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All-American Rejects are set to kick off SXSW 2026 at the Music Festival Opening Party hosted at Stubb’s Amphitheater on March 12 in Austin, Texas. The festival and conference has also announced the first slate of artists set to play the iconic event’s 40th anniversary that will take place March 12-18 throughout the city.
The initial list of 100 showcasing artists will include masked lo-fi art-pop musician Milo Korbenski from Brighton, England; experimental electropop and live coding pioneer DJ_Dave out of LA; Mexico City-based and regionally influenced post-punk project La Texana; Brooklyn-based alt-folk songwriter Hudson Freeman; Austin-based Bayonne, the introspective and ethereal electro-pop project of artist Roger Sellers; Indonesian indie trio Grrrl Gang; Irish post-punks Chalk; LA punk-pop buzz band The Sophs; West Coast hip-hop and Bollywood influenced rapper, producer, and songwriter KOAD; Minneapolis-based singer-songwriter runo plum; and Grammy-nominated rapper and Tully founder Joyner Lucas.
“SXSW has been the premiere destination for music discovery for 40 years, helping push pioneering acts like Kendrick Lamar, The White Stripes, Wet Leg, PinkPantheress, Tyler, The Creator, and Billie Eilish, to the next level,” SXSW vp of music Brian Hobbs said in a release. “By bringing the global music industry to Austin, from labels and A&R to publicists to influential journalists and critics, SXSW is a unique opportunity for showcasing artists to build their careers, enter new markets, and learn from fellow artists and industry voices. With an extra night of showcases this year, 2026 is shaping up to be better than ever for artists, industry and audiences.”
For a full list of Showcasing Artists, head here.
SXSW will celebrate its 40th year in 2026 as a condensed festival and conference due to the closure of the Austin Convention Center that is undergoing extensive renovations. The event will be two days shorter than the 2025 edition, with its interactive, film/TV and music programs running concurrently.
The festival has also announced its initial list of Music Showcase Presenters that include returning brands Billboard, NPR Music Stations, Rolling Stone, British Music Embassy, Los Angeles Times’ De Los, BMG, BBC Introducing, and The Line of Best Fit, as well as first time presenters including Willie Nelson’s Luck Reunion, R&B Block Party and Dream Con. The full list of the first 50 Music Showcase Presenters can be found here.
As Billboard reported last month, for the first time, SXSW will feature a fully integrated seven-day schedule across its trio of core programs, with downtown Austin transforming into a creative village anchored by three “clubhouses” — Innovation at Brazos Hall, Film & TV at 800 Congress, and Music at The Downright — designed to simplify navigation and foster collaboration throughout the all-in-one event.
Billboard parent company Penske Media acquired a majority stake in SXSW in 2023 and helped expand its reach to three continents, now hosting flagship events in Austin, Sydney and London.
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As Michael Jackson historically returns to the top 10 with “Thriller” and Kehlani gives Brandy her flowers, Billboard‘s chart experts break down the correlation between Grammy nominations and artists such as HUNTR/X, Alex Warren, Leon Thomas and more who have taken over the charts this year. Black Eyed Peas singer Taboo stopped by with his daughter to share what it was like to work in the studio with Jett on Dora, his thoughts on the Dodgers’ huge win, and their perspectives on the diversity of artists on the Hot 100.
What’s your prediction for next week’s No. 1? Let us know in the comments!
Tetris Kelly: Michael Jackson makes a holiday return to the charts as Taylor Swift still battles with KPop Demon Hunters for the No. 1 spot.
Taboo: The fact that we have multicultural representation on the top 100 from KATSEYE to Demon Hunters, the HUNTR/X, I love that.
Tetris Kelly: Hey, what’s up? And welcome to the Hot 100 Show. As you can see, I got my friend Taboo and his daughter, Jett, stopping by a little bit later, and we got a new top 10 entry on the chart. So let’s start by running it down. This is the Billboard Hot 100 top 10 for the week dated Nov. 15. After a Halloween surge, “Thriller” hits the top 10. Morgan stays at No. 9. “Mutt” moves up to No. 8. All right, we got a newcomer to the top 10 in MJ. I can’t say I was ready for that, but Halloween isn’t it?
