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FLO has shared a mini-deluxe edition of the group’s recently released debut LP, featuring four new collaborations.
Access All Areas, the first full-length release from the British girl group, arrived Nov. 15 via Island Records and is currently standing at No. 3 in the latest midweeks of the U.K’s Official Albums Chart. FLO has now teamed up with some of R&B’s leading names to reimagine songs from the record.
Titled Access All Areas: Unlocked, the updated version sees sister duo Chlöe x Halle contribute vocals to “Soft,” Kehlani featuring on “IWH2BMX,” Bree Runway on “Nocturnal” and Dixson on “Bending My Rules.” Actress and Wicked star Cynthia Erivo, meanwhile, narrates the album’s intro. “Our girls found each other / And meticulously prepared a feast for our ears,” she says on the track.
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“Access All Areas: Unlocked is finally out and we can’t wait for everyone to listen,” FLO said in a press release. “We really admire these artists and couldn’t be happier to have them feature on our new music. From the lyricism, to the harmonies to the sweet melodies and flows they all delivered! This is only a mini deluxe, so stay seated for more.”
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The band has also shared the music video for single “In My Bag” featuring GloRilla, who landed a top 10-charting effort on Billboard’s Top Album Sales chart Oct. 26 with her Glorious project. Describing their experience of working with the Memphis rapper, FLO said jointly, “In My Bag is such a special song to us. It’s a manifestation … singing it live for our fans has been incredible because everyone in the room feels empowered and seen!”
They continued: “Glo is such a deserving, incredibly talented and sweet artist who we really admire. When she said she’d love to do a verse on In My Bag we were so happy because we knew she would kill it! We’ve loved working with her and are looking forward to everyone watching the video we shot together in Atlanta.”
Comprised of vocalists Jorja Douglas, Stella Quaresma and Renée Downer, FLO first emerged in May 2022 with the release of single “Cardboard Box,” which landed high-profile co-signs from SZA and Victoria Monét. The group has since gone on to win the BRITs Rising Star award, feature on a remix of Stormzy’s “Hide and Seek” and top the BBC Sound Of poll. In March 2023, FLO’s Missy Elliott collaboration “Fly Girl” reached the Top 40 of the Official U.K. Singles Chart.
In March 2025, FLO will tour the U.K. and Europe in support of Access All Areas. Along the way, they perform at London’s O2 Academy Brixton, as well as sold-out shows in Paris and Cologne. Tickets can be found the group’s website.
Brandon Lake is already a superstar in the Christian music space, amassing 38 career entries on Billboard’s Hot Christian Songs chart. But he reaches the Billboard Hot 100 for the first time this week with his new viral hit, “Hard Fought Hallelujah.”
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Released Nov. 8 on Brandon Lake/Essential/Provident Label Group, the song debuts at No. 51 on the Hot 100 (dated Nov. 23) with 7 million official U.S. streams, 60,000 in airplay audience and 13,000 downloads sold in its first week, according to Luminate. Its sales sum is the largest among all songs this week, generating a No. 1 debut on the Digital Song Sales ranking, where it’s Lake’s first leader.
“Hard Fought Hallelujah” benefited from pre-release buzz on TikTok. Lake first teased the song on the platform on Sept. 3. Since then, audio from that clip has been used to soundtrack more than 30,000 TikToks. Many TikTok users have tied the song to experiences during difficult periods of their lives, and how they’ve turned to religion to overcome personal obstacles. Lake has shared some of those videos on his profile.
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Lake has been a staple in the Christian music world since his chart debut in 2019. He first reached Hot Christian Songs in July 2019 with “This Is a Move,” which reached No. 36. He has charted eight top 10s, including six No. 1s through “Hard Fought Hallelujah” this week:
Title, Peak Date (Weeks at No. 1):
“Hard Fought Hallelujah,” Nov. 23, 2024 (one to date)
“That’s Who I Praise,” Oct. 19, 2024 (five)
“Praise” (Elevation Worship feat. Brandon Lake, Chris Brown & Chandler Moore), March 16, 2024 (31)
“Praise You Anywhere,” Nov. 4, 2023 (six)
“Gratitude,” Feb. 4, 2023 (28)
“Graves Into Gardens” (Elevation Worship feat. Brandon Lake), Feb. 6, 2021 (two)
With 31 weeks spent at No. 1, “Praise” is the fourth-longest-leading hit in the 21-year history of Hot Christian Songs – and the longest-leading by a solo male. Overall, it trails only Lauren Daigle’s “You Say” (132 weeks at No. 1), Hillsong United’s “Oceans (Where Feet May Fail)” (61) and Hillsong Worship’s “What a Beautiful Name” (37). With 28 weeks, Lake’s “Gratitude” is the fifth-longest-leading No. 1.
