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Beloved 1980s pop group the Motels have been forced to cancel the remaining dates on their 2024 U.S. tour after singer Martha Davis revealed that she is in the midst of a second battle against breast cancer. In a statement released on Tuesday (Oct. 8), the 73-year-old vocalist said that a pair of planned November […]
With the first quarter of the 21st century coming to a close, Billboard is spending the next few months counting down our staff picks for the 25 greatest pop stars of the last 25 years. We’ve already named our Honorable Mentions and our No. 25, No. 24, No. 23, No. 22, No. 21, No. 20, No. 19, No. 18, No. 17, No. 16, No. 15, No. 14, No. 13 and No. 12 stars, and now we remember the century in Usher — a complete-package superstar who’s evolved with the times and amassed one of the century’s most formidable pop and R&B catalogs.
Not many artists can say they’ve made the successful transition from teen sensation to adult superstar. It’s an exclusive club whose membership brings to mind all-time greats like Stevie Wonder, Michael Jackson, Beyoncé, Taylor Swift… and then there’s Usher, baby: the singing, dancing triple-threat in the Braves hat and the U chain.
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This year, Usher has basically been running on one long career-spanning victory lap, celebrating his 30th anniversary in music and the 20th anniversary of his diamond-certified 2004 classic Confessions, and performing at the Apple Music Super Bowl LVIII Halftime Show in February to the tune of 123 million viewers — the most-watched halftime show ever. And that’s not to say that he’s been stuck in the past either: This February also saw the release of his ninth studio album Coming Home (debuting at No. 2 on the Billboard 200), while in August, he also launched his Past Present Future arena world tour. And all this follows on the heels of Usher’s talk-of-the town My Way – The Vegas Residency that packed both The Colosseum at Caesars Palace in 2021 and the larger Dolby Live at Park MGM a year later – an act he took across the pond with the eight-date Rendez-Vous Á Paris, documented in a concert film released this September. Bottom line: the eight-time Grammy Award winner, who turns 46 on Oct. 14, is riding the wave of one of the most impressive, legacy-cementing comebacks of the last decade.
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It’s a multigenerational R&B/pop legacy built on nine Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 singles and 18 top 10 singles plus four Billboard 200 No. 1 albums. The latter streak began with the singer-songwriter’s epic 2004 album Confessions, whose nine weeks at the top led to it being crowned the Year-End Billboard 200’s No. 1 album – the same year that his era-defining “Yeah!” team-up with Lil Jon and Ludacris ended up No. 1 on the Year-End Hot 100. But more significant than the history-making chart stats, sales certifications and industry accolades that Usher has racked up along the way is his innate artistry — a crucial key to his staying power.
There’s his sensual, supple tenor, which easily shape-shifts from crooning balladeer to party jam belter and hits the entire emotional spectrum in between. Equally as arresting are the intricate choreography and smooth footwork that are the hallmarks of his energetic and engaging stage presence. Who else could make rollerskating and singing simultaneously look so cool and easy? Then there’s the music itself: Yes, R&B and pop played the central roles in his career evolution, but the inquisitive music lover has never shied away from experimenting with other genres — dabbling in everything from hip-hop and crunk to EDM and trap, crafting engaging melodies, ear-worm lyrics and hooks you can’t help but sing along with. He’s also been unafraid to reach out to the next generation, linking up over the last several years with younger artists like Chris Brown (“New Flame”), Summer Walker (“Come Thru”), Ella Mai (“Don’t Waste My Time”), H.E.R. (“Risk It All”) and Justin Bieber (the remix to Bieber’s Hot 100-topping hit “Peaches”) — all of whom no doubt also count Usher as a key influence on their own artistry.
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Usher Raymond IV was just 15 years old himself when LaFace/Arista Records began setting the stage for the precocious newcomer with the 1994 release of his self-titled debut album. Mixing R&B, hip-hop and new jack swing, the album — preceded by puberty claiming Usher’s vocal range at one point — bowed at No. 167 on the Billboard 200. Despite that low entry point, the project still proved to be a buzz-builder, presaging Usher’s first major breakthrough as a singer-songwriter on the cusp of the new millennium: 1997’s My Way.
