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This week, Billboard’s New Music Latin roundup and playlist — curated by Billboard Latin and Billboard Español editors — features fresh new music, including new albums by Jay Wheeler (Girasoles) and Guaynaa (Cumbia y Amor).  Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news Following his Broadway debut last fall and […]

The Kendrick Lamar parade atop Billboard’s Mainstream R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart extends for another week, as “30 for 30,” the rapper’s collaboration with SZA, rallies 5-1 to crown the list dated March 29. The track replaces Lamar’s two-week leader “TV Off,” featuring Lefty Gunplay, which itself captured the summit from Lamar and SZA’s other active radio-promoted single, “Luther.” By linking three successive No. 1s, Lamar becomes only the fourth artist to achieve the feat in the 31-year history of the radio ranking.

“30 for 30” surges to No. 1 as the most played song on U.S. panel-contributing mainstream R&B/hip-hop radio stations in the tracking week of March 14-20, according to Luminate. The song added 14% more plays in the latest tracking window compared to the prior week; the swell gives “30 for 30” the chart’s weekly Greatest Gainer honor, awarded to the song with the largest play increase. Southern stations led the final push, with four of the five stations that recorded the most “30 for 30” plays this week — WQBT-FM (Savannah, Ga.), WHXT-FM (Columbia, S.C.) WHZT-FM (Montgomery, Ala.) and WZGB-FM (Louisville, Ky.) — from the region.

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The Mainstream R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart ranks songs by weekly plays on more than 70 mainstream R&B/hip-hop (also known as urban) radio stations monitored by Mediabase, with data provided to Billboard by Luminate.

With “30 for 30,” SZA banks her fourth No. 1 on Mainstream R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay. She previously ruled twice in 2023, with “Shirt” and “Snooze,” and added her third, “Luther,” another Lamar collaboration, earlier this month.

For Lamar, “30 for 30” gives the rapper his ninth career No. 1 on Mainstream R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay. To rundown his collection:

“Swimming Pools (Drank),” nine weeks at No. 1, beginning Dec. 8, 2012

“F–kin Problems,” A$AP Rocky feat. Drake, 2 Chainz & Kendrick Lamar; two, Feb. 9, 2013

“Humble.,” nine, June 3, 2017

“Love.,” feat. Zacari; six, Dec. 30, 2017

“Like That,” with Future and Metro Boomin; three, June 1, 2024

“Not Like Us,” 12, June 22, 2024

“Luther,” with SZA; one, March 8, 2025

“TV Off,” feat. Lefty Gunplay; two, March 15, 2025

“30 for 30,” with SZA; one (to date), March 29, 2025

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Further, by linking three successive No. 1s without interruption on Mainstream R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart, Lamar is only the fourth artist — and first entirely in lead or co-lead capacities — to achieve the feat since the chart launched in 1993. On the overall list, he joins:

50 Cent in 2005, through one lead role (“Candy Shop,” feat. Olivia) and two featured roles, both on tracks by The Game (“How We Do” and “Hate It or Love It”)

Lil Wayne in 2011, through one lead role (“How to Love”) and two featured roles (Kelly Rowland’s “Motivation” and DJ Khaled’s “I’m on One,” also with features from Drake and Rick Ross)

Drake in 2018, through two lead roles (“God’s Plan” and “Nice for What”) and one featured role (BlocBoy JB’s “Look Alive”)

Elsewhere, “30 for 30” repeats at its No. 5 high on the R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart, which ranks songs by combined audience totals from adult R&B and mainstream R&B/hip-hop stations. Despite no change in rank, the song improved 9% to 13.2 million in weekly audience at the format.

All charts dated March 29 will update on Billboard.com on Tuesday, March 25.

This week in dance music: Beatport cited a 25% revenue increase in Mexico over the past year, along with plans to expand in the country, Zeds Dead, David Guetta and GT_Ofice made moves on the dance charts, The Dare tried to crowdsurf at a gig in Bristol and it did not go well, FKA told the story of how North West ended up making a cameo on Eusexua and we caught up with Flying Lotus on the occasion of his new film and the score he made for it.

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And these, of course, are the best new dance tracks of the week.

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Fisher, “Stay”

The Australian star drops his first release of 2025 with “Stay,” a bright, warm gospel house/meets tech house singalong apt for these first few days of spring. The track samples Exile’s 1978 classic “Kiss You All Over” (a song that fans of Happy Gilmore will quickly recognize) and bumps along brightly before an abrupt end. Fans of the Fish can get more all summer long, with the producer playing fests including EDC Las Vegas and Electric Forest along with his residency at the new club [UNVRS] in Ibiza. His own event, Fisher’s Out 2 Lunch, happens for the second time this May in his native Gold Coast of Australia.

