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A three-time Grammy winner and a two-time CMA female vocalist of the year winner, Trisha Yearwood has forged a reputation as a friend to songwriters over the years, an artist who respects the craft of music creation. Sheâs made enduring classics with her renditions of songs such as âThe Song Remembers When,â âThis Is Me Youâre Talking Toâ and âGeorgia Rain.â
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But on her upcoming album, Yearwood is delving more into her songwriting skills. The 10-song project is the first in her career on which she co-wrote each song; she also co-produced the project with audio engineer/producer/writer/musician Chad Carlson.
Yearwood gave a preview of the as-of-yet-untitled project with a show at Nashvilleâs intimate songwriter haunt, the Bluebird Cafe, on Wednesday (Feb. 12). She was joined by her co-writers including Carlson, Erin Enderlin, Leslie Satcher, Sunny Sweeney and Bridgette Tatum.
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The evening served as a preview not only for the album, but also Yearwoodâs upcoming seven-city theater tour, which launches April 30 in Austin, Texas, and wraps May 17 in Lancaster, Pa. The shows will feature Yearwood performing a mix of her own hit songs as well as tracksw from the new album, and will also highlight the talents of artist-writers Sweeney and Enderlin.
Yearwood previously previewed the album with a performance during the 2024 CMT Music Awards, where she performed âPut It In a Song.â On Feb. 21, Yearwood will offer another glimpse into the album when she performs the song âThe Wall or the Way Overâ â a meditation on the power of words to both elevate and destroy those who hear them â on The Kelly Clarkson Show.
Tickets for Yearwoodâs tour will go on sale starting Friday, Feb. 21, with a presale launching Feb. 19 at 10 a.m. local time on her website.
In addition to touring, Yearwood is also set to appear on NBCâs Opry 100: A Live Celebration on March 19 to honor the Grand Ole Opryâs centennial anniversary.
See the full list of Yearwoodâs tour dates below:
April 30: Austin, Texas @ Austin City Limits Live at The Moody Theater
May 1: San Antonio, Texas @ H-E-B Performance Hall â Tobin Center for the Performing Arts
May 2: Grand Prairie, Texas @ Texas Trust CU Theatre at Grand Prairie
May 3: Stillwater, Okla. @ The McKnight Center For the Performing Arts
May 15: New York City @ The Town Hall
May 16: Glenside, Pa. @ Keswick Theatre
May 17: Lancaster, Pa. @ American Music Theater
It was a few weeks ago that Max McNownâs agents at Wasserman Music told the country upstart that his Feb. 11-12 sold-out Bowery Ballroom shows in New York City needed to move to accommodate another artist.
The agents, Jonathan Insogna and Lenore Kinder, initially pushed back against the highly unusual move until they discovered a few days later that it was because Sir Paul McCartney was playing surprise gigs at the 575-capacity room those nights. Ultimately, McNownâs management team, Live Nation, the Bowery and Wasserman quickly went into action to shift McNownâs two shows to the 1,200-capacity Irving Plaza in Union Square the same nights, and McNown ended up with an amazing story to tell.
When his agents were first asked to move the shows, âHonestly, we were a bit confused,â McNown tells Billboard. âMy agent told me this was an unusual situation that a venue would ask you to move so we kind of knew there was something bigger going on, but our first response was, âIâm sorry you want us to do what?ââ
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Shortly thereafter, when he and his team put the pieces together to realize he was getting bumped for the legendary Beatle, it all made sense at that point. âPaul wanted to play in a smaller venue and make it special. We had sold out Bowery months ago, so moving into a bigger venue and being able to accommodate more fans was great for us. A win-win in every way,â McNown says, but joked, âI am disappointed we werenât able to get him to open for us.â
Though McCartneyâs team didnât give a reason for the specific date, Feb. 11 marked the 60th anniversary of the Beatlesâ first gig in the U.S at the Coliseum in Washington, D.C.
McCartneyâs team was extremely gracious and did offer McNown tickets, but he was unable to go since he was doing his own shows a mile up the road. McNown admits he was tempted, though. âI honestly really wish I could have pulled it oďŹâ to go to McCartneyâs show, he says. âI always say touring is a job and there were too many people counting on me to play my own show to skip out on it. But yes, the term âtemptedâ is an understatement.â
The Oregon singer-songwriter, who was Billboardâs November Country Rookie of the Month and topped Billboardâs Emerging Artists chart, first hit the Hot Country Songs chart last year with âA Lot More Free,â which reached No. 29, as well as peaked at No. 15 on the Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart. His new album, Night Diving, came out Jan. 24. His new single, âBrown Eyes (Better Me for You),â is at radio.