At a time when the ‘70s-influenced neo-soul movement — embodied by D’Angelo, Erykah Badu and Maxwell — was making its mainstream ascendance, Usher’s refreshing brand of contemporary R&B was striking a chord with fans by way of its youthful, vibrant take on love, sexuality and burgeoning adulthood. The now-7x-platinum RIAA-certified project spun off three top-two Hot 100 smashes: “You Make Me Wanna…,” “Nice & Slow” (his first No. 1) and “My Way.”
A year after the millennium’s arrival, Usher catapulted into the upper level of the Billboard 200 with the No. 4 first-week debut of 8701. Initially titled All About U, his third album was delayed from its original 2000 release date thanks to leaks of several tracks, including under-performing first single “Pop Ya Collar.” Collaborating with a bevy of hitmakers — Antonio “L.A.” Reid, Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds, Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, The Neptunes, Jermaine Dupri and Bryan-Michael Cox — the revamped and retitled album (reportedly a reference to the year Usher first performed publicly, 1987, and the album’s Aug. 7, 2001 release date) found Usher delivering a spirited and emotive next-gen take on love and relationships primarily inspired by R&B/soul giants such as Wonder, Jackson, Marvin Gaye and Donny Hathaway.
Two of the album’s U-titled tracks, “U Remind Me” (the new album’s official first single) and “U Got It Bad” nabbed the top spot on the Hot 100. A third, “U Don’t Have to Call,” reached No. 3. Since certified 5x platinum, 8701 gave Usher his first Grammy for best male R&B vocal performance (“U Remind Me”) plus a second win in that category the following year (“U Don’t Have to Call”). An added plus: fans finally got the chance to experience firsthand the versatile tenor’s falsetto and other vocal riffs plus his agile dance moves when the showman-in-the-making embarked on his first concert outing, 2002’s 44-city 8701 Evolution Tour.
If 8701 was Usher’s coming-of-age bow, 2004’s Confessions was the coronation of his status as one of the marquee pop artists of the 2000s. Bowing at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with first-week sales of 1.1 million, the now diamond-certified, career-defining project found the 25-year-old crooner reuniting with Dupri and Cox and Jam & Lewis, sharing deeper experiential musings about love and relationships alongside banging party jams. Chief among the offerings on the dance, pop, hip-hop and crunk-infused album were three Hot 100 No. 1s: the club-ready “Yeah!” with Lil Jon and Ludacris, the yearning “Burn” and the guilt-wracked “Confessions Part II.” Added as a bonus cut to the album’s deluxe edition, the nostalgic love duet “My Boo” with Alicia Keys became Usher’s fourth No. 1 of the calendar year, with fifth single “Caught Up” becoming the set’s final top 10 hit. Confessions later won the Grammy for best contemporary R&B album. Prior to the end of 2004, Usher added yet another top five hit to his arsenal when he and Ludacris reteamed with Lil Jon on the latter’s single “Lovers and Friends.”
Confessions’ epic success sparked a string of three more Billboard 200 No. 1 albums for Usher, reminiscent of idol Michael Jackson’s No. 1 run beginning with 1982’s Thriller in 1982. Usher’s own run kicked off four years after Confessions with 2008’s Here I Stand. By then a husband and father, Usher ongoing maturation musically and personally was reflected in its six single releases. Those included the synth-layered, Polow da Don-produced lead single “Love in This Club” featuring Young Jeezy (another Hot 100-topper, and the set’s biggest hit) and the Grammy-nominated ballad/title track. Here I Stand was another success, but industry observers noted as well that the album’s double-platinum success paled in comparison to Confessions’ more ee-popping achievements.
