News
Page: 268
Drake has filed legal action against UMG and Spotify over Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us,” claiming the song’s numbers were inflated. Keep watching to see the full story. Tetris Kelly:Drake is in his “First Person Shooter” mood as he files legal action against UMG and Spotify, alleging that the two companies conspired to artificially inflate […]
During this time of year, when people are thinking about being thankful for those special people in their lives, Jason Kelce has one person in particular who he is especially grateful for. During an appearance on The Rich Eisen Show on Monday (Nov. 25), the former Philadelphia Eagles center told the host that being swept into Taylor Swift‘s orbit over the past year has been a “whirlwind.”
Since his younger brother, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, began dating Swift last summer, Jason told Eisen that some people have been asking him for for tickets to her massive Eras Tour stadium shows, and he always gives the same answer. “Thankfully I don’t get a lot of people reaching out for Taylor Swift tickets… it is an immediate no. But, I don’t get a lot of that,” Jason Kelce said.
That said, Jason noted that Swift has been adamant that anyone who needs a pair of tix for the tour that is slated to wrap up next week with a final run of three gigs in in Vancouver at BC Place Stadium is totally welcome to be placed on her personal VIP list. “Taylor has said she will take care of anybody that I ask for,” he said. “She does say that, she’s great, but I still say no to everybody.”
Trending on Billboard
Jason — who is expecting his fourth child with wife Kylie Kelce — explained that he just doesn’t want to be that guy who imposes on the 34-year-old singer, or puts her in an awkward position. Why? Because, he said, “she’s been nothing but lovely to our family, she’s a wonderful person and I don’t want that to kind of be a dynamic.”
Eisen asked Kelce to clarify that Swift has given him a “clear path” to tickets that the former NFL star has shut down. “Yeah… where’s the line? Exactly, so I’m not even broaching the line,” he said. “I’m staying away from the line.”
Like his younger brother, Jason has attended a number of Eras Tour shows, including with Kylie in London in June, as well as with their two oldest daughters in Miami last month. In addition, Taylor has frequently been spotted hanging with the Kelce family in skyboxes during Travis’ Chiefs games over the past year.
Watch Jason Kelce talk Taylor tickets below.
11/26/2024
The Peppas impressively learned the composition in just two days.
11/26/2024
When Brookfield Asset Management invested $2 billion in Primary Wave roughly two years ago, a representative from the Canadian fund predicted that just as there has been a wave of comic book superhero movies, there would a wave of musician biopics.
“Music is going to be like the Marvel and DC comic catalogs,” Angelo Ruffino, who was then the managing partner at Brookfield behind the Primary Wave investment, said in October 2022. “There are just so many ways to monetize music that I think are in the early innings.”
Hollywood has churned out superhero films, from Batman to Black Panther, but the genre has been drawing smaller audiences of late. With a flurry of music biopics set for release in the next few years — including feature films about Bob Dylan, Michael Jackson, Bruce Springsteen, Queen Latifah, four films about each member of The Beatles, and maybe one about The Bee Gees — have we reached peak biopic?
Trending on Billboard
The top post on Reddit’s subreddit page about Dylan as of this writing is titled, “On not being interested in A Complete Unknown,” and it is far from the only gripe about dramatizations of currently touring musicians on the Internet.
However many factors are contributing to a packed pipeline of musician biopics, and consumer demand just one. By that measure, many recent music biopics have been hits. About half of the 25 highest grossing music biopics of all time, according to boxofficemojo.com, were released since 2014, with Bohemian Rhapsody about Queen at No. 1 with $216.4 million, Straight Outta Compton about N.W.A. at No. 2 with $161.2 million and Elvis at No. 3 with $151 million all in gross revenue in the United States.
Natalia Nastaskin, chief content officer at Primary Wave, which as involved with the 2022 release “Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance With Somebody”—No. 24 in the top 25 grossing biopics—says demand remains high. But the years it can take to land the starring actors, directors and producers essential to making a hit movie may mean these films continue to trickle out over the coming years.
“I do think we are going to see more of these biopics because we are always fascinated by the stories of our rock stars and the behind-the-scenes story of their lives,” Nastaskin tells Billboard. “How many more biopics will we see? Really hitting that cultural zeitgeist may take several years.”
Primary Wave is currently involved in biopics about Boyz II Men and Boy George—both in production.
Another factor that has the potential to disrupt the normal line between demand and supply are the different ways Hollywood and the music industry make money off these films. Hollywood defines a successful movie by the revenue it grosses; the music industry is more interested in how it drives moviegoers to stream the music, buy merch and the tangential licensing opportunities delivered by the music’s resurging relevance.
