Billboard UK
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The wait is over. In 2025, Billboard U.K. will be hosting its inaugural Power Players list, also known as the Power 100, for the U.K. and Ireland’s world-beating music industry professionals.
While Billboard’s Power 100 ranks the music industry’s most influential executives globally, this list will celebrate and recognise the executives and members that are at the forefront of the U.K. and Ireland’s music scene, and boosting the region’s hugely talented artists on a global scale
Billboard U.K.’s Power Players list will be published in June 2025, and will be celebrated with an exclusive event at the upcoming inaugural SXSW London.
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Further details will be shared in the coming months.
“The U.K. and Ireland has long been home to some of the most influential figures in global music, shaping the industry and driving artists to new heights,” says Mo Ghoneim, president of Billboard U.K. “We look forward to spotlighting the executives leading this charge with Billboard U.K.’s Power Players, from labels to live, streaming to rights, and beyond.”
The news follows a period of success for British and Irish artists in recent years. In 2024, there were appearances for Hozier, Dua Lipa, Charli XCX, Coldplay and Ed Sheeran on Billboard’s Year-End Top Artists charts. Rising stars, meanwhile, like Lola Young, Aretmas, Myles Smith and more are growing their audiences domestically and internationally.
2025 will also be a bumper year for concert-goers with the U.K. hosting some of the most in-demand tours and live experiences: Oasis will kick off their reunion tour in Wales before heading around the globe, and superstars like Lana Del Rey, Billie Eilish, Olivia Rodrigo, Sabrina Carpenter, Usher and more come into market for huge shows.
There are challenges to be met, too: Grassroots music venues face decimation without urgent action; legislation on artificial intelligence is paramount to the government’s agenda on growth; artists are finding touring a loss-making endeavour; the live and festival landscape continues to evolve and bring new obstacles. These themes will shape the inaugural U.K. Power Players, but the doors are wide open.
The Power Players list will be peer-nominated and selected by the Billboard U.K. team. Nominations open Feb. 4 and will close in two weeks on Feb. 17. Interested parties can fill in the nominations form here. For any queries, please contact power100@uk.billboard.com or tsmith@uk.billboard.com.
Ezra Collective, Kae Tempest, Mogwai and English Teacher are among the names that will play the 2025 BBC 6 Music Festival – see the lineup in full below.
The weekender, which is the station’s flagship festival, will take place between March 26-29 at the O2 Victoria Warehouse in Greater Manchester. Tickets for each event are sold separately and will be available beginning at 10 a.m. (GMT) on Thursday (Feb. 6) here.
On March 26, a BBC Introducing event at the city’s YES venue will kick off proceedings, featuring rising acts Adult DVD, Renee Stormz, and Jasmine 4.t.
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The following evening (March 27), Ezra Collective will herald in 6 Music’s three-night residency at O2 Victoria Warehouse. The jazz five-piece will be joined by Fat Dog, before a DJ set from 6 Music host Jamz Supernova. There will also be a New Music Fix night at YES with DJs 1-800 GIRLS, Florentino, Marie Davidson and NAINA.
March 28, meanwhile, will see a headline performance from Scottish rockers Mogwai, with support from Leeds band English Teacher, winners of the 2024 Mercury Prize. Elsewhere in Greater Manchester on March 28, there will be DJ sets from Sports Team, Lava La Rue, Steve Lamacq, Viagra Boys and Nathan Shepherd at Band On The Wall. 6 Music will also team up with The Warehouse to present a Rave Forever event at Amber’s nightclub.
March 29 will see spoken-word artist Kae Tempest debut new material for the first time during a headline show at O2 Victoria Warehouse. They will be joined by Perfume Genius and SHERELLE.
“It’s amazing, it’s so exciting,” Tempest said of the festival, speaking to presenter Nemone on Tuesday morning’s (Feb. 4) 6 Music breakfast show. “I can’t wait for people to hear what I have been working on. We’re still working it out in terms of what people will hear first, and we’ve got a new live set-up coming together – all the pieces are in place.”
They continued: “This gig will be the first time I have performed my new songs, which are very different to the stuff I have made before. The creative process has been akin to being caught in a strong current… I can’t wait to see what happens on stage.”
Throughout the festival, the 6 Music team will be broadcasting live from MediaCity U.K. in Salford. Current presenters include: Nick Grimshaw, Iggy Pop, Huw Stephens, and Mary Anne Hobbs.
The 6 Music Festival is aired across a number of BBC radio, television, and online channels. Since 2023, it has found a home in Greater Manchester, while previous iterations of the festival were hosted in different cities annually across the U.K. including Cardiff, London, Glasgow, Liverpool and Newcastle.
