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If Ginger Rogers did everything Fred Astaire did, but backwards and in high heels, then on Wednesday night (July 27) at her U.S. Summer Carnival tour kick-off in Cincinnati, P!nk did everything Rogers did, but in higher (sparklier) heels, while adding sideways, upside down and round-and-round into the mix.
The high-flying singer brought her signature aerial rig to a sold-out, sweltering Great American Ballpark for the second show of her summer extravaganza — it kicked off in Toronto on Monday night — singing flawlessly while boomeranging 100 feet in the air during a two-hour show that mixed joy, pain, pleasure and poignancy with pure spectacle.
Fans have come to expect the former gymnast to take to the air during her concerts, and while P!nk didn’t disappoint on that level during the show that featured spirited opening sets from Grouplove and Brandi Carlile, the singer also found moments to pay loving tribute to her late dad and her musical idol Sinead O’Connor, whose death was reported just hours before showtime.
Inviting Carlile up to join her, P!nk dueted on a reverent cover of O’Connor’s signature Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 hit, “Nothing Compares 2 U,” with both women summoning their full emotional range to pay homage to the supremely talented, complicated singer who died at age 56 of as-yet-undisclosed causes.
The solemn moment came amid a flashy spectacular that featured neon flamingo scooters and glowing grocery carts skittering around the stage and a mega-trampoline set-up on which dancers performed daring flips and spins to accompany the title track from P!nk’s most recent album, Trustfall. There were also several sweet moments when the singer kneeled down and stopped the show to acknowledge superfans who brought her homemade gifts, which she promised to find a place for at home.
Amid the expected hits (“Get the Party Started,” “Raise Your Glass,” “What About Us,” “F–kin’ Perfect,” “Never Gonna Not Dance Again”) there were some surprise covers and just plain silly moments during a show that featured enough different pink costumes to rival the Barbie movie.
Check out our favorite seven moments from the Summer Carnival show.
Radiohead, Joni Mitchell, Sade and Pat Benatar Cameos
Madonna‘s debut studio album arrived on July 27, 1983, and pop music hasn’t been the same ever since. The icon, then a budding star, released her self-titled set, Madonna, to critical success. In celebration of the album’s 40th anniversary, Billboard wants to know which track is your favorite. Madonna had a hefty climb on the […]

“Right here is Clayton Cameron on the drums … he’s gonna show you how [to swing]…”
That was Tony Bennett, the legendary performer who died at the age of 96 on Friday (July 21), during his 1994 MTV Unplugged performance of Duke Ellington’s “It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing).” The man he was introducing, Clayton Cameron, had only been playing drums in his band for a couple years — after nearly a decade spent backing iconic Rat Packer Sammy Davis Jr. — and Bennett was cuing him on the biggest spotlight moment of his career to that point: a nearly two-minute drum solo in the middle of the song.
The showcase included a switch from sticks to brushes, and a move from a sitting drum set to a standing solo drum, with Cameron frequently flipping between the two ends of each brush while playing — all with circus performer-like dexterity and fluidity. Each member of the Ralph Sharon Trio backing Bennett that night was given individual moments to shine, but none was quite as show-stopping (in both senses) as Cameron’s jaw-dropping “Swing” display, lighting up the special’s penultimate performance without disrupting the casual-hang vibe that the four performers had worked hard to establish to that point.
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The Unplugged special was an immediate success, as part of Bennett’s successful mid-’90s rebranding as an artist accessible to the MTV generation, and its accompanying soundtrack would go on to be certified platinum by the RIAA and win two awards, including album of the year, at the 1995 Grammys. (MTV re-ran the special, along with its 2021 sequel alongside Lady Gaga, after Bennett’s passing on July 21.) Its popularity also brought newfound exposure to Cameron, then in his mid-30s.
“I was living in New York at the time, and I knew that something was up when I was crossing the street — I think like Sixth Avenue or something — and this fireman was yelling at me,” he recalls. “I realized he was saying my name, and then I realized he was a Tony Bennett fan. And he had seen me on [MTV] … that was something very very different for me, very new.”
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Cameron would ultimately drum with Bennett for a total of 13 years and 13 albums — the longest artistic partnership for Cameron in a career that also included work alongside such icons as Frank Sinatra, Mariah Carey and James Taylor, and even a one-off gig conducting the UCLA Bruins Marching Band and playing drums on BTS’ 2020 hit single “On.” (“It gave me credibility with my daughter and her friends,” Cameron laughs about the last one.) He currently works as a continuing lecturer at UCLA, does sideman gigs and plays with his own band The Du U Project, and remembers his time working with Bennett and his orbit of collaborators as “very special.”
