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Joe Jonas is going back to his acting career with his new, bittersweet music video for his latest single, âHeart By Heart.â Directed by Anthony Mandler and released on Thursday (May 15), the clip opens with the superstar having an awkward-but-friendly run-in with an ex on the streets of New York City. After saying goodbye, […]
The housekeepers suing Smokey Robinson for sexual assault have now filed a police report, leading the Los Angeles County Sheriffâs Department to open a criminal investigation on top of the bombshell civil claims filed against the 85-year-old Motown legend.
Lawyers for four anonymous housekeepers, who alleged in a $50 million lawsuit earlier this month that William âSmokeyâ Robinson Jr. repeatedly raped them over the course of nearly two decades, confirm in a Thursday (May 15) statement to Billboard that criminal authorities are probing the claims. Â
âWe are pleased to learn that the LA County Sheriffâs Department has opened a criminal investigation into our clientsâ claims of sexual assault against Smokey Robinson,â say attorneys John Harris and Herbert Hayden. âOur clients intend to fully cooperate with LASDâs ongoing investigation in the pursuit of seeking justice for themselves and others that may have been similarly assaulted by him.â
Robinsonâs lawyer Christopher Frost says in his own statement to Billboard that the housekeepersâ claims are âmanufactured â and motivated by âunadulterated avarice.â Frost notes that police did not launch a criminal probe unilaterally; rather that the Sheriffâs Department is required to investigate because the women filed a police report.
âWe welcome that investigation, which involves plaintiffs who continue to hide their identities, because exposure to the truth is a powerful thing,â Frost says. âWe feel confident that a determination will be made that Mr. Robinson did nothing wrong, and that this is a desperate attempt to prejudice public opinion and make even more of a media circus than the Plaintiffs were previously able to create.â
The Sheriffâs Department did not immediately return a request for comment Thursday.
Robinson, whoâs currently on a legacy tour celebrating the 50th anniversary of his album A Quiet Storm, was accused in the May 6 civil lawsuit of forcing housekeepers to have oral and vaginal sex in his Los Angeles-area bedroom dozens of times between 2007 and 2024.
The singerâs wife, Frances Robinson, is also named in the lawsuit. The housekeepers say she did nothing to stop her husbandâs abuse, despite knowing that he had a history of sexual misconduct and had previously struck settlements with assault victims.
The lawsuit also says the Robinsons paid their employees below minimum wage, and that Frances Robinson created a hostile work environment replete with screaming and âracially-charged epithets.â
Smokey and Frances Robinson have fiercely denied the housekeepersâ claims, saying through Frost on May 7 that the âvile, false allegationsâ are merely âan ugly method of trying to extract money from an 85-year-old American icon.â
Source: Getty Images / Soulja Boy / DDG / Halle Bailey
Soulja Boy calling out DDG for allegedly putting his hands on Halle Bailey was definitely not on our 2025 bingo card.
In a stunning twist of events, Soulja Boy took to X, formerly Twitter, to invite DDG to a well-deserved fade after news broke of the singer requesting a restraining order against the rapper/streamer and father of her child.
On Wednesday, May 14, Big Draco said in a post that planned on âbeating the f*k outâ of DDG in the wake of details and photo evidence hitting social media when news of Baileyâs restraining order hit timelines where she also alleges the former couple âfought each otherâ during an incident in January.
âYou a b**ch a** n**ga for putting yoâ hands on Halle,â the âCrank Datâ rapper wrote on X.
Social Media Slams Soulja Boy For Blatant Hypocrisy
Well, right message, wrong messenger. Thatâs what many people on X are saying because Soulja Boy isnât exactly a champion of womenâs rights, mainly because he was just found liable for sexual assault of a former assistant who had to pay $4 million to.
âyou ainât even the n***a to be talkin , you hit women too . Right message wrong messenger,â one reply to Soulja Boyâs tweet read.
Another reply read, âCongrats on being the first rapper to defend a female while whooping another female ass.â
âDidnât you sexually assault your assistant?â another user wrote on X.Â
Rapper Freddie Gibbs got in on the fun, replying with a simple laughing emoji.
We are definitely in the upside-down, or maybe Soulja Boy was high when he let that post off because there is no way he sent that without being aware that he is definitely in the same boat as DDG.
SMH.
You can see more reactions below.
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After working with Jack Antonoff on her last two albums, Lorde surprised fans in April when she announced her fourth studio LP, Virgin, and the producerâs name was nowhere to be found in the credits.
But in a Rolling Stone cover story published Thursday (May 15), the New Zealand pop star finally explained why she chose not to work with her longtime collaborator this time around. Calling Antonoff a âpositive, supportiveâ teammate, she revealed that she simply felt like it was time to make a change.
âIâm very vibes-based,â she told the publication. âI just have to trust when my intuition says to keep moving.â
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For Virgin, Lordeâs intuition led her to Jim-E Stack, who executive produced the album alongside the âRoyalsâ singer. She also worked with producers Fabiana Palladino, Andrew Aged, Buddy Ross, Dan Nigro and Dev Hynes of Blood Orange on the record.
Her partnership with Stack and Hynes will extend to touring when she embarks on her Ultrasound trek in September, with both collaborators serving as opening acts along with The Japanese House, NilĂŒfer Yanya, Chanel Beads, Empress Of and Oklou. âVery proud and excited to be bringing my most talented friends in support,â Lorde said when she announced the tour on May 8. âCome see whatâs under the skin.â
Dropping June 27, Virgin will arrive four years after Lordeâs last album, Solar Power. Both the 2021 LP and 2017âs Melodrama were produced by Antonoff, with whom the âGreen Lightâ artist famously had a close friendship.