Lake’s six No. 1s on Hot Christian Songs put him at a tie with Jeremy Camp, Daigle, Matthew West and Third Day for the fifth-most, after MercyMe (13), Casting Crowns (nine), Chris Tomlin and TobyMac (seven each).
Additionally, Lake claims the top three tracks on the Nov. 23-dated Hot Christian Songs chart, with “Hard Fought Hallelujah” followed by “That’s Who I Praise” at No. 2 and “Praise” at No. 3. Previously, only Ye (then billed as Kanye West) tripled up for 11 weeks in 2019-22 and Carrie Underwood, for four weeks in 2020-21.
Lake has also charted 21 songs on Christian Airplay, including six top 10s and three No. 1s: “Graves Into Gardens,” “Gratitude” and “Praise.”
On the Top Christian Albums chart, Lake has charted five titles, including one No. 1: Coat of Many Colors, in November 2023.
Earlier this year, Lake signed with UTA for booking representation. “We are wildly impressed with how Lake is changing the game for Christian artists and are thrilled to welcome him to the UTA family,” Matthew Morgan, co-head of UTA Nashville and a UTA partner, said in a statement at the time.
If you’re filming a video for a song called “The Karate Kid” it just makes sense to cast the OG Daniel LaRusso in it. On Tuesday morning (Nov. 19), Coldplay revealed the visual for their song named in honor of actor Ralph Macchio’s most beloved character, which appears on the expanded Full Moon edition of the band’s recent Billboard 200 No. 1 album, Moon Music.
The Chris Candy-directed clip was filmed in Melbourne, Australia during Coldplay’s recent run of stadium shows. According to a release announcing the video, the band reached out to Cobra Kai star Macchio after he said he thought “The Karate Kid” was a “beautiful track” when it was released last month.
“When Chris Martin pops up on your FaceTime asking you to help create a video to accompany what I found to be a beautifully emotional and poignant song – one inspired by a film I made over 40 years ago – there was only one answer,” said Macchio, 63, about filming the clip in which he plays a down-and-out busker. “Having the opportunity to join Coldplay in Australia at one of their legendary live shows to collaborate on this music video was nothing short of a career highlight. The synergy with Chris, the band and our director Chris Candy was as pure as any I’ve experienced. I’m excited to share this with the world.”
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The video opens with Macchio schlepping his busking gear to a park, where he sets up a perky “Shine On” sign and some dancing stuffed animals as he sits down at his keyboard to croon the earnest ballad. “As much as I could, as much as I tried/ I just couldn’t seem to find the light/ The trees for the wood, the wars left and right/ Umbrellas with the rain in,” the actor lip synchs as everyone around him either ignores his playing or laughs as they walk by.
Dejected, Macchio decides to try a different approach, shifting to tap dancing for his dinner as Coldplay singer Chris Martin croons, “Maybe we could share the rain/ Maybe we could dance again/ Maybe we could make the sky turn blue/ Oh Daniel knows how to make a dream/ How to make a dream come true/ Oh Daniel/ Could I be the one for you?”
When he chances into a ticket for a Coldplay show, Macchio hoists up a sign that says “Let Me Help” when Martin is suddenly hit with vocal issues. The actor triumphantly takes center stage in front of the massive crowd for his moment in the sun to end the uplifting clip.
Fans were losing their minds during the Oct. 31 show at Melbourne’s Marvel Stadium, where Martin did a fine acting job pretending to lose his voice as he welcomed surprise guest Macchio to the stage. Macchio first played karate newbie LaRusso in the original Karate Kid movie in 1986, as well as in the 1986 and 1989 sequels and returned to his signature role in 2018 for the Cobra Kai series, now in its sixth season; he is also slated to star in the upcoming Karate Kid: Legends film due out next year.
