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Ty Dolla $ign‘s EZMNY Records and Create Music Group announced a joint venture on Thursday (June 12) following the success of EZMNY R&B artist Leon Thomas. Co-founded with Shawn Barron, who signed Ty to Atlantic Records in 2012, EZMNY made waves earlier this year after signing Thomas, whose single “Mutt” continues to climb the charts. […]

The L.A. raids coupled by the Trump administration’s immigration policies have sent shockwaves through the Latin music world and beyond, bringing cultural and political tensions to the forefront. From abrupt visa issues disrupting major touring schedules from Mexican stars like Julión Álvarez and Grupo Firme, to Donald Trump’s deployment of 2,000 California National Guard to […]

All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.
Summer is upon us again, which means you’ll have to combat the sweltering sun’s rays once again.

Unlike last year, however, you can put away the sunscreen and prep your wardrobe with help from Apivoe’s sun-protected “shirts.” Retailing for as low as $9.77 depending on the colorway, this men’s hooded long-sleeve makes for the perfect gift for those who love the sun, without the damage. If you’re heading to a festival or to the beach, we can see this style coming in handy for any sun-soaked activities.

Men’s Sun Protection Hoodie UPF 50+

A men’s hoodie in deep blue that protects from the sun’s rays.

The long sleeve comes in 12 colorways and sizes small to 3XL. No matter the colorway, this piece is constructed of UPF 50+ fabric or Ultraviolet Protection Factor, which blocks up to 98% or more of the sun’s harmful UV rays, providing the wearer with a high level of protection against pesky sunburn, skin aging or even skin cancer. No, it’s not magic. The UPF-rated fabric utilizes specific weaves, materials, and coatings to absorb, reflect and block UV rays, offering a barrier of sorts.

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Beyond being sun-protecting, the fabric is also elasticized, making it extremely comfortable. While we can see this long sleeve working well for all festivals this season, it could also be great for those who labor outside like construction workers or athletes.

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This piece is also extremely breathable and waterproof. The hood attached to the neckline offers optimum coverage and is equipped with a built-in mask that allows you to customize your look based on weather conditions. Still looking for a gift for Father’s Day? If you buy now, Amazon will ship this shirt out ahead of the holiday, making gifting for those stubborn dads a breeze.

Men’s Sun Protection Hoodie UPF 50+

A men’s sun protecting hoodie in rainbow gradient hues.

Some of our favorite colorways include Black, Gray and Camouflage, which looks more like a rainbow gradient despite its name. The color options allow for endless styling possibilities. The neutral tones lean more casual, while the colorful tones would be great festival attire.

We can see the rainbow gradient style lending itself well to pride parades galore, accompanied by denim shorts, white sneakers and a bandana. For a work day under the sun or a hiking trip with scenic views, we can envision the shirt worn with cargo pants and boots, a backpack slung over your shoulder for a rugged moment. Whatever way you choose to style this piece, you’ll know you’re protected from the sun no matter the occasion. Summer just became worry-free.

Men’s Sun Protection Hoodie UPF 50+

A men’s hoodie in black that protects from the sun’s rays.

Forever No. 1 is a Billboard series that pays special tribute to the recently deceased artists who achieved the highest honor our charts have to offer — a Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 single — by taking an extended look back at the chart-topping songs that made them part of this exclusive club. Here, we honor Sly Stone, who died on Monday (June 9) at age 82, by looking at the second of Sly & the Family Stone’s three Hot 100-toppers: the disillusioned party staple “Thank You Falettin Me Be Mice Elf Agin.”

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It should have been the victory lap. Sly & the Family Stone’s 1969 was one for the absolute ages, kicking off with the band topping the Hot 100 for the first time with “Everyday People” that February, continuing through the release of its commercially successful and highly acclaimed Stand! album that May, hitting a new gear with the standalone single “Hot Fun in the Summertime” in July and perhaps peaking with a legendary set at the iconic Woodstock festival in August. By year’s end, the Family Stone was unquestionably one of the biggest and most important acts in American pop music — and with the December release of the playfully and gratefully titled single “Thank You Falettin Me Be Mice Elf Agin” (as a double A-side alongside the sweeter but less spectacular “Everybody Is a Star”), you’d think the band was simply putting a nice bow on their ’60s run and looking forward to an equally thriving ’70s.

