Music News
Page: 530
It’s common practice for artists to thank their families when winning major awards. But, as rock star St. Vincent proved at the 2025 Grammys on Sunday (Feb. 2), it’s rare to see artists reveal that they’re married with kids during a massive event.
During the evening’s pre-telecast awards, Annie Clark (St. Vincent’s offstage name) took home the best rock song trophy for her 2024 single “Broken Man.” During her acceptance speech, the singer surprised fans and audience members by offering a special shout-out to “my beautiful wife Leah [and] our beautiful daughter.” In a later acceptance speech for best alternative music album for her 2024 LP All Born Screaming, Clark thanked her family for a second time.
Clark is known for remaining tight-lipped about her personal life, a fact that she acknowledged in a backstage interview after winning her award. When a reporter from the Associated Press said that they were “totally unaware” of Clark’s marital status, the singer jumped in to add that “most people were,” revealing that she and her spouse have made a concerted effort to keep their relationship out of the public eye.
Trending on Billboard
“She’s young, we’ve kept it under wraps,” she said, before quickly clarifying her point with a laugh. “The child is young, just to be clear, the child is young, not the wife!” The singer added that she and her family had plans to celebrate her victory with her sisters, but that Clark intended “to be in bed by 10” that night.
Elsewhere in her backstage interviews, Clark reflected on the LGBTQ+ representation at the annual show and across the industry, remarking that queer people existing in the industry and the world at large is not news. “There have always been queer people in the history of the world, and especially in music,” she said. “There’s a bunch of queer people being celebrated this year. And that’s great, of course it’s great — empathy and humanity, let’s go.”
For Billboard‘s 2024 Pride cover story, the singer opened up about the history of queer people in the music business, while pointing out the importance of LGBTQ+ artists remaining on the cutting edge of culture. “There have been plenty of queer people in music. Even if the culture was saying no, there were always queer people in the arts. Please. We have built this,” she said at the time. “If you’re safe for the TV screen, you also invite an aspect of grift [from the outside world]. Which … I raise an eyebrow at.”
The All Born Screaming singer took home three trophies at Sunday night’s ceremony — best rock song, best alternative music album and best alternative music performance for “Flea.” Clark was nominated in the best rock performance category, but ultimately lost out to the Beatles’ AI-assisted track “Now and Then.”
Taylor Swift may not have won any new awards at the 2025 Grammys Sunday night (Feb. 2), but she still got to show off something sparkly — thanks to Janelle Monáe. During the show’s sprawling Quincy Jones tribute, which the “We Are Young” singer closed with a phenomenal performance of Michael Jackson’s “Don’t Stop Till […]
Beyoncé notched a number of firsts on Sunday night (Feb. 2) at the 2025 Grammy Awards. Not only did she become the first Black woman to take home the album of the year award as the lead artist this century when Cowboy Carter took the top prize, but she also finally scored her long-sought first win in the AOTY category after four previous nominations and losses.
Asked what the award means to her by ET after the show, Beyoncé said, “It’s very surreal and it’s been 25 years of working really had and trying me best to keep growing and keep opening up doors… so I’m just very honored.” In accepting the award, Bey shouted out the members of the Los Angeles Fire Department who presented it to her, thanking them for keeping Angelenos safe during the recent deadly wildfires that were acknowledged frequently during Sunday’s fundraising broadcast.
Trending on Billboard
“I’d like to thank and acknowledge and praise all of the firefighters for keeping us safe,” she said during the show. “I just feel very full and very honored. It’s been many, many years.”
A reporter for the Recording Academy also caught up with the singer backstage and got a similarly jubilant answer. “I feel overwhelmed, so full, thank you so much. This is a beautiful night,” she said, adding with some sass and a wrist roll, “the Beyhive is buzzin‘!”
In her chat with ET, Bey also said she was glad that her and Jay-Z’s eldest daughter, Blue Ivy, was on hand to see her mom triumph and join her on stage for the big moment. “Taller than me, and I don’t like it at all,” the singer joked about the 13-year-old, noting that their youngest daughter, four-year-old Rumi — who is also on Cowboy Carter — was “at home watching and I forgot to thank her so I get to thank her now: Thank you, Rumi.”
