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Page: 45
Feid, presented by Samsung Galaxy, will perform at Billboard Presents The Stage at SXSW on March 17.
A leaked album was the best thing that ever happened to Feid.
In September 2022, the Colombian singer-songwriter was headlining three consecutive sold-out hometown dates at Plaza deĀ Toros LaĀ Macarena ā MedellĆnās famed bullfighting ring and concert venue ā where he performed for more than 30,000 people over the course of the three shows. He was due for some much-needed rest the following Monday. But that never happened.
Instead, the artist born Salomón Villada Hoyos, 30, who also goes by the nickname Ferxxo, received an agitated call from his manager, Luis Villamizar, with the news that his album, Feliz CumpleaƱos Ferxxo ā scheduled for a December release ā had, without their knowledge, arrived much earlier, in the form of a 39-minute voice note first leaked as a link on the internet.
āAll my spirits dropped,ā he recalls today, still sounding disappointed. āIt was incomplete. It was a mess, and I felt rage ā but that feeling lasted about half an hour. After that, I talked to my mom to see how we could take advantage of the situation and thankfully, we reacted quickly.ā
With help from his team, producers and record label, Universal Music Latino (UML), he took matters into his own hands, working relentlessly for 24 hours to release an album that wasnāt even mixed or mastered yet. Because all 15 tracks had been leaked, Feid changed the title to Feliz CumpleaƱos Ferxxo Te Pirateamos El Ćlbum (Happy Birthday Feid We Leaked the Album) and had his sister, whoās also his longtime graphic designer, create new cover art that acknowledged how the songs had ultimately spread: Though Universal quickly took down the initial leaked link, the audio had already been shared to DropBox and then sent wide through a chain of WhatsApp conversations. (Six of the 15 tracks had already been released as singles at the time of the leak.)
On Sept.Ā 14, just two days after it leaked, the album ā powered by syncopated perreos, reggaetón swagger and chill house beats ā officially came out. Feid remains unsure of who leaked the set and why. But thatās now beside the point: Feliz CumpleaƱos Ferxxo earned him his first topĀ 10 entry on Billboardās Top Latin Albums chart, surging from No.Ā 25 to No.Ā 8 in its second week, on the chart dated Oct.Ā 1, 2022. It concurrently became his first entry on the BillboardĀ 200 and peaked at No. 5 on Latin Rhythm Albums. āNormal,ā the setās fourth single, also became Feidās first Hot Latin Songs entry as a soloist, following five alongside stars like JĀ Balvin, Nicky Jam and KarolĀ G. The track peaked at No.Ā 1 on the Latin Rhythm Airplay chart on Jan.Ā 21.
To maintain momentum, Feid and his team made another swift change of plans, deciding to rebook a previously in-the-works club tour ā his first headlining U.S. run ā to theaters to reflect his rapidly growing popularity, and to execute the task, from booking to opening night, in less than a month. Hans Schafer, senior vp of global touring at Live Nation, the tourās promoter, told Billboard at the time that, like the albumās assembly, āeveryone worked really quickly to turn this around.ā Tickets to the 14-date stint, which began Oct.Ā 13 in Atlanta and wrapped Nov.Ā 25 in Los Angeles, sold out in 24 hours.
Feid photographed on January 12, 2023 at Proper Studio in Miami.
Devin Christopher
Feid has always had a clear creative vision concerning his music, which laces innovative urban beats with the essence of early-2000s reggaetón and lyrics about love. But his biggest barrier to achieving solo mainstream success for himself was trusting that intuition, rather than worrying about othersā opinions. It took years, but Feid finally realized the importance of being faithful to his core identity. And while the album leak was jarring and unplanned, the foundation he laid over more than a decade of making music allowed him to seize the opportunity and explode in popularity. With the tour, his ability to pivot quickly kept yielding successes.
āIt was very special to go to the shows and see people dressed as me with green clothes, white glasses and even a gold tooth,ā Feid gushes. āAfter the first show, I told my team, āLook carefully at this stage because, God willing, we will never have people as close as we do now. We will have them further and further away.ā In other words, Feid expects to be playing U.S. arenas and stadiums before long.
For a teenage Feid, even playing the theaters of his fall tour would have been unimaginable.
As a seventh grader at Colegio San JosĆ© deĀ La Salle in MedellĆn, he discovered his passion for performing during a school talent show. Singing Daddy Yankeeās āRompe (Remix)ā with a group of friends as The Three Fathers, āI liked seeing how people were enjoying something I was doing,ā he recalls. āI was shaking with nerves, but when I started to sing it all went away.ā
That performance and others like it, known as colegios (school tours), are common for aspiring teen artists in Colombia, and they eventually allowed Feid to connect with Alejandro RamĆrez SuĆ”rez, who would become Latin Grammy-winning producer Sky Rompiendo ā and Feidās longtime collaborator alongside Mosty, Wain, and Jowan and Rolo of production duo Icon Music.
By their early 20s, both Feid (whose moniker sounds like āfaithā when spoken in Spanish) and Sky were making names for themselves in their hometown. Feid had already independently released singles such as āBailameā and āMorena,ā both of which gained traction in Latin America; Sky was the mastermind behind JĀ Balvinās first No.Ā 1 chart hit, āAy Vamos,ā which peaked in March 2015.
Around then, Feid āunintentionallyā fell into songwriting after Colombian artist Shako asked if he could record a song Feid had written for himself, called āRobarte Hoy.ā āI was still new in the industry and didnāt even know writing for other artists was a thing,ā he recalls (a year later, Shako invited him on the remix). One of the first popular tracks Feid wrote was Reykonās āSecretos,ā which ultimately led him to work with Balvin as a writer on the 2016 hit āGinza,ā nabbing Feid an ASCAP Latin award along the way.
āI started taking him to the studio when we had camps for Balvin because he has always had great chemistry,ā Sky remembers. āYes, he helped us write āGinza,ā but the song where he proved himself as a songwriter was āSigo ExtraƱƔndote,āĀ ā another track for Balvin that showcased Feidās heartfelt, relatable lyricism. As Balvin tells Billboard, āHe always brought something fresh to the table, and I always let him know of his potential.ā
Suddenly, Feidās āreggaetón music with pop lyricsā had made him the hip, on-demand songwriter that artists from ThalĆa to Ximena SariƱana to CNCO wanted to work with. In 2016, he signed an exclusive worldwide publishing administration deal with Universal Music Publishing Group (UMPG) through management and publishing company Dynasty Music Group, helmed by his then-manager, Daniel Giraldo, and Juan Pablo Piedrahita. Soon after, he signed his first record deal with In-Tu Linea, a label then under the Universal Music Latin Entertainment (UMLE) umbrella that was launched by industry veteran Jorge Pino and his longtime colleague Fidel HernĆ”ndez as COO. Although āmany labels showed their interest,ā Feid says, Pino and HernĆ”ndez were the only ones to make the āvery specialā gesture of meeting him in person.
Feid made his major-label debut with the Balvin-featuring āQue Raro,ā which became his first Billboard chart entry, debuting and peaking at No. 26 on Latin Digital Song Sales and peaking at No. 16 on Latin Rhythm Airplay in 2016.
āToday, I highly value that moment that Balvin gave me ā the spotlight in which he put me, the type of song it was,ā he says. āIt was super cool for my career, for my life, for everything I have been building. There are still people who tell me that they followed me or discovered me with āQue Raro.āĀ ā
Soon after, Feid collaborated with artists such as Maluma and Nacho; released his debut album, AsĆ Como Suena, in 2017; received a Latin Grammy nomination for his next one (2019ās 19); and joined āThe Avengers,ā a collective of urbano artists that included Dalex, DĆmelo Flow, Justin Quiles, Lenny TavĆ”rez and Sech and released club bangers such as āCuadernoā and āQuizas.ā Around then, he also stopped writing music for others.
āI needed to find myself as an artist,ā he says. Though Feid was gaining popularity writing for big acts, he hadnāt yet discovered his own strong artistic identity, and admits he was following the standards he observed in the industry by being āan average singer releasing average music.ā As other Colombian artists of his generation such as Maluma, KarolĀ G and Balvin skyrocketed to stardom, he wondered, āWhen will it be my turn?ā
Then one day, after more than a decade of work, it clicked.
āI decided to take an arepa with cheese in my hand and say that I was paisa,ā he proudly states, referring to the local word for someone from MedellĆn. āI began to be more faithful to who I am and my Colombian roots. At that moment, I opened the coolest door that Iāve ever opened, which was finding my identity and introducing ElĀ Ferxxo. It took me a long time to realize that this was what I had to do to really, really connect with people.ā
Feid photographed on January 12, 2023 at Proper Studio in Miami.
Devin Christopher
Putting his new alter ego to the test, Ferxxo (pronounced Fercho) began incorporating local Medallo slang into his lyrics, like mor (love), que chimba (how cool) and parchar (hanging out) and replacing letters in his titles with Xās to pique curiosity.
It worked. The Latin Grammys nominated 2020ās Ferxxo (Vol.Ā 1: M.O.R.) and its Justin Quiles-featuring single āPorfaā for best urban music album and best reggaetón performance, respectively. On the strength of an all-star remix featuring Balvin, Maluma, Nicky Jam and Sech, āPorfaā earned Feid his first No.Ā 1 hit on both the Latin Airplay and Latin Rhythm Airplay charts.