Though heâs only 23, McNown is a lifelong Beatles fan. âMy elementary school teacher would always sing âYellow Submarine,â âLet It Beâ and âHey Judeâ every single Friday in my fourth and fifth grade class,â he says. âHe always felt it was important to keep the younger generations educated on the true icons of musical history. Because of him, I know every word to those songs, and each of them now hold a level of nostalgia in my heart thatâs pretty unmatched.â
His favorite Beatles song is the gorgeous âBlackbird,â which McNown may, in homage to Sir Paul, now record and post on his Instagram, he says. âI discovered that song on my own after being introduced to [The Beatlesâ] music in school at a very young age, which made it extra personal/special for me.â Heâs also a big fan of âYesterday,â âHere Comes The Sunâ and âTwist and Shout.â
Since attending the shows wasnât possible, McNown would love some merch or even an autograph, he says, but heâll settle for an amazing story of the night he was bumped for a Beatle. âIt is definitely something Iâm sure Iâll be talking about for some time,â he tells Billboard. âThis last few years have felt like one dream sequence, from going viral, to Kelly Clarkson covering my songs and now swapping venues with a Beatle. Itâs unbelievable.â Â
Though McCartney is playing his third show at Bowery tonight, McNown couldnât attend because heâs on his way to Boston for his show Friday night (Feb. 14).

When Chappell Roan won best new artist at the 2025 Grammys, she used her platform on Musicâs Biggest Night to demand that labels provide âa livable wage and healthcareâ for artists. While her speech was greeted with applause from many artists and industry players at the ceremony, not everyone was cheering â the most outspoken case being an op-ed in The Hollywood Reporter where former music exec Jeff Rabhan called Roan âtoo green and too uninformed to be the agent of change she aspires to be today.â
The op-ed was widely shared â and widely criticized, leading to a backlash to the backlash as artists like Charli XCX and Noah Kahan came to Roanâs defense, speaking up in her favor and joining her in donating to healthcare support for developing artists. (Various industry organizations have donated as well.)
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âIt is clear that young people, artists and/or writers, have had enough of record labels and tech companies taking advantage of them,â Justin Tranter tells Billboard. The songwriter, who co-wrote hits for Justin Bieber (âSorryâ), Imagine Dragons (âBelieverâ) and Roan (âGood Luck, Babe!â), had an immediate, visceral response to the THR op-ed in a comment on Instagram: âPlease delete this. Now.â
Roanâs critics doubled down on their grievances, too, and the discourse â which has clearly hit a nerve in the industry â continues.
âSongwriters have been ringing this alarm for years,â says Michelle Lewis, a songwriter and executive director of Songwriters of North America (SONA). âWhen her speech started, my phone blew up. Everyone knows this is my fight. [Roan] said âhealthcareâ or âhealth insuranceâ like three times.â
Lewis, whom Tranter recommended Billboard speak to about this topic, says, âItâs in the industryâs best interests to jump inâ on the healthcare discussion before it reaches a head, particularly with so many artists and songwriters struggling to make it in a streaming economy that pays some creators a fraction of what they would have made in the physical media era. Lewis acknowledges that Roan using terms such as âemployeeâ and âlivable wageâ opens up a âhornetâs nest,â but she says itâs time to find âinter-industry solutions for more vulnerableâ people working in music. âLetâs stick with health insurance,â she says. âThatâs something I think we can find a workable solution around.â
âNo change is going to happen right now, but I can promise you that serious conversations are being had. I can promise you labels, managers, executives in our business are going, âWe need to figure this out,ââ insists Tranter. âIf you donât follow young peopleâs lead, at some point you will lose. That is the huge takeaway from this conversation.â
Here, Tranter speaks to Billboard about Roanâs speech, the âmisogynisticâ THR op-ed and why healthcare options that do exist for artists come with asterisks.
When Chappell was giving her acceptance speech for best new artist, what were you thinking?
First off, her getting the award is such an honor. I feel itâs the greatest honor of my career to be the tiniest, tiniest part of her journey. What she chose to speak about in this unbelievable moment â not gonna lie, it brought a little misty tear to my eye. I was blown away and inspired at her fearlessness. Itâs genuinely moving.
When you read the op-ed criticizing her for the speech, what were you thinking?
