State Champ Radio

by DJ Frosty

Current track

Title

Artist

Current show

State Champ Radio Mix

1:00 pm 7:00 pm

Current show

State Champ Radio Mix

1:00 pm 7:00 pm


Author: djfrosty

Page: 598

This is The Legal Beat, a weekly newsletter about music law from Billboard Pro, offering you a one-stop cheat sheet of big new cases, important rulings and all the fun stuff in between.
This week: A breakdown of the many lawyers working on the Sean “Diddy” Combs litigation; a motion by Lil Durk to dismiss his federal murder-for-hire charges; an updated version of Drake’s lawsuit against Universal Music Group focused on the Super Bowl; and much more.

THE BIG STORY: The Diddy Debacle’s Many, Many Lawyers

To lead off Billboard’s annual Top Music Lawyers list, I dove deep into the many attorneys involved in the litigation against Sean “Diddy” Combs over his alleged sexual abuse.

Trending on Billboard

Spread across a complex criminal case and dozens of civil lawsuits in multiple jurisdictions, the Combs litigation unsurprisingly involves a slew of high-powered lawyers, ranging from veteran defense attorneys to experienced sex-crimes prosecutors to a prolific plaintiff’s lawyer who says he represents more than 100 victims. And that’s not even mentioning the BigLaw attorneys hired to defend top industry players who have been dragged — they say wrongly — into the messy litigation.

For the whole story, which covers more than 20 lawyers in all, go read my full article here. And make sure not to miss the actual Top Lawyers list after that, detailing the top music industry attorneys who are making deals, guiding clients and watching out for AI.

Other top stories this week…

IF THE SONG DOESN’T FIT – Lil Durk asked a federal judge to dismiss murder-for-hire charges, claiming prosecutors are citing song lyrics as evidence even though he wrote them more than six months before the alleged crime. Prosecutors had claimed last year that the Chicago drill star rapped about ordering his “OTF” crew to murder rival Quando Rondo, but his lawyers said that claim was “demonstrably false” and that the feds used such evidence to mislead a grand jury: “Unless the government is prosecuting Banks on a theory of extra-sensory prescience, the lyrics could not have soundly informed the grand jury’s finding of probable cause,” Durks lawyers wrote.

DRAKE v. UMG UPDATE – Drake filed an amended complaint in his defamation lawsuit against Universal Music Group over Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us,” focusing heavily on the Super Bowl halftime show that took place after the original case was filed. Drake’s lawyers say the decision to censor the word “pedophile” during the broadcast had actually helped his case: “Kendrick Lamar would not have been permitted to perform during the Super Bowl Performance unless the word ‘pedophile’… was omitted from the lyrics — that is because nearly everyone understands that it is defamatory to falsely brand someone a ‘certified pedophile’,” the star’s lawyers wrote.

LEGAL R.I.P. – Music attorney Joel Katz, for decades one of the industry’s most powerful figures, died last week at the age of 80. A longtime practice group chair at the firm Greenberg Traurig, Katz represented a who’s who of top music executives over his career, as well as major artists (Willie Nelson, Jimmy Buffett, Tim McGraw) and industry groups (Recording Academy and Country Music Association). After Recording Academy head Deb Dugan accused Katz of sexual harassment in 2020 — an allegation he denied — he joined Barnes & Thornburg in 2021, where he spent the rest of his career. Go read Melinda Newman’s full obituary here, featuring reactions from around the industry.

DIDDY TRIAL DELAY DENIED – Judge Arun Subramanian denied a request by Diddy to delay his sex trafficking and racketeering trial by two months, ruling that the move was made too close to trial. The star’s lawyers had argued they didn’t have enough time to prepare for trial after prosecutors added new charges earlier this month. But the judge ruled that the new indictment largely overlapped with earlier charging papers, telling Diddy’s lawyers he found it “unclear why there isn’t sufficient time to prepare.”

