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Malcolm Todd is officially a Billboard Hot 100-charting artist for the first time thanks to his breakthrough single, “Chest Pain (I Love).” Released in December on Columbia Records, the song debuts at No. 68 almost entirely from 7.7 million official U.S. streams (up 45%) April 4-10, according to Luminate. It also reaches the top 10 […]

TLC’s story is heading to the stage. Bill Diggins’ Diggit Theatrical Group is producing a musical about the beloved Grammy-winning trio that will premiere in 2026.

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CrazySexyCool – The Musical will tell the “mostly true” story of Tionne “T-Boz” Watkins, Lisa “Left Eye” Lopes, and Rozonda “Chilli” Thomas, as they formed TLC and broke barriers as women in the music industry. Diggins is producing the musical, with Stephen Gabriel serving as executive producer.

Kwame Kwei-Armah (One Love: The Bob Marley Musical) wrote and directed the piece, while Chloe O. Davis created the powerful choreography to some of TLC’s biggest hits that will be featured in the musical, including “Ain’t 2 Proud 2 Beg,” “Waterfalls,” “Creep,” “Unpretty,” and “No Scrubs.”

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“TLC completely changed the game,” Diggins said in a press statement. “Their music gave a voice to women everywhere, empowering them to be confident and unapologetic. But this isn’t just a story about the music; it’s about the sisterhood between these women and what kept them together through both unimaginable challenges and chart-topping success.”

T-Boz added, “Bringing this story to the stage is a dream come true. We have performed in a lot of different venues all over the world throughout our career, but bringing our story and music to the theater is a totally new and exciting challenge.”

Chilli agreed, noting, “We have some of the best people in the business working on this project. Audiences will get to hear our story – mostly fact with a sprinkle of fiction – told in our own way, and of course it’s set to all your favorite hits!”

CrazySexyCool – The Musical will host its world premiere at Arena Stage in Washington, DC, in June 2026 for eight weeks as part of the venue’s 75th anniversary season. For more information on the show, check out its official website here.

Could Morgan Wallen and Post Malone have hot summer song up their sleeves, repeating the success of last year’s “I Had Some Help”? Possibly! The two announced Tuesday (April 15) that they are set to release a new song titled “I Ain’t Comin’ Back” on Friday (April 18). Last year, “I Had Some Help” topped […]

Ice Cube is hitting the road. The West Coast icon announced the Truth to Power: 4 Decades of Attitude Tour on Tuesday (April 15). The North American trek is his first domestic headlining tour in more than a decade.

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The 22-date run kicks off in Brooklyn at the Barclays Center on Sept. 4 and will invade arenas across the country. Cube is hitting cities such as Baltimore, Atlanta, Los Angeles, Cleveland, Chicago, Oakland and wrapping up north of the border in Toronto.

“Truth to Power is more than a tour — it’s a 40-year celebration,” Cube said in a statement. “The world needs truth. The people need power. And that’s what my music brings. It’s gonna be next level to go from city to city with a major production unlike anything I’ve ever done before.”

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Pre-sale tickets will start going on sale on Wednesday morning (April 16). Fans should keep an eye on Cube’s social media accounts when it comes to gaining access to pre-sales, while the general public will be able to purchase tickets on Friday morning (April 18) on Cube’s website.

There will be a variety of VIP packages available that will come with meet-and-greet opportunities with Cube, signed vinyls and more.

Ice Cube will be celebrating his decorated discography ranging from the days of running with N.W.A. to his Hall of Fame solo work through his most recent album, Man Down, which arrived in November.

For the first time since 2010, Ice Cube entered Billboard‘s Top Rap Albums chart last year with Man Down‘s debut at No. 8. The set was released through Lench Mob/Hitmaker Music Group and earned 20,000 equivalent album units in the U.S., according to Luminate.

“Most of the people who say hip-hop is a young man’s game don’t do it and ain’t never gripped a mic and ripped it,” Cube told Billboard last year. “I’m not worried about my ACL and my Achilles. This is wordplay, this is wordplay and flow. This is skill and beat selection, concept and hook selection.”

