Author: djfrosty
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Time, it’s been said, goes by faster as people age.
But in country music, an entire lifetime can transpire in a scant three minutes. In George Birge‘s new “It Won’t Be Long” (No. 58, Country Airplay), the storyline follows the singer from a first-meeting kiss in the parking lot to a starter home, kids and a recognition of his impending senior years. In Russell Dickerson‘s “Bones” (No. 43), the protagonist sees the full sweep of a lifelong relationship, from the first glance to his future burial with his wedding ring wrapped tightly around his finger. And in Jordan Davis‘ “Next Thing You Know,” a 2023 Country Music Association (CMA) Award nominee for song of the year, a young man marries, raises some kids and lets the song — and, presumably, his life — figuratively fade to black in the end.
All of those titles put country music’s storytelling tradition on steroids, relating the life cycle of one human, or of two people’s relationship, in a compact plot. And they were all co-written by the same guy, Chase McGill, who has a special affinity for “life songs,” as he — and several other writers — call them. Since those three-minute biographies have only a small amount of space to hit the highlights, a key to making them work is to pick moments that everyone understands and paint them vividly.
“No one is so special that they’re the only person in the world that’s been through something,” McGill reasons. “If you write it like you know it and make it real, as special as you might be, someone else has been through it, too.”
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One of the strengths that has fueled country’s current uptick is the genre’s ability to tell stories. Throughout the decades, country’s narratives have included Reba McEntire‘s “The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia,” Marty Robbin‘s “El Paso,” Luke Combs‘ “Where the Wild Things Are,” Kenny Rogers‘ “The Gambler” and HARDY‘s collaboration with Lainey Wilson, “wait in the truck.”
Those plots typically detail a short time frame, maybe a few years.
But a life song maximizes that storytelling, covering all — or most — of the passage from cradle to grave, or the whole of a relationship or of one generation.
A life song is “the ultimate challenge,” LANCO‘s Brandon Lancaster says. “To me, that’s always kind of been like the Everest of country music, if you can get to the summit and be like, ‘Wow, look at this mountaintop we just climbed in three minutes.’ “
People associate those kinds of songs with country music because they’ve seemingly always been there. In fact, while story songs were embedded in the genre from its beginning, it appears that the life song was cemented with The Browns‘ “The Three Bells,” a 1959 hit that topped both the pop and country charts. It conveyed the timeline of fictitious Jimmy Brown, using a chapel bell to mark key moments and create a template for the life song.
“Birth, marriage, death — it’s precisely that,” says songwriter Bobby Braddock (“He Stopped Loving Her Today,” “Time Marches On”).
Life songs would emerge sporadically after “The Three Bells.” Loretta Lynn‘s “Coal Miner’s Daughter”; Cal Smith‘s “Country Bumpkin”; the David Houston & Tammy Wynette duet, “My Elusive Dreams”; and George Jones‘collaboration with Wynette on “Golden Ring” — about the journey of a wedding ring, also penned by Braddock — are all strong examples.
Kathy Mattea‘s 1989 release “Where’ve You Been,” written by husband Jon Vezner with Don Henry, seemingly ushered in the golden era of life songs after winning the CMA Award for song of the year. The ’90s featured a large number of those sweeping plotlines: Wynonna‘s “She Is His Only Need,” George Strait‘s”Check Yes or No,” Lorrie Morgan‘s”Something in Red,” Patty Loveless‘ “How Can I Help You Say Goodbye,” Tim McGraw‘s “Don’t Take the Girl” and the Braddock-penned Tracy Lawrence hit “Time Marches On.”
“It’s pretty much an entire lifetime encapsulated into about two minutes and 40 seconds,” Braddock remembers of “Time Marches On.” “That was kind of a short record to be about somebody’s life.”
Typically, the verses in those songs do the heavy biographical lifting, offering narrative details, while the chorus and/or a bridge often deliver an overarching philosophy. A repetitive hook — usually in the chorus, but sometimes embedded in the verses — keeps the story cohesive. And singable.
“The most brilliant examples of that [repetition] can be found with comedians,” says artist-writer Skip Ewing, who co-wrote a couple of 1990s life songs: Bryan White‘s”Rebecca Lynn” and Collin Raye‘s “Love, Me.” “We love it when a comedian has a joke, it’s funny, and a little bit later on in the show, they’ll somehow bring that back into play and it connects the dots. And they might even do it a third time.”
