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The Detroit Lions are looking to make history this year and capture their first Super Bowl with the NFL Playoffs right around the corner. And there was plenty of star power and Lions royalty in the building to cheer on the team, as Eminem, Flavor Flav and more were spotted at Ford Field during the […]

2025 may just be getting started, but Vybz Kartel already has plans for new music — including a collaboration with one of music’s hottest female rappers: Cardi B.
Speaking with Billboard‘s Kyle Denis for a cover story chronicling the days leading up to his blockbuster Freedom Street concert in Kingston, Jamaica, dancehall legend Vybz Kartel gave Cardi B her flowers and teased a forthcoming collaboration.

“I love Cardi! We got a song coming out next year,” he revealed. “We are actually in the process of writing it. Even if I have to walk, I’m performing that song in New York!”

Last summer, Vybz Kartel walked out of prison a free man after serving 13 years of a now-overturned life sentence for the murder of Clive “Lizard” Williams. During his incarceration, Kartel suffered several health complications including thyroid issues and a Graves’ disease diagnosis. After Kartel’s release, pictures showing how the autoimmune disease altered his appearance started circulating the Internet, and Cardi B quickly came to his defense against nasty trolls.

“I do not play about f—king Vybz Kartel,” the Grammy-winning rapper said in an X Spaces. “When I see y’all talking about f—king Vybz Kartel, I be getting upset ’cause, like, not too much. Not too f—king much. Mind your f—king business. I do not play about f—king Vybz Kartel, b—h. At all. At all. I do not, I do not, I do not.”

A few months later, the “WAP” rapper continued to show love to Kartel. “I want to make the most perfect, beautiful, amazing song with Vybz Kartel,” she said on Instagram Live. “He’s really my favorite artist. He’s literally my No. 1 artist. My favorite artist in the whole wide world.” In another live session, Cardi told Latin Grammy-nominated producer Rvssian to “cook up the best motherf—king song” for her and Worl’ Boss.”

Cardi B has ventured into dancehall in the past, joining forces with Konshens and Tina (Hoodcelebrityy) for “Back It Up,” a cut from her 2017 Gangsta Bitch Music, Vol. 2 mixtape. She and Tina linked up again later that year for “Island Girls.” In 2021, she threw a dancehall-themed 29th birthday party that saw Lizzo, Megan Thee Stallion and Teyana Taylor dressed in their best dancehall fashions.

Kartel, of course, is no stranger to crossover collaborations. The Grammy-nominated DJ has collaborated with hip-hop heavyweights such as Busta Rhymes, Nicki Minaj, Fivio Foreign and XXXTENTACION.

Perhaps Kartel and Cardi can further discuss their upcoming collaboration at next month’s Grammys (Feb. 2), where both are nominated. Kartel is gunning for his first career Grammy for best reggae album (2024’s Party With Me), while Cardi is competing in best rap performance for her 2024 Billboard Hot 100 top 10 hit “Enough (Miami)” (No. 9).

The ceremony will air from Los Angeles’ Crypto.com Arena on Sunday, Feb. 2.

And we’re back! After a very Cowboy Carter Christmas courtesy of Beyoncé — and a New Year’s Day that quickly gave into allegedly LeBron James-subbing Drake freestyle by way of Conductor Williams — it’s time to start 2025 off on the right foot when it comes to running down the latest in new hip-hop and R&B music.

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Lil Baby (WHAM) and Bad Bunny (Debí Tirar Más Fotos) kicked off the new year with two major full-length releases that are sure to battle for the top of the Billboard 200, while Ice Spice (Y2K: I’m Just A Girl) and SZA (SOS Deluxe: LANA) offered expanded editions of their own hit records. The holiday period also saw the arrival of Young Thug‘s first two Slime Season mixtapes on streaming, as well as a star-studded “Denial Is A River” music video from Doechii.

Things will pick up in February between the Grammys and the Super Bowl, both of which will surely be major moments for Kendrick Lamar ahead of his forthcoming North American Grand National stadium tour.