“I enjoyed being in the studio with him so much,” he says. “He just always really knew what he wanted, and how to do it. And then just following him, he was just … I had to keep reminding myself, ‘OK, you’re a part of this – you’re not a bystander. You’re with Tony Bennett.’”
Below, Cameron reminisces to Billboard about his time with the late Bennett, his memories of working with him on the classic Unplugged special, and how tennis helped bring the two together both years before they ever properly collaborated and for many years after. (The conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity.)
Can you tell me a little bit about your early career, and the path that took you to working with Tony?
I was born and raised here in Los Angeles, California, and I grew up playing behind some of the local people like Ernie Andrews and Teddy Edwards. And I ended up playing for Gerald Wilson’s band, which included people like Ernie Watts and Jerome Richardson, Gerald Wiggins, Oscar Brashear, who recently passed. These were all great jazz musicians who were in L.A. And so playing with Gerald would actually lead me later on to playing with Sammy Davis Jr., after I graduated from college.
I was Sammy’s last drummer, from ‘82 until he passed away in 1990. And during that period, I would do the Rat Pack Tour with Sinatra and Dean [Martin] and Sammy. And later on, Dean would drop out and Liza Minnelli would come on. Sammy passed away in 1990, and so I did a few things around L.A., and then I just moved to New York. So when I got to New York, I was playing with a lot of great people – playing with the Mingus band, doing some stuff with Barry Harris, and I even worked with Kenny Burrell while I was there.
And so I was really happy, just kinda being on the scene. Then I got a call, saying that Tony was looking for a drummer and that I had been recommended. They said, “Why don’t you give it a try and we’ll see if Tony likes what you’re doing and you like the gig?” And so I started April 1 of 1992, with Tony.
So we’re on a plane going to… up north, just past the Bay Area. Tony and I were talking on the plane, and I reminded him that we had met back in the ‘80s on the tennis court, in Atlantic City. Tony,’s youngest daughter was taking a tennis lesson — she must have been 10 years old, or something like that. There was only one tennis club in Atlantic City, and so the pro there knew me. And he said, “Hey, can you hit with Tony Bennett while his daughter takes a lesson?” And so Tony and I hit some tennis balls. And it was fun, it was kinda cool.
So I reminded him of it while we’re on the plane, and he says, “Oh, OK.” We get off the plane — instead of going to the gig, he takes me to the San Francisco Tennis Club. And that was the first thing I did with Tony once I got hired. I kinda became the tennis valet after that.
Did you get to see much of his game? How was he as a tennis player?
He could hold his own. I guess we would call him maybe like a 3.0 player in tennis terms. Which means – all the tennis players out there will know – you have maybe one shot that you could really do well, and you had to work on the other ones. But he had a good forehand. So it was a lot of fun. For a lot of years we would play together, before he stopped playing.
Were you already versed in his catalogue before performing with him? What kind of level of knowledge did you have in his stuff?
Oh well certainly, the Bill Evans stuff I knew really well. And I knew his couple of hits that he had when I was growing up. So I was aware of him, I just hadn’t heard a lot about him in recent years — y’know, ‘80s into the ‘90s. And so that’s why it was kind of a surprise to me when I got the call. Even though I’d seen him in Atlantic City, that sort of thing. It was the same thing kinda with Sammy Davis, Jr., when I joined him — he wasn’t recording, but he was doing a lot of gigs and stuff. But he wasn’t necessarily doing a lot of television, things like that.
Was the style that he wanted you to play for him something that you were comfortable with? Did he push you into new territories, or did he want you in your pocket?
There wasn’t really much discussion on what to do. We just did it. There was never really much discussion, just swinging and grooving. The big thing with Tony is his dynamics – I learned a lot in that sense. Especially in the studio, just really being able to play with that quiet intensity — so that he didn’t have to compromise what he wanted to do.
Maybe one time, he gave me one real directive. And that was, we were in the studio, and I think we were recording – it must have been a ballad, I can’t remember the tune. Tony was not in a booth, we were pretty much all in the same room most of the time. And so that way, he would really get a feel of the band. And so one take was one take — if you did it again, everybody did it again.
So I remember one time, we were playing, and so Tony says, “Hey Clayton, the brushes are too loud.” I said, “Oh, OK, no problem.” And so I adjusted, and I did something that I had never done before. Usually when you’re playing brushes, you kinda have these broad strokes. And so I made the strokes very minuscule. But you’re in the studio, so the mic is picking it up. After we finished the track, Tony came over and he thanked me – he said, “Thank you Clayton, I wanted to whisper the lyric.” I said “Oh wow, it makes so much sense.”
