with broken hearts,” he spits. “Feelin’ inadequate, that’s why you doin’ so much talkin’/ ‘Cause the path that I been blazin’, you’re incapable of walkin’/ Y’all be goin’ nowhere fast, here’s some advice you should heed/ Directions way more important than speed.

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In a four-star review, NME’s Will Lavin said of Russ’ most recent album: “On his latest project, ‘Shake the Snow Globe’, he earns his seat at the big boy table, comfortably sitting alongside the Drakes, J. Coles and Kendrick Lamars of the world. That’s largely thanks to a new melody driven focus and his ever-present uncompromising lyrical content.

“Consistent from start to finish, it’s a more complete body of work than 2018’s ‘Zoo’. People often hate those who march to their own beat, and Russ knows this. But that doesn’t stop him asking for his accolades while he’s still living (“I want roses when I’m living, not just roses when I die”). And, boy, has he earned them with this album.”

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Drake Puts Up $100K Donation For Bail Relief Fund


In the midst of protests and a pandemic, Drake reveals that he’s donated $100K to National Bail Out.

The ongoing protests across America have opened more eyes to the injustices going on across the country. Though the protests, marches, and demonstrations have been led by community leaders who continue to witness the impact of police brutality, there are some celebrities who’ve faced criticism for remaining quiet. Drake is among them. Typically seen as an apolitical figure, he’s stated that he stands in solidarity with everyone protesting in America, some of which have been placed behind bars for standing up against injustice.

Drake’s spent the past few months flaunting his lavish mansion in Toronto, Canada but he also revealed that he’s putting up six-figured towards bail relief fund. Mustafa The Poet challenged both Drake and The Weeknd to match his $400 donation to National Bail Out. Drizzy exceeded what he was asked to match with a $100K donation. Sharing a screenshot of the receipt to his story, he simply tagged Mustafa with a checkbox and rose emojis.

National Bail Out is a collective that works towards helping bail out incarcerated Black mothers and caregivers during the COVID-19 pandemic to get them home for Mother’s Day. 

Though Drake did show his solidarity by sharing a poem from Assata Shakur on IG, his recent donation comes after Don Lemon named him among several prominent celebrities who were quiet in the midst of the protests. 

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Joyner Lucas Buys His Dad A Benz & A Rolex


Joyner Lucas made his dad’s birthday one to remember with a pair of lavish gifts.

Though his pre-fame come-up might have been difficult at times, Joyner Lucas can officially say he’s made it in the rap game. Not only has he finally dropped off his anticipated debut album ADHD at long last, he’s also earned the respect of veterans like Eminem, Royce Da 5’9″, Chris Brown, Will Smith, and more. Suffice it to say, Joyner is doing pretty well for himself, to the point where he can pay it forward for his loved ones.

Joyner Lucas Buys His Dad A Benz & A Rolex

 Paras Griffin/Getty Images

And that’s exactly what he did on his father’s birthday. Taking to Instagram to showcase some of the kingly gifts, Joyner revealed that he recently copped his dad a Mercedes Benz and a diamond-encrusted Rolex — not only that, but he also shared a throwback picture of himself and his dad in simpler times, with Joyner Sr. holding it down with bottle in hand. 

At this point, it’s become a rite of passage for rappers to bless their parents with lavish gifts, gestures that often lead to some genuinely wholesome moments. We can only hope Joyner and his dad enjoyed a drink together like old time’s sake, but only after taking the new car for a lengthy spin. Congratulations to the Lucas boys.  

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Rick Ross Displays Amusing Form During Pool Dive


Rick Ross shares action shots of himself diving into his pool, asking fans to rate his form.

It’s hot in Miami and, on Memorial Day Weekend, Rick Ross decided to cool down with a dip in the pool.

For the last several weeks, the rap legend has been posting photos of his compound, which includes one of the largest yards we’ve ever seen. Rick Ross must be sitting on multiple acres of land because, from the looks of his mansion, he can go for a five-mile run in his own backyard and see tons of different sights. 

His palace includes a refreshing looking pool, which Rozay utilized this weekend. Taking a plunge off the diving board, the rapper managed to get some action shots of himself in the air, also showing the minimal splash he caused.

Rick Ross Displays Amusing Form During Pool Dive
Taylor Hill/Getty Images

“Rate my dive. Leave a comment,” asked the Boss as his caption.

With no Olympic Games taking place this summer, Rick Ross might be entering his name for the diving trials of next year’s Tokyo Games. Do you think he can hang with elegant divers like David Boudia, Tom Daley, and others?

Rick Ross has been a whole mood as of late, dropping shots of his lavish lifestyle and showing us all how quarantine living has been going for him. This is just the latest display.

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"Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta" Star Arkansas Mo Arrested For Bank Fraud

Arkansas Mo, star of "Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta," has been charged with committing bank fraud after misusing a COVID-19 relief loan to buy jewelry and pay child support.

"Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta" star Maurice Fayne, who goes by the name Arkansas Mo, is in some hot water with the law after allegedly using a COVID-19 relief loan to buy millions of dollars worth of jewelry. Last month, Mo had requested a loan of $3,725,500 from a Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), which helps to cover up to eight weeks of payroll costs, interest on mortgages, rent, and utilities for small businesses amid the coronavirus pandemic. Mo sought out this loan to protect his Flame Trucking business, claiming that the money would be used to "retain workers and maintain payroll or make mortgage interest payments, lease payments, and utility payments, as specified under the Paycheck Protection Program Rule." He was ultimately granted $2,045,800 from the United Community Bank, a good portion of which he allegedly used for personal expenses.

&quot;Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta&quot; Star Arkansas Mo Arrested For Bank FraudParas Griffin/Getty Images

According to the U.S. Department of Justice, Mo has been accused of spending over $1.5 million of the loan to buy $85,000 worth of jewelry, including a Rolex Presidential watch, a diamond bracelet, and a 5.73 carat diamond ring. He also allegedly used $40,000 of the loan to pay child support.