As he established his musical identity, Feid recognized that creating a visual one was similarly important. He adopted the color green (most often, a lime shade) as his trademark, starting in early 2022 with the release of the single āCastigoā: Its cover art features a green monster truck and in the music video, Feid is clad in all green.
āIt reminded me of the time when I was a huge fan of artists and wanted all the merch that had to do with them. I try to put myself in the shoes of a fan so that the people who follow me have a better chance of feeling closer to me,ā he says. Now, he always finds a way to wear it ā the color of growth and new beginnings.
As 2021 progressed, it seemed like everything was falling into place for Feid. He inked a worldwide publishing agreement with UMPG, fully transitioned from In-Tu Linea to UML under president Angel Kaminskyās team and opened KarolĀ Gās Bichota U.S. arena tour.
Still, it wasnāt all smooth sailing ā and in fact, his month on the road with Karol was a tough wake-up call. āI feel that 90% of people saw my show for the first time,ā he says. āComing from being a big deal in Colombia and being at the top of the charts to doing a show in Sacramento [Calif.] and having only five people yell āWooo!ā was challenging for me.ā
Feid photographed on January 12, 2023 at Proper Studio in Miami.
Devin Christopher
Then, shortly after returning home, a motorcycle accident left Feid with a severely injured left knee that required a two-month recovery. But instead of wallowing in his pain (or just kicking back to watch Netflix), Feid got to work on his next album.
āThere were moments of doubt and complications,ā says JesĆŗs López, chairman/CEO of Universal Music Latin AmericaĀ & Iberian Peninsula. āIt was bad luck for his leg but good luck for his head because he was able to be calmer for a while and work more on the creativity of his album Feliz CumpleaƱos Ferxxo.ā
Hunkered down with his leg in a cast, Feid organically started engaging more with fans on TikTok. He would flirtatiously react to viral videos in his suave Medallo, create simple dance challenges for his music, tell jokes and, most importantly, preview tracks he was working on, like āNormal.ā On TikTok, he realized, it was easier to promote himself (and go viral) than through an interview with a major news platform, and it became one of his biggest marketing tools, attracting new fans outside Colombia in places such as the United States, Mexico and Spain. (Feid now has more than 7.5Ā million TikTok followers.)
But it wasnāt until two trips to Mexico in 2022 that Feid truly noticed the effects of his social media presence. When he arrived in May for a festival in Monterrey, thousands of fans greeted him at the InterContinental Presidente hotel in Mexico City, prompting Feid and his team to schedule shows of his own in the country. In August, the three resulting headlining gigs ā at Auditorio Nacional (Mexico City), Auditorio Citibanamex (Monterrey) and Auditorio Telmex (Guadalajara) ā sold almost 20,000 tickets and grossed nearly $1Ā million, according to Billboard Boxscore. Previously, Feid had only performed in Mexico as a surprise guest for other artists.
āI feel that everything has been gradual in my career, but this was definitely an alert to us that something was happening,ā he says with a laugh. āI still donāt want to realize whatās happening. I just want to keep making my music, be with my family, eat frijolitos (beans) and relax, but I can say that Mexico was that moment when we all wondered, āWhatās going on?āĀ ā
Today, speaking with me in Miamiās hip Wynwood neighborhood, fame doesnāt seem to have changed Feid ā and heās embracing his paisa identity more than ever. Heās wearing his laid-back, go-to uniform of shorts, sneakers, baseball cap and graphic T-shirt and proudly rocking the first-ever backpack from his collaboration with BogotĆ”-based brand Totto. Heās polite and warm, arriving early for his Billboard photo shoot (āPeopleās time is valuableā) and greeting everyone in the room with a chiseled smile and a tight hug. āQue mĆ”s mi reina? Todo bien?ā he asks me ā āAll good, my queen?ā
While it may have taken some extra time to get here, Feidās down-to-earth appeal is central to why, finally, heās prospering. Feid attributes his success to āthe perfect timing of God,ā but those around him know thereās a bit more to it.
āHe is real and authentic,ā says his manager, Villamizar. āIn his music, what he writes, what he says. The DNA of all this success is him and people notice and feel it.ā
āHe has a lot of perseverance and a lot of persistence that few have,ā says Balvin. āMany [artists] would have gotten out of the way by now, but he was always there. Now he is living his best moment, and Iām sure many more blessings will come his way.ā
Feid photographed on January 12, 2023 at Proper Studio in Miami.
Devin Christopher
Late last year, Feid released his second collaboration of 2022 with Yandel, and heās carried that momentum into 2023, earning his first HotĀ 100 entry with the Ozuna-assisted āHey Morā and embarking on his first proper Latin American trek, the sold-out Ferxxo: Nitro Jam Tour promoted by CMN. Heāll headline Chicagoās SueƱos Music Festival in May and tour Europe this summer, all while working on his next album. Its āwhole concept has to do with how I went from being in the shadows as a composer to everything I am achieving now [as an artist],ā he explains.
Feid is covered in tattoos, but one on the right side of his neck is particularly noticeable. In cursive, it reads: Nunca olvides porque empezaste (never forget why you started) ā a reminder to stay grounded. āFe,ā or faith, is at the core of what got him here, and what will keep him going forward.
āFrom the beginning, it was [my dream] to have a vision that only I could have and could spread to people and also surround myself with a team that understood what I wanted to do,ā he says. āI have always had a lot of faith in myself and my career ā and that is why Ferxxo is called āFeid.āĀ ā
Penske Media Corp. is the largest shareholder of SXSW; its brands are official media partners of SXSW.
This story will appear in the March 11, 2023, issue of Billboard.
Lil Yachty, presented by Doritos, will perform at Billboard Presents The Stage at SXSW on March 16.
Someone has sparked a blunt in the planetarium.
It may be a school night, but no one has come to the Liberty Science Center in Jersey City, N.J., to learn. Instead, the hundreds of fans packed into the domed theater on Jan.Ā 26 have come to hear Lil Yachtyās latest album as he intended: straight through ā and with an open mind. Or, as Yachty says with a mischievous smile: āI hope yāall took some sh-t.ā
For the next 57 minutes and 16 seconds, graphics of exploding spaceships, green giraffes and a quiet road through Joshua Tree National Park accompany Yachtyās sonically divergent ā and at this point, unreleased ā fifth album, Letās Start Here. For a psychedelic rock project that plays like one long song, the visual aids not only help attendees embrace the bizarre, but also function as a road map for Yachtyās far-out trip, signaling that there is, in fact, a tracklist.
Itās a night the artist has arguably been waiting for his whole career ā to finally release an album he feels proud of. An album that was, he says, made āfrom scratchā with all live instrumentation. An album that opens with a nearly seven-minute opus, āthe BLACK seminole.,ā that he claims he had to fight most of his collaborative team to keep as one, not two songs. An album that, unlike his others, has few features and is instead rich with co-writers like Mac DeMarco, Nick Hakim, AlexĀ G and members of MGMT, Unknown Mortal Orchestra and Chairlift. An album he believes will finally earn him the respect and recognition he has always sought.
āI did what I really wanted to do, which was create a body of work that reflected me,ā says a soft-spoken Yachty the day before his listening event. āMy idea was for this album to be a journey: Press play and fall into a void.ā
Sitting in a Brooklyn studio in East Williamsburg not far from where he made most of Letās Start Here in neighboring Greenpoint, itās clear he has been waiting to talk about this project in depth for some time. Yachty is an open book, willing to answer anything ā and share any opinion. (Especially on the slice of pizza he has been brought, which he declares ātastes like ass.ā) Perhaps his most controversial take at the moment? āF-ck any of the albums I dropped before this one.ā
Lil Yachty photographed on January 25, 2023 at Shio Studio in Brooklyn.
Peter Ash Lee
His desire to move on from his past is understandable. When Yachty entered the industry in his mid-teens with his 2016 major-label debut, the Lil Boat mixtape, featuring the breakout hit āOne Night,ā he found that along with fame came sailing the internetās choppy waters. Skeptics often took him to task for not knowing ā or caring, maybe ā about rapās roots, and he never shied away from sharing hot takes on Twitter. With his willingness and ability to straddle pop and hip-hop, Yachty produced music he once called ābubble-gum trapā (he has since denounced that phrase) that polarized audiences and critics. Meanwhile, his nonchalant delivery got him labeled as a mumble rapper ā another identifier he was never fond of because it felt dismissive of his talent.
āI came into music in a time where rap was real hardcore, it was real street,ā he says. āAnd a bunch of us kids came in with colorful hair and dressing different and basically said, āMove out the way, old f-cks. We on some other sh-t.ā I was young and I didnāt really give a f-ck, so I did do things that may have led people to the assumptions that I was a mumble rapper or a SoundCloud kid or I donāt appreciate the history of hip-hop. But to be honest, Iāve always been so much more than just hip-hop.