Beyoncé also took time to acknowledge that the Carter album was a means to introduce many more people to the deep history of Black country artists while showcasing such contemporary players as Rhiannon Giddens, whose hot banjo licks on the “Texas Hold ‘Em” single likely put a lot more eyes on her long career in country/bluegrass music.
“The banjo has a deep history and I just feel honored to reintroduce some of that history that I think has been lost and very, very honored that I got the response and the open heart and that people welcomed the album,” Beyoncé said, appearing to get a little teary-eyed when the interviewer mentioned how touched Giddens said she was in an chat last year about her prominent spot on the album.
“The love I got from the country community tonight really made me feel so seen and I’m very grateful,” Beyoncé said. “Hopefully they continue to open up the world for people that just love and respect the genre, no matter where they come from, everybody should be invited.”
In addition to AOTY, the 11-times nominated Cowboy Carter also won best country album, making Bey the first Black woman to ever take home the prize; she also won best country duo/group performance thanks to her Miley Cyrus team-up on “II Most Wanted.”
Watch Beyoncé talk AOTY Grammy win below.
AC/DC are bringing their Power Up tour back to Europe this summer. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame legends announced on Monday morning (Feb. 3) that they’ve booked a 12-date run of shows as part of their ongoing global tour.
Explore
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
The new shows will kick off on June 26 at Letňany Airport in Prague, Czech Republic, and touch down in stadiums in Germany, Poland, Spain, Italy, Estonia, Sweden, Norway and France before winding down at Edinburgh’s Murrayfield Stadium on August 21.
The new European dates join the band’s first planned U.S. tour in nine years. That run is slated to hit 13 stadiums across the nation from April 10 through May 28. The shows will kick off on April 10 at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, MN, before moving on to Arlington, TX, Pasadena (CA), Vancouver, Las Vegas, Detroit, Foxborough (MA), Pittsburgh, Landover (MD), Tampa, Nashville and Chicago before winding down on May 28 at Huntington Bank Field in Cleveland.
Trending on Billboard
The new shows are all in support of AC/DC’s 2020 Power Up album and they follow on the heels of a 2024 European leg, which also filled stadiums. Tickets for (most) of the new European shows will be available on Friday (Feb. 7) at 10 a.m. local time; the Imola, Italy show on sale will be on Friday at 11 a.m. CET and ticketing for the Paris show will open on Feb. 10 at 10 a.m. CET. For more details on ticketing click here.
Check out the announcement and the dates for AC/DC’s summer 2025 European tour below.
June 26 — Letňany, Czech Republic @ Prague Airport June 30 — Berlin, Germany @ Berlin OlympiastadionJuly 4 — Narodowy, Poland @ Warsaw PGE July 8 — Düsseldorf, Germany @ Düsseldorf Open Air Park July 12 — Madrid, Spain @ Madrid Metropolitano StadiumJuly 20 — Ferrari, Italy @ Imola Autodromo Internazionale Enzo e DinoJuly 24 — Tallinn, Estonia @ Tallinn Song Festival GroundsJuly 28 — Gothenburg, Sweden @ Ullevi Aug. 5 — Oslo, Norway @ Oslo Bjerke RacecourseAug. 9 — Paris, France @ Paris Stade De FranceAug. 17 — Karlsruhe, Germany @ Messe KarlsruheAug. 21 — Edinburgh, Scotland @ Murrayfield Stadium
Beyoncé continues her reign as the undisputed queen of the music world, announcing her highly anticipated Cowboy Carter Tour just hours after making history at the 67th Annual Grammy Awards.
Explore
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
Beyoncé revealed the first nine locations for her much-anticipated Cowboy Carter & The Rodeo Chitlin’ Circuit Tour via a post on Instagram, with the cities announced including Los Angeles, Chicago, New York, London, Paris, Houston, Atlanta, Washington, D.C., and Las Vegas. Dates for the listed cities have not yet been announced.
The superstar shared the news on Instagram, captioning a tour poster with the words: “SHE COMING.”
Trending on Billboard
The announcement comes hot on the heels of a monumental moment in Beyoncé’s career—her first-ever win for Album of the Year at the 2025 Grammys for Cowboy Carter.