Find all of the Four Decades of Attitude Tour dates below.

Celia Cruz will be honored with a tribute performance at the 2025 Billboard Latin Women in Music awards, Billboard and Telemundo announced on Tuesday (April 15). In honor of her centennial this year, the memorable Queen of Salsa — who was born in 1925 and died in 2003 due to a brain tumor — will […]

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Source: Tyler Mitchell / for Vogue
The first Monday in May is almost upon us, which means we’ll soon be tuned into the Metropolitan Museum of Art steps for the 2025 Met Gala. This year’s co-hosts- Colman Domingo, A$AP Rocky, Lewis Hamilton, and Pharrell Williams- cover Vogue’s May issue. Four men, all fashion juggernauts, brought their unique dapper style to the iconic glossy.
Vogue’s May Issue is just a taste of what we can expect on May 5. The theme is “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” with a focus on Black Dandyism.

Colman Domingo Met Gala Co-Chair
Source: Tyler Mitchell / for Vogue

All eyes will be on one of the most fashionable men in the world, Colman Domingo, on the Met Gala grand stage. As they should. According to Vogue, the respected actor “met with Monica L. Miller, guest curator of the Costume Institute’s “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” exhibition, to start scouting references.”
“I am a Black man who loves style, loves tailoring, and it struck me that I had never seen images like that—of myself, saying, I belong in these clothes,” he says. “I always had to look for a vision outside of myself,” he said.
Harlem native A$AP Rocky took it back to his hometown for his cover shoot. Before today’s release, images of the fashionable hip-hop father walking dalmations in the street giving A$AP Deville. But for the rapstar and father of Rihanna’s children, “That’s regular for us, bro,” he said in his interview. “I’m from Harlem, we showed y’all how to do this.”
Source: Tyler Mitchell / for Vogue
A$AP is looking forward to seeing “everybody celebrate Black excellence,” Rocky says. “When people celebrate a different culture or race,” he adds, “sometimes it’s done with intent, sometimes with ulterior motives.” The exhibition “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” strikes Rocky as “genuine…and very, very, very.…”
Lewis Hamilton was “blown away” when he heard the theme for this year’s Met Gala. The A1 racer broke down what Black Dandyism means to him in an as told to cover story. “What hit home hardest is how far back it goes, and that there are so many different ways to present as a man; you don’t have to be traditionally masculine,” he explained. “And Black men have always had to be more excellent than our white counterparts. I’ve seen that with my father and with me—we needed to be overachievers. That’s why this theme is just so important to me.”
Ultimately, he hopes this year’s dress code sparks conversation and reconfirms the connection between fashion and self-expression, and how deep it runs in Black culture.”
Pharrell’s unique illustrated cover is as artistic as he it. The Louis Vuitton’s creative director of menswear revealed his take on Dandyism. “I see dandyism as a set of rules and standards,” he says, “that reflect a certain sophistication and well-traveled taste. For Black people to hit that mark or exceed it, and be consistent with it, is a matter of pride. And consistency garners respect.”

Catch all the interviews, here.

Colman Domingo, A$AP Rocky, Lewis Hamilton And Pharrell Show Off Their Unique Style On Individual Vogue May Issue Covers 
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Ahead of the NBA Playoffs, the pro basketball league tips off the NBA Play-In Tournament to determine which teams will take the last spots in the Eastern and Western Conferences. Since there are eight teams battling for four spots, it’s going to be one thrilling and exciting tournament when it starts on Tuesday (April 15).

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Keep reading to learn the other streaming options to watch the NBA Play-In Tournament online without cable.

When Does NBA Play-In Tournament 2025 Start?

The NBA Play-In Tournament games broadcast live on ESPN and TNT, with tipoff starting on Tuesday (April 15) with the Atlanta Hawks vs. Orlando Magic at 7:30 p.m. ET/4:30 p.m. PT. The NBA post-season games are available to livestream on Sling TV.

Who Is In the NBA Play-In Tournament 2025?

The NBA Play-In Tournament pits the eight lowest seeded teams in contention against each other to see which teams will make the final four spots in the NBA Playoffs. There are six single-elimination games spread over three nights of hoops action.