āThereās a lot of kids who havenāt heard any of my references,ā he continues. āThey donāt know anything about Bon Iver or Pink Floyd or Black Sabbath or James Brown. I wanted to show people a different side of me ā and that I can do anything, most importantly.ā
Letās Start Here is proof. Growing up in Atlanta, the artist born Miles McCollum was heavily influenced by his father, a photographer who introduced him to all kinds of sounds. Yachty, once easily identifiable by his bright red braids, found early success by posting songs like āOne Nightā to SoundCloud, catching the attention of Kevin āCoachĀ Kā Lee, co-founder/COO of Quality Control Music, now home to Migos, Lil Baby and City Girls. In 2015, CoachĀ K began managing Yachty, who in summer 2016 signed a joint-venture deal with Motown, Capitol Records and Quality Control.
āYachty was me when I was 18 years old, when I signed him. He was actually me,ā says CoachĀ K today. (In 2021, Adam Kluger, whose clients include Bhad Bhabie, began co-managing Yachty.) āAll the eclectic, different things, we shared that with each other. He had been wanting to make this album from the first day we signed him. But you know ā coming as a hip-hop artist, you have to play the game.ā
Yachty played it well. To date, he has charted 17 songs on the Billboard HotĀ 100, including two topĀ 10 hits for his features on DRAMās melodic 2016 smash āBroccoliā and Kyleās 2017 pop-rap track āiSpy.ā His third-highest-charting entry arrived unexpectedly last year: the 93-second āPoland,ā a track Yachty recorded in about 10 minutes where his warbly vocals more closely resemble singing than rapping. (Letās Start Here collaborator SADPONY saw āPolandā as a temperature check that proved āpeople are going to like this Yachty.ā)
Beginning with 2016ās Lil Boat mixtape, all eight of Yachtyās major-label-released albums and mixtapes have charted on the BillboardĀ 200. Three have entered the topĀ 10, including Letās Start Here, which debuted and peaked at No.Ā 9. And while Yachty has only scored one No.Ā 1 album before (Teenage Emotions topped Rap Album Sales), Letās Start Here debuted atop three genre charts: Top RockĀ & Alternative Albums, Top Rock Albums and Top Alternative Albums.
āIt feels good to know that people in that world received this so well,ā says Motown Records vp of A&R Gelareh Rouzbehani. āI think itās a testament to Yachty going in and saying, āF-ck what everyone thinks. Iām going to create something that Iāve always wanted to make ā and let us hope the world f-cking loves it.āĀ ā
Yachty says he was already confident about the album, but after playing it for several of his peers and heroes ā including Kendrick Lamar, J.Ā Cole, Post Malone, Drake, CardiĀ B, Kid Cudi, A$AP Rocky and Tyler, The Creator ā ātheir reactions boosted me.ā
Yet despite Letās Start Hereās many high-profile supporters, some longtime detractors and fans alike were quick to criticize certain aspects of it, from its art ā Yachty quote-tweeted one remark, succinctly replying, āshut upā ā to the music itself. Once again, he found himself facing another tidal wave of discourse. But this time, he was ready to ride it. āThis release,ā Kluger says, āgave him a lot of confidence.ā
āI was always kind of nervous to put out music, but now Iām on some other sh-t,ā Yachty says. āIt was a lot of self-assessing and being very real about not being happy with where I was musically, knowing Iām better than where I am. Because the sh-t I was making did not add up to the sh-t I listened to.
āI just wanted more,ā he continues. āI want to be remembered. I want to be respected.ā
Last spring, Lil Yachty gathered his family, collaborators and team at famed Texas studio complex Sonic Ranch.
āI remember I got there at night and drove down because this place is like 30 miles outside El Paso,ā CoachĀ K says. āI walked in the room and just saw all these instruments and sh-t, and the vibe was just so ill. And I just started smiling. All the producers were in the room, his assistant, his dad. Yachty comes in, puts the album on. We got to the second song, and I told everybody, āStop the music.ā I walked over to him and just said, āMan, give me a hug.ā I was like, āYachty, I am so proud of you.ā He came into the game bold, but [to make] this album, you have to be very bold. And to know that he finally did it, it was overwhelming.ā
SADPONY (aka Jeremiah Raisen) ā who executive-produced Letās Start Here and, in doing so, spent nearly eight straight months with Yachty ā says the time at Sonic Ranch was the perfect way to cap off the months of tunnel vision required while making the album in Brooklyn. āThat was new alone,ā says Yachty. āIāve recorded every album in Atlanta at [Quality Control]. That was the first time I recorded away from home. First time I recorded with a new engineer,ā Miles B.A. Robinson, a Saddle Creek artist.
And while they did put the finishing touches on the album in Texas, they also let loose. āWe had a f-cking grand old time,ā SADPONY says. āWe had about 50 people all throughout these houses and were driving in these unregistered trucks, like cartel trucks, around this crazy pecan farm. Obviously, we were all having some fun making this psychedelic record.ā
Lil Yachty photographed on January 25, 2023 at Shio Studio in Brooklyn.
Peter Ash Lee
Yachty couldnāt wait to put it out, and says he turned it in āa long time ago. I think it was just label sh-t and trying to figure out the right time to release it.ā For CoachĀ K, it was imperative to have the physical product ready on release date, given that Yachty had made āan experienceā of an album. And lately, most pressing plants have an average turnaround time of six to eight months.
Fans, however, were impatient. On Christmas, one month before Letās Start Here would arrive, the album leaked online. It was dubbed Sonic Ranch. āEveryone was home with their families, so no one could pull it off the internet,ā recalls Yachty. āThat was really depressing and frustrating.ā
Then, weeks later, the album art, tracklist and release date also leaked. āMy label made a mistake and sent preorders to Amazon too early, and [the site] posted it,ā Yachty says. āSo I wasnāt able to do the actual rollout for my album that I wanted to. Nothing was a secret anymore. It was all out. I had a whole plan that I had to cancel.ā He says the biggest loss was various videos he made to introduce and contextualize the project, all of which āwere really weird ⦠[But] I wasnāt introducing it anymore. People already knew.ā Only one, called āDepartment of Mental Tranquility,ā made it out, just days before the album.
Yachty says he wasnāt necessarily seeking a mental escape before making Letās Start Here, but confesses that acid gave him one anyway. āI guess maybe the music went along with it,ā he says. The album title changed four or five times, he says, from Momentary Bliss (āIt was meant to take you away from reality ⦠where youāre truly listeningā) to 180Ā Degrees (āBecause itās the complete opposite of anything Iāve ever done, but people were like, āItās too on the noseāĀ ā) to, ultimately, Letās Start Here ā the best way, he decided, to succinctly summarize where he was as an artist: a seven-year veteran, but at 25 years old, still eager to begin a new chapter.
He dug into his less obvious influences: In 2017, he listened to Pink Floydās The Dark Side of the Moon for the first time. āI think that was the last time I was like, āWhoa.ā You know?ā He believes Frank Oceanās Blonde is āone of the best albums of all timeā and cites Tame Impalaās Currents as another project that stopped him in his tracks. All were fuel to his fire.
Taking inspiration from Dark Side, Yachty relied on three womenās voices throughout the album, enlisting FousheĆ©, Justine Skye and Diana Gordon. Otherwise, guest vocals are spare. Daniel Caesar features on album closer āReach the Sunshine.,ā while the late Bob Ross (of The Joy of Painting fame) has a historic posthumous feature on āWe Saw the Sun!ā
Rouzbehani tells Billboard that Rossā estate declined Yachtyās request at first: āI think a big concern of theirs was that Yachty is known as a rapper, and Bob Ross and his brand are very clean. They didnāt want to associate with anything explicit.ā But Yachty was adamant, and Rouzbehani played the track for Rossā team and also sent the entire albumās lyrics to set the group at ease. āWith a lot of back-and-forth, we got the call,ā she says. āYachty is the first artist that has gotten a Bob Ross clearance in history.ā
Lil Yachty photographed on January 25, 2023 at Shio Studio in Brooklyn.
Peter Ash Lee
From the start, CoachĀ K believed Letās Start Here would open lots of doors for Yachty ā and ultimately, other artists, too. Questlove may have said it best, posting the album art on Instagram with a lengthy caption that read in part: āthis lp might be the most surprising transition of any music career Iāve witnessed in a min, especially under the umbrella of hip hop ⦠Sh-t like this (envelope pushing) got me hyped about musicās future.ā
āPeople donāt know where Yachtyās going to go now, and I think thatās the coolest sh-t, artistrywise,ā says SADPONY. āThatās some Iggy Pop-, David Bowie-type sh-t. Where the mysteriousness of being an artist is back.ā
Recently, Lil Yachty held auditions for an all-women touring band. āIt was an experience for like Simon Cowell or Randy [Jackson],ā he says, offering a simple explanation for the choice: āIn my life, women are superheroes.ā
And according to Yachty, pulling off his show will take superhuman strength: āBecause the show has to match the album. It has to be big.ā As eager as he was to release Letās Start Here, heās even more antsy to perform it live ā but planning a tour, he says, required gauging the reaction to it. āThis is so new for me, and to be quite honest with you, the label [didnāt] know how [the album] would do,ā he says. āAlso, I havenāt dropped an album in like three years. So we donāt even know how to plan a tour right now because it has been so long and my music is so different.ā
While Yachtyās last full-length studio album, Lil BoatĀ 3, arrived in 2020, he released the Michigan Boy Boat mixtape in 2021, a project as reverential of the stateās flourishing hip-hop scenes in Detroit and Flint as Letās Start Here is of its psych-rock touchstones. And though he claims he doesnāt do much with his days, his recent accomplishments, both musical and beyond, suggest otherwise. He launched his own cryptocurrency, YachtyCoin, at the end of 2020; signed his first artist, Draft Day, to his Concrete Boyz label at the start of 2021; invested in the Jewish dating app Lox Club; and launched his own line of frozen pizza, Yachtyās Pizzeria, last September. (He has famously declared he has never eaten a vegetable; at his Jersey City listening event, there was an abundance of candy, doughnut holes and Frosted Brown Sugar Cinnamon Pop-Tarts.)
