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Kendrick Lamar is continuing the rollout of his surprise sixth studio album, GNX, dropping the music video for the project’s early standout track, “Squabble Up,” on Monday (Nov. 25). Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news The clip features K. Dot dancing in a blue hoodie and fitted cap […]
On the latest Billboard 200 albums chart (dated Nov. 30), three K-pop (Korean pop) albums are in the top 10 concurrently for the first time. ATEEZ’s GOLDEN HOUR: Part.2 debuts at No. 1, Jin’s Happy debuts at No. 4 and ENHYPEN’s ROMANCE: UNTOLD re-enters the chart at No. 7 following an expanded reissue (after earlier […]
Kendrick Lamar surprised fans when he unveiled his sixth studio album, GNX, without any warning on Friday (Nov. 22) via PGLang and Interscope. The 12-track project is named after the Buick Regal model and features collaborations with stars including Lefty Gunplay, Dody 6, Wallie the Sensei, Roddy Ricch, Siete7x, AzChike, Hitta J3, YoungThreat, Peysoh and SZA […]
Three decades after clashing with a Billboard editor over a negative review of his 1991 Death Certificate album, Ice Cube’s relationship with the publication has come a long way.
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The 55-year-old is still the “crazy motherf–ker named Ice Cube” but an evolved version. Cube returned on Friday (Nov. 22) to deliver his anticipated Man Down album — his first since 2018’s Everythang’s Corrupt, which served as his only release under Interscope Records.
“If I ain’t making somebody mad, I ain’t doing something right,” Ice Cube told Bootleg Kev earlier in November about his mindset coming into every album, and Man Down is no different.
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The South Central icon’s unfiltered thoughts and cinematic pen play out across 19 tracks featuring Snoop Dogg, Busta Rhymes, Killer Mike, E-40 and a first-ever collaboration with Xzibit.
Cube’s already got his sights set on a companion project with a Man Up sequel, which plays off his feelings that America’s gotten too sensitive these days.
About an hour before hopping on a Zoom with Billboard, Kendrick Lamar shook up rap’s landscape when he dropped a metaphorical bomb on the industry with his surprise GNX album. While Cube declared himself “Kendrick before Kendrick” on Man Down single “It’s My Ego,” he isn’t too worried about Lamar crashing his release day.
“That’s why Kendrick putting out a record doesn’t hurt my mission of serving my fan base,” he explains. “This record is for Ice Cube fans. I know Ice Cube fans gonna check me out — and that’s why I said, ‘Mission accomplished.’”
Check out the rest of our interview with Ice Cube as we dive into his World Series performance, how “Not Like Us” measures up to “No Vaseline,” Straight Outta Compton and more.
Kendrick Lamar just dropped his album an hour ago. How’s he gonna step on Cube’s release day?
Yeah, it was a secret record. I’m interested to check it out. It ain’t no stepping on nothing. My fan base been waiting for this record and they gon’ check mine out. His fan base is gonna be pleasantly surprised that he dropped a record. I don’t look at it that way.
How do you know when [Man Down] is done? How was the creative process and has that remained the same your entire career?
The process changed, the people changed, producers and engineers. Things have an ebb and flow. When I feel like it’s one cohesive statement and other records don’t fit into this realm I feel like the record is ready to be put out. I got more records than this and they didn’t fit on the Man Down project. Maybe they’ll make it on the Man Up project.
Is the Man Up sequel a play on how America’s gotten too sensitive out here?
Yeah, it is. It really is. It’s about men not accepting nonsense and speaking up and not just taking a backseat letting other people take the lead. We gotta take the lead.
Veteran MCs have really been bringing it this year. They say hip-hop’s a young man’s game, but Rakim dropped, Snoop and Dre coming up and you dropped. How do you feel about the guys making noise?
Most of the people who say hip-hop is a young man’s game don’t do it and ain’t never gripped a mic and ripped it. I’m not worried about my ACL and my Achilles. This is wordplay, this is wordplay and flow. This is skill and beat selection, concept and hook selection. The veterans are great and should continue to make the music that we love you for.