Coldplay is on a break from their nearly three-year Music of the Spheres stadium tour, with the group slated to hit the road again on Jan. 9 with the first of four shows at Zayed Sports City Stadium in Abu Dhabi. After stops in India, Hong Kong and Seoul, the tour will return to the U.S. for the final run of summer 2025 North American dates beginning on May 31 at Stanford Stadium in Stanford, CA. The billion-dollar outing will conclude next August/Sept. with a 10-show run at Wembley Stadium in London.
Watch “The Karate Kid” video below.
Robbie Williams has penned an open letter to former Take That manager Nigel Martin-Smith, following claims he made regarding Williams’ past drug use in new BBC docuseries Boybands Forever.
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Both the British pop icon and Martin-Smith appeared as talking heads in the first installment of the three-part series, which aired on Saturday (Nov. 16). The episode focused on the mental and financial struggles that members of Take That, East 17, A1 and Damage dealt with at the height of their popularity.
Martin-Smith managed Take That in the 1990s when Williams was a member of the group, before the latter quit in 1995 and went on to launch an enduring, successful career as a solo act. Across three decades, he has gone on to earn 13 No. 1s on the U.K Albums Chart and 18 BRIT Awards, including the prestigious BRITs Icon accolade in 2017.
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In the documentary, Williams addresses his history of drug use, saying that at one point he was made out to be “evil.” Martin-Smith goes on to say that the singer was “smart and quite clever” to blame his issues on being “in this band where he couldn’t have girlfriends or couldn’t go out.”
Williams also responded to these assertions via a lengthy statement posted to Instagram on Nov. 17. “I was equal parts terrified and excited to be sharing a screen with you again,” he said, addressing Martin-Smith. “Excited to see where we both are on this journey and terrified in case old emotions would be triggered and I’d still be in a place of anger, hurt of fear.
“As it happens, it would appear that time has done its thing and I guess the wisdom it brings has taken its mop to a few nooks and crannies here and there. I guess not every nook has been bleached, though.”
He then highlighted Martin-Smith’s comments about his drug use at the time. “My response to the warped world that surrounded me is solely my own. How I chose to self-medicate is and was something that I will be monitoring and dealing with for the whole of my life,” Williams wrote. “It’s part of my makeup and I would have the same malady had I been a taxi driver. I just got there quicker due to having the finances while trying in vain to counteract the turbulence of pop stardom’s matrix-bending washing machine.”
Encouraging Martin-Smith to take accountability for some of the struggles Take That faced behind the scenes, Williams continued: “Everyone will understand and appreciate that level of self-reflection. It’s OK to admit your shortcomings. No one is going to sue you for not knowing or understand[ing] the psychological effects everything was having on everyone.”
Martin-Smith has not yet responded to Williams’ open letter.
Williams’ comments follows a similar post he made about the late Liam Payne, remarking that boy bands need sufficient emotional support and that there needs to be a push for something to be “done in his name to make things better.” The One Direction star died after falling from the third floor of a hotel in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on Oct. 16.
Shortly after Payne’s death, a petition was launched calling for a new law to safeguard the mental well-being of young artists. It has currently received more than 149,000 signatures.
Elsewhere, the compilation soundtrack to Williams’ biopic Better Man will be released on Dec. 26 in the U.K. and Ireland, and on Jan. 17 in the U.S. and Canada. Featuring his greatest hits, Better Man will tell the story of Williams’ life from his childhood in Stoke-on-Trent, England, through to his fame with Take That and subsequent solo career. Williams will be played by a CGI monkey throughout the film directed by Michael Gracey (The Greatest Showman).
Through summer 2025, Williams will embark on a lengthy tour across the U.K. and Europe, including a night at London’s 60,000-capacity Emirates Stadium. Support will come from Warrington rock band The Lottery Winners, as well as Rag ‘N’ Bone Man on select dates.
Sabrina Carpenter might’ve let Jack Antonoff make Short n’ Sweet with her, but she’d rather Margaret Qualley make her “Juno.”
At the final U.S. stop of the 25-year-old pop star’s Short n’ Sweet Tour at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles Monday (Nov. 18), the producer — who collaborated with Carpenter on much of her Billboard 200-topping sixth studio album — made a surprise appearance. During one of the “Espresso” artist’s nightly gimmicks of “arresting” a guest for being “too hot,” Antonoff came on the big screens and shrugged.