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Well, yes and no, but mostly no. The song had the chorus you might have suspected from such a single — and perhaps more importantly, it had the commercial success — but the tone was very different than Sly & The Family Stone’s prior singalongs. Previous classics like “Dance to the Music,” “Everyday People” and “Sing a Simple Song” — all of which are name-checked, with no shortage of irony, in one of the song’s later verses — communicated a communal spirit above all else, of a band with a mixed-gender and mixed-race lineup and no proper lead singer, because the party was equally welcome to all. But by the time of “Thank You,” the party had gotten a little weird and dark, and throughout the song you can hear most of the band members actively looking for the exit.

As Sly & The Family Stone was racking up the accolades and accomplishments during its career year, the band itself was starting to fall apart. Members were becoming alienated from one another, and bandleader Sly Stone in particular was dealing with all kinds of internal and external pressures, which led to health issues and a retreat from the spotlight, and both exorbitant spending and heavy drug use to cope with all of it. “During that period, [he] had enormous pressures on him to align himself with the voices of despair and nihilism,” former manager David Kapralik said of Sly Stone’s turn-of-the-decade turmoil in Fred Bronson’s The Billboard Book of Number 1 Hits. “The poor kid was torn apart.”

You wouldn’t quite ascribe despair or nihilism to the lyrics to “Thank You” — and certainly not to the groove, elevated by Larry Franklin’s innovative slap-bass hook, which pops like air bubbles rising to the surface. But the rest of the Family Stone does feel somewhat submerged: The horns are tentative and a little slurred, the guitar is jagged and scraping, the drums can’t quite carry the weight. While the opening bounce of “Thank You” is buoyant enough to suggest good times, the panic sets in by the time of the song’s famous post-chorus breakdown section, which sounds like the whole band gasping for air.

And the vocals, once punchy and emphatic in early Family Stone singles, are now clipped and indistinct, multiple band members seemingly shouting over one another, rather than cooperatively taking turns as they once did. What’s more, the mix practically swallows them whole as the song goes on: By the time of the song’s final verse, they’re barely audible, with lyrics you can only discern on an extremely close listen. It’s the sound of a band that feels like it’s not being properly heard anyway — so why even bother making it easy for you?

Forever No. 1: Sly & The Family Stone, “Everyday People”

Sly Stone’s lyrics certainly suggest as much. The first verse features him running from a gun-toting devil, while the second seems to find him at an industry party — and he sounds much more freaked out by the latter, protesting, “Thank you for the party/ But I could never stay/ Many things on my mind/ Words in the way.” The last point about words getting in the way is driven home by the third verse, in which he and the band quote many of the their most famous anthems with dispassionate dismissiveness, only really seeming to mean it on the final one, when their declaration of “Papa’s still singing/ You can make it if you try,” feels like they’re quoting a loved one trying to pull them out of their despondency. And the final verse ends — somewhat inaudibly — with the troubled “where do we go from here?” thought: “Dyin’ young is hard to take/ Sellin’ out is harder.”

So how did this song with the sub-aquatic groove and the claustrophobic lyrics still become a No. 1 hit? Well, of course it helps to be anchored by such a mighty chorus. There’s no murmuring or sonic burying being done once you get to the song’s refrain — just the whole band shouting out the title like they mean it, like they really do still want to take you higher. It’s a strong hook and a powerful sentiment, which understandably had the impact of drowning out most of the subtler, less clearly audible signs throughout the rest of the record that all was not right in Stoneland. (As for the modegreened stylization of the title, Stone wrote in his autobiography — also titled after the song — that “mice elf” was meant to suggest “small humble things that were reminders of how big the rest of the world was. You had to stand up straight to be seen at all… And there were forces working against standing up straight. I tried to get to them in the lyrics.”)

