Blog
Page: 697
Ed Sheeran and Weezer were two previously unannounced acts spotted on the 2025 Coachella lineup when set times for the this yearâs festival were posted on Saturday (April 5). Theyâll each pop in for a one-day, daytime set. Weezer will play the Mojave tent on Saturday afternoon (3:10-3:55 p.m.) on April 12, during the festivalâs […]
Deshonne Redeaux just made his college commitment official â and he did it with the kind of hometown love story only Los Angeles can write.
The four-star running back from Carson, California, known for his speed, field vision and unshakable confidence, announced his commitment to the University of Southern California in a full-circle moment that brought two L.A. icons into the spotlight: Snoop Dogg and JuJu Watkins.
âIt means a lot to have Snoop Dogg support me at one of my biggest moments,â Redeaux tells Billboard. âI played in his Snoop Youth Football League, and it pathed the way for me to reach my goal of getting a Division 1 college scholarship.â
Also featured in the announcement video (seen in the Instagram post above) was JuJu Watkins, USCâs breakout basketball star and a longtime friend. âJuJu supporting me at this time means so much to me because we grew up together and she has inspired me watching her make history in the city that raised her,â he says. âCanât wait to share a campus with her, impact the community, and bring national championships back to the city!â
Trending on Billboard
Redeaux says staying home and playing for USC was about more than football. âI choose USC because nothing is more powerful than impacting the hometown community and being the light in my own backyard,â he says. âSome of the determining factors were the amazing USC tradition and legacy â specifically at the running back position â and being a difference maker to bring the winning culture back to USC football and to the city of Los Angeles.â
To mark the occasion, Redeaux shared his ultimate game day hype playlist exclusively with Billboard, highlighting the music that keeps him focused and fired up before he hits the field.
âDrake featuring Rick Ross, âLord Knowsâ â the message behind the song is all about motivation and reflection,â he says. âAnd with the Lordâs guidance, you can accomplish anything. It really gets me in my mode!â
When itâs tunnel time, he turns to NBA YoungBoyâs âHead Blown.â âIt puts me into dog mentality to be a lock in the field,â he says.
Other key tracks include J. Coleâs âLove Yourz,â Ginuwineâs âSame Ol Gâ and Nipsey Hussleâs âDedication.â
âIâm most excited about strapping it up for the first time at the Coliseum â that will be a dream come true,â he says. âI want to give back to the youth and always show up for the next generation.â
Check out Deshonne Redeauxâs full Game Day Hype Playlist below, featuring Playboi Carti, EBK Jayboo, SWV, Lil Durk, Icewear Vezzo, BlueBucksClan and more.
Tron is back. On Saturday (April 5), Disney unveiled the first trailer for Tron: Ares, the third installment in the Tron franchise, following the original 1982 film and its 2010 sequel Tron: Legacy. The new trailer offers a glimpse of a dark, brooding landscape where reality and the virtual world collide. The minute-and-a-half-long clip opens […]
Days after teasing a new collaboration with Roc Marciano, Grammy-nominated TDE MC Ab-Soul graced the fifth and final Dreamville Fest â and Billboard caught up with him moments before he hit the stage.
âIâm a little offended because me and [J.] Cole are very good friends and Iâm a very good rapper, if not the best rapper of all time,â he said in jest. âWhy is this my first time on the lineup? Itâs beyond me. They really saved the best for last!â
Though it is Abâs first time performing at the North Carolina festival, it may not be his last opportunity to head down to Raleigh. During a press conference on Thursday (Apr. 3), Raleigh festival organizers surprised fans by revealing that Dreamville Fest will return in the future under a new iteration. Of course, the final (for now) Dreamville Fest is a poignant moment for Ab, who âcame up in the same eraâ as several key Dreamville stars.
Trending on Billboard
âThese are really my guys, Bas was on my first headlining tour, and thatâs where I met Earthgang, JID, Cozz, the whole team,â he said. âTheyâre undeniable. Theyâre true MCs, true artists. Ari [Lennox] goes crazy. Iâm sure [Dreamville Fest] is a dream come true for Cole and for many others in this area. Iâm honored to be here [today].â
Last year, Ab dropped his sixth studio album, Soul Burger, a record dedicated to his best friend Doeburger, who passed away in 2021. Stacked with collaborators like Doechii, Ty Dolla $ign and Lupe Fiasco, Soul Burger also features Doeburger as a posthumously credited writer across all tracks.