Mo denied all of these accusations, but when the feds searched his house, he didn't look so good. They found the aforementioned jewelry, and seized $80,000 cash as well as three bank accounts that Mo had allegedly used to transfer $503,000 of the PPP funds into. On Wednesday (May 13th), he was arrested on federal bank fraud charges. It is not yet known when he will return to court for his next appearance. 

"The defendant allegedly stole money meant to assist hard-hit employees and businesses during these difficult times, and instead greedily used the money to bankroll his lavish purchases of jewelry and other personal items," said Assistant Attorney General of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, Brian A. Benczkowski. "The department will remain steadfast in our efforts to root out and prosecute frauds against the Paycheck Protection Program."

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Karlie Redd’s Ex Mo Fayne Arrested On $2 Million Bank Fraud Charges


Karlie Redd’s ex-fiancée Mo Fayne was reportedly arrested after he took out a COVID-19 small business loan and allegedly spent it on himself.

The government doesn’t play about its money. The pandemic has caused tens of millions of people to lose their jobs and income, so governments worldwide have implemented policies to help individuals, especially small business owners, during this difficult time. Love & Hip Hop Atlanta star Mo Fayne, who gained popularity while dating Karlie Redd, has reportedly been arrested on charges of federal bank fraud after he allegedly used a $2 million loan to purchase lavish gifts for himself.

Karlie Redd's Ex Mo Fayne Arrested On $2 Million Bank Fraud Charges
Paras Griffin / Contributor / Getty Images

According to a report made by TMZ, Mo Fayne took out a small business Paycheck Protection loan that was put in place as funds for COVID-19 relief. Fayne was able to obtain $2 million for his company Flame Trucking, but authorities reportedly state that instead of using the chunk of change to keep his business afloat, he made a number of expensive purchases.

The reality television star reportedly paid off a few debts, paid $40K toward his child support, and bought himself $85K worth of jewelry including “a Rolex Presidential watch, a diamond bracelet, and a 5.73-carat diamond ring.” Things didn’t end there; when federal authorities sat down with Fayne and questioned him about the cash, he admitted to “kinda, sorta, not really” spending a portion of the money on buying himself a 2019 Rolls-Royce.

When Fayne applied for the loan last month, he said that his company had 107 employees and that their monthly payroll was approximately $1.5 million. When he was arrested, officers “found a bag with about $70,000 in cash and another $9,400 stuffed in his pockets.”

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The Best Young Thug & Chris Brown Lyrics On "Slime & B"


On their collaborative album “Slime & B,” Young Thug and Chris Brown have attempted to redefine twenty-first-century love as we know it.

Hip-hop is for lovers, or so the story goes. At least, such is the case for our latest band of wistful heroes –Young “Slime” Thug and Chris “B” Brown– two gentlemen who have taken to roaming the world in a Bill & Ted-esque fashion on a seemingly endless quest to satiate their unquenchable hearts. As it happens, the recently released Slime & B marks a first-hand documentation of said journey. One that reveals deeper insight into what makes our heroes tick, their vices and desires alike. Sometimes, their desires are their vices. 

Take Thugger for instance, a man of material means. For him, he wears his fortune like a peacock wears its feathers. One glimpse of the coupe and the deal has already been half-sealed, as he tells it. Next thing you know, your girlfriend has become a master of disguise, a veritable adulterous Dana Carvey.

Look at her stare at the coupe when I’m droppin’ the top for the sky
I hit your lil’ bitty bitch, got her running around disguised
I got a coupe, cost a million, I bungie that bitch when I ride

– Go Crazy

While Thugger tends to use his net worth as a means of whittling down his prospects, his compatriot Breezy understands the inherent dangers posed by living a lavish lifestyle. Especially when romantic prospects can’t be fully trusted to form the connection he professes to seek. Yet he doesn’t seem to mind, as his desire for x-rated debauchery has never once been dormant.

Hoes on my phone when they find out that I’m rich
Then they switch when they see I’m choosin’ on my bitch
Top down, got her doin’ donuts on the dick, yeah 

– Go Crazy

The Best Young Thug & Chris Brown Lyrics On &quot;Slime & B&quot;

C Flanigan/Getty Images

On that note, it’s clear that Thug places the utmost value on physical attraction, lining damn near every verse with heightened sexuality. Even when he runs the risk of revealing Too Much Information, his imagery is so undeniably evocative it borderlines on absurdist comedy. Sometimes, he comes off like Jim Carrey in the elevator scene in Liar Liar, dealing in a blunt and smutty directness that leaves nothing to the imagination. 

Nuttin’ three or four times
Automatic drapes gonna wake you, no blinds
You’re my mommy, yes I know, ma
Someone call the officer, lift the blouse on her

– Help Me Breathe

Yet even he has his limits — tempting though it may be to dete from them in the heat of the moment.

I had to pay her tuition, the way this lil’ baby was suckin’ my nuts
I gotta keep this shit pimpin’, man I’m never fallin’ in love with a slut

– I Got Time

In fact, though Thug seems to appreciate a night of bawdy hedonism, his “relationship goals” are far more straightforward. He simply wants somebody he can relax with, someone to fall back on after a whirlwind evening on the town with Breezy. For those moments, he remains unafraid to drop his front, demanding to be respected even at his most slovenly. 

Lovin’ skills, I need some lovin’ skills
Left my dirty drawers and you love me still
Eyes come lazy, but she is real 
Dressed to kill , we can bump bump til you’re tired

– Go Crazy

The Best Young Thug & Chris Brown Lyrics On &quot;Slime & B&quot;

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

Though both men seem to enjoy the thrill of enacting pornography on a nightly basis, to the point where Thug actually requested to have “pussy” on his rider at all times (“Trap Back”), it should be noted that Breezy possesses the foresight to understand the inherent dangers in seeing such a lifestyle run to its conclusion. Cautionary reflections ring all the more profound when paired with a melancholic guitar-driven beat. True, that doesn’t mean he intends on taking preventative measures, but as they say, knowing is half the battle.