But there are only two things that seem to remotely excite him, first and foremost of which is being a father. As proud as he is of Letās Start Here, he says it comes in second to having his now 1-year-old daughter ā though he says with a laugh that she ādoesnāt really give a f-ckā about his music yet. āI havenāt played [this album] for her, but her mom plays her my old stuff,ā he continues. āThe mother of my child is Dominican and Puerto Rican, so she loves Selena ā she plays her a lot. [We watch] the Selena movie with Jennifer Lopez a sh-t ton and a lot of Disney movie sh-t, like Frozen, Lion King and that type of vibe.ā
Aside from being a dad, he most cares about working with other artists. Recently, he flew eight of his biggest fans ā most of whom he has kept in touch with for years ā to Atlanta. He had them over, played Letās Start Here, took them to dinner and bowling, introduced them to his mom and dad, and then showed them a documentary he made for the album. (Heās not sure if heāll release it.) One of the fans is an aspiring rapper; naturally, the two made a song together.
āI want to be Quincy Jones,ā Yachty near whispers. Last year, he co-produced a handful of tracks on the Drake and 21Ā Savage collaborative album Her Loss. And recently, he features on two Zack Bia tracks, one of which he produced, for Biaās upcoming album. Six months ago, he started living by himself for the first time. āI wish I did it sooner. I wake up, play video games and then I go to the studio all night until the morning,ā he says. āThatās all I want to do.ā Since finishing Letās Start Here, Yachty claims he has made hundreds of songs, some experimenting with āelectronic pop sh-tā that he can only describe as ātight.ā
Lil Yachty photographed on January 25, 2023 at Shio Studio in Brooklyn.
Peter Ash Lee
Yachty wants to keep working with artists and producers outside of hip-hop, mentioning the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and even sharing his dream of writing a ballad for Elton John. (āI know I could write him a beautiful song.ā) With South Korean music company HYBEās recent purchase of Quality Control ā a $300Ā million deal ā Yachtyās realm of possibility is bigger than ever.
But heās not ruling out his genre roots. Arguably, Letās Start Here was made for the peers and heroes he played it for first ā and was inspired by hip-hopās chameleons. āI would love to do a project with Tyler [The Creator],ā says Yachty. āHeās the reason I made this album. Heās the one who told me to do it, just go for it. Heās so confident and I have so much respect for him because he takes me seriously, and he always has.ā
Yachty is now hoping everyone else does, too. āI just want people to understand I love this. This is not a joke to me. And I can stand with my chest out because Iām proud of something I created.ā
Penske Media Corp. is the largest shareholder of SXSW; its brands are official media partners of SXSW.
This story will appear in the March 11, 2023, issue of Billboard.
While 26-year-old rapper-singer Baby Tate had her eye on music stardom since she was a little girl, she also had an even more pressing childhood dream: becoming a cheerleader. āI was a huge Bring It On fan,ā she says of the 2000 cult classic film. āI wanted to be a cheerleader real bad but I went to a performing arts high school, so we had no sports at all.ā
Although she never had the chance to yell āgo team!ā from the sidelines at a high school football game, she still achieved her pom-pom filled dreams on her own terms when the cheer-tastic āHey, Mickey!ā ā her 2016 single interpolating Toni Basilās 1982 Billboard Hot 100-topper āMickey,ā which itself was a cover of 1979ās āKittyā by British pop group Racey ā began bubbling up on TikTok, seven years after its initial release. āItās really crazy the things that that app can do,ā she says today, biting into an egg roll at Hollywoodās Luv2eat Thai Bistro.
The latest example of the TikTok-virality-to-charts pipeline, āHey Mickey!ā began racking up listens in January, after a few K-pop fans began using the sound on edits of their favorite acts, including Stray Kids and BIBI, and posting to social media. Soon after, Quinn Goydish ā who manages Tate alongside LVRN partner/executive vp/GM Amber Grimes ā noticed a bump in the songās daily plays, from dozens of streams to a few thousand. āI feel like for Quinn, checking my Spotify for Artists is his daily newspaper,ā jokes Tate. Since, the song has accumulated more than 1.6 million user-created videos on TikTok and grown into her first entry on multiple Billboard charts.
At the time of the songās inception, she was a budding artist performing as Yung Baby Tate and living in her hometown of Atlanta. She recalls rocking āsynthetic wigs,ā seeing some SoundCloud success and bringing in a couple hundred dollars per show. āI remember a song doing 300 streams in a day and I was so excited,ā she says. āItās so crazy how [our] perspective of success can change.ā
Baby Tate photographed on February 22, 2023 in Los Angeles.
Joelle Grace Taylor
After receiving the beat from a producer who often sent sounds her way, Tate recorded Basilās famous āMickeyā chant atop the wonky production on a Snowball USB microphone, and it stuck. The lyrics tell the story of an attractive guy named Mickey that Tate meets and goes out with, only to find out that heās gay. āMy whole schooling was in performing arts and I was always surrounded by LGBT culture and community, so for me, the people that I was dating in high school were gay,ā she explains with a giggle. ā[āHey Mickey!ā] was the best song of all of my old songs to go viral.ā
Since then, sheās dropped the āYung,ā signed a label deal with Warner Records in 2021 and management deal with LVRN in 2022. Warner initially approached Tate in 2019, she says: āI wasnāt ready mentally. I was kind of all over the place as far as where I wanted to go with my music.ā
But Tate says she grew a lot during the pandemic, and in December 2020, she released one of her most successful singles āI Am,ā through a partnership with Issa Raeās label Raedio, as part of her EP After the Rain (Tate is no longer affiliated with Raedio). Her monthly Spotify listeners have ballooned to 10.6 million and gone are the days of a few hundred dollars per show.
Baby Tate photographed on February 22, 2023 in Los Angeles.
Joelle Grace Taylor
As soon as Tateās management team caught wind of āHey Mickey!ā bubbling up, the dynamic pair of Goydish and Grimes ā who have known each other for over a decade ā kicked things into high gear, meticulously planning TikTok strategy, rereleases and remix ideas. āTate immediately leaning in on TikTok was the first thing that helped,ā says Goydish. āWe also decided to invest in a TikTok campaign. The second we saw an opportunity, we put money into outside influencers.ā
By early February, āHey, Mickey!ā had reached Nos. 21 and 40 on Billboardās Hot Rap Songs and Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs charts, respectively, as well as a No. 5 high on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 list.
Tateās āHey Mickey!ā visual ā directed and choreographed by Nicole Kirkland ā then amassed nearly two million views in a week, following its Feb. 20 release, and perfectly portrayed the story of Tateās almost-boyfriend, Mickey. āJumping on a [music] video as fast as we could made all the difference,ā Grimes says. āWe were able to capitalize in less than three months off of a visual to keep this going.ā The same week, Tateās team also released Hey, Mickey! ā Full Pack, an EP including sped up, bass-boosted and slowed down versions of the song, a new strategy popularized by TikTok.
Two official remixes for the track are also set to release, the first being a Jersey Club mix from the famed DJ Smallz, paying homage to Tateās East Coast roots, where she spent summers in New Jersey with her momās side of the family as a kid, learning the latest dance crazes and sharing Atlanta staples like Dem Franchise Boyzās āLean Wit It Rock Wit Itā with her cousins. The second remix will arrive with what Tate calls the āofficialā music video (with a possible cameo from Bring It On star Gabrielle Union) and include one or two surprise features, including a fellow woman rapper. āItās super cute and fun and girly,ā she says. āBut if the other person gets on, itās still gonna be fun but not so girly. Itāll be gworly.ā
Ahead of an album on the horizon, which she hopes to release this year, Tate moved to Los Angeles last month. āThis is the first project that Iām beginning from scratch with both Warner and LVRN by my side, so Iām really excited to get into the creation of it,ā she says, adding that she has yet to make a single song for the album. āThere may be some songs that Iāve created throughout my long history of making music that might fit, but for the most part, I want to just start with a clean slate.ā
From left: Amber Grimes, Baby Tate, and Quinn Goydish photographed on February 22, 2023 in Los Angeles.
Joelle Grace Taylor
A version of this story will appear in the March 11, 2023, issue of Billboard.
In February, Mimi Webb brought her mother to the 2023 Brit Awards, where she was nominated for best new artist. She lost to WetĀ Leg, but days later, Webb was still beaming over meeting Harry Styles at the ceremony instead of being fazed by the defeat ā as she saw it, she had too much more to look forward to.