“Break the Mirror,” I did not know that was your first time ever teaming up with Xzibit.
Yeah, our first time on wax. We been down with each other for a long time. I’ve always loved his flow and the choices he makes on wax, lyrically and his beat selection is next level. It was cool to get on a track with him.
As far as your label situation, are you not with Interscope anymore? You were for the last project.
Not with Interscope — I was with the last project. This one’s totally independent Lench Mob Records with Heatmaker. It’s been a great pairing. Great working relationship. This our first project together. We been making a lot of noise up until the release date. We been doing everything we need to bring awareness to it.
I saw a bar you said, “You’re gonna lose your fan base chasing a fan base.” If you could expand on that.
When you first get in the game you just want to expand your fan base. You’re trying to become a world wide artist so you’re loved all over the world. You’re always reaching for more and more people to recognize you and dig what you do. At a certain point, if you reach so much, you end up stretching the s–t out yourself or coming detached from base. You’re just floating and your base left you and you’re looking for new fans that may not even come. You’re baseless. Always serve your fan base — the people that got you there and been there year after year. Always keep them in mind when you’re doing anything and let new fans come to you, don’t reach for ’em.
I think younger artists run into a hit or are looking for the next one instead of playing the long game and developing a fan base.
Yeah, develop yourself and cultivate your fan base. Learn how to do that. That’s the future. We can be on 1,000 different platforms, but it’s gonna come down to do fans come directly to you for what you have to give. That’s why Kendrick putting out a record that doesn’t hurt my mission of serving my fan base. This record is for Ice Cube fans. I know Ice Cube fans gonna check me out and that’s why I said, “Mission accomplished.” Feedback from my day ones is they love the record. It’s a beautiful day.
Let’s talk about the World Series performance. After the Freddie Freeman grand slam you come out for game two in L.A. and I’m like, “This isn’t looking too good for us [Yankees fans] right now.”
I think it was because of the grand slam that gave us a lot of momentum. Salute to Fat Joe — it’s tough when your team is down 0-2 — and my team has been down 0-2 in the championship, you don’t want to hear no damn rap. You don’t want to hear nobody. I don’t give a damn who’s up there. You’re ready to get to the game. You relly don’t want to hear the National Anthem. You just want to get to the game — let’s play and get back into this series. For me, Fernando Valenzuela had passed away a few days before the series started, so there was a lot of emotion in the building. It was a good look.
Then at the parade that clip of Dave Roberts dancing with you performing. Did you know that was him out there with you?
Nah, at first I thought it was a fan or a security dude. I looked and was like, “Oh, this Dave!” I’m rocking out. Dave was faded, he was off that champagne. He was feeling pretty good and had a good night. It was fun to see him party. The fans dug it and it was a viral moment for sure.
I saw it was The Predator‘s 32nd anniversary last week. What was special about that time? It went No. 1 on the Billboard 200.
Just that the record was highly anticipated. I had some huge hits off that record. Me personally, I was sick of so much controversy behind every single record that I dropped up until then. I just wanted to bust raps. I wanted to show that it wasn’t a Stephen King, but I can rap and bust a rhyme. You got songs on there like “Wicked” where I wanted to show that I’m a true MC and not just a shock rapper trying to find a subject to shock you. That’s what people were coining me as. I went into that record just wanting to prove lyrically I’m one of the best.
You touched on racial tensions and a lot of things going on in the world at that time while trying to prove you’re an MC. Did the L.A. Riots and things going on influence your songwriting?
Yeah, it was a situation where I didn’t expect the riots. It just unfolded and happened. I had to address it on the record. I did. It was cool. I had a lot of issues with that record with the editor of Billboard at the time. He was really against the Death Certificate record. It probably had a lot to do with Jerry Heller. I was looked at as damn near a villain in the music industry. It wasn’t really fair to Priority Records and people who had put their money behind me to just carry that title and be controversial and try to sell records. We’re in the record business. This isn’t the fight-against-the-world business. I didn’t want a personal vendetta to start affecting record sales. I had partners and people who put money behind the s–t and I wanted to serve them.