The accolade marks a long-overdue recognition for the superstar and makes her the first Black woman in over two decades to take home this prestigious award, and the fourth Black woman to ever win the accolade following Lauryn Hill in 1999, Whitney Houston (1994) and Natalie Cole (1992). The achievement also cements Beyoncé’s status as the most-awarded artist in Grammy history, with an astonishing 32 wins.
“I’d like to thank and acknowledge and praise all of the firefighters for keeping us safe,” she began her heartfelt speech at Los Angeles’ Crypto.com Arena. “I just feel very full and very honored. It’s been many, many years.”
Bey continued: “I just want to thank the Grammys, every songwriter, every collaborator, every producer for all of the hard work. I want to dedicate this to Ms. [Linda] Martell. I hope we keep pushing forward opening doors.”
It was already a decorated night for Bey as Cowboy Carter won best country album earlier in Sunday’s (Feb. 2) ceremony. She’s the first Black woman to win that award. Additionally, she was victorious in the best country duo/group performance for “II Most Wanted,” which featured Miley Cyrus.
Following its arrival in April, Cowboy Carter spent two weeks atop the Billboard 200. It’s her eighth album to reach the chart’s summit. Just prior to the Grammys ceremony, Bey teased the Cowboy Carter Tour, posting a short video on Instagram showcasing a large hanging neon sign that read “Cowboy Carter Tour,” accompanied by the sound of wind in the background.
In a follow-up post, she shared a promotional image of herself sporting blonde braids with the caption “Cowboy Carter Tour 2025.”
Doechii isn’t wasting any time celebrating her big night at the 67th Annual Grammy Awards.
Fresh off winning Best Rap Album for Alligator Bites Never Heal, the Tampa rapper surprised fans with a brand-new single, “Nosebleeds,” just hours after her emotional victory.
The track, released via Top Dawg Entertainment and Capitol Records, was written and recorded specifically for the occasion with producer Jonas Jeberg. Executive produced by Anthony “Top Dawg” Tiffith and Anthony “Moosa” Tiffith, “Nosebleeds” finds Doechii at her sharpest—balancing confidence, humor, and raw storytelling as she addresses her rise, her doubters, and the whirlwind of speculation surrounding her Grammy nominations.
Explore
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
Her Best Rap Album win made history, as Doechii became only the third female artist to take home the award since its introduction in 1989.
In her acceptance speech, she reflected on the significance of the moment. “This category was introduced in 1989, and two women have won,” she started, before correcting herself: “three women have won — Lauryn Hill, Cardi B and Doechii.”
Trending on Billboard
She then took the opportunity to introduce herself to a wider audience and shine a light on her city’s talent. “There’s so many people out there who probably don’t know who I am. I call myself the Swamp Princess because I’m from Tampa, Florida. Tampa has so much talent… labels, go to Tampa.”
She ended her speech by shouting out the kids watching who might see themselves in her: “I know there is some Black girl out there [watching] and I want to tell you that you can do it. Anything is possible. Don’t allow anybody to project any stereotypes onto you… you are exactly who you need to be to where you are, and I am a testimony [to that].”
In addition to her Best Rap Album win, Doechii was nominated for Best New Artist and Best Rap Performance for “Nissan Altima.”
Her 2024 mixtape, Alligator Bites Never Heal, earned critical acclaim, and the project was supported by a sold-out tour across the U.S., Europe, and the U.K., along with high-profile performances on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and NPR’s Tiny Desk Concert series.
Stream “Nosebleeds” below.
“Can we take a minute and make some noise for the city of f–king angels,” the Grammys‘ Premiere Ceremony host Justin Tranter demanded while opening up the show on Sunday (Feb. 2) in Los Angeles.
As commanded, the crowd cheered for the Grammys’ longstanding city of residence, and the duration of the show — which eventually moved from the Peacock Theater to Crypto.com Arena next door for the main telecast — gave significant love and airtime to L.A., where wildfires decimated entire neighborhoods in early January. The disaster prompted the cancellation of many Grammy parties and related events, but the awards show itself persevered, nodding to the disaster and corresponding relief efforts many times during the telecast while also functioning as a fundraiser and, of course, providing many non-fire related moments that emphasized music’s power to thrill and uplift.
