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If you were wondering why Rick Ross chose to get involved in the Drake pile-on last spring, his recent sit-down with Shannon Sharpe and Ochocinco in Houston for their Nightcap Summer Sessions has your answer. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news “Y’all had the summer going crazy. I […]
Earlier this summer, avant-garde musical pioneer Laurie Anderson stopped by Billboard’s first-ever Indie Power Players event at the Soho Grand Hotel in Manhattan to accept the Indie Icon Award. When I bring it up to her over Zoom a few weeks later, Anderson laughs off the idea of being hailed as one of the GOATs. “That was a little embarrassing – or a lot embarrassing,” she demurs. “Yeah. Icon. But you know, it’s flattering. It was sweet.”
She’s clearly retained some of that Midwestern humility from her childhood in the suburbs of Chicago. But if Laurie Anderson isn’t an indie icon, then who is? After making waves in the New York City art scene since the ‘70s, she brought her uncompromising, idiosyncratic vision to one of the major labels, Warner. Bros., with 1982’s Big Science. A heady, funky mélange of minimalism, electronica and art-pop, the trailblazing classic enjoyed improbable crossover success thanks in large part to its single “O Superman (For Massenet),” which became a No. 2 hit in the U.K. Over the ensuing decades, Anderson has become an influential force in exploring the ways music, technology and performance art intersect. Plus, she’s done everything from voicing a Rugrat to directing films to winning a Grammy.
The lattermost came thanks to Landfall, her 2018 album with the Kronos Quartet. On Friday (Aug. 30), Anderson returns with Amelia, a Nonesuch release that delves into legendary aviator Amelia Earhart’s ill-fated final flight. But while questions such as “what really happened to Amelia Earhart?” and “where did her plane crash?” have recurred throughout popular culture for nearly 90 years, Amelia isn’t interested in answers, or even asking questions. Instead, Anderson – through her indelible mixture of storytelling, sing-speak and dizzying soundscapes – takes us into the cockpit with Earhart throughout the course of her flight, drawing on flight logs, diary entries and contemporary interviews to give a sense of the frightening vastness of the ocean, the thrill and loneliness of exploration and the othering of female pilots in the 1930s. Like much of her work, it’s soothing, unsettling and thought-provoking.
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“They called her Lady Lindy, they didn’t even take her seriously,” Anderson says. “But she was doing this really dangerous thing. She was very hands on, unlike Charles Lindbergh, who was a white gloves pilot in many ways. She really was working with the guys under the hood.” It’s that element of Earhart’s life that makes her story feel “super timely” to Anderson, who notes that “girls still aren’t really encouraged to do engineering” nearly 100 years later.
Below, Anderson walks Billboard through this project’s roundabout gestation, why collaborator ANOHNI is perfect “for every project” and her work on a “doomsday comedy” that will serve as Part V to her groundbreaking magnum opus from 1983, United States Live.
When you arrived at Billboard’s Indie Power Players event in June, you gave a surprise performance with this little handmade electronic device in your mouth. How long does it take you to make something like that?
Oh, you know, it’s sorts of time depending on what you’re making. I’m making a few things now for a big show in the fall. Right now, the project that I’m doing called ARK is mind-boggling. There are so many pieces to it that it’s just weird.
What’s ARK?
ARK is a big thing with music pictures and electronics on a stage in a big theater [Factory International] in Manchester, which is going to open in the fall [Nov. 12-24]. And it’s something about the end of the world.
I mean, we could be facing that soon.
Well, it’s kind of in the back of people’s minds. And I really like what’s in the back of people’s minds. It influences you even though you’re not necessarily talking about it. So that’s why I wanted to do that. It’s also — it sounds really stupid — but it’s like a doomsday comedy.
How else does one approach doomsday?
Exactly. That’s what I think. Yeah, yeah.
So Amelia is your new album, but I gather you’ve done this piece before – in 2000 at Carnegie Hall.