On MarchĀ 3, the charismatic rising pop star released her debut album, Amelia, which includes pop radio hits like āHouse on Fireā and āRed Flags.ā The 12-track project, which juxtaposes power-pop songs with catchy confessionals, is the culmination of a yearslong plan that prioritized career development and patience ā and rewarded Webbās drive.
āI always loved being center stage,ā the 22-year-old born Amelia Webb recalls of growing up in Canterbury, England. She started music lessons when she was 12 and became active in her schoolās band nights. āThatās where I was able to grow more as a musician and find that love for it. Thatās when I decided, āRight. Iām going to go for it.ā [There was] no backup plan.ā
By 16, Webb moved out to attend Brighton Music College. She didnāt stay long: That same year, she scored a manager in music and tech entrepreneur Rob Ronaldson, who was quick to set up studio time and label meetings in Los Angeles. āI just didnāt have time to do college. I had to drop out,ā says Webb, speaking quickly as if to match the pace of her ascent. āI learned so much to the point where I took things into my own hands and went out there and just did it.ā
From the start, Ronaldson foresaw Webbās cross-continental appeal and aimed for a record deal abroad rather than signing in the United Kingdom. The approach aligned with Webbās own goal: āBreak worldwide.ā
In 2019, she signed a deal with Epic Records, forming an immediate bond with Ezekiel āZekeā Lewis, the labelās executive vp of A&R. And in 2020, Best Friends Musicās Brandon Goodman signed on as Webbās stateside co-manager. Still, she continued to grow her domestic fan base, landing a U.K. hit every year since breaking first on TikTok with the impassioned āBefore I Go,ā a song Charli DāAmelio used to soundtrack a video on the app. (DāAmelio soon after helped Webb create her own account.)
Coperni jacket, Justine Clenquet earrings.
Rosaline Shahnavaz
And in 2021, āGood Without,ā from Webbās debut EP, Seven Shades of Heartbreak, crossed the pond and became her first entry on Billboardās Pop Airplay chart, followed by āHouse on Fireā in 2022. She started 2023 completing a hat trick, as the rousing āRed Flagsā became her third entry on the list, peaking at No.Ā 29. The success was steady, but to Webb, who was writing incessantly and building her following on social media, it was a whirlwind. āWhen I look back, I had no clue what I wanted to really do as an artist ā till now.ā
On Amelia, Webb introduces the world to her two selves: the chill homebody Amelia and the pop powerhouse Mimi. āWith this album, I really wanted to get the mixture of both [my] worlds ā get those ballads in, but also get the uptempo, fun songs in there as well,ā she says.
Webb officially started working on Amelia last April, finishing the bulk of it in under six months, she estimates. āI had a lot of songs in the bag,ā she says, noting that she wrote the wishful āSee You Soonā four years ago, while she co-wrote newer songs like āRed Flags,ā āRoles Reversedā and āLast Train to Londonā in one week with Connor and Riley McDonough (who last year scored a Billboard HotĀ 100 topĀ 10 with Jojiās āGlimpse of Usā).
And even though Webb is embracing her offstage persona, sheās grateful for her foresight in creating a moniker, comparing it to a wall. āI think it was a way of protecting [myself],ā she says, āand also feeling that confidence to go onstage and not worry about whatās going to happen.ā
She admires peers like Tate McRae, whom she opened for on tour, and praises the dominant onstage presence of Dua Lipa, an artist she has ācompletely fallen in love withā ā and one with whom she shares a milestone. āRed Flagsā made Webb the first British female artist since Lipa (who was also a U.K. star before crossing over to the United States) to chart two singles in the topĀ 15 of the U.K. Official Singles Chart before releasing a debut album. āIāve taken a lot of inspiration from how she has done the steps and built from scratch, doing the small shows to the big arenas,ā Webb says.
That slow climb is exactly how Webb and her team have arrived at this moment: a hit single leading into a debut album leading into a U.K. and European headlining tour. What will follow, the artist hopes, is U.S. stardom.
āFor the last two-and-a-half years, we have been focused on the recording and artist-development process,ā Epic chairman/CEO Sylvia Rhone says. āBy releasing music and content consistently, coupled with touring, it has allowed her to mature as an artist and build a loyal and global audience.ā
āIām definitely excited for people to get to know Amelia and to tell the story of growing up and how intense everything feels,ā says Webb. āI just want people to really get to know me more as an artist ā and as a person.ā
Mimi Webb photographed on February 24, 2023 at zÄphyr in London.
Rosaline Shahnavaz
This story will appear in the March 11, 2023, issue of Billboard.
U.K.-based electronic producer Mura Masa and rising pop singer-songwriter PinkPantheress have been close collaborators for a couple years now ā in both the artistic partnership sense and the more literal one. āShe lives 10 minutes down the road,ā Mura Masa, 26, tells Billboard with a laugh. āShe has a friend who lives right next to me, so weāre always bumping into each other.āĀ
It was that combination of proximity and kinship that led to the two cooking up āBoyās A Liarā over a couple of hours together last year ā a charming synth-pop twinkler born, Mura Masa says, of āborderline-misandrist tendenciesā shared by the two artists. A minor chart hit in their country and a modest stateside streaming success, the song blew up earlier this month following the release of its āPt. 2ā remix, which adds a verse from New York rap phenom Ice Spice. After debuting on the Billboard Hot 100 (dated Feb. 18) at No. 14 ā an eye-popping arrival for two artists with limited history on the chart ā the collaboration leapt to No. 4 the following week and ticks up to No. 3 on this weekās list (dated March 4).Ā
āIce Spice is the most exciting artist right now, alongside Pink,ā says Mura Masa, who adds he only found out about the new version when videos of the two of them filming the NY-set video went viral on TikTok. āI texted [PinkPantheress] straight away and I was like, āYeah, genius, big-brain move. This is gonna be great.ā āĀ
Below, Mura Masa dives further into the process and inspirations behind the biggest global smash of his and his collaboratorsā young careers, how the songās success could lead to future U.K. hits crossing the pond and more.
Youāve worked with PinkPantheress for a while already. Can you talk about how that relationship started, and how it has developed over time?Ā
I think I first heard Pinkās music around like āPainā and āBreak It Off,ā and then I was reaching out to people to try to find out who she was and where she lived because thereās not much information about her online. And it turned out she lived 10 minutes down the road from me. [Laughs.] We started hanging out a lot after that, and itās really easy for us to pull up on each other.
[The] first time we worked together, I think we made āJust for Meā that day. It was probably the first idea that we worked on, and I think it was very obvious that we have a similar set of influences, and I really see her in a really nice way. We share a lot of the same ideas. Quite often sheāll knock on the door and be at my house, like, āHey, I was in the areaā¦ā Thereās a little studio at the bottom of my garden ā thatās where we made āBoyās a liarā and āJust for Meā and countless other things that may or may not be released.Ā
How did āBoyās A Liarā come about?
Weāre oddly not very verbal with our communication. We just kinda hang out and maybe one word or phrase will get tossed around, and then Iāll start a beat. I wish it was a more remarkable story, to be honest, but it was made in a couple of hours, like most things that we do. She took the idea and went away and worked on it by herself, and restructured it, wrote some different parts. But basically, the final record is what we did in those few hours, which I love. I think thatās really important.Ā
She said something in the press release about how you both wanted to write a song about how boys are liars ā which she said was a particularly common theme āthis time of year.ā Do you have any idea what she meant by that?
[Laughs.] Yeah, I think we share similarly borderline-misandrist tendencies. Just like, āMen are often problematic and canāt be trustedā ā but I try not to involve myself too much in the lyric-writing with Pink as much as I might do with other artists. Sheās so formed already and has such a great idea about whatās going to hit in terms of pop culture. In terms of getting Ice Spice on the record, it was entirely her proactive, genius brain.Ā
So much of the song is about the melody of that title phrase. Did she come up with that? And if so, did you recognize immediately that it was something special?
The first iteration of the song came about very quickly, and then I sent her the instrumental. The whole āboyās a liarā bit was actually something that she wrote on her own. I think the next week, she had leaked it herself, which sheās prone to doing ā thatās the first time I heard that version. I texted her and was like, āYeah, thatās it! Thatās the hook! Thatās better.ā Full credit to her for that.Ā
I didnāt really notice it until a handful of times listening to it, but the beat does kind of have that Jersey club bounce to it, which is getting to be a prevalent sound in pop music ā especially on this side of the pond. Is that something youāre drawing influence from these days, or were listening to while you were making it?Ā
Yeah. Itās really cool whatās happening with Baltimore and Jersey and these really localized American genres that are having moments. āJust Wanna Rock,ā the [Lil Uzi Vert] song, is the biggest example of that. If I remember correctly, that is something that we talked about that day, but I really didnāt want to go fully into that and make a pastiche of something that Iām not locally a part of. But yeah, thereās bed squeaks in there, thereās the kick [drum] pattern, things like that.Ā
When me and Pink work together, weāre never trying to make something thatās pastiche-y ā it has to fit into her world. Itās interesting that you said you didnāt even notice it until recently, because thatās a good thing in my head.Ā
Basically the song is left as-is on the remix, aside from swapping the second verse for Ice Spiceās verse. Was there any thought about changing it at all?