“This is super awkward,” Carpenter joked from on stage as the Bleachers frontman shook his head inconspicuously, as captured by fan videos. “I’m sure you’re probably really good at [producing]. In fact, I’m so confident you could produce someone even hotter than you.”
That’s when the cameras panned over to the Maid actress, who is married to the former Fun band member. “This right there, ladies and gentlemen, this is a hottie with substance,” said Carpenter, referencing Qualley’s critically acclaimed new movie, The Substance. “Whoever made you, God bless them. God bless your genetics.”
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After Qualley blew a kiss at Carpenter, the singer passed a pair of kinky handcuffs to the couple before performing her NSFW Short n’ Sweet fan-favorite “Juno.” The scene is one that’s played out at many of the Girl Meets World alum’s shows this year, with Carpenter previously arresting Saturday Night Live‘s Marcello Hernandez — who arrived dressed as his viral Domingo character — and Stranger Things‘ Millie Bobby Brown.
With the U.S. leg of her trek in the books, Carpenter will next hit the road in March for a European leg of Short n’ Sweet dates. The tour kicked off in March following the “Feather” artist’s stint on Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour.
Carpenter and Antonoff collaborated on a number of Short n’ Sweet tracks together, including Billboard Hot 100-topper “Please Please Please,” “Sharpest Tool” and “Slim Pickins.” The LP went on to become the former’s first-ever No. 1 album, about which the producer recently told Billboard, “No one deserves it more.”
“Sabrina’s been quietly growing, and her albums have been getting more awesome, and she’s been honing her sound and performances,” he added in the October interview. “It’s not like she just popped onto the scene — this has been a decade of grinding toward it.”
Method Man, Redman and Raekwon are each hip-hop legends, but they aren’t resting on their laurels. Huddled inside of Red Bull’s Los Angeles studio, the veteran MCs are gearing up for their Red Bull Spiral Freestyle. Before filming the cypher, Redman reflects on what this moment means for him and for rap’s evolution.
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“It’s not just about us. It’s about the culture of Hip-Hop,” Redman tells Billboard. “We lettin’ people know, we’re ’90s dudes, but we still got fire… You young cats, let me see how active you are when you’re 54 years old. Because I’m 54. People be like, ‘You 54?’ Yeah, I’m 54! I just take care of myself and I still body s–t. This gives us the opportunity to let that cultural vibe out to the world.”
That vibe is on full display in this Red Bull 1520 release. With the dynamic energy they’re all known for, the venerated icons deliver what’s billed as a one-take performance in this dynamic visual. And while they have a history of collaborations — including Wu-Tang Clan’s “Red Bull,” for example — this marks “the first-ever freestyle track exclusively featuring all three MCs,” according to a press release.
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The three rap titans sat down with Billboard to discuss the art of the cypher during this Red Bull 1520 shoot. The trio hit on the art form’s expansion from parks and alleys to the TV screen and beyond. They also highlight memorable cypher verses from the likes of Kendrick Lamar, Eminem and Ol’ Dirty Bastard.
No strangers to cyphers in the form of posse cuts, they also break down some behind-the-scenes stories from celebrated classic songs (and one that never happened). Finally, they drop gems for future MCs too.
Since you’re here for the Spiral Freestyle Cypher, what’s your favorite personal cypher story?
Redman: The end of Yo! MTV Raps with all of us on it. Me, Meth, Special Ed, even MC Hammer was there. It was epic and we all barred up! Shout out to Doctor Dré and Ed Lover for supporting the community of Hip-Hop for so long. Let me mention one more, too. I liked the Def Squad cipher on BET. We was bodyin’ s–t!
Raekwon: Some of my favorite ciphers probably was in the community. We’d go to the park and be in the staircases. These were amateur rhymes from guys from our community. For us, it was always freestyling, gettin’ high, smokin’ blunts, 40 ounces, bangin’ on the hallway door. That, to me, was some of my greatest times of being in cyphers. We’d spin a bottle around a room, so whatever the last word he said, the next man picked it up. That’s the essence of freestyling, to be able to get in a room and pick it up when it’s your turn, to carry the torch.
Method Man: When we first started out, everywhere we went, it was a cypher. You had to basically rhyme all f—kin’ night, because you had a record deal, or n—as wouldn’t respect you. Plus, if you really enjoyed it, that was the kind of s–t you did.
Outside of your own, what’s been the best cipher you’ve seen in person or on film?
