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One of the great music cities of America, the Twin Cities (Minneapolis and St. Paul, MN) gave us Prince, The Replacements, Jam & Lewis, Hüsker Dü, Soul Asylum, The Time, Semisonic, The Jayhawks, Atmosphere and more. Not to mention serving as early stomping grounds for Minnesota-born legend Bob Dylan and, more recently, a pre-fame Lizzo […]

Following Jill Sobule’s tragic death on Thursday, the president and CEO of GLAAD released a statement honoring the groundbreaking singer/songwriter. “Jill wasn’t just a trailblazer in music—she was a beacon for queer artists, and I was incredibly lucky to call her a dear friend,” Sarah Kate Ellis wrote on Friday morning (May 2). “Long before […]

The owner of Las Vegas’ Sphere has hit Beyoncé with a cease and desist letter over fan-shot concert footage that shows the superstar picking up a computer-generated version of the iconic Las Vegas venue and briefly juggling it between her hands, Billboard has confirmed.
“Beyoncé — many orders of magnitude larger than the Sphere venue — leans over, picks up the venue, and looms over it,” the letter reads, according to the New York Post, which first reported the news, leading to “significant speculation that Beyoncé will end her tour with a Sphere residency.” (Billboard has not independently obtained the letter.)

The filmed sequence, which plays during an interlude at Beyoncé’s newly launched Cowboy Carter tour, irked Sphere Entertainment Co. executive chairman/CEO James Dolan because Sphere unsuccessfully lobbied the “Texas Hold ‘Em” singer to perform at the venue in the past, sources with knowledge of the negotiations tell Billboard.

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Attorneys for Dolan, who is also the chairman/CEO of Madison Square Garden Entertainment Group, want Beyoncé to cut the brief sequence from her three-hour concert, which she performed for a second time at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles on Thursday (May 1).

The letter is addressed to Beyoncé’s production company, Parkwood Entertainment, on behalf of Sphere Entertainment Group and authored by Kathleen McCarthy of the law firm King & Spalding. In the letter, Spaulding accuses Parkwood of using imagery of the Sphere’s likeness “without permission” and accuses the singer of misleading her fans.

“It has recently come to SEG’s attention that a Cowboy Carter tour interlude video contains the unauthorized use of SEG’s intellectual property,” the letter reads. “SEG is sure that multiple aspects of the interlude video, including other brands, clips and music, were duly cleared by the tour with rights permissions from the rights holders whose works were used in the video, as is common practice. SEG, however, was never asked and the prominent appearance and manipulation of SEG’s Sphere™ venue in the video is unauthorized.”

“SEG demands that the tour cease and desist from using the Sphere™ venue in the video immediately,” the letter continues, demanding that Parkwood “refrain from using this imagery on any merchandise, promotional or marketing materials, or in tour movies, etc. Should you fail to do so, SEG reserves all rights to take further action as SEG deems appropriate without notice to you.”

Beyoncé has never played Sphere in Las Vegas, although her representatives reportedly held talks with officials at Sphere Entertainment about a possible residency at the venue several years ago. Those discussions never materialized into bookings and Beyoncé has instead opted to play Allegiant Stadium when her Cowboy Carter tour stops in Las Vegas on July 25 and 26.

Billboard reached out to representatives for Beyoncé and tour promoter Live Nation for comment, but did not receive a response by press time.

One of the most acclaimed new musicals on Broadway right now has all the charm of a corpse — literally.
The unlikely subject of Dead Outlaw is the life — and death — of Elmer McCurdy, a late 19th-century ne’er-do-well who came to an early end but whose corporeal form enjoyed a bizarrely long afterlife as a well-preserved (well, for a time) traveling oddity. On paper, it might not sound like typical musical fare, but thanks to an expert creative team — led by co-composers David Yazbek and Erik Della Penna, director David Cromer and writer Itamar Moses — Elmer’s tale becomes not just strangely humorous and poignant but deeply thought-provoking.

Yazbek has a résumé stacked with great musical adaptations of films — including The Full Monty, Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown, Tootsie and The Band’s Visit, the latter of which won him the Tony for best original score. But Dead Outlaw is an increasingly rare breed of show on Broadway these days, based on no pre-existing intellectual property and not driven at the box office by celebrity names above its marquee.

So far, that’s working out well: Dead Outlaw just received a best musical nomination for the 2025 Tony Awards, one of seven nods for the show also including best score for Yazbek and Della Penna’s music, which is performed by a crackerjack band onstage. Yazbek is rarely working on one show at a time — among many overlapping projects, he’s also creative consultant on the Tony-nominated Buena Vista Social Club — but he and Della Penna took the time post-opening to talk to Billboard about Dead Outlaw and why often, on Broadway, smaller is better.

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How did you become aware of McCurdy’s crazy story in the first place, and how did you know it would lend itself well to musical form?