Poppin’ bottles in the club
Fuckin’ models, doin’ drugs
And I can’t do this anymore
I feel like an animal

– Animal

And never forget, as pointed out by the likes of Pat Benetar and Jordin Sparks, that love can and will feel like a battlefield at times. Breezy may make the sunnier side of the journey seem like a rollicking good time, but he’s not about to sugarcoat those inevitable dark days. Remember how frivolously Young Thug seemed to boast about turning taken women into disguise donning cheaters? It’s no coincidence that Breezy’s most brutally honest moment of musings finds him invoking similarly disguise-centric language — might he not have been on the receiving end of a similar tactic? Live by the sword, and so on.

You took my sanity, I got no peace of mind
Overdrawn on my memory, bank can’t buy back my time
But you tryna cap though, talkin’ ’bout you layin’ low
When you switch on n***s like you change clothes

– Stolen

Like many stories in the midst of being told, we have yet to see a proper ending on the horizon. As of now, Slime & B paints a picture of two men eager to settle down and find romantic stability — though the constant temptations that frequently arise as a result of their chosen lifestyles make doing so more difficult than it needs to be. But given the joy, they seem to derive from engaging in uninhibited sexcapades, we’d be fools to shed tears for these would-be romantics. If the joyous sounds of their first debut album are any indication, they’ll figure it eventually. 

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Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time


We count down the top 30 best posse cuts.

If there’s one format that never fails to elicit excitement, it’s the posse cut. With roots deriving from hip-hop’s inherently competitive elements, a trial-by-fire tradition associated with regionalist pride among other factors, the posse cut often finds emcees in an unspoken quest to emerge with the standout verse — much to the benefit of the song as a cohesive whole.

Alliances are built and strengthened; the old adage of strength in numbers holds true in the booth. Unfortunately, the posse cut has come to feel like a dwindling art. Where it once seemed to be one of the game’s preferred structures, an all-but-guaranteed album highlight, newer artists have tended to steer away from the beloved tradition. That’s not to say they have disappeared entirely, but it’s become a far cry from the glory days in which hip-hop’s best lyricists would unite on sprawling, multiple-verse, sometimes even six-minute-long epics.

In honor of the posse cut, we have compiled a list of the thirty best hip-hop hs to offer. As to what technically qualifies a posse cut, it should be noted that crews have been by and large excluded from the mix — lest the list turn into a rundown of Wu-Tang Clan’s greatest hits. Should a crew be present on a track having opened the door for a fellow emcee or two, however, that’s another story. Should you call yourself a hip-hop-head, it’s likely you’ve heard a few of these already. Maybe even all of them.

Should that be the case, be sure to hit the comments with your thoughts on the ranking – including any snubs you might feel were overlooked. Obviously, placing thirty classics in numerical order is not exactly a cut-and-dry process, and many of the selections below are, to be perfectly honest, interchangeable from their allotted spots. How far can one timeless anthem really differ from another? Perhaps it’s best to not overthink this one, and simply bask in a celebration of some of the greatest collaborative hip-hop songs of all time.

– Mitch Findlay


30.  Dreamville, J.I.D, Mez, Buddy, Jace, Reese LAFLARE, Ski Mask the Slump God, Smokepurpp & Guapdad 4000 – Costa Rica

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

While healthy competition can drive a posse cut to heightened levels of excellence, so too can the simple purity of camaraderie. Especially when substances are involved. The Revenge Of The Dreamers 3 sessions were legendary in that regard, bringing emcees of all walks of life into the studio for a two-weeks-long creative haven, culminating in no shortage of new music and friendships forged along the way. In many says, the bombastic “Costa Rica” feels like the heart of the Dreamers sessions, a gathering of like-minded emcees feeding off one another’s energy during an extensive night of recording.

Hearing the stories of “Costa Rica’s” creation is akin to hearing a longtime journeyman reflect on a particularly epic night. Those electric feelings bleed into the song itself, with each emcee simply happy to be there — nobody is vying for top billing, with the brief verses all possessing an endearing sort of spontaneity. There’s something undoubtedly pure about hearing the entire room echo Ski Mask The Slump God’s raucous cries of “going on a date with an AK!” A relatively new addition to the list, but one that captured a distinct moment in time, one that will likely follow each participant for the rest of their lives. 

– Mitch


29. Trae Tha Truth, T.I., Dave East, Tee Grizzley, Royce Da 5’9″, Curren$y, Snoop Dogg, Fabolous, Rick Ross, Chamillionaire, G Eazy, Styles P, E-40, DRAM, Gary Clark, Jr. & Mark Morrison – I’m On 3.0

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

There are posse cuts, and then there are songs that boast more featured artists than most albums. It’s difficult to get more than 10 MCs to deliver dope verses that feel both fresh and different enough from one another, while ensuring that the track as a whole doesn’t drag on for so long that listeners start to check their watch. This balance is key, and that’s exactly what Trae Tha Truth and his assembly of artists successfully achieve on “I’m On 3.0.” Serving as the third installment of Trae’s “I’m On” series, this most recent incarnation takes what Trae and his previous collaborators did on both prior renditions and builds on it. While Mark Morrison’s vocals remained on the chorus, now accompanied by Gary Clark Jr. and D.R.A.M., Trae traded in the eight rappers from “2.0,” and recruited a whopping 12 replacements. Although a bold move, it ultimately paid off.

While some posse cuts require the song itself to somehow work around all the different contributing rappers’ individual styles in order to create a cohesive sound, in this case, the burden seems to lie on the artists themselves to ensure that their particular flow and lyrical flair fits the overall vibe of the track. Although there are certainly some undeniable standouts amongst this group, Chamillionaire’s verse has been widely regarded as the major highlight, the track serving as a platform on which the underappreciated MC was finally able to really show off his chops. In the case of this cut, the expression “third time’s the charm” certainly rings true.