By those definitions, Elvis was a smash. All of the activity that the Baz Luhrmann biopic drove for Elvis’s music and brand boosted the Presley estate’s estimated value to around $1 billion 2022 from an estimated $400 million to $600 million in 2020.
It may take years to measure the impact of Timothée Chalamet’s portrayal of Bob Dylan on his catalog, at least until 2025, which is when the Michael Jackson biopic is slated for release. With The Beatles films expected in 2027, there seems like no shortage of musician biopics to come.
Damiano David is iHeartMedia’s latest “On the Verge” artist with his new solo single, “Born With a Broken Heart.” In a first for iHeart, he will be featured across three formats, with all iHeartRadio CHR, Hot AC and Alt stations participating in the promotion. Damiano, 25, is best-known as frontman for the Italian rock band Måneskin, […]
Modern-day America is full of conspiracy theories. Among them: Votes have been changed by space lasers, birds aren’t real and large corporations are injecting vaccines into over-the-counter foods.
Explore
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
With his new single, Luke Bryan unintentionally found a conspiracy that’s been grossly overlooked: Honky tonks have manipulated the population with magnets.
To be clear, that is a kooky – and unfounded – proposition, but it is true that country bars have an irresistible attraction for many of their customers. That internal pull is at the heart of Bryan’s “Country Song Came On,” released by Capitol Nashville to country radio Oct. 28 via PlayMPE.
The single’s protagonist is ill-equipped to say no to the joint’s alluring features, and his plan to get a good weeknight’s sleep is derailed by the pursuit of a good time. “I’ve certainly been drawn in, no shortage of times, by the vibes of a bar, and the right songs and the right ambience,” Bryan says.
Trending on Billboard
He knows that scenario from both sides of the fence: he’s paid the cover charge as a patron, and sang cover songs on a hole-in-the-wall stage.
“From the time I was 16 years old till I got my record deal, I [played] most of my concerts in little bars and honky tonks,” Bryan says, “so I spent a good 12, 13 years playing in those environments and playing the Merle Haggard songs and the Waylon Jennings songs and the Keith Whitleys and all that. So it’s nice to find one like this that really is authentically me.”
“Country Song Came On” found its genesis in a second-floor writing room on April 18, 2022, at SMACKSongs’ Music Row headquarters in Nashville. Songwriters Neil Medley (“Made For You,” “Hung Up On You”) and Ryan Beaver (“Pretty Little Poison,” “Party Mode”) had been co-writing frequently for more than a decade, but it was the first time they worked with River House writer Dan Alley.
Once they settled on the “Country Song Came On” title, the rest of the piece unfolded naturally, as they explored a regular guy who cedes control of his evening hours to a greater power. “It’s not my fault,” Alley says with a laugh. “It’s the song’s fault, or it’s the barstool’s fault.”
Beaver toggled on acoustic guitar between a tonic chord and a two-minor, adding a seventh note into the latter triad to give it extra color. Most, though not all, of the song resides in that simple back-and-forth interplay, as they crafted a bluesy melody over the top.
“I tend to play a lot of voicings,” Beaver says. “If there’s an A-minor, I’ll play it a couple of different ways, just for it to feel fresh or new or different. An A-minor is an A-minor, but if you add a seventh, or you play that A-minor in [a different] position, it feels different, sounds different. We were probably just all entertaining ourselves, but it’s really a lesson in simplicity, going back and forth between those two chords a lot.”
They had the opening line of the chorus (“I was gonna drive by, wasn’t gonna stop”) and the payoff lines (“I wasn’t gonna drink / But then a country song came on”) and mapped out the chords and melodic progression of the first verse and chorus before filling in the rest. Even though the start of the chorus was obvious, it didn’t have a typical lift.
“That character is not going to sing a big chorus,” Medley says. “It just never felt for one second that we needed it. It just felt like this groove is going on, so why take it out of that? Let’s just continue.”
Midway through that chorus, they switched up the phrasing and melody just enough to propel it forward, and they cemented the club’s magnetism once they settled on the lyric for that passage: “Wasn’t gonna let the bar twist my arm / But I’m helpless in a honky tonk.” Bryan suggested that second line could be a title on its own. “’Helpless in a honky tonk’ – we should write that at some point,” Medley quips.
They had the bar’s band cover a George Jones hit in the second verse, and gave “Country Song” a very subtle bridge, then did a work tape to end the day. As much as they liked it, they didn’t get around to demoing “Country Song” until the fall, using a four-piece band. Alley sang lead, unintentionally copping a Blake Shelton sound. Shelton and Bryan were their leading targets once their publishers started pitching it.