I left that up to her. Sheās a brilliant producer in her own right, and she was able to take the stems of what I did and work it around what Ice Spice did. Iām just happy to even be a remote part of what sheās doing.
What do you think about the remix is lending itself to this kind of success?Ā
I think itās just the combination of two extremely zeitgeist-y artists. There are interesting through-lines between them as artists: they both have an interesting emotional center to what they do. Itās just a match made in heaven, and the video that makes the chemistry super-obvious. But as far as why itās doing so well, I just think itās a brilliant song, and Pinkās a great songwriter.
Is its chart progress something that either youāre monitoring, or your team is keeping you informed about?
No. I wouldnāt say itās something I donāt care about, but itās not something that I would normally follow actively. In fact, it was a text from a friend of mine out of New York ā it was a tweet from one of these pop chart accounts, like, āOh, itās gone in at No. 14!ā or whatever. I was like, āWow, itās so amazing that itās ascended to kind of that level.ā One of my publishers texted me out of the blue, like, āWell done.ā I was like, āOh, I must be doing something!āĀ Ā
PinkPantheress reacted to the songās chart success in the U.S. with surprise, and I know a number of U.K.-based artists feel similarly about the challenges of landing that kind of an accomplishment. Why do you think thatās the case?Ā
I could give an hourlong answer about the structure of radio in the U.S., and the need to break certain local markets before you get international success. But for most U.K. artists, itās just a taste thing, an accent thing, or one [other] thing thatās holding them back. Itās been interesting seeing Central Cee really game the system. He did a whole freestyle about the differences between U.S. and U.K. slang. I love it when someone makes it their mission to break [into] the U.S. [market].
Was breaking the U.S. something you particularly cared about?
Itās a definite milestone for everybody involved. Itās interesting, like, post-Britpop and these kind of historical moments where the U.S. is tuning into what the U.K. is doing. But in the streaming era, itās becoming more borderless and a lot more possible for international artists to break in the U.S. I donāt tend to see it as divided by territories. I just think a stream is a stream.
Do you think that the success of the song could lead to other opportunities, either for you or for like-minded U.K.-based musicians?
Absolutely. PinkPantheress is a huge example of that, where sounds that originate out of the U.K., like drumānābass and U.K. garage, are resonating with U.S. audiences at the moment. Something like this getting a chart position like it has is proof of concept where people really do enjoy this. āBoyās a liarā is an interesting song because it feels like it has a U.K. sensibility, but ultimately itās kind of in the shape of a U.S. song. Itās my favorite kind of thing.
A version of this story originally appeared in the Feb. 25, 2023, issue ofĀ Billboard.
While the use of magnetic tape to record and play music dates back to the 1930s, it wasnāt until 1963, at the Berlin Radio Show, that Philips introduced the two-spool cassette. Twenty years later, the finicky format passed vinyl as the most popular music medium in the United States, but it was a short-lived victory: The CD soon spun it into the bargain bin of history. But two decades after most music fans pressed the Eject button, cassettes are following vinylās comeback in stores and stereos.Reel Love
Operating under the Norelco brand in the United States, Philips launched an āintensified advertising and promotion driveā to get cassettes into American homes,ā according to the Sept. 24, 1966, Billboard. āThe Norelco success on TV with shavers will hopefully be duplicated with recorders.ā By the Nov. 26 issue, Philips predicted that āthe market for equipment that can record and play back cassettes will reach 4 million setsā within a few years, citing one advantage the format had over vinyl: the ācapability to play in any position, even upside down.ā
Hitting Pause on High-End
Over the next decade, cassette sales were on fast-forward ā but the format struggled to attract audiophiles, who stuck with vinyl. āA $19 cassette is a difficult sale to make,ā mused an ad executive who worked for a chain store in the May 8, 1982, Billboard, referring to high-end cassettes. But electronics company Maxell tried: In that very issue, a pre-fame Geena Davis, leaning on a shelf full of tapes, appeared in a full-page ad targeting audiophiles.
Tapes and Tapes
Big Brother must have carried a Walkman: In 1984, the March 24 issue reported that ācassettes toppled LPs as the dominant prerecorded audio configuration last year, accounting for almost 53% of all album product shipped to trade.ā Cassettes were up 30.1% year over year, while vinyl dropped 14.1%. The āportable lifestyle,ā Billboard noted, ācontinues to propel sales to new peaks.ā
Find Cassingles Near You
āIs Cassette-Single Format Winding Down Already?ā asked the front page of the Dec. 21, 1991, Billboard. Apparently so: āThe dollar value of CD sales surpassed that of cassettes,ā according to an article in that issue. āMost distribution executives [agree that] the format has passed its peak,ā though one Midwest chain store owner blamed ālousy songs,ā insisting that the decline was nothing āa couple of hits couldnāt fix.ā
Measuring Tapes
By the end of the ā90s, cassette sales were unspooling. āThe decline of todayās cassette mirrors the disappearance of the 8-track tape two decades ago,ā Billboard reported in its Dec. 28, 2002, issue. A year later, cassette sales had dropped 40.3% while CD sales had dropped just 3%, due to the rise of online piracy. In a Dec. 19, 2009, year-end āSales by Album Formatā graphic, cassettes had been folded into the āotherā category. But reports of the formatās death were greatly exaggerated. From 2015 to 2022, the little tape that could saw a 443% increase in U.S. sales, according to Luminate, as marquee names like Taylor Swift, Megan Thee Stallion and Maren Morris cued up the cassetteās comeback.
This story originally appeared in the Feb. 25, 2023, issue of Billboard.
Rushing from elementary school with handwritten raps in her pocket, 10-year-old Alyssa Michelle Stephens would hop in her fatherās āold-school cars with [24-inch] rimsā and head straight to the recording studio ā first in his friendsā homes, but soon enough, in professional spaces. āWhen we started paying for sessions, heād say, āYou aināt gonā be in here all day,āĀ ā the artist now known as Latto recalls. āĀ āYou better have that song ready, top to bottom, one take, in and out!āĀ ā Even then, the Atlanta-raised aspiring MC ā today a chart-topping, Grammy-nominated rapper with more than 1Ā billion on-demand streams in the United States, according to Luminate ā was preparing for her destiny, winning high school writing competitions as a fifth grader.
Nurtured by her accountant mother and āhustlerā father ā both of whom she recalls living off ramen noodles during her early years ā the self-proclaimed ādaddyās girlā stayed ahead of the curve, accompanying him to video shoots where rising acts like Dem Franchize Boyz and Ciara used his cars. āI just remember being so mesmerized by the whole process,ā she says. āI loved the fast-paced hustle and bustle.ā At 16, Latto competed on (and won) the first season of Lifetimeās hip-hop reality show, The Rap Game, under the moniker Miss Mulatto. Already, she had the foresight to recognize a bad career move when she saw one and, citing a less-than-adequate payout, turned down the showās grand prize ā a record deal with Jermaine Dupriās SoĀ So Def Recordings ā and remained independent until she signed to RCA Records in 2020, following the success of her breakthrough single, āBāch From Da Souf.ā
Christian Cowan dress and shoes, Sterling King jewelry.
Ssam Kim
Today, studio costs are no object to Latto, 24, who locks herself in the booth, pumping out 10 songs at a time about quarrels with her man or whatever inspires her on a given day. That tireless approach ā Latto says she has hundreds of unreleased tracks stockpiled ā has paid dividends, most notably with her massive 2021 hit, āBig Energy.ā The song established Latto as a mainstream force ā even if its mere existence was by no means a foregone conclusion.
āI heard my A&R and management whispering, debating on whether or not to play this beat for me,ā Latto recalls. āIt was just so different from everything else that Iāve done. They were hesitant on how I would react.ā In the end, she loved the beat, despite not recognizing its biggest draw: a snippet of āGenius of Love,ā the 1981 Tom Tom Club song famously sampled on Mariah Careyās āFantasy.ā
āIt ended up working in my favor,ā she says. āI feel like thatās what kept it so āLatto.āĀ ā Still, the trackās eventual success surprised her. āI could feel the potential of the song and how commercial it was,ā she continues, ābut I definitely didnāt think it would be Grammy-nominated.ā
Latto photographed on January 18, 2023 at The Paramour Estate in Los Angeles. Brandon Blackwood coat, Jessica Rich shoes, Versace eyewear courtesy of Tab Vintage, Sara Shala necklace.
Ssam Kim
For Latto, those wins paled in comparison to another āBig Energyā achievement: Carey herself called Lattoās management and chatted with the rapper for over an hour, leading to her appearance on the trackās March 2022 remix. āShe was just embracing me and telling me she loves everything Iām doing,ā Latto gushes. āIt was a super out-of-body experience.ā
Since āBig Energyā and Careyās assist, Latto has positioned herself as rapās biggest sweetheart. This yearās Powerhouse exudes warmth as she melts into her seat at Los Angelesā Paramour Estate for her Billboard interview, flashing a bright white smile that contrasts with her painted-on, fire-engine red pantsuit. āYou have to [ask yourself], āWhat am I going to sound like? What am I going to rap about? What will my beats sound like? Whereās my lane in the industry?āĀ ā she explains of her meticulously planned path. āOnce you figure that out, you figure out the business side. Otherwise, youāre going to be high and dry when your 15 minutes are up.ā
After breaking with āBāch From Da Souf,ā Latto diligently ensured her career would last. First, she changed her moniker from Mulatto to Latto, following controversy around the wordās connections to colorism. āNew crib, new whip, new name/Iām still that bāch,ā she roared on her first single with RCA, āThe Biggest,ā adding on Instagram that the new name signified āa new chapterā and āgood fortune, spiritually and financially.ā
Her predictions came true, as āBāch From Da Soufā became her first entry on the Billboard HotĀ 100 (peaking at No.Ā 95) and both it and its follow-up, the Gucci Mane-featuring āMuwop,ā went platinum. Her second album with RCA, 777, debuted at No.Ā 15 on the BillboardĀ 200, and within two years, sheād hit No.Ā 3 on the HotĀ 100 with āBig Energy.ā
ACT N°1 gown.