Redman: I like Kendrick Lamar’s freestyle on BET. Him and TDE. There’s so many elements to a freestyle. It’s not just about bars. It’s the movement; it’s the body language. My favorite part of Kendrick’s freestyle was when he high-fived ScHoolboy Q. See, I pay attention to little things like that. It was the perfect high-five! It was clean and you heard it! I know when or if he sees this, he’ll be like, “Wow, that guy is detailed. He knows what he talking about.” Because I know that hand slap was practiced and perfected.
Eminem too… Em always bodyin’ s–t. What he was talking about [during a BET Hip-Hop Awards freestyle], the purpose he was talking about when he was freestyling is what I liked. He could have blacked out and just went HAM, but he talked about purpose and things that was going on, so [I] highly respect it.
Raekwon: One year, we went to [the] Jack the Rapper [convention]. It was an event, but it felt like a neighborhood, because everybody from all over was there… We’d run up and start battles. I remember, [Ol’ Dirty Bastard], God bless his soul, would approach artists and say, “Shoot [your rhyme].” They shoot they rhyme, thinking that we were just inspired, but they don’t know they just walked into a f—kin’ liquid sword fight. I remember Dirty goin’ crazy. “I grab the mic and I damage ya/ Crush ya whole stamina/ Here comes the medical examiner!” Those three lines right there was like, “Holy s–t!”
Method Man: My favorite moment — I wasn’t there, but it was when [Busta] and Dirty had that cypher…It was kind of like a battle, but it wasn’t, but it was very respectable. And I think that started their friendship from that day, where they was, like, inseparable…I [also] really liked the Slaughterhouse/Eminem cipher. That s–t was dope. They was killing it. I also liked a battle rapper cipher that they did on their own. Everybody caught a body on that. K-Shine killed it. Those are the ones that stick out in my mind.
Posse cuts are kind of like cyphers in recorded musical form. What’s been your favorite story from a posse cut experience?
Redman: One of my memorable posse cuts was [“Headbanger”], with Hit Squad, EPMD and K-Solo. It was so much tension on that video, because Erick [Sermon] and Parrish [Smith] was breaking up at the time. Parrish had his crew over here, and E had us and his crew over here. It almost came to blows on the set. At that time, [I was like] “Damn, man, I hope I don’t have to fight my own dudes.”
I was kind of pissed because it was my turn to shine. Everyone was supposed to be like, “Redman came out with his album. Let’s go back on the road and help promote his s–t.” But everything broke up when I was coming out. It was something for me to learn from… I was thinking, “I gotta get my a-s up and get away from this. I can’t depend on the Hit Squad giving me that support that I needed.” It triggered something in me, and gave me a lot of motivation. That right there catapulted me into an independent career.
Raekwon: Making “Protect Ya Neck.” That record was a posse cut with nine members getting on a song… When we did “Protect Ya Neck,” I wasn’t even trying to kill nothin’. I just wanted to be involved, because I kind of was seeing the future of what we were going to be. If you notice, I went second. Inspectah Deck went first. When I heard his verse, I had to go next — because I’m like, “F—k waiting!” I just threw my little rhyme in to keep the momentum up.
Method Man: I can tell you about a song that never happened. Busta [Rhymes] was doing an album. He wanted myself, Biggie and Nas on the record. I remember the first time we tried to do the record, Nas didn’t show up. It was weird that night. A bunch of weird s–t happened that night. But the record never got done. Then we went to the other spot. I think it was Quad? I’m not sure. Everybody showed up but the elevator was broke, and B.I.G. wouldn’t walk up the stairs, man. So we never got that record done. That’s one that I wish would have happened.
Another studio session that stood out to me — I was in the studio with Dr. Dre, and by the time I left there, I couldn’t even spell my own f—kin’ name. Just the anxiety, first of all, being in there with Dre — and second, just the level of smoking. I smoke, but the level of smoking and the grade of the smoke, I was not in the right place at the right time, that’s for sure. And I should have murdered that s–t! But I was off. I vowed that would never happen again.
Sometimes you hear about people changing verses on posse cuts. An MC will hear a verse and go, “I might need to change my verse.” What’s been your experience with that sort of thing?