“There’s a lot of space in it, [and] it’s kind of traditional, just to leave a little space and not get too many words jumbled in there,” Alley says. “That kind of leans towards the old school.”
Bryan quickly put it on hold when he heard the demo in January 2023. Producers Jeff and Jody Stevens booked a different set of studio players than in past Bryan sessions for a recording date at Nashville’s Starstruck Studios. Steel guitarist Eddie Dunlap and guitarist Sol Philcox-Littlefield got plenty of space to set the sonic tone.
“Due to the title, I think we thought ‘Country Song’ was going to need a lot of steel on it,” Jody says.
Philcox-Littlefield enhanced that attitude by playing a growling baritone guitar instead of the light Memphis soul licks featured in the demo. “[Bryan] wanted something country and something straight ahead,” Jeff says.
Those two musicians played the most prominent role in defining the sound, and divvying up the parts was effortless. “I’ve been recording this kind of band ever since 1993,” Jeff says. “If they’re working well together – and they almost always do – by the time the second run-through comes through, they’ve kind of got their spots figured out.”
It jelled so nicely that even after Bryan stopped singing at the 3:06 mark, the band kept grooving another 50 seconds. “We could have made that outro about half as long,” Jody says, “but I don’t think it’d be as fun.”
Bryan’s final vocal, also cut at Starstruck, was just as effortless, given the easy nature of the song. He made one important revision, replacing Jones in the lyric with “ETC” – short for Earl Thomas Conley, whose songs Bryan covered frequently when he was playing barrooms.
“If people don’t know what ETC is, they’ll get online or Google, and maybe go dive into some deep, deep, deep cuts of Earl Thomas Conley,” Bryan says.
The ETC alteration uniformly impressed the writers. “That was the moment I realized, not only does Luke love this song, but Luke really cares still, this many years into his career, about his craft and about songs,” Beaver says. “And he made it his.”
“Country Song Came On” is as magnetic as the bar it celebrates, and it debuted on the Country Airplay chart dated Nov. 30, easily surviving the internal vetting process. If anyone suggests the decision to make it a single was contentious, consider it another conspiracy theory.
“Through the years, I’ve had songs that I really believed in, that not everybody believed in, and they worked out,” Bryan says. “This one’s funny, because everybody’s really on the same page and excited to see it come out.”
With the first quarter of the 21st century coming to a close, Billboard has spent the last few months counting down our staff picks for the 25 greatest pop stars of the last 25 years. You can see the stars who have made our list so far here — and now, we examine the century in Taylor Swift, who took pop stardom to places we hadn’t previously thought possible. (Hear more discussion of Taylor Swift and explanation of her list ranking on our Greatest Pop Stars podcast — with her episode debuting Wednesday — and see our recently rebuilt list of the Greatest Pop Star by Year from 1981 to 2023 here.)
Explore
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
It’s amusing to think back on Taylor Swift at age 17, staring straight into Tim McGraw’s soul at the 2007 ACM Awards while performing her debut single – which just so happened to be named after him.
Trending on Billboard
Pitchy but spirited, plucky but deeply promising as a songwriter, it was clear that she was bursting at the seams with talent and ambition – fully capable, in theory, of reaching the greatest heights a career in the music business could offer. But the audacity she demonstrated by taking the moniker of one of country’s biggest stars, claiming it for her own release – her first-ever, at that – and serenading him with it in front of all of their peers on live television? That proved she also had the sheer nerve she’d need to actually get there.
Time and time again, that same moxie would propel the Pennsylvania native to previously inconceivable heights, her profile skyrocketing with each album as she stacked up chart records, historic sales numbers and unprecedented Recording Academy recognition. Through honoring all the traits that made her different – her sharp pen, her relatable girl-next-door awkwardness, her hopeless romanticism – and rejecting culture’s previous expectations for female artists to be overtly sexy, pliable and cool, she was able to forcefully, gravitationally bend culture to her will and become one of the world’s biggest undisputed pop stars, despite her eight-year late start in country music.
She is the only person to ever win album of the year at the Grammys four times. She has the second-most Billboard Hot 100 entries of all time (only Drake has more) and ties with Jay-Z for second-most No. 1 albums on the Billboard 200 (bested only by The Beatles). She is one of the most impressive touring artists of the past quarter-century, a status that has culminated with her global Eras Tour becoming the highest-grossing trek of all time in 2023, just halfway through its run, as it repeatedly set stadium attendance records and boosted local economies in its confetti-and-friendship-bracelet-strewn wake. She’s a billionaire, the only female artist to become one predominantly through music alone. She is the most famous woman in the world.
And, with all due respect to Tim McGraw, the first thing millions of young pop fans really do think of when they hear his name is Taylor Swift.