David Yazbek: The answer to the second part of that question is not until basicallyopening night (laughs). I heard the Elmer McCurdy story like 30-something years ago; when his body was discovered in 1976 by The Six Million Dollar Man TV crew it was a national story briefly, and I think a college friend’s mother sent him clippings about it. He told me the story and it really stuck, especially the themes of identity and death and mortality and greed and fame. For years and years, anyone who heard the actual true story was just amazed that it actually happened. And one of the people I told it to eventually was Erik, who I was in a band with and had written some songs with, and he got hooked.

Erik Della Penna: It was just such an odd story that it’s immediately compelling — anybody I tell this story to is immediately interested. I consider myself a student of American music and of history in general, so this kind of hit all my buttons for those interests

Yazbek: And those factors don’t make it an obvious thing for a musical or a play or whatever, but…

Della Penna: I feel like a musical is sort of the best way to tell the story. Theater really succeeds when it in some way represents an otherworldly environment, and there’s only scant facts in the Elmer McCurdy story. So it’s the perfect way to present them and to really show the depth of it, and not just the cold facts — to bring some humanity to it and relatability.

Yazbek: We both had the instinct that that would be the way to tell the story, and that we could write the songs to tell the story. And, you know, I guess we’re right. So far.

Erik Della Penna (left) and David Yazbek

Jennifer Small

The ideas it brings up about achieving fame and notoriety at any cost — about this very American obsession with being remembered for something, anything — feels especially timely…

Yazbek: I have his memory of when I was maybe 15, I wrote a short story for a class, and it was kind of about that ephemeral idea that for some reason being remembered will afford you some degree of immortality. It’s just another f–king illusory comfort, but it really does drive people, sometimes for their entire lives — this idea of, “Oh sh-t, I’m gonna die. But wait a minute, I’ll be remembered! I’ll have a legacy!” Even the word legacy is dangerous. It’s why some people amass much more wealth than they should and put their name on buildings.

Della Penna: It doesn’t even work with buildings. Like, [New York’s] Alice Tully Hall is now David Geffen Hall, so what happened to Alice Tully? Now we all forget about her?

The onstage band is central to the show. Did you have a particular sonic palette or influences you were drawing upon in writing the music?

Della Penna: I think Yazbek asked me because my musical interests were in early 20th century American music…

Yazbek: That’s pretty accurate. I don’t read reviews, but people keep throwing little bits at me, and [the New York Times review] was referencing an album of mine called Evil Monkey Man, and Erik is all over that album, and just like in this show, he’s playing lap steel, different electric and acoustics, and there’s some banjo. That’s sort of at the root of all of this: Erik and I are both capable of being very eclectic in our songwriting. We both love this genre — I don’t want to call it Americana, but like you just said, that early 20th century American music…

Della Penna: And that includes Cole Porter, Irving Berlin, Jimmy Rogers…

Yazbek: And all of that stuff is very apropos for this show. The show is 100 years of American history. And from the very beginning, we sort of said, “Let’s Lennon and McCartney this” — in other words, let’s not be counting bars and who wrote what, let’s go all in, and that was part of the fun of it.

Though you do have two standout performances in central roles — Tony nominees Andrew Durand as Elmer and Jeb Brown as the narrator and bandleader — this truly feels like an ensemble piece. The cast is a band too, in a way.

Della Penna Absolutely — the cast as a band, that’s right. We were thinking about that for a while, getting a star in there [as] the narrator. I thought that would be more guaranteed juice for this to move [to Broadway]. But I also felt bad that it was sort of a cop out for the quality of the piece and the quality of the music. So I’m glad where it landed.

Yazbek: Yeah, me too. I was talking to somebody, maybe one of our producers, about how there’s the artistic currency of a show, but then there’s also, like, the currency for marketing the show itself. And to me, the currency for marketing the show is quality with a capital Q. The star of the show is how great everyone is who’s in it, and its uniqueness and its depth. Like, can’t you market that? (laughs)

Dead Outlaw

Matthew Murphy

Dead Outlaw started out at New York’s Minetta Lane Theater as part of Audible’s theater series there. How did that help launch the show?

Yazbek: There are several independent theaters, regional and local, that should have just immediately said, “Oh, the Band’s Visit guys. Oh, this music, oh, this story. Yeah, sure, here’s a slot.” And for some reason, I guess because we didn’t have a star and it wasn’t [preexistent] IP, they didn’t do it. I’ve had at least two artistic directors tell me how much they regret not doing it, which is very satisfying. But it was [Audible’s] Kate Nathan who said, “Oh, I think we can do this. I think we want to do this.” And as the budget grew, she just saw us through the development. That takes vision.

David, you’ve done big, splashy shows, and you’ve done smaller shows like this one. As creators, does doing a smaller-scale show allow you to do something that a big budget spectacle doesn’t as much?