In the caption of an Instagram post teasing his forthcoming Roc Marciano collaboration and honoring Doeburgerâs birthday (Apr. 1), Ab gave a special shoutout to Cole, thanking the âMiddle Childâ rapper for sharing his perspective. âPreciate the insight Cole. It was much needed,â he wrote, detailing how much the new song means to him. âItâs imperative that I let the world know the impact my brother left on me and so many others. I didnât do this for views nor to monetize. I did this to honor someone who was undoubtedly ânone of a kind.’â
At the very end of his caption, Ab-Soul wrote: âSoul Burger: The Odyssey⌠Stay tuned.â While itâs unclear what exactly heâs teasing, Ab confirms to Billboard that this new project and his 2022 LP are âtwo different things.â
âSoul Burger is a character, itâs the fusion of me and Doeburger,â he explains. âThe Odyssey is⌠the odyssey. Itâs one of the most special pieces Iâve ever put together, Iâm very excited about it. Itâs very therapeutic â liberating, if you will. Itâs a continuous ode to my brother.â
With new music and a performance at Wiz Khalifaâs forthcoming 420 on the Rocks show on the horizon, Ab-Soul is showing no signs of slowing down in 2025.
American composer Philip Glass will be celebrated with a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 25th annual World Soundtrack Awards on Oct. 15 and at a film music concert which will close the Film Fest Gentâs three-day Film Music Days 2025 on Oct. 16 in Ghent, Belgium.
Previous recipients of the Lifetime Achievement Award include Marvin Hamlisch, John Barry, Giorgio Moroder and Elliot Goldenthal. (Full list of previous recipients below.)
The celebration will be held at the film music concert âMinimalism in Motion: Glass, Nyman and Beyond,â which will be held at Muziekcentrum De Bijloke in Ghent. During the concert, a selection of Glassâ work will be performed by the Brussels Philharmonic conducted by Dirk BrossĂŠ, who personally presented the award to Glass in New York.
Trending on Billboard
While initially renowned for his work for opera and his symphonies, Glass has made an equally impressive contribution to film music. He has received three Oscar nominations for best original score for Kundun, The Hours and Notes on a Scandal.
Glass, 88, has received many other accolades, including a BAFTA Award, a Drama Desk Award and a Golden Globe Award, as well as nominations for four Grammy Awards, and a Primetime Emmy Award. He has also received the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in 1995, the National Medal of Arts in 2010, the Kennedy Center Honors in 2018, and a Trustees Award from the Recording Academy in 2020.
Glassâs work was recognized at the World Soundtrack Awards in 2007 with two nominations for his score for Notes on a Scandal.
This yearâs WSA Film Music Days will be held from Oct. 14-16 during Film Fest Gent (Oct. 8-19). Tickets to the film music concert are now available on filmfestgent.be and worldsoundtrackawards.com.
Hereâs a complete list of previous Lifetime Achievement Award recipients at the World Soundtrack Awards:
2024: Elliot Goldenthal
2023: Nicola Piovani and Laurence Rosenthal
2022: Bruno Coulais
2021: Eleni Karaindrou
2020: Gabriel Yared
2019: Krzysztof Penderecki and FrĂŠdĂŠric Devreese
2018: Philippe Sarde
2017: David Shire
2016: Ryuichi Sakamoto
2015: Patrick Doyle and George Fenton
2014: Francis Lai
2013: Riz Ortolani
2012: Pino Donaggio
2011: Giorgio Moroder
2010: John Barry
2009: Marvin Hamlisch
2008: Angelo Badalamenti
2007: Mikis Theodorakis
2006: Peer Raben
2005: Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller
2004: Alan Bergman and Marilyn Bergman
2003: Maurice Jarre
2002: George Martin
2001: Elmer Bernstein
Elton John is sharing a heartbreaking update about his vision.
During a visit to Good Morning America late last year, the 78-year-old rock legend revealed that he lost the ability to see in his right eye after suffering from an eye infection that summer.