SMOKING GUN OR ‘UNRELIABLE’? – Elsewhere in Diddy-world, his lawyers asked the judge to exclude the infamous 2016 surveillance video of him assaulting his former girlfriend Cassie Ventura from the trial, arguing it would “unfairly confuse and mislead the jury.” They claim the clip was edited by CNN and then the original was destroyed, leaving only an “inaccurate, unreliable video” to play for jurors: “The manipulation of the videos was specifically designed to inflame the passions of CNN’s viewing audience, and that is what the government is hoping to leverage in this case.”

DISASTER DEPOSITION – Megan Thee Stallion asked a federal judge to hold Tory Lanez in contempt of court over “disruptive” and “inflammatory” behavior during a recent deposition in a civil lawsuit. Lanez — currently serving a 10-year prison sentence for shooting Megan — made a “mockery of the proceedings” by harassing a female lawyer and demanding definitions of basic terms. The motion came in a defamation case Megan filed against gossip blogger Milagro Gramz, who she claims has waged a “coordinated campaign” with Lanez to “defame and delegitimize” the superstar rapper in the wake of the shooting and trial.

DANCE DANCE LITIGATION – A TikTok user named Kelley Heyer, who says she created last summer’s viral “Apple dance” to a Charli XCX song, is suing Roblox over allegations that the company violated copyright law by selling her dance moves as an “emote.” Heyer claims that other games paid her for a license, but that Roblox used her moves without a deal. The lawsuit is the latest in a long line of cases filed over viral dance moves that are used in video games.

Billboard’s Producer Spotlight series highlights creatives currently charting on Billboard’s producer rankings. Whether they are new to the industry or have been churning out hit after hit, the intention is to showcase where they are now, and their work that’s having a chart impact.

Explore

Explore

See latest videos, charts and news

See latest videos, charts and news

Michael Uzowuru and J. White Did It are seasoned hitmakers on Billboard’s producer charts. The pair share the top spot on Billboard’s latest R&B Producers ranking (dated April 26, 2025) thanks to their work on SZA and Kendrick Lamar’s “30 for 30.” Uzowuru spends a 10th total week at No. 1, while J. White Did It (real name: Anthony Jermaine White) spends a 13th week on top.

“30 for 30” ranks at No. 2 on the Hot R&B Songs chart, after spending six weeks at No. 1, via 29 million radio airplay audience impressions (up 2% week-over-week) and 9.3 million official U.S. streams, according to Luminate. The song also ranks at No. 25 on the Billboard Hot 100, after hitting No. 10 to become Uzowuru’s first top 10 as a producer and J. White Did It’s fourth. It was released in January on the Lana deluxe reissue of SZA’s 2022 album SOS.

Trending on Billboard

Uzowuru began producing in the early 2010s with west coast rappers Vince Staples, Earl Sweatshirt and Domo Genesis. Since then, he’s worked with Frank Ocean (Blonde), Childish Gambino (Bando Stone & The New World), Rosalía (Motomami), Kevin Abstract (American Boyfriend), Beyoncé (The Lion King: The Gift) and Halsey (The Great Impersonator), among others.

Michael Uzowuru’s Production History on the Hot 100SZA with Kendrick Lamar, “30 for 30,” No. 10, 2025 (J. White Did It)SZA, “Scorsese Baby Daddy,” No. 41, 2025 (Tyler Johnson, Tyler Page, Owen Stout)SZA, “Notice Me,” No. 44, 2022 (Teo Halm, Carter Lang, thankgod4cody)SZA feat. Travis Scott, “Open Arms,” No. 54, 2022 (Teo Halm, Rob Bisel)SZA, “Diamond Boy (DTM),” No. 60, 2025 (Carter Lang, Declan Miers, The Antydote, Solomonophonic)SZA,” Another Life,” No. 63, 2025 (Rob Bisel, Sir Dylan)Childish Gambino, “Lithonia,” No. 69, 2024 (Childish Gambino, Ludwig Göransson, Max Martin)SZA, “Crybaby,” No. 70, 2025 (Carter Lang, thankgod4cody, Declan Miers)Halsey, “Lucky,” No. 88, 2024 (RAHM, Sir Dylan)Frank Ocean, “Nights,” No. 98, 2016 (Frank Ocean, Vegyn, Buddy Ross)