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What did you know about MTV Unplugged as a series before doing it? Did you have a vision about how Tony’s set would translate to it?
Well, I was aware of it. MTV Unplugged was fairly new. And we had done the record Steppin’ Out [in 1993], and then Danny Bennett, Tony’s son and manager, said, “Hey, we’re gonna do this MTV thing, Unplugged, and it may become a record.” So that was it. We just went on and we did our show – there was no directives or anything, we just played. And I think that’s how it comes off — where we’re just having a good time and just doing a concert.
So the show that you guys played on Unplugged – was that fairly standard in terms of both the setlist and the arrangements that you normally would have played at a show around that time period? Or did you have to rehearse it differently?
No, there was no rehearsal. I mean, I was still fairly new in the band, and so things were developing. And that’s why it’s kinda nice for me to look back on it, because it was still early in the process of me playing with Tony. So the fact that he would feature me with a drum solo, I thought was just quite generous. It really told me that, here was a guy that just really knew what he wanted, and was very secure in what he was doing — to allow me to go off and do a drum solo and come back.
Is that something that he would frequently do at concerts? Because over the course of the special, he really gives all three of you a pretty specific time to shine individually.
Yeah, absolutely. It was – I did that for 13 years. Get featured, and all of that.
I’ve heard stories about the Unplugged tapings that sometimes they drag on for seven-eight hours, and everybody’s exhausted by the end, you end up doing these retakes and retakes. Was it like that for you guys, or was it more get in-get out, you do your set and move on?
Oh yeah, the latter. Yeah, I’m shocked to hear that people were doing all those takes. You have to realize that — people of Tony’s era, of Sammy Davis’ era, Frank Sinatra’s era — they know how to perform. It’s not like, you gotta tell them what to do. They know how to perform. All those guys had at least 10,000 hours on the road, if you’re gonna do the Gladwell, 10,000-hours-makes-you-a-pro kinda thing. Those guys had 100,000 hours doing shows.
So it’s not like you have to tell them. And then if you’ve got a good band, you don’t have to tell them either! What tunes are we gonna do? And then do it. You don’t have to rehearse a bunch of tunes. If you’ve got consummate musicians, and you’ve got a consummate performer like Tony Bennett or Sammy? Man, they could do 10 shows without rehearsing.
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Did the Unplugged change your career at all? There’s such a focus on you, and Tony says your name over and over again – were you getting more gig requests? Were people asking you to do the thing with the brushes on their album or their stage?
Yeah, that actually did happen. I certainly got a lot of attention because of Tony. I didn’t have time to do a lot, though, because during the time with him, we were so busy… everyone from Sting, James Taylor were reaching out to me, just these different people, maybe little things here and there. But I didn’t have time. Because we were on the road like 200 days a year. I mean, doing the television and concerts and all of that. But I did do some things, yeah.
Did you have any moments from the special that stick out to you as particularly memorable?
What I remember most is… what I learned about Tony at that concert is just how gracious he was. He just did his thing and didn’t blink. Tony just did his show. There wasn’t anything different than what we would ordinarily do. But I tell you – watching him, when I look back on it, it was like he had done it the first time. Like everything was fresh. Even though we had done like 20,000 shows or whatever. It was still fresh! There was not any, like, “Oh, I gotta do this again…”
And he would tell you that, too. “You’re sinning against your talents” is one of the things he used to say. If you’re gonna not show up, y’know. “You’re sinning against your talents.”
You mentioned Danny Bennett taking him in that MTV-oriented direction over the course of the ‘90s. Was that something that you were surprised by – that he was able to connect with the younger audiences the way that he was? What was it about him that allowed him to reach audiences that were, at that point, almost two generations his junior?
Well one, the music was good. And Tony was charismatic, period. And so when we were doing a lot of these – like, going between Smashing Pumpkins and all these different groups – when we play, we gonna swing, and we gonna groove, and it doesn’t really matter whether you’re a grunge or this or that. The groove is there. And then Tony comes out, and he’s doing his thing? I mean, come on… it’s infectious.
But the thing about what Danny and Tony did, is that they took Tony’s thing into those young people’s arenas. They didn’t have to go to Carnegie Hall to see Tony. Naw, Tony went to them and said, “Hey, check this out!” And so it was amazing. It really was. I don’t know if anyone could’ve really predicted how much of an effect it really would have.