Here I Stand was followed by fellow No. 1 albums Raymond v. Raymond in 2010 and Looking 4 Myself in 2012. The former project, certified 3x platinum and released in the wake of the artist’s divorce from Tameka Foster, included the Hot 100 No. 1 dance-pop single “OMG,” produced by and featuring will.i.am, as well as the R&B hits “Hey Daddy (Daddy’s Home)” and “There Goes My Baby.” Also of note was the song “Papers”: Recorded before the singer filed for divorce, the song was a insightful and vulnerable nod to the personal struggles he was dealing with at the time. The song reached No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart and peaked at No. 31 on the Hot 100.
Usher deepened his experimentation into electronic music, with forays into Euro-pop and dubstep, on Looking 4 Myself. His first project for RCA Records boasted the respective top 10 and top 20 hits “Scream” and Grammy winner for best R&B performance “Climax,” co-produced by Diplo. The latter track, an electronic-punctuated slow jam about a tenuous relationship, brought Usher some of his strongest critical acclaim. However, the album – lauded for its alt-R&B vibes in what Usher described as “revolutionary pop” — was his lowest-selling No. 1 entry. At that same time, mainstream R&B was in the midst of shifting away from the pop star hybrid model that Usher symbolized, and moving towards more underground-leaning emerging stars like The Weeknd, Frank Ocean and Miguel.
The ebb and flow that can accompany any veteran hitmaker’s career trajectory continued for Usher into the mid- to late 2010s. Prior to the 2016 release of his eighth studio album Hard II Love, he released three singles in 2014 — the Grammy-nominated, platinum-certified R&B hit “Good Kisser,” “She Came to Give It to You” featuring Nicki Minaj (a top 20 Rhythmic Airplay hit and the electro/R&B percolator “I Don’t Mind” featuring Juicy J (No. 11 on the Hot 100; No. 1 Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs). All three were intended for Hard II Love, but only appeared on the album’s Japanese edition.
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Leaning back in a more R&B direction, the artist collaborated with songwriter-producers such as Raphael Saadiq, Pop & Oak, The-Dream and Metro Boomin for the resulting Hard II Love. Debuting at No. 5 on the Billboard 200, the album gained the dubious distinction of becoming Usher’s first album to not bow at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 in 12 years, and failed to generate a Hot 100 hit bigger than the No. 32-peaking Young Thug collab “No Limit” (though the song topped R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay, while later single “Missin U” went top 10 on Adult R&B Airplay). Meanwhile, his last North America tour had been 2014’s UR Experience.
Five years after Hard II Love — with no new full-length releases, aside from his 2018 mini-album A alongside producer Zaytoven — Usher and his team placed their bets on another venture: launching his first Las Vegas residency. The July 2021 gamble paid off in more ways than one: The sold-out My Way tenure wasn’t only an affirmation of Usher’s estimable career, it also doubled as a creative rebirth and introduction to a new generation of fans. Next came the Super Bowl and the ongoing world tour. In between, Usher’s ninth studio album Coming Home arrived — the first release on his indie label Mega, co-founded with L.A. Reid and in association with Larry Jackson’s gamma. Featuring the No. 25 Hot 100 hit “Good Good” and “Risk It All,” the project bowed at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 to become his highest-charting effort in over a decade.
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Growing up musically and personally in the public eye isn’t an easy feat. But Usher has proven his staying power with aplomb — and an indefatigable outlook. As he told Billboard in August 2021 with his always-disarming smile, “People are critical. But you continue to do it for the love. You do it for the people to connect with what you’re trying to articulate. That pressure is there every time. That’s why I try to give myself as much of a shot as I possibly can by giving fans variety. You’re going to like something.”
Read more about the Greatest Pop Stars of the 21st Century here — and be sure to check back next Tuesday as we start to unveil our top 10 artists!
We all know that women have been dominating the music scene in the past year, but get this: 10 of the 11 artists with the most nominations for the 2024 MTV EMAs are women. The only man who cracked the leaderboard is Kendrick Lamar, with four nods.