In a new interview with The Times of London, published Friday (April 4), Sir Elton got even more candid about his eyesight problems.
âI can see you, but I canât see TV, I canât read,â the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame icon said. âI canât see my boys playing rugby and soccer, and it has been a very stressful time because Iâm used to soaking it all up.â
John, who shares sons Zachary, 14, and Elijah, 12, with his husband, David Furnish, described the situation as âdistressing.â
Trending on Billboard
âYou get emotional, but you have to get used to it because Iâm lucky to have the life I have,â the iconic artist said. âI still have my wonderful family, and I can still see something out of [my left eye]. So you say to yourself, âJust get on with it.ââ
While appearing on Good Morning America in November 2024, John revealed that he contracted the eye infection while in the South of France. âItâs been four months since I havenât been able to see, and my left eyeâs not the greatest. Iâm, kind of, stuck in the moment,â he told ABC Newsâ Robin Roberts at the time.
The hitmaker also shared that his eye issues could impact his ability to make new music.
âI canât see a lyric, for start. Weâre taking an initiative to try and get it better, but at the moment, thatâs really what weâre concentrating on,â he said. âItâs never fortunate for anything like this to happen. It kinda floored me, and I canât see anything. I canât read anything, I canât watch anything.â
The following month, John addressed his eyesight loss during the stage debut of The Devil Wears Prada in London. âAs some of you may know, I have had issues and now I have lost my sight,â he told the crowd at the Dominion Theatre, according to the Daily Mail. âI havenât been able to see the performance, but I have enjoyed listening to it.â
John also joked about his eyesight problems during the 2025 Golden Globes, where he took the stage alongside pal (and fellow Grammy winner) Brandi Carlile, who co-wrote the song âNever Too Lateâ for his documentary Elton John: Never Too Late with him.
âItâs a very special night for me to be here because, I donât know if you know, but thereâs been stories going around about my regressive eyesight,â John said. âI just want to reassure everybody â itâs not as bad as it seems. Iâm so pleased to be here with my co-host, Rihanna,â he said, pointing to Carlile.
Despite his eyesight struggles, John teamed up with Carlile for a new collaborative album, Who Believes in Angels?, which arrived on Friday. The duo is set to appear on Saturday Night Live as musical guests on Saturday (April 5), and the day after, theyâll host a one-hour concert special in celebration of the new album.
Mariah Carey just pulled a classic mom move by embarrassing her teenage son in front of his friends.
During a recent Twitch livestream, the superstar singerâs 13-year-old son, Moroccan (aka âRockyâ), got frustrated after his twin sister, Monroe, and his mom appeared in the background while he was chatting with his friends.
In all fairness, Rocky had invited Carey to join the livestream after his friends asked to see her. âYou want to come here, mom?â he asked, as Monroe and the iconic singer made a brief cameo in the dimly lit background.
Rocky quickly got flustered as his friends in the chat started reacting, and he demanded his mom and sister (who was holding a small dog) leave the room. âOK, yâall need to get out now!â Rocky said. âMom, they can see you. Theyâre saying, âHi Mariah, I love you.ââ
Trending on Billboard
Carey replied, âHi, guys, I love you too,â as her son pleaded with her to leave. Meanwhile, his friends in the background couldnât resist adding, âHi, Mrs. Carey!â
Moroccan and Monroe are Careyâs twin children with her former husband, Nick Cannon. The pair tied the knot in the Bahamas in 2008, separated in 2014, and finalized their divorce in 2016.
Moroccan and his twin sister have become half-siblings multiple times over, as their dad has welcomed five new children since 2022, bringing his total to 12 kids with six women, including Carey.
Carey is gearing up to take her Celebration of Mimi tour overseas. The singer announced in late March that sheâll be marking the 20th anniversary of her 2005 album with a series of international dates in Asia this May and again in the fall. The celebration of her 10th studio album, The Emancipation of Mimi, began with her fifth residency in Las Vegas at Dolby Live, which launched in April 2024.