Eric Frankenburg: Yeah, I don’t know if newcomer’s the word. “Thriller” was in the top 10 in 1984, but this is the highest it’s been since March of 1984 — it’s pretty incredible. You know, it returns to the chart every year for Halloween, but this year’s a whole different story. It’s in the top 10. And, yes, it’s just wild you know that it’s higher than it’s been in 41 years.
Xander Zellner: Yeah, it feels like it’s kind of becoming, like, the “All I Want for Christmas Is You” of the Halloween season, where, like, it started growing more and more each year, and this year, Halloween fell on a Friday. So like, now it’s in the top 10. It’s amazing.
Delisa Shannon: I can already imagine, like, AI versions of Michael Jackson going, “It’s time.” Like, I already know it’s coming. You said it, not me.
Keep watching for more!
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Tyler, The Creator is gearing up for his first feature film role in Josh Safdie’s Marty Supreme, and the A24 film starring Timothée Chalamet and Gwyneth Paltrow released a trailer on Tuesday (Nov. 11).
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Chalamet plays the role of Marty Mauser, who’s an aspiring table-tennis player who will do anything to make his professional ping-pong dreams come true. The film is loosely based on the life of world champion table-tennis player Marty Reisman.
Tyler’s character seems to be a friend of Chalamet’s Marty in the film, helping him on his journey to stardom as a sidekick. The Grammy-winning rapper makes multiple appearances in this trailer, the first of which show him with a bloody nose playing against Marty in a game of ping-pong.
“The Mouse is back, baby, yeah,” Tyler’s character shouts in another scene while driving with Marty. To close out the high-octane clip, the rapper makes a final return to bring some comedic relief as he hops out of the car to dance with Marty on the side of the road.
Marty Supreme has generated quite a bit of Oscars buzz ahead of its Christmas Day release. The cast is rounded out by Penn Jillette, Odessa A’zion, Kevin O’Leary (Mr. Wonderful) and Abel Ferrara.
Safdie held a surprise screening with the cast at the 63rd New York Film Festival in October, where the film received a standing ovation from the audience members. At the time, Tyler got on the mic and explained to the crowd why he was “beyond grateful” to the director for believing in him as a first-time actor.
“Thank you to you, Josh. Please make the biggest noise for this man,” Tyler said. “I’m so grateful, beyond grateful. I play piano and put on cool clothes. I do not act at all.”
He continued: “This man is so good that I trusted him and said, ‘Anything you need. I don’t want to read this script. I will show up and be there.’ Because I trust this man and the way he curated and handled every detail. And the team, working with y’all, it was so wonderful. I got emotional up there because you gave me a chance, so I thank you, I love you, and thank you. Please give it up.”
Watch the Marty Supreme trailer below.
Trending on Billboard BERLIN — The first serious European court decision on AI and music is in – and rightsholders won. On Nov. 11, the Munich Regional Court ruled that OpenAI’s ChatGPT software infringed copyrights to compositions represented by GEMA, the German collective management organization. The judge ordered OpenAI to pay damages but did not […]
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Mariah Carey’s “All I Want for Christmas Is You” makes its annual merry return to the Billboard Hot 100.
The song, at No. 31, is one of two carols ringing in the Yuletide season on the latest Hot 100 (dated Nov. 15), joined by Wham!’s “Last Christmas” at No. 43.
Mixing figgy pudding with pumpkin pie, also sweetening the chart are five Halloween hits, led by Michael Jackson’s “Thriller.”
“All I Want for Christmas Is You” drew 9.9 million official streams (dashing 252%) and 942,000 airplay audience impressions (up from almost none the week before, as radio stations begin playing holiday hits) and sold 1,000 (up 302%) in the United States in the Oct. 31-Nov. 6 tracking week, according to Luminate.
Notably, on Nov. 1, Carey made her yearly proclamation that it’s time for the holiday season once again.