Tuesday, April 15

Orlando Magic vs. Atlanta Hawks, 7:30 p.m. ET/4:30 p.m. PT — TNT

Golden State Warriors vs. Memphis Grizzlies, 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT — TNT

Wednesday, April 16

Chicago Bulls vs. Miami Heat, 7:30 p.m. ET/4:30 p.m. PT — ESPN

Sacramento Kings vs. Dallas Mavericks, 10 p.m. ET/7 p.m. PT — ESPN

Friday, April 18

East Magic/Hawks loser vs. East Bulls/Heat winner, Time TBD — TNT

West Warriors/Grizzlies loser vs. West Kings/Mavericks winner, Time TBD — ESPN

How to Watch NBA Play-In Tournament 2025 With Sling TV

To watch the NBA Play-In Tournament on ESPN and TNT, Sling TV Orange + Blue starts at $33 for the first month, $65.99 per month afterward (the streamer’s current deal), with more than 45 channels that are streamable on smart TVs, smartphones, tablets and on web browsers.

The service even gets you live access to broadcast and cable networks such as Disney Channel, ESPN2, NBC, Fox, TBS, Bravo, Discovery Channel, Fox News, MSNBC, National Geographic, USA Network, Fox Sports and more. Please note that channel availability and price depends on your local TV market. Learn more about Sling TV here.

How to Watch NBA Play-In Tournament 2025 With Hulu + Live TV

The NBA Play-In Tournament games on ESPN and TNT are available to watch with Hulu + Live TV too. Prices for the cable alternative start at $82.99 per month, while each plan comes with Hulu, Disney+ and ESPN+ at no additional cost.

Hulu + Live TV might be best for those who want all of these streaming services together in one bundle. It also features many other networks, including ABC, Hallmark Channel, BET, CMT, Disney Channel, NBC, Fox Sports and more.

How to Watch NBA Play-In Tournament 2025 With DirecTV

A subscription to DirecTV’s new My Sports package — which comes with ESPN and TNT for NBA Play-In Tournament — gets you access to live TV, local and cable channels, starting at $69.99 per month. The service even offers a five-day free trial to watch for free if you sign up now.

You can watch local networks such as NBC, ABC and Fox, while you can also watch many cable networks, including FS1, MLB Network, NBA TV, NFL Network and others.

Which Celebrities Are Making Appearances During NBA Play-In Tournament?

It’s likely there will be a number of celebrities and famous recording artists in attendance during the NBA Play-In Tournament, such as Warriors fans E-40, Jessica Alba and Carlos Santana; Hawks fans T.I., Ludacris and 2 Chainz; Bulls fans Chance the Rapper, Common and Bill Murray; and others. Tune in to the games to find out who’s sitting courtsideon celebrity row.

How to Buy NBA Play-In Tournament 2025 Tickets Online

Want to attend the NBA Play-In Tournament games in person? There are still last-minute tickets available via Vivid Seats (get $20 off purchases of $200 and over with code BB30), SeatGeek (your first purchases can get $10 off ticket order $250 and with code BILLBOARD10), StubHub and GameTime (score $20 off ticket orders of $150 and over with code SAVE20). Prices vary depending on the city and seats available.

Moreover, you can save $150 off when you spend $500 with promo code BILLBOARD150, or $300 off when you spend $1,000 with promo code BILLBOARD300 at TicketNetwork.com.

Starting on Tuesday (April 15) at 7:30 p.m. ET/4:30 p.m. PT, the NBA Play-In Tournament 2025 broadcasts on ESPN and TNT. Post-season games are also available to livestream on Sling TV.

Want more? For more product recommendations, check out our roundups of the best Xbox deals, studio headphones and Nintendo Switch accessories.