Above & Beyond with Zoe Johnston, “Quicksand (Don’t Go)”

The gentlemen of Above & Beyond, along with frequent and longtime collaborator Zoe Johnston, have always specialized in a style of music that makes you dance as it also makes you cry. Their latest “Quicksand (Don’t Go)” is more of the same in the best way, with the gently propulsive, highly emotive anthem and slowly building anthem contemplating concepts of love, loss and longing over nearly six minutes. The song is the lead single from A&B’s newly announced sixth studio album Bigger Than All of Us, coming July 18 on their own Anjunabeats label. Ahead of that, the trio will play major festivals including Ultra in Miami next week and Coachella next month.

DK Holographic, “Aries”

Detroit’s DJ Holographic drops her debut album House In the Dark, with each of the 12 songs named for each of the 12 zodiac signs. Given that Aries season starts today, it’s apt that “Aries” opens the album, with the song encapsulating a driving and kaleidoscopic electro production that the producer occasionally strips down to just the kick drum and a glowing bells before building it all back up. “Through healing practices like shadow work, astrology, and more, I’ve found a profound sense of arrival while writing House in the Dark,” the producer says in a statement. “I’ve stepped into who I’ve always wanted to be as a creative and so much more.” Whatever your sign, there’s something for you on this dazzling LP.

Loco Dice & The Martinez Brothers, “Juice”

It’s a meeting of the minds on “Juice,” with Loco Dice partnering with fellow club kings The Martinez Brothers for the tight, hypnotic and predictably cool tech house track. The collaboration, from Dice’s forthcoming album Purple Jam, is one of myriad upcoming get-togethers for producers, with the three guys closing out Space together at the tail end of Miami Music Week on March 27 and then going b2b at Coachella next month as part of the festival’s freshly announced Quasar Stage lineup.

Dom Dolla feat. Daya, “Dreamin (Anyma Remix)”

Dom Dolla’s slinky February release “Dreamin” gets the Anyma treatment via a new remix from the latter producer. Under his watch, the song becomes bigger, darker and tougher, with the producer’s melodic techno fingerprints all over the edit and the approach altogether creating an eerie juxtaposition against the “sunny days/ it’s such a pretty place/ I see your smiling face” lyrics.

Booka Shade, “Broken Glass”

German mainstays Booka Shade release the latest in the duo’s long list of studio albums today, with For Real opening with the sumptuous “Broken Glass.” Containing none of the harshness its title might indicate, the track is laden with bongos, strings and bird calls, altogether falling squarely into the deep, vibey and contemplative realm where so much Booka Shade music has existed for more than 20 years now.

Who is Amir “Aura” Khan?

That’s the question everyone has been asking as McNeese State’s Men’s Basketball student manager has been taking March Madness and the Internet by storm with his tunnel walkouts.

Before each game, Aura leads McNeese State into battle, as he wraps a boombox around his neck that blasts various rap songs from rappers like Kodak Black and NBA Youngboy, and walks the Cowboys from the locker room, through the arena tunnel, and onto the basketball court.

The guy has personality as well, and takes his role very seriously. He once said, “If they kept manager stats for rebounding and wiping up wet spots on the court, I’d put up Wilt Chamberlain numbers.”

And look how he keeps himself in shape to be the best team manager in the nation.

The guys is a maniac, telling Sporting News that his fast mopping skills are what separates him from the field. “My quickness,” he told the outlet. “As soon as a player gets down, I’m running towards the wet spot, I’m diving on the floor for everyone, wiping up as quick as I can, but also making sure I get it. [Then] getting up as fast as possible and getting ready for the next one.”

His aura has earned him not only a lifelong nickname, but it’s earned him some paper. Khan is the first student manager to have NIL (Name, Image, and Likeness) deals, and he has them with TickPick, Insomnia Cookies and Buffalo Wild Wings.

Amir Khan, you are officially a pioneer. In the wildest couple of weeks anyone could have, you’ve stayed so humble & true to yourself. First-ever college student manager to ink a NIL deal… 3 deals… all with global brands… in a week! Keep going. You deserve it all✊@amirk_23 pic.twitter.com/hvEernU05Y— Reed Vial (@reed_vial3) March 16, 2025

Here he is letting everyone know what time it is like Shedeur Sanders.