The singer, who received her second nomination for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in February, received good news recently when a federal court ruled in her favor, dismissing a copyright lawsuit over her holiday classic âAll I Want for Christmas Is You.â The court rejected claims from songwriter Vince Vance, who alleged that Carey and others had stolen key elements of her Christmas hit from his 1989 song of the same name.
Renowned guitarist and singer Amadou Bagayoko of Maliâs music duo Amadou & Mariam has died. He was 70. Maliâs Minister of Culture Mamou DaffĂŠ paid tribute to the blind musician in a televised broadcast on state TV. He said that Bagayoko died Friday (March 4) in the city of Bamako, his birthplace, but didnât give […]
From career milestones to new music releases to major announcements and those little important moments, Billboard editors highlight uplifting moments in Latin music. Hereâs what happened in the Latin music world this week.
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
Feid Surprises Fans in Europe
This week, Feid officially wrapped a 13-date stint across Europe with this Europe Fastest Tour produced by Live Nation. In the midst of his sold-out shows in cities such as London, Milan, and Rome, the Colombian sensation surprised fans with impromptu meet-ups that he would announce on his Instagram stories. Calling them âcoffee party,â Ferxxo crashed various coffee shops in the middle of the day and would play DJ while spinning some of his biggest hits, including his latest release âDALLAXâ in collaboration with Ty Dolla $ign.
Ed Sheeran Crashes J Balvinâs Show
Currently on his Rayo U.S. Tour, J Balvin performed his sixth show on Sunday, March 30 at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, NY. While the Miami stop included special guests Ryan Castro and Justin Quiles, his fans in New York were surprised by Ed Sheeran. During his appearance, the two artists performed their collaboration âSigueâ and English singer-songwriter also sang his chart-topping hit âShape of You.â Fan videos that went viral on social media also captured the moment the two artist friends took a shot of guarito together. âNEW YORK my second home!!! What a great experience!!!,â Balvin expressed on Instagram.
Trending on Billboard
J Balvin and Ed Sheeran
Gaby Deimeke
Billboard Latin Women in Music
This week, Billboard and Telemundo unveiled the first wave of honorees for the 2025 Billboard Latin Women in Music Awards set to broadcast live at 9 p.m. ET on Thursday, April 24 via Telemundo. Olga Taùón, Anitta, and Chiquis will be honored at the third annual event: Taùón will receive the Lifetime Achievement Award, Anitta will be honored with the Vanguard Award, and Chiquis with the Impact Award. Hosted by Ana BĂĄrbara, the two-hour music special will celebrate the âgroundbreaking women shaping the future of Latin music,â according to a press release. The awards show will also stream on the Telemundo app, Universo and Peacock.
Shakira Reacts to Billboardâs List
In other uplifting news, Shakira reacted to Billboardâs Best 50 Female Latin Pop Artists of All Time list, after realizing that she was picked No. 1 by the Billboard Latin and Billboard EspaĂąol editors. âThis is an incredible honor,â she wrote in a now-deleted Instagram story. âThank you for inspiring me to continue working in hopes to give you the best of me every day of my life.â On the ranked list, the Colombian global sensation is followed by Gloria Estefan, Selena, Celia Cruz, Karol G, RocĂo DĂşrcal, Ana Gabriel, Olga Taùón, Laura Pausini, and Mercedes Sosa.
From powerful ballads to timeless dance hits, the ranked list wrapped up Womenâs History Month by honoring the extraordinary contributions of women and celebrating the female pioneers, visionaries, and stars who have defined Latin pop music.
De izquierda a derecha: Paquita la del Barrio, Celia Cruz, Shakira, Mercedes Sosa e Ivy Queen
Michael Tran/FilmMagic; Jack Vartoogian/Getty Images; John Rogers/Getty Images; Sepia Times/Universal Images Group/Getty Images; John Parra/WireImage
Yandel on Fallon Tonight
Ahead of soon kicking off his SinfĂłnico U.S. Tour in Puerto Rico next month, Yandel made his late-night TV debut on The Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon this week. Joined by a 15-member orchestra, the Puerto Rican artist performed a potent and passionate version of his reggaetĂłn banger âPuĂąo de Tito.â The unique performance is also in support of his new album SinfĂłnico (En Vivo) out April 3, where Yandel reimagines some of his career-defining songs â from âAbusadoraâ to âRakataâ â in a 29-track set recorded live in Miami with the Florida International University Symphony Orchestra.