In a year that has already seen explosive comeback concerts (Vybz Kartel‘s Freedom Street and subsequent sold-out Brooklyn shows) and head-turning headliner announcements (Buju Banton leads this year’s BET Experience lineup) from reggae and dancehall‘s brightest stars, Alkaline is looking to add his name to the list.
The dancehall icon, whose hits include anthems such as “My Side of the Story,” “On Fleek” and “Move Mountains,” is set to bring his eight-year-old New Rules concert series back to Jamaica — this time at Trelawny Stadium, on the west side of the island, in collaboration with New Era Productions. Slated for Saturday, July 5, the concert marks the first time Alkaline has mounted New Rules in JA since its 2022 staging at Kingston’s National Stadium. Most live events that grace Jamaica often opt to visit Kingston and St. Andrew, which tends to exclude music lovers from the island’s west side to a degree. Having already visited Kingston twice, New Rules’ Trelawny stint will allow a wider range of fans to enjoy Alkaline’s concert.

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“It wasn’t really so much of a surprise [telling my mother New Rules would be coming to her hometown of Trelawny] because we always visit Kingston, but I wanted to give fans a different experience,” he tells Billboard. “They can expect high-energy entertainment as usual, but with a twist. It’s been a long time coming!”

The Trelawny date is the third stop on Alkaline’s New Rules 2025 route, which includes a stint in London on April 17 and a show in Canada on June 21. The face of Givenchy’s spring-summer 2023 men’s global campaign is most excited to perform “all of his big hits,” including “Bruk Out,” as well as some songs he hasn’t performed in a long time — and some that he’s never performed before. After all, the “unpredictability” of dancehall sustains his love for the genre, a space he’s been navigating for over 15 years now. He famously started releasing music in 2013, eventually breaking through the following year and launching a career that traded on massive hit singles, global appeal and a penchant for controversy. Over the past decade, he’s also added a litany of international collaborations to his catalog of solo hits, including 2017’s “Formula” (with French Montana), 2018’s “Nonchalant” (with A Boogie wit da Hoodie) and a 2018 remix of Chip‘s “My Girl.”

“[The name ‘New Rules’] came from my entry into the music industry and bringing my ideas and vibe to the scene,” he explains. “We came in set in our ways. We didn’t take anything away from [what was already there], we just added to it. I brought a youthful exuberance to [dancehall] because I jumped out very young, younger than most.” 

In 2021, Alkaline released Top Prize, his second consecutive album to reach the top two on Billboard‘s Reggae Albums chart. While he isn’t promising a new album before New Rules touches down in Jamaica this summer, fans can certainly “expect new music” from the star, which he’s already started rolling out with January’s “Earn Your Way.” The Autobamb and Sponge Music-helmed track continues Alkaline’s streak of standalone singles following his 2022 Ripple EFFX EP, which won EP of the year and the inaugural Caribbean Music Awards (Aug. 31, 2023).

As for this year’s New Rules lineup, Alkaline has yet to confirm who will appear at the Trelawney edition, but he’s already announced Loyal Squad, Andrew Fresh and Movie Star Johnny as supporting talent for the concert’s London staging at OVO Wembley Arena. Dancehall stars Armanii and Rahjahwild are also slated to perform. Earlier this year (March 30), Alkaline brought New Rules to Boston, where Massachusetts State Senator Liz Miranda honored him with a citation lauding his contributions to Jamaican music and culture and international influence.

Though it marked his first show of 2025, Boston isn’t the first American city to experience New Rules. Alkaline mounted the concert series in New York in 2018 and 2023, the latter of which boasted additional performances by Mavado, Charly Black, Skinny Fabulous and 450.

With Europe and North America on lock, Alkaline is now eyeing stages in “China, Japan and Africa” for future editions of New Rules. “New Rules is a worldwide ting!” he declares.

By the time Nashville-based digital marketer Jennie Smythe launched her company Girlilla Marketing in 2008, she had already gained significant experience working in marketing and promotion for companies including Hollywood Records, Yahoo Music, and Elektra. She also forged her path in digital marketing as the music industry was undergoing the profound transition to a primarily digital medium.

“A portion of it was just being in the right place at the right time,” she recalls to Billboard. “I found myself in a unique position to be able to be the bridge between the two. And it just so happened that nobody was speaking the digital language. I became the person—this was [when] Napster [was happening], when the industry was suing kids in college and doing everything in their power to squash the new business. I was one of the people who was like, ‘Wait a second, if we’re hearing that this is what they want and they’re seeking it out…’ It was very ‘flip the script,’ because up until then, it was the industry telling the people what they were going to get, the industry making those decisions. That’s completely changed.”

