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LL Cool J returns with his highly anticipated 14th studio album, The Force, which dropped on Friday, Sept. 6.
The release comes after a 10-year break from music, during which the Long Island-born, Queens-raised rapper focused on other ventures, including his acting career and hosting gigs.
In a recent interview with E! News, LL Cool J explained the reasons behind his decade-long hiatus and why this album was worth the wait.
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“I didn’t want to cheat the fans. I wanted them to have a real LL Cool J album,” he shared, adding, “This project is more about the people and cultural impact than anything else.”
The Force also marks a milestone in LL’s career, as it coincides with the 40th anniversary of Def Jam Records, the label where his legendary journey began at just 16 years old.
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Reflecting on his early days with the label, he said, “I called that [Def Jam] phone number every day for a week and a half. That demo led to the creation of Def Jam. Now, 40 years later, here I am putting out this record on Def Jam again.”
It marks LL Cool J’s first album since Authentic in 2013, which featured collaborations with artists like Eddie Van Halen and Seal.
Produced by Q-Tip from A Tribe Called Quest, The Force boasts a lineup of collaborations with heavyweights like Eminem, Snoop Dogg, Nas, Busta Rhymes, and Rick Ross. “He [Q-Tip] produced the s–t out of these joints and did his thing. He’s a brilliant dude,” LL said about working with the producer.
The album also features the long-awaited collaboration between LL and Eminem on the track “Murdergram Deux,” which dropped just ahead of the album’s release.
Stream LL Cool J’s The Force below.
Halsey is giving fans another preview of her highly anticipated concept album The Great Impersonator with her new single, “Ego,” which officially dropped on Friday (Sept. 6). Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news The track, inspired by the ’90s, was first teased during her live show at […]
Linkin Park came roaring back on Thursday night (Sept. 5), with Billboard’s exclusive digital cover story diving into the mega-selling rock band’s surprise return. Emily Armstrong and Colin Brittain have joined the band as co-vocalist and drummer/co-producer, respectively; their new album, From Zero, will be released on Nov. 15; they’ll be playing six arena shows across four continents, beginning next week; and they’ve got big touring plans in 2025.
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And the band kicked everything off in riveting fashion with a livestreamed performance from the Warner lot in Los Angeles on Thursday night, playing a small for hardcore fans for a little over an hour. The set marked the first Linkin Park performance in seven years, following singer Chester Bennington’s tragic death in 2017.
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Following an intro that included bits of “Castle of Glass” and “The Requiem,” the band ripped into “The Emptiness Machine,” which will be the lead single to From Zero. Armstrong appeared onstage midway through the song to deliver her second verse, as a reveal for who would be joining Mike Shinoda as the band’s other lead vocalist.
Linkin Park then performed a mix of their biggest hits (“In the End,” “Numb,” “Crawling”) and fan favorites (“Lying From You,” “Waiting for the End”). They also gave “Lost,” the re-discovered single from their Meteora 20th anniversary set last year, its live debut, with Armstrong leading a piano version of the top 40 hit.
The band will kick off its six-date arena tour next Wednesday (Sept. 11), in Los Angeles. Until then, check out the setlist to Thursday’s intimate performance, and watch the full performance below:
Intro: “The Requiem,” “Castle of Glass”“The Emptiness Machine”“Somewhere I Belong”“Crawling”“Lying From You”“The Catalyst”“Waiting for the End”“Numb”“One Step Closer” “Lost”“What I’ve Done”“In the End” “Faint”
Encore:
“Papercut”“Bleed It Out”
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Megan Thee Stallion and RM of BTS aren’t messing around on their new single “Neva Play,” which dropped Friday (Sept. 6). Released just a week after the pair started teasing that they’d be joining forces on social media, the duet finds the Houston Hottie and K-pop phenomenon taking turns showing off their rap skills. “This […]
Camila Cabello’s C,XOXO era isn’t over yet. The superstar dropped the deluxe, Magic City Edition of the album on Friday (Sept. 6). Cabello announced the expanded edition of the album last week via Instagram, revealing that the project will include her next single, “Godspeed.” “i wish you well, but far away from me,” Cabello captioned a […]
Mr. Big said farewell with its The Big Finish tour, which wrapped up Aug. 23 at Romania’s Way Too Far Rock festival and is documented on The Big Finish Live album and DVD coming out Friday, Sept. 6.