I thought it was such a pro-corporation, pro-old guard, old person [take] and extremely misogynistic. For him to think that because she is a young woman she has no clue what sheâs talking about is so gross. And to find out this person has apparently worked at educational [institutions] for young artists and musicians? And this is the energy he is putting toward his students, the energy of âlet the corporations continue to treat you terriblyâ? The whole thing was heartbreaking, to be honest. His article was heartbreaking. Also laughable to be that out of touch. Gen Z has had enough. Itâs never been a good idea to not support young people.
Do you think this is a case where the old guard sees change potentially coming and is trying to stop it?
Whether its artists or songwriters being taken advantage of, itâs reaching a boiling point. When it comes to artists, labels need artists to do more work than ever. And thatâs no oneâs fault, itâs just how technology has changed. The artist has to be the head of their marketing department, itâs just a fact. Now the labels need the artist to write, sing, record, tour and be the head of their own marketing department. The industry is asking for us to do more and more and yet donât want to give them more and more. Luckily, Gen Z knows better and is going to fight for themselves. Itâs amazing to see.
Thereâs also the mental health component of healthcare. Being an artist on a major label comes with an occupation hazard most jobs donât entail â national scrutiny about your work, your appearance, your opinions.
In most jobs whether you do good or bad is not in the court of public opinion. Itâs very stressful to be a professional creative where the whole world gets to watch and see how you did at your job that day.
From your perspective, as someone who works with artists and industry insiders, whatâs the tone of the conversation around this since the Grammys?
Everyone feels excited that with Chappell opening that door and with Raye speaking out for songwriters at all the different awards sheâs won. Everyone finally feels like young artists are using their voices to help everyone. This business is old and a mess â there arenât overnight solutions to any of these conversations â but the fact that these conversations are being had by such public figures is such a joy and will lead to change finally. Michelle Lewis and I speak frequently about healthcare for songwriters. There have been brilliant people fighting this fight in the darkness for a while now, so for someone like Chappell or Raye to say it in bright spotlights is very exciting.
Artists signed to major labels are sometimes eligible for healthcare through SAG-AFTRA. Can you walk me through your experience with that?
In SAG-AFTRA, you have to make a certain amount a year [$27,540 in covered earnings to qualify] to be eligible for their health insurance. So the year you sign your deal and the year you get your advance, you can probably afford health insurance. If you know it exists. If your deal was big enough and you have a good enough lawyer and a good enough business manager and they can walk you through all of these things. Very real chance you might have a manager who is amazing but they were your friend in college and you busted your asses together and youâre learning [the industry] together. Thatâs no shame to that manager â they probably are the right manager for you â but they might not know these things because it is so hard to figure out.
Then in year two, maybe your advance is gone and youâre not earning. Youâre back in the studio and figuring out your next step. And it has to be specifically money thatâs going through SAG-AFTRA. A brand deal isnât going to count toward that, a touring gig isnât going to count toward that. If you donât make that your second year, all of a sudden you lose your health insurance. But youâre still signed to one of the largest entertainment companies in the world.
I have my health insurance through SAG-AFTRA and lucky for me there are songs like âBelieverâ from Imagine Dragons and âCake By the Oceanâ by DNCE that get so many continual film and TV syncs that my health insurance is covered. But if youâre a songwriter or artist that doesnât have a song that gets used in film and TV over and over, you might be an artist that most people know of â or a songwriter that most of the industry has heard of â but if you donât have a song that is getting synced like crazy and has money going through the SAG-AFTRA system, all of a sudden you donât have health insurance.
Thatâs why itâs so beautiful for Chappell and Raye to be raising their voices. They are not fighting for themselves. They have broken through; they are now fighting for the next generation of writers and artists. Thatâs why it felt so condescending for him, the writer, to be like, well, when Prince and Tom Petty took on the industry, they were decades in. Well, no â thatâs why itâs so beautiful that Chappell did it on what some might consider her first night of household-name status. To me, that is so much more inspiring. To fault her for that is wild.
You do see a tendency for people to celebrate activism that happened decades ago while decrying contemporary activists for âdoing it wrongâ in some way. What do you think the next steps are?
The big win a week later is look how many conversations are happening. And Iâm honestly kinda grateful that very misogynistic article was written because itâs kept the conversation going longer. We live in such a quick news cycle and here we are still talking about it. Okay, boomer, thank you for booming so hard, now weâre even angrier. By the way, Iâm old â Iâm Gen X â but I think like a young person when it comes to equality. Iâm so glad this boomer boomed because now we have something to be even angrier about, and anger is going to fix this problem.