Ssam Kim
Since then, the rapper has received widespread support from women artists including Queen Latifah, Trina, City Girls, CardiĀ B, SZA, RemyĀ Ma and Lizzo, who tapped Latto to support both North American legs of her Special arena tour. āI get a lot of love,ā she says with an exuberant smile. āReal recognize real.ā
And Latto intends to pay it forward, gushing over other newcomers like Flo Milli, Lola Brooke and GloRilla. āMy No.Ā 1 thing has been being a girlās girl,ā she explains. āI utilize my power in uplifting others on my way up. When you see Latto do a feature with an upcoming female rapper, I donāt charge them. The label got to cover the glam, but I donāt profit off that.ā
Considering her youth, Latto has also displayed considerable foresight and grace thus far, which she attributes to the āget-it-out-the-mudā mentality she inherited from her teen parents. ā[Thatās why] I know what I want,ā she adds.
Still, her cool under pressure has been tested. Last year, the rapper ā like many her age, a fan of Nicki Minajās since childhood ā became embroiled in a bitter Twitter battle with the rap legend, who had expressed frustration with the Recording Academy following its categorization of āSuper Freaky Girlā as a pop song when considering it for the 2023 Grammys. āIf [āSuper Freaky Girlā] has 2B moved out RAP then so does Big Energy!ā Minaj wrote in a tweet that led to a blowout fight with Latto, who posted a recording of a phone call theyād had.
āItās difficult navigating through situations like that because thereās a disconnect. I will look at myself as a fan of someone and they will view [me] in a whole different light,ā Latto explains today. āItās disappointing. You just got to take it to the chin and keep pushing.ā
Brandon Blackwood coat, Jessica Rich shoes, Versace eyewear courtesy of Tab Vintage, Sara Shala necklace.
Ssam Kim
So when social media drama next reared its head ā late last year, more than 100 of Lattoās unreleased songs were leaked without her knowledge, including tracks that would become massive hits for rappers Coi Leray and BIA ā she responded with restraint, simply posting a trio of photos captioned āTrending.ā
āI had to stop using my age as an excuse, because I [was] like, āIām not nobody momma, Iām not nobody teacher. Iām not raising your kids.ā But unintentionally, you are,ā she says now. āThey look up to you. So I try to put my best foot forward.ā
Now, sheās focused on a new āauthenticā chapter in her career. āBecause I started rapping so young, Iāve had a lot of other cooks in the kitchen,ā she says. āSo now Iām taking control back.ā That means exploring new sounds, releasing her latest single, the pop-centric āLottery,ā while staying true to her hip-hop roots.
āThe content Iām about to roll out is a whole fresh new leaf,ā says Latto. āI genuinely love to see the new wave of female rap, and Iām honored to be a part of it.ā
Christian Cowan dress, Sterling King jewelry.
Ssam Kim
This story will appear in the Feb. 25, 2023, issue of Billboard.
Lana Del Rey practices āautomatic singing.ā Using the improvisational songwriting technique, she lets her voice carry over accompaniments, not commandeering where her words or melodies take her, accepting all ideas she has in the moment and editing them later. Lately, her voice has led her home, back to memories of her childhood in Lake Placid, N.Y., and to ruminations on relationships with her family and the divergent paths theyāve taken.
That subject underpins her upcoming ninth album, Did You Know That Thereās a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd (out MarchĀ 24). Del Rey, 37, says she hesitantly began to unpack this subject matter with her previous album, Blue Banisters ā but now, sheās ready to dig deeper. āAt first I was so uncomfortable,ā she says of the more personal material. āThen, by the grace of God, I just felt completely unburdened.ā
Lia Clay Miller
As a singer-songwriter, this yearās Visionary honoree has embodied that word for over a decade. Her 2012 major-label debut, Born To Die, made her a star and defined musicās Tumblr era, as a young DelĀ Rey toyed with both the romantic and the darker sides of the American dream. Her āworld building,ā as she calls it now, for her early work created a collage of beautiful and disparate images, pairing hip-hop aesthetics with references to the Kennedy family, Elvis Presley with John Wayne, and old Hollywood glamour with biker gang grit.
Since then, DelĀ Rey has pushed musical boundaries ā seamlessly peppering an album with features from Stevie Nicks to Playboi Carti (2017ās Lust for Life), reworking a Sublime cover into a contemporary Billboard HotĀ 100 hit (2019ās āDoinā Timeā), for instance ā while achieving both critical acclaim and commercial success. She has earned six Grammy nominations and holds the record for most No.Ā 1s on Billboardās Alternative Albums chart. And somehow, each week, it seems a new song from her vast catalog gains traction on TikTok. (āWest Coastā and āHow To Disappearā are two recent breakouts.) Younger artists often cite her as an inspiration ā including Billie Eilish, whom DelĀ Rey now calls āmy girl. It makes me feel comforted that music is going in such a good direction.ā
Lia Clay Miller
Since 2019, youāve released four albums. Is it fair to say you have more creative energy than ever?
I think it might look like that! Itās funny because I keep telling people, āI havenāt worked in three years,ā but really I just havenāt done shows in three years. As soon as I start getting ready for a show, thatās when it feels like work.
How has your process changed since Born To Die came out?
Eleven years ago I wanted it to be so good. Now, I just sing exactly what Iām thinking. Iām thinking a little less big and bombastic. Maybe at some point I can have fun creating a world again, but right now, I would say thereās no world building. This music is about thought processing. Itās very, very wordy. Iām definitely living from the neck up.
Lia Clay Miller
Can you remember what it felt like creatively when you were just starting out?
I think back to the beginning, being in New York. I would just go to a little deli by Grand Central and all you had to do to sit at the table for hours was buy a black coffee. I remember thinking, āIām doing it. Iām living it.ā It was all very thrilling. I was so psyched back then.
You recently featured on Taylor Swiftās āSnow on the Beach.ā What was collaborating with her like?
Well, first of all, I had no idea I was the only feature [on that song]. Had I known, I would have sung the entire second verse like she wanted. My job as a feature on a big artistās album is to make sure I help add to the production of the song, so I was more focused on the production. She was very adamant that she wanted me to be on the album, and I really liked that song. I thought it was nice to be able to bridge that world, since Jack [Antonoff] and I work together and so do Jack and Taylor.
Who do you consider to be a visionary?
Joan Baez. I sang with her recently. She gave me a challenge: She said, āGo down a little road and look for a left turn and find my house [in Northern California]. If you find it and can play āDiamonds and Rustāsā high harmony, Iāll come to Berkeley with you and sing.ā So my sister and I rented a car and searched for the house. I was very nervous. I donāt play guitar that well, but I learned the first three chords and sat across from her, [and when] we stopped playing, she was like, āGreat, Iāll see you at Berkeley.ā
And another visionary to me is Cat Power. I had heard that she would run offstage when she wasnāt feeling it or just turn her back to the [audience] and keep playing. Thatās when I knew I could probably do this.
Lia Clay Miller
This story will appear in the Feb. 25, 2023, issue of Billboard.
Ivy Queen arrives in full color-Ācoordinated regalia ā a form-fitting, floor-length dress in lemon hues that match her long, yellow-tipped acrylic nails and the curly, beach blonde locks that reach her waist. Standing still and ramrod straight, her eyes surveying the room from under impossibly long lashes, she has the bearing of, well, a queen.
Itās a far cry from nearly 25 years ago, when Martha Ivelisse Pesante RodrĆguez, then 25, walked into the San Juan, Puerto Rico, studios of The Noise, the all-male rap collective formed by the pioneering DJ Negro, who sized her up: a country bumpkin from the islandās west side, her tiny frame dwarfed by oversized jeans and a T-shirt, hair tied in ā500 braids,ā lips painted blue, nails like talons.
āWhatās your name?ā he asked. āIvy Queen,ā she replied, without hesitation. āI have a song called āSomos Raperos, Pero no Delincuentesā [āWe Are Rappers, Not Delinquentsā].ā Overcome by shyness, she then flipped the mic around and rapped, facing the wall. But even with her back to him, DJ Negro was impressed. āWelcome to The Noise,ā he said. āYou know we donāt have girls here, right? Youāre the first one.ā
Ivy Queen photographed January 20, 2023 in Los Angeles.
Austin Hargrave
It was 1995, a time when the Puerto Rican airwaves were dominated by glamorous, big-voiced pop divas like Ednita Nazario and Yolandita Monge, and when reggaetón and rap were still underground movements dominated by men.
