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Looks like Dua Lipa is signing up for a new era. Are you coming with her?
After deleting all prior posts on Instagram, the 28-year-old pop star shared a cryptic teaser video Monday (Oct. 31) full of possible clues regarding long-awaited new music. Her hair dyed bright red, Dua closes her mouth on a gold necklace with a key-shaped pendant and shows a split-second flash of a stack of Polaroids, after which a series of seemingly random numbers flash onscreen: 4, 8, 9, 9, 14, 15 and 21.

The clip is set to what sounds like a snippet of upcoming music; following a descending line of piano notes, Dua sings the words “Tell me all the ways you need me” before a funky bass line kicks in.

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“🔑✨sign up dualipa.com,” the Argylle actress wrote in her caption.

On the star’s website, fans are prompted to “Sign Up” for “happiness, passion, love, joy, optimism, energy” and “fun.” After plugging in your phone number, expect a message welcoming you to “Dua’s text community.”

The teaser comes more than three years after Dua’s last album Future Nostalgia, her massively successful sophomore effort which spawned the single “Levitating.” Though the singer has remained busy with acting projects, her Barbie soundtrack contribution “Dance The Night” and various musical collaborations — most notably “Cold Heart” with Elton John and “Sweetest Pie” with Megan Thee Stallion — fans have been antsy for a new album for months.

Many have already started decoding the elusive numbers tacked onto Dua’s teaser, with some concluding that the digits are code for the name “Houdini.” The famed magician notably passed away on Halloween, the same day Dua’s teaser went live. The key in Lipa’s mouth may also be a Harry Houdini reference. During the magician’s public stunts, his wife, Bess, would often pass him the key to his handcuffs via a kiss. The cover of Kate Bush’s 1982 album The Dreaming – which shows the art rocker kissing a chained man with a key in her mouth – is a reference to Houdini.

See Dua’s new teaser video below:

In her new music video, Sabrina Carpenter cheerfully facilitates the deaths of several obnoxious men. But don’t worry, it weighs heavily on her mind after the fact — as heavy as a feather, that is.
Posted on Halloween, Carpenter’s “Feather” music video is fittingly bloody. As the 24-year-old singer nonchalantly listens to music in her headphones, lifts weights and rides an elevator, men who catcall, mansplain and take inappropriate photos are met with instant karma. The cat-callers are run over by a truck; the fitness know-it-alls fight each other to death; and the predatory photographer gets his blood squeezed out of him in an elevator shaft — thanks to Carpenter, who jams his tie in the doors as they close without a second thought.

“I feel so much lighter like a feather with you off my mind,” she sings as she gleefully frolics around a church, presumably at the men’s collective funeral.

“Feather” is the latest song off Carpenter’s July 2022 album Emails I Can’t Send to get the music video treatment, following “Nonsense,” “Because I Liked a Boy,” “Fast Times” and “Skinny Dipping.” Upon its release, the album debuted at No. 23 on the Billboard 200, marking the rising pop star’s highest peak on the chart to date.

Much like “Nonsense,” which became Carpenter’s second ever entry on the Billboard Hot 100 in January months after its initial release, “Feather” started gaining traction this year due to it being a major fan favorite on Emails. The former Disney Channel actress addressed this on Instagram Stories prior to the new music video’s release, writing, “You guys showed ‘feather’ so much love we had to make a video.”

The project comes about two weeks after Carpenter performed “Feather” for Spotify Singles, for which she also turned in a cover of Taylor Swift’s “I Knew You Were Trouble.” “Well she nailed it,” Swift later praised Carpenter, one of several openers for the “Anti-Hero” singer on her Eras Tour.

Watch the “Feather” music video above.

Mariah Carey may be the Christmas queen, but she’s also no amateur when it comes to Halloween. This year, the songstress looked fabulous as Jessica Rabbit, sharing photos of her Disney-inspired costume on social media Monday night (Oct. 30).

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In the photos, Carey sports a curve-hugging red dress, purple opera gloves and flaming red hair, just like the Who Framed Roger Rabbit femme fatale. “Happy Halloween!” she captioned the pictures, adding a spooky Jack-o-lantern emoji.

The “We Belong Together” singer also seemed to wink at the upcoming holiday season, which she’s all but trademarked at this point thanks to her evergreen chart-ruling hit “All I Want For Christmas Is You.” “#notyet,” she hashtagged her post.