The atmosphere backstage was essentially a facsimile, with artists finding a deft balance between celebrating their wins while acknowledging the awards happening in the wake of a major natural disaster. Even the commercial breaks included stars such as Doja Cat, Anderson .Paak and Avril Lavigne appearing in ads with local L.A. business owners.
Trending on Billboard
But of course, the Grammys also went big on what it always aims too accomplish — celebrating the year’s biggest songs and artists with the awards and showcasing huge, glitzy performances from some of the world’s biggest stars. Even back in the press room, journalists were cheering as artists such as Doechii and Benson Boone electrified the stage.
Throughout the busy, jubilant and occasionally tear-jerking night, Billboard was positioned on the red carpet, backstage and in the audience to report on all things behind the scenes. Read on for everything you didn’t see on TV.
2:32 p.m. PT: “Never get into a rap battle with Kendrick Lamar,” says Sean Lennon, offering a word of advice to the Premiere Ceremony audience and livestream viewers while accepting the award for best boxed or special limited edition package for his work art directing Mind Games (The Ultimate Collection), the 1973 album by his late father, John Lennon. (Even at this early hour Lamar’s “Not Like Us” has already won Grammys for best rap performance, best rap song and best music video.)
2:50 p.m. PT: Lennon then accepts the best rock performance award on behalf of The Beatles, who won the award for “Now and Then,” with Lennon acknowledging the band and making a request. “It’s really incredible if you think about it, man,” he told the Premiere Ceremony crowd. “The Beatles have done so much incredible work and they’re still in the culture … and as far as I’m concerned, its the greatest band of all time. … Play The Beatles to your kids. The world can’t afford to forget about people like The Beatles. We need the peace and love of the ’60s and we need the magic to stay alive.”
3:00 p.m. PT: Backstage in the press room, Norah Jones reflects on her best traditional pop vocal album win for Visions, which comes 22 years after her album Come Away With Me swept the 2003 Grammys, winning for album of the year, record of the year, best female pop vocal performance, best pop vocal album and Jones winning best new artist. “I’m really grateful that I still have a job,” Jones says while reflecting on this accomplishment backstage. “This business is crazy, so I’m just really happy to make music that I love and that people listen to still. It’s special. [Winning those early awards] was exciting, it was crazy though, and I was so young. I really, definitely, probably appreciate this even more.”
3:12 p.m. PT: Backstage, Anderson .Paak reflects on playing the massive FireAid benefit concert that took place two nights ago to raise money victims of the Los Angeles wildfires. “It was awesome to be a part of an epic lineup and to unite the city and provide some much needed aid for the people who need it,” the son of SoCal says. “I loved playing in the Forum. I was able to bring out the big homie Dr. Dre, the big homie Sheila E. and with my band The Free Nationals — it was one of the greatest nights for sure in L.A.”
3:17 p.m. PT: Jason Carter, the grandson of late President Jimmy Carter, reflects on his grandfather’s posthumous win for best audio book, narration and storytelling recording for his Last Sundays in Plains: A Centennial Celebration. The project features recordings from President Carter’s final Sunday School lessons delivered at Maranatha Baptist Church, in his hometown of Plains, Ga.
“He was such an enormous music fan,” Jason Carter said backstage in the Grammys press room after accepting the award on behalf of his grandfather, who died in December at age 100. “He loves the creative aspect of music, it’s an important part of his political life and an important part of his personal life. He was an artist in many ways himself. He was an author, he was a painter … so he really appreciates the aspect of the Grammys that recognizes creativity.”
3:35 p.m. PT: St. Vincent cradles the three Grammy awards she’s won during the Premiere Ceremony. When asked how she plans to celebrate, she says, “My sister is in town and we’re going to make the night ours, and probably be in bed by 10, if all goes well.”
She’s then asked about the representation of LGBTQ+ people at the Grammys, to which she responds: “There have always been queer people in the history of the world and especially in music, so I think there’s a bunch of queer people being celebrated this year especially. Of course it’s great. Empathy and humanity, let’s go.”
She also discloses that holding the three awards at once is making her biceps burn.
4:01 p.m. PT: In the press area, Sean Lennon is asked about “the burden” of carrying on the legacy of his father, John Lennon. “It’s not a burden,” the younger Lennon responds. “It’s honestly a great privilege for me. I just feel so lucky that I get to do good by my dad. It feels like a privilege as his son to be able give back. He gave the world so much, and he gave me so much and I just feel really honored to be able to do justice by him.”