“All I Want for Christmas Is You,” originally released in 1994, hit the Hot 100’s top 10 for the first time in December 2017. In December 2019, it ascended to the apex at last. Having reigned in each holiday season since, Carey’s soloist-record 19th leader has ruled for 18 weeks to date, the third-longest command in the chart’s history. It also ranks as the No. 1 hit on Billboard’s Greatest of All Time Holiday 100 Songs retrospective.
“When I wrote [it], I had absolutely no idea the impact the song would eventually have worldwide,” Carey marveled of the song in 2021. “I’m so full of gratitude that so many people enjoy it with me every year.”
Below Carey’s chestnut, Wham!’s “Last Christmas” reenters the Hot 100 led by 8.2 million streams (up 217%). The song, released in 1984, hit a new No. 3 best last holiday season for the duo of Andrew Ridgeley and the late George Michael.
Meanwhile, the Hot 100 reflects a combination of holiday music consumption, with five Halloween-themed hits also haunting the chart.
As previously reported, “Thriller” lurches 32-10 on the Hot 100, making the late King of Pop the first artist ever with to rank in the top 10 in six distinct decades. With Halloween kicking off the Oct. 31-Nov. 6 tracking week, “Thriller” drew 14 million streams (up 57% week-over-week) and 9.3 million in radio airplay audience (up 124%), while selling 3,000 (up 1%).
Bobby “Boris” Pickett and the Crypt-Kickers’ “Monster Mash” returns from beyond, reentering the Hot 100 at No. 21 powered by 10 million streams (up 49%), 4 million in airplay audience (up 216%) and 2,300 sold. The song first became a graveyard (and aboveground) smash in 1962, ruling for two weeks leading up to that Halloween.
Ray Parker Jr.’s “Ghostbusters” shoots back onto the Hot 100 at No. 22, with 10.1 million streams (up 48%), 4.9 million in radio reach (up 57%) and 1,600 sold. The theme to the blockbuster movie of the same name topped the chart for three weeks in 1984.
Rockwell’s “Somebody’s Watching Me” reenters the Hot 100 at No. 24 with 10.1 million streams (up 45%), 3.7 million in airplay audience (up 85%) and less than 1,000 in sales. The song, from 1984, reached No. 2 that year.
Plus, The Citizens of Halloween’s “This Is Halloween” jumps 47-26 for a new Hot 100 high, led by 10 million streams (up 34%). The track, written and produced by Danny Elfman, premiered in the 1993 film The Nightmare Before Christmas (foretelling the blend of Halloween and Christmas decorations on the latest chart).
Trending on Billboard SEVENTEEN member HOSHI dropped a surprise solo single on Tuesday (Nov. 11) the sad boy lament “Fallen Superstar.” The skittery ballad co-written by Andrew Goldstein (Maroon 5, Katy Perry) and singer-songwriter JXDN is the 29-year-old K-pop star’s first solo effort entirely in English following on the heels of March’s Beam EP, a […]
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Navy Blue is an interesting person.
He was childhood friends with Earl Sweatshirt and introduced him to Tyler, The Creator, with Earl then returning the favor years later by introducing Navy to the late Brooklyn rapper Ka, which led to not only a working relationship, but a genuine friendship. He came up as a skateboarder and model, often seen in Supreme lookbooks, before he decided to share his music with the world.
I remember noticing the name Navy Blue floating around the underground during the late 2010s, but it wasn’t until he dropped his debut album Àdá Irin in 2020 that I realized Navy Blue and Sage were the same person. Maybe that was by design, as he said in multiple interviews that rapping under the moniker was a safe space for him to be able to express his intimate feelings.
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In 2023, he made is major label debut under Def Jam with the Budgie-produced Ways of Knowing. However, he was subsequently dropped from the label, which in turn inspired him to release Memoirs in Armour a year later. “Due to the shift in circumstances, this project became a refuge to me, I hope you enjoy it,” he shared on social media. “I’m happy to be putting this album out independently, the way I had always intended to be releasing music.”