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Taylor Swift leads with seven nods, including best artist, best video, best pop and biggest fans. Ariana Grande, Billie Eilish, Charli XCX and Sabrina Carpenter each scored five nominations. Closely following with four nods each are Ayra Starr, Beyoncé, Lamar, LISA, plus first-time nominees Chappell Roan and Tyla.
These nominees also demonstrate the globalization of pop music. Charli XCX hails from England; Starr from Nigeria; LISA from Thailand (though she is best known as a member of a South Korean girl group, BLACKPINK); and Tyla from South Africa.
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The show is set to be broadcast live on Sunday, Nov. 10, from Co-op Live in Manchester, U.K. Last year’s ceremony was set for Nov. 5 in Paris, but was canceled two weeks before the show due to the Israel–Hamas war, becoming the first EMAs to be canceled in its 30-year history.
Nineteen nominees have the chance to score their first ever MTV EMA at this year’s show, including Kehlani and Tinashe in the best R&B category, Disclosure and Fred Again.. for best electronic, Fontaines D.C. for best alternative, The Last Dinner Party for best new and BTS’ Jimin for best K-pop, which marks his first nomination as a solo artist.
Fans can vote for their favorites on the EMAs website from now until 00:00 CET on Nov. 6.
The winner in the best video category will be chosen by MTV. The nominees are Grande’s “We Can’t Be Friends (Wait for Your Love),” Charli XCX’s “360,” Eminem’s “Houdini,” Lamar’s “Not Like Us,” LISA featuring Rosalía’s “New Woman” and Swift featuring Post Malone’s “Fortnight.”
Fans from 23 regions around the world can also vote for their favorite artists in the best regional act categories. These categories reflect the territories in which MTV operates.The biggest fans category will be voted for at a later date on social via @MTVEMA.
The 2024 MTV EMAs will broadcast at 9 p.m. GMT Sunday, Nov. 10, on MTV UK, Channel 5 and Pluto TV, and will be available on demand on Paramount+ from Nov. 12. Tickets will be on sale at a later date.
Bruce Gillmer and Richard Godfrey are executive producers for the 2024 MTV EMAs. Debbie Phillips and Chloe Mason are producers.
This will be the eighth time the EMAs have been held in the U.K. The show has been in London three times, and in Liverpool, England; Edinburgh, Scotland; Belfast, Northern Ireland; and Glasgow, Scotland once each.
Here’s the full list of 2024 MTV EMA nominations.
Best song
Ariana Grande – “We Can’t Be Friends (Wait for Your Love)”
Benson Boone – “Beautiful Things”
Beyoncé – “Texas Hold ‘Em”
Billie Eilish – “Birds of a Feather”
Chappell Roan – “Good Luck, Babe!”
Sabrina Carpenter – “Espresso”
Best video
Ariana Grande – “We Can’t Be Friends (Wait for Your Love)”
Charli XCS – “360”
Eminem – “Houdini”
Kendrick Lamar – “Not Like Us”
LISA feat. Rosalía – “New Woman”
Taylor Swift feat. Post Malone – “Fortnight”
Best artist
Beyoncé
Billie Eilish
Post Malone
Raye
Sabrina Carpenter
Taylor Swift
Best collaboration
Charli XCX & Billie Eilish – “Guess” feat. Billie Eilish
Future, Metro Boomin & Kendrick Lamar – “Like That”
Lady Gaga, Bruno Mars – “Die With a Smile”
LISA feat. Rosalía – “New Woman”
Peso Pluma, Anitta – “Bellakeo”
Taylor Swift ft. Post Malone – “Fortnight”
Best new
Ayra Starr
Benson Boone
Chappell Roan
LE SSERAFIM
Teddy Swims
The Last Dinner Party
Tyla
Best pop
Ariana Grande
Billie Eilish
Camila Cabello
Charli XCX
Dua Lipa
Sabrina Carpenter
Taylor Swift
Best Afrobeats
Asake
Ayra Starr
Burna Boy
Rema
Tems
Tyla
Best rock
Bon Jovi
Coldplay
Green Day
Kings of Leon
Lenny Kravitz
Liam Gallagher
The Killers
Best Latin
Anitta
Bad Bunny
Karol G
Peso Pluma
Rauw Alejandro
Shakira
Best K-pop
Jimin
Jung Kook
LE SSERAFIM
LISA
NewJeans
Stray Kids
Best alternative
Fontaines D.C.
