Music News
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01/31/2025
Abel’s final album as The Weeknd is here.
01/31/2025
The music world is mourning Marianne Faithfull, who died this week at 78 years old.
Tributes to the iconic singer-songwriter have been pouring in ever since her spokesperson revealed in a statement Thursday (Jan. 30) that she had “passed away peacefully” earlier that day while surrounded by family in London, with Mick Jagger, Metallica and more stars all penning messages remembering her life and legacy.
The Rolling Stones frontman — who famously dated Faithfull in the ’60s — shared a couple throwback photos of himself with the “As Tears Go By” singer and wrote that he was “saddened to hear” of her death, adding, “She was so much part of my life for so long … She was a wonderful friend, a beautiful singer and a great actress.”
The Stones’ Keith Richards also shared a more recent photo of himself with Faithfull and offered his “heartfelt condolences” to her family, writing, “I’m so sad and will miss her!!” Bandmate Ronnie Wood also shared photos with the singer-actress on Instagram and added, “Marianne will be dearly missed.”
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The group further paid tribute to Faithfull by sharing a video of an old performance of “As Tears Go By” on the Stones’ official X account, while Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich wrote, “Thank you, Marianne… For the good times, for your kindness, for the great stories, for your fearlessness.” The metal giants teamed with Faithfull for “The Memory Remains” from their 1997 ReLoad album.
In addition to the rock bands, both of John Lennon’s sons spoke out about Faithfull’s death. “A uniquely special soul, she was one of a kind — someone who truly did stand out among her contemporaries,” wrote Julian on X, while Sean Ono Lennon shared a photo of Faithfull with the caption, “Marianne Faithfull R.I.P. ❤️ Miss you.”
The Kinks’ Dave Davies shared a link to “As Tears Go By” on X and wrote, “A bit sad all my friends are going … Bless her,” while The Charlatans’ singer Tim Burgess posted, “Farewell Marianne Faithfull … She was such a free spirit and true talent.”
David Bowie’s official account acknowledged Faithfull’s death by sharing photos of the two late legends together, writing, “GO WELL MARIANNE.” Slash simply shared a photo of the Girl on a Motorcycle star on Instagram and wrote, “RIP.”
As evidenced by the amount of legends who have spoken out about her passing, Faithfull was an essential, beloved figure of the ’60s and beyond. She notched five songs on the Billboard Hot 100 — including top 40 hits “Summer Nights” and “Come and Stay With Me” — and released two dozen albums, several of which charted on the Billboard 200. Outside of music, the British performer acted in a number of iconic films, perhaps most notably starring in Michael Winner’s 1967 dramedy I’ll Never Forget What’s’isname.
Faithfull also had a son — Nicholas Dunbar, whom she shared with ex-husband John Dunbar.
The 67th annual Grammy Awards are here at last. A few weeks ago, the thought of an awards show in Los Angeles, where entire neighborhoods went up in flames, seemed unthinkable. But the Recording Academy withstood considerable pressure to postpone or even cancel the show in light of this month’s devastating wildfires, so here we are.
Live from Crypto.com Arena in L.A. and hosted by Trevor Noah, Music’s Biggest Night will be broadcast live on Sunday (Feb. 2) at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT on CBS. The show will also be available to stream live and on demand on Paramount+.
This year’s show will put a spotlight on new artists. Six of this year’s best new artist nominees – Benson Boone, Chappell Roan, Doechii, Raye, Sabrina Carpenter and Teddy Swims – are set to perform. (The other two best new artist nominees, Shaboozey and Khruangbin, have not been announced as performers.)
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Other performers on the telecast include Billie Eilish (who won best new artist five years ago), Charli XCX and Shakira.
The Recording Academy usually reserves one or two really big names to announce closer to the show. Among the top nominees not yet announced as performers are: Beyoncé, Kendrick Lamar, Taylor Swift (with or without Post Malone) and Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars.
Beyoncé, who led this year’s nominations with 11 nods, last performed on the Grammys in 2017. Swift, who received six nods, last performed on the show in 2021. A promo for the show which aired on CBS confirmed that they will be in attendance at the show, but not that they will perform. Gaga and Mars, whose twice-nominated “Die With a Smile” is in its fourth week atop the Billboard Hot 100, have performed on the telecast separately many times.