Gareth Cattermole/TAS24/Getty Images
Rick Diamond/Getty Images
Swift and her fans were both young when they first saw each other, she an angel-faced teenager with corkscrew curls and lofty dreams that spilled over into both songs and MySpace posts, they a pack of mostly adolescent girls who pored over her interviews, replayed her vlogs long before “vlogging” was even a thing and started picking up guitars at higher rates to emulate their beloved heroine. The details of her origin story are now common bits of trivia — she was born Dec. 13, 1989 to Scott and Andrea Swift, raised on a Christmas tree farm in Wyomissing, and did you know her lucky number is 13? — but they used to make up the sacred web of knowledge held dear by her earliest admirers. To them, the tale of what happened next is also etched into memory like a bible passage: She moved to Nashville as a teenager to pursue a country music career, scored a publishing deal while still a student at Hendersonville High School and later got her big break when Scott Borchetta discovered her at the Bluebird Café and signed her to his infant label Big Machine Records.
In 2006, she dropped her self-titled debut LP through Big Machine and promoted it heavily, embarking on radio tours and hand-packing her own CDs into envelopes to personally send off to stations. She performed constantly — later joining Rascal Flatts, George Strait, Brad Paisley, Faith Hill and, yes, Tim McGraw as an opener on their respective country tours – and she was already demonstrating an instinctual business savvy that’s uncommon in most creatives, let alone ones who are still just 16. As an incentive for fans to buy copies of the record, for instance, she started planting hidden messages in her CD lyric booklets hinting at the real-life inspirations behind her songs, a tradition that would continue on future albums and grow more tantalizing as her subjects became more famous.
The specifics of this era feel fuzzier now that Swift has been ubiquitous for years — especially when, in 2024, modern stars find fame seemingly overnight through the lightning strike of social media virality as opposed to slowly, steadily building their fanbases over time. But her early career was much more of an old-school, brick-by-brick climb up the ranks than we often give her credit for now, fueled by the fact that on Taylor Swift, she was already composing with the skill of an experienced career songwriter who had a particular knack for connecting with young girls – because, well, she still was one herself.
Lead single “Tim McGraw” became Swift’s first entry on the Hot 100 that September, and the following year, the heart-rending “Teardrops on My Guitar” and the maniacally catchy “Our Song” also made their way up the chart. Neither of those would reach their peaks until 2008, though, when fiery breakup bangers “Should’ve Said No” and “Picture to Burn” also entered and became top 40 hits, just in time to capture everyone’s attentions ahead of the release of Fearless in November. She was a darling in the insular world of country music, earning professional recognition from the CMAs and ACMs, but she was becoming a face people recognized in pop culture, too. It was around this time that she was embraced into Miley Cyrus and Selena Gomez’s Disney star ranks and briefly dated Joe Jonas, her first of several tabloid-feeding romances that would become central to the way we think and talk about her persona. People were looking – she just needed to stick the landing with her next album.
Again, the magnitude of the entire Fearless era is hard to conceptualize now that Swift has dwarfed herself so many times over the years. But in late 2008, the musician officially exploded into crossover-star status thanks to the staggering success of her sophomore album – which spent an incredible 11 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and sold 592,000 million copies in its first week. She dominated radio with country-pop smashes that remain classics in her discography to this day – most notably, “Love Story” and “You Belong With Me,” two top five Hot 100 hits with cinematic music videos that inspired some of the most memorable moments in her iconography — and she became the ultimate it-girl, whose face you craned your neck to see on red carpets, talk shows, magazine covers. The very first headlining trek she ever embarked on, the Fearless Tour, was through arenas, and she capped the triumphant era with a headline-grabbing album of the year win at the 2010 Grammys, at that point the youngest artist to ever do so.
The most talked-about moment from the first of Swift’s many imperial phases, though, was none of the above — but you probably already know where this is going. Like Shakespearean foils crossing paths for the first time, Kanye West fatefully thrust himself into the then-19-year-old Swift’s storyline, publicly declaring at the 2009 VMAs that she actually didn’t deserve one of the countless awards she would take home that year and leaving her shellshocked on stage in a moment that would catapult her into the international news cycle for weeks to come. Everyone from Dr. Phil to President Barack Obama had an opinion on the matter, with the latter famously declaring the rapper to be “a jacka–.”
Now, to look at the trajectory Swift was already on up until this point and still argue that the VMAs incident “made [her] famous,” as Ye would later claim, is laughable. But his protests at the show would foreshadow so many others coming for her down the line – namely, questions about her overall worthiness as an awards powerhouse, as debates raged over whether such a young (and female) performer was actually writing her own songs, or merely coasting off the contributions of her older male collaborators.
