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Is there anything better than some aespa in the morning? On Wednesday (Sept. 6), the K-pop stars graced Good Morning America for a performance of “Better Things” and a conversation about their ongoing Synk: Hyper Line Tour. “We are so excited to be here,” Giselle gushed. “We are so appreciative of all the love and […]

If you didn’t know, now you know: Zach Bryan is one of the biggest singer-songwriters of 2023.
The Americana artist, who has been growing his fanbase steadily for a half-decade and even scored a Billboard Hot 100 top 10 smash this year with “Something in the Orange” (from his top five-charting Billboard 200 hit 2022 album American Heartbreak), dominates Billboard‘s two marquee all-genre charts this week. His self-titled new LP bows at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with 200,000 units, while the album’s Kacey Musgraves-featuring ballad “I Remember Everything” also enters the Hot 100 at pole position.

Did we see this kind of week coming for the rapidly rising Bryan? And what, if anything, does it mean for the larger country world? Billboard staffers discuss these questions and more below.

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1. Zach Bryan has already flexed a little Billboard chart muscle with his American Heartbreak album and its breakout hit “Something in the Orange,” but these are straight-up star returns for his latest. On a scale of 1-10, how surprised are you at this commercial showing for Zach Bryan?  

Kyle Denis: I think I’m at a 3. Zach Bryan has been a star, and it’s great to see that properly reflected on the charts in a major way with his latest album. When I think of the way songs like “Something in the Orange,” “If She Wants A Cowboy” and “Cold Damn Vampires” subtly took over campus last year, it’s only right that the follow-up to American Heartbreak would debut with such an impressive start. 

Lyndsey Havens: 7. I think his one-off single with Maggie Rogers, “Dawns,” really showed that there was an audience who wanted more of that Americana, country-rock leaning sound — especially in the form of a vulnerable collaboration with gorgeous two-part harmonies. And oh boy did he deliver on Zach Bryan. That said, quality aside, I am surprised at how the mainstream embraced this album and its lead single to the point where Bryan has simultaneously topped the Billboard 200 and Hot 100 charts.

Melinda Newman: 3. It’s not much of a surprise. There is a groundswell for Bryan that keeps growing. If you watch his streaming numbers and his ticket sales, he’s one of the biggest artists out there right now. Plus, predecessor American Heartbreak has spent 67 weeks in the Top 40 on the Billboard 200. There is no shortage of demand for Bryan’s material.

Kristin Robinson: 3. Zach Bryan’s fanbase has always been incredibly passionate about him. If you listen to Zach, you don’t just like him — you love him. He has his longtime fans, but he picked up a lot more with his last album and the breakout success of “Something in the Orange.” I think we should’ve anticipated this would hit No. 1 the moment Zach announced that he would be doing an arenas-and-stadiums tour with openers like Sheryl Crow and Jason Isbell. This album also obviously comes at a time where country music in general is flourishing, and that certainly doesn’t hurt.

Andrew Unterberger: Yeah, 3 seems about right. The degree of it is maybe slightly surprising — just because you can’t ever totally know for sure until it happens — but it’s long been clear Bryan was on the verge of a huge moment. Hell, the last few weeks, both his “Oklahoma Smoke Show” and “Burn, Burn, Burn” have re-entered the Hot 100, for no apparently reason other than they’re streaming fixtures now and folks were extra excited about Bryan with this new album on the way. The last new artist I remember having that level of catalog-wide excitement around them was a pre-When We All Fall Asleep Billie Eilish, and we all know how things turned out with that album.

2. Zach Bryan is something of a departure for its creator, with a rawer, self-produced sound and some more personal/direct subject matter. Do you think the album’s shifts in sound or style are related to its greater and more immediate commercial success, or is it more just a matter of timing for an artist who was already on the ascent?  

Kyle Denis: I think it’s more of a timing thing. Although I will note that the shift to a rawer sound is quite logical, especially considering the success of Z&E’s version of “Orange” and the warm reception of his Maggie Rogers duet “Dawns.” The rawer, more unfiltered sound seems to enrapture his audience more than the gloss of radio-facing contemporary country and rock. Nonetheless, given the intensely personal, poetic vibe of Zach Bryan, the rawer sound is more apt anyways. 