In January 2014, the BBC launched the 6 Music Festival in Manchester with headliner Damon Albarn. In the years that have followed, the event has seen sets from world-renowned acts including Depeche Mode, Fontaines D.C., Father John Misty and Neneh Cherry.
Coldplay have teamed up with Laura Mvula to cover The Proclaimers’ classic track, “Sunshine On Leith.” Watch the performance in full below. The band delivered an emotive rendition of the Scottish act’s 1988 single during a pared-back performance for BBC Radio 2’s Piano Room Month series on Monday night (Feb. 3). Birmingham-raised songwriter Mvula assisted […]
The Great Escape festival in Brighton, England has announced hundreds of new names for their lineup including The Libertines’ Peter Doherty, Jordan Adetunji, Lynks, The K’s and more.
The festival is also expanding its programme to run for an extra day, and will take place in the city on May 14-17. First held in 2006, the annual gathering showcases emerging talent across the city at a number of independent venues; previous performers at the festival include Charli XCX, Fontaines D.C., Sam Fender, Japanese Breakfast and more.
On May 14, The Libertines’ Peter Doherty will perform at a special Spotlight Show curated by his record label, Strap Originals. It will feature acts such as Warmduscher and Trampolene at the Deep End venue on Brighton’s beachfront. Tickets for the festival are on sale now.
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Further additions to the festival’s bill include: Armlock Silver, Black Fondu, Bold Love, Donny Benét, Gore, Lemfreck, Man/Woman/Chainsaw, Moonlandingz, Namesbliss, Rabbitfoot, Real Farmer, Shortstraw, Sunday (1994), The Pill, Westside Cowboy and more.
The festival has also announced further details about the accompanying conference programme and a raft of speakers and curators for the event. Industry bodies The Council of Music Makers (MMF, MPG, FAC, Ivors Academy and the MU), Night Time Industries Association (NTIA), BBC Introducing LIVE and Youth Music all return as collaborators, alongside The Association of Independent Music (AIM).
Themes across the panels will include the role of government policy in creative spaces, community building for artists and labels and more. See the full rundown at the festival’s official website.
The Great Escape has also shared news that warmup event, The Road To Great Escape, will take place in the preceding week, and returns to key cities Glasgow (May 9-10) and Dublin (May 12-13). The showcases will see a number of acts from the lineup performing live in their home cities before making the trip to England’s south coast.
Focus Wales has shared the next wave of its lineup for 2025, with an additional 104 acts added to the bill.
The festival, which takes place across multiple venues in Wrexham, north Wales, will return in May (8-10) with support from the Arts Council of Wales, the Welsh Government and PRS Foundation’s Talent Development Network.
The event will bring together talent from the U.K., Europe, Asia, Australia and North America.
Among the new names announced include French synth-pop band eat-girls, Seoul’s Hynopsis Therapy and Brussels jazz collective Tukan. View the lineup in full below.
In partnership with APRA and the British Council NZ, meanwhile, three New Zealand artists will be featured in a special Māori reception and showcase: Jordyn With a Why, MĀ and MOHI.
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The additions join previously announced acts like Irish rockers Sprints, the Mercury Prize-nominated Nova Twins, Welsh songwriter Gruff Rhys and rapper Lemfreck, the recipient of the 2024 Welsh Music Prize.
Tickets for Focus Wales 2025 are on sale now. Festival passes begin at £80 ($99), or those working in the music industry can acquire delegate passes for £160 ($198). Day tickets are also available for purchase.
Earlier this month, Focus Wales held a showcase at ESNS in Groningen, the Netherlands, featuring Welsh bands CVC and The Family Battenburg. Speaking to Billboard UK, Focus Wales co-founder and booker Andy Jones explained that the festival’s presence at ESNS “ensures that Focus Wales and, more broadly, Wales as a music market, is part of the wider conversation with the European music community.”
In 2024, Focus Wales played host to performances from Spiritualized, The Mysterines and Antony Szmierek, among others. For more information, visit the festival’s official website.