I saw this clip going viral of Keke Palmer talking to Shannon Sharpe and she recalled some advice you had for her on the set of The Long Shots. I don’t know if you remember it, but it clearly stuck with her.
I just saw a 14-year-old girl who’s very friendly on set. I just wanted her to make sure she protected herself in this business. I just know that it’s shady. It’s a shady business. When I work with any of the kids, I try to give them good advice about the business, so they can protect themselves in all ways. Not only protect themselves from that, but you gotta watch yourself on a movie [set]. You gotta make sure everything is safe and take care of yourself on the movie set.
Ice Cube’s powerful advice to Keke Palmer when she was 14 about ‘men in the entertainment industry’ protected her throughout the years 🙌🏽💯pic.twitter.com/3XzFo8UFWn— My Mixtapez (@mymixtapez) November 21, 2024
John Singleton told you, “If you can write songs like you write, you can write a movie.” Did he put the battery in your back for movies?
Yeah, he hit me with that one day. I was sitting in his kitchen one day and we were talking about Boys N the Hood coming together. Then he hit me with that quote. That day I went and bought a computer and told him to get the Final Draft program. Started to think of what story I wanted to tell, and I’ve been writing ever since.
What did you think about Kendrick [Lamar] unifying the West Coast in his battle with Drake? And how does “Not Like Us” measure up to “No Vaseline?”
As a hit, it’s humongous. As a diss, it’s top-notch. It’s one of the best disses that’s ever been done. Me and my homie Dub-C (WC) talked about it, when the battle first started — we were like, “The first one who does the battle off a hit beat, it’s gonna be a knockout blow.” It’s gonna cause a lot of damage. Because that’s what “No Vaseline” is: It’s a hardcore diss, but it’s over hit music.
It’s hard to miss when you got that combination. When I heard “Not Like Us,” I was like, “He got it.” It’s the perfect music for the perfect diss. Where he goes that “No Vaseline” don’t go is that he made it a hood anthem. Everybody’s singing along and can scream that hook. You could be talking about the football team across the field and be like, “They not like us.” It’s just an anthem that brings everybody in. Just on that tip alone, that three-pronged combination of incredible lyrics, it cut deep and it’s hit music. Then making it an anthem, it’s hard to beat that.
With Straight Outta Compton, I think it’s the best rap biopic that I’ve seen. We’ve botched a few but that was so well done. How important was it to make sure that it was well done, having your son playing yourself but also telling the story on a high level?
We had to do it right. I was thinking of all the filmmakers who were really difficult on set. The producers who fought tooth and nail to get it done their way. That’s the kind of producer I was. I was not gonna take no for an answer. Probably made some people mad and rubbed them the wrong way — sorry about that, but we had to get it right. We couldn’t botch this. We couldn’t f–k it up. My son playing me, as a father-parent, watching your son on the highest stage perform and achieve his dreams of doing movies — amazing.
Ultimately, he was the right guy for the job. They brought in four other Ice Cubes. It wasn’t working. He was the best person for the job. That’s why he got it. I’m pretty sure if there were better Ice Cubes they would’ve got the job. It wasn’t up to me, it was up to the head of Universal Donna Langley, F. Gary Gray and a few others in the room. I wasn’t in the room when he auditioned. I was at home waiting for a phone call. I had nothing to do with the process on that tip. Ultimately, looking at all the ones that tried out, he was the best.
How close were the scenes to reality when you watch them back — like the Detroit concert arrest, and the final meeting with Eazy-E when he pulls up on you at the club and you guys hash it out?
That was totally on point. The Detroit scene had happened in Cincinnati — the half where we get ran into the paddywagons. Movies you gotta summarize. You’re trying to get 10 years into two-and-a-half hours. Some things that happened in a week or month, you might have to squish into two scenes as part of the journey. You figure out how to make that make sense and still be what happened. What really locks that up is the dialogue. Most times movies are done and the people are dead, but by having most of us all here, we were able to make sure the dialogue was on point and those conversations were pretty much the exact ones that went down. It was all what happened but done in a cinematic way. [The Eazy-E scene] happened at the Tunnel.