Since filing for divorce from ex-husband Ye (formerly known as Kanye West) in 2021, Kim Kardashian has mostly kept quiet about the coupleâs relationship, how they are co-parenting their four children and whatever feelings she might have about Westâs repeated public meltdowns in which he spouts hate-filled antisemitic invective for days on end.
But in Thursdayâs (Feb. 13) episode of The Kardashians, Kim opened up a bit about what may have caused the dissolution of the coupleâs marriage while bonding with sister KhloĂŠ about her own marital issues. After having an emotional reunion with her ex-husband, retired NBA player Lamar Odom, after nine years apart, KhloĂŠ said she got married âtoo quicklyâ to Odom.
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Though their marriage lasted only five tumultuous years, KhloĂŠ said she âwouldnât change a thingâ about marrying the man she called the âlove of my life,â lamenting that if it werenât for Odomâs well-publicized struggles with substance use they might still be together. âI know I picked the right person at that time,â she told Kim and their mother, Kris Jenner, in the episode.
Kim seemed to relate to the sentiment, seemingly referencing her struggles with West, saying, âThatâs the hardest part. Iâve been there. When you donât foresee something happening that really changes a personâs personality and then theyâre not the same person and you canât ever get that person back, but you canât live with the new person. I get it.â
Kim had more to say in a confessional segment, adding, âItâs tougher when you donât want your marriage to end off of personal reasons but circumstances change that force your marriage to end. When you werenât planning on that and thatâs not really the outcome you want but thereâs no other option, I think it makes it harder to get over.â
While the SKIMS founder never specifically named West in the episode of the Hulu series, it appeared as if she was referencing their relationship, which ended with Kardashian stating in a petition to be considered legally single in early 2022 that Ye was âcreating emotional distressâ by sharing âmisinformationâ about their private family matters.
While the reality star was open to talking about what she said at the time was Westâs struggle with bipolar disorder during their relationship, the rapper recently claimed that his now-wife, Bianca Censori, has told him that he was mis-diagnosed and is likely on the autism spectrum.
Kardashianâs comments on the show â which is taped months before the episodes air â came just a few days after West deleted his X account following a four-day spree of virulently antisemitic posts in which he declared once again âIâm a Naziâ and âI love Hitler,â before briefly offering a shirt emblazoned with a Nazi swastika for sale on his Yeezy site.
The offensive posts have once again caused serious professional fall-out for West, who has been criticized for spreading hate speech by the ADL and fellow artists, as well as being dropped by his booking agent and hit with a lawsuit by a Jewish staffer who alleged that he compared himself to Hitler and threatened her because she is Jewish.
In the ever-evolving world of music asset trading, Influence Media Partners early on broke away from the initial frenzy over evergreen rock music classics to pursue a riskier strategy: acquiring contemporary music catalogs, including hip-hop. One of its biggest deals was the 2022 acquisition of Futureâs publishing catalog, which consists of 612 songs composed from 2004 to 2020.Â
Last year, Influence Media, which is backed by BlackRock and Warner Music Group (WMG), expanded its operations with the founding of SLANG, a label and music publishing operation. While the music company has signed publishing deals and separate joint ventures with Future and DJÂ Khaled that allows them to sign songwriters to publishing deals, its label is betting on such developing acts as hip-hop artists Camper, RXÂ YP and TruththeBull â a sector of the business that usually does not attract institutional investors.Â
Rene McLean founded Influence Media in 2019 with his wife and business partner, Lylette Pizarro McLean, a former music industry marketing executive, and Lynn Hazan, a former CFO for Epic and RED. He grew up in New York just before hip-hop music and culture were becoming mainstream in the early 1990s. âWhat do you do when youâre 18 in New York City?â he says. âYou start clubbing. I got drawn into nightlife and music, and I loved hip-hop and did break dancing and graffiti and all that stuff.â Even though he was the son of jazz musician Rene McLean Sr. and the grandson of renowned jazz saxophonist-composer Jackie McLean, âI didnât want to be a musician or in the music business,â he recalls. âBut then something went off in my head.âÂ
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âI like to keep meaningful books and collectibles Iâve picked up throughout my career to remember where I come from.â
Carl Chisolm
After landing a promotion position at Virgin Records, followed by similar jobs at RCA â where he worked with Mobb Deep and Wu-Tang Clan â and Elektra, McLean formed Mixshow Marketing and Promotion company The RPM Group before founding Influence Media.Â