Lyndsey Havens: I do think that Bryan’s current success says just as much about him and the path he was already on as it does about the masses and what’s resonating right now; in a record-breaking year for country music on Billboard‘s all-genre charts — and during what I believe to be a renaissance of narrative-driven, folk-leaning songs, thanks in large part to Taylor Swift — a rising star like Bryan seems to be a voice everyone can get behind.

Melinda Newman: It’s both. His fans are already so invested in him that this slight switch to more intimate material only deepened that connection and made them lean in even more. They felt they got to know him from his previous material and were ready to invest even further in his story. However, there’s no denying the timing. His fans already had a bounty of material from previous releases, but he knew they wanted more and would eagerly dive into new material and he rewarded them by pulling back the curtain a little more on himself.

Kristin Robinson: No, I think this was just a matter of timing for a rising star. If anything, this more rough-around-the-edges feel to his production might’ve made it a little harder to achieve mainstream success. Of course, there is a bit of a movement towards less glossy country right now (shout out Tyler Childers) — but if you look to the other No. 1 country album of the summer, One Thing at a Time by Morgan Wallen, it’s a lot cleaner and poppier. So to me, going for more a more minimal Americana style was a beautiful and bold statement!

Andrew Unterberger: It’s more about the timing than the album itself — but it also helps that the album is good! If Zach Bryan had felt tossed-off or compromised or just kinda flat, it certainly could’ve hindered it reaching these kinds of commercial heights. But it feels like a natural step forward for him, showcases his strengths well, and has a number of immediately striking songs that only improve with additional listens. Bryan had a moment to meet, and het met it. Pretty simple.

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3. “I Remember Everything” is the breakaway hit to lead off the album, with its biggest-name guest in Grammy winner Kacey Musgraves. Does it strike you as a lasting hit, or is its early success mostly based on its higher early profile?  

Kyle Denis: I think the first-day success of the song is mostly thanks to Kacey’s name recognition, but the fact that consumption was so consistent that it debuted atop the Hot 100 – especially when both artists had just one Hot 100 top ten hit between them prior to this – speaks to the quality of the song. “I Remember Everything” has all the makings of an autumn/winter breakup hit: a heartbreaking melody, verses that are in conversation with each other while showcasing each party’s side of the story, and lyrics that are equally intimate and universal. 

Lyndsey Havens: As much as I love this single, since listening to the album (again and again and… again) there are other songs that have stood out a bit more. “I Remember Everything” is a stunning surprise hit, purely because it’s rare for a song so delicate to top the Hot 100 — and while I do think it will stand the test of time, I think more rollicking tracks like “Hey Driver” in particular may soon outpace “I Remember.”  

Melinda Newman: It’s a lasting hit because it’s beautifully simple. It’s understated, elegant and heartbreaking. Both Bryan and Musgraves give fairly restrained performances that somehow make the gut punch all the stronger that a love has been torn apart by their own failings and they are very aware of what they have both lost… even though the relationship was likely doomed regardless. “Strange words come on out of a grown man’s mouth when his mind’s broke” is a hell of a lyric. There’s a whole novel in that one line.

Kristin Robinson: I don’t think it’s catchy and poppy enough to stay at No. 1 for too long, but I think it will be a lasting hit that ranks among the top 20 for a while. The lyrics of that song are wonderfully done, the production is timeless, Musgraves and Bryan are a natural fit. I see this being a staple of his catalog and one that is revered more than many other No. 1s.

Andrew Unterberger: It’s off to such a dynamite start on streaming that it’s sure to stick around for a while. Will it be the kind of song that ultimately towers over the rest of his catalog from this period? I don’t think I really see that yet; the song is good but it’s not even a clear standout from the set to me. One thing I will say though: This song, and its respective performers, will absolutely KILL at awards season.

4. As major as Zach Bryan’s chart success has been already, he still has yet to gain much of a foothold on country radio — the extremely rare true star country (or country-adjacent) artist with no real presence on the genre’s airwaves. Is that going to come with this album — or later — or is he just destined to operate outside of that part of the Nashville machine?  