With Fresh Picks, Billboard aims to highlight some of the best and most interesting new sounds across R&B and hip-hop — from GloRilla’s reboot of a years-old OMB Peezy banger to G3’s instantly viral new track. Be sure to check out this week’s Fresh Picks in our Spotify playlist below.

G3 (LiAngelo Ball), “Tweaker”

If “Tweaker,” is anything to go by, 2025 is shaping up to be another Y2K-obsessed year. After a snippet of the early ’00s hip-hop-informed track went viral, G3 (aka LiAngelo Ball, the second of the three Ball Brothers) uploaded the full joint on WorldStarHipHop’s YouTube channel — a move that’s poignantly reminiscent of the pre-streaming days, just like the song itself. “I might swerve, bend that corner, woah-woah/ B—h, hold on tight ’cause I tweak and this b—h, start lettin’ s—t go/ And I heard that she wanna show-ow/ Me who she be, I’m kinda f—kin’ with it, show me some mo’,” he spits over production that recalls ’00s NOLA rap and begs for a remix by an artist of that era. It may be too early to tell if “Tweaker” is the start of a fruitful rap career for Ball, but he undoubtedly has scored the first viral hip-hop hit of 2025. — KYLE DENIS

SahBabii, “Show Off”

It’s beautiful to see SahBabii getting his flowers. NFL star Jahmyr Gibbs even hit Sah’s “Viking” dance in the endzone after scoring a touchdown. King Squad delivered his Saaheem (A Lu Bit More) deluxe, and he shocked the music community when teaming up with an uncredited Clairo for the unlikeliest of collaborations on “Show Off.” The alt-pop singer-songwriter’s soothing background vocals blend with SahBabii’s croon, as the ethereal single feels like a branch off Young Thug’s pioneering Beautiful Thugger Girls tree. — MICHAEL SAPONARA

OMB Peezy & GloRilla, “Lay Down” (Remix)

Late last year, OMB Peezy’s seven-year-old breakout song, “Lay Down” experienced a streaming resurgence thanks to a viral TikTok dance trend. That momentum turned into a genuine revival of the song, culminating in a new Glorilla-assisted remix, which arrived on Dec. 27, 2024. “All of that cheatin’, lyin’, connivin’ s—t, had to drop that b—h/ He must’ve thought I was gon’ stay ’round,” Big Glo spits in the intro to her brief, but effective, verse. Her Memphis accent sounds right at home next to Peezy’s Mobile, Ala. drawl over Drum Dummie’s synth-laden beat. — K.D.

Mozzy & Kalan.FrFr, “Where I Come From”

Sacramento meets Los Angeles here, as Mozzy’s grimy street tales mesh with Kalan.FrFr’s melodic croon for the 10 tracks making up Lucky Her. The sentimental “Where I Come From” finds the duo putting their West Coast ties on the table and thanking the harsh times in the Golden State for molding them into the successes they are today – in a way that doesn’t border on being corny, either. “I left the hood in my 30s/ Feel like I’ve seen enough,” Mozzy admits about turning a new leaf in life. He could’ve spun the block for a second poignant verse too. — M.S.

Little Simz, “Hello, Hi”

After landing on Billboard’s Best Rap Albums of 2024 with her genre-expansive Drop 7 mixtape (No. 12), Little Simz kissed 2024 goodbye with a new straightforward rap tune called “Hello, Hi.” “I ain’t gotta be what they on or be in the latest drop/ I just want my ends, and I want Miu Miu with the same damn bop/ Tell me, why they all dress the same? Carbon copy thesis/ I cut you with a Japanese silhouette, I know you ain’t never seen these pieces,” she rhymes over SHYY and Rigas’ guitar-inflected, London hip-hop production. Drill snares ricochet in the background as Simz draws parallels between her ascendance in music and high fashion, setting the stage for even more career milestones in 2025. — K.D.