âWhen I came to New York, we had only written together maybe a couple of times, and we were very obsessed with each other on a creative level and as buds,â Lorde told Billboard of her dynamic with the Bleachers frontman in 2018. âI was sort of doing nothing in New York, and we did this thing where for five days in a row, we just kept having dinner every night, just getting to know each other.â
âWe still FaceTime almost every day,â she added at the time. âWhen you work with someone, you sometimes think, âMaybe it will just be for this time, and we say weâre going to keep in touch but we wonât.â But we really ⊠Iâm like, âHey, dickhead, what are you getting me for Christmas?’â
The two stars were so close as friends and collaborators, they often found themselves faced with rumors that their relationship had turned romantic. Both parties, however, denied the speculation on multiple occasions, with Antonoff tweeting in 2018, ânormally i would never address rumors but i resent having the most important friendships and working relationships in my life reduced to dumb hetero normative gossip ⊠im not seeing anyone. lol.â
The next month, Lorde told fans on an Instagram Live, âJack and I are not dating ⊠I love him. Heâs awesome, but weâre not dating.â
See Lorde on the cover of Rolling Stone below.
YG revealed he was the victim of sexual abuse when he was a teenager on his poignant â2004â single in March. Now, the Compton rapper is opening up to about being sexually assaulted by a 30-year-old when he was just 14 years old.
âI kept it inside for a long time,â he told ABC News on Wednesday (May 14). âMy familyâs first time hearing about that was when the record came out.â
The 35-year-old said he played the candid track for some of his male friends and was surprised to hear that many could relate after enduring similar experiences growing up. â90 percent of the people that I played it for â the men, the males â they all got similar stories. That was the conversation everyone was having,â he said. âIt was like, âYeah, I was sexually abused.’â
When the encounter took place over 20 years ago, he thought it was âlitâ and didnât realize he had been sexually assaulted. âIt wasnât a thing that I did some with an older woman â itâs lit,â YG explained of his thought process at the time. âYou go through life and you see stuff and you learn stuff and itâs like, âI got raped.’â
â2004â came together when J.LBS (J Pounds) pushed YG to open up about something he had never talked about before on a record during a studio session. âHe like, âYou gotta talk about something you ainât never talked about. You gotta dig deep! Whatâs something that you ainât never told somebody that nobody know,â he recalled. âThen I was like, âBop twice my age.â And everybody was like, âWhat?!’â
YG hopes his honesty influences peers and fans to tell their own stories. âEspecially coming from an artist â somebody like me â itâs unexpected,â he added. âPeople put me in a box⊠They look at us like we gang members, we animals, we not human, but itâs like, bro, Iâm human. I go through real-life stuff.â
While â2004â came as a shock to many of YGâs fans and friends, itâs only the tip of the iceberg as far as his personal story goes, and heâs planning to delve deeper into his life with the arrival of his The Gentlemanâs Club album this summer.
âPeople say I live a dangerous life â I talk about that and I give it to you straight like that,â he said. âNow me going through this growing stage of my life, it ainât hard for me because Iâm telling my truth.â
This year marks a chapter of change in YGâs life, who was baptized for the first time with his children in March. â2004â arrived with an accompanying music video, co-directed by the rapper himself, which boasts over 1.5 million views on YouTube.
Watch the full interview with YG below.
If you or someone you know is struggling and in need of help in the wake of sexual assault, please contact RAINN at 800-656-4673 or at online.rainn.org.
Mewow! Billboardâs Power Pets is a new feature focusing on musiciansâ best friends â no, not the humans â but the furry (and some scaly and feathery!) ones who bring extra joy and companionship to artists. Celebrities will be sharing sweet details about their beloved pets and how their furbabies enrich their lives. For the second story in the installment, we talked to country artist Chase Rice.Chase Rice may sing âyouâre right there in that bench seat next to meâ in his emotional tune âBench Seat,â but nowadays, itâs Jack â his beloved dog and best friend â who sits next to him on the concert stage during his performance of that song.Â
â[âBench Seatâ] was the reason I got Jack,â the country artist tells Billboard of his black Lab and the track about the healing power of dogs that was inspired by a friendâs mental health struggles. As the songwriter previously shared, Riceâs palâs own dog saved the friend from a very dark moment by simply laying its head on his lap to create an unbreakable connection during that difficult time. Â
â[Jack] was originally supposed to be the puppy in the video, but it took us a year and a half to get it together, so heâs the middle-aged dog in the video,â Rice explains of the visual for âBench Seat,â which reveals that the track is from the poochâs point of view. âThat song is the very reason that I got him. I knew the day that I wrote it that it was finally time for me to get a dog.âÂ
Rice says that heâs always wanted a duck dog since childhood, so thatâs what he looked for when he began his search. âI met a guy who works with Mossy Pond Retrievers in Georgia, and he said if you want a duck dog, get a black Lab, so we made a plan.â Now, shares Rice, Jack is âcertified as a master hunter and heâs my best buddy.â Â
And a much-loved friend at that. âBefore every meal, I have him sit and I hug him and tell him, âI love you and youâre the best dog Iâve ever had.ââ the singer-songwriter says. âHe has no clue that heâs the only dog Iâve ever had, but Iâll keep telling him that all the same.âÂ
Rice says Jack has taught him about love and responsibility as well: âI know heâs made me a better man.âÂ
Read on to learn more about Jack from Chase Rice.Â
All About Jack
Image Credit: Evan DeStefano
Age: 4 years  Hometown: Nashville  Type/breed: Black Lab  Favorite toy: Water bottles. It drives me crazy, but he loves them. Favorite nap spot: The couch, then the floor, and back and forth for no reason.Â
âHe was the chunkier one out of the two males from [the litter I was considering]; the other one looked like the Terminator,â Rice recalls of selecting his pup. âJack looked fat and I loved that. Heâs since shaped up.âÂ
The Best Thing Jack Has Changed About Chaseâs Life
Image Credit: Evan DeStefano
âThe time we spend and adventures we get intoâ are two things the singer cherishes that his dog has brought into his life. âIâve ended up chasing birds in places I had never even heard of because of Jack and knowing I didnât want to miss the opportunity to see him get one more bird.âÂ
âOne time this year I sent Jack on a 350-yard retrieve for a wounded mallard in Oklahoma; just a few hand signals and he was all over that duck,â recalls Rice. âThatâs a long retrieve, but he did it perfectly. Just a few hours later, he was on stage with me that night partying. Heâs a jack-of-all-trades: business by day, party by night.â
Jackâs Reaction to Being on Stage
Image Credit: Evan DeStefano
âI bring him on stage for one song during my set; he just sits next to me and looks for my approval at the end to not have to heel anymore and to be able to go party with the fans,â explains the artist.