Yazbek: Part of it is like independent film versus studio films. There are producers out there who don’t really understand how to bring quality, other than just bringing the big flying helicopter or whatever the money can buy. There are economic exigencies to putting up a show on Broadway and keeping it running. And from the very beginning [with Dead Outlaw], I had that in my head. When we first were thinking, “Oh, well, let’s just do this as a band show with one narrator, and that narrator’s in the band” — to me, that was like, how could you say no to that? It’s just got to be good, but it’ll also be so inexpensive that you could put it in a playhouse and it could run as long as people want to see it without us having to charge $800 a ticket. Sometimes great art is done with a limited palette, as opposed to with anything you want. How much value is there in seeing these eight performers do 60 parts, and they’re great? Like, that’s f–king theater right there.

Clairo proved the “Apple” doesn’t fall far from the tree at Charli xcx‘s tour stop in Brooklyn, New York on Wednesday night (April 30). In attendance for the first of Charli’s four sold-out nights at Barclays Center on the ongoing Brat Arena Tour, the “Sexy to Someone” singer was filmed doing the viral choreography to […]

Amidst all the gruesome killings on Only Murders in the Building, something else about the show stuck out to Kelly Clarkson: the onscreen romance between Meryl Streep and Martin Short’s characters, about which the musician wrote a new song called “Where Have You Been.” Released Friday (May 2), “Where Have You Been” finds Clarkson singing […]

2 Chainz is set to premiere a new short film he made with Omar Epps at the Atlanta Film Festival on Saturday. In an interview with Variety on Friday (May 2), 2 Chainz said his new film Red Clay felt like a fitting extension of his music. “I tell stories through my music, always hoping […]

May is here, which means Pride Month is just around the corner — so start prepping your playlists with some new tunes from your favorite queer artists. Billboard Pride is proud to present the latest edition of Queer Jams of the Week, our roundup of some of the best new music releases from LGBTQ+ artists.

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See latest videos, charts and news

From Dove Cameron‘s flirtatious new pop song to Blondshell’s much-anticipated new album, check out just a few of our favorite releases from this week below:

Dove Cameron, “French Girls”

Dove Cameron knows people are watching her closely — now, she’s giving them something to look at. On “French Girls,” the singer’s stunning new dance single, Cameron invites her fans to make like Jack from Titanic and paint her like one of the song’s titular Parisian women, all while promising to give them lots to work with. A thundering beat accompanies the star’s voice as she lets a campy affectation take over. “Everything I do,” she assures her audience, “I do it for you.”

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Blondshell, If You Asked For a Picture

Sabrina Teitelbaum is ready to have a conversation about boundaries. If You Asked For a Picture, the singer-songwriter’s latest album as Blondshell, takes a life’s worth of questions about existing in the public eye and expertly examines what it means to let people see you. Whether she’s exploring emotional burnout (on album standout “Event of a Fire”) or her own perceptions of sexual identity (“Model Rockets”), Teitelbaum never flinches with her lyrics or her well-curated production, making If You Asked For a Picture an immediate classic in Blondshell’s growing sonic universe.

Model/Actriz, Pirouette

The world is in desperate need of some excellent new rock music, and Model/Actriz is more than happy to fill in that gap. With its newest album Pirouette, the band levels up their sound in scale, scope and standing, making for a winning 11-track project that paints a portrait of a group ready for an even bigger breakthrough. From the staccato guitar lines of “Vespers” to the delirious beats of “Poppy,” Model/Actriz leaves no desire unfulfilled on this excellent new album.

Brooke Eden, “Giddy Up!”

“I don’t care where you come from,” Brooke Eden offers in the opening moments of her new song. “Just listen to the sound of the kick drum.” With just a few words, Eden delivers a thesis statement on “Giddy Up,” her queer-inclusive new country single. A proper hoedown ensues throughout the rest of the track, as Eden commands the listeners to scoot their boots onto the dance floor, while never letting them forget that this song — and even this genre at large — can be for everyone, not just those who’ve historically benefitted from it.

KiNG MALA, And You Who Drowned In the Grief of a Golden Thing

If Lady Gaga incited chaos upon the release of her critically-lauded album Mayhem in March, then KiNG MALA is here to keep that bedlam going with her debut album. Throughout And You Who Drowned, MALA self-destructs (“Ode to a Black Hole”), rebuilds (“Garden”) and deconstructs (“GøD”) just about everything that she can get her hands on, all while exploring some of her biggest and best sounds to date.

Maddie Zahm, “Mothers & Daughters”

With Mother’s Day coming up in just over a week, Maddie Zahm decided to share an early tribute to her own mom with “Mothers & Daughters.” Throughout the touching new track, the singer-songwriter doesn’t shy away from some of the harder truths about the familial dynamic, including the times she found herself “screaming ‘I hate you, and you’re ruining my life.’” But the gorgeously composed track comes around to the conclusion that, as difficult as the relationship can sometimes be, it doesn’t change the immense love shared between Zahm and her mom.

Check out all of our picks on Billboard’s Queer Jams of the Week playlist below:

YEAT paid homage to Drake with a cover of “Feel No Ways” during his Coachella set in April, and the electronic cover of the Drizzy fan-favorite received an official release on DSPs on Friday (May 2). Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news The “Feel No Wayz (Yeat Mix)” […]

Featuring aural floral offerings from Miley Cyrus, the Foundations and more.