He continued to record music, and eventually realized that he was making a follow up to Memoirs — which had themes of knighthood and armor — while The Sword & The Soaring was touching on things like the sword Archangel Michael is often depicted with, and how our angels in heaven protect us here on earth.
Billboard talked over Zoom with Navy Blue as he was in Europe on tour with British MC Loyle Carner — about the themes of this latest project, why being vulnerable is important (especially for men) and his close friendship with the late, great Ka.
What’s the underlying theme of this album?
Well, even in, you know, posing the question about my brother… I mean, death definitely kind of created this like doorway for me to walk through, in terms of connecting with my own spirituality. And growing up, I always viewed my brother as like a guardian angel. And a lot like Archangel Michael who, as the story goes, defeated Satan and expelled the other fallen angels to protect the heavens against evil. So, this album kind of was birthed out of that idea, because I always saw angel Michael depicted with a sword, and all of my music praises the people that have passed on and honors them.
Why did you go with “Orchards” for the lead single?
It was the first one that I did that really made me feel like I was making an album. It kind of solidified the message. I’ve always been a fan of Child Actor, and his beats are just different. They make me think differently. They’re a lot like movies. I always see imagery when I hear his music and his unorthodox approach to beatmaking. The way that like that some of his beats have this…they like pump almost. I don’t want to talk about his, like, beatmaking “drip,” but I can hear the things that he does where his music feels really alive. So, it’s really cool to nestle myself into that world. With “Orchards” specifically, when I heard that beat, I was like, “Wow.”
And another beautiful thing that Child Actor does, is he’ll send me a beat and he’ll make me feel really special and say, “You’re the only one that I know will get this,” and it feels good to be thought of in that way, and the manner in which we communicate with each other, and constantly being like, “Yo, bro, thank you.” We say thank you to each other very often. And since he’s kind of become a part of my life, and my music making, I felt this new kind of portal open up that I didn’t know was was there, which is really nice.
Why did you decide to follow up Memoirs in Armour with this particular project?
It’s not as strategic and as thought out other than it’s just what came through me at the time. I’m always working on music, so I generally try to approach making music through the lens of just being a conduit and whatever the spirit has for me, that’s what I need to say. So, it’s not like, “Ah, I’m going to do this one.” It’s just where my focus, went because I had another project that’s been done for a while.
Instead of being stagnant and waiting around, I started working mainly with Child Actor sending me a bunch of joints, and the theme just presented itself especially coming off of releasing Memoirs in Armour last year with this theme of like knighthood and armor. And then it just felt like I was discussing the battle on this project. So, I felt like the sword was the earthly tool used for battle and the soaring meaning the heavenly council, and like our angels and protectors and how they intervene. It just felt like the culmination of my struggles of becoming and the support of what I call my angels.
Your stuff is always so personal. Is it like a release for you? Because you’ve said that you make music really for yourself, and if people can connect with it, they connect with it.
It’s definitely a release. You release it from the confines of your head and you get to witness other people have their own experience with it — and that’s really gratifying, and makes me feel like I’m giving something to the world, especially during a time like this right now, where there’s just so much going on in the world, a lot of sadness, a lot of traumatic events, we’re extremely desensitized. It makes me feel like I’m putting good energy into the world.
And just feels like it gives me purpose, and I just want to make other people feel seen and heard and not alone through their experiences. If I could offer any help through sharing what I go through and how I get through my hardships, then I feel pretty content with who I am and what I’m doing. Because I know there’s a lot of music that’s very fleeting, and I know there’s probably people who don’t identify with my music, and that’s okay because I make music for those who it speaks to. You know, like Ka said, “If it don’t move you, then move on.”
But I love knowing that there are people that are invested in my journey and simultaneously invested in theirs, and we kind of get to have this kinda like dance where we grow together. It’s always been my goal to speak to an experience for somebody who doesn’t have the words. I’ve only been on earth for 28 years, so I don’t have that much experience, but I feel like none of the experiences that I’ve had in getting through depression and addiction and things like that, I feel like none of it was in vain, because it gave me reference and it allows me the insight to speak on an experience that maybe somebody else is going through.