That was its distant cousin, let’s say. That was a very long time ago. Those pieces don’t really sound like each other at all. That was something that I was commissioned to do for Carnegie Hall, and then it was kind of horrible, actually. Really. It’s really pretty bad. So I stopped working on it. Then a few years later, the conductor [Dennis Russell Davies] said, “You know, I really liked that piece.” And I said, “You did?!” He said, “Yeah, let’s just do it for string orchestra.” So we did and it sounded pretty cool. Then, in the pandemic, he got back to me again and said, “Let’s record that.” And I really like this conductor a lot. He’s really supportive and cool. So we recorded it, and then I thought, “Okay, I’m gonna put some other stuff on top of this.” And that’s what this record is.
So did Carnegie Hall specifically commission it to be about Amelia Earhart, or was that your choice?
No, they just wanted something about flight, so I chose Amelia. I really got very fond of her working on it. She was she always talking to women — she was like the original blogger, first of all. She was talking to reporters at every stop, she would send telegrams at every stop, and she would write in her pilot’s log and in her diary. She was very conscious of her public. She also married her press agent, which tells you a lot. What I liked the most about her was she said, “You know, if I survive this trip” — and she wasn’t sure if she would — she said, “I want to start shop for girls.” At that point, boys in school took shop, which was like engines and motors and metal and woodworking, and girls took cooking and cleaning. I was like, “Whoa, that’s very cool.” She said, “Girls should find out how engines work, too.” She didn’t live to make that happen. But it was I was very impressed with that because her plane crashed like 87 years ago, on July 2 [1937], and you look at what’s going on now: Girls still aren’t really encouraged to do engineering or government, medicine, politics. It’s just kind of weird that women haven’t made more progress, I think. So anyway, that was an important story to hear now.
It’s timely.
Super timely, especially when we virtually just elected a president who kind of thinks women are stupid. It’s crucial to look at people who did really amazing things. And she was a great pilot. People were very patronizing when she was doing it: they called her Lady Lindy, they didn’t even take her seriously. But she was doing this really dangerous thing. She was very hands on, unlike Charles Lindbergh, who was a white gloves pilot in many ways. She really was working with the guys under the hood. And I really admire that about her. People are always asking me, “How do you work with technology?” And it’s not like it’s so amazing. It’s still [seen as] weird for women to be working with technology.
I hadn’t heard she was called Lady Lindy ‘til I listened to the album. That’s doubly a shame, since he was a racist.
He’s a pretty odd character. And pretty, I think, horrendous in the end. Just a really scary, weird guy. And what a story that he actually killed his son – did you go for that story?
The baby thing?
Yeah, the baby thing and trying to get the organs for his sister. I was like, “Whoa, that’s the weirdest story ever.”
That dovetails a bit with something I wanted to ask. Like the Lindbergh baby, people are still coming up with theories and evidence about the Earhart crash. Not that long ago, someone said they might have found her plane. Did that ever make you think, “hmm, maybe I should address this in the project?”
Oh, no, no. I think some of those are sort of credible but most of them aren’t really. They’re pretty iffy. The very last one? Maybe. I don’t know and it doesn’t matter to me.
After immersing yourself in her world and travels, do you ever get the urge to visit some of these places – Howland Island, New Guinea – for research? Or have you?
If I could go anywhere, I’d go to the Galapagos. Just to see what that would feel like. But no, I never really felt like going to look for her plane. I’d rather write about certain things than go there. Although that’s not to say that wouldn’t be really, really fun to do.
The album features guest vocals from one of my favorite singers, ANOHNI. What was it about ANOHNI that made her make sense for this project?
She makes sense for every project. I just love her singing. I got to hear her new show a couple weeks ago. So beautiful. I’m just a complete fan. She’s singing in ARK as well; she’s singing the part of the Buddha. It’s so inspiring to work with her.