Kyle Denis: I would be disappointed if country radio doesn’t at least give “I Remember Everything” a fair shot – but I wouldn’t necessarily be surprised. “Holy Roller” and “Hey Driver” also have potential, but I won’t hold my breath. Most of Zach Bryan just doesn’t sound like your most-spun songs on country radio right now. I think an artist like Zach will continue to cultivate the lane that he’s already in while bringing new fans into the fold with each release. He’s already proven that he doesn’t need radio to reach people, but I’m sure the radio hits will come at some point – whether that’s through his own songs or a featured turn on someone else’s track. 

Lyndsey Havens: I foresee him operating (and succeeding) outside of the machine, much to his benefit. I think part of why Bryan is taking the music industry by storm right now is because he doesn’t “belong” to country — or to anyone or anything, for that matter. The way I see it, Bryan isn’t too concerned with playing by a rulebook, which is exactly what has helped him get to this moment. 

Melinda Newman: “Something in the Orange” did reach No. 20 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart, but his label hasn’t aggressively pushed him to the format yet (they didn’t service terrestrial country radio with “I Remember Everything”), so I think it’s too early to say. At this point, it’s clear that he doesn’t need radio though, and so he does not need to court radio in any way and country radio likes to be courted. He is operating outside of the mainstream in other ways: He very seldom does interviews and he doesn’t appear on television (other than on Yellowstone), so he may decide he’s doing just fine playing by all his own rules.

Kristin Robinson: It will come. They can’t ignore him any longer! But Zach will continue to be anti-establishment. He won’t go by the stations to shake hands or do interviews with them to gain favor, but he is so big now that radio stations need him.

Andrew Unterberger: I don’t know if country radio will use the occasion of the song’s No. 1 debut to embrace it (or Bryan himself). But I know that country radio is coming to a very important crossroads in its development, where it can try to reconcile its proven successes with the fact that Bryan and his peers are making the kind of country music most young people are most excited about right now, or it can just ignore them and continue milking the Lukes and Chrises of the country world until there isn’t a drop left to get from ’em. I know which way I’d go if I were them.

5. This is the fourth straight Hot 100 No. 1 to come from the larger country world this summer — but the first without any real kind of discourse or controversy surrounding either the song or the artist behind it. Does this feel like something new for this country-dominated summer, or is still all basically coming from the same place?  

Kyle Denis: I wouldn’t say it’s all coming from the same place. “I Remember Everything,” for me, is more in line with “Last Night.” Yes, Morgan Wallen’s N-word scandal partially resulted in his star growing even bigger, but “Last Night” was as dominant as it was because the song connected with people, not some larger political conversation around it à la “Rich Men North of Richmond” or “Try That In A Small Town.” 

If anything, this is undeniable proof that we’re in the midst of a country music renaissance in mainstream contemporary music – and there’s a testy fork in the road. Are we going to support and celebrate good country songs like “I Remember Everything,” or are we going to continue to be inundated with songs that court the political fervor of thinly veiled racism like “Small Town”?  

Lyndsey Havens: I will always root for the songs that top the charts simply because they’re great f–king songs, which “I Remember Everything” sure is. Controversy and virality have of course become key factors in many a success stories, there’s no denying that and in many cases, it makes sense and pays off to lean in. I even think such discourse surrounding previous Hot 100 country No. 1s helped create the appetite for a star like Bryan. And now, I think his success will only fuel a desire for more emerging country-rock artists with stories to tell. At least, that’s the hope. 

Melinda Newman: It’s basically coming from the same place and a totally different place. Bryan is as much rock as he is country (his album is the biggest rock album in equivalent album units earned in four years) and, thematically, “I Remember Everything” has nothing in common with the three songs that preceded it. But, they do all rely on basically simple, relatively unadorned instrumentation (whether acoustic or electric guitars), are slow-to-mid tempo and are carried by solo male voices (Musgraves adds a lot to “I Remember Everything,” but doesn’t appear until almost two minutes in). In many ways, these four songs topping the Hot 100 consecutively feels more like a coincidence, except that all four artists have extremely passionate fans who, whether ignited by their love for the artist or the controversy behind the songs, have loudly declared their devotion.

Kristin Robinson: I think “Last Night” by Morgan Wallen and “I Remember Everything” by Zach Bryan have a lot in common, so I don’t think this feels totally new. Both songs are streaming successes, both are apolitical with good hooks and neither made any incendiary statements alongside the release.  