In response to those criticisms, she would pen the entirety of her 2010 follow-up album, Speak Now, without any outside lyrical help, resulting in a magical 14-track romantic dreamscape that remains a fervent fan-favorite to this day. If Fearless showcased her ability to craft hooky, accessible earworms, her third studio effort introduced her gift for penning deeply personal, woundingly emotional ballads like “Back to December,” “Dear John” and “Last Kiss,” a trade most important to the DNA of Swift’s musical genius.
Though it spent six weeks at No. 1 and helped make Swift Billboard’s then-youngest Woman of the Year, Speak Now didn’t spawn the same level of pop smashes, critical acclaim or Grammy love as its older sister did. When she made 2012’s Red, she seemed determined to make up for its lack of universality, enlisting the help of pop-music godfathers Max Martin and Shellback to push her sound up to the absolute barrier of pop, while staying just country enough to hold onto her identity and keep Big Machine happy. It worked: the deliberately cloying “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together” became her first-ever No. 1 hit on the Hot 100, and with numerous top 40 smashes (“I Knew You Were Trouble,” “22” and “Begin Again,” to name a few), the project had double the capacity for hits as Fearless. Slower, more intimate tracks like “The Last Time,” “I Almost Do” and crown jewel “All Too Well” also expanded on the confessional sad-girl oeuvre she’d started with Speak Now, making Red a beautiful hodgepodge of all the best parts of both albums that crystallized what we now recognize as Swift’s greatest contributions to modern music: catchy hooks and heartbreaking ballads.
When Red also failed to take home album of the year at the Grammys, and her self-described “break my heart and I’ll write a song about you” schtick started to be met with antagonism – as Swift later explained, she became a “national lightning rod for slut-shaming” — she once again sought to level up. Breaking almost entirely away from her longtime Nashville collaborators and assembling a top 40 dream team comprised of Martin, Shellback, Ryan Tedder and newbie producer Jack Antonoff, the increasingly self-assured artist narrowed her focus on making an unabashed pop album that exploded with energy and shimmering ‘80s synths. She chose singles centered less on boys and more around moving to New York (which she did around that time), feuding with a frenemy (ahem, Katy Perry) and shaking off the haters. It was a colossal success by every metric. Thus began imperial phase no. 2: 1989.
Swift was downright inescapable at this point, with 1989 selling 1.29 million copies in its first week and reigning atop the Billboard 200 for 11 weeks. Her dominion was powered by an impeccable single and music video run, with “Shake It Off,” “Blank Space” and “Bad Blood” all spending time at No. 1 while “Out of the Woods,” “Style” and “Wildest Dreams” held down her rule over radio and department-store speakers for years after the fact. She embarked on her first-ever stadium tour, on which she often brough out guest artists and random famous friends from her #Squad – the innerworkings of which were constantly being dissected by fans and gossip sites alike, both boosting Swift’s fame and narrowing the microscope on her body, style, decisions and personal life. She became Billboard’s first-ever two-time Woman of the Year while making history as the youngest musician to ever take home album of the year at the Grammys twice.
She was Caesar, finally ascending the throne, her ambition and tunnel vision at last giving way to more success than even she could’ve dreamed of. But she hadn’t gotten there with the amount of support and trust she’d hoped from her advisers at Big Machine, who she has insinuated dragged their feet on every step of her country departure. Meanwhile, someone else was preparing to reenter the picture, a sharp knife strapped to his Yeezys.
When public opinion tilted in Ye’s favor following the Great Phone Call Dispute of 2016, Swift responded to the chorus of voices undermining her — fellow celebrities and people behind the scenes included — by hiding away. After a year of self-imposed solitude in London, during which time she fell in love with actor Joe Alwyn, the singer re-emerged in November 2017 with Reputation, one of her most pointed creative risks to date. The dark, theatrical LP found Swift truly reclaiming her narrative and explaining her side of a controversy in detail for the first time in her career, a sharp swerve from her previous method of staying quiet and letting the public decide what she was thinking for her. She would never again be the girl in the silver gown, stunned into silence on the VMAs stage.
Taylor Swift
As soon as her six-album contract was up with Reputation, Swift split from Big Machine and signed with Republic, at the time only hinting at the reason behind her decision: “Incredibly exciting to know that I’ll own all of my master recordings that I make from now on,” she wrote on Instagram. But the signs that she’d been quietly battling her own label for years were there; with 1989, she was open about how hard she’d had to fight Borchetta to let her release a pop album, and on the Reputation Tour, a dedication to Loie Fuller, who “fought for artists to own their own work,” was shown onscreen each night.