Joey Bada$$, “The Ruler’s Back”

Joey Bada$$’s poetry in motion mixed with Conductor’s grainy yet gleaming production is like a match made in heaven. Hopefully, there’s an EP in the stash of the bodega basement. Joey set the tone with “The Ruler’s Back” putting the rap game on notice as the West Coast’s ears collectively perked up. “Too much West Coast d–k-licking, I’m hearin’ n—as throwin’ rocks, really ain’t s–t sticking,” he raps in an homage to fellow Brooklyn legend Jay-Z’s 1996 track “22 Two’s.” Last year brought the competitive spirit back to hip-hop, and that has spilled into 2025. — M.S.

Hurricane Wisdom & Polo G, “Giannis Remix”

Nothing was promised for Hurricane Wisdom hailing from North Florida. The Havana native broke down the regional barriers of Tallahassee with the twitchy “Giannis” in August, which picked up momentum like the Milwaukee Bucks superstar on a fast break to close out 2024. Hurricane narrates his gritty come-up but also delivers witty one-liners making light of his situation. He compares guns to the size of Giannis Antentokounmpo and jokes about not being good at math, but keeping problem-solvers around – if you catch his drift. Wisdom caught the ear of Polo G, who connects Chicago to Florida with a glossy assist to power the “Giannis Remix,” and ensure Hurricane gusts into the new year. — M.S.

King George & Snoop Dogg, “Unbelievable”

It’s not the star-studded menacing cast from Death Row’s 90s golden era, but Snoop Dogg has assembled a strong roster of versatile artists for the revamped label, with the West Coast icon at the helm. The Death Row Revue compilation project arrived last week and Snoop makes an appearance on the groovy “Unbelievable” alongside South Carolina’s King Geroge, which finds the Doggfather harping on the importance of loyalty. “Loyalty is rare/ So when you find that special someone, makes sure you stay locked and loaded/ Because it’s unbelievable what could happen,” he says. — M.S.

Naomi Osaka and Cordae have broken up after more than five years together, the tennis champ announced Monday (Jan. 6). In a straightforward letter posted to her Instagram Story, Osaka revealed that she and the rapper — with whom she shares 18-month-old daughter Shai — have called it quits, but emphasized that there’s “no bad […]

Ariana Grande is continuing to embrace her natural beauty despite jokingly shouting out Botox and Juvederm during her Rising Star acceptance speech Friday (Jan. 3) at the Palm Springs International Film Awards.
In a red-carpet interview with Entertainment Tonight, the singer-actress clarified that she was only kidding when, at one point in her speech, she quipped, “I never thought at the age of 31 I would be hearing the words ‘rising star’ again, so I wanted to start by thanking my two friends: Botox and Juvederm.”

“Oh my gosh, my joke,” Grande remarked to the outlet, laughing. “My bit.”

“I’m still clean, I’m still clean,” she then clarified in regards to the beauty treatments. “But when I start going again, I’ll let you know. I mean it. I really want to be transparent as a beauty founder, as the founder of R.E.M. Beauty — I think it’s important to have transparency.”

“I love it, I support it,” the “Yes, And?” singer added of fillers. “But I am still four years clean.”

Grande’s comments echo what she previously revealed to fans in a 2023 beauty secrets video with Vogue, saying at the time that she’d had a “ton” of lip filler and Botox injections over the years before stopping cold turkey in 2018. “For a long time, beauty was about hiding for me, and now I feel like maybe it’s not,” she said in the emotional clip. “It was just like, ‘Oh, I just want to see my well-earned cry lines and smile lines’ … These are just thoughts that I feel like we should be able to discuss when we’re talking about beauty secrets. F— it, let’s lay it all out there.”

The two-time Grammy winner earned the Palm Springs ceremony’s Rising Star honors thanks to her performance in Wicked, in which she stars as Glinda opposite Cynthia Erivo’s Elphaba. Grande was full of jokes at the award show, with the Victorious alum also comically faking like her trophy was too heavy for her to carry after accepting it from Jennifer Coolidge — something she also laughed about with ET.

“I was doing a bit on stage, but I’m scared people actually thought it weighed me down,” Grande said.

Two days after the Palm Springs International Film Awards, Wicked won cinematic and box office achievement at the 2025 Golden Globes.

Watch Grande clarify her joke about Botox below.