Raekwon: I remember making this record [“John Blaze”]. It was me, Nas, Jadakiss, Fat Joe, and Big Pun, God bless his soul. Everybody told me I scored. I wrote my rhyme kind of quick, though, so I didn’t even really think too hard on it. But I heard, between there, that there was a lot of cats shufflin’ they rhymes and going back-and-forth. I think I was mad at Joe… I was like, “You let cats go back in and do they s–t over? Why you ain’t let me get mine over?” You know, we’s all laughing. But it was all out of fun because, you know, that’s what the game represents sometimes.
That’s what makes hip-hop so dope, because we all realize when it’s certain guys that’s in the room that get busy, it’s a chess game now. You want to make sure that you push the right envelope with your rhyme and make sure your s–t hits the way you want it to hit. That was just probably one situation… sometimes, it happens. But I’m confident in anything I throw out.
Oh, and [Mobb Deep’s] “Eye for a Eye [(Your Beef Is Mines)]” too. I wish I had another chance to spin the bottle on that one, because a lot of times when I write, I write at the moment, because I be so hyped. It’s like — the person who know how to cook, they don’t got time to measure. They just season it with their hand, chef it up, boom-boom-boom. Eat it, it’s good, you love it. I love this s–t. But if I really had time to measure, to calculate, to do it the way I feel I want to do it-do it-do it, then it’s a different story. Then you’re going to get an even more impactful chef. But you know, I’m always able to serve and do what I gotta do.
Redman: If I jump on a record with somebody, I record in my own studio. Before I send it in, I live with it for like 2-3 days. I be very skeptical of myself. I don’t worry about what the next man’s saying. It’s really about my purpose and what I’m saying. I might go back in, I might switch a couple of words around before I send it out. But yeah, I proofread everything I do, and I make sure that I execute correctly when I send it out, and I’m happy with it… I have never heard anyone in the world that has ever made me want to change my verse. I know that I’m coming with something different and I’m coming to body s–t.
Like me and Eminem, when we wrote the record for “Off the Wall,” we wrote the song right there in the studio. I flew to Detroit. We wrote this song right there in the studio, and we laid it, and we didn’t go back. I didn’t hear his vocals — and I was like, “Damn, I should have tightened this. I should have said this. I need to go back.” No, we was very happy with what we wrote. I never in my life have changed my verse because of another man. If I change my verse, it’s before I sent it out and I wasn’t happy with a word that I said, but it was never because of anyone else.
Method Man: I had one person ask me to go back and do a verse, and I kind of – I didn’t tell them this so I’m not naming any names – but I kind of took it personal, and I went in on that motherf—kin’ verse. The worst s–t you can do is ask a n—a to come a little harder or something, especially if he felt like he did. But it’s the best thing you can do as well, because sometimes we need that reality check, or sometimes you need to check a n—a for saying that your s–t wasn’t hard enough. “What do you mean it ain’t hard enough, n—a?” You know what I mean? So, yeah, it’s a good thing.
If you had to advise a young up-and-comer, what’s the mentality that an MC should have for a cipher?
Redman: What’s your purpose when you’re coming into a freestyle? Is it to impress the guys around you? Is it to impress the fans, or is it to start making a cornerstone in hip-hop for you? Will this freestyle be memorable for the next 20 years? I’m gonna give you a perfect example. How I got on [was through] Biz Markie, rest in peace, my big brother, Biz Markie. I was getting on with EPMD, but also Biz Markie took me around battling. I got heard freestylin’ at [a park] in Queens… I was doing it for the culture of Jersey. Like, “I’m from Jersey. I’m battlin’ a lot of New York dudes. I gotta put my city on my back.”
Someone had a tape recorder [at the park]. They recorded the freestyle, sent it to [the] Stretch and Bobbito show in New York. Stretch and Bobbito played that freestyle and it went — if you will, in the ’90s — viral through the circuit. I was known for that freestyle as much as I was known for the record I did with EPMD that introduced me. So I say that to say this: Young artists, when you freestyle, make sure you have a purpose. It’s cool to just body s–t and be cute with punchlines and all that bulls–t, but have a goal. Everything is purpose. What you do in life, even this music, even down to the littlest thing like a freestyle, try to have purpose.
Method Man: Stay out of [cyphers]. They don’t pay your bills no mo’. That was for us. It was a sport, like slapboxing back in the day. Somebody’s talking a lot of s–t? Let’s see what you got, man. We didn’t have SoundCloud and s–t like that. So you were always looking for an opportunity to show motherf—kers that you ’bout this s–t. That was the importance of it. Nowadays, we don’t have to do that.