āWhen I started in this music industry, I didnāt look like I look right now,ā says Ivy Queen, noting she was relentlessly criticized for her deep voice, her fashion choices and her staunch refusal to exploit her sexuality.
āToday itās all about the look, but for me it was all about the music and about what I [could] bring,ā she says. āHow to be unique and not have a similarity to anyone else. I needed to learn how to fight with words.ā
And sure, Ivy could rap, but writing was her secret weapon. āI used to go to a lot of freestyle competitions and study everything around me ā the male behavior and how they went at each other with lyrics,ā she remembers, āand thatās how I protected myself. I won my own spot. No one gave it to me. Iām notorious because I stomped on the guys.ā
Ivy Queen photographed January 20, 2023 in Los Angeles.
Austin Hargrave
It took her nearly a decade, but in December 2003 she entered the Billboard charts for the first time with āQuiero Bailar,ā then gained notoriety the following year as one of the 12 essential reggaetón artists, and the only woman, featured on Eddie Deeās āLos DiscĆpulosā (āThe Disciples,ā off his 12Ā DiscĆpulos), where the likes of VicoĀ C, Tego Calderón, Voltio and Daddy Yankee jockeyed for dominance.
Ivy Queenās lines, written on the spot ā āQuĆtate tu que llegó la caballota, la perra, la diva, la potra, la mami que tiene el tumbaoā (āGet out of the way for the caballota, the bāch, the diva, the mare, the mami with the swaggerā) ā and later her 2005 Latin Grammys performance of the song as the only woman among the men confirmed her entry into the top echelon of reggaetón.
āThe first time I felt empowered in my life was when I learned and sang her verse from āLos DiscĆpulos,āĀ ā says Elena Rose, who has co-written tracks for RosalĆa, Bad Bunny and BeckyĀ G. āIvy is the queen, and we have much to thank her for; for all the doors that were shut to her and she broke down for Latinas in urban music.ā
In September 2005, āQuiero Bailarā peaked at No.Ā 16 on the Tropical Airplay chart and debuted on Hot Latin Songs and Latin Airplay. Its chorus, describing how arousal and flirtation do not translate to consent, defined Ivy Queenās ethos and personality, while also changing how women in reggaetón and beyond were perceived.
Ivy Queen photographed January 20, 2023 in Los Angeles.
Austin Hargrave
āIn the history of reggaetón, we have to talk about a ābefore and afterā Ivy Queen,ā says Puerto Rican attorney Edwin Prado, who has worked with virtually every major reggaetón artist, from Daddy Yankee to Anuel. āBefore her, female artists sang poppy tunes focused on erotic dances and physical attributes. After Ivy, the musical conversation changed. Her songs spoke about the reality of the streets, and when she spoke about romance, it wasnāt about exploiting her looks.ā
Back then, Ivy Queen didnāt have other women to collaborate with ā and few men extended a helping hand. Still, she landed 11 solo entries on Billboardās Latin Rhythm Albums chart, including eight topĀ 10s and two No.Ā 1s, over the next decade. On Latin Rhythm Airplay, she has 20 entries ā the third-most among women, behind Natti Natasha (25) and KarolĀ G (24), both next-gen stars who benefited from the doors she opened. And while she hasnāt cracked the topĀ 10 since 2010, with her chart-topping smash āLa Vida Es AsĆ,ā the queen, at 50, has endured. Most recently, she hosted Loud, a Spotify podcast on the history of reggaetón. On Feb.Ā 23, she was honored at Univisionās Premios LoĀ Nuestro with the legacy award in urban music. And in addition to new music, this yearās Icon is working on a memoir, a makeup line and a film based on her life.
Ironically, many of the trademarks the press and even Ivyās fellow artists once criticized her for ā her multicolored braids, the long nails, the deep voice ā are now de rigueur among younger urban female artists. But her messages of empowerment, she feels, often get lost.
āMany women think empowerment today is saying, āGive it to me here, give it to me there,āĀ ā she says ruefully. āThat the more clothes you take off, the more controversial you are. Empowerment is more than that. You earn your own money; you earn your own spot. I try to maintain my essence, of what reggaetón was, and what reggaetón is. I donāt want to be a puppet.ā
Ivy Queen photographed January 20, 2023 in Los Angeles.
Austin Hargrave
Staying true to those core values, adds her manager, Sonia Clavell ā the rare female manager in reggaetón ā has sometimes meant saying no to opportunities along the way.
āIvy isnāt swayed by trends or money. Everything has to align with her values and her message,ā says Clavell, who adds that she has seen a rise in interest in Ivy Queen since they began working together two years ago.
Notably, Bad Bunny, a fan and admirer, featured her on the remix of his hit āYo Perreo Solaā (āI Dance Aloneā), which he told Billboard that he wrote āas an homage to women and a nod of respect to women in general and to Ivy Queen specifically.ā
āHe has given me a space that not even the gentlemen I started my career with ever did,ā says Ivy Queen, who made guest appearances multiple times on Bad Bunnyās Worldās Hottest Tour last year. āTo have this young kid, who sings what he wants, does what he wants, give me my place and my honors while Iām alive is huge for me.ā
Ivy Queen photographed January 20, 2023 in Los Angeles.
Austin Hargrave
And while some of her reggaetón contemporaries have retired from music or announced plans to do so, Ivy Queen plans to continue getting her due.
āIām a great writer, Iām a great rapper, Iām a great lyricist, Iām a great chef. Iām great at everything that I do,ā she says, matter of factly. āCome on. We have to normalize loving ourselves and praising ourselves. Iāve never thought of retiring. Iām healthy, Iām rolling.ā
This story will appear in the Feb. 25, 2023, issue of Billboard.
Doechii recently watched ĀAvatar: The Way of Water, and it got her thinking about a key Naāvi tenet: āAll energy is borrowed, and someday you have to give it back.ā āThatās exactly how I feel,ā she says. āFrom the women before me, Iām borrowing their energy so that one day I can give it back to the girl after me. Thatās what Iām here to do.ā
In just the past year, the 24-year-old rapper from Tampa, Fla. ā who started releasing music in the 2010s before self-funding her debut EP in 2020 ā has used that energy to impressive ends. In March, she became the first female rapper to sign with Top Dawg Entertainment, subsequently scoring a record deal with Capitol as well. Late-night TV and awards show performances followed, as did a string of standout singles, most notably āPersuasive,ā which has 30Ā million official U.S. on-demand streams, according to Luminate. She also released her major-label debut EP, the five-track sheĀ / herĀ / black bāch, which peaked at No.Ā 23 on the Heatseekers Albums chart and featured Rico Nasty and labelmate slash ābig sisterā SZA.
āEverything aligned,ā says Doechii. And yet, despite her stellar 2022, this yearās Rising Star is planning an even bigger 2023 ā which will include the first male feature on one of her songs, a Coachella performance and the release of her first full-length. āIām in year three of my five-year plan,ā she continues. āIām constantly rising and I definitely havenāt arrived yet ā at all. But Iām coming.ā
What kind of pressure have you felt as the first female rapper signed to Top Dawg Entertainment?
A good pressure, because I know with me being the first, the next female rapper on TDE is going to look to me, look at the things I did and didnāt accomplish, and hopefully be better than me. Thatās the point. Iām a leader of a new era of TDE, which feels really good. A lot of my fans reach out all the time about the impact that Iām making for them just being an alternative Black girl. Doing it on TDE like this is cool.
You mentioned borrowing energy and passing it on. Who did that for you?
They donāt even know they did it for me. It was artists like Trina, Nicki Minaj, Lauryn Hill, SZA ā just powerful women being powerful women. Even watching BeyoncĆ© be BeyoncĆ©, she shows me that I have permission to be a boss. I can be a woman, and I can be a boss. Then Rihanna, sheāll be like, āI can be a savage.ā Sometimes Iām sassy, sometimes Iām not. Watching all of them gives me permission to be more of myself.
Doechii photographed on May 17, 2022 at Seret Studios in Brooklyn.
Hao Zeng
Is there a favorite recent memory you shared with your labelmate SZA?
Sheās like a big sister to me. When we were on tour [in 2021] she gave me a lot of advice on what to expect from the industry and how to carry myself. She has just always been supportive of who I am.
You mentioned your five-year plan ā what will year five look like?
By year five I want to be at my peak. I want to be in my Sasha Fierce era, the top of my game with still a long way to go ā but I want to reach my prime and never leave it.
You show so many sides of yourself in your music. What havenāt we seen yet?
Yāall are going to get it this year. Itās my pop era. Usually Iām alone [in the studio], but these days Iāve been inviting people in. Usually I like people to send me beats and Iāll just listen through, but recently Iāve been working with producers like JĀ White in person, which is cool. So my vibe is kind of changing; itās a lot of energy. It feels like a party.
Doechii photographed on May 17, 2022 at Seret Studios in Brooklyn.
Hao Zeng
Is this the year youāll release a full project?
I will. I said that last year, though, and I didnāt. Like, for real for real, I have to this year. Itās not even funny, I have to. Itās time for me to debut this year. My fans will kill me if I donāt.
This story will appear in the Feb. 25, 2023, issue of Billboard.
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