“Love, Me,” a 1992 CMA song of the year nominee, used a letter nailed to a tree to connect the dots between a youthful verse-one elopement and the woman’s death-bed moments in verse two. The singer reveals himself to be their 15-year-old grandchild, giving the listener a sense of the couple’s decades together. But all the interim events in the story of their relationship are missing. That actually allows the listener to participate, filling in the life song’s blanks with their own experience.
“A lot of times it’s what we didn’t say,” Ewing notes. “You don’t have to tell someone much for their own mind to begin to put the story together.”
Life songs have been less prominent since the ’90s, though some certainly broke through, including Brooks & Dunn‘s “Red Dirt Road” and “Believe.” And LANCO’s Lancaster developed a greater understanding of country when he heard Randy Travis‘ 2003 single “Three Wooden Crosses” for the first time as a teen.
“I remember when that song ended,” Lancaster says, “feeling like I had just watched a three-hour movie, like I had just really gone through this journey and realizing it was in three minutes and really appreciating how that’s possible.”
LANCO’s new single — “We Grew Up Together,” released Jan. 27 — extends the current wave of life songs, taking on a larger time frame in its plot than the group tackled in its biggest hit to date, “Greatest Love Story.” Added to the current and recent recordings by Birge, Davis and Dickerson, life songs seem to be resurging as part of an ongoing ’90s country revival that counters some of the genre’s sound in the previous decade.
“The 20-teens capitalized on this very momentary thing — ‘Right now; let’s party right now,’ ” Lancaster says. “I do think that it’s a good time [for life songs] because I think that you’re starting to see more that falls in the category of storytelling.”
Ultimately, the story that life songs tell most often is a reminder that life is short and each moment should be lived fully. McGill embodies that message even outside of his songs. His daughters are fully immersed in gymnastics, and he is devoted to them, regularly attending their practices as they live through an age that only lasts so long.
“I bought my own stadium chair and take it to gymnastics every night, and I sit in a folding chair four nights a week,” he says. “I know that I’m in the sweet spot of my life.”
Subscribe to Billboard Country Update, the industry’s must-have source for news, charts, analysis and features. Sign up for free delivery every weekend.
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Next to Kansas City Chiefs fans and Drake, no one had a crappier weekend than PlayStation console owners, thanks to a massive service outage. The company finally explained what happened, but gamers were not feeling it.
The AskPlayStation account on X, formerly Twitter, finally broke its silence on the massive service outage that kept PS5 and PS4 owners from playing multiplayer games, games that require online connectivity,y and even some games in their digital library for over 24 hours.
According to PlayStation, the outage that began on Friday, February 7, around 6 p.m. ET and ended at 6:58 p.m. ET on Saturday (February 8) was due to an “operational issue.” To compensate for ruining gamers’ weekends, PlayStation said it would offer subscribers additional days of service at no additional cost.
“Network services have fully recovered from an operational issue. We apologize for the inconvenience and thank the community for their patience. All PlayStation Plus members will automatically receive an additional 5 days of service.”
That’s all they had to say? Hmm
As you can imagine, gamers are not buying what PlayStation is selling, especially the “additional 5 days of service,” because it just feels cheap on their part.
“What was the reason behind Network failure? this is extremely shady and tone deaf communication. I lost my profile back in ps3 hack and this one of the reason why i don’t trust this Brand atleast security wise,” one post on X read in reply to AskPlayStation’s post.
Another post read, “5 days of PlayStation Plus as an apology? That’s like getting a small fry after they mess up your entire order.”
Listen, we understand that there has to be a better explanation for what happened. However, we still believe that it was Elon Musk and Donald Trump’s fault.
You can see more reactions in the gallery below.
7. Interesting
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Kendrick Lamar‘s 2025 Super Bowl Halftime Show was full of memorable moments — and Billboard wants to know which one is your favorite. There certainly are a lot to choose from, with the Compton rapper demonstrating his prowess with 13 straight minutes of back-to-back hits and all-star cameos from collaborators and friends. After the show […]
Despite taking the stage for what is traditionally the most-viewed television event of the year on Sunday night (Feb. 9), SZA said she wasn’t nervous before joining Kendrick Lamar for the Super Bowl LIX halftime show. “THANK YOU @kendricklamar for consistently putting the world on your back . At all times . Thank you for […]
Following his triumphant Super Bowl Halftime Show on Sunday (Feb. 9), Kendrick Lamar is extending the victory lap into this summer with a new set of U.K. and European tour dates.