And whether you did get Sly’s intent in the lyrics or just loved belting along to that chorus, you still would have no problem getting down to “Thank You.” As off-kilter and occasionally disconcerting as the song’s groove is, it is never less than 100% funky: arguably even more so than the band’s poppier early hits, which sometimes sanded off the grit that traditionally characterizes the best funk records. In fact, along with other grimier late-’60s hits like the Isley Brothers’ “It’s Your Thing” and Charles Wright and the 103rd Street Rhythm Band’s “Do Your Thing,” “Thank You” pointed the way more to where funk would go in the next decade, with rougher textures, fatter bass lines, and lower-pitched grooves that suggested something at least slightly sinister going on underneath the surface.

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Really, it made perfect sense that despite coming out at the end of the ’60s, “Thank You” ended up being one of the first No. 1 hits of the ’70s. The double-A-side debuted on the first Hot 100 of 1970, dated January 3, and replaced Shocking Blue’s “Venus” atop the listing six weeks later, ruling for both the February 14 and 21 charts. Though the song would ultimately give way to Simon & Garfunkel’s quintessentially soothing “Bridge Over Troubled Water,” the rise of “Thank You” did portend some angrier, darker No. 1s to come; the entirety of Three Dog Night’s “Mama Told Me Not to Come,” which topped the listing five months later, feels like it takes place at the party from the second verse of “Thank You.”

In the decades following “Thank You,” the song has endured as one of Sly & the Family Stone’s most beloved, and has both been inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame and named by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as one of the 500 Songs That Shaped Rock. It has also been covered by everyone from Gladys Knight and the Pips to Van Morrison to Soundgarden, and sampled prominently by dozens of artists — most notably by Janet Jackson, who used the breakdown section as the backbone to her similarly iconic turn-of-a-decade Hot 100 smash, 1989’s No. 2-peaking “Rhythm Nation.”

But the most telling redo of “Thank You” was from Sly & The Family Stone itself, who refashioned the song as “Thank You for Talking to Me Africa,” the closer to its classic 1971 LP There’s a Riot Goin’ On. The new version, which borrowed musical elements from “Africa Talks to You ‘The Asphalt Jungle’” from the album’s A-side, slowed the original song down to a lurch, quieted the chorus to a near-whisper, and even flattened out the bass pops to a repetitive burble. The funk still remained — always would with the Family Stone — but the party was officially over.

Tomorrow, we revisit the final of Sly & the Family Stone’s three Hot 100 No. 1s, the joyous-but-broken-down lead single from There’s a Riot Goin’ On.

Colombian singer songwriter Fonseca is taking his Latin Grammy-winning Tropicalia Tour on a limited U.S. arena run that kicked off June 10 in Atlanta and will play in seven cities before heading off for nearly 20 dates in Latin America and Spain. The trek will mark the first time Fonseca has played songs from 2024’s […]

Source: Cook County Department of Corrections / Cook County Department of Corrections

R. Kelly‘s attorneys have filed a motion asking that he be freed. They say officials solicited another inmate to kill him.

As per Variety, the legal team representing R. Kelly has submitted an urgent request for his release. His attorney on retainer Beau Brindley says that they having damning evidence that the high-level employees at FCC Butner propositioned an inmate to kill the disgraced singer. According to the motion, Mikeal Glenn Stine, a terminally ill inmate at the same facility, has provided a sworn testimonial saying officials at the prison and prosecutors offered him freedom in exchange for killing R. Kelly. Stine also says that the alleged conspirators thought the plan out entirely even telling him that he would be charged with the crime but the evidence would be mishandled to guarantee a not guilty verdict. 

Thankfully the Aryan Brotherhood member decided against it and shared the plot with the singer directly in March. Brindley says in June he was alerted that a different member of the Aryan Brotherhood was solicited to kill both R. Kelly and Stine. “The threat to Mr. Kelly’s life continues each day that no action is taken,” the filing reads. “More A.B. members are accumulating at his facility. More than one has already been approached about carrying out his murder. One of them will surely do what Mr. Stine has not, thereby burying the truth about what happened in this case along with Robert Kelly.”

Beau Brindley is asking that R. Kelly be released to home detention. This is not the first time R. Kelly has filed for a release. Back in 2020, he asked to be released due to fears of catching the coronavirus. He was eventually moved from Metropolitan Correctional Center Chicago to his current prison in North Carolina.