What led you to found Influence Media?Â
At that point in time, I had created a conference, a trade magazine, and, through the conference, we were doing a lot of brand work. Thatâs when Lylette Pizarro entered my life. We had gotten corporate clients to sponsor the conference, so we went out and created our own boutique agency, which wound up having a bunch of Fortune 500 clients like PepsiCo, LVMH and Verizon. We did everything from sponsorship to endorsement deals to strategy work, and that led us to think if weâre going to really get back into the nuts and bolts of the music business, the only way to really be impactful was to create Influence Media. By then, streaming had come on, and we saw the future. So we raised money and acquired three catalogs, which we then sold to Tempo.Â
After selling those catalogs, you got $750Â million in funding from BlackRock and WMG and bought more catalogs â Future, Blake Shelton and Enrique Iglesias. Why start SLANG?Â
Lylette and I felt that, outside of acquiring and investing in these catalogs, there was an opportunity to build a label and a publishing company. Iâve always looked for the white space. Weâre not just finance folks; we come from the music business.Â
Is WMG a partner in the label? Are you using them for distribution and publishing administration?Â
Yes, SLANG is a part of Influence and Warner is one of our strategic partners in Influence.Â
âMy son painted these art pieces,â McLean says. âI love the color that they add to the office.â
Carl Chisolm
Who is doing the A&RÂ and signing the artists to the label?Â
Iâve done all the signings to date, but weâre going to bring in a head of A&R. We now have a staff of about eight. But itâs been very boutique in the way Iâve been looking at these acts. We really want to develop these acts properly and break them solidly. And it seems like itâs really going in the right direction.Â
In looking at your roster, the bigger names are Will Smith and The Underachievers.Â
Will Smith is a distribution deal. But weâre highly involved in all the marketing and everything else. We work closely with Willâs camp. Theyâve been great partners. And we just had our first No. 1 gospel record with him. So thatâs wonderful right there.Â
I would classify the rest of your roster as developing artists, like Camper and RXÂ YP.Â
Camper is incredible. He is a Grammy-nominated R&B producer, and heâs done a lot of things with H.E.R., Daniel Caesar and Coco Jones. RX YP is a rapper from Atlanta, very street. We also have, like you mentioned earlier, The Underachievers, who were originally signed to RPM and we picked them back up. They have a project coming out soon. Theyâre doing something with the clothing designer Kid Super. Weâve got TruththeBull, which is a true artist development story in the making. His debut mixtape is coming out in April, and his most recent single debuted [at No. 28 on the TikTok Billboard Top 50]. Weâre really excited about that project.Â
âBlake Shelton signed this guitar. We have been working with him on the Influence Media side since 2022, and we are honored to work with such a luminary.â
Carl Chisolm
You have eight albums by developing acts either out already or coming out this year. With such a small staff, does SLANG have the bandwidth to try to break that many acts?Â
But they are not all coming at the same time. Some of them, like RXÂ YP, are releasing things later in the year. The focus right now is on TruththeBull, Leaf, Isaia Huron and Camper. When you are working with developing acts, there are no days off, so itâs constant development, building and building. And if things are going in the right direction, then you just keep fueling it to keep it going. But then certain acts are just very creative on their own, so we lean on their creativity and just amplify it. Some acts require heavy lifting and then thereâs some light lifting.Â
Why start a publishing division?Â
In my mind, it goes hand in hand with the label. The great thing about the publishing side of things is that you can step in at a more accelerated [pace]. Weâve had three No. 1s in the last six months courtesy of our relationship with Future. We also publish Lil Durk and, I love this one, RaiNao. Itâs pronounced âright now,â and sheâs currently on Bad Bunnyâs album. Itâs getting huge exposure. Sheâs working on her new project. Weâre excited about her, as we are about our friend DJ Khaled. We are currently his publisher, too.
In addition to a publishing deal with Future, you have partnered with him on other business. What does that entail?
We also have a joint venture with him regarding signing writers. The same thing with DJÂ Khaled. We get vertically involved with a lot of artists that we work with. For instance, with Future we secured [a deal for] him to be the face of Grand Marnier, which just started rolling out. And we helped Visa organize their first large event at the Louvre and secure Post Malone [for it]. We had RaiNao perform at the Louvre with Post. Thatâs an example of how we see the world.Â
âI was drawn to this chess board because it reminds me of my hometown, the best city in the world, NYC,â he says.