As for the first time Jack went on stage? Rice says the Lab was still a puppy at the time, and was âa little nervous.â But that didnât last. âHe got used to it when I started letting him go down and run towards the crowd, because he loves people. The first time I did it was really just about me wanting to have my dog with me. He was going to training that night for about six months, and I wanted him with me as much as possible, so I brought him up there on stage. That was a tough night once he left.âÂ
Jackâs Musical Tastes
Image Credit: Evan DeStefano
âI think heâs pretty sick of hearing anything by me at this point,â admits the singer. Â
Regardless of how Jack may feel about his music, that hasnât stopped Rice from mentioning his beloved buddy in his songs. ââArkansasâ had a mention of him in there,â the songwriter shares. âAn unreleased song called âOctoberâ has his name â not sure if Iâll put that one out. He will get a bunch of songs over these next few years, Iâm sure.âÂ
A Sibling for Jack?
Image Credit: Evan DeStefano
Rice mentioned in a sweet March 2023 Instagram post for Jackâs 2nd birthday that his dog was âdangerously close to having a little bro.â So did the musician grow his family? âIâve really been messing with the thought of breeding Jack or just getting another breed thatâs not a working dog,â he shares. âWith my schedule, itâs gonna be real tough to have two, so for now, Iâm sticking with just Jack. Quality over quantity.â
Itâs been 13 years since Xzibit dropped his last album Napalm, and a whole lot has changed since.
Not just with Xzibit, who has since ventured into the cannabis industry, acted in dozens of films and gone through divorce â but to the music industry as a whole. The way albums are marketed and rolled out now is completely different than it was when Napalm dropped, while Xzibitâs core fans are now well into their 30s and 40s.
I ask if the rap veteran is aware people may not be as quick to tune in to his music. âThisâll be the litmus test,â Xzibit says of his new album Kingmaker, which drops on Friday. âLetâs see what happens. Itâs a nice science experiment.â
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Regardless, the former Pimp My Ride host is not nervous or worried, heâs amped. The album has colossal features from big West Coast names like Dr. Dre, Ty Dolla $ign and Ice Cube, and Xzibit has steadily promoted the project for months, appearing on seemingly every podcast known to man.
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Kingmaker is an ambitious return to form, with Xzibit fully embracing his veteran status in the hopes of spreading some knowledge. Songs like opener âPlay This At My Funeralâ aim to inspire the youth, and offer guidance to those in need of it.
âIâm not preaching, I donât wanna preach,â the rapper clarifies. âThe church and politics are way too violent, Iâll stick to gangster rap.â
Below, Billboard chats with the rapper about his new album, his reunion with Dre, his Pimp My Ride legacy, his thoughts on the state of rap media and more.
You havenât put out a record since 2012. Iâm curious as you started getting back into the studio if there was any imposter syndrome or insecurity creeping in during the albumâs early days?
I think the benefit of being able to have had a career spanning from 1996 to now, the self-doubt kinda [goes] out the window. Iâm coming into the energy of where music is right now â and not necessarily ignoring whatâs happening in music, but just realizing I need to do what I need to do extremely well. I donât need to chase a trend or follow a sound, I just need to do Xzibit music really well.
What was it like then putting the album together? How did your sound change after all those years away from the booth?
I started and stopped the album like four or five different times because I didnât like what was coming out. There are three songs that made it from the first original Kingmaker sessions, only three. Everything clicked when we did âPlay This at My Funeral.â Now, that song gave me a nod to what the messaging should have been about, and that messaging was speaking from a position of power. If this was my last project, what would I wanna leave the game? That was the voice that I needed to find.
Tell me more about âPlay This at My Funeral.â At what point in the creative process did that song transform into more of an anthem for your entire career?
