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It’s a warm Saturday night in Phoenix, Ariz. and the crowd is a mass of kinetic energy as Justice drops “Audio, Video, Disco,” a song that effectively sends the thousands of people assembled in front of the stage into collective overdrive. Fists thrust into the desert air as the song’s “audioooooo!” lyric swells in time with the kickdrum and lights — a primal response that’s essentially programmed into the show.
“It’s almost mathematics, almost pure physics, what makes people dance,” says the duo’s Xavier du Rosnay. “[Making] the live show was like white coat scientist work, because we were preparing the music and thinking ‘Okay, if we add 16 more bars of this, it will make the crowd response more efficient.’”

Justice has toured the U.S., Europe and Central American with this precise configuration of beats, lights, lasers, mirrors and music for the last 11 months, since releasing their fourth album, Hyperdrama, on April 26, 2024. The tour began with a headlining set at Coachella’s Outdoor Stage, where the French duo established another show routine now as predictable as the audience freakouts.

After the Phoenix set, du Rosney and Gaspard Augé jump offstage and spend a solid 10 minutes high fiving and shaking hands with audience members who’ve pressed themselves up against the barricades to make contact. Ever cool, the sunglasses the guys have worn for the duration of the show stay on, but after remaining physically stoic for the duration the 90-minute performance, they now smile as they say their hellos.

“The show is very cold in a way,” du Rosnay says a few days prior in Los Angeles, where Justice is spending a few days between performances. “We don’t interact with the crowd for three reasons: The first is that it’s not in our character. We’re not like, stage people, you know? Second, we are very focused on what we’re doing. And then, every time we get excited and try putting a bit of emphasis in the way we move onstage and then watch the video after…”

Augé moves his hand slightly and laughs, indicating that their onstage motions haven’t been quite grand enough to convey their enthusiasm.

“So at the end we go meet [the crowd] to say thank you,” du Rosnay continues, “because we don’t get the opportunity to say that during the show.”

For both fans and actual members of Justice, there is currently a lot to be thankful for. Last year at this time, Hyperdrama and its attendant live show were finished but unreleased, and du Rosnay and Augé were managing expectations, saying in a Billboard cover story last April that they “had no idea” who the average Justice fan was or how people would respond to the music from Hyperdrama, the followup to 2016’s Woman. It’s now all much clearer.

Hyperdrama has been exceptionally well-received by critics and longtime fans and has helped open the duo up to new audiences through the duo’s first ever chart hit, “Neverender.” Ubiquitous in 2024, the collab with Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker marked Justice’s first ever radio No. 1, reaching the top of Alternative Airplay last month. It also won the Grammy for Best Dance/Electronic Recording at the Awards last month. Meanwhile “Wake Me Up,” their collaboration with The Weeknd out on the latter artist’s January album Hurry Up Tomorrow, gave Justice the first Hot 100 hit of their nearly 20-year career.

Justice

Andre Alves

Meanwhile the Hyperdrama tour is a face-melting cathedral assembled of kaleidoscopic lights, a rig that takez a 30-person team to operate — and which is so intense that the show is preceded by a warning that it “may cause discomfort and/or seizures for those with photosensitive epilepsy.” The show has turned new fans into believers and pre-existing fans into zealots. (In Phoenix, nearly every person I talk to in the crowd has seen the show at least once before.)

“It’s going much better than we thought it would, and we’re very appreciative of that,” says du Rosnay. But while reaching radio and winning awards is all exciting, the guys seem primarily delighted by meeting their fans, with du Rosnay and Augé finding that they really like the people who really like them.

“On tour when we do pop-up stores or events, we don’t do it in the hope of selling 20 more t-shirts if we show up to the store,” says du Rosnay. “We do it first as sign of gratitude for the people who show up, and also because we’re curious to see who those people are.”

“And they are so lovely,” Augé continues. “They make homemade stickers, fanzines.”

“And the main thing we noticed that’s made us very happy,” continues du Rosnay, “is that the crowd is much more diverse than it used to be in age, in gender, in every way. We see a lot more people who are not just like us. That’s the thing that’s made us the happiest.”

Justice fans, a demographic that began assembling when the guys released its era-defining debut single “We Are Your Friends” in 2006, have had ample opportunity to see and meet Justice. The guys have played more than five dozen festival and standalone dates on the Hyperdrama tour. Augé says they’ll likely tour the show until this December. After that, du Rosnay says that — as they have for previous tours — they’ll “pick a date and then dismantle everything” related to the live production “so that there can’t even be the temptation of saying yes to anything else.”