SZA is keeping fans on their toes to kick off 2025. While the Lana deluxe is expected to receive new songs and mixes in Monday’s update (Jan. 6), she also teased a separate fresh track on Instagram. Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news Solana posted the unreleased […]

Two-time Grammy winner Dennis Scott is the 15th recipient of The ASCAP Foundation’s Joe Raposo Children’s Music Award. Honoring the best in children’s music since 2010, the award is presented by the family of Joe Raposo, one of the co-creators of Sesame Street and the show’s longtime musical director. “I feel honored to be among […]

In this week’s batch of new releases, Billboard Hot 100 chart-topper Morgan Wallen issues a tender ballad, while crooner Brett Eldredge releases a new, non-holiday track. Also featured in this week’s new releases are fresh music from Americana queen Sierra Ferrell, country group Restless Road, and bluegrass luminary Becky Buller.

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Check out all of these and more in Billboard‘s roundup of the best country songs of the week below.

Morgan Wallen, “Smile”

Nineteen-time Billboard Music Awards winner Wallen gave fans a surprise on New Year’s Eve, releasing the introspective ballad “Smile.” Written by Wallen along with Rocky Block, John Byron, Ernest Keith Smith, Ryan Vojtesak and Luis Witkiewitz, the song finds Wallen singing about having a photo taken at a bar with a lover, knowing that his lover’s bright smile “was only for the picture” — and far from representative of their crumbling relationship. Still, seeing his lover’s smile elicits memories of their happier times together. Melodically, this pensive, pop-tinged ballad makes the most of Wallen’s polished falsetto and heartfelt vocal rendering. The song’s breakup-centered lyrics build upon his recent hits, “Lies, Lies, Lies” and “Love Somebody.”

Brett Eldredge, “Gorgeous”

Eldredge marks the second release on his own Warm and Cozy Records with the lush, pop-leaning uptempo track, “Gorgeous.” The track is stratified with vocal harmonies, melding for a gospel-tinged choral sound that elevates the composition’s uplifting lyrics of praise and admiration for a significant other–even when they are seemingly at their lowest points. As always, Eldredge relates the song’s message with his nimble, soulful vocal rendering. The song is Eldredge’s first non-holiday music since 2022’s Songs About You, and is a welcome return from this gifted singer-songwriter.

Sierra Ferrell, “The Garden”

Sierra Ferrell’s intricate songwriting, exuberant performance style and signature musicianship have made quickly established her one of the most heralded artists in Americana, bluegrass and folk music over the past few years, and she continued amassing accolades in 2024, including taking home the artist of the year and album of the year (Trail of Flowers) at the Americana Music Awards. She’s also nominated for several Grammys at the upcoming ceremony, including best Americana album (Trail of Flowers). She previews the upcoming deluxe version of her Trail of Flowers album (out Jan. 31 on Rounder Records) by offering up an expanded arrangement of her song “The Garden.” The new arrangement is bolstered by layers of piano, pedal steel and stringwork, all framing Ferrell’s distinct voice.

Restless Road, “Work on Me”

Tender piano highlights this trio’s flawless harmonies and individual vocal talents, as Restless Road’s Zach Beeken, Garrett Nichols and Colton Pack release their latest song, centered on someone who realizes they are far from perfect, but are inspired by love to make better life choices and embark on a journey of building better habits. Written by Restless Road, Jacob Davis and Joe Fox, this powerful, pop-inflected ballad marks an auspicious musical start for the new year.

Becky Buller, “Reach”

Bluegrass vocalist/fiddle player/songwriter Buller teams here with her fellow First Ladies of Bluegrass members (who each became the first woman to win IBMA Awards in their respective instrumental categories): banjoist Alison Brown, mandolin player/vocalist Sierra Hull, bassist Missy Raines and guitarist/vocalist Molly Tuttle. Together, they construct this fleet-fingered, female-led, and harmony-heavy anthem about balancing ambition with contentment, while continually pushing forward with new personal challenges. Though a new single from Buller, “Reach” was written by rock group Orleans’ Johanna and John Hall, and previously recorded on New Grass Revival’s 1981 album Commonwealth.