I didnât name the song until after it was done, and when I listened back to it, there was no hook. Just one long verse. When I heard the statements that were being made in it, and how final and immovable [they were] â the song has nothing to do with me dying, but it has everything to do with the state of the union of how I feel about music. How I feel about the state of affairs in this world that weâre living in. I just thought it was very fitting to start the album off with that.
So at this moment, how are you feeling about the state of hip-hop right now?
I think itâs grown substantially â and, to be fair, the state of hip-hop is well. There is so much music that comes out, and itâs hard to kinda grasp the way it was. There are new ways of communicating, new ways to get through to the audience. I think because itâs grown so much hip-hop is experiencing some growing pains. The only way we can keep going is to tend to it and make adjustments accordingly.
For example, I think hip-hop has grown to the point now where it needs sub divisions. It needs adult contemporary, alternative hip-hop, and I think looking at it from an objective point of view: itâs too hard to lump everybody in and just call it hip-hop. If you look at the birth of what Travis Scott is doing and the energy he brings to it, that was birthed around the Anger Management time when we were going out with Linkin Park and Limp Bizkit. That kinda energy merged those audiences, so now itâs a hybrid. Itâs something different and it needs to be addressed as such.
Is that difference inherently good for hip-hop?
Absolutely! Hip-hop was once just one piece of music, now it permeates through all things. Thatâs a double edged sword as well.
After being in the game for so long and watching the extinction of albums and physical media and the rise of streaming, does it worry you at all about how music is consumed?
The audience and the artists are great, what weâre experiencing are the gate keepers trying to keep control of the gate. Itâs the middle men that are trying to keep the revenue going a certain way. Music has been here since the beginning of time and will continue to be here. As far as how itâs consumed, how we communicate, thatâs the main thing I worry about. The tug of war of whoâs in control.
On âShut Yo Mouth,â you rap: âHere to address the nation like a congregation/ While you gossip like a bâh in your conversations.â Compton AV rapped a bar about Akademiks in the song too. What are your thoughts on hip-hop media after watching it evolve over the years?
I feel like hip-hop media is like the Basketball Housewives, and ainât none of âem married. Itâs the drama of it, and I get it, but it reminds me of the tabloids from back in the day, the National Enquirerâs. Itâs about everything but the music. People are making livings off that media, I get it, but I think: Whereâs the other side of it? The real hip-hop reporting thatâs being drowned out? Now, the essentials of what hip-hop needs to be recognized for â the people behind the scenes and behind the music and networking of hip-hop â are being drowned out by the drama of hip-hop. There needs to be a balance.
âShut Yo Mouthâ is just the anthem for telling people to shut the fâk up. Weâre in a world now where everybody has a soap box and a megaphone, but that doesnât necessarily mean everyone needs to be heard.
You expressed some concern regarding Kendrick and Drakeâs beef when it happened last year, but now that itâs been a little over a year, Iâm wondering if youâre still worried about the precedent this sets for rap beefs moving forward?
Iâm not worried itâs just that history repeats itself. That was a David and Goliath moment and it played out how it played out, but my worry is when people start being physically hurt. It happens so often, we loose so many good people that way. That doesnât happen in any other genre of music. The spirit of competition is always welcome in hip-hop. Itâs when it starts translating into other things.
What does it mean to be a Kingmaker?
Iâm giving you the information you need to make yourself a king or queen in your own right. Some people, this is gonna go over their heads, some people, itâs gonna hit a bullseye. Everybody has a different understanding of life, but this is the best way I could communicate my journey and my experiences in this art form.
What was it like to link back up with Dr. Dre on âLeave Me Alone?â
We were supposed to come out on March 28, and then [âLeave Me Aloneâ] came in. I was like, âOh sât!â It was crazy. Swizz Beatz actually did the track and Dre did co-production, and just to have both of them together on a track, I donât think thatâs ever been done. It was really exciting. To have Dre on the album after all this time means the world to me. Heâs my brother, heâs coach.
What was your most memorable studio sessions with Dre over the years?
The first one is always the best. When we did âBâch Pleaseâ together. The insanity of it was being a fan first and then you basically get recruited into The Avengers. Iâll never lose that feeling, because it keeps things in perspective. The direction Dre gives when heâs in the studio only elevates the record, because you rely on his experience. Even if it takes you out of your comfort zone.
Obviously, I have to ask you about Pimp My Ride. The show really became a cultural force of nature on its own. Looking back on it, what was the biggest lesson you learned from that time in your career?
The power of television and how you become essentially part of peopleâs families. Youâre part of peopleâs childhoods and developments. Youâre in their homes. I didnât realize the impact of that show until I was in Italy at one of the fountains. I was just sitting there, and this little old lady pushes past my security and starts, literally, grabbing my face with no fear. Just pushes past these gigantic dudes, and it dawned on me that people fell in love with my character. It has nothing to do with my music.
How do you think that show impacted pop culture?
Pimp My Rideâs impact was unexpected â it really was amazing to see it grow into what it was â but what I take away from it was it wasnât about me. It wasnât about the cars. It wasnât about the garage. It was about wish fulfillment, and people having that feeling that, âThis could happen to me.â I think that was dope man, Iâm glad we were able to put something out that was positive when reality television at the time was really bent on peopleâs embarrassment.
Still, you have random people pinching your face in public. Was it scary to go from being a rapper to the face of a mainstream movement like Pimp My Ride?