As for J. White, the producer/songwriter first broke through in 2017 thanks to his work with Cardi B. He produced three tracks from her debut album, Invasion of Privacy, including its Hot 100 No. 1s “Bodak Yellow (Money Moves)” and “I Like It.” He subsequently produced a third No. 1, via Megan Thee Stallion’s “Savage,” featuring Beyoncé, in 2020, and later, tracks with 21 Savage, Doechii, Flo Milli and Latto.

J. White Did It’s Production History on the Hot 100Cardi B, “Bodak Yellow (Money Moves),” No. 1, three weeks, 2017 (Laquan Green)Megan Thee Stallion feat. Beyoncé, “Savage,” No. 1, one week, 2020Cardi B, Bad Bunny & J Balvin, “I Like It,” No. 1, one week, 2018 (Craig Kallman, Tainy, Invincible)SZA with Kendrick Lamar, “30 for 30,” No. 10, 2025 (Michael Uzowuru)Cardi B, “Money,” No. 13, 2018Doechii ft. Kodak Black, “What It Is (Block Boy),” No. 29, 2023Polo G, “Bad Man (Smooth Criminal),” No. 49, 2021Cardi B, “Money Bag,” No. 58, 2018 (Laquan Green)Iggy Azalea, “Sally Walker,” No. 62, 2019

Billboard launched the Hot 100 Songwriters and Hot 100 Producers charts, as well as genre-specific rankings for country, rock & alternative, R&B/hip-hop, R&B, rap, Latin, Christian, gospel and dance/electronic, in June 2019, while alternative and hard rock joined in 2020, along with seasonal holiday rankings in 2022. The charts are based on total points accrued by a songwriter and producer, respectively, for each attributed song that appears on the Billboard Hot 100. The genre-based songwriter and producer charts follow the same methodology based on corresponding “Hot”-named genre charts. As with Billboard’s yearly recaps, multiple writers or producers split points for each song equally (and the dividing of points will lead to occasional ties on rankings).

The full Hot 100 Songwriters and Hot 100 Producers charts and full genre rankings can be found on Billboard’s charts page.

It’s the Wilson Phillips song the world didn’t know it needed.
Tight, three-part harmonies, infectious hooks and a light, positive air that makes it easier to hold on for one more day — that’s Runaway June’s “New Kind of Emotion,” a slow-boiling track soaked in fresh nostalgia.

Wilson Phillips was “my favorite when I was little,” Runaway June founder Jennifer Wayne says, “because my mom used to listen to them.”

Explore

Explore

See latest videos, charts and news

See latest videos, charts and news

Wayne is the only original member left in Runaway June. Current lead vocalist Stevie Woodward and fiddler-vocalist Natalie Stovall found their roles in the trio’s live show through several tours, but it wasn’t until they developed “New Kind of Emotion” with songwriter Paul Sikes (“Wildflowers and Wild Horses,” “Make Me Want To”) on July 19, 2023, that they felt like they’d found their collective voice in the writing room.

A Woodward family gathering started the creative chain. Some of the guests started making music, and one of her cousin’s friends slid into a chord progression with a descending element. Woodward freestyled a melody, and she liked it so much that she recorded it on her phone for later use.

Trending on Billboard

“The song and the melody felt like it was a very summery, nostalgic song,” Woodward remembers. “My thought was, ‘Well, what if it was a song about driving down the Pacific Coast Highway?’ I saw a convertible with the roof off, and I thought of the song ‘Wild Horses’ by The Rolling Stones, one of my favorite bands.”