4:57 p.m. PT: Celebrating her best R&B performance win for “Made for Me (Live on BET),” Muni Long reflects, “For me, moments like this are just a reminder that when you do what’s in your heart, you win no matter how much resistance you encounter, no matter how many opinions people might have, you have to be authentic, because that resonates with people.”
5:19 p.m. PT: Percussion legend Sheila E., who won an award for best global music performance for “Bemba Colorá” featuring Gloria Estefan and Mimy Succar, shares about temporarily evacuating her home during the L.A. wildfires. “I was one of the fortunate ones,” she says. “It was very, very close to my house. I had to evacuate the night of the fires … and the first thing that I took — because I had evacuated that area before — and this time I put all my music, all my hard drives in bins so I could carry them down the stairs by myself if I had to, and I just took my music, a pair of pajamas, a pair of sweats, and I left.”
5:25 p.m. PT: While speaking to the press after winning for best arrangement, instrumental or a cappella, John Legend discussed the recent wildfires in Los Angeles and the broader occurrence of climate change-related disasters. “We’ve had floods in this country, we’ve had hurricanes in this country, and what I love to see is when all of us realize that our neighbors, our fellow countrymen and women are struggling and suffering, and we all come together and help each other out,” Legend says.
“L.A.’s going through it now, and folks around the country and around the world are going through it in other ways,” he continues. “A lot of it is due to climate and heightened disasters and the strength of these storms and winds … I think more than ever, we’re going to have to come together and support each other in these times. It’s L.A.’s turn right now, but we’re going to have to return the favor for other communities and other cities and states as they go through the same things. Hopefully, we’ll be there for each other, and we’ll all do the best we can to think long term about climate change and how it’s affecting all of us, and we’ll do the things we need to do as a society to help mitigate the damage.”
6:10 p.m. PT: Brothers Taylor and Griffin Goldsmith of the band Dawes step backstage to discuss their show-opening performance of Randy Newman’s 1983 anthem “I Love L.A.” “We’ve never been nominated; we’ve never even been here,” says Taylor, “so for us this is just such a whirlwind of thinking [the Grammys] have never been a part of our journey, to going to the show and playing onstage. It’s a wild thing about how our childhood dreams could meet up with an opportunity to help our communities at such a tragic moment.”
7:22 p.m. PT: Inside the venue, Beyoncé — who has just won for best country album and attended the show with husband Jay-Z and daughter Blue Ivy — is escorted back to her seat just before a tribute to late genius Quincy Jones. The medley features Cynthia Ervio and Herbie Hancock performing “Fly Me to the Moon,” Lainey Wilson and Jacob Collier doing “Let The Good Times Roll,” Stevie Wonder and Hancock performing “Blusette” and “We Are the World” and Janelle Monáe singing “Don’t Stop Till You Get Enough.”
7:38 p.m. PT: After winning for best rap album and putting on a jaw-dropping performances of “Catfish” and “Denial Is a River,” Doechii arrived backstage and said the performance was one of the most difficult she’s ever done. “I really felt I needed to push myself harder than I ever have before,” she told the journalists assembled, who’d cheered when she entered the room. “It meant everything to me to prove myself tonight, to me, and so it was about Broadway and theater and art, and I think I brought that to the stage.”
8:35 p.m. PT: Backstage, SZA, whose “Saturn” has won for best R&B recording, is asked if she can reveal any secrets about her upcoming Super Bowl Halftime Show special guest appearance with Kendrick Lamar. “Mm-mm,” she says, politely declining. “That’s King Kendrick’s performance, and all I can say is that he’s working really hard on it.”
She’s then asked what her future plans are in terms of not being “placed in a box” of R&B. “I don’t really think I’m actually really placed in a box,” she says. “I think these are the parameters in which I’ve been honored this evening, and I’m grateful for that, and I think within all the parameters I’ve been honored, regardless of the label, I’m grateful to have gotten the award, the but that’s not the point. The point is the reach, and the impact, and the experience I’ve had creating music.”