Hozier
Imagine Dragons
Lana Del Rey
Twenty One Pilots
Yungblud
Best electronic
Calvin Harris
David Guetta
Disclosure
DJ Snake
Fred Again..
Swedish House Mafia
Best hip-hop
Central Cee
Eminem
Kendrick Lamar
Megan Thee Stallion
Nicki Minaj
Travis Scott
Best R&B
Kehlani
SZA
Tinashe
Tyla
Usher
Victoria Monét
Best live
Adele
Coldplay
Doja Cat
Raye
Taylor Swift
Travis Scott
Best push
Ayra Starr
Chappell Roan
Coco Jones
Flyana Boss
Jessie Murph
Laufey
LE SSERAFIM
Mark Ambor
Shaboozey
Teddy Swims
The Warning
Victoria Monét
Biggest fans
Anitta
Ariana Grande
Beyoncé
Billie Eilish
Chappell Roan
Charli xcx
Katy Perry
LISA
Nicki Minaj
Sabrina Carpenter
Shawn Mendes
Taylor Swift
Best U.K. & Ireland act
Central Cee
Charli XCX
Chase & Status
Dua Lipa
Hozier
Raye
Cheetos is planning to leave its mark for the third year in a row in honor of its Deja Tu Huella campaign at Billboard Latin Music Week and we have all the details on the Miami takeover. Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news In line with the […]
On Oct. 8, 1994, Toby Keith’s “Who’s That Man” ascended to No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart. It became the second of his 20 career leaders, among 42 top 10s. The hit, which Keith wrote and Nelson Larkin and Harold Shedd produced, was released as the lead single from Keith’s sophomore LP, Boomtown. […]
A$AP Rocky and Rihanna have two kids together — sons RZA and Riot — but the Harlem rapper knew she was the one since they connected when they were just emerging stars.
Rocky detailed his special connection with RiRi and gushed about the mother of his children while gracing the cover of W Magazine on Tuesday (Oct. 8), which was shot by Rihanna.
“I knew from when we were younger,” he said of when he knew the nine-time Grammy winner — whom he called his “perfect person” in his Billboard cover story — was the one to be the mother of his kids. “We both did, I think. So it was only right when we got older. We just kind of reconnected.”
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The “Fashion Killa” rapper also recalled a time when he was kicked out of a nightclub, and Rihanna came outside and stuck up for him to the staff to let him get inside. Rocky added that they began dating prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, around “2019, 2020.”
“It’s a lot of history between us. I was kicked out of this nightclub,” he said. “They wasn’t giving me no access to it. This is when I’m just starting out, so nobody knows me. I was with Matthew Williams and Virgil. I was getting into it with the bouncers, and she came out. We just locked eyes. She didn’t even know us, but she was like, ‘Yo! Why y’all not letting him in? What’s wrong with you?! Let that man in!’”
A portion of the interview was conducted across the street from Rocky’s NYC apartment, where the late creative Virgil Abloh shot the “Fashion Killa” music video in 2012. Rocky shared, “This is very special because this is the first place she fell in love with me.”
RZA was born in 2022, and Riot followed the next year. The A$AP Mob frontman credited having his mom and Rihanna’s parents around to help them. “I’m so happy that I at least still got one parent,” he stated. “If I didn’t have the support of our [his and Rihanna’s] parents, I don’t know what we would be doing.”
Rocky has been busy on the music side as well as he prepares for the release of his anticipated Don’t Be Dumb, which was delayed until the fall. He’s charted a trio of singles to the Billboard Hot 100 with “Hijack,” (No. 89) “Tailor Swif” (No. 84) and the J. Cole-assisted “Ruby Rosary” (No. 85).