But wait, what was the question again? What type of mentality shouldn’t you bring into a cypher? Keep that other s–t I said, but that is a great question. Don’t come on that hard rock s–t, like you harder than the ground you walkin’ on — because you’ll f—k around and get beat up, and then it’s beyond hip-hop. Don’t battle in nobody neighborhood if you ain’t from there. You can go in they city, but don’t go in they neighborhood and battle there. That ain’t going to work out too well for you there, playboy. You don’t want to do that.
Raekwon: Don’t panic. Be smart. Be clever. Sometimes, you can have a dope rhyme but if you don’t say it right, you might have lost the game. You may sometimes win based on cadence. Always look at it as a competition. It’s a sport. You came to “bus’ ass” like Busta would say. Take it for real. Write something dope. Today, I wrote something fresh off the stove, right off the grill. So I would say, come in, be strong, believe in your rhyme and flow… and just breathe, man. Breathe on it.
Cher is out there hitting all the usual spots promoting her long-awaited autobiography, Cher, The Memoir: Part One. And a recurring theme in her chats is how unapologetically Cher she is, including talking candidly about how hard it was reviewing her 78 years on Earth, most of which she’s spent in the public eye.
And, Cher being Cher, sometimes that forthrightness can tip over into not-safe-for-morning-TV talk. That’s exactly what happened on The Today Show on Tuesday morning (Nov. 19), when the singing legend sat down to talk about the memoir with co-host Hoda Kotb and dropped an uncensored F-bomb while telling a hilarious story about some solid relationship and career advice she got from late comedy icon Lucille Ball.
To be fair, Cher warned Kotb that she was going to sprinkle some zesty language into the breakfast mix when the host asked about what Ball had counseled when Cher split from husband/singing partner Sonny Bono in 1975. “I can’t say it on TV,” Cher said before making sure that producers were “going to bleep it.” When Kotb promised that it would be censored, Cher went ahead and told the story, as-is.
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She then described reaching out to Ball — who went through a similarly public break-up with her husband and I Love Lucy co-star, Desi Arnaz, 15 years earlier — who gave some sage, and salty, advice after Cher found out that, as she told Kotb, Bono had taken “all her money” before their split. “I said, ‘Lucy, I’m calling you because to my knowledge, there’s never been a situation besides mine except yours,’” Cher said she told Ball about a female entertainer who publicly left their on- and off-screen spouse. “And she said, “F–k him. You’re the one with the talent!’”
Though the f-word is now bleeped in the online video of the moment on the Today feeds, after it happened a clearly shocked Kotb said, “Oh!… we didn’t have the seven-second [delay]. But we will get it for the next feed!”
After realizing the f-bomb had not been bleeped, Cher turned to Kotb and pointed the finger, saying, “Well you said I could!”
Kotb laughed, saying, “I should have bleeped it myself! Bleep!”
That oopsie moment followed Cher’s Monday night (Nov. 18) visit to the Tonight Show, where she did another funny bit with host Jimmy Fallon and talked about how difficult it was to really lay it all out in the book — which is the first half of a two-part project that will be followed by Part Two next year.
“It was a b–ch,” she told Fallon about the first half of the book, which follows her rise from Cherilyn Sarkisian to worldwide fame as one-half of the Sonny & Cher duo. “It’s not going through your life that’s hard so much. But I did it a couple of times because the first time it didn’t work out. The second time I just didn’t want to tell anything. And then I thought, ‘You know what? Give back the money.’ It’s hard because when you’re telling your life there’s parts you’d like to guard.”
More importantly for her fans, the new Rock and Roll Hall of Famer also casually mentioned that she’s working on her twenty eighth studio album and follow-up to 2018’s ABBA cover album Dancing Queen; she released the Christmas holiday album in 2023. When Fallon asked if a new LP was on the horizon, Cher said she’s “about to” begin work on one to wild applause from the audience.
Watch Cher on the Tonight Show below.
Cardi B has big plans for 2025, from a new album to a romantic conquest.
In a clip from a recent Instagram livestream hosted by the rapper, Cardi tells fans that she’s been “wilding out lately” but wants to “get [her] f–king life together.” “I have so much things coming next year,” she continued. “I know next year is gonna be my f–king year.”