He even has the cheerleader squad wearing socks with his face on them.

The god even takes time to give out some fan love.

If you’re still not convinced, check out this list I put together of some of his best rap moments this season.

I gotta warn you, though. The aura is contagious.

Kodak Black, “No Flockin’”

Jae Tips never saw himself as making a “transition” from rapper to sneaker designer. For him, music and fashion have always been intertwined — parallel worlds where influence is currency. “I feel like if you’re big in music, you’ll be big in fashion just because of how influential the voices are,” he explains. “Musicians, from the beginning of time, have always had a way of dictating trends.”

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The Bronx native started pouring more energy into fashion when he realized his brand was gaining traction — perhaps even more than his music at the time. “What if I stop putting all my finances into just music for a moment?” he recalls thinking. “Let me see what happens if, for six months, I invest in clothes, fashion, and style — see where it takes me.” That decision led him to this moment: sitting with Billboard, reflecting on the journey that brought him to a major sneaker collaboration with Saucony.

Still, music remains part of his DNA. “I think you never really retire from music — it’s always a part of you,” he says. Every move he makes, from sneaker drops to brand-building, is part of a broader plan. “It’s all just a big rollout for new music eventually. So, I think it’s always a possibility that you’ll see some new Jae Tips pop up on your timeline, on your little streaming services.”

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For his upcoming Saucony Jazz sneaker, Jae Tips introduces the theme: “I Love You But I’m Busy.” The phrase, he says, speaks to the delicate balance between ambition and personal relationships. “To me, it represents the entrepreneurial and creative lifestyle — constantly trying to figure out a work-life balance,” he explains. “Sometimes, intentions don’t always align with actions. You want to acknowledge the shoe’s place as another notch in your resume and design history, but it also marks a real turning point— one that involves making difficult decisions about the people you love and the things you love.”

Jae Tips x Saucony

Jordan Keyser

The inspiration behind the sneaker taps into this idea of emotional distance in the pursuit of success. “The soundtrack for this shoe, to me, is ‘Welcome to Heartbreak’ by Kanye West,” he says. “It reflects how you can become out of touch with reality while everyone else remains in the same place you left them.”

Jae Tips’ approach to sneaker design is deeply rooted in his past work in headwear. “The design process began a few years ago when I made a hat inspired by a Mickey Mouse, Disney and Ralph Lauren collaboration with the NFL,” he recalls. “I remade a Yankee hat using those same colorways. Many people who have followed my journey know I’ve done so much in the headwear space, but you can’t always tell the full story with hats because of licensing restrictions. With shoes, there are so many different panels, hidden features, and details — it’s been like a wonderland for expanding on stories I initially started with hats.”

This new sneaker embraces those past influences, featuring thoughtful color placement, rich materials, and subtle details that elevate the design. “We have an orange hit in the toe box, but in the mid, there’s an orange that almost looks like a faded yellow. It’s one of those things you appreciate more the closer you get to the shoe — you can really see the contrast,” he notes.

The sneaker also includes hidden gems, such as a “Savior S” logo on the tongue for Savior Sport, the phrase “Made by Jae Tips” — a staple in all his collaborations — and an insole that reads “Coming Soon.” Retail pairs will come with a flower keychain, and the box includes an extra set of white laces. Jae wanted to create a trendy runner shoe that people would wear in a sporty way. “I thought, ‘If you make it a sports shoe, maybe people will pair it with track suits, sweatpants, and really get busy with it.’”

Jae Tips x Saucony

Jordan Keyser

For Jae Tips, the connection between music and sneaker culture has always been undeniable. “Rappers always want to be designers, and designers often want to be in the limelight like rappers,” he says. “For as long as I can remember, a rapper wearing a certain designer’s piece or outfit could make or break a brand. Now, as trends shift, we’re seeing more musicians launch their own clothing brands because they realize the power they have to change an entire trajectory.” He points to examples like Dapper Dan’s influence on Gucci, Rihanna’s success with Fenty, Kanye West’s Yeezy empire, and Travis Scott’s massive impact on sneaker culture. “His brand is so big that when you say his name, you might not even know if you’re talking about a shoe or a song. That’s pretty dope.”

While Jae Tips’ designs carry echoes of his musical background, he sees his creative identity as something people are still discovering. “I would say yes, and I’d say no,” he reflects when asked if his music shaped how people view his aesthetic. “I apply a lot of the principles I learned navigating the underground music scene to my work ethic — the way I put things together, prepare emails and documents, and communicate all stem from that experience. And the way I promote myself is similar to how an artist drops a single.”