The “not yet” is an ongoing joke between Carey and her fans, as the five-time Grammy winner typically kicks off her Christmas festivities immediately after Halloween concludes. Last year, she posted a video of her in a bubble bath midway through October, teasing fans who wanted to prematurely listen to “All I Want” with the coy caption “Not yet!”

Then, on Nov. 1, the star shared a video of her channeling the Wicked Witch of the West before morphing into a Santa-inspired jumpsuit, declaring, “IT’S TIIIIIIIIME!!!!!!!!”

In years past, Carey has taken on Halloween as a heavy metal rocker, a devil, a pink-haired nurse, a bride and a mermaid. This year’s Jessica Rabbit tribute comes on the heels of the pop diva’s announcement that more dates will be added to her upcoming Merry Christmas One and All Tour, which kicks off Nov. 15 in Highland, Cali. and wraps Dec. 17 with a show at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

See photos of Mariah Carey as Jessica Rabbit below:

A video for “Now and Then,” which has been described as the “last Beatles song,” is scheduled to premiere on Friday (Nov. 3) at 10 a.m. ET., 24 hours after the track’s release on Thursday (Nov. 2). The clip was directed by Peter Jackson and is described in a release as a “poignant and humorous” visual that “invites viewers to celebrate The Beatles’ timeless and enduring love for one another with John, Paul, George and Ringo as they create the last Beatles song; the video will premiere on the Beatles YouTube channel.
“Now and Then,” which will be released by Apple Corps Ltd./Capitol/UMe, is the final song written by John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr, and it was finished by living members McCartney and Starr more than 40 years after the group began work on it. The double A-side single will also include a touching throwback with the inclusion of the band’s 1962 debut single, “Love Me Do,” featuring the original cover art shot by Ed Ruscha. Both songs have been mixed in stereo and Dolby Atmos.

The “Now and Then” video is Jackson’s first foray into music video production and in a statement, the director behind the acclaimed 2021 The Beatles: Get Back miniseries said when Apple first approached him with the gig he was initially reluctant to say yes. “I thought my next few months would be a hell of a lot more fun if that tricky task was somebody else’s problem, and I could be like any other Beatles fan, enjoying the night-before-Christmas anticipation as the release of a new Beatles song and music video approached – in 1995, l loved the childlike excitement I felt as the release of ‘Free As A Bird’ was inching closer,” he said of the 1995 Beatles song that began as a 1977 Lennon home demo that was completed by McCartney, Harrison and Starr.

“I could have that experience once again – all I had to do was say no to The Beatles. To be honest, just thinking about the responsibility of having to make a music video worthy of the last song The Beatles will ever release produced a collection of anxieties almost too overwhelming to deal with,” the director continued. “My lifelong love of The Beatles collided into a wall of sheer terror at the thought of letting everyone down. This created intense insecurity in me because I’d never made a music video before, and was not able to imagine how I could even begin to create one for a band that broke up over 50 years ago, had never actually performed the song, and had half of its members no longer with us.”

But, as Jackson kept trying to think of new reasons to turn down the gig — to this day, he said, he still has never, technically, agreed to the job — he told Apple that the lack of “suitable footage” was worrisome because the project would require tapping into rare and unseen film of the Fab Four, not much of which is out there.

“Nothing at all seemed to exist showing Paul, George and Ringo working on ‘Now And Then’ in 1995 … There’s not much footage of John in the mid-seventies when he wrote the demo … I grizzled about the lack of unseen Beatles footage from the ’60s … And they didn’t even shoot any footage showing Paul and Ringo working on the song last year,” he said of his tortured thought process.

“A Beatles music video must have great Beatles footage at its core. There’s no way actors or CGI Beatles should be used,” Jackson continued. “Every shot of The Beatles needed to be genuine. By now I really had no idea how anyone could make a ‘Now And Then’ music video if they didn’t have decent footage to work with, and this was far from being a lame excuse. My fear and insecurity now had solid reasons why they should prevail and allow me to say no without looking too much like a chicken.”

But Jackson also knew the Beatles don’t take no for an answer once they set their minds to something, which might explain why they didn’t wait for him to decline before forging ahead. Jackson said he found himself “swept along” as McCartney and Starr addressed his worries and shot some footage of themselves that they sent to him. In addition, Apple dug up more than 14 hours of long-forgotten film shot during the 1995 sessions, including several hours of McCartney, Harrison and Starr working on the last song.