Rihanna Photographs A$AP Rocky for the Cover of W Magazine Vol. 5 | The Originals Issue
Rihanna for W Magazine
Chris Martin and Coldplay are going back to the start. The group announced yet another extension of their record-setting Music of the Spheres tour on Tuesday morning (Oct. 8) via a set of summer 2025 North American shows that will kick off more than three years after the tour first touched down in the U.S. and Canada on May 6, 2022; it officially launched in San José, Costa Rica in March 2022.
The 10 newly added gigs will include Coldplay’s debut stadium performances in Stanford, CA, El Paso, Denver, Las Vegas, Nashville and Madison, WI; in fact, the latter gig will mark the first music event at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Camp Randall Stadium since a 1997 Rolling Stones gig. The band will also have the honor of being one of the first bands to perform at Toronto’s newest venue, the 50,000-capacity Rogers Stadium, set to open in June 2025.
After launching on May 31 at Stanford Stadium, the tour will hit Las Vegas, Denver, El Paso, Toronto, Foxborough, MA, Madison and Nashville before winding down on July 26 at Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium.
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Fans can sign up for an artist presale now through Thursday (Oct. 10) at 10 a.m. ET here; artist presale begins on Friday (Oct. 11) at 9 a.m. local time, with a general onsale launching on Friday at noon local time here. The group will also offer up a limited number of affordable $20 Infinity tickets for every show at noon local time on Nov. 22, with a two-ticket limit per purchaser.
According to a release, since the tour’s launch it has sold more than 10 million tickets across shows in Europe, North America, Latin America, Asia, Australia and New Zealand, making it the most-attended tour by a group of all time. Support acts for the 2025 shows have not yet been announced.
In the meantime, the Spheres tour will visit Australia again in late October and early November before moving on to Abu Dhabi and Mumbai, India in January 2025, followed by Hong Kong and Seoul in April. The band also announced an update on their extensive sustainability initiatives on the tour, which they said has produced 59% less CO2e emissions on a show-by-show basis to date than their 2016-2017 stadium tour, exceeding their original target of 50% reductions. They also noted that more than nine million trees have been planted around the world as part of the tour’s green efforts, with another million to be planted before year’s end.
Last week, Coldplay released its 10th album, Moon Music, which features the singles “We Pray” and “feelslikefallinginlove.”
Check out the Music of the Spheres 2025 North American dates below:
May 31 — Stanford, CA @ Stanford Stadium
June 6 — Las Vegas, NV @ Allegiant Stadium
June 10 — Denver, CO @ Empower Field at Mile High
June 13 — El Paso, TX @ Sun Bowl Stadium
July 7 — Toronto, ON @ Rogers Stadium
July 8 — Toronto, ON @ Rogers Stadium
July 15 — Foxborough, MA @ Gillette Stadium
July 19 — Madison, WI @ Camp Randall Stadium
July 22 — Nashville, TN @ Nissan Stadium
July 26 — Miami, FL @ Hard Rock Stadium
Billy Strings’ Highway Prayers arrives at No. 1 on Billboard’s all-genre Top Album Sales survey dated Oct. 12.
The set also launches at No. 1 on Bluegrass Albums, marking the first time that bluegrass has boasted the top-selling album among all genres in 22 years. The O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack spent two weeks at No. 1 on Top Album Sales in March 2002. It also ruled Bluegrass Albums for 15 weeks.
Highway Prayers, which includes 20 songs, sold 19,000 – Strings’ biggest career sales week – in the United States in its first week (Sept. 27-Oct. 3), according to Luminate.
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The 32-year-old singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist from Lansing, Mich., now based in the Nashville area, leads Top Album Sales for the first time following three top 10s: Live, Vol. 1 entered at its No. 5 high on the chart dated July 27 with 15,000 sold; Me/And/Dad started at its No. 5 peak in December 2022 with 16,000 sold (his previous high mark); and Renewal began at its No. 7 best in October 2021 (8,000). He posted his initial appearance in October 2019 as Home entered at its No. 34 peak.