To celebrate the release of the Saucony Jazz “I Love You But I’m Busy,” dropping on March 28th for $165, Jae Tips has curated an exclusive playlist for Billboard — tracks that embody the spirit of his latest creation. Mark your calendars for the drop, and in the meantime, press play on the soundtrack to his latest masterpiece.

Jae Tips’ “I Love You, But I’m Busy” Playlist

1. Kanye West, “Welcome to Heartbreak”

2. Nipsey Hussle, “Forever on Some Fly S–t”

3. Jae Tips, “ Remember Who Fronted”

4. Leon Thomas, “YES IT IS”

5. Nipsey Hussle, “ That’s How I Knew”

6. Bonus: Frank Ocean, “Lens”

North Carolina native John Morgan currently has a Billboard Country Airplay top 10 hit with his Jason Aldean collaboration “Friends Like That,” and is gearing up for his debut album, Carolina Blue, out April 25.

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But in a true “only in Nashville” kind of moment, both of those milestones came courtesy of not only innate talent and ambition — but also one propitious Uber ride, when a conversation about songwriting led to Morgan sharing his contact information with the driver. At first, nothing came of the incident, but months later, the two had another chance meeting in Music City. The driver passed Morgan’s music onto his buddies, who happened to be longtime Jason Aldean collaborators/bandmates Tully Kennedy and Kurt Allison. Morgan began co-writing with them, and soon got a call from Aldean himself.

“He was just like, ‘I really dig what you’re writing. I like your style,’” Morgan recalls of the conversation. “It was the fact that he saw me not only as a writer, or just a track guy, but he saw me as an artist. He’d never seen my show or anything, just heard the demos and the songs.”

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Carolina Blue will release on Aldean’s Night Train Records, his imprint with BBR Music Group/BMG Nashville, while Aldean also signed Morgan to a publishing deal with Triple Play Music, the publishing company Aldean launched with Allison and Kennedy.

Beyond “Friends Like That,” other highlights on the album include the ode to his Carolina roots in the title track, as well as a mix vulnerable songs and up-tempo grooves including the rural anthem “Long Ride Home,” “One More Sunset,” and the breezy, romantic “I Know Better,” and the introspective “Kid Myself.” Strains of his myriad influences, from bluegrass to John Mayer’s guitar work, can be heard throughout.

Morgan’s musical roots began to take shape when he started taking piano lessons alongside his uncle and two cousins. “Two of us hated piano, so I switched to guitar and my cousin switched to banjo, and we just started jamming together,” Morgan recalls. Those jam sessions evolved — and by 10 years old, he was steadily playing local gigs and bluegrass festivals as part of the family bluegrass band.

“I did that circuit for about 10 years. It was a big part of my life and childhood, middle school through high school,” Morgan says. “It’s funny, I met [fellow country artist] Zach Top through that, at the Darrington Bluegrass Festival]. He was playing mandolin in his own family band.”

That time in the bluegrass music scene served as a catalyst for Morgan to craft his own songs.

“Having been doing traditional bluegrass for so long, you’re playing the same song as everybody else is playing, every version. I was like, ‘I got something to say. I want to write my own stuff.’ And that’s when I really chased that, for sure,” he says.

For a time, he gave up his musical ambitions and planned to work at his father’s property management business in North Carolina. He purchased property and was fixing up an old house on the land when a moment of realization shifted his perspective: “It just hit me out of nowhere, like, ‘Man, I’m not happy. I got everything going [on] outside and it looks great, but I knew music was missing in my life, so I moved to Nashville.”

He calls his Nashville arrival in 2020 “a daunting thing,” adding, “I lived in an apartment with one of my best friends and the rent was like almost two grand a month. Obviously, living in a city was a big change but it was just making friends, networking and figuring out how to get my foot in the door.”

He quickly became a versatile creator and asset in the writing rooms, learning how to track and mix songs, and fashion demos. “YouTube was my best friend, and I had a few guys that let me shadow them and watch their process,” he says. “I credit that a lot for two things: getting me into better writing rooms, and also finding my voice. If I was writing with two or three writers, they’d want me to sing the demo. With bluegrass, nobody cared how you sang — they cared how you play. I knew I could sing, but I didn’t know what my voice was, so doing those demos helped me figure out what felt good for me.”