Alicia Keys accepted the Dr. Dre Global Impact Award at the 2025 Grammys Sunday night (Feb. 2). It was the second award she took home that evening, as her Broadway musical Hell’s Kitchen won the Grammy for best musical theater album, bringing Keys’ overall total to 17.
Queen Latifah presented the award and hailed the musician as a “constant inspiration through her voice, her talent, but most importantly, through her heart.” As she commanded the audience to properly congratulate the “Girl on Fire” hitmaker, the iconic rapper and actress yelled, “Make some noise, this girl is on fire!”
“I just want to give big love to my brother Dr. Dre who created a sound that began a movement, and your sound told me that if you’re a creative growing up in Compton or Hell’s Kitchen, you can touch the world,” Keys said. “I always had to fight for a certain level of respect as a songwriter, a composer and especially a producer. It’s strange that we don’t think of women as producers like Quincy or Dre or Swizzy, but female producers have always powered the industry.” Keys shouted out Patrice Rushen, Missy Elliott, Linda Perry, Grimes and Solange, to which the latter’s sister Beyoncé clapped.
The “Fallin’” artist continued to celebrate the other “superpower, groundbreaking, risk-takers” she’s worked with over the years, such as Roc Nation CEO Desiree Perez and Universal Music Publishing Group CEO Jody Gerson, the latter of whom won the 2025 Industry Icon Award at Clive Davis’ Pre-Grammy Event Saturday night. “They saw in me what I didn’t see in myself, and we started She Is the Music to open the doors for other women who didn’t get the opportunities or credit they deserve. So this is for all the ladies that know the magic that they bring to the room,” she added.
She also criticized President Donald Trump’s executive orders rolling back diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives. “This is not the time to shut down a diversity of voices. We’ve seen on this stage talented, hard-working people from different backgrounds with different points of view, and it changes the game. DEI is not a threat — it’s a gift,” Keys said while the audience roared with applause. “The more voices, the more powerful the sound. When destructive forces try to burn us down, we rise from the ashes like a phoenix. And as you see tonight, music is the unstoppable language that connects us all.”
It’s OK to just admit that you’re jealous of Charli XCX — she did just close out the 2025 Grammys with the final performance of the night, after all. Performing a medley of two of the most beloved tracks on her album Brat, the star kicked things off outdoors in the Crypto.com Arena driveway, popping […]
Shortly after taking home the Grammy for record of the year, Kendrick Lamar returned to the stage at Crypto.com Arena to accept his second Big Four Grammy for song of the year on Sunday night (Feb. 2) for hit breakout hit “Not Like Us.”
The award was presented by the legend Diana Ross, who offered a somber reflection on the goings on of the world. “How can we have the balance between celebrating and being filled with sorrow? Even as we face trials and tributes with our soul, music brings us home,” she told the audience. “You are not alone, we stand with you, my heart reaches out to you.”
Appearing from backstage after taking home the prize for record of the year, Lamar immediately started beaming about being handed his second trophy of the evening by The Boss herself. “Damn, that’s Diana Ross,” he said with a laugh. “I’m starstruck.”
Trending on Billboard
After letting his crew get a few words in (including Mustard declaring “somebody get the broom out” for his partner’s apparent sweep), Lamar took a moment to pay tribute to the West Coast rap stars who helped build the lane he occupies today. “All the West Coast artists, from early on — G Malone, Problem, Bad Lucc, K-Bo, Daylyt … these are the cats that inspired me to be the MC I am today,” he said. “Schoolboy, J-Roc, Ab-Soul, this is what it’s about, man. Because at the end of the day, nothing more powerful than rap music — I don’t care what it is. We are the culture.”
With his final words, Lamar offered one final message to any up-and-coming rap artists watching. “To all the young artists, like my man Punch say, I just hope you respect the art form,” he said. “It’ll get you where you need to go.”
At Sunday night’s ceremony, Beyoncé led the pack of nominees with a whopping 11 nods, with Charli XCX, Billie Eilish, Lamar himself and Post Malone tied for the second most nominations with seven each. Meanwhile, the jam-packed show included performances from stars such as Chappell Roan, Sabrina Carpenter, Doechii, Lady Gaga, Bruno Mars, Benson Boone and plenty of others.
State Champ Radio
