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TOMORROW X TOGETHER dropped the colorful video for the English-language version of their latest single, “Over the Moon (Our Sanctuary ver.),” on Thursday (Nov. 7). In it, the six-member K-pop boy band embark on a road trip — under the full moon, naturally — with SOOBIN, YEONJUN, BEOMGYU, TAEHYUN, and HUENINGKAI spreading love and good […]

From October 14 to 18, 2024, the Fillmore Miami Beach came alive with the return of Billboard Latin Music Week, celebrating its 35th Anniversary in style. This year’s event showcased over 70 artists, reinforcing its position as the premier gathering of Latin artists and industry executives globally. Since its inception, it has highlighted the growth and cultural impact of Latin music in the U.S.

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The vibrant lineup featured exclusive panel discussions, electrifying performances, and a range of workshops that engaged both fans and industry professionals. Attendees gained valuable insights from industry leaders and participated in events that celebrated the rich culture of Latin music.

A standout element of this year’s celebration was Chevron’s Re-Fuel Zone. Guests were able to refuel their devices at a charging station, helping them continue capturing special moments throughout the week.

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Additionally, fans had the opportunity to pose in front of a Chevron-themed car for a fun photo moment, creating lasting memories of the event. Attendees enjoyed a selection of snacks, refreshing beverages, and delightful paletas, keeping everyone energized. Plus, stylish branded tote bags were given away as keepsakes from the event.

One of the week’s highlights was the special appearance by Latin GRAMMY Award-winning artist Luis Figueroa. Chevron Rewards members had a special opportunity to meet and greet with him, and he participated in a rapid-fire interview, sharing captivating stories about his tour experiences and life as a rising star.

Singer-songwriter Luis Figueroa has merged his innate musical talents with his Puerto Rican heritage to become an up and coming force in the Latin music scene.

As Billboard Latin Music Week continues to evolve, this year’s celebration not only honored the rich history of Latin music but also set the stage for its vibrant future. If you weren’t able to join us in Miami, stay tuned to Billboard.com and Billboard’s socials for more content from the 35th anniversary of Billboard Latin Music Week.

Chevron is a paid sponsor of Billboard Latin Music Week.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ “Maps” tops the TikTok Billboard Top 50 for a fifth week, while social media stars A.J. & Big Justice snag their first top 10 on a Billboard chart with “We Bring the Boom!” on the Nov. 9-dated ranking.

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The TikTok Billboard Top 50 is a weekly ranking of the most popular songs on TikTok in the United States based on creations, video views and user engagement. The latest chart reflects activity from Oct. 28-Nov. 3. Activity on TikTok is not included in Billboard charts except for the TikTok Billboard Top 50.

“Maps” leads Alphaville’s “Forever Young” and Akon’s “Akon’s Beautiful Day” at Nos. 1-3, respectively, maintaining a hold on the top three that’s persisted for the past three weeks (while the top two has remained intact for even longer, a four-week run).

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The rest of the chart’s top 10, however, sees movement – including TikTok stars’ A.J. & Big Justice’s “We Bring the Boom!,” which jumps 15-7 in its second week on the tally. The father-and-son duo’s catchphrase-addled theme song was uploaded to streaming services in early July, with remixes adding new verses from affiliated stars like The Rizzler coming last month.

It’s the latter that drives the lion’s share of the activity for “We Bring the Boom!,” with a dance trend highlighting The Rizzler’s verse among the most-engaged-with uploads in recent weeks. A.J. & Big Justice’s original dance to the song also continues to trend on the platform.

In the tracking week ending Oct. 31, “We Bring the Boom!” earned 434,000 official U.S. streams, a boost of 33%, according to Luminate.

Ahead of “We Bring the Boom!,” The Cramps’ “Goo Goo Muck” leaps into the top five of the chart for the first time, lifting 9-4. The 1981 track from the band’s album Psychedelic Jungle sports a yearly gain around Halloween these days, particularly after its synch in the 2022 Netflix series Wednesday, but this year it scores additional prominence thanks to a trend where a creator is running from a serial killer or some sort of danger, only to turn back around (and often beginning to disrobe) when learning that their pursuer is attractive.

“Goo Goo Muck” earned 1.9 million streams in the week ending Oct. 31, with its gain of 126% also attributable to general Halloweentime jumps.

Two songs debut within the top 10, led by 21 Savage and Metro Boomin’s “Runnin,” which debuts at No. 5. The Savage Mode II track, released in 2020, benefits from a photo collage-based trend involving misdirection (example: “he didn’t like my red hair, so I went brown,” but the user choosing a new significant other who has brown hair).