Did you go to the Grammys when he was nominated?
[Laughs.] Oh man, yeah. I was there. It was in L.A. I mean, we weren’t really expecting – I wasn’t really expecting — that it was gonna win. I’m just kinda lounging up in Tony’s dressing room at the Grammys, backstage. And then they say, “Tony Bennett!” And I was like, “Whoa!” I mean, it was mind-boggling.
But I’m so happy that Tony won. Because that was historic, really. It really created a whole ‘nother energy for Tony himself. And he just rode the wave, but he didn’t have to change anything. He didn’t do anything differently, other to be himself, which was great.
Did you stay in touch with Tony over the years, after you stopped touring and recording with him?
Oh yeah. We talked — usually when the U.S. Open was on, or Wimbledon, I would get a call, or I would call him. “Did you see Federer?” “Did you see Agassi?” That sort of thing. So we absolutely stayed in contact.
There have been some pretty amazing remembrances of Tony since his passing – just what an incredible life he lived, and what a great person he was. But is there anything about Tony that you think gets underappreciated, either as a performer or a man?
There’s a couple things. We did a session one time for 2001’s Playin’ With My Friends – it was the blues record – and we were waiting for Stevie Wonder to come in to do a duet. I think it was “Everyday (I Have the Blues).” And so Stevie comes in, and immediately says, “You know, Tony, I want to thank you for marching in the Civil Rights Movement.” And I think that’s one of the big things — Tony was a humanist, he was a pacifist, in terms of war. Because he was a veteran as well.
And the last thing I want to say is, I remember being at South by Southwest, and he was giving a little talk. And he was in tears, just telling the kids on how to hone your craft, and how to be true to yourself. And so he was very, very interested in the welfare of other people, and the welfare of young people.
Please do not be alarmed! No, that’s not actually Beyoncé reigning 1,100 feet above New York City, but it is the latest wax figure created in her image from Madame Tussauds! On Thursday (July 27), the new Beychella-inspired Beyoncé wax figure made its debut atop The Edge, the highest outdoor sky deck in the Western […]
Billie Eilish’s “What Was I Made For?” soars in at No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot Alternative Songs chart dated July 29 following its first full week of streaming, sales and airplay. In the July 14-20 tracking week, “What Was I Made For?” earned 11.4 million official U.S. streams and 699,000 radio audience impressions and sold […]
Two weeks before hear death, Sinead O’Connor revealed to fans that she was working on her 11th studio album and contemplating a world tour in support of the untitled work. In her last public post on Facebook, on July 11 O’Connor informed fans that she had recently moved back to London after 23 years and was “very happy to be home.” She also wrote that she finishing an album slated for release next year and plotting a world tour, including stops in the U.S., Europe, New Zealand and Australia.
O’Connor died on Wednesday morning (July 26) at age 56. In a statement from the London Metropolitan Police — which did not refer to O’Connor by name, as is official policy, but which was confirmed by British press reports to be in reference to the singer — officials said a woman [O’Connor] was found unresponsive at her South London home on Wednesday morning and pronounced dead at the scene. The Police noted that the deceased’s next of kin had been notified of her death and that it is not being treated as suspicious; a coroner’s inquest is to follow.
In a note on Thursday morning (July 27), O’Connor’s management sent their condolences to O’Connor’s family and thanks to their peers for the support over the years. “To our business partners in the industry who have been nothing less than devoted to Sinead and again have shown nothing but love and compassion for her throughout our tenure, that cannot be overstated. Sincere and heartfelt thanks. You know who you are,” they wrote.
“To the wonderful musicians, artists and supporting teams who have been nothing short of incredible in the time that we knew Sinead. Incredible as musicians and incredible as true friends to Sinead. Those that worked with her and those that supported her from the sidelines, thank you,” they added.
67 Management also confirmed that “Sinead was completing her new album, reviewing new tour dates for 2024 and considering opportunities in relation to a movie of her book” at the time of her death. O’Connor released her cathartic memoir, Rememberings, in 2021. “Wonderful plans were afoot at this time. Testament and tribute to those who have put their hearts first for Sinead, to whom we are forever grateful,” managers Kenneth and Carl Papenfus wrote.
“It has been an honour to have worked with Sinead professionally, as musicians, producers and her artist managers over the last nine years, but much, much more than that Sinead was family. May she rest in peace.”