Central Cee has secured this week’s No. 1 on the U.K.’s Official Albums Chart with his debut LP Can’t Rush Greatness (Jan. 31). The west London rapper outsold the rest of the top five combined to reach the summit; this album gives him his second chart-topper following 2023’s mixtape 23. There’s been a flurry of […]
Lola Young has bagged a second week at No. 1 on the U.K. Singles Chart with her breakout hit “Messy” (Jan. 31). The song first hit the top spot last week after dethroning Gracie Abrams’ “That’s So True,” which reigned for eight non-consecutive weeks. The London-based musician’s star continues to rise with the song hitting […]
The BRIT Awards has announced the first slate of live performers for its 2025 ceremony. JADE, Myles Smith, Shaboozey, Teddy Swims and The Last Dinner Party will all perform live during the event at London’s O2 Arena on March 1. All of the performers are nominated in a number of categories. Myles Smith has already […]
Few people have had a better start to 2025 than Imogen Heap. Over the past few weeks, the pioneering producer and songwriter has scored her first-ever chart hit with “Headlock” – lifted from 2005’s spellbinding LP, Speak For Yourself – and has found herself receiving “dozens upon dozens” of collaboration requests, she tells Billboard UK over the phone.
A combination of TikTok and a feature on viral psychological horror game Mouthwashing may be helping “Headlock” scale the charts – it currently stands at No. 98 on the Billboard Hot 100 and has cracked the top 40 in the U.K. – but it’s a newfound appreciation for Heap’s groundbreaking approach to pop music that has summoned an increasingly feverish Gen Z audience.
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Across social media, younger listeners have recently become enamored with Heap’s theatrically layered vocals and expressive production style, as well how she popularized the use of the vocoder. They are also coming to gauge the extent of her influence on global superstars such as Ariana Grande, FKA Twigs and Billie Eilish. “Imogen Heap was lowkey mother to every 2010s pop girl,” reads a comment on a decade-old clip of Grande performing with Heap’s ingenious wearable instrument, the MiMu gloves.
In 2010, Heap became the first woman to win a Grammy for engineering, while her music has since been sampled extensively by Grande (“Goodnight N Go,” “Eternal Sunshine”), as well as rappers including A$AP Rocky and the late Mac Miller. Following the release of 2014 album Sparks, however, she has aligned her output with developing technological initiatives in order to make the industry more accessible, she says. Recently, there’s been the launch of data solution Auracles, while Heap has also spent the past few years working on Mogen, an AI assistant that she hopes will deepen her creative process in the studio.
Her journey hasn’t all been art and reverence. Heap contended with a plethora of major label battles during her time in electronic duo Frou Frou, and a currently oversaturated streaming market, she says, has occasionally discouraged her from releasing new music. Since she spent time enjoying “solo jam sessions” during lockdown, however, she has slowly begun to emerge renewed: “I realized how much I needed to be back at the piano. I started to feel more free and open,” she says.
This sense of levity has been amplified by the slow-burn success of “Headlock,” an achievement that has coincided with the song’s rights reverting back to Heap, after a 20-year license to Sony. In the coming months, she is planning to start collaborating with fans via livestream, alongside deepening her unique sound world and learning more about herself. It’s a time of rejuvenation and opportunity – with Heap preparing to set out on a more experimental path than ever before.
Below, Heap talks with Billboard about her recent “Headlock” success, working on Auracles and Mogen, being an influence on younger artists and much more.
When did you first notice that “Headlock” had started taking on a life of its own?
There’s a new type of energy this time. For so long, [my career] has been about sharing ideas like Auracles and hoping to kickstart something new for the music industry. This [virality] feels like a nice balance that’s happening in return, and I’m excited about the opportunities it’s giving me. I love taking a wildcard and running with it.
I don’t have TikTok and I don’t really understand it. I’ve never really gone into this world of hyper-fast, collaborative music but I do think that it’s amazing. I’ve instead become obsessed with blockchain, and more recently, AI, while keeping my head down for the past 10 years. I haven’t wanted to add to the problems of the music industry, and contribute to things that make sense for me.
How does it feel to look back at your earlier music, revisiting those thoughts and emotions with the perspective you have now?
I’m just really, really happy. I love that record [Speak for Yourself]. It changed the course of my independence: I was able to be free of any debts or labels; I remortgaged my flat at the time. I came off Island Records with Frou Frou and it wasn’t so great. They did an absolutely terrible job of marketing our records, as they decided that the Sugababes were worth all their money or something, meaning our record [2002’s Details] got no love. It’s really sad, you know — they just couldn’t be bothered.
So, I wanted to come out of that deal, and I said, “Please just let me go. I want to do a record independently and I think I can do it.” Back then, we didn’t have Patreon or Kickstarter, so I was left with the question of where to get the money from. I would walk into banks and ask for the loan to make a new record, and they would say, “Yeah, sure, but what’s your job?” I would have to say, “This is my job, here’s the records I have made and here’s how much more money I’d make if I did it independently.”
I would soon learn that if you went independent and did these discussions yourself, and you found your marketing people, everything just opened up. It was just a myth that you needed a label to make something happen.
You have amazing vocal control on “Headlock.” Do you have any rituals as far as keeping it in shape?