Carl Chisolm
How are these deals structured?Â
It depends. Some of the [artists] are signed directly to us; some of them are [joint ventures]. Thereâs the distribution deal [with Smith]. We have the ability to be flexible.Â
Earlier, you indicated that SLANG is funded by Influence Media, which primarily invested in contemporary, established artists. SLANG works with developing artists, a sector of the business that institutional investors typically donât fund. Does SLANG have the same investors as Influence? How much funding does it have?Â
Same investors. I am not going to disclose [financing], but you know Influence is well funded. Thereâs no lack of capital needs. But you have to look at it right. Most companies that start with too much money usually donât win because, when you have access, you can be very undisciplined. Weâre very conscious of the mindset and how we allocate what we spend and invest in. Itâs really about discipline and focus. Thatâs what got us to where weâre at.
This story appears in the Feb. 8, 2025, issue of Billboard.
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President Donald Trumpâs administration is reportedly set to strike a deal with Elon Muskâs Tesla company to the tune of $400 million. President Trump is putting a fleet of armored Tesla Cybertrucks on order, prompting many online to call out the hypocrisy of DOGE and the White House.
As spotted on Drop Site, it appears that the State Department, now headed by Marco Rubio, was in line to receive the fleet of armored Tesla Cybertrucks with a value of $400 million and is slated to take place in the fourth quarter of the year for a period of five years. The outlet notes that the forecasted purchase was modified on Dec. 13 of last year, ahead of when Trump was officially sworn in last month.
Drop Site added that the plan was set in motion by President Joe Bidenâs administration, with the aim of transforming the Bureau of Diplomatic Securityâs fleet of over 3,000 armored vehicles into all-electric, zero-emission vehicles by 2035.
After reports of the deal went wide, including outlets such as MSBNC and NPR, speculation pointed to the Cybertruck as the vehicle of choice after the word âTeslaâ was seen in the State Department document. However, that word was removed Wednesday evening, prompting some to think that there is trickery afoot.
Elon Musk is currently spearheading the Department of Government Efficiency, also known as DOGE, which has aimed efforts to cut government overspending. Critics of Musk and DOGE have aimed their concerns about the raging conflict of interest should Muskâs company retain the contract despite his pledge to cut the countryâs deficit by trillions.
Cybertruck owners have recently been the target of vandalism and ridicule after Muskâs public alignment with Trump. Some owners are saying theyâre being targeted while viral clips online show the vehicle marked with insults and taking surface damage.
On X, the reaction to the reports that Tesla could potentially earn $400 in government contracts for a fleet of decked-out Cybertrucks has garnered some passionate responses. Weâve got those listed below.
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Photo: Getty
This analysis is part of Billboardâs music technology newsletter Machine Learnings. Sign up for Machine Learnings, and other Billboard newsletters for free here.
Have you heard about our lord and savior, Shrimp Jesus?
Last year, a viral photo of Jesus made out of shrimp went viral on Facebook â and while it might seem obvious to you and me that generative AI was behind this bizarre combination, plenty of boomers still thought it was real.
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Bizarre AI images like these have become part of an exponentially growing problem on social media sites, where they are rarely labeled as AI and are so eye grabbing that they draw the attention of users, and the algorithm along with them. That means less time and space for the posts from friends, family and human creators that you want to see on your feed. Of course, AI makes some valuable creations, too, but letâs be honest, how many images of crustacean-encrusted Jesus are really necessary?
This has led to a term called the âDead Internet Theoryâ â the idea that AI-generated material will eventually flood the internet so thoroughly that nothing human can be found. And guess what? The same so-called âAI Slopâ phenomenon is growing fast in the music business, too, as quickly-generated AI songs flood DSPs. (Dead Streamer Theory? Ha. Ha.) According to CISAC and PMP, this could put 24% of music creatorsâ revenues at risk by 2028 â so it seems like the right time for streaming services to create policies around AI material. But exactly how they should take action remains unclear.
In January, French streaming service Deezer took its first step toward a solution by launching an AI detection tool that will flag whatever it deems fully AI generated, tag it as such and remove it from algorithmic recommendations. Surprisingly, the company claims the tool found that about 10% of the tracks uploaded to its service every day are fully AI generated.