Lamar, who has seven nods, last performed on the Grammy telecast in 2018, when he opened the show in tandem with U2 and comedian Dave Chappelle. A Grammy performance this year is unlikely: Lamar is set to headline the Super Bowl halftime show on Feb. 9.
This year’s telecast will carry an added sense of purpose: raising funds to support L.A. wildfire relief efforts and honoring the bravery and dedication of first responders. A series of special performances will highlight the show, including a salute to the life and legacy of Grammy legend Quincy Jones, tributes to the spirit of Los Angeles, and the annual In Memoriam segment.
Swift, who won album of the year at the 2024 Grammy Awards, and Victoria Monét, who won best new artist on that show, are set to present on this year’s show. Other presenters, announced Friday, are Anthony Kiedis & Chad Smith of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Cardi B, Gloria Estefan, Olivia Rodrigo, Queen Latifah, SZA and Will Smith.
Smith will introduce the salute to Jones. Jones was executive producer of the hit sitcom The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air which ran from 1990-96 on NBC and propelled Smith to stardom.
Jones, who died in November at age 91, won 28 Grammys across six different decades, from the 1960s to the 2010s. He was a friend and mentor to generations of talented artists, including Herbie Hancock, Stevie Wonder, John Legend and Jacob Collier, all of whom are set to appear on the show.
This is the fifth consecutive year that Noah has hosted the show. He will become the first comedian to host the Grammys five times. He’s also a Grammy nominee for best comedy album for Where Was I. If he wins, he’ll become just the second Grammy host to win on a night that he or she hosted. Kenny Rogers was the first, in 1980.
The 67th Annual Grammy Awards will be produced by Fulwell 73 Productions for the Recording Academy for the fourth consecutive year. Ben Winston, Raj Kapoor and Jesse Collins are executive producers.
This year’s premiere ceremony, where the vast majority of Grammys are presented, will stream live at 3:30 p.m. ET/12:30 p.m. PT on the Recording Academy’s YouTube channel and on the Grammy website. The show will be held at Peacock Theater in the LA Live complex in Los Angeles (which also encompasses Crypto.com Arena). Justin Tranter, a Grammy nominee for song of the year for co-writing Chappell Roan’s “Good Luck, Babe,” is set to host the premiere ceremony for the second year in a row.
Check out the full list of performers and presenters on the main Grammy telecast below. For a summary of performers and presenters on Premiere Ceremony, go here.
Performers
Benson Boone
Billie Eilish
Chappell Roan
Charli XCX
Doechii
RAYE
Sabrina Carpenter
Shakira
Teddy Swims
Performers, Tribute Segments
Brad Paisley
Brittany Howard
Chris Martin
Cynthia Erivo
Herbie Hancock
Jacob Collier
Janelle Monáe
John Legend
Lainey Wilson
Sheryl Crow
St. Vincent
Stevie Wonder
Presenters
Anthony Kiedis & Chad Smith
Cardi B
Gloria Estefan
Olivia Rodrigo
Queen Latifah
SZA
Taylor Swift
Victoria Monét
Will Smith
Joss Stone and Eurythmics co-founder Dave Stewart have partnered with SongBits to allow fans the chance to own part of Stone’s 2021 single “Never Forget My Love”.
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Stewart – who produced and co-wrote the song – is also a co-founder of SongBits, which aims to empower independent artists by providing fans the chance to own a share in their favorite songs.
Utilizing blockchain technology, fans are able to own a ‘bit’ of these songs and share in their success. The purchase includes lifetime ownership of the ‘bit’, along with the appropriate revenue that comes along with that respective percentage of the streaming rights.
Now, Stone and Stewart have offered Stone’s 2021 single “Never Forget My Love” to fans, with purchases going live on Friday (Jan. 31). 20% of the profits will be donated to the World Central Kitchen charity, which provides food to communities affected by war or natural disasters. Founder José Andrés is currently on-ground in Los Angeles aiding those impacted by the devastating fires.
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“I’m excited to be working again with my friend Dave on this project,” Stone said in a statement. “‘Never Forget My Love’ is one of my favourite tracks from the last album we did together. He’s such an innovator – always looking at new tech stuff and also finding ways to help fellow musicians. This one also helps the brilliant charity World Central Kitchen.”