So Amelia is a “distant cousin” of something you started in 2000. Last year, I saw you perform your Let X=X show at BAM in Brooklyn, and it was absolutely incredible. Similarly, that found you revisiting some of your older work, with Sexmob as your backing band. When you revisit this material, how do you balance the urge to tinker with it and make it different, as opposed to staying true to the spirit of the original piece?
Really good question, because that’s something I’m doing in this project called ARK now, which is subtitled The United States Part V. It’s basically what I see as the empire falling, in a way. But you never know; there are complex ways that things fall apart and then come back into shape, so you never know. There are a couple of things that refer to earlier pieces. Sometimes I think I’m the only one who’s going to notice that but sometimes other people do. It’s a wild project to be doing. But anyway, with Amelia I was very happy with how the orchestra seemed to be almost the ocean in it or the wind. It had this wildness to it that was really fun to work with. I did this backwards, actually. I did the orchestra and then I did drum and bass overdubs. Which is crazy. Tony Scherr, the bass player, I just said, “I want you to improv over the whole thing.” I didn’t play it for him [before]. He just did his part live. He’s an incredible player and he did some really intuitive things. It felt very spontaneous. I loved what he did.
When you’re working on these things, are you a one-take, two-take person, or do you obsess over tweaks and changes?
One hundred percent obsession. It goes on forever. It’s never right. Oh yeah. I love it. I love sitting in the studio and sampling things and playing around and that’s kind of how I put it together. Just a long time alone in the studio. It’s a lot of fun for me to do it like that.
After having a seven-album deal with Warner Bros. back in the day, you’ve been with Nonesuch for a while. Being on an indie must jibe well with your tendency to take your time, as opposed to being forced to hit deadlines to deliver albums.
That’s probably true. Although they didn’t bother me about that at Warner. They didn’t say, “Crank them out, come on!” The time I was [at Warner] there were some real music lovers, and they were just really interested in what I was doing. And at Nonesuch, I feel the same. For me, it depends more on the people than on the actual label. So I didn’t really feel that kind of pressure.
You’ve done a number of performance pieces that haven’t made it to a recording studio. I’m thinking of your 1999 piece Songs and Stories From Moby-Dick. I’ve always been curious, do you ever think about going back to those pieces and making a proper document of it on an album?
No, I don’t. I want to move forward. If there’s a point in incorporating it into anything then I would, but not just to go back and set the record straight.
Welcome to Billboard Pro’s Trending Up newsletter, where we take a closer look at the songs, artists, curiosities and trends that have caught the music industry’s attention. Some have come out of nowhere, others have taken months to catch on, and all of them could become ubiquitous in the blink of a TikTok clip.
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This week: Addison Rae’s major label debut might become a breakout hit, Oasis’ daily streams soar thanks to news of their comeback, and Sabrina Carpenter looks to collect another Short n’ Sweet hit.
Addison Rae Eyes Major Pop Breakthrough With “Diet Pepsi”
It’s been a few years since she was popping and locking on TikTok — now, we’re the closest we’ve ever been to witnessing Addison Rae’s breakthrough pop star moment. After first capturing the ears of pop listeners with “2 Die 4” and her audacious remix of Charli xcx’s “Von Dutch,” Rae has unleashed “Diet Pepsi,” her major label debut single.