By the time the situation exploded with the sale of Big Machine — and with it, her master recordings — to Scooter Braun in 2019, Swift had already turned in Lover. As we’d learn later in her 2020 Netflix film Miss Americana, she felt that, at 29, this project was her last chance to reach audiences on a global scale before she aged out of pop stardom. This fear seemed to lead to her releasing “Me!” — a slightly juvenile and generic pop track that documentary footage would later show she wrote not with the ambition of living up to her own pop genius, but with the quaint goal of little kids singing along — instead of the LP’s clear pop banger, future four-week No. 1 “Cruel Summer,” as its lead single. The most important part of the Lover era to Swift’s overall legacy is that she finally started using her immeasurable influence for political causes after a decade of silence, championing the LGBTQ community through “You Need to Calm Down” and endorsing Tennessee Democrat Phil Bredesen for U.S. senate over Republican opponent Marsha Blackburn.
But when Scootergate happened, a fire was lit under her. She issued scathing response after scathing response, making her fury abundantly clear and quickly publicizing her intention to re-record her first six albums in order to reclaim ownership of her past works. While waiting for the clock to run out on the legal barriers blocking her from doing so before November 2020 – and after the COVID-19 pandemic sidelined her plans for the continuation of the Lover era, including a limited run of performances dubbed “Lover Fest” – she surprise-dropped Folklore and Evermore. Un-muddled by months of pre-release rollout or the need for flashy singles or visual moments, the back-to-back albums reminded the general public that her true gift lies in her storytelling — and thanks in part to an understated acoustic-folk sound assisted by The National’s Aaron Dessner, they made Swift “cool” to an entire audience that had never seen her that way before. In 2021, Folklore gave her a record-tying third AOTY win at the Grammys.
The first piece of imperial phase no. 3 fell into place that April. With the unveiling of her Fearless (Taylor’s Version) re-recording, Swift took her first steps on an escalator that, at the close of the quarter-century, is still going up, sharing a near-exact replica of the album that made her a household name with the additions of never-released songs she wrote and recorded more than 15 years prior. Following that same formula each time, the re-records have only ramped up in cultural significance as they’ve progressed; Red (Taylor’s Version) spawned history’s longest song to go No. 1 with fans’ beloved “All Too Well (10 Minute Version)”; Speak Now (Taylor’s Version) outsold its predecessor by 138k units in its first week; and 1989 (Taylor’s Version) became the first re-record to outsell its original counterpart, blowing the already staggering first-week numbers of 2014’s 1989 out of the water with 1.36 million.
The beauty of the re-recordings was that they both allowed longtime fans to relive some of their best memories with Swift while giving newer fans – or simply outsiders who weren’t paying much attention the first time these albums rolled around – a second chance at experiencing her most quintessential eras in real time. But arguably the most shocking part of the process was the fact that, in between the Taylor’s Versions, she was still recording original music. She dropped Midnights in 2022, moving a jaw-dropping 1.58 million first-week units and spawning her longest-running No. 1 hit with “Anti-Hero” — the most honest she’s ever been in her music about her personal demons and incomprehensible station in life — while making chart history, as the first artist to ever simultaneously occupy the entire top 10 of the Hot 100, not to mention winning a record-setting fourth AOTY Grammy.
By the time she embarked on her global Eras Tour, interest in her body of work — old songs and brand new — had never been higher, and like the mirror ball she is, Swift has rewarded fans for it every night on the road with more than three hours’ worth of over-the-top scream-your-face-off catharsis, each show an homage to the painstaking career she’s built, brick by brick, one beautiful, messy era at a time. The unprecedented scale of the tour aligns with the absolutely unfathomable reach she’s achieved in 2023 and onward, her victory lap only continuing with the introductions of boyfriend Travis Kelce to the fairytale – through which she’s also captivated the NFL, proving that no major institution is off limits for her to take over — and the release of 12-week Billboard 200-topper The Tortured Poets Department. The dense 31-track blockbuster LP is second only to Adele’s 25 in highest first-week sales of all time (2.6 million) and has once again swept nominations in every major Grammy category for Swift in 2025, including what could be a record-extending album of the year.
Last year, she was Billboard’s Greatest Pop Star of 2023, making her the only artist to ever win the title in three separate years (following 2015 and 2021), but the run she’s had in the past biennium isn’t just the grandest of her own career; it’s also possibly the most extraordinary cultural supremacy any of us have ever seen one artist accomplish in our lives. Her decisions, whereabouts and opinions are all considered public domain – you’re out of the loop if you haven’t seen what she wore to the latest Kansas City Chiefs game – and there is no reason to believe that if she dropped another album tomorrow, it wouldn’t invariably end up spending more weeks at No. 1 on the charts than even Tortured Poets, because when hasn’t she been able to top herself? Nothing is out of the realm of possibility for her.
Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images
All of this to say, the star is still outdoing herself, still beating her own unbeatable feats, still forging ahead in the same uncharted direction when most others would’ve long since burned out or jumped ship to alternative career paths – all of which, it shouldn’t go without saying, is exceedingly rare for someone nearly 20 long years into their career. She is venerated by the greats who came before her, from Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr — who declared that Swift’s mega-popularity is the closest phenomenon to Beatlemania he’s ever seen – to Stevie Nicks, Dolly Parton and Carole King. At just 34 years old, her catalog has inspired college courses all over the world that treat her written word with the same level of analysis as Wordsworth, and her business innovations – be it the album variations she’s been experimenting with since 1989’s collectible Polaroid sets, her negotiations with Spotify and Apple Music for fairer streaming rates or the playbook she’s still writing on how to re-release old music to new blockbuster returns – will continue to have reverberations throughout the industry, for longer than we can probably even currently imagine.
For all these reasons and so many more, she is Billboard’s No. 2 Greatest Pop Star of the 21st century, blowing past countless other accomplished hitmakers and icons. The fact that controversy will likely tear through the internet over her being just one small space below No. 1 is just another testament to her power, but regardless, her placement shouldn’t leave Swifties upset for too long — especially considering how much later in the millennium she got her start, both in the genre and music in general. In a way, Swift has always been like pop’s most curious tourist, never quite feeling like she’d always belonged there, more so trying on the things she liked best about the territory and sticking to her own guns for the rest. Instead of coming up and thriving naturally within the bounds of what we understand pop to be then and now, she rewrote the genre in her own image and, in doing so, charted a new course for crossover success that countless other confessional singer-songwriters like Olivia Rodrigo, Phoebe Bridgers, Gracie Abrams have since benefitted from.
That’s a lot more than tween Taylor bargained for when she wrote on her first album that she was “just a girl, trying to find a place in this world.” And if what her history has told us remains true, she’s still just getting started.
Read more about the Greatest Pop Stars of the 21st Century here — find our accompanying podcast deep dives and ranking explanations here — and be sure to check back next Tuesday (Dec. 3) as we unveil our No. 1 Greatest Pop Star of the Century so far!
THE LIST SO FAR:
Honorable Mentions
25. Katy Perry24. Ed Sheeran23. Bad Bunny22. One Direction21. Lil Wayne20. Bruno Mars19. BTS18. The Weeknd17. Shakira16. Jay-Z15. Miley Cyrus14. Justin Timberlake13. Nicki Minaj12. Eminem11. Usher10. Adele9. Ariana Grande8. Justin Bieber7. Kanye West6. Britney Spears5. Lady Gaga4. Drake3. Rihanna2. Taylor Swift
“It’s been very difficult, especially for me, to develop a sense of self-worth that is not attached to one’s career, because we’re taught we are what we do,” Don Henley told Billboard in 1994. “But it must be done at some point, and it generally comes later in life.”
On the Nov. 26, 1994-dated Billboard 200, the Eagles’ reunion album Hell Freezes Over sizzled in at No. 1 with 267,000 copies sold, according to Luminate.
The set, which led for two weeks, marking the Eagles’ fifth Billboard 200 No. 1, returned the band to the chart’s summit after a break of nearly 15 years. The group logged its first four leaders consecutively in 1975-79: One of These Nights, Their Greatest Hits 1971-1975, Hotel California and The Long Run. The best-of set is the top-selling album of all time, according to the RIAA, with 38 million certified units.
Trending on Billboard
Following The Long Run, the Eagles – then comprising Henley, fellow co-founder Glenn Frey, Don Felder, Timothy B. Schmit and Joe Walsh – parted (acrimoniously enough, famously, to eventually inspire the wry Hell Freezes Over album title). They combined for seven top 40-charting solo albums on the Billboard 200 in between The Long Run and Hell Freezes Over, including Henley’s 1989 top 10 The End of the Innocence. Frey tallied two Billboard Hot 100 top 10s in that span – the No. 2-peaking anthems “The Heat Is On” and “You Belong to the City,” both in 1985 – while Henley notched five top 10s, reaching a No. 3 best with “Dirty Laundry” in 1982.
The group’s reformation was sparked in part by the five members’ appearance in Travis Tritt’s video for his version of the Eagles’ 1972 classic “Take It Easy.” The remake, from 1993’s Common Thread: The Songs of the Eagles, hit No. 21 on Hot Country Songs in March 1994, after the set had run up a 13-week reign on Top Country Albums.