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With Highway Prayers, Strings (born William Apostol) earns his fifth leader among eight top 10s on Bluegrass Albums.
Simultaneously, the LP — which Strings produced with Jon Brion — arrives at No. 8 Top Country Albums, awarding Strings his third top 10. The set starts with 24,000 equivalent album units, the largest consumption week of his career. The collection also opens at No. 6 on Americana/Folk Albums, marking his fourth top 10.
Currently on tour, Strings makes his next stop Oct. 11 in Indianapolis.
Billboard’s Top Album Sales chart ranks the top-selling albums of the week based only on traditional album sales. The chart’s history dates to May 25, 1991, when Billboard began tabulating charts with electronically monitored piece count information from SoundScan, now Luminate. Pure album sales were the sole measurement utilized by the Billboard 200 albums chart through the list dated Dec. 6, 2014, after which that chart switched to a methodology that blends album sales with track equivalent album units and streaming equivalent album units.
For all chart news, follow @billboard and @billboardcharts on both X and Instagram.
What was Kamala Harris made for? Billie Eilish thinks the Oval Office.
Just a few weeks after endorsing the VP for president in 2024, the 22-year-old superstar was candid about her thoughts on the fast-approaching general election in a Vogue cover story published Tuesday (Oct. 8). “A lot of my fans are going to be able to vote for the first time,” Eilish told the publication. “So I’m like, ‘Do you like freedom?’”
“First female president? Would be really amazing,” the nine-time Grammy winner continued of Harris. “I would love to feel safe as a woman in my country.”
Eilish first joined the election discourse in September, when she and her older brother, producer Finneas, filmed a video together emphatically endorsing the Democratic ticket. “We are voting for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz because they are fighting to protect our reproductive freedom, our planet and our democracy,” she said at the time. “Vote like your life depends on it — because it does.”
In posting the video to her social media accounts, the “Lunch” singer became just one of many stars to throw support behind Harris ahead of Election Day on Nov. 5. Taylor Swift, Megan Thee Stallion, Cardi B, John Legend, Ariana Grande, Barbra Streisand, Carole King, Bon Iver, Pink and more have all also joined the cause over the past few months, while artists such as Ye, Kid Rock, Jason Aldean and Sexyy Red have backed Republican opponent Donald Trump.
“I mean, this is the most important election of our time, maybe,” Eilish told Vogue, adding that she’s a “really big fan of women’s rights and women’s reproductive rights and social justice and gun laws.”
“It’s so easy to be like, ‘I don’t want to think about it,’” she continued. “I have that same kind of feeling: I’m one person, I can’t make any change. But the truth is, we can all make change. And I have this platform and I’m going to use it.”
See Eilish’s Vogue cover and photos from the shoot below.
Milli Vanilli made Grammy history in 1990, becoming the first (and still the only) act to have a Grammy revoked. Their best new artist award was stripped from them after it became known that the duo hadn’t sung on their smash debut album Girl You Know It’s True.
But Milli Vanilli’s Grammy saga may not be over. The acclaimed documentary Milli Vanilli is among 72 films vying for a Grammy nomination for best music film. The award is given for concert/performance films or music documentaries. Awards are generally presented to the artist, video director and video producer, though we’ll have to wait for the announcement of the nominations on Nov. 8 to see exactly who is being nominated in each case this year. The entry list, from which voting members vote in the first-round of voting, shows the name of the artist in each case for identification purposes, but includes no director or producer credits.
Three past winners in the category are represented. The Beatles, who won for The Beatles Anthology (and had two subsequent titles also win in the category, though they didn’t personally win for those), are entered with Now and Then – The Last Beatles Song (Short Film). Michael Jackson, who won for Making Michael Jackson’s Thriller, is entered with Thriller 40. U2, which won for Zoo TV: Live From Sydney, is entered with Kiss the Future.