21 Jump Street, what do you remember about that movie and the cast?
It was fun to work on a comedy that I didn’t have to produce. I was acting in it and I can kind of kick back and pop up and do my thing. And with Jonah Hill and Channing [Tatum], we knew we were in good hands. And those directors are crazy. It was fun to play Captain Dickson.
I saw you talking to Coach Prime, Deion Sanders, you think we’re gonna get him and his son Shedeur over to the Las Vegas Raiders?
That would be a dream come true. Prime is one of my favorite NFL players of all time, and he’s a good friend. To see him on the Raiders sideline with his son at the QB position would be — man I’d be there every game. That’s great for him and great for the Raiders and Vegas and the fans of the team. It would be next level.
How many Dodgers hats do you own?
Maybe about 25 of them around here. All different colors.
Kendrick Lamar’s first GNX visual arrived on Monday (Nov. 25), and the Compton rhymer is repping for his city in the “Squabble Up” video. Interpolating Debbie Deb’s 1984 “When I Hear Music” dance bop, “Squabble Up” has been crowned an early standout from Lamar’s GNX album, and he didn’t waste much time delivering the Calmatic-directed […]
Gojira may have wowed viewers around the world as red streamers mimicking a torrential downpour of blood rained from the windows of Paris’ Conciergerie palace — where beheaded Marie Antoinettes stood — into the Seine during the band’s performance at the Summer Olympics’ Opening Ceremony, but frontman Joe Duplantier wants fans to take a less sanguineous route for the holidays. And so, the French rocker has partnered with PETA to urge fans to forgo meat and animal products not just when gathering with friends and family, but every day.
“The holidays are the perfect time for people to try out new traditions with their friends and family that leave cruelty behind. It makes sense to celebrate kindness and peace on Earth with a delicious vegan feast that didn’t cost anyone their life,” Duplantier tells Billboard. “When I chose to go plant-based, I thought I would miss all the foods I grew up on, but surprisingly, the transition was painless. A vegan diet brings joy, energy and an unexplainable sense of relief knowing nobody’s getting slaughtered for my food.”
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“Nowadays it’s so easy to switch to a vegan diet with all the meat replacements and different plant-based milks and cheeses,” he notes. “Join the revolution! End the torture!”
Gojira’s Joe Duplantier for PETA
Courtesy of PETA
In an accompanying video for the PETA campaign, the rocker — who has been vegan for 10 years — shares that he chose a cruelty-free diet because of his love for animals. “It’s about the life of the animals and what they go through. But another benefit of being vegan is for your own health,” he explains while discussing the topic in a studio, as the metal band’s “The Trails” plays. “There’s no way eating animals or animal products that are a product of violence can be good for you. I have more energy now when I perform since I became vegan.”
Duplantier also highlights the horrors of the meat industry. “The way we treat animals — animal farms, the factories, the slaughterhouses — is unacceptable,” he declares as clips of the abuse pigs, cows and chickens endure appear. “Even non-vegans, I think, if they would spend a day in a slaughterhouse, they would come out of that vegan.”
“It’s not just an ethical question anymore, but it’s also a question of survival for our species,” he concludes, alluding to the massive amount of resources that goes into factory farming and the damage it does to the planet. “You have to go vegan.”
Watch Duplantier urge fans to try a vegan diet in the video below:
Rosé is less than two weeks from dropping her debut solo album, and the BLACKPINK superstar is adding to the hype by dropping the track list on Monday (Nov. 25). Rosie is set to arrive on December 6 via Atlantic Records/THEBLACKLABEL and features 12 tracks. Among the song titles are “3am,” “Two Years,” “Toxic Till […]
Drake made an appearance on Canadian streamer xQc’s livestream on Sunday night (Nov. 24), and the 6 God didn’t hold back on a multitude of topics. At one point in the stream, Steve Lacy’s Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 hit “Bad Habit” was playing, and Drake seemingly shaded the artist. “This guy’s like a fragile […]
Lizzo is the latest star to weigh in on the always heated debate over the top MCs of all-time. In a post on Bluesky on Friday (Nov. 22) the “About Damn Time” singer offered up her top three rappers, in no particular order she said, and the first two on the list happen to be freshly at odds.