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The group plans to make an actual finish next February, with a couple of shows in Japan.
But if frontman Eric Martin has his way, the “To Be With You” quartet may well be with us again in the future.
Talking to Billboard via Zoom from his home in San Rafael, CA, Martin admits to having second thoughts about packing the band in 35 years after its debut album. “I was right there in the beginning when we were sitting at the online table making the decision — ‘This is it! The big finish!’ I even thought of the name. I was right there with everybody else — ‘It is time. Let’s be done with this!’” Guitarist Paul Gilbert, he adds, had even broached the idea five years prior.
“But now,” Martin says, “after playing on the road with these guys, I felt that we were so tight. We were getting along great. Why are we breaking up? Why is this over? And it’s like, ‘Well, we can’t go back now. All those other bands like Mötley Crüe, Kiss, we laugh at them. We don’t want to be those guys!’ And I’m thinking, ‘Who cares! We made a mistake! Let’s come back!’ You’re supposed to go out with a bang, right, and at the top of your game? We were at the top of our game, tighter than we were back in the ’90s. Let’s not stop!”
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That’s the plan, however, after what are being billed as the final two shows – Feb. 22 in Osaka and Feb. 25 at the Budokan in Tokyo, where The Big Finish Live was recorded last July 26. But Martin says that if Mr. Big’s days as a touring or even a live act are indeed over, he doesn’t think the band has to stop completely.
“I always wanted to keep the door open to making records,” he says, adding that he hopes Ten, which the band released in July, “isn’t the final thing we do. We’re not touring anymore; everyone agreed on that. If nobody wants to tour anymore, that’s cool, but can’t we throw ideas around the table? Have Zoom calls to write some songs? I sure think we can still do that — and I’d love to.”
Martin formed Mr. Big in Los Angeles during 1988 with bassist Billy Sheehan, adding guitarist Paul Gilbert, his chief songwriting partner, and drummer Pat Torpey. The group broke big with its second album, 1991’s platinum Lean Into it — which Mr. Big performed in its entirety throughout the farewell tour; it contained Mr. Big’s biggest single, the chart topping ballad “To Be With You.” The band went through some lineup changes before breaking up in 2002, resuming seven years later and working sporadically since.
Torpey, who Martin calls “the band’s referee,” passed away in 2018 of complications from Parkinson’s disease; Nick D’Virgilio from Spock’s Beard, and other bands was Mr. Big’s final drummer.
“There were some great times and some super bad times, too — it’s a rock band, y’know?” Martin says. “It consumed my life for 30-plus years. I’ve written my best songs with Mr. Big. I cherish that writing relationship I had with Paul Gilbert; him and I just clicked — and Andre Pessis, who wrote a lot of those songs with us.
“Off stage, some of us got along and some of us didn’t’ get along; I’m like the clown prince of rock ‘n’ roll sometimes, and maybe nobody liked that side of me. That’s just my personality. In our band we’d give it all on stage but we’d come off and we weren’t like other bands, partying it up and, ‘Yo, bro, we just kicked ass at a rock concert!’ It was more like the Christian Science Monitor Reading Room; you could hear the sweat hitting the floor. We just gave it everything on the stage.”
Martin says he was gratified that Mr. Big recorded the Ten album — which was also a contractual obligation — even if it doesn’t rock quite as hard as he or Sheehan might have preferred. “I do love the Ten record,” Martin contends. “I liked the process; me and Paul Gilbert wrote together for the first time in so many years. I flew to Portland and basically lived with him and his family, and we wrote from scratch. I did keep saying to him, ‘There’s no ‘Daddy, Brother…’ on here. There’s no ‘Addicted to That Rush.’ But he didn’t want a copycat of the other records; I don’t know if he said that, but I felt that from the vibe and the mojo that was happening in the room. It is totally different from any of our other records, and the fact that we wrote it from scratch, just him and I, I really enjoyed that.”
The Big Finish Live album and film, meanwhile, was decided upon not too long before last summer’s Budokan shows — just six days after the 13-month tour began. The 26 songs include the entirety of the Lean Into It album, as well as covers of Humble Pie’s “30 Days in the Hole,” the Olympics’ “Good Lovin’” with the band members on different instruments and the Who’s “Baba O’Riley.” It also features a five-song acoustic section capped by Cat Stevens’ “Wild World.”