The Grand National Tour, a co-headline trek between Lamar and SZA, will head to the U.K. for four dates this summer: Hampden Park, Glasgow (July 8); Villa Park, Birmingham (July 10); Principality Stadium, Cardiff (July 19); and London’s Tottenham Hotspur Stadium (July 22).
The four dates come amid a slew of dates in Germany, the Netherlands, France, Portugal, Spain, Italy, Poland and Sweden throughout July and August.
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The duo’s Grand National run will tour through North America from April 19, kicking off at Minneapolis’ U.S. Bank Stadium and concluding on June 18 at the Northwest Stadium in Washington, D.C. The pair will also hit up the Rogers Centre in Drake’s hometown Toronto, Canada, along the way.
Tickets for the U.K. and Europe shows go on sale from the tour’s website on Feb. 14.
Kendrick Lamar headlined the Super Bowl Halftime Show in New Orleans’ Caesars Superdome on Sunday, providing a fiery, upbeat set during the blowout win for the Philadelphia Eagles over the Kansas City Chiefs.
Lamar was joined by SZA for two songs, “Luther” and “All the Stars,” and saw him play his Drake diss track “Not Like Us” live. The set came amid legal action from Drake against Universal Music Group for profiteering from a song that allegedly defames him. The song picked up five Grammys at the recent ceremony, including record of the year.
Writing for Billboard, Carl Lamarre called Lamar’s set a “victory lap” following the rapper’s recent accomplishments, and wrote that “the impact of Lamar’s performance is indisputable, leaving hip-hop and pop culture awestruck once again.”
Kendrick Lamar & SZA Grand National UK and Europe tour dates:
July 2 – Cologne, Germany @ RheinEnergieSTADION
July 4 – Frankfurt, Germany @ Deutsche Bank Park
July 8 – Glasgow, U.K. @ Hampden Park
July 10 – Birmingham, U.K. @ Villa Park
July 13 – Amsterdam, Netherlands @ Johan Cruijff ArenA
July 15 – Paris, France @ Paris La Défense Arena
July 19 – Cardiff, U.K. @ Principality Stadium
July 22 – London, U.K. @ Tottenham Hotspur Stadium
July 27 – Lisbon, Portugal @ Estadio do Restelo
July 30 – Barcelona, Spain @ Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys
Aug. 2 – Rome, Italy @ Stadio Olimpico
Aug. 6 – Warsaw, Poland @ PGE Narodowy
Aug. 9 @ Stockholm, Sweden – 3Arena
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Kanye West recently stepped up to help Kodak Black after a viral video surfaced showing Kodak sitting in the middle of an Atlanta street, eating chicken like everything was normal. Fans have been worried about Kodak for a while, especially with his past “crash-out” moments and his unpredictable behavior. His appearance on Kai Cenat’s stream only added to the concern, as he looked completely out of it, even going viral for doing a trick shot, catching a pill in his mouth.
Kanye saw the video and was clearly concerned, so he took to Instagram to let people know he was going to do something about it. “I’m booking my flight to Atlanta right now to help Kodak,” Ye said. “I know I said f**k rappers man, but I need y’all right now. Someone has to go and do something. I know y’all always think I’m crashing out, and I’m just expressing myself, I’m cathartic. Look man, please don’t, just let me go down there and help this man out.”
Ye’s message shows that even though he’s had his own struggles, he still has the heart to reach out and try to help someone who’s clearly in need. Despite his past statements about distancing himself from the rap game, Ye is willing to help Kodak get back on track. This act of concern speaks volumes about the importance of supporting each other, especially in an industry where mental health and addiction can be overlooked. Kanye’s move is all about stepping up and making sure Kodak gets the help he deserves.
Though becoming a stadium artist was a huge bucket list moment for Travis Scott in 2023, achieving such a feat with his children in attendance during his SoFi performance in L.A., a performance that was a part of his Circus Maximus Tour, was the real cherry on top. In his latest cover story with Billboard, […]
After making headlines with her critical acceptance speech at the 2025 Grammys, Chappell Roan is doubling down on helping up-and-coming artists earn a livable wage and affordable healthcare.