Five years later, Morgan has forged a career as both an artist in his own right, as well as an in-demand songcrafter. He wrote on eight songs for Aldean’s Macon, Georgia double project, including the chart-topper “Trouble With a Heartbreak,” and the Aldean/Carrie Underwood 2022 ACM Award-winning single of the year, “If I Didn’t Love You.” Morgan has also written songs recorded by Jon Pardi (“Hung the Moon”) and Thomas Rhett (“Country For California”).

Carolina Blue follows Morgan’s 2023 EP Remember Us?, which featured a solo version of “Friends Like That.” Co-writing each of the dozen songs on Carolina Blue, Morgan has filled the project with songs he’s stacked up over the past few years, working with co-writers including Allison, Will Bundy, Ben Hayslip, Kennedy, Randy Montana, Jordan Schmidt and Lydia Vaughan.

Managed by Rich MGMT and booked by Wasserman, Morgan says his new album aims to connect listeners with his own story, while giving them universal songs to find their own point of relation. “I tried to capture that effect on this project of giving people different tastes of what I love and what I grew up listening to, but also keeping that identity as an artist,” Morgan says.

Below, Morgan — Billboard’s Country Rookie of the Month for March — opens up about his journey, his influences, working with Aldean and more.

Jason Aldean joins you on a new version of “Friends Like That.” How did that collab end up on the record?

I think we pitched it to [Jason] initially and it didn’t fit his record at the time. I released that song I guess two years ago and put it on the streaming world and shortly after that he reached out and said, “I’d love to look at doing a collab with you.” We got in the room and wrote some stuff together and got some cool stuff, but were never sold on it together. This song was doing its thing in the streaming world, so I said, “What if we reworked it? It fits both of our lanes. Sonically, it has that driving guitar and it’s a subject matter we can both sing about.” We went in and revamped it to make it its own thing.

Who else would you love to collaborate with?

I really love Cody Johnson. He’s just one of those guys that can absolutely rip. And he’s also just a great guy, has great messages in the song.

What is one album you never get tired of listening to?

Eric Church’s [2009 album] Carolina. I’ve been a fan of his and what he’s done over the past several years, just doing what he feels like is him in the moment. But that album specifically was inspiring to me. Casey Beathard is one of my favorite writers. It’s unbelievable what he can do with a hook. And truthfully, the [2009] Wide Open record from Aldean was a big influence, too.

You’ve written hits for other artists. When you moved to Nashville, did you at any point ever aim to be solely a songwriter?

It crossed my mind a lot, because I’ve got two kids now. The biggest thing you have to let go of [to be an artist] is your time. It crossed my mind, but I try to stay focused on the bigger picture. [Being an artist], it’s not only an outlet to provide for my family but also an outlet for people who have been in my corner from the beginning to take care of their families.

“Kid Myself” feels like a maturing, yet apologetic look at some past decisions. What inspired it?

That kind of pulls the curtain back a little bit on my personal life, a sense of a relationship that I was in back home in that whole time period where I was trying to figure out what I wanted to do and taking my dad’s business over and all that. I was dating a girl and it was getting to a serious point where it was like, we either do this or don’t. I feel like “Kid Myself” is in a way, an apology and a sense of, “I’m sorry that it was such bad timing. I’m sorry that I was just a kid myself, too.”

What are your must-haves on the road?

It’s changed a bit, but I love a good, bottled whiskey. Woodford [Reserve]’s always been my go-to, and there’s Buffalo Trace. I’m not too particular. The funny thing is we always had on our rider a veggie tray, a fruit tray and a bottle of whiskey to balance it out.

What is the best career advice Jason has given you?

He’s very unique, in the sense that he’s got a 20-year career as an artist himself, and now as a publishing head and a record label head. The biggest piece of advice he gave me was when we were putting the album together and he’s like, “Don’t cut album fillers. You don’t need fillers; you need hits.” That changed my perspective on what this album was going to be. I feel like some of ‘em aren’t teed up to be radio hits, but I just made sure every song we cut had a great hook, great melody and had the potential to be a single.

Would you ever want to put out a bluegrass album in the future?

That’s one of my bucket list things. I know the last time saw Zach [Top], I said, “Dude, whenever things get rolling for us, let’s get together and make a bluegrass album.” That would be awesome.