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Arriving on Aug. 9, “Diet Pepsi” pulled over 3.05 million official on-demand U.S. streams in its first week of release, according to Luminate. That number rose by 4% the following week (Aug. 16-22), collecting over 3.17 million streams. Although its third week of release (Aug. 23-30) is not yet complete, “Diet Pepsi” is already on track to once again rise in week-over-week streaming activity. From Sunday (Aug. 25) to Monday (Aug. 26), the Elvira-produced track jumped 20.5% in streaming activity, going from approximately 537,000 streams to 647,000 streams. “Diet Pepsi” is currently playing in around 95,000 posts on TikTok, helping the track reach No. 8 on their Viral 50. The song has also topped Spotify’s USA Viral 50 chart and earned over 2.4 million YouTube views for its official music video. With a few dance trends seeking to truly take off, “Diet Pepsi” is off to a formidable start on streaming that could potentially lead to the social media star’s first commercial hit. – KYLE DENIS
Oasis’ Daily Streams Nearly Quadruple Thanks to 2025 Reunion Announcement
The nearly impossible, the previously unthinkable, is happening: Oasis has announced a reunion, with Liam and Noel Gallagher re-forming the British rock group that made them famous after 15 years and countless verbal jabs at each other. And over the past few days, U.S. music listeners have toasted the unlikely comeback by revisiting (or discovering) the band’s back catalog, nearly quadrupling their daily audio streams in the process.
Click here for the full story on Oasis’ soaring streams. – JASON LIPSHUTZ
“Good Graces” Continues Sabrina Carpenter’s Hot Streak
“Espresso” reigned as one of the songs of the summer, “Please Please Please” topped the Billboard Hot 100 and “Taste” is her latest smash – but Sabrina Carpenter isn’t letting up anytime soon. On the heels of the release of her new LP, Short n’ Sweet, Carpenter is eyeing an impressive fourth hit from the record.
“Good Graces” — an Ariana Grande-esque kiss-off jam produced by John Ryan and Julian Bunetta – has been getting a lot of attention on streaming, easily becoming one of the most-consumed album tracks upon the album’s full release (Aug. 23). In its first day of release, “Good Graces” earned nearly 3.5 million official on-demand U.S. streams. While the song has yet to cross the three million threshold in the days since, it has pulled over 2.4 million streams everyday this with, including an impressive 2.89 million streams on Monday (Aug. 26).
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Given how early it is in the song’s run, there’s no viral dance craze or can’t-miss trend set to its R&B-indebted groove just yet. Nonetheless, the song currently soundtracks over 16,000 clips on TikTok, a substantial portion of which finds fans gushing over how much they love the song. Notably, with 1.6 million views, “Good Graces” is also the Short n’ Sweet album track with the highest-viewed lyric video.
Between three consecutive smashes and a slew of choices for her next hit, Sabrina Carpenter certainly isn’t dealing with “Slim Pickins” when it comes to pushing Short n’ Sweet. – KYLE DENIS
If you’re a certified Swiftie, don’t lose hope on finding tickets to the remaining dates of Taylor Swift’s Eras tour. In June, TikTok launched the #TSTheErasTour, an interactive in-app artist experience, during which fans were encouraged to complete album-themed tasks. Fans who completed all 11 tasks received a celebratory profile frame. However, now it appears that […]
Streams and sales of Beyoncé’s 2016 Kendrick Lamar-featuring song “Freedom” have continued to rise throughout the last month following its pick as Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign theme song for her 2024 U.S. presidential campaign, capturing its biggest streaming day in a month on the day after Harris accepted the Democratic Party’s nomination at the party’s national convention on Aug. 22.
On Aug. 23, streams of “Freedom” ballooned to 159,000 official on-demand U.S. listens, up 43% from 111,000 on Aug. 22, the final day of the Democratic National Convention, according to Luminate. (Incidentally, Aug. 22 was also the day Beyoncé was rumored to be performing at the Chicago convention, the whispers of which did not ultimately ring true.)
A week before on Aug. 16, “Freedom” pulled 49,000 such streams, making that gain far more pronounced: a 224% jump.
Kamala Harris’ Presidential Campaign Effect on Beyoncé’s ‘Freedom’
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Streams of the song accelerated once the convention began on Aug. 19. It earned 51,000 streams on day one, followed by sums of 87,000, 101,000 and 111,000 prior to the accumulation of 159,000 on Aug. 23.