In a series of posts to Instagram Stories on Sunday night (Feb. 9), Roan continued the conversation about her speech, and called on music industry’s power players to invest more financial support into their artists. “Sharing my personal experience at the Grammys wasn’t meant to be a crowdfunded bandaid but a call to action to the leaders of the industry to step up, help us make a real change and protect their investments in a sustainable way,” she wrote.
The “Pink Pony Club” singer also continued to indirectly call out former music industry executive Jeff Rabhan, who criticized the singer’s speech in a blistering op-ed for The Hollywood Reporter. Rabhan referred to Roan’s call for change “wildly misinformed” and claimed that the singer was both “too green and too uninformed to be the agent of change she aspires to be today.”
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“My mind will not be changed about artists deserving more than what’s standard in the industry,” she wrote. “Random dudes are allowed to criticize my Grammy speech, but they best put their money where their mouth is, otherwise MOVE out the way.”
Roan and Rabhan previously traded public messages, with Roan calling for Rabhan to match her $25,000 donation to funding developing artists. Rabhan, in turn, replied that Roan should “stop dumpster diving” by criticizing his criticism, and instead should “act like the agent of change you say you want to be,” pointing out that the singer’s donation came after his critique.
In her posts, Roan also revealed the charity she was sharing her money with — Backline, a nonprofit that “connects music industry professionals and their families with mental health and wellness resources.” Specifically, Roan pointed to a fundraising initiative from the organization that is “supporting accessibility of health care for artists.”
However, Roan told her fans that she did not expect them to donate to these efforts — instead she pointed out that industry executives should feel compelled to donate to the organization. “Fans, y’all don’t have to donate a damn penny,” she wrote. “This is one of many opportunities for the industry powers to show up for artists. There is much more work to be done.”
For anyone questioning whether or not Roan herself shared such a donation, the “Hot to Go” singer concluded her posts with a screenshot of a confirmation email from Backline confirming her donation of $25,000 to their fundraiser. “Here,” she added.
Among those who shared their support for Roan were Noah Kahan and Charli XCX, both of whom pledged to match the singer’s $25,000 donation before her latest posts, with both artists posting since-expired posts to their Instagram Stories. “I’m inspired by you,” Kahan said of the singer. “Happy to get the ball rolling. Money where my mouth is.”
Ye appeared to sign off from X on Sunday (Dec. 9) following a days long spree during which he posted dozens of antisemitic, misogynistic and homophobic messages, culminating with the rapper sharing a string of uncensored clips from pornographic movies.
According to KTLA, West signed off with a final post on Sunday night — just a few hours after appearing in a cryptic ad promoting his Yeezy shoe brand during Super Bowl LIX — writing, “I’m logging out of Twitter. I appreciate [X owner] Elon [Musk] for allowing me to vent. It has been very cathartic to use the world as a sounding board.” At press time it did not appear as if Musk had responded to West shutting down his account and it was unclear if the move was West’s choice or if the account had been suspended by X; a spokesperson for West had not returned Billboard’s request for comment at press time.
The sign-off came after West posted another shot at frequent target Taylor Swift, who attended the game to support boyfriend Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce. “If its about the culture… why are we letting Taylor Swift be seen on TV singing a song about taking a Black man down and accusing of things that can take a Black man down for life,” West, 47, wrote in one of his all-caps missives.
He then lashed out at Lamar, issuing the latest in a four-day deluge of antisemitic slurs. “Kendrick is being used by these white people and Jews and so am I,” Ye wrote. In prior days, West had also expressed his support for disgraced Bad Boy Records boss Sean “Diddy” Combs, who is currently in jail without bail awaiting a May trial on racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution charges.
“@realDonaldTrump please free my brother Puff,” wrote Ye of the formerly high-flying rap mogul who is also facing dozens of lawsuits from men and women who claim he sexually and physically assaulted them and forced or coerced them into sexual activity over the past 25+ years, accusations Combs has denied.
Ye’s comments also included repeated attacks on the Jewish people via stereotypes and antisemitic language, jokes about the disabled, homophobic slurs and a double-down on his praise for Nazi leader Adolf Hitler (“I love Hitler”) and the statement “I’m a Nazi.”
The hate-filled posts drew alarm from the CEO of the Anti-Defamation League, who said in a statement that it was, “Another egregious display of antisemitism, racism and misogyny from Ye on his X account this morning. Just a few years ago, ADL found that 30 antisemitic indents nationwide were tied to Kanye’s 2022 antisemitic rants. We condemn this dangerous behavior and need to call it what it is: a flagrant and unequivocal display of hate.”