Lizzo’s trifecta includes Lil Wayne, Kendrick Lamar and Missy “Misdemeanor” Elliott, a fine roster of world-class mic technicians by any account. The post came just hours after K-Dot shocked the world with the surprise release on Friday of his sixth studio album, GNX. The 12-song R&B-inflected lyrical barrage includes an opening track, “wacced out murals,” which takes on Wayne’s publicly aired frustration over being passed over to perform during the halftime show at next year’s 2025 Super Bowl in his home town of New Orleans.
“Used to bump Tha Carter III, I held my Rollie chain proud/ Irony, I think my hard work let Lil Wayne down,” Kendrick raps on the song in reference to Weezy posting a video about how hurt he was about not being tapped to pay the plumb gig at the Caesars Superdome in February.
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“Won the Super Bowl and Nas the only one congratulate me/ All these n—-s agitated, I’m just glad they showin’ they faces,” Lamar continued. Wayne did appear to take kindly to the shout-out, responding on Saturday morning, “Man wtf I do?! I just be chillin & dey still kome 4 my head,” he wrote. “Let’s not take kindness for weakness. Let this giant sleep. I beg u all. No one really wants destruction,not even me but I shall destroy if disturbed. On me. Love.”
Lizzo’s list is also interesting because it appears to continue the storyline of the explosive Drake/Kendrick feud, which was kicked off in 2023 with the Drizzy/J. Cole song “First Person Shooter,” on which Cole claimed the “big three” of modern hip-hop are himself, Drake and Lamar. That song set off a flurry of back-and-forth diss tracks between Drake and Lamar earlier this year that culminated with what most consider the final nail: K-Dot’s lacerating “Not Like Us.”
Comments on Lizzo’s Bluesky top three list included many fans rubber stamping the inclusion of Elliott, with one person writing, “Missy is Goated. Like golden statue goated. Like rename her childhood street goated” while another said, “I almost got into a fist fight with someone at a New Year’s Eve party when they said Missy Elliott wasn’t impactful to music.”
Two out of three of Lizzo’s picks made it into the mix for Billboard’s Best Pop Stars of the 21st Century, with Elliott gaining an honorable mention and Lil Wayne grabbing the 21st slot. For the record, Drake took the No. 4 spot while the top two pop icons have not yet been revealed.
On Nov. 20, P!nk played the last of 128 shows over the last year and a half. The run was sprawling, from the Summer Carnival Tour, which took place in stadiums, to the Trustfall Tour and P!nk Live, both of which brought her to arenas. Altogether, she earned $693.8 million and sold more than 4.8 million tickets, according to figures reported to Billboard Boxscore. One of her many box office achievements is recent: The nine shows she played in October make her the biggest touring act of the month.
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Across nine shows between Oct. 1-18, P!nk grossed $44.2 million and sold 254,000 tickets, putting her at No. 1 on Billboard’s monthly Top Tours chart. That haul includes four stadium dates, including an Oct. 3 show at MetLife Stadium ($9.1 million; 60,400 tickets), and three arena stops, including double-headers at Detroit’s Little Caesars Arena and St. Paul’s Xcel Energy Center.
Another nine shows in November make P!nk eligible for one last monthly chart in 2024, when the November report is published next month.
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When separated by tour, P!nk’s 2023-24 run breaks down to $584.7 million for the Summer Carnival Tour, $60.8 million for last year’s Trustfall Tour and $48.3 million for this fall’s Live 2024 run. Since launching last June, Luis Miguel is the only musician who has played more shows.