In the meantime, however, they’ve got more than upcoming dates throughout South America, the U.S. and Europe, with the stretch including headlining slots at festivals including Bonnaroo and Electric Forest. The operation is now smoother than its Coachella debut, when the guys were “so anxious and stressed,” about unveiling the production, du Rosnay says that “we were basically paralyzed on stage. We were just so focused and stressed thinking ‘okay, don’t fuck this up’ that we could barely move.” (While du Rosnay says there were some slight technical hiccups during this first show, they were not apparent to the naked eye.)

The nerves have decreased as the tour has moved through festivals and standalone shows at venues including The Holllywood Bowl and the Accor Arena in Justice’s native Paris. Setlists collect classics like “DVNO,” “Genesis” and “D.A.N.C.E.” alongside new tracks like “Neverender,” Woman” and “Mannequin Love,” the latter of which builds to a place of disco ecstasy, bolstered by the swirling shimmer of lights happening in tandem. Generally too, the show has become heavier and more ferocious, with the similarly chaotic “Stress” and “Generator” — spiritually similar tracks released 17 years apart — both getting major play.

In fact Augé calls this latter track, from Hyperdrama, “the barometer for if the show is going to get crazy. If the crowd reacts as it should” when the song is introduced early in the set, he says, “You can really feel the room vibrating, and you know it’s going be a good show.”

Another element of the performance that’s changed is their outfits. The tour began with du Rosnay and Auge both wearing sharply cut white suits from, naturally, French fashion house Celine. Then last fall, “We had this talk with our friend Gesaffelstein,” du Rosay says, referring to the revered French producer who’s also been on tour this year, playing his show in a sparkly black suit and a black mask with eyes that glow red. “He has an amazing character on stage. He looks so good. We were talking about how far you can go in terms of dressing up on stage. We’re not shy, but we don’t feel that it’s necessary to be over the top.”

But with Gesaffelstein as inspiration, that thinking evolved. “After all,” du Rosnay says, “it’s meant to be fun and over the top.” He and Augé reconvened with the team at Celine and asked for something “more visible.” While Celine had previously suggested gold suits, “We were like, ‘No, we don’t do gold.’ Then we went back like, ‘Let’s do it.’”

Justice

Andre Alves

One song that’s yet to make it into the live show is “Wake Me Up,” a track Justice made with The Weeknd for the latter artist’s January album Hurry Up Tomorrow. (The release bore out the long-gestating rumors that the pair was working on something together.) The Weeknd first texted the duo “in 2021 or 2022,” recalls du Rosnay, asking them “to make something that sounded like an opening track, like classical music, and something very solemn.” They created this custom order and included a bonus 10 seconds of music that they thought could work for a drop.

“We told him ‘Okay, that’s the intro you asked for, but just for your information, it could go into something else,” recalls du Rosnay. “He was like, ‘Yeah, give me more of the thing that comes after.” They went back and forth on the song for a year, with the final product sampling English songwriter Rod Temperton and evoking the heavy mood of Michael Jackson’s “Thriller.”

In terms of other forthcoming releases, the guys neither confirm or deny that they’re doing a live album for Hyperdrama, as they’ve done for all three of their previous LPs. Du Rosnay says they’re “thinking about it and just trying to find a way of putting it together.” He acknowledges that while “the metrics have shown us that nobody cares about our live albums,” that’s not exactly true, given that their 2018 live LP Woman Worldwide won the Grammy for best dance/electronic album. (Beyond that, du Rosnay says they have “no idea” when they’ll make another studio album, joking that given the five years between Audio, Video, Disco and Woman, and the eight years between Woman and Hyperdrama, it might be “10 or 12 years.”)

But despite the thrill of their live shows, as captured on previous albums and experienced by scores of people around the world, Justice does not, du Rosnay says, “have a passion for being on stage.” Rather, the effort is a function of “wanting to make something cool and to show it to people” and also because live shows are, He continues, “our breadwinning thing,” with theses financial considerations now especially important given the high cost of post-pandemic touring.

But while the songs are charting, the tickets are selling, the suits are shinier and there are more awards on the shelf, the current priorities are the same as they’ve always been.

“Same thing as before the album, or, like, 10 years ago,” du Rosnay says of what’s curently most important to Justice. “It’s to be happy, to be proud of what we do and comfortable with what we’re doing.

“There are so many things happening in these cycles that without noticing, you might start doing things that you aren’t comfortable with,” he continues. “It’s really easy, you know? You make one slight drift, and then you make another, and then three weeks later you’re doing something you thought you would never do in your life. So being at ease with what we’re doing, being proud and being happy, that’s the important thing.”