Ye also referenced Twitter/X owner and unofficial White House advisor Elon Musk’s repeated use of a Nazi-like salute at an inauguration event for Donald Trump last month, which was widely criticized; while not disavowing directly that the gesture was similar to the Nazi salute, Musk responded to critics at the time by saying they “need better dirty tricks.” “Elon stole my Nazi swag at the inauguration… yooo my guy get your own third rale,” Ye wrote on Friday, adding, “I can say Jew as much as I want. I can say Hitler as much as I want.”
Ye was kicked off X (then still known as Twitter) in October 2022 for antisemitic posts, then briefly reinstated in November of that year and re-suspended in November after he posted an image of a swastika intertwined with a Jewish star. Musk reinstated West’s account eight months later.
The manic posting spree, which at times found West firing off dozens of all-caps tweets per hour, prompted former Friends star David Schwimmer to ask Musk on Saturday to ban Ye from the platform. “This is so 2022. We can’t stop a deranged bigot from spewing hate filled, ignorant bile… but we CAN stop giving him a megaphone, Mr. Musk,” the Jewish actor, 58, wrote on Instagram. “Kanye West has 32.7 million followers on your platform, X. That’s twice as many people than the number of Jews in existence. His sick hate speech results in REAL LIFE violence against Jews.”
Following Schwimmer’s comments, Ye posted on X that Musk had unfollowed him. “Elon unfollowed me so I’m not sure how much longer I’ll be on twitter / X If I’m taken off go to,” he wrote. Last week, Ye’s hate posts were amplified by white supremacist Nick Fuentes, who wrote “we’re back” in response to one of the rapper’s tweets, in which he wrote, “all you pleeeeease come at me… that’s who we spot the k–ns… let these white people and Jewish people tell you what to do and say.”
Ye’s barrage of hate speech was capped on Sunday by a string of posts featuring scenes from uncensored porn films, as well as some that appeared to target singer Cassie, who dated Combs for a decade. Cassie alleged in a since-settled lawsuit that she suffered years of rape and repeated physical abuse at Combs’ hands, including allegations that he forced her to have sex with male prostitutes while he watched; Diddy has denied those, and dozens of other allegations of abuse.
“When I [sic] man truly loves a woman he may express it in rage I empathize with both sides,” West wrote in the since deleted tweet alongside an image of Diddy and Cassie screenshotted from a video of Combs assaulting the singer in a hotel hallway. He doubled down on the misogynistic comments by appearing to downplay the seriousness of Cassie’s charges of intimate partner violence.
“Hey, question if someone were to beat up their girlfriend in public, would that be considered domestic violence, or is that outdoor violence, or is it just public indecency? … I’m just asking for a friend,” Ye wrote. The rapper was also reportedly selling a sweatshirt on his Yeezy site similar to the one Cassie was wearing in the widely seen 2016 assault video that he was calling “The Love Hoodie,” in seeming reference to Combs’ nickname “Love.”
At press time, however, it appeared that the only item for sale in the Yeezy store was a white t-shirt featuring a swastika.
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2025 seems to be a banner year for T.I. and Tiny Harris. A judge has reinstated their original $53 million dollar payout over the OMG Girlz.
As per Newsweek Magazine a magistrate has reconsidered his original ruling regarding their lawsuit against MGA Entertainment. Back in 2024 the celebrity couple filed a complaint against the toy company claiming they violated the intellectual property of their teen girl group the OMG Girlz with the release of L.O.L. Surprise! O.M.G. dolls. In September a jury ruled that 15 of the dolls in the collection did infringe the recording artists’ image and likeliness; including some of their outfits worn at public events.
Last month U.S. District Judge James Selna voided the $53 million payout citing that the jury did not have adequate evidence to review. Nevertheless, on Monday, Feb. 3 Selna reinstated the original ruling stating that both the defendant and plaintiffs agreed to a jury verdict thus T.I. and Tiny are entitled to the total value of the original claim.
Last week the Grand Hustle couple celebrated the opening of their affordable housing community in Northwest Atlanta. Joined by friends, family and local politicians, the Intrada Westside offers 143 affordable housing units and an additional 25 specifically for homeless youth. The property was once a shopping center. You can apply here.
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