– Lynn


28. Sway & King Tech, Eminem, RZA, Xzibit, KRS-One, Tech N9ne, Chino XL, Pharoahe Monch, Kool G Rap, Jayo Felony, DJ Revolution – 1999 Wake Up Show Freestyle

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

As the new millennium was dawning on a generation of hip-hop fans, Sway and King Tech were using their position to assemble an absolutely insane collective. Capturing the raw energy of a cipher and channeling it onto a golden-era instrumental, the “1999” edition of the “Wake Up Show” freestyle kicked off with Bobby Digital on a mission, representing for the Wu-Tang movement and bringing a legendary pedigree from the jump. On that note, there’s plenty of notable wordsmiths on deck; Eminem landed his first collaboration with Xzibit and Tech N9ne, Chino XL proved why he stands among the underground’s most respected lyricists, and KRS-One imbued the track with the presence of a true “master of ceremonies.” 

– Mitch


27. Chris Brown, Kanye West, T.I., Fabolous, Rick Ross & Andre 3000 – Deuces (Remix)

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

Chris Brown has had his fair share of ups and downs. 2010 was essentially a peak “down” time in Brown’s long career, as a year prior, he left Rihanna with bruises on her face following an argument with her that escalated to physical blows. Thus, by the time 2010 rolled around, Chris Brown was essentially working his way back into our good graces, one song at a time. 

It was around this same time that the singer ended up collaborating with Tyga for their joint mixtape, Fan of a Fan. “Deuces” served as a single off it, also featuring R&B singer Kevin McCall. It’s the sort of catchy, easy beat that you can still bop your head to right now, which is exactly the type of record we needed from Breezy back then– something we didn’t have to analyze too closely but would be easily enjoyed by masses. 

As the song grew legs on the internet, Chris Brown recruited a ton of star power for the massive remix– which just goes to show the span of his reach and his clout, even amid domestic violence allegations. It doesn’t hurt to have Kanye West, T.I., Drake, Andre 300, Fabolous and Rick Ross in your corner when you’re in the process of a career comeback. Each artist drops off their personalized dose of female relationship fodder and what spurs them to leave a particular relationship, for a total of eight verses on this epic remix. Andre 3000 blesses us with the final farewell, in philosophical manner: “And here I am, all heavy with the words where / Somebody that’s a nerd, likely fast forward / But, shit, they asked for it / It’s hard to throw up them deuces / ‘Cause when you know it’s juicy / You start to sound like / Confucius when makin’ up excuses / Chase the Cabooses until the track gone / I gotta find me a new locomotive, stop makin’ sad songs.”

– Rose


26. Lil Kim, Left Eye, Da Brat, Angie Martinez, Missy Elliott – Not Tonight (Ladies Night Remix) 

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

With so many classic posse cuts being testosterone-heavy affairs, you know the ladies had to come through and represent. “Not Tonight’s” official remix arrived in 1997 as part of the Nothing To Lose soundtrack, earning its “Ladies Night” moniker with appearances from Left Eye (RIP), Da Brat, Angie Martinez, and Missy Elliott. A pivotal moment for females in hip-hop, the accompanying clip was lined with legendary artists like Queen Latifah, Mary J. Blige, T-Boz, Xscape, and many more.

Oozing with a charismatic swagger, each rapper attacks the groove with their own distinctive flow: Angie with the newcomer’s wide-eyed energy, Brat with the aggression, Kim with the Junior M.A.F.I.A sauce, Left Eye with the playful sensuality, and Missy coming through as the exclamation point — “you ain’t gon’ use me to just be singin’ hooks.” 

– Mitch


25. DJ Khaled, Akon, T.I., Lil Wayne, Rick Ross, Birdman, Fat Joe – We Takin Over

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

“We Takin Over” had the ultimate formula for a certified hit. The track, led by posse-cut-conductor-extraordinaire, DJ Khaled, boasts verses from five major hip-hop heavyweightsLil Wayne, T.I., Rick Ross, Birdman, and Fat Joesome in their prime, others proving with ease that they’ve still got it. Their verses were also punctuated by Akon’s signature high-pitched vocals delivering a criminally catchy hook on the chorus. Combine all of these elements with some stellar production from Danja, and you’re guaranteed to come out with a banger.

While practically every MC on this world-domination anthem manages to hold their own, there’s one clear star. As was often the case on a Weezy-featured posse cut in those days, Wayne blows everyone else out of the water, sliding in at the very end to close out the show only to upstage his preceding partners. His unhinged, bloodthirsty delivery paired with Danja’s looming production has the track ending on a high, followed only by one final declaration of the title from Akon. Based on the sheer number of remixes alone that this cut birthed, it’s clear that “We Takin Over” left an impression not just on fans, but on other artists, as well. Though certainly a product and reflection of it’s time sonically, it still manages to hold up all these years later.

– Lynn


24. The Game, Jim Jones, Snoop Dogg, Nas, T.I., Fat Joe, Lil’ Wayne, N.O.R.E., Jadakiss, Styles P, Fabolous, Juelz Santana, Rick Ross, Twista, Kurupt, Daz Dillinger, WC, E-40, Bun B, Chamillionaire, Slim Thug, Young Dro, The Clipse, Ja Rule – One Blood Remix

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

Junior Reid’s 1989 single “One Blood” has been flipped on countless occasions but perhaps, the most popular use of the sample is in The Game’s single, “One Blood.” Reid’s original single represents unifying the human race, regardless of race, class, or religion, in the face of division. The Game carried the theme in the megamix that brought together rappers from every coast in an attempt to unify gang bangers. Twenty-five rappers were included on the track such as Jim Jones, NORE, Nas, T.I., Lil Wayne, Snoop Dogg, Jadakiss, Clipse, Styles P, and more, though some of the verse may have been reused from the regional remixes The Game also released. 