Upon the arrival of Tracy Chapmanâs self-titled debut on April 5, 1988, Billboard heralded the album as filled with ârich, haunting music,â praising both Chapmanâs âhusky, forceful voiceâ that ârecalls Phoebe Snow and Joni Mitchellâ and her poignant writing that tackled racism, injustice and an aspirational yearning for a better life.
Bolstered by first single âFast Car,â the now-classic album has gone on to sell more than 20 million albums worldwide, and Chapman was recently introduced to a new generation of fans through country superstar Luke Combsâ 2023 âFast Carâ cover that topped Billboardâs Country Airplay chart for five weeks.
Chapman and the albumâs producer, David Kershenbaum, had long been looking for a reason to revisit the seminal set on vinyl as the milestone anniversaries rolled by and, finally, the right moment arrived. âWe might have talked about it at 25 years or 30 years, and then it just seemed like, âOK, this is a moment to do it because people have this renewed interest in vinyl and obviously this record was so extremely important to me and my career as a songwriter,ââ Chapman says of the 35th anniversary.
Trending on Billboard
Though widely available on streaming services, Chapmanâs record collector friends were telling her that the original Elektra Records album was hard to find on vinyl, and even she was running short on copiesâ so much so that on the occasions Chapman wanted to revisit the album, she would listen on CD to keep from wearing out her few remaining vinyl copies. Â
So Chapman wrote a note to Mark Pinkus, CEO of Rhino Entertainment, Warner Music Groupâs catalog division. âI said I wanted to make a faithful reissue,â she says. âI wanted it to sound as good or better than the original and to look like the original.â
The reissue, which came out Friday (April 4) via Rhino, overshot the 35th anniversary by two years, but thatâs because she and Kershenbaum put so much meticulous care into the new version that it took way longer than they expected when they started in 2022.
Tracy Chapman, âTracy Chapmanâ
Courtesy Photo
Three decades later, Chapman unabashedly says she âloves the record. I mean Iâm not unbiased,â she says with a laugh. âIâm just so proud of it. I was [proud] the day that we finished it and in the days when we were making it. It holds up for me. I have a lot of positive feelings about the whole process. Then what was created and then now, what [we] managed to achieve by bringing it back.â
In their first ever interview together, she and Kershenbaum display an easy rapport with evident respect, affection and trust as they revisit creating the original album and working together on the reissue. The intensely private Chapman, 61, rarely gives interviews, but throughout the nearly hourlong telephone conversation, she is upbeat, warmly engaging and thoughtful.
As the well-known story goes, Chapman was attending Bostonâs Tufts University in the mid-â80s and playing in local coffeehouses when she was discovered by fellow student/future A&R executive Brian Koppelman, who played a tape of her music for his father, Charles Koppelman, then-co-owner of music publishing company SBK Songs. That led to Chapman signing with Elektra when she was in her early 20s.
But recording her debut album got off to a rocky start. Alex Sadkin, the initial producer Elektra paired her with, died in a July 1987 car accident before they began recording, and a subsequent effort wasnât the right fit. âI was put into a studio with really great musicians, and it just didnât work because it was just too much for me and too much for the songs. I was being overwhelmed,â says Chapman, who had never played her own songs with other musicians and had very little experience playing music with other people at all. âI was briefly in a little cover band in my dorm. We only had two songs that we never played out and I was playing drums,â she says with a chuckle.
By the time she met Kershenbaum in SBKâs conference room, âI was worried at that point,â she admits. âI had a couple of false starts.â But Kershenbaum, who had worked with artists including Cat Stevens and Joan Baez, had already heard seven of Chapmanâs songs and was in. Then, at their second meeting, Chapman played Kershenbaum a tape of the achingly sad âFast Car,â and he was âtotally blown away,â he says. âIt was perfect in every respect: from the emotional message, the lyric, the fact that everybody has a situation sometime in their life they would like to get in a car and just drive away,â he says. âIt was the strongest thing that I probably ever heard in an initial demo.â
Though Chapman had spent virtually no time in a recording studio, Kershenbaum remembers her seeming âincredibly confident, a rock,â as they recorded over eight weeks at his Powertrax Studio in Los Angeles.