Andrew Unterberger: It feels a little… I don’t know, cleaner? Nothing at this level of commercial success is ever truly pure — and Bryan showed that himself this week by publicly ceding his longstanding battle with Ticketmaster — but it’s nice to see a country-adjacent artist having this kind of success without any real support from either the Nashville powers that be or the Big Red Machine of FOX News and their ilk. Hopefully he won’t be the last one.

New music from NCT U, Nicki Minaj and ONE OK ROCK complete the top five of Billboard’s Sept. 16-dated Hot Trending Songs chart, powered by X. Billboard’s Hot Trending charts, powered by X (formerly known as Twitter), track global music-related trends and conversations in real-time across X, viewable over either the last 24 hours or […]

Don’t ever say The Chainsmokers never took a creative risk. In anticipation of their upcoming single “Summertime Friends,” groupmates Alex Pall and Drew Taggart stripped down to their underwear to recreate a steamy photo originally taken by Justin and Hailey Bieber for a 2019 Calvin Klein campaign. The picture finds Pall straddling Taggert, sitting on […]

Miley Cyrus has clearly been having a good time revisiting some of the peak moments of her long career in the ongoing TikTok video series “Used to Be Young.” She’s reminisced about not making a dime on her Bangerz tour, the real story behind the “stripper pole” during her 2009 Teen Choice performance and recalled how Beyoncé and Rihanna treated her like a “little sister” the year before.
But in the latest clip posted on Wednesday morning (Sept. 6), Miley said she wanted to get serious for a moment while discussing the dissolution of her marriage to actor Liam Hemsworth. She revealed that around the time she was getting ready to headline England’s Glastonbury Festival in June 2019, the decision had been made that “me and Liam’s commitment to being married, just really… came from of course a place of love first because we’d been together for 10 years,” she said in part 37 of the series.

But, Cyrus added, it also came from a place of “trauma and just trying to rebuild as quickly as we could.” Cyrus said the day of the show was the same day she decided that “it was no longer going to work in my life,” in reference to the couple’s marriage.

“That was another moment when the work, the performance, the character came first,” she added, noting that since that time she’s dedicated herself to not prioritizing those professional things over the personal. “The human comes first,” she said.

Cyrus, 30, and Hemsworth, 33, met while filming her movie The Last Song in 2010 and got married in 2018, the split in August 2019 after less than one year as man and wife. In a “Used to Be Young” video posted last week, she reacted to a photo in which she was kissing Hemsworth, which sparked memories about the origins of their love.

“I think one of the elements that made that movie feel so special was it was watching two very young people fall in love with each other, which was happening in real time and real life,” she said. “So, the chemistry was undeniable and that was the beginning of a long, 10-year relationship.”

Watch Cyrus talk about her divorce below.

Tia Mowry was left blown away by Beyoncé after the pop superstar improvised an impressive tribute to the 45-year-old actress’ childhood singing group Voices, just seconds after spotting Mowry in the Monday (Sept. 4) Renaissance World Tour audience.
The on-the-fly tribute came as Bey was singing “1 + 1” onstage, during which she clocked Mowry enjoying the show. After blowing Mowry a kiss, she seamlessly inserted a snippet of Voices’ 1992 song “Yeah, Yeah, Yeah!” into her performance without even a second of pause: “Yeah, yeah, yeah, the boy makes me say.”

“From the beginning, Beyoncé’s undeniable talent is only rivaled by her incredible kindness and generosity,” Mowry wrote on Instagram after the concert, sharing a Destiny’s Child era photo of her meeting Bey with her twin sister and Voices bandmate Tamera Mowry. “You can truly see how amazing and detailed an artist she is, and how much thought and love was put into this show.”

The Sister, Sister alum also shared a snap of her metallic concert outfit, as well as a clip of her dancing along to the show. “The highlight of the night was when she saw me in the crowd, and she gave me a smile and a hello, and then started singing ‘yeah, yeah, yeah’ from when @tameramowrytwo and I were in the singing group, Voices!” she continued. “I was so touched by her gesture, and I still can’t believe that it truly happened!”

“She’s a true icon, who continuously inspires me with her talent, dedication, humility, and beautiful spirit,” Mowry added.