“Runnin” is up 4% in the Oct. 25-31 tracking week to 2.7 million streams. It debuted and peaked at No. 9 on the Billboard Hot 100 in October 2020.

A brand new song in Tyler, the Creator’s “Like Him” joins “Runnin” in the TikTok Billboard Top 50’s top 10, debuting at No. 6. It’s one of 14 new songs from the rapper’s album Chromakopia released Oct. 28, with “Sticky” also joining it on the latest survey at No. 50.

“Like Him” is driven by a TikTok trend featuring edits showing often complicated relationships between children and their parents, fictional or otherwise, while others use the tune to make comparisons between athletes past and present.

The Lola Young-featuring song debuts at No. 45 on the Hot 100, as previously reported, via 12.4 million streams in its first four days of availability.

And while the latest TikTok Billboard Top 50 is inundated with Halloween-themed material (Crystal Knives and Lex Allen’s “Spooky, Scary Skeletons” ranks at No. 11, while The Party Cats’ “This Is Halloween” cover shows up at No. 25, some users got a head start on the Christmas season, as Mariah Carey’s “All I Want for Christmas Is You” bows at No. 17, followed by Wham!’s “Last Christmas” at No. 48. Carey’s holiday standard reigned for two weeks last year, while “Last Christmas” peaked at No. 2.

See the full TikTok Billboard Top 50 here. You can also tune in each Friday to SiriusXM’s TikTok Radio (channel 4) to hear the premiere of the chart’s top 10 countdown at 3 p.m. ET, with reruns heard throughout the week.

Young Thug has a new lease on life after being released from jail last week on a plea deal, and he’s thankful for attorneys like his lawyer Brian Steel.
Thugger made a virtual special guest appearance over FaceTime during Steel’s Emory Law School class lecture on Wednesday (Nov. 6), where he was preaching the importance of defense attorneys, as videos online show.

“We had a situation that was daunting towards my life and I think that the justice system could be bad,” Thug said to the group of students while reflecting on his 700-plus-day stint behind bars. “You know, sometimes it could be bad, and you gotta always look at it, like, they’re there to put us in prison and you guys are here to keep us from prison.”

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The 33-year-old Atlanta rapper then made the case for the aspiring legal experts to become defense attorneys rather than working as prosecutors.

“I think you guys should become lawyers,” he suggested. “I think it’s very important to help people out of the situations they’re in the best you can. I mean, what side do you wanna be on? You wanna put people in prison for mistakes? Because everybody makes mistakes — we’re human.”

Thugger added: “And everybody in this classroom, you always need to know that you want one mistake away. Anything you need from me, I’m here always. We need y’all.”

Thug got a belly laugh out of the class while hyping up Steel as “the best person possible” and claimed that defense attorneys are doing a version of “God’s work.”

Young Thug — born Jeffery Williams — reached a plea deal on Oct. 31, and was released with no more time to be served, but will be on probation for the next 15 years.

“I know you’re talented, and if you choose to continue to rap, you need to try to use your influence to let kids know that is not the way to go and that there are ways out of poverty besides hooking up with the powerful guy at the end of the street selling drugs,” Judge Paige Reese Whitaker said to Thug.

Thugger ended up serving more than two years in jail after repeatedly being denied bond since his arrest in May 2022. The YSL RICO case became Georgia’s longest-running criminal trial ever, and isn’t finished yet, with two co-defendants still on trial.

In 2023, Luke Combs earned a No. 2 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 with his rendition of Tracy Chapman‘s 1988 pop hit “Fast Car.” Combs’ version was named single of the year at the CMA Awards, and netted a Grammy nomination for best country solo performance. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See […]

Halle Bailey says she’s “extremely upset” after DDG and their son Halo made what she says was an “unapproved” appearance on Kai Cenat’s livestream Wednesday night (Nov. 6).

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The Little Mermaid actress voiced her frustrations on X about unknowingly having her almost 1-year-old son in front of millions of eyeballs on Kai’s stream.

“Hi everyone,” she began. “Just so you know I am out of town and I don’t approve of my baby being on a stream tonight. I wasn’t told or notified and I am extremely upset to have my baby in front of millions of people. I am his mother and protector and saddened I wasn’t notified especially when I am out of town.”

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Per Essence, Bailey added in a separate tweet that she was going through “severe postpartum” and wrote, “Nobody knows what somebody is going through until they snap.”

Footage of Halo’s appearance quickly went viral along with Bailey’s tweets. Cenat showered DDG and Halle’s son with plenty of gifts to take home.

Bailey later deactivated her X account.