That being said, the Aug. 23 count for “Freedom” isn’t its largest over the last month or so. On July 23, one day after Harris walked out to “Freedom” while visiting her newly minted campaign headquarters, the song scored 205,000 official on-demand streams, then a 646% boost over July 22’s sum of 27,000. It rebounded again on July 25 and 26 following the premiere of a campaign ad featuring the song on July 25, racking up 179,000 and 184,000 streams those two days, respectively.
32% of “Freedom’s” on-demand official streams in the U.S., year-to-date, have occurred in the span of time between when Harris used the song at her first campaign event (July 22) and the day after she accepted the Democratic party’s nomination (Aug. 23). In those 33 days, the song garnered 2.8 million on-demand official streams – of the song’s total 8.8 million earned since the start of the year.
As for sales, “Freedom” jumped 216% in the week ending Aug. 22 to 2,000 downloads sold, spurring its coronation at No. 1 on Billboard’s R&B Digital Song Sales chart dated Aug. 31. The song had never been No. 1 before; it debuted at No. 15 on the May 14, 2016, survey and had not charted since 2019 until it blasted onto the ranking at No. 2 Aug. 3 due to its initial affiliation with Harris’ campaign.
That 2,000-download count also puts “Freedom” at No. 25 on the all-genre Digital Song Sales list, its first time there since the chart dated May 21, 2016.
“Freedom” was released as part of Lemonade, Beyonce’s sixth studio album, which debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 dated May 14, 2016. It peaked at No. 35 on the Billboard Hot 100 that year.
—Additional reporting by Keith Caulfield
The nearly impossible, the previously unthinkable, is happening: Oasis has announced a reunion, with Liam and Noel Gallagher re-forming the British rock group that made them famous after 15 years and countless verbal jabs at each other. And over the past few days, U.S. music listeners have toasted the unlikely comeback by revisiting (or discovering) […]
A seven nation army couldn’t hold Jack White back from calling out Donald Trump over the alleged unauthorized use of his music. In a heated Instagram post Thursday (Aug. 29), the White Stripes rocker reshared a tweet seemingly posted by the former president’s deputy director of communications, Margo Martin, featuring a video of Trump ascending […]
Two months after rapper Enchanting’s devastating passing at age 26, her official cause of death has been revealed. The hip-hop artist died of toxic effects of oxycodone and benzodiazepines, a spokesperson for the Dallas County Medical Examiner’s Office told People. Her death was deemed accidental. She was previously reported to have died in the hospital […]
Jobs can feel like a prison for some people, and Cardi B felt the backlash from a recent joke she made when posting a photo from the studio, which she compared to being in jail.
The Grammy-winning rapper posted an Instagram Story on Wednesday (Aug. 28) working hard in the studio, but captioned the photo letting her fans know she was jokingly back at the “Atlantic Records correctional facilities.”
Apparently, the quip didn’t go over well with some and Cardi B spoke out defending her jest on X on Thursday (Aug. 29). “The fact that I made a little joke about the studio because I been mixing and mastering about 40-50 songs and y’all turned that into I hate creating is crazy,” she wrote. “This why artists don’t interact anymore cuz y’all will take one little joke and stretch it wider than y’all a–holes.”
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She continued: “God forbid I make a little sarcastic jokey jokey about motherhood y’all gonna claim I hate my kids and call cps…dweebs.”
A fan attempted to troll her with his response: “What do u create? lol.” Cardi wasn’t having any of it and clapped back with the swiftness: “HITS AND BEAUTIFUL A– KIDS.”
It’s been a six-year journey for Cardi B heading into her sophomore LP. She provided an update earlier in August, letting fans know that the cover art had been shot, but she was struggling on picking the right one.
Even outside of music, 2024 has been another busy year for The Bronx native. Cardi B is currently pregnant with her third child, which she revealed on Aug. 1 and happened to be the same day Billboard confirmed that she has filed for divorce from Offset.
Per Cardi’s rep, the divorce filing “is not based on any one particular incident, it has been a long time coming and is amicable.”