The Twitches actress was just one of many stars who showed up to Beyoncé’s Monday concert in their best silver attire, with Lizzo, Kim Kardashian, Katy Perry and Adele all spotted by fans in the audience that night at SoFi Stadium. Some of Hollywood’s most famous couples were also in attendance, including Zendaya and Tom Holland, Justin and Hailey Bieber, and, making their public debut as a pair, Timothée Chalamet and Kylie Jenner.

The show just so happened to coincide with Bey’s 42nd birthday, for which none other than Diana Ross came onstage as a surprise guest to help celebrate. The 79-year-old legend led the crowd in singing “Happy Birthday” to the “Break My Soul” musician, who also commemorated the night with an emotional speech thanking her fans, family and former Destiny’s Child bandmates.

See the moment Beyoncé spotted Tia Mowry in the crowd at the Renaissance Tour below:

Renée Rapp is speaking out about the scary 2022 incident that inspired the urgent title track to her Snow Angel album. The former The Sex Lives of College Girls star recently released her debut full-length album on Interscope — with the title song serving as the first single — and in a new interview with On Purpose podcast host Jay Shetty she revealed that dramatic song was inspired by a traumatic experience last year in which she was drugged and lost nearly an entire night.
“I was drugged, and I had just been missing for seven hours,” Rapp told Shetty about a night out in 2022 when she went to a party with a new group of friends after a breakup. “I really let my judgment go when it came to the people that were around me. We were all out, and it was just situation after situation where they were just not trustworthy, and then the next thing you knew, I was face up, laying down in a bathroom stall in a hotel bar, just waking up at 5 in the morning, completely alone.”

Rapp said when she woke up alone in the bathroom stall early in the morning she had no idea what happened and saw that she’d missed two texts from people she’d started hanging out with the night before.

“First to arrive, last to leave/ What’s misery without company?/ It’s hard to laugh when it’s hard to breathe/ It’s white outside, but red underneath,” she sings in the opening verse of the song before dipping into the pre-chorus, “Feel the tip of my nose/ It’s burning, but it’s ice cold.”

Rapp said when she woke up the next day she saw blood on her pants and had no idea what happened during that lost time. “I was drugged, and I had just been missing for seven hours. I stopped being friends with those people and stopped doing as much partying as I was doing,” she said. “I told my parents, told some of my friends. I explained it in a very matter-of-fact way, and they were all very concerned and I didn’t even understand what was happening.”

It was hard to process the night at first and she couldn’t wrap her head around what happened for several months. But once Rapp started working with the song’s co-writer, Alexander “23” Glantz, they found a way to turn the scary event into a moving song.

“‘I really want to write a song about this,’” she said of the incident she turned over-and-over in her mind, telling the story to a number of friends who didn’t seem to be comprehend what she was saying. “We started writing it, and it was just the two of us. And the entire time I was writing it, I felt nothing,” Rapp said. “Until we recorded the song and the whole thing was done and I played it for my friends and my manager and everybody was like, ‘This is insane.’ But for me, that whole year of my life was inherent resilience.”

The good news is that Rapp, 23, said she’s cut ties with those people, but she still doesn’t know exactly how she feels about it. “I just know that I feel weird… and very resilient,” she said. “I was just like, ‘I don’t care what you know or what you claim to know or don’t know.’ I just want to let it go.”

Rapp wil kick off her Snow Hard Feelings Tour in Houston, TX on Sept. 15.

Watch the “Snow Angel” video below.

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Beyoncé played three sold-out nights at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif., over the holiday weekend — and Billboard was there for all three shows. On the new Billboard Pop Shop Podcast, we’ve put together a roundtable discussion about the trio of concerts with Gail Mitchell, Billboard‘s executive director, R&B/hip-hop; Cat Johnson, Billboard‘s business development and […]

From two weddings & two children to a divorce filing, here’s a look at the former couple’s relationship.

After four years of marriage, Joe Jonas has filed for divorce from Sophie Turner. The Jonas Brothers singer filed a petition for dissolution of marriage on Tuesday (Sept. 5) that stated “the marriage between the parties is irretrievably broken.” The news comes amid a firestorm of rumors alleging a breakup, but both Jonas’ and Turner’s […]