Running for nearly twelve minutes in length, the star power alone would be worth its placement on this list but its impact on the streets is forever as the game unified Crips and Bloods from the East and the West on one track. 

– Aron


23. Tech N9ne, Busta Rhymes, Yelawolf, Twista, Twisted Insane, D-Loc, U$O, JL B.Hood & Ceza – Worldwide Choppers

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

Fast rap isn’t for everyone. In fact, it has recently become synonymous with “corny,” a go-to move for rappers hoping to mask a lack of sauce with sheer technical prowess. Yet countless artists have proven that double-time delivery can be undisputably badass, including some of Tech N9ne’s handpicked “Worldwide Choppers.” Not only does this posse-cut feature nine contributing rappers from across the globe, it does so while operating under a strict conceit: all parties must gun for that god-forsaken Guinness World Record.

Arguably the quickest of the bunch, Tech sets the tone for fellow hyperspeed rappers Twista and Busta Rhymes to absolutely wreak havoc, with both parties sliding several interesting flow-schemes into their verses. Between Twista’s “stig-a-ma-tism” scheme and Bus-a-Bus’ “Get ’em, hit ’em and finish ’em” scheme, we’re looking at a masterclass in verbal dexterity. 

– Mitch


22. Jay-Z, Twista, Killer Mike, Big Boi – Poppin Tags

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

When hip-hop fans think of posse cuts, they think of all-time great rappers, multiple dope verses, and production that will keep your head nodding along throughout the entire song. Jay-Z’s “Poppin Tags” off of The Blueprint 2 is absolutely one of those posse cuts that ticks off every single box and then some. 

First off, let’s start with the soulful production by none other than Kanye West. By 2002, Kanye was an established producer and “Poppin Tags” was yet another highlight on his growing resume. As for the verses, those are what make this song truly stand out. Jay-Z begins the track with a fast yet steady flow that features bars about, as the title suggests, spending a lot of money. From there, Twista comes into the picture with blisteringly fast bars that create a nice contrast between him and Jay-Z’s skill sets.

The entire track is six minutes long and in the latter half, we get some southern influence with verses from Georgia natives, Killer Mike and Big Boi. Both of these MCs bring their signature flows and sounds to the track which helps spice things up a bit. Depending on where you live, one could argue Big Boi and Killer Mike actually outshine Twista and Jay-Z although that’s a debate we’re sure the commenters would love to engage in.

– Alex Cole


21. Kanye West, Big Sean, Pusha T & 2 Chainz – Mercy

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

Kanye West’s GOOD Fridays series recalls a simpler time in rap, when the market was less crowded and free download links were still the norm. Ye really shook things up with the series, drawing in more and more eyes every Friday when he came through with some sort of fire, GOOD Music cut, often featuring a crew of artists. “Mercy” was among them, and would go on to make the final tracklist of the underwhelming Cruel Summer compilation album. Nonetheless don’t let that take away from the strength of the collaboration which features a pre-controversial (well, pre-Trump) Kanye West, Sean Don, Pusha T and GOOD Music-affiliated 2 Chainz. 

The beat is one of the most iconic aspects of this record, with its dancehall sample and alternating keys kicking off the record. There’s really nothing else to say except that it was, and remains, a banger that will still get a party lit in a matter of seconds. 

– Rose


20. T.I, Jay-Z, Kanye West, Lil Wayne, M.I.A – Swagga Like Us 

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

Where posse cuts of the nineties seemed to thrive off the spirit of lyrical competition, those creeping closer to modern times appeared more concerned with sheer spectacle. Despite enlisting three heavy-hitting lyricists for the occasion, T.I’s “Swagga Like Us” was hardly concerned with administering death-by-a-thousand-bars. The musical equivalent to a Basquiat hanging in one’s foyer, the Grammy-Award winning Paper Trail single was so confident in its mere existence that all it needed to do was show up.

That’s not to say the four emcees didn’t come correct, with the Troubleman asserting himself as the defining verse, but it’s clear they approached this one with the energy of a pickup game. A championship pickup game, to be sure. Impossible to ignore on the basis of sheer talent, “Swagga Like Us” remains a defining cultural moment, the ultimate flex on wax. 

– Mitch


19. Noreaga, Big Pun, Nature, Cam’Ron, Jadakiss, Styles P – Banned From T.V.

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

What is it about Jadakiss that seems to gravitate toward the posse cut format? Once again, Mr. Raspy slides onto this list as a key contributor to Noreaga’s absolutely stacked “Banned From TV.” On that note, fellow Ruff Ryder Swizz Beatz made New York history the day he wrapped this particular beat up — little did he know he’d be providing the soundtrack for a gathering of the the titans, including an appearance from the late Big Pun, the quitely scene-stealing Nature, and a classic back and forth from Kiss and Pinero.

Though many have come to know NORE as a lovable and perpetually inebriated storyteller on Drink Champs, long before that he was an integral member of the New York hip-hop landscape; one who commanded enough respect to bring such a  ridiculous lineup to the table in the first place. And the results speak for itself, with “Banned From TV” encapsulating everything a classic posse cut is all about. Leave the best verse debates for the philosophers.

– Mitch


18. Dr. Dre, Kurupt, RBX, Lady Of Rage, Snoop Dogg – Stranded On Death Row

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

Dr. Dre has been at the center of many epic collaborations, and narrowing down one in particular was no easy feat. For the longest time, 2001’s extensive west coast anthem “Some L.A. N***az” had all but secured the position — that is until “Stranded On Death Row” started to spread back into the picture, a relic of one of hip-hop’s darkest and dopest eras. Featuring contributions from Kurupt, RBX, The Lady of Rage, and a young Snoop Dogg, the Dr. Dre-produced banger features hard-hitting verses from all involved.