Alongside the basic purchase of a ‘bit’ of “Never Forget My Love”, additional benefits are also available depending on the cost of purchase, including signed items from Stone, vinyl variants, exclusive concert tickets, and guitar and songwriting lessons from Stewart.
“Basically, we did lots of tests with more sort of indie, semi-unknown artists, to make sure SongBits was working fully, and it is, and it worked for every artist thus far,” Stewart added. “And then I talked to Joss, and we decided this would be a great song, because we’re giving a percentage to World Central Kitchen and, appropriately, it’s called, ‘Never Forget My Love’.
“It’s one of our songs we did together that we both really love. It was a single, and we always thought it was a song that potentially worked kind of as a radio single, but never really got the chance so much to fully promote it, but it’s one that, after Joss has played it live many times, fans love, and it’s one that grows and, could grow exponentially, depending on which way DSPs move, in different directions, for example, with Web3.”
Stewart co-founded SongBits with Russell Sheffield in 2021, and has been passionate about the impact that a platform such as this can potentially have on the wider music world, including offering younger artists the opportunity to earn greater income in an industry dominated by streaming.
“One of the reasons I’m interested in developing SongBits is the alternative route for younger artists to actually have some income to even get going,” Stewart added. “You know, at the moment, lots of artists can’t afford to even start going on any tours because the income from DSPs is so minimal, and you need to get started and be able to go and play shows.
“And I just noticed recently, that 80% of artists in the U.K. say they can’t tour. There’s no way to finance their tours, whether they’re small, medium or even larger ones, and this is one of the actual ways of ensuring that there is some money coming in, immediately, and it connects with their real fans and involves them and gives them equity in the journey.”
Stone’s “Never Forget My Love” was originally released in 2021 as the lead single from her 2022 album of the same name. Though the record was her first not to chart in the U.S., it did top the U.K. R&B Albums chart.
Fans can purchase a ‘bit’ of Joss Stone’s “Never Forget My Love” via its page on SongBits.
Billboard’s Friday Music Guide serves as a handy guide to this Friday’s most essential releases — the key music that everyone will be talking about today, and that will be dominating playlists this weekend and beyond.
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This week, The Weeknd closes out a trilogy, JENNIE continues shining solo and Morgan Wallen declares that it’s him, hi, “I’m the Problem.” Check out all of this week’s picks below:
The Weeknd, Hurry Up Tomorrow
Concluding the trilogy that began with the 2020 blockbuster After Hours and continued with the daring 2022 follow-up Dawn FM, The Weeknd splits the difference between commercial potency and devil-may-care pop experimentation on Hurry Up Tomorrow: an 84-minute opus that includes guests ranging from Lana Del Rey to Giorgio Moroder to Anitta to Travis Scott, the new album brushes off modern conventions, mixes soul-baring introspection with immaculate dance grooves, and goes for the gusto.
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JENNIE feat. Dominic Fike, “Love Hangover”
Ahead of new album Ruby, which arrives on March 7, JENNIE showcases a fresh side of herself on “Love Hangover,” which nudges her pop aesthetic towards the breezy rhythms and blurted-out realizations of her collaborator on the track, Dominic Fike; the final product is fun, funky and the perfect excuse to drop the sure-to-go-viral line “I swear, I’ll never do it again! / Ah, s–t, I did it again.”
Morgan Wallen, “I’m the Problem”
As the title track of his upcoming fourth studio album, “I’m the Problem” functions as a platform for Morgan Wallen to examine his own flaws while accusing his partner of not being perfect, either: “You hate that when you look at me, you halfway see yourself,” the country superstar sings, the hurt in his voice betraying the song’s more confrontational lyrics.
Latto feat. Playboi Carti, “Blick Sum (Remix)”
Months after first surfacing online, the version of Latto’s “Blick Sum” featuring Playboi Carti has finally arrived on streaming services, with the Atlanta rappers now trading verses that mix firearms metaphors — “That .22′ ain’t gon’ do, that 90 get me out my thong,” Latto declares — while keeping up with the bleary beat.