I know at first you were kind of apprehensive with sharing your music, and I feel like rap is a form of therapy for you, at least that’s how most of your stuff comes across to me. Do you feel nervous about having your feelings out there?
As human beings we’re deeply concerned about how we’re perceived, and we want to control as much of it as we can. I feel very proud to share that with the world. I think it’s a shame that the world that we live in that you get, “Wow, that’s so powerful,” for telling your truth. It’s just a testament to where we’re at where me just talking about my feelings is like, “Wow, it’s so vulnerable.” I’m just trying to shine a little light on a path that doesn’t get enough love, which is self love and self discovery and honest expression.
We’re fed so many lies and people are talking about things that don’t hold much weight. All we really have is this lifetime, and I just don’t want to squander my opportunity. I want to talk about real things. I think there’s enough music out there that doesn’t really talk about things that are of any importance. I try to not get in my own head about that — but yes, as a man also, yeah, it definitely can feel that people might think I’m soft or whatever. But, you know, I see strength in that.
It’s very powerful for men to talk about feelings and lived experience. There’s a stigma behind that, so it feels quite important for me — because it’s who I am, it’s how I’ve always been, I always kind of lead with my heart first. I’ve been living this way since I was a kid, man, feeling like, “Man, it’s hard out here.” I wear my heart on my sleeve. I cry, I go through stuff, and I tell people how I feel, and that’s not normalized. It can be a little isolating at times, but as I release more music, it’s attracting more people that think like me and want to better themselves. And that feels really good.
Did you keep a journal growing up or write poetry? Your style kind of feels like poetry.
Yeah, I grew up writing a lot. It just it always felt like the place that I could make sense of my thoughts. And yeah, I think for a long time I used to kind of push against that like, you know, “Oh, it’s poetry.” But, yeah, that’s exactly what it is. Rap music is poetry, whether it comes across poetic, quote unquote, or not. I don’t journal as much anymore, but I definitely approach writing as a form of journaling. I try to welcome in God, and just see what comes out.
When I’m going through a tough time, it’s generally like the first line that just — whether the music creates the space for me to do that or something that I’ve seen — it doesn’t really matter, it just happens. That’s the beauty of it. It doesn’t feel so forced. I’m not going into a studio and forcing myself to make a song. It’s just a natural expression for me, and poetry has always been a way for me to feel. Poetry is beauty, man, it’s like a place where you get to say things in a manner that… you don’t get to speak that way in everyday life. So, it’s really nice to to make these experiences that were painful and make them beautiful.
I know you had the situation with Def Jam and I wanted to ask, how did you end up at Def Jam and what did you learn from that experience?
I guess I learned to trust my gut and that there’s nothing that a label could do for me that I can’t do for myself. I’ve always been a self-sustainable person and sometimes, in hopes of bringing your music to more people, you lose a little bit of yourself in the process. It kind of reminds me of when Drake won a won a Grammy a few years ago and he got on stage and he said, “This don’t mean nothing.” He said, “If you got people coming out to your shows in the snow, in the rain, you’ve already won. You don’t need this.” And I always loved when he said that, because that’s how I feel. If there’s one person in the world who puts their headphones on and vibes out to my music, I’m content.
I learned through that process and I’m grateful for the experience. I’m grateful for it all. No experience, no matter how stressful or annoying as things might be, none of it is in vain. It’s all part of the greater plan. Had that situation not happened, Memoirs in Armour wouldn’t have come out. I wouldn’t have made that album. I wouldn’t have made The Sword and The Soaring, so that was the blessing hidden in the frustration of what happened with them.
Why did you decide to record Memoirs after that situation.
Yeah, I didn’t want to be sitting around. I just gotta start making new joints and revisit a couple old joints that I thought weren’t good enough that were sitting in the hard drive for a year or two. I was like, “You know, these are good. People deserve to hear these.” Joints like “Slow” and “Time Slips” and “Say the Word,” joints that have just been sitting there, and I’m glad that they got to come out. You know, had the situation with Def Jam not happened, then I wouldn’t have made that album, and I’m proud of it.