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Oliver Anthony had a lot to get off his chest on his new song, “Scornful Woman,” which finds the singer-songwriter venting about his divorce.
If the lyrics of the June-released song are to be taken as autobiographical, Anthony implies that his wife is shaking him down for money amid legal proceedings following the dissolution of their marriage. The Virginia resident has kept his personal life out of the public eye, but it is known that he had a wife and kids when he first blew up in 2023 with “Rich Men North of Richmond.”

“The court says 50/50, but the math don’t seem right with a scornful woman,” Anthony belts on the fiddle-heavy track. “She can have all the money, and they can keep all the fame/ I’d go back to being broke as a joke if I could just get a break from the pain.”

The scorching track arguably speaks for itself, but on a recent episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, the podcaster — who had Anthony as a guest on his show in 2024 — shared his version of the story behind “Scornful Woman.” “I’ll tell you guys what happened,” Rogan said on the show. “Oliver Anthony has no money. He’s poor, he’s selling farm equipment. He puts this song on YouTube, he’s a f–king superstar. He doesn’t know what to do, he freaks out. He asks me for advice.”

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The comedian went on to explain how he urged Anthony not to “sign anything with anybody.”

“I go, ‘You’re independent, you’re already there,’” Rogan continued. “‘You already made it.’ Cut to: He starts making millions of dollars, doing arenas. The wife divorces him, she wants everything. She wants more than half. She wants all the money he’s going to be making in the future, ’cause she was with him when he was broke. He’s just tortured, wants to die. And he writes this song.”

Rogan’s remarks came just before the release of “Scornful Woman,” which Anthony sent to him before it dropped. In a video shared to the musician’s Instagram, the podcaster also praises the track ahead of its release on a different episode of JRE, saying, “That’s what I’m talking about … in the middle of all this honey honey sugar s–t, there’s still Oliver Anthony.”

It’s been nearly two years since Anthony went from unknown to Billboard Hot 100-topping artist in a matter of days. After a video of him performing his independently released single “Rich Men North of Richmond” went mega viral, the ballad debuted at No. 1 on the singles chart, making him the first artist to ever do so without having appeared on it previously.

Listen to “Scornful Woman” below.

From June 6-8, G-DRAGON performed three dates of his 2025 WORLD TOUR [Übermensch] IN MACAU. Streaming platform QQ Music logged over 7 million users online simultaneously while promoting the show, demonstrating the overwhelming anticipation for the Macau stop. G-DRAGON delivered three consecutive, sold-out performances at Galaxy Arena, bringing the Macau stop to a spectacular close. […]

Ron Jenkins / Kyrie Irving

Kyrie Irving wants to bring his gaming talents to FaZe Clan.

For those who don’t know, Kyrie Irving streams when he’s not on the court, showcasing his crafty dribbling skills that break ankles.

During one of his recent streams, Irving was on the phone with a member of FaZe Clan, the once-uber-popular esports and influencer brand, which has seen better days and expressed interest in joining the team.

“I was wondering if y’all are taking applications,” the all-star Dallas Mavericks point guard said. “I don’t really know how that shit really goes, bro.”

Needing some serious star power like Irving, the person on the other end of the phone took Irving’s inquiry into joining the team positively, and the official account for FaZe Clan on X, formerly Twitter, shared a photoshopped image of the NBA champion wearing a FaZe Clan jersey.

If Irving does officially join FaZe Clan, he would follow in the footsteps of other big names like Bronny James, Offset, Snoop Dogg, Lil Yachty, and Ben Simmons, who are seemingly no longer a part of the organization.

So if Irving does decide to join officially, he would be the biggest name on the squad.

Kyrie Irving Wants People To Stop Making Fun of Karl-Anthony Towns’ Voice

That’s not all that went down during the stream. Irving also defended his close friend Karl-Anthony Towns, urging fans to stop making fun of him for “changing up his tone.”

“Y’all gotta stop making fun of my brother KAT. I’m done with y’all,” Irving told viewers of the stream.