Zach Bryan, “Blue Jean Baby”
So many Zach Bryan songs have lore attached to their creation and release, factoids that make every hit and deep cut all the more compelling — and with “Blue Jean Baby,” a rollicking demo that fans have been hoping would some day be finished, Bryan stays prolific as a storyteller while providing listeners with another page in the history books.
EST Gee, I Ain’t Feeling You
“I really got it all right now, one of the very few,” EST Gee drawls at the top of “Houstonatlantaville,” a team-up with Lil Baby and Travis Scott; indeed, the Louisville native sounds reinvigorated on I Ain’t Feeling You, honing his bruising delivery and understanding how to operate over booming percussion more effectively than ever.
L.S. Dunes, Violet
Rock supergroups typically harken back to their members’ primary collectives, but L.S. Dunes — which features members of My Chemical Romance, Thursday, Coheed and Cambria and Circa Survive — is creating something new on sophomore album Violet: helmed by Will Yip, the new full-length takes the coiled energy of 2022’s Past Lives and stretches it out, and the sprawl results in towering anthems like “I Can See It Now…” and “Forgiveness.”
Editor’s Pick: Jamie xx feat. Erykah Badu, “F.U.”
The genesis of Jamie xx’s scorching new house track involves a Primavera festival after-party with faulty equipment that forced Erykah Badu to ad-lib through a set with just a microphone, which Jamie recorded on his phone and later rearranged into a song, with Badu’s help; it’s a fascinating backstory that also isn’t necessary to feel enthralled by the communal excitement of “F.U.,” Badu’s voice beckoning an unseen crowd as the beat slingshots around.
It’s stadium status once again for The Weeknd. The Toronto crooner announced plans for the North American 2025 After Hours Til Dawn Tour on Friday (Jan. 31) and he’s bringing “Timeless” collaborator Playboi Carti with him. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news Along with Carti, Mike Dean is […]
Two musical trios have joined forces for a harmony-drenched new song about heartbreak, with country group Rascal Flatts and sibling pop trio the Jonas Brothers blending their vocal talents on the new track, “I Dare You.” Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news Flatts’ Gary LeVox launches the first […]
Latin Grammy-winning DJ and producer Michaël Brun has been churning out bangers for over a decade — but his latest single shifts him into history-making territory.
Out Friday (Jan. 31), “Touchdown” — the Haitian star’s new anthem – features Billboard Hot 100 chart-topper J Balvin, Jamaican dancehall legends Bounty Killer and Beenie Man, and rising Jamaican singer-songwriter Tasan, the daughter of reggae legend Papa San. Izy Beats, who helmed Koffee’s 2018 crossover hit “Toast,” helped co-produce.
A celebratory anthem, tailor-made for major sports victories, “Touchdown” beautifully marries the already closely intertwined genres of dancehall and reggaetón, using their shared DNA to combine contemporary Latin superstars with dancehall giants of eras past. J Balvin first premiered the track on ESPN as the network’s Monday Night Football ambassador, marking a rare usage of Caribbean music on the iconic sports brand’s broadcast. The cross-genre collaboration served as the official promotional anthem for the 2025 NFL Wild Card Weekend games.
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“Touchdown” previews a busy year for Brün that includes his first-ever arena show. On June 28, Brün will mount his BAYO! Festival at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center. The festival’s steady growth over the past half-decade is just one segment of Brün’s efforts to uplift Caribbean music around the world.
“I actually was part of the [Grammy] committee for best global music performance,” he exclusively tells Billboard hours before “Touchdown” hits DSPs. “At Spotify, I curate the ‘Haitian Heat’ playlist and help them with other Caribbean stuff.”
Last year, Brun prioritized collaborations, joining forces with artists spanning genres and generations, including Keyon Harrold (“Playa Noche”), Charly Black (“Jessica”) and John Legend (“Safe”). With an ever-growing festival and new music on the horizon, Michaël Brun caught up with Billboard to break down the making of “Touchdown,” his favorite Haitian artists and who he thinks will win the Grammy for best reggae album on Sunday (Feb. 2).
How did “Touchdown” come together?