Vybz Kartel is adding his voice to the Drake vs. Kendrick Lamar debate — and he’s firmly on Team Drizzy.
While speaking to Billboard‘s Kyle Denis for a cover story published Monday (Jan. 6), the dancehall artist didn’t hold back when prompted to share his thoughts on rap’s biggest feud in recent memory. “I’m not a fan of Kendrick,” Kartel began frankly. “I don’t even listen to Kendrick, so I wouldn’t know.”

“What does he rap?” the “Ramping Shop” musician continued. “I saw it on the internet, but no disrespect to the dude, I hear him, but I don’t listen to him. Drake is more in tune with Jamaica and the culture.”

Kartel added, “Drake is a better and bigger artist.”

The reggae star’s cover story comes less than a week after he made his grand return with a massive Freedom Street concert in front of more than 35,000 people at Kingston’s National Stadium in Jamaica on New Year’s Eve, performing for the first time since his July prison release. Kartel had served a 13-year sentence for the murder of Clive “Lizard” Williams, for which he and his co-accused — Shawn Campbell, Kahira Jones and Andre St. John — have always maintained their innocence.

During the tail end of Kartel’s sentence, Drake and Lamar’s beef simmered over into an explosive rap back-and-forth that fans are still talking about months later. The beef started with the Toronto artist dissing Dot on “Push Ups” and “Taylor Made Freestyle” in April. Lamar clapped back with a slew of searing response tracks including “Euphoria,” the Billboard Hot 100-topping “Not Like Us” and more, while Drake added fuel to the fire with songs such as “Family Matters” and “The Heart Pt. 6” in May.

Lamar is now set to headline the 2025 Super Bowl Halftime Show, while Drake is in the midst of taking legal action against Universal Music Group for allegedly conspiring to “artificially inflate” the Compton musician’s streams on “Not Like Us” and for allegedly allowing Lamar to defame Drake on the track. In November, UMG denied the accusation — which the company called “offensive and untrue” — and added in a statement to Billboard, “We employ the highest ethical practices in our marketing and promotional campaigns. No amount of contrived and absurd legal arguments in this pre-action submission can mask the fact that fans choose the music they want to hear.”

As for Vybz? He’s in the running for the best reggae album Grammy for Party With Me, which was “done in prison,” the artist tells Billboard. “I was writing to keep my mind occupied, ended up with these songs and said, ‘Let me just put them on a little EP.’ Bam, Grammy.”

The ceremony airs Feb. 2 on CBS.

Three years ago, no one would have predicted that a ragtag group of NFL players would put out an album of music that didn’t just break into the Billboard charts but actually sounded good. Yet The Philly Specials — as Philadelphia Eagles offensive linemen Jason Kelce, Lane Johnson and Jordan Mailata called themselves — did just that and much more. Over the course of three holiday albums, they’ve not only become unlikely chart stars, attracting luminaries from the actual pop music world to collaborate, but they’ve raised astounding sums for charity with each release. 

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Their most recent, A Philly Special Christmas Party, is their biggest yet: with 32,000 copies sold in its first week out in November 2024 — including 22,000 vinyl pressings — its debut had the largest sales week for a holiday release on vinyl in the modern era. It hit No. 1 on Billboard’s Independent Albums chart, No. 2 on Holiday Albums, Vinyl and Top Album Sales, and No. 16 on the Billboard 200.    

And in an unprecedented feat of philanthropic outreach, the proceeds benefited Operation Snowball, which delivered a gift to every student and teacher in the School District of Philadelphia (for a total of 1.1 million items) in partnership with the Fund for the School District of Philadelphia, with the players making in-person visits to spread holiday cheer. 

Kait Pritivera

Like its two LP predecessors, A Philly Special Christmas features the unlikely vocal talents of Kelce (now retired from his legendary run as the Eagles’ cente,r but busy as ever hosting the New Heights podcast with his brother, Travis Kelce; ESPN’s Monday Night Countdown; and, now, the network’s new They Call It Late Night With Jason Kelce), Johnson and Mailata, along with high-profile musical guests (Stevie Nicks, Boyz II Men).   