There’s definitely more music to come that I’m excited for the world to hear, but it felt necessary to do The Sword and The Soaring, because Memoirs was only 10 joints. I thought it was very concise and a solid album, but it feels good to give the listeners a bit more and something to really sit with and digest and dive all the way in.
You mentioned being self sufficient earlier and I was curious about your relationship with Ka, because he was very big on that. He recorded, produced, made his own videos. Mailed everything out himself. Can you kind of talk about the relationship you guys had a little bit?
For sure, man. Ka’s a one-of-a-kind artist, and it’s very rare that you get to meet your heroes, even if the saying goes that you shouldn’t meet them. But in this case, I met one of my heroes, and out of that blossomed a really beautiful friendship and relationship. He became somebody that I could confide in. He was like a big brother/uncle figure. It’s almost like I felt connected to him, like I knew him before this life type s—t. I remember meeting him early on, and the first bit of advice that he gave me in regards to making music, he said, “Only make music with people that you’ve built a friendship with,” because then what you make is real. It’s not like a transaction. So, that was always some of my favorite advice — because that means the world to me, when you make music with somebody that you really connect with.
When Ka was finally willing to work with me… I didn’t even ask, I just played him a joint and he said, “Nah, send me that.” That solidified who I was to him. It made me feel really seen, understood. Even before knowing him, his music always felt like a hug to me. When I heard his music for the first time, it fully shifted everything that I was doing — not that I was doing anything different per se, but it gave me purpose. I just wanna make people feel, I wanna make someone else feel the way that I feel when I listen to this guy. He’s speaking about life in a way that feels sacred. The way that he speaks about his lived experience in such a poetic manner, in such a simple way that I could understand was always so intriguing. So, of course, as we do when we’re inspired, I tried to just take that little bit of magic that I was offered and tried to do something with it.
I mean, the little bit of magic being that, like, just that moment when I was like, “Wow, I want to do this,” and he was incredibly supportive of me. And beyond the music, he was a great friend and a confidant of sorts, someone that I could rely on, especially as an elder. Someone that I could really talk about the things that I was going through and get his advice on. I always yearned for that kind of big brother figure, and Ka was a force. I feel really lucky to even have gotten to know him, or to have known him in this lifetime.
How’s your experience been performing overseas?
The past 14 shows that I’ve done out here in Europe have been beautiful. Especially as a supporting act, because there’s a lot of new listeners — so it’s like, I’m going out there and I’m sharing my music with new people, and it’s really beautiful to witness people connect with it in the present moment, which is nice. Without any reference to who I am, what the music sounds like, I just come on the stage — and there’s definitely some listeners that are there — but it’s beautiful. It’s hard to do, but it’s also why I do it: for the experience, just challenging myself to get out there and be present, smile and share my music.
I definitely feel like I’ve left some of those shows with new listeners and people going, “Wow, that was beautiful” — especially with the language barrier, maybe they go home, and they want to have a deeper look into what I’m saying. I have some beautiful moments where I’m singing “La Noche” with people in the crowd, and it’s really amazing, man. I’m really grateful. Loyle Carner is a really solid dude, and he’s been really helpful, especially with how to navigate going out there and sharing such vulnerable music and feeling like sometimes you’re not getting anything back from the audience, but they’re listening. Just because they’re not bouncing and putting their hands up, they’re present, and they’re listening to what I have to say and that’s all I could ask for really.
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Benson Boone didn’t get the mystical, magical day he was hoping for when the Grammys unveiled its list of 2026 nominees Nov. 7.
In a hilarious Monday (Nov. 10) post on his Instagram Story, the pop star joked about getting snubbed by the Recording Academy, which did not recognize his song “Mystical Magical” in any of its categories for next year. Sharing a brightly lit selfie in which he stares straight into the camera, his eyes comically wide, Boone wrote, “Can’t believe moonbeam ice cream didn’t get a Grammy nom,” referencing one of the most meme-worthy lyrics in his Billboard Hot 100 top 40 hit.
The singer added, “it’s literally pure lyrical genius.”