Today, the all-woman team at Girlilla Marketing leads social media initiatives and content creation for its clients, helping to develop online audiences, virtual events, digital monetization, analytics tracking and more. During her career, Smythe has worked with artists including Willie Nelson, Darius Rucker, Vince Gill, Blondie, and Dead & Company. She chairs the CMA board and serves on the boards of the CMA Foundation and Music Health Alliance.

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Now, Smythe is sharing the lessons she’s learned along the way in her memoir, Becoming Girlilla: My Journey to Unleashing Good — In Real Life, Online, and in Others, which releases via Resolve Editions/Simon & Shuster today (April 15). Her book also delves into Smythe’s personal journey including her 2018 breast cancer diagnosis and treatment. Smythe was named a 2025 Advocacy Ambassador with the Susan G. Komen Center for Public Policy.

Jennie Smythe

Courtesy Photo

“[The book] really was a way for me to express my gratitude to the music business and the digital marketing community. It was a way to share my survivorship so that I could help other people. And my intention was to be able to be a support document for entrepreneurs and especially young women,” she says.

Billboard spoke with Smythe about writing her book, launching Girlilla Marketing, the importance of mental health advocacy and leading the next generation of women music industry execs.

Why was it important to you to share your life and career experiences in this book?

I thought I was going to write a business book about business lessons, anecdotal humor in the workplace, generational bridges, that kind of thing. But I got sick and our music community also lost several people to cancer, like [music industry executives] Jay [Frank], Lisa Lee, and Phran Galante. I had 12 rounds of chemo, six surgeries. [Part of me] was like, ‘Can I just go back to work?’ But I realized, ‘No, you can’t. This is part of your story now.’ Every single one of those three people–Jay, Phran and Lisa–called me every day when I shared my story [about her battle with breast cancer]. They all were in harder circumstances than I was. So I was like, ‘I want to do this for them.’ And the Nashville community, it is like a family. That’s one of the most special things, and no matter how big Nashville gets, we don’t lose that.

A conversation with your father led you to launch Girlilla Marketing. What do you recall about that?

I was 30, I had had a pretty successful career, and then my dad was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.  I was in the hospital room with him and he said, ‘What would you do if your life was half over?’ When he asked me that question, in that moment, it drilled down to two different things: I want to start a digital agency and I want to travel more. I realized, “There’s never going to be a perfect time, a perfect amount of money—if I don’t do it now, I will not do it.”

Girlilla Marketing is an all-woman company. What inspired you to launch a female-first company?

I feel like through my whole career of working for other people, I only had the opportunity to work for one woman, and she was amazing. But I wished I would’ve had more opportunity to do that. So, I created what I wanted, the place I wanted to work, because it didn’t exist.

One of the key early moments in the book was when, during your career at Yahoo Music, you received a performance review from your former boss, Jay Frank. You received some feedback you didn’t expect.

That’s what made him my trusted mentor because he was like, “You’re so smart and you’re doing all the right things, but you’ve got to be human, or people won’t want to work for you.” I thought if you are the champion and you are the best, then you will be rewarded for that behavior. Not at all. Everything that has come to me in a good way has come because of a team mentality. It was a lesson in leadership.

What are some things were you able to implement because of that conversation?

How do you come into the office in the morning, no matter how stressed you are—do you say good morning to everyone, or do you just ignore everyone? When you are in a meeting and somebody is not prepared, instead of drilling somebody down to where they feel like they can’t get out of that hole, what do you do? Isn’t the job of a manager to lift them up?

What are some of the biggest myths that persist around digital marketing in music?

One of the myths is that [artists] have to create all the time. That’s not true. You do have to figure out what your cadence is, but if you are creative and you’re constant, you’ll be okay. Some people are too precious with it, they feel like they can’t, and we have to get them out of that.

With things like TikTok and A.I., so many things are swiftly changing in the industry. What do you think are some of the biggest issues?