In addition, Lennon’s son, Sean Ono Lennon, and Harrison’s widow, Olivia, found some “great unseen home movie footage” that they shared with him. “To cap things off, a few precious seconds of The Beatles performing in their leather suits, the earliest known film of The Beatles and never seen before, was kindly supplied by Pete Best,” Jackson revealed of the contribution from the band’s original drummer. “Watching this footage completely changed the situation – I could see how a music video could be made. Actually, I found it far easier if I thought of it as making a short movie, so that’s what I did… My lack of confidence with music videos didn’t matter anymore if I wasn’t making one. Even so, I still had no solid vision for what this short film should be – so I turned to the song for guidance.”

Jackson described separating Lennon’s voice on the demo tape a year ago, with producer Giles Martin cooking up an early mix of the single last year that the director loved and which he’s listened to more than 50 times since. After doing a deep-dive into the song looking for ideas and inspiration for the short film, Jackson said the more he listened the more the shape of the visual began to take form, “without any conscious effort from me.”

Working with his Get Back editor, Jabez Olssen, Jackson started pulling together “little fragments, sliding pictures and music around in different ways until things began to click in.” The idea, he said, was to create a short film that would “bring a few tears to the eye,” though he began to realize that generating emotion using only archival footage was “tricky” at best.

“Fortunately, the simple power of this beautiful song did a lot of the work for us, and we finished the first 30 or 40 secs of the film fairly quickly,” Jackson said, admitting that finding an appropriate ending that could “adequately sum up the enormity of The Beatles’ legacy” proved daunting. If not impossible.

“Their contribution to the world is too immense, and their wondrous gift of music has become part of our DNA and now defies description,” he said. “I realised we needed the imagination of every viewer to do what we couldn’t, and have each viewer create their own personal moment of farewell to The Beatles – but we had to gently steer everyone to that place. I had some vague ideas, but didn’t really know how to achieve this.”

Jackson said he got lucky because Harrison’s son, musician Dhani Harrison, happened to be visiting Jackson’s home country of New Zealand at the time, and after discussing the proposed ending with him, “his [Harrison’s] eyes immediately filled with tears — so that is the way we went.”

The middle section aimed to capture the band’s legendarily silly side using a collection of unseen outtakes where the Beatles are “relaxed, funny and rather candid.”

The video will be accompanied by a 12-minute Now and Then — The Last Beatles Song documentary written by Oliver Murray, due out on Wednesday (Nov. 1). The doc will tell the story behind the track and feature exclusive footage and commentary from McCartney, Starr and Harrison, as well as Sean Ono Lennon and director Jackson.

Once a bandmate, always a brother. That appears to be the case for Lance Bass, who recently stuck up for his *NSYNC bandmate Justin Timberlake amid the “Mirrors” singer’s myriad swirling controversies following the bombshell revelations unleashed in Britney Spears’ new memoir The Woman in Me. In an impromptu airport interview with TMZ, Bass confirmed […]

Boygenius’ Lucy Dacus and Julien Baker gave fans a serious throwback to 2018 with their Halloween costume over the weekend, recreating a viral photo of Ariana Grande and Pete Davidson that has since become the base of countless memes. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news In the snap […]

Joe Jonas helped a Jonas Brothers band member say “I do” on Sunday night (Oct. 29) — in front of thousands of fans. In a video shared to TikTok by user @recessionobsession, the sibling trio stopped their concert at the Honda Center in Anaheim, Calif., to share what happened when they asked their percussionist, Molly Lopresti, […]

Looking for some motivation to help power you through the start of another work week? We feel you, and with some stellar new pop tunes, we’ve got you covered.
These 10 tracks from artists including Maisie Peters, Alec Benjamin, Yard Act, Baby Queen and more will get you energized to take on the week. Pop any of these gems into your personal playlists — or scroll to the end of the post for a custom playlist of all 10.