“With every ending comes a new beginning! I am so grateful to have shared this season with you, you have brought me more love, more life and most of all renewed my power! Reminded me that I can have it all!” she wrote at the time. “You’ve reminded me that I never have to choose between life, love, and my passion! I love you so much and can not wait for you to witness what you helped me accomplish, what you pushed me to do! It’s so much easier taking life’s twists, turns and test laying down, but you, your brother and your sister have shown me why it’s worth it to push through!”
Invasion of Privacy arrived in April 2018. The LP debuted atop the Billboard 200 and every song on the project is at least certified platinum. Cardi B also took home best rap album honors at the 2019 Grammy Awards.
Check out Cardi’s latest tweets below:
The fact that I made a little joke about the studio because I been mixing and mastering about 40-50 songs and y’all turned that into I hate creating is crazy… this why artists don’t interact anymore cuz y’all will take one little joke and stretch it wider than y’all assholes— Cardi B (@iamcardib) August 29, 2024
God forbid I make a little sarcastic jokey jokey about motherhood y’all gonna claim I hate my kids and call cps…dweebs 😩— Cardi B (@iamcardib) August 29, 2024
Billboard Unfiltered is back with another brand new episode. Staffers Kyle Denis, Carl Lamarre and Damien Scott embraced debate on Thursday (Aug. 29) while touching on a plethora of topics such as A$AP Rocky’s new Billboard cover story, Complex‘s GOAT Atlanta rapper list, Nelly missing the cut on Billboard‘s top 25 pop stars of the 21st century list.
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Deputy Director, Editorial Damien Scott provided some context to his cover story on Rocky, who delayed his Don’t Be Dumb album into the fall. For part of their travels, Scott accompanied the Mob frontman through his hometown as Rocky’s love affair with Harlem was on full display.
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“He’s like, ‘I come back all the time.’ At first I was like, ‘No you don’t.’ People wouldn’t go this crazy if you came back all the time,” Scott said. “But because he was so comfortable there, I was like, ‘You do come back here all the time.’ He was just waltzing around like it was nothing.”
Scott continued: “He was like, ‘This is my block, this is where I came up, this is where my friend lived, this is where we used to go, this is where I used to bring my dates, my school was right here, I used to go shopping right here.’ He felt at ease as if one of you were to go back home.”
Complex recently unveiled its top 50 Atlanta rappers list with André 3000 coming in at No. 1, which Deputy Director R&B/Hip-Hop Carl Lamarre took issue with since Three Stacks is without a solo album in his discography.
“What befuddles me so crazy is you don’t have a singular body of work to put against somebody like a T.I., who has 11 albums himself — I’ma say three classics solo. Someone like Jeezy, ATL staple TM:101,” Lamarre said. “When you’re talking about individuals, it would help to have a singular body of work to represent that output.”
CL listed out his personal Mount Rushmore of Atlanta MCs in no specific order: “Future, Jeezy, Tip and Thug.” Scott went with Outkast as a duo, Ceelo Green, T.I. and Gucci Mane over Jeezy.
Staff Writer Kyle Denis was among the team responsible for crafting Billboard‘s top 25 pop stars of the 21st century list, and among the honorable mentions that didn’t make the cut like 50 Cent, Kendrick Lamar and Jennifer Lopez, it was Nelly who he had the toughest time with keeping out of the 25.
“I think there’s just so much happening in 2024 specifically that you don’t get without Nelly,” he said. “We don’t get a Shaboozey ‘Tipsy,’ we don’t get half of what Beyoncé’s doing on Cowboy Carter on the back half, we don’t get a lot of Morgan Wallen’s s–t in the way that he attacks records certain songs with the cadence he uses without what Nelly does. Talking about Midwest rappers, you don’t get Sexyy Red.”
Watch the entire episode below. Keep it locked for another episode of Billboard Unfiltered next week.
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