I thought Deezerâs announcement sounded like a great solution: AI music can remain for those who want to listen to it, can still earn royalties, but wonât be pushed in usersâ faces, giving human-made content a little head start. I wondered why other companies hadnât also followed suit. After speaking to multiple AI experts, however, it seems many of todayâs AI detection tools generally still leave something to be desired. âThereâs a lot of false positives,â one AI expert, who has tested out a variety of detectors on the market, says.
The fear for some streamers is that a bad AI detection tool could open up the possibility of human-made songs getting accidentally caught up in a whirlwind of AI issues, and become a huge headache for the staff who would have to review the inevitable complaints from users. And really, when you get down to it, how can the naked ear definitively tell the difference between human-generated and AI-generated music?
This is not to say that Deezerâs proprietary AI music detector isnât great â it sounds like a step in the right direction â but the newness and skepticism that surrounds this AI detection technology is clearly a reason why other streaming services have been reluctant to try it themselves.
Still, protecting against the negative use-cases of AI music, like spamming, streaming fraud and deepfaking, are a focus for many streaming services today, even though almost all of the policies in place to date are not specific to AI.
Itâs also too soon to tell what the appetite is for AI music. As long as the song is good, will it really matter where it came from? Itâs possible this is a moment that weâll look back on with a laugh. Maybe future generations wonât discriminate between fully AI, partially AI or fully human works. A good song is a good song.
But we arenât there yet. The US Copyright Office just issued a new directive affirming that fully AI generated works are ineligible for copyright protection. For streaming services, this technically means, like all other public domain works, that the service doesnât need to pay royalties on it. But so far, most platforms have continued to just pay out on anything thatâs up on the site â copyright protected or not.
Except for SoundCloud, a platform thatâs always marched to the beat of its own drum. It has a policy which âprohibit[s] the monetization of songs and content that are exclusively generated through AI, encouraging creators to use AI as a tool rather than a replacement of human creation,â a company spokesperson says.
In general, most streaming services do not have specific policies, but Spotify, YouTube Music and others have implemented procedures for users to report impersonations of likenesses and voices, a major risk posed by (but not unique to) AI. This closely resembles the method for requesting a takedown on the grounds of copyright infringement â but it has limits.
Takedowns for copyright infringement are required by law, but some streamers voluntarily offer rights holders takedowns for the impersonation of oneâs voice or likeness. To date, there is still no federal protection for these so-called âpublicity rights,â so platforms are largely doing these takedowns as a show of goodwill.
YouTube Music has focused more than perhaps any other streaming service on curbing deepfake impersonations. According to a company blog post, YouTube has developed ânew synthetic-singing identification technology within Content ID that will allow partners to automatically detect and manage AI-generated content on YouTube that simulates their singing voices,â adding another layer of defense for rights holders who are already kept busy policing their own copyrights across the internet.
Another concern with the proliferation of AI music on streaming services is that it can enable streaming fraud. In September, federal prosecutors indicted a North Carolina musician for allegedly using AI to create âhundreds of thousandsâ of songs and then using the AI tracks to earn more than $10 million in fraudulent streaming royalties. By spreading out fake streams over a large number of tracks, quickly made by AI, fraudsters can more easily evade detection.
Spotify is working on that. Whether the songs are AI or human-made, the streamer now has gates to prevent spamming the platform with massive amounts of uploads. Itâs not AI-specific, but itâs a policy that impacts the bad actors who use AI for this purpose.
SoundCloud also has a solution: The service believes its fan-powered royalties system also reduces fraud. âFan-powered royalties tie royalties directly to the contributions made by real listeners,â a company blog post reads. âFan-powered royalties are attributable only to listenersâ subscription revenue and ads consumed, then distributed among only the artists listeners streamed that month. No pooled royalties means bots have little influence, which leads to more money being paid out on legitimate fan activity.â Again, not AI-specific, but it will have an impact on AI uploaders with bad motives.
So, whatâs next? Continuing to develop better AI detection and attribution tools, anticipating future issues with AI â like AI agents employed for streaming fraud operations â and fighting for better publicity rights protections. Itâs a thorny situation, and we havenât even gotten into the philosophical debate of defining the line between fully AI generated and partially AI generated songs. But one thing is certain â this will continue to pose challenges to the streaming status quo for years to come.
Madonna fans are getting something better than chocolates or roses for Valentineâs Day this year: the promise of new music. On Instagram Thursday (Feb. 13) â just one day before the day of love â the superstar shared a video slideshow of photos showing off her recent time in the studio. In some pictures, she […]
Brandon Lakeâs âThatâs Who I Praiseâ continues its domination on Billboardâs Christian Airplay chart (dated Feb. 15) as it reigns for a 10th week. It drew 5.2 million in audience Jan. 31-Feb. 6, according to Luminate.