“That was my favorite part, the acoustic portion,” Martin recalls. “I just love the intimacy, the camaraderie of the band. We were so close together, closer than we are on a tour bus. You could see in our faces there’s no acting there. It’s really genuine.” Most of the group members’ families, including Torpey’s widow and children, also came out to the show, which Martin says made the experience “really special.”Martin acknowledges some vocal problems during the tour, though only one date had to be postponed; Michele Luppi, an Italian singer and keyboardist, was also brought in to “shadow” Martin during a few shows on the European leg. The frontman was left with a warm memory, too, after the very last show. “We climbed on the tour bus, and each of us had different flights and different days,” Martin remembers. “That night Paul and Nick and all the crew split to the airport, and me and Billy Sheehan were left — just like it was at the beginning, when he called me in 1988 and said, ‘Hey, you want to start a band? ‘Who do you have?’ ‘Just us.’ So it ended up the same way it began.”
Martin doesn’t have too much time to spend mourning Mr. Big’s conclusion, however. He, along with Night Ranger’s Jack Blades, is about to head back to Japan to tour with the Tak Matsumoto Group, which he started with 20 years ago and which reformed and released a new album earlier this year. He’s anticipating some solo shows after that, on his own acoustically and possibly with a backing band. And then…
“I don’t have a wife anymore, my kids are almost 20 years old and I sit in the dark and go, ‘Oh, God, man, I wish I had Mr. Big to turn to right now,’” Martin says. “I may go, ‘Hey you guys, what do you think?’ Somebody might hang up on me, or they might say, ‘Hey, let’s do it.’ I don’t want to do the full-scale tour anymore, but maybe five or six shows here or there. Nick said, ‘Why don’t we do a residency somewhere — Indonesia, Vegas, the Philippines, I don’t know. I would like to open that door, but I don’t have the strength to open it by myself. I’m gonna need someone else to help me. So we’ll see.”
Carlos Vives now has his double at the Wax Museum of Mexico City. The Colombian star helped unveil his figure on Thursday night (Sep. 5) night at the institution, where it will share space with other iconic Mexican cultural figures, like painter Frida Kahlo and wrestler El Santo.
“I’m happy with this recognition that the Mexican people give me, that’s how I feel,” Vives said during the ceremony, evidently moved. “We have come to Mexico so much, our hearts have been touched by its music, by its art, by its cinema, its television.”
He added: “Being here in the museum, next to so many figures from the world, but above all next to the Mexican stars, who from my childhood and my youth had been a great example and inspiration — being here with them is the greatest honor I’ve received from the Mexican people.”
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The new wax figure shows Vives looking a bit younger and taller than the real artist. It carries a guitar and wears fitted leather pants and a black t-shirt emblazoned with his name and the title of his sixteenth album, Cumbiana (2020). It’s located in the main hall of the museum, close to those of Vicente Fernández and Marco Antonio Solís.
Vives — who is performing this Saturday, Sept. 7 before 10,000 people for a sold-out show at the National Auditorium in Mexico City — shared the honor with the Colombian musicians who inspired him in his youth and who are part of his history. “They are here with me and represent what I wanted to show the world: a beautiful and diverse oral tradition like our country,” he said.
His addition to the museum comes two months ahead of his honoring as the Latin Recording Academy 2024 Person of the Year in November, during the 25th anniversary of the Latin Grammys in Miami.
Born in Santa Marta, Colombia, Vives is one of the most respected artists in Spanish-language music and a pioneer of a new Latin American sound, redefining traditional Colombian vallenato by incorporating to it pop and rock sounds. With No. 1 hits on the Billboard charts such as “Volví a Nacer,” “Fruta Fresca” and “La Bicicleta” with Shakira, among others, he has become an ambassador of Colombian and Latin American culture around the world.
“He has undoubtedly left an indelible mark on the hearts of millions of people and today he will be immortalized at the Wax Museum of Mexico City,” said the museum in a press release prior to Thursday’s ceremony.
Located in the central neighborhood of Colonia Juárez, in an old Art Nouveau style mansion, the Wax Museum of Mexico City celebrates this year its 45th anniversary. In its 14 thematic rooms, visitors can appreciate some 260 wax figures of characters from history, art, politics, and sports, from Diego Rivera and Salvador Dalí, to Bill Gates, Ronaldinho, Hugo Sánchez, ‘Canelo’ Álvarez; Gene Simmons, Michael Jackson, Chaplin, Alex Lora, Chabelo, and more.