The post comes a few days after the nominations ceremony, which revealed Kendrick Lamar as the 2026 frontrunner with a total of nine nods. Lady Gaga, Jack Antonoff and Cirkut picked up seven nominations apiece, while Bad Bunny, Sabrina Carpenter and Leon Thomas earned six.
Boone, however, was shut out from the awards, despite the success of his album American Heart, which dropped in June and debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200. Multiple songs from the LP charted on the Hot 100, including “Mystical Magical,” which reached No. 17.
Though the Washington native wasn’t recognized this year, he did score a best new artist nomination last year. That particular category was especially stacked in 2025, with Chappell Roan ultimately winning over Boone, Sabrina Carpenter, Doechii, Khruangbin, RAYE, Shaboozey and Teddy Swims. This year, Olivia Dean, KATSEYE, The Marias, Addison Rae, Sombr, Leon Thomas, Alex Warren and Lola Young will duke it out for the prize.
Boone is currently on tour in Europe, with his final show for the run slated for Nov. 18 in Stockholm. A couple of weeks later, he’ll perform on Dec. 4 slot at the Formula 1 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix in the United Arab Emirates.
His trek recently hit a bump in the road when the American Idol alum was forced to cancel his show in Birmingham due to vocal issues. “I am so so sorry but I will not be able to perform tonight,” he wrote on Instagram at the time. “I have tried everything I can to revive my voice, but I cannot give you the show I’d like to be able to give you with the condition of my throat right now. This is genuinely the crappiest feeling, I am so sorry. I promise you I will do everything in my power to make it up to you.”
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Drake and PartyNextDoor have just achieved another milestone.
This one came from their collaborative album, “$ome $exy $ongs 4 U”, which recently went certified platinum. After years of teasing a joint project, the OVO member finally linked up in February 2025 to deliver on their promise. The 21-track project was filled with mostly love songs but still had a few Hip-Hop moments sprinkled in.
Some of the most popular songs were “Spider-Man Superman,” “Somebody Loves Me,” and “Raining In Houston.” The most successful track off the project is undoubtedly “NOKIA,” which is currently 2x certified platinum. PND also had his solo record on the album, “Deeper,” giving fans those Day 1 PX vibes. The album sold 246,000 units in its first week, Party’s biggest debut to date, and The Boy’s 14th.
Since the release of this project, both artists have not taken their foot off the gas. Drizzy has been teasing the release of his next solo project, “ICEMAN,” and has already dropped the single, “What Did I Miss?”
He appeared to take a few jabs at so-called friends who turned their backs on him during the beef with Kendrick Lamar. One ex-friend of the Canadian rapper is LeBron James, who fans allege caught a few strays on the track. This comes after Kendrick’s Pop Out concert, which, in theory, turned into an anti-Drake event, and guess who was front and center? The NBA GOAT.
Party has still been riding off his late 2024 release of the fourth series of his self-titled album.
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Last week, GoldState Music founder and managing partner Charles Goldstuck gathered his investors along with a collection of music’s most brilliant minds for “Conversations in Music,” a three-day conference about the future of the business.
Goldstuck has been convening exclusive thought-leadership meetings for decades in his many roles: he’s the founder of The Sanctuary at Albany, a state-of-the-art recording studio and music academy in the Bahamas; the executive chairman of TouchTunes Interactive Networks, and a major-label veteran who ran business operations for BMG’s music labels and co-founded J Records with Clive Davis, building it into the RCA Music Group.
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But the South African philanthropist said that this year’s event — which he hosted at the luxurious Pier Sixty-Six resort in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida — marked his first event of such scale and urgency, reflecting the speed at which industry dynamics are changing.
Each expert-moderated conversation was packed with insight, and reflected Goldstuck’s own keen interest in the intersection of AI and music — he is currently funding the AI & African Music initiative at his alma mater, Witz University in Johannesburg, to empower creatives to use AI to preserve, teach or co-create African musical traditions and sounds, and recently published a paper arguing that music companies ought to negotiate deals with AI companies to set precedent before courts and lawmakers weigh in.