I didnât realize what was happening. I wanted the world to know me as Xzibit the hardcore punch-him-in-the-face rapper, but life has a weird way of showing you different paths, and itâs up to you to be brave enough to go down it. Thatâs kinda what I just relied on, and sometimes those paths arenât very well lit. Itâs a risk, but Iâve never been afraid of taking risks. So I just went down that path⊠I didnât wanna live with regrets.
Did taking that path negatively impact your rap career?
It took a backseat. I wasnât able to tour [or] record. It was a constant film schedule, so I knew I had to dedicate time to do [Pimp My Ride] and I did. Iâm glad I did it, but on the music side, it definitely was a disconnect. I was doing music, but I wasnât able to give it the attention that I wanted to give it in order to proceed with it. You canât be in two places at once, but I still got the same gratification building something outside of music as I did [with] music.
You were also one of the earliest rappers to pivot into the cannabis industry. What are your thoughts on the industry now?
Itâs interesting to see people try to own the plant, which you canât do. What we can do is come with the best versions of it and the most reliable versions of it. When you try to dominate it, and I think thatâs this capitalist idea of âcornering the market,â itâs not gonna work. You canât squeeze out and make it difficult for the people who are part of the culture. Cannabis is culture, it goes hand in hand with so many other things. You canât corner that. Nobodyâs gonna buy âMcDonaldâs Cannabis.â
What I think needs to happen is that Big Pharma is gonna need to come in when itâs federally legal to partner with the people who have been part of the culture from the beginning. Youâre gonna need that bridge. Cannabis is not like alcohol or clothing where you can just slap a hip-hop label on it and put some funky music behind it. People need cannabis to work.
Having dabbled in all these different industries, how do you feel about this point in your rap career? Do you feel any pressure to try and cater Kingmaker to the younger audience or to the algorithms that seem to run music?
People will find me if they find me, but you canât perform an algorithm. My audience is in front of me at that stage. My algorithm is in live performances, but whatever this album does, I feel really good about getting back in front of my people. I feel really good about the music Iâve created, and letâs let this thing be a good time, man. This is gonna be a really big moment for me. I worked really hard on this record. Still being able to do it at this level is a blessing, I canât tell you enough how excited I am.
âForever,â Prince famously declared in the pastor-like open to his carpe diem chart-topper âLetâs Go Crazyâ â âthatâs a mighty long time.â âLive now,â the Purple One urged us in song, âbefore the Grim Reaper comes knocking on your door.â
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FOREVER is also the name of the fourth project and third studio album from EKKSTACY, the Canadian alt/indie musician who knows a little something about getting crazy and living like thereâs no tomorrow. Yet on the new LP, out Friday (May 16), heâs entered a new chapter: fundamentally changing his recording process, embracing a new band-centric sound and turning out his most energized and confident work to date.
âI wish I could have stayed there longer,â EKKSTACY â born Khyree Zienty, but known to friends and fans as Stacy â says over Zoom from Vancouver. Heâs talking about Mexico, where he and his girlfriend have just spent a long weekend to celebrate his 23rd birthday and recharge for what should be a big year ahead. Now heâs back home, about to go to Los Angeles to shoot a fifth music video from the LP, and ready to talk about a record that he had âso much funâ making, with a lot of the credit going to his new producer, Andrew Wells.
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âI love that fool,â Stacy says of Wells, whose impressive writing and production CV includes Fall Out Boy, ROSĂ, Meghan Trainor, 5SOS and Halsey. âWe just clicked. Our first session we did two songs, full songs, first day we met. I was like, âAlright we just gotta do it with him.ââ The two met before EKKSTACY and his band went out on a two-month tour last fall, Stacy having written and recorded acoustic demos for most of the songs. FOREVER was done when he returned from tour, in short order. âWith Wells, it was so easy,â he recalls. âAndrew is just so good at producing. Weâd be finishing the songs in like an hour, hour and 20 minutes. It would be done.â
That hit-it-and-quit-it energy is felt throughout FOREVER, and it is in marked contrast to the way EKKSTACY used to craft records. Through his come-up â including the 2021 aura-defining EP NEGATIVE and its breakout single, âI walk this earth all by myself,â followed by his debut album, 2022âs misery â Stacyâs music mirrored that of some of his early influences. âI used to listen to a lot of Current Joys and programmed, like Linn drums and lo-fi guitars, sh-t like that.â Comparisons to bedroom pop acts with a surf bent, like Surf Curse, Current Joys and The Drums, were inevitable; Stacy even collaborated with The Drumsâ Jonny Pierce on a 2021 single. âBut then I got into a lot of emo,â he says. âI got into Remo Drive, and blink, and then a lot of Nirvana. I got to the point where I was, âOkay, I canât make this anymore. I have to do something else.â I was tired of the computer-indie sound, you know? I wanted to go full band.â
Stacy says heâd already reached the point of burnout on his old sound by the time he made his last record, 2024âs self-titled EKKSTACY. While it arguably won him more mainstream attention than ever, due in part to features from The Kid LAROI and Trippie Redd, he recalls that album as going through the motions. âBy then I was inspired by other stuff. And I just didnât think I had the tools to just do what I wanted really, so I just stuck to what I knew, and I was tired of that. It was kind of just beating a dead horse. I had really done everything I could do in that space, but I just had to make a whole ânother fâking album of it. And I was just like, âThis fâking sucks, dude. Fâk this.ââ
He doesnât mince words. I talk to a lot of young artists who, perhaps understandably in this age, are guarded in conversation. Not so Stacy, who lets it rip with very little filter, on everything from music to drinking and drugs to girls to â you name it. He has no qualms telling me, a decades-long New Yorker, that he âhatesâ our city, having spent some time here last year, before quickly adding, âItâs just not for me, Iâm not built for it.â He dismisses his first full-band recording, last yearâs one-off single âMr. Mole,â with, âSh-tâs ass, I fâking despise that song.â Â And when I point out that heâs never done the most high-profile tracks from the EKKSTACY LP on tour â âalrightâ (with LAROI), âproblemsâ (with Trippie), and the uncommonly sunny, buoyant âbellaâ â he bluntly replies: âYeah, and they never will be. I donât like those songs. Theyâre just so â cringe-y, to me.â Fair enough.