According to the museum, the wax figures are made by its team of sculptors and many wear clothes that belonged to the real character. The creation of each figure takes approximately four to eight months.
Watch Carlos Vives unveil his wax figure below:
Taylor Swift made her glam return to Arrowhead Stadium on Thursday night (Sept. 5) to watch her boyfriend Travis Kelce in the Kansas City Chiefs‘ season-opening game against the Baltimore Ravens. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news All eyes were on what the pop superstar would wear to […]
Sabrina Carpenter is a Barb through and through. The “Espresso” singer took to her Instagram Stories to share a stunning bouquet of flowers Nicki Minaj sent her. “I adore u @nickiminaj + the barbz,” she wrote over the white bouquet. “this is so thoughtful!!!! and these are so beautiful.” It’s been an exciting summer for […]
Bruce Springsteen and Patti Scialfa, Jim Gaffigan, Norah Jones, Jerry Seinfeld, Jon Stewart, Questlove and Mark Normand are confirmed for the 18th annual Stand Up for Heroes benefit, which will take place on Veterans Day, Nov. 11, as part of the New York Comedy Festival.
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The annual event, which raises awareness and funds for the Bob Woodruff Foundation, whose mission is to ensure that our nation’s veterans, service members, and their families have stable and successful futures will take place at David Geffen Hall at Lincoln Center in Manhattan and feature performances by these and other stars of music and comedy.
At least one of the musicians on the bill has proven himself to be adept at comedy as well. In the past, Springsteen — who is a regular at the event and aced an extended cameo on the last season of Larry David’s Curb Your Enthusiasm — has peppered his set with dirty jokes such as this one he told at the 2022 event: “During sex, you burn off as many calories as if you ran 8 miles,” he said. “But who can run 8 miles in 30 seconds? Got that off the Internet.”
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“For 17 years, at each Stand Up for Heroes, I’ve been impressed to see so many come together to honor the bravery and resilience of our veterans,” said Woodruff, an ABC correspondent who suffered a traumatic brain injury in 2006 while covering the Iraq War, and after battling his way back to health created the foundation. “Our 18th event will be another outstanding tribute to those who served and a reminder to all of us of the debt we owe them and their families for their service and sacrifices.”
Jim Gaffigan performs onstage during the 15th Annual Stand Up For Heroes benefit at Alice Tully Hall presented by Bob Woodruff Foundation and NY Comedy Festival on Nov. 8, 2021 in New York City.
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In 2007, New York Comedy Festival founders Caroline Hirsch and Andrew Fox partnered with Bob and Lee Woodruff to create this special event as a tribute to impacted veterans and their loved ones. Since its inception, Stand Up for Heroes has raised $84 million to date to help all veterans and military families have successful futures. Over the past 17 years, comedians and performers including John Mellencamp, Stephen Colbert, Eric Church, Sheryl Crow, Gaffigan, Whoopi Goldberg, The Lumineers, John Mayer, Seth Meyers, Hasan Minhaj, Tracy Morgan, John Mulaney, Trevor Noah, Conan O’Brien, Red Hot Chili Peppers, The War and Treaty and Robin Williams have taken the stage to advocate for our extraordinary service members.
“Eighteen years of comedy and music have transformed into a powerful force for good. As Stand Up For Heroes celebrates its 18th anniversary on Veterans Day, alongside the New York Comedy Festival’s 20th, we’re humbled to once again unite comedy’s brightest stars with a shared mission: to honor and support our nation’s heroes. Together, we’ll laugh, inspire, and invest in the futures of those who’ve sacrificed so much for our freedom,” said Hirsch, who is a foundation board member.
Jon Stewart performs onstage during the 17th Annual Stand Up For Heroes Benefit presented by Bob Woodruff Foundation and NY Comedy Festival at David Geffen Hall on Nov. 6, 2023 in New York City.
Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for Bob Woodruff Foundation
“Stand Up for Heroes, a night of hope, healing, and laughter to honor our nation’s veterans and their families, fittingly takes place on Veterans Day this year,” said Anne Marie Dougherty, CEO of the Bob Woodruff Foundation. “As a nation, it’s our privilege and our duty to stand with them, and to ensure they receive the support they’ve earned. Our event is a powerful platform to help us spread that message.”
Tickets go on sale Sept. 5 at the event’s website.