But no co-writers responded to that descending progression until she pitched it to her bandmates. “It wasn’t meant for those people,” she says. “It was meant to be a Runaway June song.”

But it continued to evolve. The PCH and the “Wild Horses” reference disappeared as they evaluated its foundation. “One of us was like, ‘Well, gosh, it kind of just feels like a love song,’ ” Wayne recalls. “And one person said, ‘Yeah, like a new kind of emotion.’ And then I think I said, ‘You set it in motion,’ and then we just rolled with it.”

They wrote the chorus first, catching a sunshiny vibe with a subtle spike of melancholy. That came from the chord structure, which features two major-seventh chords back-to-back. They use four notes each, rather than the standard three, to create their sound, and one is only a half-step from the root. It introduces a tinge of dissonance, adding biting complexity.

“Those major-seventh chords give you that kind of throwback feel, but also in an uptempo way that makes you just kind of want to roll the windows down at the same time,” Sikes says.

Runaway June explored harmonies as the members shaped the melody, pointedly emphasizing the trio’s signature. “The three-part is the lead voice,” Stovall says. “That’s what this band is. It’s three-part harmony, and obviously Stevie sings the lead lines. But we want to make sure that the harmonies are really supporting everything.”

The major-sevenths, by stuffing four notes into the chords, offered greater harmonic options, and Sikes was determined to take advantage of them, encouraging Wayne to incorporate the dissonant notes into her high harmonies. Initially, she found herself edging those notes up a half-step to the more conventional root, but as Sikes coached her through it, Wayne increasingly caught the beauty in the part.

“It rubs a little bit,” she says. “My brain couldn’t wrap around singing it, but once you learn it and you sing it together, you’re like, ‘Wow, that’s actually really cool.’ ”

Once they’d crafted two verses at a lower, sultry pitch, they developed another, unexpected hook. “This is what a love song feels like” popped up, and they instinctively repeated the phrase hypnotically after the second chorus.

“When you think about relationships, a lot of times they come out of nowhere,” Woodward says. “So that part, while it does come out of nowhere, it’s fitting for the message.”

“It’s not your typical bridge,” Sikes adds, “because we’re not bringing up any new information. We’re not reinventing the wheel. You might consider it a refrain, more than anything, where it’s kind of a ‘row, row, row your boat’ round-robin [of] that hook.”

They created another moment with a four-note passage in the intro that became a key instrumental riff. It operated similarly to the major-seventh chords, holding at a final note that didn’t quite resolve. It introduced more rewarding tension, similar to the fresh uncertainty of a new relationship.

“I’m always trying to find some sort of fiddle riff that is another hook in addition to the lyrical hooks,” Stovall says.

Sikes built the bulk of a demo that day, converting that riff to a programmed steel guitar in some parts of the performance. He also programmed drums, which were eventually replaced, though the members of Runaway June discovered to their surprise that they preferred the mesmeric artificial percussion, which mirrored the narcotic pleasure of new love.

They developed a game plan for the song during preproduction with their producer, Sugarland’s Kristian Bush, before recording it at Nashville’s Sound Stage in March 2024. The studio band easily grasped the goals.

“The song is a little bit about that weird floatiness you get when you meet somebody for the first time and you connect with them and you’re like, ‘Wow, why do I feel lighter?’ ” Bush explains. “Until you have that feeling, you don’t really connect to a lot of those kinds of songs.”

Woodward played one of the acoustic guitars on the track, drummer Travis McNabb captured the controlled nature of the programmed percussion and Stovall turned in her fiddle riff — though it was blended with Benji Shanks’ electric guitar and a shape-shifted Brandon Bush keyboard part.

“We use an ambient pedal a lot called the Microcosm,” Kristian Bush says. “It inserts weird, uncontrollable versions of your note, so the keyboard might be a Wurlitzer or a [Fender] Rhodes or something really normal. Once you run this thing, you kind of spin knobs until it does something wacky and pray that it goes to the good side.”