I’ve never done any vocal exercises, and the only thing that kept my voice good was the fact that I was using it almost every day. Recently I haven’t been — it’s not as strong at the moment. But as I’m seeing my monthly streams grow and grow, I have started to consciously sing more: When there’s nobody in the house, I’ll sing from my lungs in the shower!
For some time, I didn’t want to sing, as I couldn’t live with putting music out in an industry that doesn’t support its artists. “Headlock” is doing its thing, and for the first time, I’m seeing crazy numbers from streaming income [at 17 million monthly listeners] – that’s never happened to me before. I’m really grateful to be able to put it into Auracles, but generally [the streaming model] doesn’t really work. Instead, I’ve wanted to invest my time in something that did make sense, so then I could relax and make absolutely tons of music and feel like it’s doing something to empower others.
Dozens of artists have covered or sampled your work over the years. In particular, Ariana Grande has repeatedly spoken of your influence on both her career and personal music fandom. Do you feel a kinship with her?
I appreciate Ariana to the point where I get teary even talking about her. She is so f–king busy, right – I thought the [Wicked] film was brilliant – but she remains consistently kind, thoughtful and open. Recently, I reached out to thousands of people ahead of an Auracles launch. When I spoke to Ariana about it, she was like, “Whatever help you need, let me know.” Having that support from someone who is so high-profile and influential made me feel really validated. People say, “Oh God, I am so busy” – but they can’t possibly be as busy as Ariana Grande!
The other day I was walking around and thinking to myself, “I’m going to write a song about her one day.” I really am. I am so grateful she found a connection with my work, and she has been so nice about what it means to her — and in a way, I want to repay that.
No matter how big she gets, or how many things have happened to her – I mean, just look at [the] Manchester [attack] for f–k’s sake – she remains a shining light and is so pure, funny and bright. Ariana is so genuine; there’s not many people you can point to who send such a great message and energy out there.
You’ve been working on Mogen and Auracles for a good while now. Are there any other creative models today that you see now as you did AI two years ago – ideas with potential that musicians are only beginning to scratch the surface of?
Oh God, there’s so many! I find the rate of innovation around AI and visual media to be breathless. Every single day there are these insane developments, it’s blowing my mind. There’s so many things you can do that don’t involve sitting at a computer, typing away. The thing which makes me nervous is the covenants; there’s all this amazing video, art and poetry being generated by AI as well as music, but you know, creators need to be credited and they need to tell us where they’re training [the data] from.
There’s some cultural suspicion around the use of assistive AI in music, but you have always seemed to approach it positively. How has it felt to open up the discussion with those who may hold different views?
I think as long as we get the ground layers right, and we build from a bedrock which is supportive, then we can grow great things off of that together. If we build off a very shaky, unstable, permissionless system, which is currently what it is, then we’re going to create chaos.
But I guess I am positive, because there are lots of things to be positive about. The more worried people are, the more negative energy will go out and come back into these things, it’s just a law of attraction. I think it’s really important to enjoy this kind of unstoppable force of creativity because that’s how humans survive and evolve – through collaboration. We need to find this common ground where we feel that humans are supporting the system consciously, so that it doesn’t create tension.
Do you still believe that music can make a difference in these troubling times?
Yes, undeniably so! Music makes a difference in the world every single second of every single day. When you’re creating music, and even when you’re listening to music, all the structures of how we understand our reality disappear. Those tiny moments of ephemeral, continuous flow and presence offer us the pure sense of being in the moment; not having to think about material practices and money. That’s why music is just so powerful.
What headspace are you hoping to enter your next era in?
I’m in a really good place. I think before, I felt like I had control in my life, which is a complete fantasy. Every single day, things happen and impact your life to the point that you don’t really have control. That’s been the big shift that’s happened for me in the last couple of years: in order to do anything in the future, you have to do it now.
The other day, I chatted to ChatGPT, and I said, ‘Can you find me a Tai Chi master in my area?’ It came up with this person who I then met the other day – and that just feels amazing! The future is in our minds, in our history books, it’s in our predictions, but it isn’t real life. This is all there is.
I’ve been embracing an element of stillness. When something is hyper-good or hyper-bad, I try to regulate that, so the waves of feeling and emotion become less overwhelming. It’s really embracing what’s manageable: what’s happening here, what’s happening now.
Drum’n’bass duo Chase & Status have been revealed as the latest headliner for London’s All Points East festival on Aug. 16. They join previously announced performers for the two-weekend event including The Maccabees, RAYE and Barry Can’t Swim. Billed as the latest instalment in their RTRN II DANCE series, the duo will curate a day’s […]
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