Billboard has reached out to reps for Bailey and DDG.

DDG and Bailey went public with their relationship in January 2022, and Halle gave birth to Halo in late 2023. The couple announced their split in October when DDG posted a message to his Instagram Story that he and Halle would be going separate ways.

“After much reflection and heartfelt conversations, Halle and I have decided to go our separate ways,” he wrote at the time. “This decision was not easy, but we believe it’s the best path forward for both of us. I cherish the time we’ve spent together and the love we’ve shared.

DDG continued, “Despite the changes in our relationship, our love for each other remains deep and true. We are still best friends and adore each other. As we focus on our individual journeys and our roles as co-parents, we cherish the bond we’ve build and the beautiful moments we’ve shared.”

Halle opened up about her battle with “severe” postpartum depression as a new mother in April. She posted to Snapchat at the time, “I have severe, severe postpartum [depression], and I don’t know if any new moms can relate, but it’s to the point where it’s really bad, and it’s hard for me to be separated from my baby for more than 30 minutes at a time before I start to kind of freak out.”

Nearly a month after his shocking death following a fall from a third-story hotel balcony, Liam Payne‘s body has been released to his family in order to repatriate his remains to the singer’s native U.K. for burial. According to Reuters, an unnamed senior cemetery source in Buenos Aires told the news service that Payne’s body […]

Halsey’s The Great Impersonator debuts atop Billboard’s Top Rock & Alternative Albums and Top Alternative Albums charts dated Nov. 9. The set earned 93,000 equivalent album units in the United States in the week ending Oct. 31, according to Luminate. That sum includes 81,000 via traditional album sales. Halsey previously ruled Top Alternative Albums for […]

With the 2024 MAMA Awards around the corner, and for the first time ever, the event will feature a ceremony in the U.S. To celebrate, two new performance collaborations were announced featuring a fuse between global music and K-pop. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news Anderson .Paak and […]

Hank Azaria says that learning to sing Bruce Springsteen songs to front his EZ Street Band is “by far the hardest I’ve worked to do any vocal for anything,” even if it is “a genuine joy” for the bona fide Boss fan.

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Still, that’s saying something for a guy who’s won six Primetime Emmy Awards (four of them for voicing numerous characters on The Simpsons, including Moe Szyslak and Chief Wiggum) and has a lengthy resume of film, television, theater and video game roles.

Nevertheless, Azaria assures Billboard that he’s “extremely all-in” on the EZ Street Band. The band hits New York City’s Brooklyn Bowl on Nov. 8 and heads to the Stone Pony in Asbury Park, N.J., on Nov. 15, with more dates to come through 2025. He’s using proceeds from the shows to fund his 4 Through 9 Foundation for social justice, education and recovery causes.

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“I tell stories about myself, as Bruce, on the night,” says Azaria via Zoom, adopting Springsteen’s voice with an earnest, intense expression on his face. “Some of them are what a song means to me. Some of them are just kind of repeating the way Bruce introduced the songs. Some of them are the back stories of how the songs were written that I found fascinating. It creates this evening of theater, of trying to be the best Springsteen band we can be and trying to mimic his vocal and the E Street Band sound as closely as we can. But I’ve never worked harder to prepare for any role I’ve ever done than I did for this.”

Azaria, who’s played a handful of EZ Street Band shows so far — starting with his 60th birthday party at City Winery in New York in April — is hoping there will be an audience for his take on Springsteen. And United Talent Agency, which is booking the shows, is sure of it. “It’s a masterclass of homage,” says UTA’s Ryan Edmundson. “Hank and the band’s devotion to their craft is evident on stage. Their faithful portrayal of the real-life icon Bruce Springsteen honors his legacy in a way we have never seen before. We’re thrilled to introduce the band’s unique artistry to larger audiences.” Glee veteran Michael Novick is managing Azaria’s EZ Street concerns, while his publicist, Seth Cohen, spent nearly a decade as Springsteen’s day-to-day representative with Shorefire Media.

Azaria, who’s met Springsteen twice over the years (more on that later), also received some tacit approval from the man himself.

“A few weeks ago, I got a text from a buddy of mine who’s a dentist in New York,” he says. “He says, ‘Please, please, please, ASAP, send me your favorite video of your band.’ I sent him a video of us doing ‘Thunder Road.’ Later that night he calls me and said Patti Scialfa [Springsteen’s wife and an E Street Band member] was in my dentist chair. I’m like, ‘Omigod, if I’d have known that I assure you I wouldn’t have sent the video.’