But back to what Stacy does like and is proud of. FOREVER offers the most thrilling one-two punch opening of any EKKSTACYrecord: the power-pop explosiveness of opener âif I had a gunâ reminds me of a sped-up take on the old INXS chestnut âDonât Change,â and its energy would no doubt be approved by the Paulson brothers of Stacy faves Remo Drive. Itâs followed by âforever,â on which another of his heroes, blood-pumping Canadian countrymen Japandroidsâ influence can be heard in a rousing, shouted, âHey! Hey!â Later, the albumâs standout rawker âshe will be missedâ offers a frenetic stop-start feel that isnât far afield from blink-182, who EKKSTACY opened for last summer, a career moment.
EKKSTACY
Michael Donovan
But thereâs more than just one flavor to FOREVER. There are gentle acoustics on âmessagesâ and âone day Iâll wake up from this.â âwonderâ serves up gauzy Beach House feels (Stacy is an unabashed fan of â00s and â10s indie) while âshouldersâ â a C86-styled track that opens, âItâs summertime / You made it out / Soon Iâll be ashes / In the groundâ â might earn a Morrissey thumbs up. There are two forays into shoegaze-adjecency: the dreamier âhead in the cloudsâ and âstain,â maybe EKKSTACYâs heaviest track to date. âYeah, I really love My Bloody Valentine,â he explains. âI was just listening to them a lot when I was in Poland. Iâve always loved that sound and so I just wanted to see what I could do with it.â
Other benchmarks for Stacy on the new LP include more guitar playing than ever. He shares guitar credit on some tracks with his bandmate and right-hand man in live shows, Erez Potok-Holmes, but he has sole guitar credit on most songs. Heâs also using his voice like never before. While he is blessed (and cursed, maybe) with a sweet, melodic timbre that will never allow him to be truly screamo, on songs like âshe will be missed,â he pushed himself with Wellsâ help. âI wanted to really sing,â he says. âOn my older records Iâm not singing as hard as I can, and Iâm really maxing my sh-t on this album. Iâm at the top of my range a lot, but in a good place, where Iâm really projecting.â
What hasnât changed throughout EKKSTACYâs musical eras has been the angst. He was a SoundCloud rap-era teen, an acolyte of XXXTentacion and Lil Peep; the faded emo trap of his early single, 2020âs âUncomparable,â wouldnât sound out of place next to Juice WRLD. When Stacy turned a sonic corner and leaned into lo-fi indie, then came the real gloom with titles like âit only gets worse I promiseâ and âchristian deathâ (a fan favorite). His brand was equal parts self-deprecation (âI just wanna hide my faceâ), melancholy and worse (âwish I was deadâ âI want to sleep for 1000 yearsâ and âI want to die in your armsâ). If angst was your thing, and for millions it is, EKKSTACY was your man.
The disaffection is tempered a bit on the new album, but still presents throughout: âWhatâs wrong with my head / How long can I take itâ he wonders on âwhatâs wrong with meâ; âIâm so sick /Iâm so tired of everythingâ on âone day Iâll wake up from thisâ; and âcanât put the bottle downâ on âstain.â On the wiry, propulsive post-punk of âsadness,â Stacyâs entire lyric is a recitation of generally not-good things: âDrinks, pills, nicotine chills, death, sadness and fear.â âI was just kind of describing my thoughts, and everything thatâs around me,â he says of the compact song.
Stacyâs candor about his drinking and drug use is refreshing. I am no expert on addiction, but I believe I am safe in saying that, in general, honesty is the best policy, and the artist makes no bones about his penchant for hard partying, mostly with alcohol but with no shortage of pills and powder. âMy thing is â Iâm an alcoholic,â he admits. âItâs just straight-up, I am. I am an alcoholic and Iâm functioning. Sometimes it gets really bad and thereâs been times when itâs like, I canât function, and I go into psychosis, and I start doing really crazy sh-t. And then sometimes itâs like Iâm fine, and I just drink every fâking day, butâŠif I could shake that? If I could snap my fingers and not drink anymore, I would. But â I donât know â the thing about drinking for me is that I just have so much time on my hands. And I have nothing to do really, so it just creeps up every day. Iâm like, âWell, sh-t, I guess Iâm gonna drink this bottle of vodka thatâs on my fâking counter! [laughs] I donât have sh-t to do tomorrow!ââ
And, of course, thereâs the road, which has tested the most disciplined of sober souls. Time and again it has roped Stacy back into wild living, nowhere more so than in Germany, where he enjoys an outsize popularity and has toured extensively. âI canât explain it, but I love it there!â he says. âI feel like a god there [laughs] â I mean, no, Iâm just fâking around, but I just love it.â Godlike treatment often means getting offered a lot of things that can be hard to turn down. âI did [coke] hardcore for like a week in Germany,â he recalls. âAnd for me, coke is like â I liked it, but I didnât love it as much as people say they do. Iâm a really anxious dude. Like really bad, Iâve always been like super anxious. So I would wake up and just be almost on the verge of psychosis, every morning. So once I ran out of Xanax, I really couldnât do coke.â (We commiserate on the wonders of Xanax, and why itâs the wildly popular â and widely abused â drug that it is.)