A day later, he booked Runaway June into the Starstruck Studios and had the members record their vocals simultaneously for the first time. Watching through the glass in their separate vocal booths, they could breathe as one and follow each other as they would in concert. It’s part of the reason their harmonies sound as tight as a Wilson Phillips performance.

“That’s exactly what I was going for,” Kristian says.

The track went to digital service providers in October, and programmers responded enthusiastically as Runaway June toured. That played a part when the trio asked Quartz Hill to release “New Kind of Emotion” to radio instead of a previously planned ballad. It shipped to country stations through PlayMPE on March 24.

It also tested well informally with people outside the music business; it’s the first time that all of Runaway June’s family members were in harmony on a particular song.

“It’s a good sign,” Stovall says, “when your parents tell you that they were dancing to it in the living room.”

Pope Francis passed away on Monday, April 21, and musicians such as J Balvin and Andrea Bocelli have taken to social media to pay tribute to the pope. What was your favorite memory of Pope Francis? Let us know in the comments below. Narrator:That’s J Balvin taking a selfie with the late, great Pope Francis […]

Dem Babies are not happy with dem Easter photos. After Mariah Carey shared a carousel of sweet snaps from her family celebrations this year, the superstar’s 13-year-old twins Moroccan and Monroe — whom she shares with ex Nick Cannon — both hilariously voiced their dismay in the comments. In the pictures posted on Instagram Monday […]

50 Cent was able to squash his beef with Joe Budden at the New York Knicks game last night, but Ja Rule reminded him their beef is still very much alive. On Monday (April 21), 50 and Joe ran into each other at Madison Square Garden as the New York Knicks faced off against the […]

HipHopWired Featured Video

Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

Kevin Gates has responded to what many interpreted as LeBron James and his wife Savannah’s reaction to Gates’ recent controversial remarks.

Gates originally stirred conversation when he said, “I don’t like the way Savannah look at LeBron. I like the way them white women look at LeBron.” The statement sparked widespread backlash online, with many viewing it as both disrespectful and racially insensitive. In what appeared to be a subtle clapback, LeBron took to Instagram, writing, “Kings don’t concern themselves with the opinions of peasants.” 

Meanwhile, Savannah joined in with a more playful, yet pointed reaction, sharing a viral clip of Nicki Minaj saying, “What? Um—chile, anyways, so,” signaling dismissal and disinterest.

Gates, never one to shy away from controversy, responded via his own Instagram video. “The truth hurts, but it heals,” he began. “And ‘Bron, I love you, ‘cause you my n**a… But anyway, look, long as you being celebrated, I don’t care who don’t like me.”* He went on to say that his focus is on celebrating LeBron’s legacy, adding, “We gon’ get the results… I’m a life coach and a guru.”

Though Gates attempted to temper his comments with affection toward LeBron, many saw the video as doubling down rather than offering any sort of apology. The situation highlights the growing tension between celebrities using social media as both a platform for personal expression and a battlefield for public opinion. Whether this exchange will escalate further or simply fade into the constant churn of online drama remains to be seen.

Billboard Latin Women in Music 2025 is this Thursday, April 24, and we’re here to take you through who you can expect to see on the big night, including Selena Gomez, Celia Cruz, Anitta, Chiquis and more! Who are you excited to see at Billboard Latin Women in Music 2025? Let us know in the […]

When you gotta go, you gotta go. Shaquille O’Neal couldn’t wait until the next commercial break while filming Inside the NBA live, so he got up and headed to the bathroom mid-show on Monday night (April 21).

Explore

See latest videos, charts and news

See latest videos, charts and news

While co-hosts Charles Barkley and Kenny “The Jet” Smith were recapping the thrilling game two finish between the Los Angeles Clippers and Denver Nuggets, Shaq — aka DJ Diesel — made a mad dash for the Studio J exit, which took everyone by surprise.