“He said he played it for Patti and apparently she loved it. And later that night I got another text saying Patti played it for Bruce and they loved it. They took it for how it’s meant, which was a loving tribute.”

Springsteen and company have an off night when Azaria and the EZ Street Band play the Stone Pony, by the way. But the actor doesn’t need more to get him excited about that particular show. “I can’t wait — it is the mothership,” he says. “Look, I think what carries me through any kind of nerves is this so genuinely comes from this joy of sharing this. I’ve earned my stripes as a Bruce fan.”

Growin’ Up

That devotion dates back to Azaria’s youth, including seeing Springsteen for the first time when The River tour played New York’s Madison Square Garden during 1980. “When I grew up, he was like an uncle — that’s how much I connected to him,” Azaria remembers. “His music and his (in-concert) talks got me through some very hard times as a teenager. I’d say he, almost more than anybody else, encouraged me to try to be a creative person. That was his message to me, for real.”

Azaria got to tell Springsteen about that, too, although neither meeting with Springsteen went quite as he hoped or planned.

While playing “Growin’ Up” during the EZ Street Band shows, Azaria tells the story of when Springsteen came backstage to see him during his Tony Award-nominated run in Monty Python’s Spamalot on Broadway.

“There’s a knock on my door and Bruce is standing there, alone,” Azaria recalls. “I almost had a heart attack. I absolutely lost my mind, to a point. He was very sweet and connected and present. He kinda gave me his review of the show, which he really enjoyed, in detail. We chatted long enough for me to tell him what his music meant to be, but it came out about nine octaves higher than my regular voice and very rushed, kind of screaming at him, as a fan boy. He was very sweet about it, but it was ridiculous.”

The same thing happened, he says, when he attended a Springsteen on Broadway performance and was part of the backstage meet and greet. “Before he could even say hello I started (makes babbling noises). He was very sweet again but kinda patted me on the shoulder and got out of there, and I don’t blame him. My wife just turned to me and said, ‘What is wrong with you?!’ My friend calls it Bruce Juice. It kind of overtakes you.”

Born to Run

The inspiration for the EZ Street Band, Azaria says, was his impending 60th birthday, which “bothered me a bit.” He came up with the idea as “a distraction,” working with keyboardist Adam Kromelow, his son’s former piano teacher, as musical director and studying a wealth of live recordings to familiarize himself with Springsteen’s vocal mannerisms and nuances. “I find that raspy sound he has easier to imitate, and that’s what I’ve always imitated, but (Springsteen) has a lot more than that,” notes Azaria, whose natural singing voice is deeper than Springsteen’s. After employing his well-practiced “homegrown mimicry process” he bought in vocal coach (the EZ Street Band’s Hannah Juliano) to bring him closer to the mark.

“I’m such a singing neophyte that I didn’t realize that these songs were unattainable for me,” acknowledges Azaria, who was had to overcome an anxiety that almost scotched the birthday party performance — where E Street Band drummer Max Weinberg joined the group for a couple of songs. “I started out four or five steps below Bruce; I’ve now kind of, through singing training and practice, worked up to almost at his key, just a step or two below. And the closer you are to his key the more authentic you sound. It’s been a very steep learning curve.”

With the eight-member EZ Street Band, however, he’s found some kindred spirits.

“They are kids in this band,” Azaria says. “They didn’t grow up with this music; only the bass player (Jeff Koch) knew any of it ’cause his dad was a huge fan. They’re all professional musicians, and now they do play it as if they did grow up with it ’cause they’re so good. And one of the joys of this is how much they’re discovering Bruce’s music, and they love it now. They love playing it even more than hearing it. They report to me as musicians how much fun these songs are to play.”

Since the birthday party Azaria and the EZ Streeters have also performed outside of a New York Mets game at CitiField and also at (Le) Poisson Rouge in New York. The repertoire is growing: “Darkness on the Edge of Town,” “Candy’s Room,” “The Price You Pay” and “Jersey Girl” are slated to be played this month, and Azaria voices a desire to take on “The River” and “Atlantic City.” But don’t expect to see the EZ Street Band match the multi-hour extravaganzas that are Springsteen and the E Street Band’s routine.

“We’ll never get there, I promise you that,” Azaria says with a laugh. “An hour 20 (minutes), an hour 30. We’ll never get to two and a half (hours), I don’t think. But it’s getting better and better, and it’s such a joy. People ask me, ‘Do you feel like a rock star up there? Are you living out a rock star fantasy?’ On a certain level I am, but what I much more feel like is what I am, which is a lucky Bruce fan who’s gotten to go up there and share his version of Bruce love with everybody else — with the ability to mimic it better than most have.”