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Coldplay, who have been nominated three times in the category (though they have yet to win), is entered with Music of the Spheres: Live at River Plate. The band’s Music of the Spheres album was nominated for album of the year and best pop vocal album last year.
Three past nominees in the category are entered again this year. The Beach Boys are entered with The Beach Boys; Bon Jovi with Thank You, Goodnight: The Bon Jovi Story; and Travis Tritt with Country Chapel. Jon Bon Jovi received the MusiCares Person of the Year honor on Feb. 2.
Taylor Swift/The Eras Tour (Taylor’s Version) is also entered. The doc documents one of the most successful concert tours of all time. Taylor Swift is the only four-time Grammy winner for album of the year and is almost certain to be back in the running in that category this year with The Tortured Poets Department.
The Greatest Night in Pop, which tells the story of the recording of the 1985 smash “We Are the World,” is entered. The film received a Primetime Emmy nomination for outstanding documentary or non-fiction special, but lost to Jim Henson Idea Man. Among the producers of the film: Lionel Richie, who co-wrote the song with Michael Jackson, and Harriet Sternberg, a close associate of the late Ken Kragen, who spearheaded the project.
Jon Batiste’s American Symphony, which was shortlisted for an Academy Award for best documentary feature film late last year (though it wasn’t ultimately nominated), is also entered here. Meanwhile, Céline Dion, who performed on the Eiffel Tower in Paris at the opening ceremony of the Summer Olympics on July 26, is entered with I Am: Céline Dion.
Several films that are linked to albums that have received Grammy nominations in the past are still in the running. We’ve already told you about Coldplay’s Music of the Spheres: Live at River Plate. In addition, Lady Gaga, who was nominated for best pop vocal album four years ago for Chromatica, is entered with Gaga Chromatica Ball, and Lil Nas X, who was nominated for album of the year three years ago for Montero, is entered for Long Live Montero.
The list also features numerous films by or about musicians who have died. In addition to Jackson, they include Chet Atkins (The Making of We Still Can’t Say Goodbye – A Musicians’ Tribute to Chet Atkins and His Legacy Remembered); Syd Barrett (Have You Got It Yet? The Story of Syd Barrett and Pink Floyd); James Brown (James Brown: Say It Loud); June Carter Cash (June); Roy Hargrove (Hargrove); Jerry Lee Lewis (Trouble in My Mind); and Ryuichi Sakamoto (Ryuichi Sakamoto/Opus). A previous film about Brown, Mr Dynamite: The Rise of James Brown, was nominated in 2016.
Willie Nelson, who has always been prolific, is the only artist with two films on the entry list — Willie Nelson & Family and Willie Nelson’s 90th Birthday Celebration.
Thriller 40 isn’t the only anniversary release on the ballot. Weezer’s The Blue Album LIVE/Spotify THIRTY – the 30th Anniversary is also listed.
Stax: Soulsville U.S.A. is entered. A previous film about the fabled record company, Great Performances: Respect Yourself: The Stax Records Story, was nominated in 2009.
Jennifer Lopez’s This Is Me… Now: A Love Story, which was made amid the star’s rekindled romance with Ben Affleck, is on the entry list, even though the couple separated in April and Lopez filed for divorce in August.
Other films of note on the entry list include Sheryl Crow & Jason Isbell featuring Don Isbell’s The Art of Music; Melissa Etheridge’s I’m Not Broken; The Kid LAROI’s Kids Are Growing Up: A Story About a Kid Named LAROI; Cyndi Lauper’s Let the Canary Sing; Kacey Musgraves’ Apple Live Music Live: Kacey Musgraves; Run DMC’s Kings From Queens; Paul Simon’s In Restless Dreams: The Music of Paul Simon; and, Lolla: The Story of Lollapalooza.
First-round voting opened Friday (Oct. 4). Voters have until Oct. 15 to make their choices. Nominations will be announced on Nov. 8. Final-round voting runs from Dec. 12 through Jan. 3. The winners will be revealed on Feb. 2 at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.
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