Spring has officially sprung, and what better way to welcome the warmer weather than with some hot new music releases? Kicking things off is Selena Gomez’s new joint album with fiancé Benny Blanco, I Said I Love You First. The project features previously released singles “Scared of Loving You,” “Sunset Blvd,” “Younger and Hotter Than […]

Influencer-turned-musician Alex Warren has secured his first No. 1 single in the U.K. with the viral hit “Ordinary” (March 21). The song ends the week as the most-streamed track in the country (5.6 million streams).  

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It knocks Chappell Roan’s “Pink Pony Club” from the summit, which hit No. 1 on March 7, almost five years after its initial release in 2020. The track gave Roan her first-ever chart-topper in the U.K., besting her previous high of No. 2 with “Good Luck, Babe!” in 2024.

Warren, meanwhile, is on something of a hot streak in his musical journey. Having started his career in the mid 2010s as a YouTuber before becoming a co-founder of the collaborative TikTok group The Hype House during lockdown, the 24-year-old made his debut on the Official U.K. Singles Chart last year with “Before You Leave Me” (No. 80), and by the close of 2024, he’d netted two top 40 hits — “Carry You Home” (No. 23) and “Burning Down” (No. 33). 

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“Ordinary,” his first release of 2025, began its ascent at the start of March after catching fire on TikTok. “Thank you to the U.K. for the No. 1 single of the week. I promise I won’t let you down — I’ll make you proud,” Warren said in a statement issued via the Official Charts Company.

Warren also appears twice more further down the chart. The aforementioned “Carry You Home” climbs to No. 20, while “Burning Down” finishes at No. 28. 

Elsewhere, Roan scores this week’s highest new entry with “The Giver” landing at No. 2. The country-pop bop becomes her fourth U.K. top 10 single, and her first to debut inside the top 10 upon release.

Doechii’s “Anxiety” scales a new peak at No. 3, marking the rapper’s highest charting single in the U.K. to date. Roan’s “Pink Pony Club” follows at No. 4, while Benson Boone’s “Beautiful Things” rounds out the top five. Other notable appearances include alt-metal group Sleep Token, who celebrates its first-ever entry into the chart as “Emergence” hits No. 17. Following her first BRIT Awards win as a solo act, JADE’s “FUFN (F–k You for Now)” debuts at No. 25, while Ravyn Lenae’s breakout hit “Love Me Not’ earns a new peak of No. 26.

Playboi Carti has landed his first-ever No. 1 album in the U.K. with Music (March 21). 
It marks Carti’s first LP in just more than four years, following December 2020’s Whole Lotta Red, which peaked at No. 17. The Atlanta rapper, born Jordan Terrell Carter, also previously saw success on the Official U.K. Albums Chart with 2018’s Die Lit (No. 27).

The sprawling 30-track effort features cameos from an all-star guestlist, including Kendrick Lamar, Travis Scott, Lil Uzi Vert and Jhené Aiko. The record was announced less than a week prior to its release, following years of development purgatory — from its title changing multiple times to a protracted recording process.

Two songs from Music also appear in the top 10 — “Evil J0rdan” (No. 7) and “Rather Lie” with The Weeknd (No. 10), taking Carti’s all-time Top 10 tally to four. Upon release, it  became Spotify‘s most-streamed album in a single day in 2025 so far.

As the Short n’ Sweet Tour continues to roll through the U.K. and Europe, Sabrina Carpenter’s sixth LP lands at No. 2 this week. The 2025 BRITs Global Success award winner first topped the Official U.K. Albums Chart in September 2024, with Short n’ Sweet going on to become the third-biggest album of last year in the country.Songwriter and Porcupine Tree founder Steven Wilson follows at No. 3, matching his previous solo career-best with eighth studio collection The Overview. Lady Gaga’s MAYHEM slips three spots to No. 4, while Tate McRae rounds out the Top 5 with So Close To What.

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Following its release on Blood Records white powder-filled vinyl, Charli XCX’s Brat remix LP makes its Top 40 debut this week (No. 40). Titled Brat & It’s Completely Different But Also Still Brat, the collection’s initial streaming release in November 2024 pushed its parent album to No.1 in the U.K. for the first time.

After taking this week’s No. 1 single with “Ordinary,” breakout U.S. singer-songwriter Alex Warren is on the cusp of his first-ever Top 40 album with You’ll Be Alright, Kid (Chapter 1). Initially released in September, the record has jumped 13 spots to a new No. 41 peak.

In addition to a visionary oeuvre melding jazz, electronica, hip-hop and beyond, Flying Lotus has been quietly building a film/TV career over the last decade. For the 2021 anime Yasuke, he not only scored the series but executive produced, providing plot and character concepts for the series. Prior to that, you may have missed his directorial debut, Kuso, a 2017 body horror flick starring Hannibal Buress; hell, even if you saw it, you might not have known he was involved, as the director was credited simply as “Steve” (his real name is Steven Ellison) on the project.