“You all right, big fella?” Smith asked. “You catching a cramp? It’s that olive oil you been drinking. Hey, listen, he couldn’t hold it. Can’t hold it no more after 40.”

Trending on Billboard

DJ Diesel implored them to continue the show, while anchor Ernie Johnson wondered if this was some planned skit. “I didn’t like his gait as he left, that was not a typical walk right there,” Johnson said.

Smith took a jab at Shaq as he quipped: “He’s been drinking olive oil to clean his gut, he’s cleaning his gut all right.”

A few minutes later, O’Neal returned to the set and blamed drinking too much water along with Barkley’s loud mouth. “I’m sitting here like shut the hell up and hurry up,” he said to Barkley.

Add this to the many memorable moments of Inside the NBA as the TNT show will be exiting Turner Sports at the end of the NBA’s 2025 Conference Finals.

However, it’s not the end for Shaq, Chuck, Ernie and Kenny. The crew will be heading to the ABC/ESPN family starting next season.

On the music side, let’s hope DJ Diesel uses the restroom before his gig on Friday night (April 25) when he takes over the Silo for a set in Dallas.

Watch the full clip below.

Tina Knowles loves being a grandmother to Beyoncé‘s three kids — but she’s not so much a fan of how the world turned on her daughter when the superstar was first expecting.
In an interview with People published Tuesday (April 22) — the same day the businesswoman’s new memoir, Matriarch, hit shelves — Knowles opened up about how widespread rumors Bey faked her pregnancy with firstborn Blue Ivy in 2011 marred the experience for the entire family. “Babies and children are so precious and so sacred,” the designer began.

“To hear people say the most horrendous things and to call my whole family a lie — because we would all have to be part of that conspiracy and lie about something so sacred — it was one of the worst times of my life, because I couldn’t say anything,” Knowles continued. “My daughter was saying, ‘No, you’re just going to make the story bigger.’ But it didn’t go away for a long time.”

Trending on Billboard

“It’s one of the most painful things for me, to know that people could be that disgusting,” she added, noting that the incessant pop-culture rumor mill has remained an ever-present challenge for her as a mom. “I deal with lies all the time. I’m dealing with lies now, that I’m having, like, an invisible zipper at my mouth. There’s always these crazy rumors that are out there and, people just get to lie, and they don’t have to suffer any consequences.”

Rumors that the “Texas Hold ‘Em” musician was pretending to be pregnant originally took off after she appeared on an Australian talk show in the fall of 2011. As she sat down for the interview, her dress folded in such a way that some viewers thought it looked like a fake baby bump caving in on itself, leading to inescapable chatter and frame-by-frame analyses from people who were convinced that Bey was lying. Even after Blue was born in January 2012, some haters still theorized that the vocalist and Jay-Z had welcomed her via surrogate.

At the time, Bey’s publicist shot down the rumors as “stupid, ridiculous and false,” while the 35-time Grammy winner added to People months later, “That was crazy. It wasn’t hurtful, it was just crazy.” The musician and Roc Nation founder are now also parents to 7-year-old twins Rumi and Sir — but more than a decade after the fact, Ms. Knowles — who was honored as Mother of the Year at 2025 Billboard Women in Music — says that the 2011 controversy still angers her, especially knowing that her daughter suffered multiple pregnancy losses before Blue came along.

“The worst thing is that people had no idea how hard it was for Beyoncé to go through multiple miscarriages, and then when finally blessed to carry a baby to term, the world starts heckling you as you both try to make it to the finish line,” she writes in Matriarch, according to snippets published by The Independent. “This child was prayed for and prayed over — a wanted, cherished, real baby, and people were making a living off saying she was a lie.”

“I wanted to curse some people out and scream at these losers to set the record straight,” Knowles adds in the book. “They had no idea what she and Jay, and our whole family, had been through.”