Sam Asghari is well aware of the impact Britney Spears has had on his career. The topic of the “Toxic” singer came up during the actor’s recent guest appearance on Nikki and Brie as he and the SiriusXM show’s hosts Nikki and Brie Bella — alongside Asghari’s The Traitors season 3 co-stars Wells Adams and […]

Nelly thinks Diddy wouldn’t stand a chance against Jermaine Dupri in a Verzuz. The St. Louis rapper visited Drink Champs recently, where he was asked to choose between Timbaland and Dupri, and the convo veered into a Verzuz that — for whatever reason — never came to fruition. “Respectfully, and outside of current situations,” he […]

Gigi Hadid and Zayn Malik may not be a couple anymore, but they’ll always be on the same team thanks to their daughter, Khai.
In a Vogue cover story published Tuesday (March 11), the model got candid about her co-parenting relationship with the former One Direction star. She and Malik dated for about six years — and welcomed Khai in September 2020 — before calling it quits in 2021 following a dispute between the singer and Gigi’s mother, Yolanda Hadid.

“Zayn and I do our custody schedules months in advance,” the Victoria’s Secret Angel told the publication, noting that she and her ex plan everything around the weeks they respectively have their daughter. “That doesn’t mean that it doesn’t change here and there, but we help each other out and have each other’s backs.”

Gigi went on to say that she and Malik both approach their co-parenting relationship with “love and a feeling of camaraderie,” though it’s sometimes difficult knowing that parts of their history will forever be public knowledge. Though she didn’t mention it specifically, one of the most talked-about moments in the former couple’s relationship — and subsequent breakup — is definitely the 2021 incident in which Malik was accused of grabbing and shoving Yolanda. The “Pillowtalk” singer later pleaded no contest to four counts of harassment and agreed to serve 360 days of probation as well as complete anger management and domestic violence programs.

“There is the hard part of the world knowing this much, and thinking they know everything,” Gigi told Vogue. “At the end of the day, we’re not interested in giving everyone our whole story. What we are interested in is raising our daughter together, with so much respect for each other, and not just as co-parents, but what we’ve been through together.”

Gigi is now dating actor Bradley Cooper, whom she met at a birthday party for a mutual friend’s child. Calling their relationship “very romantic and happy,” the model said, “I think just getting to the point where knowing what you want and deserve in a relationship is essential.”

“Then to find someone that is in a place in their life where they know what they want and deserve … and you both do work separately to come together and be the best partner that you can be,” she added. “I just feel really lucky. Yeah, lucky’s the word.”

See Gigi on the cover of Vogue below.

Tina Knowles revealed that Beyoncé is stepping away from the film world, and we’re running through her biggest blockbusters.  What do you think of Beyoncé being done with the film world? Let us know in the comments below! Tetris Kelly: Beyoncé said she is done with movies! Her mama, Tina, broke it all down as […]

Benson Boone might appear confident onstage, but things are a bit different behind the scenes. The rising star discussed his self-consciousness surrounding his appearance in a new interview with Rolling Stone published on Tuesday (March 11), especially since his fanbase is primarily young women who view him as a heartthrob. “There is an art to […]

Ian has seemingly responded to Tyler, The Creator after the Grammy-winning rapper subliminally dissed him during an interview with Maverick Carter last year. Ian pulled up to the Lyrical Lemonade studios on Monday to deliver his fiery “Lunch Break Freestyle,” which saw him reference his love for Odd Future while growing up and address some […]

Three months after SiriusXM pivoted away from its streaming app in favor of its core in-car satellite listeners, the company further thinned its ranks on Monday (March 10) with a new round of layoffs. The cuts came primarily in the company’s product and technology group and were part of the strategic shift announced in December, according to a company spokesperson. The company did not specify the number of employees affected.
Monday’s layoffs mark the third time in as many years that SiriusXM has cut its workforce. The company also laid off 3% of its employees in February 2024 and 8% of its employees in March 2023. The company described the previous two rounds of layoffs as necessary to build its platform and invest in technology to generate growth. Satellite subscription growth has stalled in recent years, though, and the company’s effort to attract new subscribers with a lower-priced streaming app brought disappointing results. 

Trending on Billboard

In December, the company returned its emphasis to satellite listening, planning to “tak[e] steps to drive profitability and cash flow as we face marketplace headwinds impacting the company’s growth trajectory,” CEO Jennifer Witz said in December. At the same time, SiriusXM named former Google and Viacom executive Wayne Thorsen as COO in charge of the company’s product and technology, corporate strategy and parts of the commercial business. Thorsen’s arrival coincided with the departure of chief product and technology officer Joseph Inzerillo. 

One of the products SiriusXM is using to bring in new subscribers is a lower-cost, ad-supported satellite service that had a limited launch in 2024. “In having an ad-supported tier, it gives us a place where we can market to these individuals,” CFO Tom Barry said Tuesday (March 11) during the Deutsche Bank Media, Internet & Telecom Conference. “We can bring them up to a higher price point as they appreciate and they increase their engagement in the product.” The full roll-out is expected to happen at some point in 2025, “but it could slip,” he added.