Now, on his second feature-length film, Ash (out now in theaters and eventually on Shudder), he’s fully aligning his artistic pursuits under his Grammy-winning moniker. Flying Lotus is the director, executive producer and composer of Ash – plus, he acts in the film, alongside stars Eiza González and Aaron Paul, as one of the crew members on a blood-soaked mission to set up life on an alien world in a future where earth has become unlivable (hard to imagine, right?). Melding surreal science fiction, slasher, whodunnit and psychological suspense, Ash is a tightly executed thriller that also grapples with some weighty question: Is there a future for humans on other worlds? What happens when you can’t trust your senses? Is it worth sacrificing the truth just to survive?

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The direction is assured and economical when it needs to be while also evoking Kubrick and Nolan in its more disorienting moments. Speaking to Flying Lotus days ahead of the film’s release, it’s strange to learn that the music, of all things, seems to have given FlyLo the most trouble on Ash. In fact, he wrote an entirely different score for the movie that he decided didn’t work, forcing him to start over in the post-production process.

While we may hear parts of that other score eventually (more on that later), the music that does accompany Ash perfectly suits the action, mining the relentless terror of John Carpenter’s music in some scenes, the majesty of Vangelis in others and even the expressive soundscapes of Jean-Michel Jarre.

From learning his post-production “superpower” to the shot from a famous horror movie he cops to lifting, here’s what Flying Lotus had to say about his new project.

Directing a movie is a huge undertaking and accomplishment, so congrats. How did you come to this project?

The people who I worked with on Kuso — that put it out and helped me get distribution for it, XYZ films — they’ve been kind of repping me ever since. We’ve been trying to find a good project to work on — you know, gently. They would send me material and oftentimes it was just not right for me. When this one came around, after I had just done Yasuke, they were like, “Hey, are you interested in this? We’ve been trying to get this thing going for a while.” And I was like, “Guys, how could you not have sent this my way before? It’s totally up my alley!” It’s got all the things that I’m after, and it’s also one of those things where I would also hate to see someone else do it and not do a great job with it. So I got in the mix and just started coming up with some ideas and drawing pictures and throwing them back and forth. They got into it with me and I’m really grateful.

When you signed on for this, was it just a given you would do the score, too?

It was more so like, “Hey, you’re also thinking of doing that, right?” I’m pretty sure people were thinking that was going to happen.

What was it that attracted you to this story? What about the script made you think you had to do this?

It struck me out the gate. It had all the signs that directors talk about. You couldn’t put the script down; you started coming up with images in your mind; and like I said, you just start seeing someone else direct it and not doing a good job with it, and [that idea] frustrates you to the point where you’re like, “You know what? I got to do this.” I love the genre, and I love the idea of doing a film that was a bit more commercial leaning, but where I still have room to experiment and play. It was the perfect thing for me. It’s so hard to make a movie; I wouldn’t just jump on any gig just because it’s an opportunity.

The script is interesting, because when it starts out, you think you have it figured, but as the movie progresses, so much more is unraveled.

Yeah, man, it was a lot of fun. It also reminded me of some of my favorite survival horror games. I think it’ll resonate with all the gamers, hopefully. That’s where I come from with this for sure — a lot of first person-y things and lot of video game references. A lot of people ask me about cinematic references, but I always lean more on games and play a lot of video games when I’m working on a movie: Resident Evil, playing Silent Hill, the old ones, over and over. A lot of the indie horror games, too. I started borrowing more from that world because it felt like a road less traveled.

So the first film you directed was credited to Steve, but this one is credited to Flying Lotus. Why?

I guess it’s just taking ownership of the name. They even asked if I wanted to call it “a film by Steven Ellison” or whatever. And I was just like, “I gotta ride it. I’m Flying Lotus, I’ve been doing this for 20 years, man.” It’s time to just let it be what it is at this point.

As a composer, when did you start coming up with musical ideas for this. While reading the script?