Mental health. Giving people the space to create without the pressure of the analytics, which are glaringly upfront in every conversation that we have. Once a week, somebody comes in here ready to quit because they’ve been told that if they don’t hit a certain threshold, that they don’t have a career. I’ve been around artists my whole life and that’s not conducive to a creative career. My thing is telling artists constantly that they are the CEOs of their lives, and their digital ecosystem is part of it, but it’s a wide net.

Also, the mental health thing starts from the top. I am so lucky to be in this community with people like Tatum [Allsep] from Music Health Alliance, and grateful for people like at the CMA who put together the mental health fund. People talk about artists, but it’s also the people in the business that need support, like our touring families.

For those who are just starting out in digital marketing, what essential tools do they need to know?

I think just being an avid user, and you need to know how to shoot and edit content. It’s all video. This is the biggest merge of the decade. We used to have the creative people and the analytical people. To inform the creative, sometimes you need to understand what the market is requesting—very much the same conversation we had with Napster, when it was like, “So this is the most illegally downloaded file in Green Bay, Wisconsin—maybe we should go play there.” It’s also having somebody that can purposely come up with a creative strategy that also speaks to the analytical success to something, that’s the job for the next 10 years. That’s exciting because I think when I was in college, my [current] job didn’t exist. But along the way, everything I picked up mattered.

The MATI Festival and Conference is returning for its fifth edition in St. Louis, Missouri later this year, organizers announced on Tuesday (April 15). Taking place Sept. 12-14 in the Grand Center Arts District, the festival — which is leaning into the acronym for Music at the Intersection — will feature over 100 performances and presentations across three main stages and several nearby venues.

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This year’s headliners include rapper-actor Common with Pete Rock, R&B icon Patti LaBelle, hip-hop influencers De La Soul, jazz composer Branford Marsalis, recent Grammy winner Lucky Daye and neo-soul singer-songwriter Leon Thomas. Local trumpeter Keyon Harrold returns as MATI’s artist-in-residence, while Pedrito Martinez joins as the artist-at-large, performing across multiple sets.

With a new format and identity focused on celebrating “St. Louis Made” music, MATI honors the city’s heritage rooted in blues (the National Blues Museum is down the street), jazz, soul, R&B and more, alongside artists from culturally connected regions like the Caribbean and Mississippi Delta. Local artists such as Ryan Trey, The Baylor Project, Marquise Knox and Weedie Braimah will feature prominently.

Trending on Billboard

MATI’s footprint has also been tinkered with to provide a barrier-free experience, replacing a stage on Washington Avenue with food trucks, street performers and other family-friendly activities. Three main stages—The Big Top, Field Stage and The Sovereign —will host the headliners, while a new “MATI Places” initiative will activate adjecent indoor venues with acts, DJ sets, poetry slams, workshops, panels and keynotes, with the conference portion now spanning the full weekend.

Passes go on sale April 18 here, with weekend passes priced at $150. Special MATI Places-specific day passes will be available this summer.

Presented by the Kranzberg Arts Foundation, MATI is supported by the Steward Family Foundation and Regional Arts Commission of St. Louis.

“If you’ve been to MATI, you can feel that it’s special,” said Chris Hansen, executive director of Kranzberg Arts Foundation. “It’s a microcosm of the city: all ages, races, ethnicities. No neighborhood divides. People who can afford tickets and people who can’t. All joyous. All together in the streets of Grand Center. We want to keep MATI a true, representative community experience.”

The lineup includes Common & Pete Rock, Patti LaBelle, Lucky Daye, Leon Thomas, De La Soul, Branford Marsalis, John Medeski’s Mad Skillet, Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe, The S.O.S. Band, The Budos Band, Leela James, Arooj Aftab, The Baylor Project, The Womack Sisters, Coco & Breezy, Pedrito Martinez, Keyon Harrold, Delvon Lamarr Organ Trio, Pirulo Y La Tribu, Butcher Brown, Marquise Knox with Funky Brass Band, Brothers Lazaroff Super Friends, Weedie Braimah & The Hands of Time and more.