Advertising continues to be a problem, however. As concerns build over the Trump administration’s tariffs on China, Mexico and Canada, SiriusXM started “to see a drop-off” in advertising in the last “couple of weeks,” particularly in consumer-packaged goods brands, said Barry, adding, “I would say we’re cautious about where the ad industry is going right now.”

More subscriber losses are expected in 2025. SiriusXM is reducing its marketing spending on the streaming app and will “tighten” the terms of promotional plans, Barry said, which should result in the loss of approximately 200,000 subscribers this year. That drop would follow a 4% decline in subscribers in 2024, when SiriusXM revenue fell 3% to $8.7 billion.  

A few unsuspecting Little Monsters were learning the choreography to Lady Gaga‘s “Abracadabra” when, just like magic, the pop star appeared right in front of them for an emotional surprise.
In a video shared by Mastercard on Tuesday (March 11), Gaga secretly watches from behind a one-way mirror as a handful of fans take a class with one of the 14-time Grammy winner’s longtime dancers, who teaches them some of the moves from the “Abracadabra” music video. “[There’s] something about Little Monsters that is this deep connection,” Gaga says while looking on proudly. “They were just giving it their all — I didn’t expect myself to feel so emotional.”

After finishing the dance, the group posed for a photo — at which point the A Star Is Born actress suddenly popped out from behind the sliding mirror. In response, the shocked fans loudly screamed and cheered, some of them covering their mouths with surprise.

Gaga then sat on the floor with the Little Monsters for a heart-to-heart conversation, during which the fans told her their personal stories about how long they’ve been fans. “The purpose for why I kept making music really was all of you,” the vocalist told the group. “It means so much to me, the way you have been celebrating this song.”

“Abracadabra” was one of three singles that preceded Gaga’s new album, Mayhem, along with Billboard Hot 100-topper “Die With a Smile” featuring Bruno Mars and “Disease.” The full LP dropped March 7, marking the musician’s first album since 2020’s Chromatica.

Gaga has long maintained a special relationship with her fans, but in a recent interview with Billboard, the star said that something about the Mayhem era that’s brought them even closer. “I’ve seen Little Monsters be so amazing for almost 20 years,” she said at the time. “I haven’t seen us like this in a long time.”

“Between the dancing, the makeup, the hair, the costumes, it gives me so much life,” she continued. “I am really honored. All I ever want to do is make something that you press play and you feel good for the duration of the record, and maybe you play it again.”

Watch Gaga surprise her fans above.

HipHopWired Featured Video

Source: Ron Galella, Ltd. / Getty
Now that Ma$e is back in the spotlight thanks to his and Cam’ron’s highly successful sports talk show, It Is What It Is, it seems like the former Bad Boy artist is readying his long-awaited return to the rap scene, as he’s announced that he has a new project in the works.

During the March 7 episode of It Is What It Is, Ma$e revealed that not only does he have a new album on the way, but that he’s dropping it on the same day that Diddy’s trial is set to begin! Once known as Murda Ma$e when he first came into the rap game, could the artist also formerly known as Pastor Ma$e be trading in his former monikers for something like Petty Ma$e? We don’t know, but it certainly seems to fit the bill. But hey, we’re not mad at him one bit.

During his conversation with former football player Maurice Clarett, Ma$e let it “slip” out that he was working on a new album and that Cam’ron was helping him pick and choose which songs would make the cut saying, “I’m listening to the songs that Killa picked out of the stuff I made.” When asked when we would be hearing his new project, Ma$e didn’t hesitate to say, “May 25. The first day of the Diddy trial. We’re dropping. You like that? You made me put it out there. I wasn’t going to put that out there, but Mo, you made me.”
While the Diddy trial is actually slated to begin on May 5, Ma$e is clearly looking to send a message to his former boss and might just tweak his release date once he realizes the trial is set to begin a lot sooner than he originally thought.
Interestingly enough, Ma$e is also revisiting a trend from Hip-Hop’s golden era by releasing a double album, which would’ve consisted of a double CD (do kids even know what CDs are these days?), but he’s taking it a step further by dropping a triple album so things can be “even.” What that means to him is anyone’s guess, as it could be related to business or simply a personal statement. But regardless, it will be interesting to see what Ma$e and Cam have been cooking in the lab come May.
Will Ma$e have songs aimed directly at Diddy? Will it be ready for a May 5 release date? Will his day one fans want to hear what he has left in the tank?
Are y’all looking forward to a new Ma$e album? Let us know your thoughts in the comments section below.