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Samira, “Toxic”

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Pop newcomer Samira has spent the year releasing a string of increasingly promising singles, and “Toxic” bests them all by imbuing its entire runtime with a sense of danger, as the stormy percussion and the lyrical warning signs suggest trouble lies ahead with her bad-boy subject. “Toxic” doesn’t try to reinvent the wheel, but provides Samira with a new high-water mark. — JASON LIPSHUTZ

Yaeger, “Jaguar”

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Love Swedish pop? Dig into the latest confection from Yaeger, the impressive singer-songwriter who recently hopped on the latest album from fellow Swedes Icona Pop, and whose new single carries a similar sensation of Tove Lo’s best tracks. “Jaguar” feasts upon a killer synth riff (borrowed from downtempo electronic greats Boards of Canada), not backgrounding that hook too much as Yaeger’s voice drifts between vulnerability and ferocity. — J. Lipshutz

Kanii feat. Trippie Redd, “Sins (Let Me In)” Remix

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After dropping “Sins (Let Me In)” last month, Kanii has tapped Trippie Redd to flesh out its bleary-eyed, melodic bounce, and the remix is a match made in heaven. Trippie’s croon grounds the track in the middle of Kanii’s vocal flourishes, gripping the skittering beats until his voice fades out — but “Sins (Let Me In)” still has another minute of evaporating emotion before the curtain closes. — J. Lipshutz

CIL, “Bloodsucker”

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Plenty of pop artists try to stand out each and every week with dramatic vocal showcases, but CIL possesses the skill and confidence to pull it off. New single “Bloodsucker” is a snappy kiss-off with some muted strings, a quick guitar solo and a ghostly texture, but the instrumentation takes a backseat to her melismas, belts and snarling soul throughout the track. If you haven’t been following CIL yet, “Bloodsucker” will command your attention. — J. Lipshutz

Yard Act, “Dream Job”

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Yard Act’s 2022 debut The Overload demonstrated a modern understanding of classic post-punk, but the previews of 2024 sophomore LP Where’s My Utopia? suggest that the British rock group is ready to burst forward with new ideas. “Dream Job” funnels their talkier tendencies into a crowd-approved groove, with the band shimmying over the dance track with undeniable fervor and untamed personality. — J. Lipshutz

The Voidz, “Flexorcist”

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While The Strokes’ music often soars with live instrumentation — a hallmark of the group’s early garage rock revivalist sound, thanks to early releases Is This It and Room on Fire — Julian Casablancas’ side project, The Voidz, trades the crunchy guitar riffs and heavy drum beats for ’80s excess in new single, “Flexorcist.” The indulgent, nearly six-minute single sees the singer’s vocals sitting under a blanket of upbeat synths and keytar accompaniment as he casts an eye roll at a know-it-all (“What — you’re an expert?/ You read about it somewhere?,””It’s always something with you”) on the chorus. Talking Heads-inspired drum beats carry the song through its fade-out. — Starr Bowenbank

Wilderado feat. Matt Berninger, “In Between”

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In September, indie-folk band Wilderado released its first single of 2023 with “In Between.” Now, the band has tapped The National’s Matt Berninger for a cozy acoustic take on life’s in betweens. And while the lyrics seem to tell a sliver of a larger story, Berninger’s signature low range adds depth to the open-ended narrative — resulting in an engaging “choose your own adventure” listen. — LYNDSEY HAVENS

Alec Benjamin, “Different Kind of Beautiful”

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Pop singer-songwriter Alec Benjamin has returned with the creeping and complimentary “Different Kind of Beautiful.” Produced by duo Stargate, the single is the first taste of a new album coming next year. The moodier, Weeknd-inspired beat and elongated ending notes are evidence of what’s to come, with Benjamin confirming in a statement: “The song represents the start of a whole new chapter.” — L.H.

Maisie Peters, “You’re Just a Boy (And I’m Kinda the Man)” 

Hailing from Maisie Peters’ seasonally appropriate new album The Good Witch, “You’re Just a Boy (And I’m Kinda the Man)” is a strummy, energetic tune that’s as much of a profession of love as it is a savage dunk on a romantic man-child. The influence of Taylor Swift looms large on this signee to Ed Sheeran’s Gingerman Records, but Peters’ deceptively sweet voice and sly humor gives it a distinct flavor. — JOE LYNCH

Baby Queen, “I Can’t Get My Shit Together” 