But Stacyâs most recent visit to Deutschland may have been a breaking point. âI was just doing a lot of drugs and partying really hard,â he says. âAnd when I got home from it, it kind of transferred to me in Vancouver, like I was doing drugs at the club and sh-t, and I was just like, âDude, I canât do this.â I remember I woke up one morning after doing a lot of coke, and I was just sweating and fâking freaking out in my bed. I opened all the windows in my house and laid in front of the window for like two hours, and I was having such a bad panic attack. âCause I was on a bender for like a month.â
Stacy offers even more detail on his use of the anti-seizure medication Klonopin, along with a ton of alcohol (âI was going fâking mental. For like, a good month.â) before getting around to how he moved past this dark period. It happened during his Vancouver panic attack. âI called the girl Iâm dating now,â he remembers. âIâd talked to her for like year, before we even met. I called her that morning, when I was losing my sh-t. I had really liked her for a long time, but I had never met her, âcause she was hesitant to come meet me. Sheâs pretty shy, and sheâs just smart.â
During our talk, he mentions a Russian girl he used to crush on, who inspired him to get the Cyrillic Đ»ŃĐ±ĐŸĐČŃ (âlyubovâ or âloveâ) tattoo splayed across his chest â just one piece in a mural of ink that covers much of his body. Another woman, a fellow musician he declines to name, was dating Stacy in the early days of FOREVER, and helped him find his songwriting mojo. âSheâs an incredible writer,â he explains. âAnd at the beginning of the record, I was kind of like, âFâk, like what the fâk do I write?â Watching her write, it blew my mind. And helped me write a lot of songs. She would talk to me about writing. Sheâd say, âYou take it so serious! You just gotta write.ââ But no one has impacted his personal trajectory quite like his current girlfriend. âI called her that morning and I talked to her on the phone for hours and hours, and I was just like, âI need to meet this person, dude.â So I donât know, I just kind of threw the drugs away that morning. I still had some problems with pills for like a few months after that, but the hard sh-t I stopped.â
EKKSTACY
Michael Donovan
Itâs been a wild ride. Is it any wonder that at times on FOREVER, Stacy longs for a less complicated time? On âseventeenâ he looks back six years to a more carefree point in his life, singing, âIâm not who I used to be / And I hardly know this new meâŠI kinda miss being 17.â He echoes the sentiment on thoughtful closer âkeep my head downâ:  âI was young once / I miss it so much / Where did that go?â Simpler days. âEveryone was just happier,â he explains. âNo one had jobs, and we were just kids, doing everything for the first time. The best day ever back then was all of us sleeping at one of our homiesâ houses and getting hammered. And that was literally just peak life. And going skating.â At only 23, he says he doesnât feel âoldâ as much as just âjaded,â and weary of the nonstop bacchanal. âIâve just seen â so much has happened â I donât even know what else I can feel,â he says. âI feel like Iâve just done enough partying, bro. Like, I feel like Iâm ready to just be with one person. And this person I met is honestly like the most incredible person Iâve ever met.â
As for the year ahead, FOREVER feels like a record built to give EKKSTACY his most high-powered live show to date. Joining Stacy and Potok-Holmes on his upcoming summer tour will be two new band members, bassist and fellow Vancouverite Hannah Kruse, and drummer Sean Friday (Dead Sara), though he says they just may be âtemporary.â And just possibly, Stacy won some new fans last year when he joined $UICIDEBOY$â annual Grey Day arena tour, sharing a bill with the New Orleans punk-rap mainstays, as well as the acclaimed hip-hop adventurer Denzel Curry and others. It was a good look for an artist hoping to expand his audience, even if he had to warm to the experience. âAt first I felt like I was such an outsider, that it was like, âWhat the fâk am I doing? No one fâking wants me here?ââ he recalls. âBut then we slowly started socializing with everyone, and it was sick, it felt like a little fâking society in there. And it was fun, after I started meeting fools, it was really nice. I made some really good friends.â
All that talk of psychoses, blackouts, anxiety and booze-and-drug benders has led more than a few observers in the past to worry about EKKSTACYâs health and future. But heâs quick to point out that heâs always been knee-deep in sad songs. As open as he is about his stresses and the potential pitfalls of self-medication, heâs equally quick to tamp down reading too much into depressive lyrics, and put off by the idea of commodifying mental health as a talking point. Not every tortured musical poet is necessarily going through it 24/7, nor considering self-harm â even an artist who once recorded âwish i was dead.â
âIâm just like â bruh, I was just a kid, talking like that,â he says. âI was just a kid, 18, 19. My brother is 19 now and I look at that fool like heâs a child. I just want people to fâking feel me. I want them to know that Iâm just hanging out, and that Iâm just normal. That I get fâked up and hang out with my friends, and skateboard, and live normal as fâk. And I still stress about the same sh-t that everyone else stresses about.â
That said, FOREVER does feel like a marginally more hopeful record than Stacyâs past work. Even if some of the new record lingers on the past, its very title â also the name of Stacyâs upcoming tour â Â seems to anticipate many days to come. Itâs certainly more forward-looking than NEGATIVE or misery. On the moving final track, âkeep my head down,â he offers, âI wonât stop saying that things will be better soon / Put my head out the window I donât have time to be blue.â When I observe that the lyrics suggest he may be in a better place, Stacy, true to his no-BS self, quickly retorts:Â âI donât think I am in a better place. I think I am calmer, but Iâm still fâking scared. But Iâm definitely more mature, and just chilled out, than I have been in the past. But Iâm still nervous.â
Nervous, but apparently in a great creative place â he says he is eager to work on another album â and in a relationship unilke any heâs been in. Heâs even contemplating becoming a dad. âItâs on my mind,â he admits. âI want to get married and have a kid.â
So yeah, Prince, âforeverâ is a mighty long time. Maybe, like EKKSTACY, we just take forever day by day.