The Bronx native went on to share her to-do list for the new year: “My album will be out. My secret businesses will be out. Hopefully next year I get a little boyfriend.”
Billboard has reached out to Cardi’s rep for comment.
Fans have been waiting on a new LP from Cardi for well over half a decade at this point, with 2018’s Billboard 200-topping debut album Invasion of Privacy remaining the entirety of her discography six and a half years later. She previously teased in October that her sophomore effort was “coming really, really soon” and confirmed that she was actively working on it in the studio.
But, as Cardi pointed out in her livestream, she’s been quite busy these past few years — 2024 in particular. On the personal front, she welcomed her third baby in September, just a couple weeks after filing for divorce for a second time from Offset. The exes — who have put each other on blast on social media multiple times since their spit — are also parents to daughter Kulture and son Wave.
On the professional front, the “WAP” artist has been spearheading her Whipshots business in between releasing a number of singles this year, including “Like What (Freestyle),” “Enough (Miami),” “Puntería” with Shakira and “Wanna Be” with Megan Thee Stallion and GloRilla.
“This has been the most rudest year I’ve ever experienced,” Cardi summarized on her Live. “I don’t know what the f–k happened this year. I can’t even tell you. A b—h got knocked up, a b—h f–king fell in love, then fell out of love, then got a divorce … I’m going through a very different transition in my f–king life.”
Cardi has also been active in politics this year, championing Democratic candidate Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election and speaking at one of the VP’s final campaign rallies Nov. 1. When Harris ended up losing to Donald Trump, the rapper shared a lengthy message on Instagram, writing, “To Vice President Kamala, no matter what they’ve said to bring you down or belittle your run for presidency they can never say you didn’t run your race with honesty and with integrity!”
“This may not mean much but I am so proud of you!” she added at the time. “No one has ever made me change my mind, and you did! I never thought I would see the day that a woman of color would be running for the President of the United States, but you have shown me, shown my daughters and women across the country that anything is possible.”
Ultra Music Festival has added more than 50 artists to the lineup for its 2025 event this March in Miami.
New to the bill are techno legend Dubfire, who’ll be performing his 2022 album Evolv, melodic house star Gryffin, bass mainstays Knife Party, Claude VonStroke performing as his Barclay Crenshaw bass project, mainstage regulars Steve Aoki and Timmy Trumpet, along with Nico Morena, Stephan Bodzin, Joris Voorn, Kshmr, Tokimonsta, Odd Mob, Peekaboo, Said the Sky and many more.
Additionallly, Australian producer Partiboi69 will bring his Area 69 party to Ultra for the first time, with this stage takeover lineup including debut Ultra performance from Partiboi69 and KETTAMA’s Ketboi69 project, along with Partiboi69 b2b Juicy Romance and Skream playing b2b with Interplanetary Criminal.
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These artists join a previously announced lineup featuring Ultra regulars Armin van Buuren, Carl Cox, Afrojck, Tiësto, Martin Garrix and Hardwell, along with pairings including Anyma b2b Solomun and Knife Party alias Pendulum playing both solo and back to back with Deadmau5. This latter artist will also perform his first ever career-spanning “retro5pective” set, which will see the producer playing his classic hits.
Meanwhile, Swedish House Mafia’s Axwell will perform his first ever solo headlining set on the mainstage, Dom Dolla and John Summit will play for the first time in Miami with a mainstage set under their Everything Always name, and Above & Beyond will play the fest for the first time in six years. Richie Hawtin will also debut his DEX EFX X0X show at the event. Gesaffelstein will play Ultra for the first time in a decade.
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Ultra 2025 will also feature Zedd, Nero, Charlotte de Witte, Four Tet, Lsdream, Miss Monique, Subtronics, Mau P, Eli Brown, Artbat and many more.
Next year will mark the 25th edition of the festival, which returns to downtown Miami’s Bayfront Park on March 28-30. Tickets are on sale now.
See the lineup for Ultra Music Festival 2025 below:
Ultra Music Festival 2025
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Post Malone appeared to let the cat out of the bag about two of his biggest 2025 tour dates. In an Instagram post announcing his most ambitious outing to date — next year’s Big Ass Stadium Tour with Jelly Roll — Malone also included a pair of shows on April 13 and 20 in Indio, […]
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