“Stop making fun of my brother KAT. It’s over for that, it’s a fuckking wrap, I’m letting you know that if you repost that shit again or meme him up, I’m attacking you. Not like that physically, GTA, but I’m attacking you.”

Irving also alluded to Kat’s upbringing in New Jersey as a reason people should back off.

“Y’all gotta leave KAT alone because y’all don’t know what it’s like to grow up in Jersey and have all of these cultures that you’re a part of, trust me on that,” said Irving. “Jersey is literally 130 miles long, it’s (a) very, very small state … but leave him alone.”

“Because he’s Dominican, he’s black, he grew up in a certain area in Jersey, just like me, and you gotta survive out here,” Irving continued. “You got many different demographics of people, so you gotta survive out here. I don’t agree all the time when he be changing up his tone sometimes, I don’t always agree and all that shit, that shit be funny, but on a serious note, he is a man, he is my brother and I protect him all the time.”

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Bonnaroo is back and better than ever.

The music festival is set to take place in Manchester, Tenn., from June 12-15. The multi-day festival promises loads of fun with top headliners including Tyler The Creator, Luke Combs, Glass Animals, Olivia Rodrigo, Avril Lavigne, Vampire Weekend, Hozier, Modest Mouse, Wallows, Tyla, Beabadoobee and Raye. For the full music lineup for Bonnaroo 2025, click here.

Each day holds new and exciting acts from all types of genres including rap, R&B, pop, rock and country. There’s truly something for everyone.

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How to Stream Bonnaroo 2025 Festival On Hulu + Live TV

For those of us who can’t make the trek down to Tennessee this year, do not fret. Hulu will be streaming the festival so you can tune in from the comfort of your home. The livestream will begin tonight at 8:15 pm ET, starting off the festivities strong with Marcus King. Hulu will update the stream as the weekend unfolds Sign up with Hulu now to catch the Bonnaroo stream while you can.

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With Hulu + Live TV, you can get all the content of competing streaming services together in one bundle The popular streaming service along with live TV access. The bundle will currently run you $82.99 per month, a small price to pay for music festivals at your fingertips at no additional cost. With this service, you have access to Disney+, ESPN+ ESPN2, MLB Network, FS1, FS2, Fox, NBC, CBS, ABC, Hallmark Channel, BET, CMT, Disney Channel and Discovery Channel, among others. Your subscription also allows you unlimited access to all of Hulu’s available programming, which includes The Bear, Love Island USA, Dying for Sex and The Handmaid’s Tale.

Beyond the musical acts, the festival will also feature interactive brand activations like free yoga sessions, hula hoop classes, life-size yard games, a marketplace and a colorful parade from brands you love including Beatbox, Smirnoff Ice, Trojan, White Claw, Coca-Cola and Jack Daniel’s. For our active readers, there’s even a Roo Run, a race benefiting the Bonnaroo Works Fund. Whether you’re riding the festival’s iconic Ferris wheel or jamming out to your favorite artists, you’re sure to find something you’ll love.

Check out the full livestream schedule below.

Channel 1 Schedule (All times listed in Eastern Standard Time)

Thursday, June 12, 2025

8:15 PM – Marcus King

9:20 PM – Wisp

9:50 PM – Die Spitz

10:20 PM – Wilderado

11:10 PM – Luke Combs

1:00 AM – Joey Valence & Brae

2:05 AM – Insane Clown Posse

Friday, June 13, 2025

8:05 PM – Cults

8:40 PM – Foster The People

9:45 PM – John Summit

11:05 PM – Marina

12:10 AM – Tyler The Creator

1:30 AM – Glass Animals

Saturday, June 14, 2025

9:15 PM – Jessie Murph

10:25 PM – Beabadoobee

11:30 PM – Olivia Rodrigo

1:05 AM – Modest Mouse

2:25 AM – Nelly

Sunday, June 15, 2022

5:10 PM – Treaty Oak Revival

6:15 PM – Remi Wolf

7:25 PM – Alex Warren

8:30 PM – Vampire Weekend

9:45 PM – Queens of the Stone Age

11:05 PM – Hozier