This process has taken a couple of years. I’ve known J Balvin for years, and we’ve worked on a lot of projects together. My first platinum records and a lot of my No. 1s were with him. [Brun co-produced and co-wrote J Balvin’s Ed Sheeran-assisted “Forever My Love,” which topped Latin Airplay in 2022]. In the process of making some new songs together a couple of years ago, we started talking about the influence of dancehall in reggaeton and how much dancehall artists have influenced and shaped the global sound.
Then we had the idea to do something that honored [the songs] we used to listen to at parties. “Touchdown” came from the idea of that link between everything that’s happened in dancehall history and the way that Haiti has been influenced by the Caribbean, Latin America and our own local sounds.
Once we made that initial concept, I knew I wanted to tap in with some friends and icons from Jamaica. I reached out to Tasan, who sings the hook, and Beenie Man and Bounty Killer, who are two iconic dancehall artists from Jamaica. I also reached out to Izy – who produced iconic dancehall songs like Koffee’s “Toast” — to co-produce the song with me.
This is the first time Beenie Man and Bounty Killer have ever been featured on a track together, which is pretty monumental given their history. What does this moment mean to you as a dancehall fan?
I think that it’s really representative of what I believe in: [the power of] bridging different cultures and people. I want my music to make people feel good. I want you to feel that the culture is enriching you. I think that both of their careers have been incredible and have been so influential… not just in Jamaican sounds, but global sounds too.
We actually cut their verses around the time of their Verzuz battle [in 2020], it was literally that week that we started the process. It was really special. I’m grateful that we also got to link in Kingston and Miami. That’s all I care about: genuine cultural unity and authentic cultural portrayal.
Do you have any plans to get this performed live anytime soon?
I have BAYO coming up, and that’s been so much fun for me because it’s rooted in Haitian culture and history. I started it in Jacmel in the South of Haiti, but the music that I play and the artists that pop up for the show are from all around the world. Haitian music is very traditional — we have our genres like konpa and rara — but we also play music from everywhere. I’ve already had a couple of the artists on “Touchdown” pop up in past shows. We might get some really good surprises!
Talk to me a bit more about how BAYO! has grown over the past five years.
It’s been wild. The very first New York show we did was at Music Hall of Williamsburg, and there were about 500 people or so. BAYO! was such a crazy twist for me because, up to that point, I was a DJ doing electronic music and I wanted to set up this festival concept to bring the sounds that I love from the Caribbean and all the different global diasporas to New York and different parts of the U.S. Now we’re hitting Europe and Canada too. The energy at that first show was so special; it made sense to me as a concept, so to see it go from Irving Plaza to Brooklyn Steel and then to Central Park and Prospect Park has been a dream come true.
And the feedback I get from everybody that comes – whether it’s people flying from different cities or people in the New York community — is that it feels like a family. The show is the embodiment of my music. This is my claim, but BAYO! is the best party in the world!
Every festival has its own approach, but, personally, I love to be surprised. I work hard every year to surprise people with the lineup. We never announce who’s performing, so when you show up you might see Maxwell or J Balvin – anybody can pop up! This festival is my pride and joy.
It’s interesting to have a song like “Touchdown” arrive amid the ongoing “Dem Bow” copyright case. How do you feel the song honors and acknowledges the musical lineage of these genres?
We’re honoring icons for the work that they’ve done and creating new moments that incorporate different aspects of their lineages. We’re bridging culture-holders with modern-day and up-and-coming stars. Having these songs in these global moments is important for people to see. I feel like these cultures are very separate segments for a lot of people and if they’re not explicitly shown it, it’s hard for them to understand what the links are. This is my way of helping to create that mutual respect across the board and have all of us in community with each other. Everybody on “Touchdown” actually loves the other artists.
What’s the dream sporting event to perform “Touchdown” at?
Oh man, the Super Bowl! In terms of the song itself, it’s the perfect fit, and J Balvin has also already done the Super Bowl [as a guest of Shakira and J. Lo’s in 2020]. On a personal level, I really love football (soccer), so the World Cup too. Any stadium sporting event with people chanting works, that’s what the energy of the song was from the beginning. It’s also so cool to have Caribbean music on ESPN, I think it’s the first time they’ve ever done that! It’s pretty amazing to be part of that lineage now.
Is “Touchdown” leading to a larger project for you this year?