Absolutely, right out the gate. I had this crazy, cosmic concept for the music. It was something I started chipping away at from the very beginning. I really wanted to get this new sound: I was pitching to the producers, I was playing it to people, sharing it. When we got to the edit room, none of it worked. It was a totally different sound than it needed to be. It was music for another movie, basically, that wasn’t the movie that was being presented to me. I learned a huge lesson there. I think if I would have gone along with that original idea it would have still been interesting but would have been very wrong for the movie. I learned to listen to the movie and let the movie show you what it’s supposed to be, and to remember to take that step away from it. I think some people get this vision and they’ll just stick with it to the end. Sometimes you need to be able to adapt to the work that is on the timeline.

What was that other soundtrack like? What sonic reference point would you compare it to?

I really don’t like to talk about it, because I’d still like to do it at some point, but I’ll just say that, as a reference point, I was going to do something more like [Miles Davis’] Bitches Brew. It’d be a little different, but it just didn’t go.

How quickly did you figure out the score that ended up in Ash?

It took a while to figure out, but thankfully, I have a lot of reference points from different films. Right out the gate, we had to throw a temp in the movie, so I was able to play with what I thought it needed to sound like for a little while. And while we were in the edit I would sometimes write a queue for something, because I didn’t want to have the temp in that moment. I did the majority of the work when I was in New Zealand finishing post-production on the movie.

Does it feel like different parts of your brain, the composing, directing, editing?

It is now becoming part of my directing process, because I have more confidence in what I can do in the edit while I’m shooting. The editing part of the process, the post, is honestly where I come to life. As someone who sits in front of Ableton all day, it’s real close, editing a film and doing sound design and all that. It’s right there. That’s my superpower zone, the post.

What is it like to act alongside people you’re also directing?

It’s really nerve-racking. But the beauty of this movie was we all ended up doing our scenes on day one together. In a way, we were all nervous; we all had the jitters and were trying to feel each other out. And that was actually what the scene needed — it was a way for us to start building for the greater movie. To put myself in that position, I was able to empathize better with what the actors are feeling, because I know what it’s like to be on the other side of it.

What was it like directing Aaron Paul? Are you a Breaking Bad fan?

I’m just an Aaron Paul fan. He’s a such a great actor and a great human. He was super, super essential in the process. Just his energy on set and how he would lift the crew and the cast. He’s just an incredible human.

Without giving anything away, I will say there was a particular scene where the score really evoked John Carpenter – that relentless, repetitive, terrifying electronic sound.

That makes me happy. Some of those weird dissonant chords, there’s some of that in there for sure. I was thinking of him so much in the process. One of the movies that I did watch over and over right before production was the original Halloween. I even lifted a shot from that movie — if you’ve seen Halloween, you’ll know the shot. I was trying to get in his spirit toward the end, because he did a lot of his soundtracks alone with very minimal equipment and not a lot of time. When I was in New Zealand, I tried to think like him. I even hit him up: we talked a bit, and he was just so cool, man. He gave me some pointers, we were talking sh-t. But yeah, he was super influential. Vangelis was super inspiring. Akira Yamaoka from the Silent Hill series was super inspiring. I listened to the Cliff Martinez soundtrack from [the 2002] Solaris. I listened to a bunch of Berlin techno, really dark techno. And Angelo Badalamenti, there’s some of him in there.

Speaking of Angelo, you worked with David Lynch on “Fire Is Coming” in 2019. Do you take any particular inspiration from his directing style?

One thing I’ve learned is to be more confident in the unknown and the surreal and how a thing feels versus what a thing means. And not having to always explain a thing or why. Giving people some mysteries to chew on for a little while.

What was the hardest scene to direct?

Dude, my worst day on set was the medbot, the extraction medbot scene. I didn’t know if it was going to work. The whole movie depends on that sequence working out. There was a lot of faith that had to be put into the CG element of it, and we had no time. And that was also the day Aaron was done filming, so he was like, “Alright, that’s the last thing I got, right? I’m out of here.” It was that feeling of, “Oh, Aaron, no, don’t go!” [laughs] Then feeling like, “Dude, I don’t know if we got it with this medbot thing.” But now I have a bit more confidence in the post process and the things that that can be achieved.

Well, it’s tough to direct or act in a scene where CGI makes up a big portion of it.

To be honest, because we’re a small movie, I was just worried that our FX team wouldn’t be able to pull it off in a realistic way. Just because I didn’t know! So I was really, really nervous about that. Had a little freak out, but came back, got it done. But there’s some really great FX stuff there. I was just blown away when I saw that. That’s my favorite stuff that they put together.

And of course, it’s a small budget. But the scene absolutely does work.

It was a lot of love and a lot of support from people who had heard of my music and wanted to try a project that would be a little different. It’s nice to go a little crazy.