But the album wouldn’t have become a hit without two key behind-the-scenes forces: Connor Barwin – a longtime friend of Kelce’s, who is himself a former Eagle (and also now the organization’s head of development and strategy) – and Charlie Hall, drummer for alt-rock arena-fillers The War on Drugs and the Philly Specials’ producer and musical director.  

Barwin and Hall spoke to Billboard as they recovered from the whirlwind release of A Philly Special Christmas and Operation Snowball about what football players and musicians can learn from each other, watching Jason Kelce and Stevie Nicks duet, and discovering Travis Kelce’s vocal talents.  

Tell me a bit about your individual roles in getting the album together.  

Connor Barwin: It started with being good friends with Jason, Lane and Jordan. I played with Jason from college [at University of Cincinnati] till Phill,; played with Lane in Philly for a long time — and then working for the team, obviously got to know Jordan really well. I heard Jason throw out this idea of making a Christmas record, and I knew all these guys were very talented musically.

I’m someone who really appreciates and loves music and had gotten to know quite a lot of people in the music industry through my [Make The World Better Foundation] that I started when I came to Philly. And one of the many wonderful benefit shows I’ve thrown was with Charlie and The War on Drugs. Jason knows Charlie as well – he’s one of the best musicians, he’s an Eagles fan, he’s local – so I immediately thought, “This is who we should call.”

We all got together and Charlie started asking the right questions: What songs are important to you? How do you think about Christmas music? We sort of left that meeting all very much committed to taking it seriously. My role from then on has been trying to keep it all together; there’s a lot of busy people, a lot of different stakeholders, so making sure we’re finding time to do this the right way, where it doesn’t intersect with their main career — which is playing football for the Eagles — but finding a balance, because this is very fun and fulfilling for them.   

Kait Pritivera

Charlie Hall: I don’t think we had any idea when we started doing this what sort of shape or scope it would have. But from that first meeting, just seeing the way the guys were passing the guitar around, it was like wow, these guys are deeply connected, they’re doing this thing at the highest level in their “real” jobs but they also approach music with that same mindset of “we want to make this great.” And they did! 

When you set out to make this third record, did you have in mind big goals in terms of people you wanted to get on it or songs that you wanted to take on? 

Barwin: With how old we all are, and being in Philadelphia, it made sense, like — if we could ever get Boyz II Men on the record, that would be incredible. But at the end of the day, I never really had any goals other than making something we were proud of, having fun and raising money. 

Who’s harder to convince to participate: high-profile musicians or football players?  

Hall: It’s scary singing into a microphone, hearing yourself that closely and in headphones… There’s a lot of the guys’ friends [on the team] that can sing, but I would probably argue that it’s a little harder to get some of the players.

Barwin: Yeah, I agree. But it’s also been really fun watching these guys in the studio with professional musicians and seeing how they’re inspiring each other. As a former athlete that still works in the NFL, it’s really cool to just show everyone that these guys, who are some of the best football players in the world, are brave enough to try something that they’re not completely comfortable with. It’s an inspiring thing for a lot of people, whether they’re athletes or not, to see: that if you or the world is putting you in this one place, you can try something else. It’s cool for kids to see that… 

Hall: And for their teammates to see that, for the musicians to see it. To see these guys out of their element just going for it and having the confidence to try and get better… I learned so much from every single person that came through that door, musically, interpersonally, professionally.  

Kait Pritivera

Jeff Stoutland, aka Stout — the Eagles’ legendary run-game coordinator and offensive line coach — has a humorous feature on this album’s cover of “It’s Christmas Don’t Be Late,” better known as The Chipmunk Song. How did you get him involved?

Barwin: Stout is known as one of the most hardcore, best coaches in the world, and it’s no surprise to me that he understands how fun and important something like this is. But the Chipmunks thing was a Charlie/Jason idea that came out of the studio. You really love that song, and Jason thought, “You know, Stout would be perfect,” and he was game for it. People know how great of a coach he is, but he really looks at these guys like family, and he’s so proud of them to be doing something outside of football.  