Chapman attributes that self-assurance to Kershenbaum. âHe made me feel so comfortable and he was supportive from the beginning,â she says. â[Previously] I was feeling like âNobodyâs really listening to me.â We had good communication from the start. He understood what I was doing musically, and he didnât want to change it.â
That included recording the album live with all musicians playing together instead of the more conventional method of recording each instrument at a time.
âIt was unorthodox the way we approached it, where we tried different bass players and drummers with Tracyâs guitar and vocal. And it was just a natural evolution,â Kershenbaum says. Ultimately, he selected drummer Denny Fongheiser and bassist Larry Klein.
âMany times, they are all thatâs playing along with Tracy. Itâs a third of the record,â he says. âSo I had to be careful that they were really supporting what she was doing and not distracting because she had to be at the forefront of this.âÂ
The studio became Chapmanâs safe haven. âWhen the record company flew me to Los Angeles, it was the first time Iâd ever been there,â she says. âThey put me up in one of these [corporate] hotels. I was totally by myself, no manager, no assistant, no family. [The studio] was my social life, my work life, that was everything [while] we were making the record, and [David] made me feel so welcome and so comfortable and so cared for in the process.â
The pair knew the album would open with âTalkinâ Bout a Revolution,â a call for social change that Chapman wrote when she was 16. âTo me, it was obvious that that was our starting point,â she says. âItâs the introduction, in a way, to everything else that follows. It alerts you that these are serious songs that are on the way. We didnât try to hide that song, which I think certain people might have been inclined to do because of the subject matter.â
Across the set, she was fearless in tackling domestic abuse on the chilling, a cappella âBehind the Wall,â racism on âAcross the Linesâ and class warfare on âMountain oâ Things.â
Even though Chapman was an unproven new artist, the label took a hands-off approach. âWe never really even saw them or heard from them until we started sending finished stuff,â Kershenbaum says. Â
Chapman also felt free to create without commercial expectations, in part because her largely acoustic, weighty songs were so far removed from the bouncy pop delights like George Michaelâs âFaithâ and Rick Astleyâs âNever Gonna Give You Upâ dominating radio.
âI have to credit [then-chairman of Elektra] Bob Krasnow, who signed me,â she says. âRight away, he was a champion, and he never talked to me about changing anything.â
The only conflict with the record label came after âFast Carâ was picked as the first single and Elektra said the 4:57 album version was too long to receive radio play. Chapman initially refused to allow an edit. âI was adamant that we couldnât cut any of the lyrics,â she says. They compromised by deleting some of the instrumental turnarounds, shortening the radio and video versions to 4:27, which was still longer than the average radio tune. The song reached No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100.
After the album came out, Chapman was thrust into a dizzying array of live gigs with musical superstars, filling in for a delayed Stevie Wonder at Nelson Mandelaâs 70th birthday tribute concert at Wembley Stadium; joining the Amnesty International tour with Bruce Springsteen, Sting and Peter Gabriel; and opening for Bob Dylan (who wished her happy birthday via X on March 30).
Tracy Chapman went on to earn six Grammy nominations for the 31st annual Grammy Awards, with Chapman taking home trophies for best new artist, best pop vocal performance, female, and best contemporary folk recording.
Despite the Grammys declaring the collection a folk album and critics and fans labeling her a protest singer because of her issues-oriented, acoustic-guitar-based songs, Chapman has never seen herself that way.
âThere was no folk scene that Iâm aware of in Cleveland in the â70s. Maybe there was, but not one for an 8-year-old black girl,â she says. âItâs the acoustic guitar part that I think often makes people put me into the folk category. It is not a label I choose for myself, and Iâm not really interested in looking at genres in that way. Iâve always loved all different kinds of music.