The Summer Carnival is the second-highest grossing tour in history among women, accounting for Billboard’s billion-dollar-plus estimate for Taylor Swift’s as-yet-unreported The Eras Tour. P!nk narrowly passes Beyoncé’s Renaissance World Tour, which grossed $579.8 million last year during a comparatively brief 56-show sweep. Madonna’s Sticky & Sweet Tour (2008-09) and P!nk’s own Beautiful Trauma World Tour (2018-19) follow next, hovering on opposite sides of the $400 million threshold.
Among all artists, and including estimates for Swift, The Summer Carnival Tour ranks eighth in revenue, and just outside the top 10 based on attendance.
The Summer Carnival Tour spanned five legs – each of which grossed at least $100 million – across three continents. The biggest was a 22-show run in North America, bringing in $150.7 million from July to October of 2023. Ultimately, the U.S. and Canada delivered $266 million, Europe accounted for about $214 million and 20 shows in Oceania added $104.3 million.
Travis Scott follows on October’s Top Tours chart, scoring the highest monthly rank for a rap artist since returning from the pandemic shutdown. He grossed $41.2 million and sold 352,000 tickets on the final dates of the Circus Maximus Tour.
Scott kicked off the month with an Oct. 9 show at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. (13 miles from New York City), bringing in $8.7 million from 61,700 tickets sold. That’s $400,000 less, but 1,300 more tickets than stats for P!nk’s October show at the same venue.
He then brought his world tour to three cities in Australia, plus a closing-night performance in Auckland, New Zealand. The Oceania leg grossed $32.5 million and sold 291,000 tickets, which is slightly more than half of the European leg (June-August), but more than double the Latin American run from September.
Usher is next at No. 3, with $36.6 million for Usher: Past Present Future. Since kicking off on Aug. 20, the tour has earned $90.6 million. With North American shows scheduled through mid-December and a European leg in the spring, it’s likely to close in on $150 million.
Future tourmates Post Malone and Jelly Roll round out the top 5 at Nos. 4 and 5, respectively. Last week, Post announced The Big Ass Stadium Tour with Jelly Roll as direct support, which will bring both acts to – you guessed it, stadiums – for the first time in their careers. Combined, they’ve brought in over $130 million this year, but they’ll head closer to $200 million in 2025.
And just outside the top five, Sabrina Carpenter makes her Top Tours debut at No. 6. The first handful of dates from the Short n’ Sweet Tour left her just outside the top 30 in September, but a full slate of shows lifts her into the top 10 for October, with a full gross of $27.8 million from 221,000 tickets sold. The first leg wrapped up on Nov. 18 at the Kia Forum in Inglewood, Calif., and 14 shows are set for March throughout Europe.
Melbourne, Australia’s Marvel Stadium the month’s top-grossing concert venue, thanks to a trio of double-headers. On Oct. 5-6, The Weeknd sold 92,100 tickets and earned $12.5 million. A couple weeks later, Travis Scott played on Oct. 21-22, upping the ante to 115,000 tickets and $12.6 million. And on Oct. 30-31, Coldplay played the first two shows of a four-night run, bringing in $14.4 million from 115,000 tickets. All three are among the top five on Top Boxscores.
Madison Square Garden returns to the summit among indoor venues, grossing $23.4 million from 13 shows in October. That includes a Halloween show by Duran Duran, a farewell performance from Cyndi Lauper (Oct. 30), and a get-out-the-vote concert from Stevie Wonder (Sept. 10).
MSG’s banner month pushes its Las Vegas sister-venue Sphere back to No. 2, supported by just four shows of Eagles’ residency. Those dates grossed $18.9 million, adding to the $23.2 million in September.
A quartet of American venues top the smaller-capacity rankings. Austin’s Moody Center is tops among rooms with a cap of 10,001-15k, Red Rocks Amphitheater in Morrison, Colo., Is No. 1 on the 5,001-10k chart, Atlanta’s Fox Theatre rules the 2,501-5k tally, and Grand Rapids, Mich., wins gold on the 2,500-or-less survey via DeVos Performance Hall.
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