Hall: I think Stout gets a kick out of it – and [he likes] showing the guys that yeah, doing something off the field has impact. 

The big reveal of Stevie Nicks on the record, duetting with Jason on Ron Sexsmith’s “Maybe This Christmas,” was huge. How did that happen, and what was it like seeing her and Jason working together?

Barwin: I mean, just seeing her was amazing, and then seeing her with Jason was very cool, the respect they had for each other and how happy they were to be together doing this. The backstory is, you know, as the Kelce family’s rise has happened, I think there was just some admiration [on Stevie’s part] for what a wonderful family they are. And I think Stevie had met Travis at a show before, and so their teams had sort of known each other, and Charlie had this song, so we said, you know, let’s ask Stevie if she wants to do it, she would be perfect for this. And she was game right from the beginning. When she came to the studio, she was so happy to be there, and she was awesome to be around.   

Hall: I think it’s fair to say that sense of humor is part of the connective tissue here. You think of Stevie as this, like, magical creature who exists on like another plane, and yes, she kind of is, but then there’s this sense of humor that was at the forefront of her and Jason’s connection. 

There was a very positive fan reaction to Travis’ first Philly Specials vocal appearance last year on A Philly Special Christmas Special, on “Fairytale of Philadelphia” with Jason, and he returns here on “It’s Christmas Time (In Cleveland Heights)” with Jason and Boyz II Men. He does a full-on ‘90s-style slow jam spoken intro and sings quite nicely. Were his vocals a surprise, or is he just naturally talented at singing, too?

Hall: Totally naturally talented. And kind of approaches things head-first, just scratch- scratching away, and then bam, it’s there. It was really, really awesome to watch both years the way he approached his stuff – he’d just jump in there and literally find his way. And his and Jason’s voices, they obviously share DNA, so there’s a quality that makes them blend really well.

Barwin: So here’s a story I can tell: Charlie went out to KC to record Travis both times. And the first time, Charlie gets back and tells me, “That’s one of the most wild things I’ve ever witnessed in my life.” Because they started working on the song and in the first like 10 minutes, Travis is singing, and Charlie was like, “Oh, I don’t know if this is a good idea…” And then Travis asked to hear it back, and then asked for some feedback, Charlie gave him some feedback – and then the dude just got in there, and in like 15 minutes, found it. It went from “this might not work” to “holy s–t, this guy is in it, we gotta keep going!” It speaks to just how much of a talent and a performer he is, and why he’s such a great athlete and been so successful. 

It’s been so fun to discover some of the hidden vocal talents among the Eagles, like Jordan Davis last year. Are there any other hidden gems on the team who, if you were continuing the project, you’d want to get on wax? 

Barwin: I need to find that out — I know there’s a few. I’m not going to put them out there on blast right now, because then people will be begging them. 

Hall: And we know who is not, and we’re not going to say that either. [Laughs.] 

The Philly Specials project has just become more and more successful – why stop now?

Barwin: I think it just feels like the right time, being the third one, to end. It’s just such a special thing that happened, and I think all of us don’t want to change that and overdo it. We just want to keep it as magical as it’s been. Who knows where we’ll all be come next summer — maybe there’s a song or two, a couple more Eagles who can sing, or special guests that that we end up doing something to sort of keep this tradition going. But right now, it feels like maybe stop while we’re in a good place. 

Hall: It truly has become this kind of strange, giant family that’s definitely connected for life. So who knows?  

Barwin: What we were able to scale up and do this year has never been done before, and there are really big partners that want to find a way to do it in maybe other cities and with other teams, other players. So you know, who knows where this will end up. At the end of the day, there’s still such a big opportunity to continue to merge [the sports and music] worlds together for the benefit of everybody, for both athletes and musicians. We don’t quite have it figured out, but we’ve met a lot of people and know how to keep the artists and the athletes in the front position and make sure the music is at the forefront. And when you do that, you’ll make something that people connect to. Hopefully we can be helpful in facilitating more stuff like this.