Among the conference highlights: Water & Music’s AI analyst and music producer Yung Spielberg demonstrated how to make songs using Suno. MIT professors showcased the cutting-edge music technology their top students are building. DAYA, a GoldState artist who shot to fame with her feature on Chainsmokers’ “Don’t Let Me Down,” revealed how she’s navigating the modern industry and shared her new music. Dr. Tamay Aykut, founder and CEO of Sureel, broke down the possibilities for how to determine which rights holders should get credit for music produced with AI models trained on their works.
We asked Goldstuck for his five top takeaways from the invite-only affair – here’s what he pointed to.
Publishers are gaining leverage. The deal between Kobalt and ElevenLabs establishes a 50-50 split between publishers and recorded-music rights holders, a big improvement from streaming and sales, which have paid out lower rates to publishers. This sets a new precedent for future generative AI licensing deals, with publishers now in a position to secure stronger economic outcomes as the landscape evolves. Industry surveys estimate that more than half of younger creators already use AI tools in their workflows, suggesting that generative AI could make songwriters more productive.
Laurent Hubert (Left), CEO of Kobalt Music, Mary Megan Peer (Center), CEO of peermusic, and Kristin Robinson (Right), Senior Correspondent at Billboard – at the GoldState Conversations in Music Conference
Courtesy of GoldState Conversations in Music Conference
Music catalog deal volume is at a record high. Buyers include both established music companies and financial investors. There have been no significant defaults or financial problems across these transactions in recent years, fueling the highest level of investor confidence seen in the sector since the Napster era. The market is competitive, but investors are employing more sophisticated knowledge and due diligence thanks to increased transparency from the digital music ecosystem. And yet, there are only two major players in the catalog valuation space. Is there room for more?
The indies are rising. Independent music companies claim nearly half the global market share and the majority of new releases in 2025. Improved creator tools, the proliferation of distribution options, and the ease of accessing audiences across more than 700 digital and social platforms worldwide are powering the expansion of independent distributors like Symphonic Distribution, Too Lost, Create Music Group, and Empire, all of whom are posting double-digit annual growth. Financing for independent creators is getting more sophisticated too, with leading distro platforms now offering artists advances based on real-time consumption data.
Ghazi Shami (Left), Founder and CEO of EMPIRE, and Priyanka Khimani (Right), Founding Partner of Khimani & Associates – at the GoldState Conversations in Music Conference
Courtesy of GoldState Conversations in Music Conference
Investing in China and India is about to get easier. Historically, Western artists and rightsholders lacked clarity on Chinese consumption, but Luminate’s new licensing partnership with Tencent Music promises new transparency from the world’s fifth-largest music market. Luminate is also ramping up its Indian market data coverage, as Billboard launches in India.
AI detection and attribution technologies will be key. Only a handful of formal licenses have been announced for generative AI platforms and music, but commercial and licensing momentum is building. Landmark agreements include those between Kobalt and ElevenLabs, Merlin and ElevenLabs, and the Universal Music Group with Udio. As Goldstuck wrote in his paper, Past Precedent, Future Proof: Towards a New Commercial and Legal Framework for AI-Generated Music, generative AI platforms and rightsholders should move towards collaboration through negotiated settlements, not litigation, so as to pave the way for a more standardized commercial licensing regime for AI-generated music. Accurate detection will help monitor the use of tracks for training, while new attribution systems will be critical for properly crediting and compensating rights holders and creators for outputs. Platforms like Deezer, which offers detection, and Sureel, which specializes in attribution, are showing early promise in moving the industry towards proactive AI music tracing and licensing, but widespread adoption will require a lot more work.
Charles Goldstuck (Left), Recording Artist Daya (Center), and David Conway (Right), President of Hard 8 Working Group and Daya’s Manager – at the GoldState Conversations in Music Conference
Courtesy of GoldState Conversations in Music Conference
Next week, Harbourview Equity founder and CEO Sherrese Clarke Soares brings her investors to Miami for another series of panel conversations, as the investor-conference circuit continues.
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