Kurupt spazzes out the gate, his tongue-twisted style and references to Jean Claude Van Damme instant reminders of simpler times. Yet it may very well be the Lady of Rage who leaves the deepest impression, he sneering cadence and violent vows solidifying her as the most feared inmate on the doomed cellblock. “I plead guilty on all counts, let the ball bounce where it may, it’s just another clip into my AK,” she raps. “Buck ’em down with my underground tactics. Facts and stacks of clips on my mattress.”

– Mitch


17. Drake, Kanye West, Lil Wayne, Eminem – Forever

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

You can’t talk about modern-day rap posse cuts without mentioning “Forever,” the 2009 single from Drake, Kanye West, Lil Wayne, and Eminem. When it was originally released as part of the More Than A Game soundtrack, the song was tremendously impactful. You’ve got to believe that if these four rappers linked up another time one decade later, the critical reception would be even wilder. And that’s saying a lot, considering “Forever” has gone 6x platinum since its release.

Each artist featured on the track is given ample time to shine through on “Forever.” Drake starts things off before Kanye West slides over the second verse. Lil Wayne takes over for the third verse before things close out with a remarkable appearance from Eminem. Drake, Kanye, Weezy, and Em are all iconic in their own right and they will each sit high on rap’s totem pole when this is all said and done. Drake sang that he wanted this to last his entire life and, eleven years later, he’s arrived at that stage. We may never see another star-studded posse cut like this.

– Alex Zidel


16. Kanye West, Kid Cudi, Pusha T, John Legend, Lloyd Banks, Ryan – Christian Dior Denim Flow

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

“Christian Dior Denim Flow” counts another entry in the GOOD Fridays series helmed by Kanye West. It’s another example of the type of insane artist-gathered collaborations Ye was putting out at this time, alongside beats that were often “big” for lack of a better words– beats that were luxurious, over-the-top, lofty– perhaps recalling My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy in the sense that they were highly arranged and layered, but a bit less refined.

“Christian Dior Denim Flow,” similar to “Mercy” also contains production that at one point breaks down, leading the way for Lloyd Banks’ raspy verse. Kid Cudi delivered the melodic hook with assistance from John Legend, but he also closes out the song with a verse– that was another hallmark of these GOOD Fridays collaborations, they were often songs spanning over 5 to 6 minutes in length– especially long if you consider these days’ 1-2 minute records. Yet this just ensured that every single artist featured on these posse cuts would have their own time to shine, ultimately making each one so exciting. 

– Rose


15. Bone Crusher, Cam’Ron, Jadakiss, Busta Rhymes – Never Scared Takeover Remix

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

For those who came of age during the early millennium, Bone Crusher’s “Never Scared” likely holds a special place in your heart. Though the original lineup of Killer Mike and T.I. made for a strong baseline, Bone Crusher’s New York ambitions secured three of the East Coast’s most capable lyricists in the midst of their primes. With the hard-knocking and uniquely Southern instrumental from Avery Johnson and Jermaine Dupri intact, Cam, Jada, and Busta made themselves at home, seemingly moving to one-up each other with each new verse.

Narrowing down a clear standout might come down to personal preference, but there’s something about Jadakiss’ steely demeanor that makes his presence on the “Takeover Remix” uniquely formidable. “I ain’t neva scared, I got big hammers everywhere,” his flow methodical. “In places where you need yo passport at, I’m heavy there.” 

– Mitch


14. Fat Joe, Big Pun, Nas, Jadakiss, Raekwon – John Blaze

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

On the basis of reputation alone, “John Blaze” promises to be an onslaught of bars from a handful of dominant East Coast emcees. Many of whom would feel right at home in a top-ten lyricist conversation. As such, there’s an unspoken sense of healthy competition permeating the padded track — though Big Pun would swiftly go on to live up to his well-earned moniker of dream-shatterer.

While recognized by purists as elite, the effortless nature with which Pun would absolutely run laps around legendary emcees often goes unappreciated by the game at large. “The same n***a who known to blow out your brain mineral, I reign subliminal inside your visual,” he spits, his dexterity insane. “Try to supply your physical with my spiritual side of this lyrical / I’ll appear in your dreams, like Freddy do, no kidding you / Even if I stuttered, I would still sh-sh-shit on you.” Listen, there is no universe that would position me to speak ill of Nas, Jadakiss, Raekwon, and Fat Joe — but “John Blaze” really does feel like Big Pun’s showcase. 

– Mitch


13. Obie Trice, Lloyd Banks, Eminem, 50 Cent – We All Die One Day

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

Obie Trice was looking to make a big first impression with his debut project, Cheers, all the way back in 2003. When you’re backed by an artist like Eminem, there is always going to be pressure to deliver and that’s exactly what he did. Perhaps the biggest highlight on his debut effort is the posse cut “We All Die One Day” which features the likes of Eminem, 50 Cent, and Lloyd Banks.

This extremely gritty banger stands out thanks to some gritty production by Em – among other reasons – who also provides the longest and most technical verse of the song. The track starts with a smooth chorus from Lloyd Banks that eventually transitions to a visceral and violent verse from Obie Trice who is very open about shooting and killing those who get in his way. In the ensuing verse, Lloyd Banks flexes his money and accomplishments while letting people know that he still has an edge to him despite making it out of the hood. Following Em’s verse, 50 Cent helps wrap the song into a neatly tied bow as he provides some violent bars that run parallel to Obie Trice’s first verse.

As far as blood pumping posse cuts go, “We All Die One Day” is certainly up there.

– Alex Cole


12. B.G ft Big Tymers & The Hot Boys – Bling Bling

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

Say what you will about the mastermind behind it, but Birdman’s Cash Money dynasty has endured as one of hip-hop’s most legendary movements of all time. Featuring the talents of B.G, Juvenile, Turk, Lil Wayne, Mannie Fresh, and Baby himself, the New Orleans-based label helped forge a sound that continues to influence hip-hop as we know it today.