Fifteen years after achieving his first top 10 on Hot Latin Songs and his first No. 1 on Tropical Airplay with his take of âStand by Me,â Prince Royce gifts his fans an entire album filled with pop classics in bilingual versions (English/Spanish) and bachata rhythms.
Titled ETERNO, the 13-track LP will be released Friday (May 16) under Sony Music Latin. It includes everything from âDancing in the Moonlightâ by King Harvest and âHow Deep is Your Loveâ by the Bee Gees to âI Just Called to Say I Love Youâ by Stevie Wonder and âGo Your Own Wayâ by Fleetwood Mac, with âI Want It That Wayâ by the Backstreet Boys as the focus track. All the Spanish lyrics were written by Royce himself.
âFor me, these are songs that are eternal, iconic, legendary,â the Latin star tells Billboard Español. âThe intention with the album was somewhat similar to âStand by Me.â I wanted to bring back that nostalgia from a time when there was no Auto-Tune, when everything was raw, very real, into todayâs world.â
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With a tracklist that also includes âStuck on Youâ (Lionel Richie), âRight Here Waitingâ (Richard Marx), âCanât Help Falling in Loveâ (Elvis Presley), and âYesterdayâ (The Beatles), Royce says it took his team about nine months to secure all the rights.
âWhen I was seeing that a song was going to go in, I was already like, âOkay, it fits in bachata,’â he explains about the selection process. âFor me, the important thing was that the songs worked well in bachata, that the Spanish was good, that it flowed with the genre. Also I didnât wanna force songs â it was important to keep the Prince Royce essence while also respecting the original song.â
Among the classics he felt were essential for this album, he mentions âDancing in the Moonlightâ as a song with a âpositive vibeâ that had always reminded him of bachata; âCanât Help Falling in Loveâ as a perfect âwedding songâ that was somewhat difficult to adapt; âMy Girlâ by The Temptations as an iconic âdoo-wopâ he wanted to tackle even though it reminded him of his previous hit âStand by Meâ; and âStuck on Youâ by Lionel Richie, one of his personal favorites.
ETERNO follows Prince Royceâs 2024 album Llamada Perdida, a deeply personal set that included several heartbreak songs. This new project was very different, and Royce says he had fun learning and researching the original artists and embracing the challenge of adapting himself to their songs.
âIt was just like a fun, music-geek project. I ended up really enjoying it and really like dissecting each harmony and background vocal and recording it,â he says enthusiastically. âIâd like for people who know these songs to bring those memories back, and maybe the younger generation in Latin America who doesnât know them creates new memories. I hope we can achieve that.â
Prince Royce âETERNOâ
Courtesy Photo
Snoop Dogg has enjoyed well over three decades of notoriety and the requisite ups and downs that come along with fame. In a recent sitdown with The Breakfast Club, Snoop Dogg addressed fans who refer to him as a sellout over his assumed alignment with President Donald Trump, and he appeared to clear the record.
The larger part of the conversation centered on Snoop Doggâs legacy as an artist, learning how to adjust to being a grandfather, praising his wifeâs guidance for his family, and promising some new music down the pipeline, including his upcoming 21st studio album, Iz It A Crime? He also spoke on Warren G, a past collaborator of both Snoop and Dr. Dre, who felt like he was left out of the Missionary album sessions with his past partners.
From there, the conversation shifted to Snoopâs appearance at the Crypto Ball around the time of President Trumpâs inauguration. The Doggfather was blitzed by fans who felt that he betrayed them for doing the event, considering some of the presidentâs current political positions. Snoop was clear to draw a line right there.
âCanât none of you motherf*ckers tell me what I can and canât do,â Snoop said after explaining he DJ-ed a set at the event for 30 minutes. âBut Iâm not a politician. I donât represent the Republican Party. I donât represent the Democratic Party. I represent the motherf*cking Gangster Party period point blank, and G sh*t we donât explain sh*t so thatâs why I didnât explain. Thatâs why I didnât go into detail when motherf*ckers was trying to counsel me and say he a sellout.â
Snoop went on to say that he would frequently post certain things on his popular Instagram page to see what fans had to say, with some using keyboard courage to call the veteran rapper out his name. Snoop said he hopped into some DMs and addressed the critics head-on, confirming that everyone changed their tune after that.
Check out Snoop Doggâs full chat with The Breakfast Club in the video below. Hop to the 21:00-minute mark to see the topic mentioned above.
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Photo: Screenshot / YouTube/The Breakfast Club
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