Hell Freezes Over introduced four new Eagles songs, mixed with 10 of the group’s ‘70s favorites and Henley’s The End of the Innocence single “New York Minute” performed live on MTV in April 1994. “For the record, we never broke up … we just took a 14-year vacation,” Frey winked during the set.
All four new tracks reached Billboard songs charts: first single “Get Over It,” with Henley on lead vocals, hit No. 4 on Mainstream Rock Airplay and No. 31 on the Hot 100; “Love Will Keep Us Alive” (Schmit) crowned Adult Contemporary for three weeks; “Learn To Be Still” (Henley) rose to No. 15 on AC; and “The Girl From Yesterday” (Frey) reached No. 58 on Hot Country Songs.
In Henley’s 1994 interview with Billboard, he predicted that the Eagles’ reunion would be temporary. “We’ve grown in different directions now, as people should,” he mused, “and so we’ll finish our obligations and go our separate ways again.” He added with a chuckle, “And frankly, I’m looking forward to that.”
Still, the band continued to add to its legacy, and catalog, including the top five AC hits “Hole in the World” in 2003 and “No More Cloudy Days” in 2005. In 2007, the Eagles released Long Road Out of Eden, their first album of all-new material since The Long Run. Led by the AC top 10 and top 25 Hot Country Songs hit “How Long,” Long Road Out of Eden launched as the Eagles’ sixth and most recent Billboard 200 No. 1, moving 711,000 copies in its first week, the best frame for an album by the band since Luminate began tracking sales in 1991.
Following Frey’s passing in 2016, the Eagles have remained a touring force, with his son Deacon and longtime country hitmaker Vince Gill since having become staples of their lineup in concert. As announced today (Nov. 26), four more shows have been added to the Eagles’ residency at Sphere in Las Vegas, extending its run, which began Sept. 20, through April 12, 2025.
Dating to the Eagles’ 1994 reunion, they have earned $1.5 billion in concert grosses and sold 11.6 million tickets, according to Billboard Boxscore. Their The Long Goodbye Tour, which began in September 2023, has grossed $138.1 million and sold 486,000 tickets over its first 40 shows. Their Sphere residency has grossed $42.2 million and sold 131,000 tickets over its first eight shows.
Adele is celebrating the end of her two-year Las Vegas residency with some commemorative keepsakes. The singer announced in an Instagram post on Tuesday (Nov. 26) that she is offering fans who made it to the Weekends With Adele extravaganza — as well as those who didn’t — a live album with a special bit of fairy dust from the series.
“To commemorate the ending of my residency in Las Vegas, I’m making a limited edition vinyl box set featuring the entire live setlist, a photo book, and even confetti from the show,” the singer wrote alongside an animation showing off the colorful box that features a grand piano on the front and opens up to reveal some spectacular photos of the show, as well as a full-color 56-page book and three 180g LPs.
The $349 box recorded during the 100-show residency at the Colosseum in Caesars Palace features two hours of music across 21 tracks, including such beloved hits as “Hello,” “Easy On Me,” “Rumor Has It,” “Skyfall,” “Set Fire to the Rain,” “Someone Like You” and “Rolling in the Deep,” among others; the estimated shipping date for the box is February 2025.
Trending on Billboard
And that’s not all. The singer is also selling some holiday-appropriate merch that includes a new card game called, naturally, “Love Is a Game,” that comes in a handsome burgundy box. The “conversation cards” inside include such topics as “Let’s Begin,” “When We Were Young” and “Who Am Eye?” with question including “Who do you love fighting with?” and “A time when you were wrong about yourself.”
Her web store is also stocked with a $15 Adele ceramic Christmas tree ornament featuring a vintage-looking pic of the singer in profile and a drawstring pouch, as well as an $85 green crewneck sweatshirt with a bedazzled “A” logo on the front, matching $80 green holiday sweatpants and a $90 black Adele hoodie.
Earlier in the day the singer reminisced about her “adventure” in Las Vegas during the run of twice-a-weekend shows that kicked off in November 2022 and wound down on Saturday. “Las Vegas you’ve been so good to me,” she wrote. “This residency went on to mirror what 30 was about – lost and broken to healed and thriving! Seems so fitting in the end.”
Adele has not said what she will do next, but the singer who typically takes extended breaks between albums has previously hinted at plans to temporarily step away from music, saying she’s prepared to take a “big break after this.”
Check out Adele’s preview of the box set and her holiday gear below.
As audiences continue holding space for the lyrics of “Defying Gravity,” Wicked star Cynthia Erivo is making sure that they understand the intention of her green-skinned heroine. On Tuesday (Nov. 26), Erivo spoke with Variety about the creation of her version of the iconic character, saying that she wanted her Elphaba to be intrinsically similar […]