âI actually grew up listening to mostly R&B and soul music and gospel music and some jazz and rock & roll because thatâs what was on the radio,â she continues. âI was a huge fan of Casey Kasem and his Top 40 Countdown. I used to record it on a little steno recorder so I could listen back.â
She credits picking up the acoustic guitar when she was 8 to watching the country variety show Hee Haw, a staple in homes across America in the early â70s on Saturday night. In addition to corn-pone sketches about rural life often with country comedian Minnie Pearl or a bevy of scantily clad beauties nicknamed the Hee Haw Honeys, the series featured stellar musical performances helmed by virtuosos like Roy Clark and Buck Owens.
âMy mother loved the show, and so whatever she liked to watch on television, we watched too,â she says. âBuck Owens on the acoustic guitars. I think I fell in love with the instrument when I heard it on that show.â
Chapman asked her mom to buy her a guitar and âeven though she didnât have a lot of money, she managed to pick up one for me,â she says. Chapman taught herself how to play from books she checked out of the library and a class at the Boys & Girls Club.
By the time Chapman performed âFast Carâ with Luke Combs at the 2024 Grammys, 35 years after she first played the song on the 1989 Grammys, she and Kershenbaum were already hard at work on the reissue. (âI was quite weepy after, for some time,â she says of appearing on the Grammys with Combs. Â âNot so much from having played the song, but from the emotional experience of it all and also reuniting with Denny Fongheiser and Larry Klein. That was also very emotional. We were all crying at rehearsal.â)
Their reissue work had begun nearly two years earlier after they unearthed engineer Bob Ludwigâs original master of the album in the Warner Music Group archives, from which engineer Bernie Grundman created a lacquer to make a new master to press the new vinyl.
As the pair proceeded, Chapman took a vinyl copy of the original that she had never opened to use as a reference guide for the artwork and the sound quality âbecause it had no scratches, no dust, it had never been played,â she says.
They were zealous about their faithfulness. Through ever step âwe would compare what we were doing now with what we had originally because we wanted people to be excited about it, not disappointed,â Kershenbaum says. That proved challenging because technology had advanced with different machines and methods since manufacturing the original. â[We were] going back and forth betweenâ the new and old versions, âtrying to make sure that what we were doing was as good or hopefully better than what we had,â he says.
The process was not without its disappointments. They reviewed test pressings for distortion and other flaws, giving feedback to the pressing plant in Germany. âThere was a perfect test pressing the second time around and there was a speck of dust or something [causing] a huge pop on one of the songs and so the whole thing was ruined, which was unfortunate,â Chapman says.
They were just as painstakingly exacting with the artwork, including the stunning cover photograph by Matt Mahurin.
âWe discovered as we started getting into the process that the record plants now donât have a standard size for the cover,â Chapman says. âIf we had reproduced the cover at either a larger or smaller size, it would have distorted as a photo. It would have made my chubby cheeks even chubbier.â Ultimately, Optimal Media in Germany created a new die that would match the size and scale of the original cover.
They were also slowed by international shipping delays and COVID precautions, leading to missing the actual 35th-anniversary deadline.
âIt did take longer, but Iâm really, really pleased with how it all ended up because we were just trying to get it right,â Chapman says. âI was disappointed to miss that actual milestone, but I think I would have been a lot more disappointed to have put something out that we all didnât feel was 100% as good as it could be.â
All these years later, Chapman says the vivid, sympathetic characters she created on the album still live with her. âOn a practical level, Iâve never really thought about, say, writing a song to continue the story of any of these characters in particular. But I think they are representing something emotionally for me, even if itâs not my own personal life story, that is still true for me now. I still have these feelings that you still want to find a sense of belonging. Itâs a feeling that doesnât necessarily go away.â
Chapman, who hasnât toured since 2009, has no plans to play live again, but doesnât rule it out. âIf I were to tour, I would tour for something new, new material, and in that process, I would, of course, play these songs, too. But that would be the thing that would be most interesting to me at this point. And thatâs always the case. Whenever someone asks, âWhatâs your favorite song?â Itâs always the one Iâm writing at the time.â
And yes, that does mean she is writing. Though she hasnât released an album of new material since 2008âs Our Bright Future, Chapman stresses that sheâs never stopped. âI said it before, but maybe no one believed it, that Iâm always playing and Iâm always writing songs. Iâve been doing it since I was 8 years old. Itâs just part of my DNA. Itâs part of who I am.â
State Champ Radio