I’ve been working hard on a lot of stuff. There’s more music coming with some very special artists who I’ve been working with for the past few years, one of which everyone’s gonna be surprised about because she had such an insane 2024. I won’t reveal too much, but I feel like my entire bucket list has been checked off.
Who are some Haitian artists we should be keeping our eyes and ears on in 2024?
What Naïka is doing on a global scale with incorporating different sounds from Haiti — whether it’s twoubadou or konpa – is incredible. Her song “6:45” was pretty massive last year on socials and streaming. On the rap side, Baky is about to drop his new project which I know is gonna be crazy. One other person I think is fire is Rutshelle Guillaume; we worked on a song with John Legend together last year. She’s one of the big singers from Haiti. Everybody comes through to BAYO!, so you should pop out this year!
Who do you think will take home the Grammy for best reggae album on Sunday?
Oh, that’s a tough one. I think Vybz [Kartel] might take it, man. His comeback is a pretty big deal. It depends on the voter base, of course. What Vybz is doing right now is really important for the culture. I think it will probably go to [the Bob Marley: One Love soundtrack] though because of the movie. If the culture voted, it would be Vybz, in my opinion.
Outside of BAYO and your new music, what else can fans look forward to from you this year?
I’ve been producing a lot of projects. I’m really close with Naïka; she’s working on her debut album right now, and it’s a really, really special project that incorporates so many influences from her Haitian heritage. There’s a lot of really fun stuff that I’ve been involved with that I think will be rolling out at different points throughout the year.
On a personal note, my mom passed away in December, which was a pretty crazy journey because she had cancer for three years. With this show and my music, my career is all about honoring her. She was born in Georgetown, Guyana, and she was very philanthropic. I genuinely want to ensure that I’m continuing to honor her through philanthropy and community building. We created the Sharon Andrea Lee-Brun Memorial for BAYO Fund at the end of the year as opposed to people sending flowers and stuff. We ended up donating $12,000 to different education and food sovereignty organizations in Haiti.
I’m in my next life now without my mom, so I’m trying to keep her in mind always.
Post Malone had the dream team backing him up on set for his fourth Super Bowl commercial with Bud Light, with the singer-rapper this year starring alongside Peyton Manning and comedian Shane Gillis for the beer’s game-day spot. In the 60-second spot that premiered Friday (Jan. 31), Posty and Gillis come to the rescue when […]
Frank Ocean has begun filming his directorial debut in Mexico City with Alien: Romulus and Industry star David Jonsson. According to Variety, the rising British actor will have top-billing in the currently untitled independent film whose plot has not yet been revealed.
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No other information is available about the latest project from the enigmatic Ocean, who has been mostly out of the public eye since he pulled out of the second weekend of Coachella in 2023 after suffering a leg injury during his first weekend headlining set.
At the time a rep said, “After suffering an injury to his leg on festival grounds in the week leading up to weekend 1, Frank Ocean was unable to perform the intended show but was still intent on performing, and in 72 hours, the show was reworked out of necessity. On doctor’s advice, Frank is not able to perform weekend 2 due to two fractures and a sprain in his left leg.”
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The singer — whose most recent album was 2016’s Blonde — added in a statement at the time, “It was chaotic. There is some beauty in chaos. It isn’t what I intended to show but I did enjoy being out there and I’ll see you soon.”
Since then, he’s released the 48-page booklet Mutations, a 2023 project featuring photos taken by Ocean that was printed on tissue-weight paper, and, in November of that year, a minute-long preview of an unnamed moody track. The latter was the first new music from the enigmatic performer who had not issued any new music since he surprise-dropped two singles, “Dear April” and “Cayendo” in 2020, followed by a never-released, untitled nine-minute song on the Christmas special on his Apple Music 1 Blonded Radio show in December 2021.
Ocean also dropped another unnamed snippet in December 2023, accompanied by a 24-second video in which he enthusiastically danced to a mid-tempo R&B jam. Producer Michael Uzowuru revealed in an interview last year that he’d been in the studio with Ocean in Miami working on new music, after collaborating with him on both Blonde and 2016’s visual album Endless. The singer described their relationship thusly: “Me and Michael’s careers exist post hip-hop — that genre, that culture, informs both of us greatly, but his appetite has grown; his vocabulary, musically, has grown so much over the time that I’ve known him.”
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