“Bling Bling,” originally released as the lead single on B.G.’s 1999 album Chopper City In The Ghetto, brought the entirety of Cash Money into the fold for a stacked celebration of lavish living. Driven by an iconic beat from Fresh, who also holds it down with a swaggy verse, “Bling Bling” encapsulates the collective’s sound at its most effective — playful, confident, and formidable if pressed. “N***s wear shades just to stand on side of me,” raps B.G., closing things out with a highlight verse. “Hoes say take that chain off boy ya blindin’ me.”

– Mitch


11. Ruff Ryders, Jadakiss, Snoop Dogg, Scarface, Yung Wun & Jadakiss – WW III

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

Regionalism is one of the most important tenets in hip-hop stylistic analysis. Throughout the years, different cities and states have developed distinctive sonic qualities, many of which are held dear by the artists who claim a given locale. On Ruff Ryder’s introductory banger “WW III,” location played an integral role. Bringing together the likes of Jadakiss, Snoop Dogg, Scarface, and Yung Wun, each rapper opened their verse by representing for the cause.

The conceit imbued “WW III” with a sense of gravitas, only enhanced by the bombastic — and instantly iconic– Swizz Beatz production. In one corner stands Snoop Dogg, representing the “west coast.” In another stands Yung Wun, triumphantly screaming “ATL Shawty!” Across is the imposing figure of Scarface, holding it down on behalf of the entire “muthafucking South.” And for the East Coast is none other than Jadakiss, who closes the anthem out with a nail in the coffin.

– Mitch


10. Danny Brown, Kendrick Lamar, Ab-Soul, Earl Sweatshirt – Really Doe

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

On paper, “Really Doe” stands among the most stacked gatherings of lyricists on this list. In reality, it was never meant to appear as such. When Danny Brown originally conceived the song, it was meant to be a duet between himself and Ab-Soul. Upon hearing the instrumental, Kendrick Lamar deted from the intended plan to contribute elsewhere on Atrocity Exhibition and made himself at home.

Last but not least came Earl Sweatshirt, whom Danny bestowed the coveted position of the final verse, an honor reserved for the most valuable player. Few can dispute that the former Odd Future poet absolutely bodied the track, lines like “I’m the type of ni**a it ain’t never been an honor to judge” deftly showcasing his clever mind at work. Throw in a creepy instrumental from Detroit legend Black Milk and you’re looking at the perfect posse cut for witching hour reflections. 

– Mitch


09. Puff Daddy, The Lox, Notorious B.I.G, & Lil Kim – All About The Benjamins Remix

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

With all this talk about a Verzuz battle between P. Diddy and Dr. Dre, many have been fondly reminiscing about the Bad Boy era. After all, such was the time when the Notorious B.I.G. was alive and well, bodying tracks at every opportunity. The classic remix to Diddy and The Lox’s “All About The Benjamins” is no exception, with Biggie and Lil Kim sliding through to represent for the Junior M.A.F.I.A. movement.

From the moment Diddy sets it off with a laid-back yet assertive opening verse, his flow seeped in the signature style of his label, “”All About The Benjamins” never lets up. Aside from boasting hard hitting salvos from a youthful Jadakiss and Sheek Louch, it’s the new additions that leave the deepest imprint. “German Ruger for yo’ ass, bitch, deep throat it,” raps Lil Kim. “Know you wanna feel the womb ’cause it’s platinum-coated / take your pick, got a firearm you shoulda toted.” You’d be hard-pressed to find a hip-hop head incapable of vibing to this timeless cut.

– Mitch


08. LL Cool J, Method Man, Redman, Canibus, DMX, & Master P – 4, 3, 2, 1 

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

Many hip-hop historians have come to remember “4,3,2,1” as the song on which LL Cool J and Canibus dissed each other in their respective verses. A darkly comedic turn of events to be sure, as the whole beef essentially kicked off after LL misinterpreted one of Canibus’ lines and decided to clap back accordingly. It’s hard to resist the scandalous allure of such a narrative (especially since it led to some great diss tracks from both parties), but we mustn’t forget one key factor.

This song assembled some of the best lyricists of the late nineties and engaged them in competitive sparring over Erick Sermon’s production. Given the pedigree of talent involved, it’s hard to deem a clear winner. Yet there’s something unmatchable about DMX’s menacing cautionary tale, which reveals the consequences of crossing his path at sundown. If you’re unfamiliar with the fact that LL Cool J was a murderous rhymer in his prime, look no further than “4,3,2,1.”

– Mitch


07. DMX, Jay-Z, Jadakiss, Styles P, Sheek Louch – Blackout

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

It doesn’t get more New York than DMX’s epic Flesh Of My Flesh, Blood Of My Blood gathering “Blackout.” Another instance of healthy yet borderline competitive sportsmanship, the Swizz Beatz produced classic finds DMX, Jadakiss, Styles P, Sheek Louch, and the Jigga Man sliding through to lay down verse after verse. In true posse-cut fashion, the chorus is forsaken in favor of straight bars and listeners are all the better for it.

Especially when it comes time for Jay-Z’s supremely confident verse. “The beeper done changed, you dead bitch, the Reaper done came,” he raps, his mafioso roots coming through strong. “I suggest ni***s stop speakin my name, cause trust me, y’all can still feel the heat in the rain.” A welcome collision of worlds between the Ruff Ryders and the R.O.C, “Blackout” is the perfect encapsulation of a structure we simply don’t see anymore. And yet, at the time of its release, music like this was still doing numbers. 