The song ties for the longest rule of the decade. Housefires and JWLKRSâ âI Thank God,â featuring Blake Wiggins and Ryan Ellis, began its 10-week stay at No. 1 in December 2023.
Meanwhile, Lake has a stake in one of the songs tied for second place. Elevation Worshipâs âPraiseâ ââ featuring Lake, Chris Brown and Chandler Moore â ruled for nine frames beginning last May; Katy Nicholeâs âIn Jesusâ Name (God of Possible)â started its own nine-week No. 1 run in April 2022.
Since the Christian Airplay survey launched in June 2003, the longest-leading No. 1 overall is MercyMeâs âWord of God Speak,â which dominated for 23 weeks starting that August.
The 34-year-old Lake, from Charleston, S.C., co-authored âThatâs Who I Praiseâ with Steven Furtick, Benjamin William Hastings, Zac Lawson and Micah Nichols, the lattermost of whom also produced it. It became Lakeâs fourth Christian Airplay chart-topper.
âIâm completely blown away,â Lake beamed to Billboard when the single hit No. 1 on the multimetric Hot Christian Songs chart in October. âTo hear that this song is connecting with so many hearts out there is humbling and just unreal.â
Dewandâs First No. 1
On Gospel Airplay, Jevon Dewandâs rookie single, âWithout You,â featuring Zacardi Cortez, Gasner the Artist and Jazze Pha, climbs 3-1 (up 12% in plays).
The Atlanta-based Dewand co-wrote and co-produced the song. Itâs is the lead single from his same-named album, released last June.
âWithout Youâ becomes the first Gospel Airplay leader for Dewand, Gasner the Artist and Jazze Pha, while veteran Cortez banks his seventh No. 1.
The song marks the first freshman entry to lead Gospel Airplay since Will Smithâs turn toward the genre with âYou Can Make It,â featuring Fridayy and Sunday Service, led for a week in December. It became the first No. 1 for all three acts.

Over the past year or so, Jelly Roll has been open about his dedication to working to transform his health. Last year, he ran his first 5K, taking part in Tom Segura and Bert Kreischerâs 2 Bears 5K.
Now, the country star is gearing up to run his second 5K race in May in Tampa, Fla, and heâs intent on helping others who also want to change their health for the better. The âHalfway to Hellâ singer told fans on Instagram Feb. 11 that he is launching Jelly Rollâs Losers Run Club as he gears up for the race.
In the video, he also told fans just how much his poor health was impacting his daily life, and how that inspired him to want to change.
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âA little bit over a year ago, I literally struggled to walk down my hill to the mailbox, yâall. I mean, it was really bad,â Jelly Roll said in the video. âAnd Iâd let myself get to the point of being absolutely just disgusted with myself. I was just sick and tired of it, and I was like, âMan, Iâm gonna figure this out. And about the time I was trying to find something to motivate me, I saw that Tom Segura had teased doing a 5K By May, and I knew right then that if there was ever a place that I was gonna feel safe trying to do my first 5K, it was going to be at the 2 Bears 5K.â
As he launches Jelly Rollâs Losers Run Club, the star said heâs launching a Facebook group, and has teamed with the Strava app to help others train for the race and stay motivated. Jelly Rollâs trainer Ian Larios will be helping people who take part with lifestyle, nutrition and exercise coaching. Meanwhile, ultramarathoner Matthew Johnson put together two plan options â one for beginners, as well as an intermediate plan â for partakers to train for the race.
âMatthew Johnson has the fastest time running across the state of Texas,â Jelly Roll said in the video. âThis man is an absolute machine. I love everything about him, the fact that he is dedicating the next 12 weeks of his life to try and help me and a bunch of people like myself to run in a 5K.â
âWhat we are trying to inspire here is just change and belief and community,â Jelly Roll summarized of the groupâs mission. âSomewhere where you can go and feel judgment-free when youâre trying to figure this thing out. I know how rough it was at first and how embarrassed I was to just be sucking snot and air every time I walked down the driveway. But it felt so good to have friends and people behind me, telling me I was doing the right thing. ⌠I believe that we can create huge change right here. I believe a huge group of people can come together right here and encourage each other to become what they always dreamed they could be.â
Watch Jelly Roll announce his Losers Run Club below:
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