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A perfect anthem for a frustrated Monday morning, “I Can’t Get My Shit Together” finds Baby Queen bellowing her frustrations in a staccato chant over a playful blast of synth-y indie-pop. The South Africa-born, London-based singer might not feel like it, but when it comes to crafting sub-three-minute bursts of pop pleasure, her s–t is very much together. — J. Lynch  

Just weeks after she was announced as a special guest slated to play the role of Sally in the annual live stage performance of Tim Burton’s Halloween classic The Nightmare Before Christmas, Halsey quietly pulled out of the production. Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news While no […]

Tate McRae got an inkling that her latest single would be huge the night before it was released.
The 20-year-old pop singer began teasing snippets of “Greedy” on TikTok in August, prior to the single arriving in full on Sept. 15. McRae was in the middle of a North American headlining tour in mid-September, and decided to unveil “Greedy” at her Sept. 14 show at The Fillmore in Philadelphia.

“We put it into the set list, and in rehearsals, I was just so nervous and terrified, because it was such a different sound for me,” McRae tells Billboard. “And then the second we premiered it in Philly, the crowd reaction was crazy.” McRae was especially blown away that the crowd knew most of the lyrics to “Greedy,” even though she had only been posting teasers of the track. “It was just very, very validating,” she says.

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McRae has enjoyed crossover hits prior to “Greedy”: The Calgary native scored a top 20 Billboard Hot 100 hit in 2020 with “You Broke Me First,” while singles like “She’s All I Wanna Be” and the Regard/Troye Sivan collaboration “You” also made their presences felt at top 40 radio. Yet “Greedy” is something different, a propulsive self-empowerment anthem built around a firecracker of a pop hook that finds McRae dipping in and out of a falsetto while exuding unshakeable confidence.

The song has earned 71.3 million on-demand official U.S. streams to date, according to Luminate, and by peaking at No. 14 on the Hot 100 thus far (it’s No. 17 on the current tally), “Greedy” is already McRae’s highest-charting hit on the chart. More important to McRae than the commercial achievements, however, is how the song has expanded her sound and pop persona, offering a commanding vocal take amid whooping sound effects and a danceable beat.

“I think I have a pretty good grasp on what my fans like to hear and what they enjoy,” McRae explains. “But I don’t think you ever really know. I was like, ‘This is a big risk for me as an artist’ — turning 20, I felt like I had to make a big change in my life and my sound. And you can only see so much on TikTok. You never know which direction it’s gonna go, or if it’s going to translate. So it’s been pretty special.”

McRae says that she typically writes songs by herself in her bedroom, so creating “Greedy” in the studio with pop veterans Ryan Tedder, Amy Allen and Jasper Harris felt like an effective crash course. “I just try to be a sponge as much as possible, and just see where their instincts go,” she explains. McRae adds that she and that same trio of songwriters have penned a lot more songs together, potentially for her next full-length. “It feels like a little family,” she says, “and we’re just like trying out new sounds and being ballsy and being like, ‘How do we take a bigger risk and say something different?’”

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Meanwhile, the “Greedy” music video, which is up to 22 million views on YouTube, highlights a different, yet personally familiar, side of McRae. Set in an empty hockey arena, the clip gives the singer an opportunity to showcase her dance skills — with breakneck choreography, courtesy of the esteemed Sean Bankhead — years after becoming a finalist on So You Think You Can Dance.

“I was a competitive dancer until I was like 17 years old, and it was everything to me,” she says. “And then I had no idea how to dance and sing at the same time, because they were just opposite sides of my brain — one was this emotional teenager who needed to express herself, and then the other side was this super-competitive athletic dancer. So it was really cool for me to be able to put my two passions together.”

Having wrapped up her headlining tour earlier this month, McRae says that she’ll be spending the rest of the year finalizing the next phase of her career — logging more studio time, filming more videos and finishing a body of work to follow last year’s debut album I Used to Think I Could Fly. But she couldn’t have asked for a better start to that phase than “Greedy,” and the way it represents what she wants for herself as a recording artist and performer.

“I feel like for the first time in my career — with the visuals and the single art and the music video and the song — it feels like 100% my vision,” says McRae. “I can look at it on Spotify and I can look at it on YouTube and be like, ‘I’m so proud of this.’ And I think that’s why I’m having a really good time. I’m working beside people that I really admire, and people that really respect me as a young woman, and that feels very satisfying … I just feel very lucky right now, and excited for what’s to come.”