– Mitch


06. A$AP Rocky, Kendrick Lamar, Joey Bada$$, Yelawolf, Danny Brown, Action Bronson, Big K.R.I.T – “1Train”

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

At the time of its release in 2013, all six rappers present on “1Train” were stars in their own right. Speaking with Complex, Rocky explained that he wanted to create a posse cut evocative of early nineties hip-hop, employing an array of his contemporaries boasting a variety of distinctive styles. Tethering the disparate time periods is Hit-Boy, who laces a symphony at once rugged and distinguished. There are honed flows and outlandish quotables, be it Danny Brown’s “worst enemy’s penis” bar or the imaginative Action Bronson implementing a “Chilean Horse” into his imagery.

It’s almost impossible to discern the standout performer, as each rapper comes together like some deadly coalition, but Big K.R.I.T’s murderous bars certainly conclude matters on an emphatic note. Despite its relative youth, it’s fair to deem “1Train” one of the most impactful tracks of the past ten years.

– Mitch


05. Eminem, Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Xzibit, & Nate Dogg – Bitch Please 2 

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

The Up In Smoke Tour remains one of hip-hop’s defining tours, with Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Xzibit, Ice Cube, Nate Dogg, Eminem, and countless Aftermath affiliates embarking on a weed-fueled odyssey. In some ways, Marshall Mathers LP’s fifteenth track “Bitch Please II” encapsulates the spirit of Up In Smoke. Marking a milestone for Slim Shady, who secured his first collaboration with Snoop Dogg and Nate Dogg, the eerie sequel emerged as a highlight on its unexpected home album.

Between Dre’s braggadocio, Snoop’s laid-back swagger, Xzibit’s imposing aggression, and Em’s scathing wit, there’s somehow enough common ground to make for a cohesive vibe. With stellar verses from each performer — including one hell of a chorus from Nate Dogg– it’s Eminem’s climactic “fuck you” that resonates the deepest. Although, X to the Z does make a compelling case, especially when he whips into his “ashes to ashes” rhyme scheme.

– Mitch


04. Bone Thugs & The Notorious B.I.G. – Notorious Thugs

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

The East Coast met the smokey Midwest on Biggie Smalls’ second studio album Life After Death when the Brooklyn legend linked up with Bone Thugs-N-Harmony for “Notorious Thugs.” 

Gangsta rap was at its height while hip-hop suffered the loss of both Biggie and Tupac in a matter of months of each other. The hypnotizing piano keys, twangy guitar, and the choral harmonies of Bone Thugs turned into a haunting gospel of romanticized inner-city turmoil with violence and paranoia riddling each rapper’s verse. What might be most notable about the track, though, is that it became a further testament that Biggie had mastered the art of flow. Before even signing a deal, Biggie Smalls was highly revered for his technical prowess and viscous flow but “Notorious Thugs” took it to a new level. Without compromising his skillset, he leaned deeper into the double-time, melodic flow that Bone Thugs introduced to the game with a defining verse in his catalog.

– Aron


03. Three 6 Mafia ft UGK & Project Pat – Sippin’ On Some Syrup

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

To say Three 6 Mafia were ahead of their time is an understatement. To this day, many of their lyrical and sonic trends — from celebrations of hedonism to the dark southern banger — have become embedded within the very fabric of the contemporary soundscape. Nowhere is that more effectively encapsulated than on “Sippin On Some Syrup,” a posse cut extraordinaire that brought the Underground Kings and Project Pat into the fold for a rollicking good time.

The track, which arrived on the 2000 album When The Smoke Clears: Sixty 6, Sixty 1, featured a dangerously smooth instrumental produced by the two-headed monster Juicy J and DJ Paul. The perfect backdrop for an influx of excellent verses, with the late Pimp C, DJ Paul, Juicy J, and Bun B holding it down. With each mind married to the singular concept of giving into inebriation, it’s difficult to single out a standout verse — though it’s hard not to credit Pimp C for bringing the legendary term “simp” into the mainstream vernacular. 

– Mitch


02. International Player’s Anthem (I Choose You)

 Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

UGK’s biggest commercial record is also considered one of hip-hop’s finest collaborations, and a certified classic. Pimp C and Bun B teamed up with fellow hip-hop duo OutKast in 2007 for this ode to marriage, from the perspective of a player who may or may not have changed his ways. It’s equally important in UGK’s catalog, as the last single the duo put out before Pimp C’s passing.

The music video for the collaboration made the record even more exciting: it’s a full-out hip-hop wedding with Andre 3k playing the role of the lucky man, and other artists acting as invited guests to partake in the big day. 

It’s hard not to simply drop in Andre’s full verse here and call it a day. Apparently, Pimp C didn’t even like Andre’s verse when he first heard it (!!), taking issue with the fact that Andre had opted to remove the drums for his opening verse. Still, the song comes together in epic fashion. As soon as Andre’s verse ends, the drums pick up alongside Pimp C’s nasally verse. Willie Hutch’s “I Choose You” fills the record with soul and funk, thanks to the horn arrangement and vocal sample. It’s a record that marries soul with hip-hop with funk. In spite of this, it’s the type of record that doesn’t sound dated, the type of record someone could ostensibly drop today and we would consider it to be just as fire as it was over 10 years ago.

– Rose


01. Bone Thugs & 2Pac – Thug Luv

Top 30 Best Posse Cuts Of All Time

There aren’t any other groups in hip-hop that have the bragging rights that Bone Thugs-N-Harmony have. A Midwest group signed to Eazy-E’s Ruthless Records, they remain the only hip-hop group to ever work with Biggie and Tupac while the legendary rappers were still alive. Even for a group with five members, collaborations with artists like Big, Pac, Eazy-E, and more had Bone Thugs bringing their influential sound across the coasts. 

“We doin’ this shit from Cleveland to L.A,” 2Pac screams at the top of his collab with BTNH on “Thug Luv.” Riddled with sound effects of gunshots, Pac and Bone Thugs bring the world into a warzone. Between Pleads to the Lord for forgiveness, Pac and Bone Thugs’ united Thug across America for an anthem specifically geared for the streets. Though the only collaboration between the two entities, they hoisted Thug Life for the world to see. 

– Aron

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