While no additional information is available on the album O’Connor was working on at the time of her death and her management did not respond to requests for additional details on the project, her most recent full-length release was 2014’s I’m Not Bossy, I’m the Boss. At the time of its release, O’Connor explained the pugnacious title in a now-unavailable post on her official website: “Originally I had a different title, The Vishnu Room, but a few months back when I saw the phrase ‘I’m not bossy, I’m the boss’ and became aware of the Ban Bossy campaign, I wished I could re-name the album, since indeed it can be tricky being a female boss and I think Sheryl [Sandberg]’s campaign is a terribly important one.”
O’Connor said she became aware of the “Ban Bossy” campaign at the time and decided to re-appropriate it, as was her rebellious wont, before finding out that it was too late because the album art for her 10th studio collection had already been printed. “But last week, when the record company received the promo shots, which included the cover shot you now see, they asked could they change the planned cover to the current one, and that allowed me the opportunity of changing the title. Very happy girl,” she said.
Sandberg’s Ban Bossy campaign advocated for the elimination of the word ‘bossy’ to describe leadership qualities in women; Beyoncé was one of the high-profile supporters of the viral movement.
O’Connor had been mostly out of the public eye and had not released significant music in the years since Bossy. She released a cover of gospel great Mahalia Jackson’s “Trouble of the World” in Oct. 2020 to benefit Black Lives Matter. At the time, she told Rolling Stone that she was finishing work on a new album called No Veteran Dies Alone that she planned to release in 2022, and which was to include the Jackson cover.
“I’m writing more about personal matters, being a mother,” she said at the time. “The record is like letters to my children. The songs are very subconscious. I don’t know what the tone of the whole record will be, but that’s what it is so far.” O’Connor is survived by three children; her 17-year-old son, Shane, died by suicide in January 2022.

Jung Kook’s coronation on the Billboard Hot 100 with “Seven” (featuring Latto) is a win for BTS, too. As the song launches at No. 1 (on the chart dated July 29), BTS now boasts two members who have led the list as soloists. Jimin debuted atop the Hot 100 in April with “Like Crazy.” BTS, […]
On July 27, 1983, Madonna released Madonna, a self-titled debut that introduced the world to a Michigan-born, New York City-based woman who would become one of the most influential pop stars of all time. The album entered the Billboard 200 at No. 190, eventually hitting No. 8 and producing three top 20 singles on the […]

Just hours after the news broke that Sinead O’Connor had passed at age 56, P!nk found the most fitting way to pay tribute to the powerful, pioneering vocalist whose calling card was emotional poignancy and fierce independence.
On the first U.S. date of her neon-lit, fittingly titled Summer Carnival tour, the acrobatic singer stopped spinning for a few minutes, turned down the bright lights and acknowledged that the world had lost one of its most cherished voices, one that had meant everything to teenage Alicia Moore back before the world knew her power.
“When I was a little girl, my mom grew up in Atlantic City and I used to go down to the Ocean City Boardwalk with my ten dollars and I would make a demo tape… I would make a little cassette tape and imagine it was my demo for the record company,” P!nk told the crowd while standing center stage with piano player Jason Chapman as a hush came over the sold-out baseball stadium.
“And it would always be either ‘Greatest Love of All’ by Whitney Houston or ‘Nothing Compares 2 U’ by Sinead O’Connor. So in honor of Sinead, and in honor of my very, very talented friend Brandi Carlile I asked her if she would come out here and sing this song with me.”
The last-minute addition to the tightly scripted and choreographed show featuring the headliner and her opening act was a tall hill to climb at best. O’Connor’s famous rendition of the Prince-penned ballad is one of modern music’s most moving, gut-wrenching love laments. More subdued than the equally untouchable Houston song, “Nothing Compares” is perhaps even more of a vocal challenge because of an implicit, rending emotion that’s impossible to fake.
The heartache in O’Connor’s version, however, could not have been in better hands than P!nk and Carlile’s, however, as the two friends hugged midstage and proceeded to put on a masterclass in impromptu song interpretation. (Keeping in mind, however, that there is plenty of YouTube evidence of both women having sung the song before, so they clearly know its contours.)
“It’s been seven hours and 15 days/ Since you took your love away/ I go out every night and sleep all day/ Since you took your love away,” P!nk sang gently over minimal piano and keyboard accompaniment, her voice floating crisply over the rapt audience.
With tears visible on a number of fans on the stadium’s packed floor, Carlile took over, crooning, “I can eat my dinner in a fancy restaurant/ But nothing, I said nothing can take away these blues,” the signature crack in her voice adding an extra layer of sorrow on what was already a very sad day for music.
Matching her grit, P!nk leaned into the second verse, wailing, “where did I go wrong?” before they came together to power through the verse, “I went to the doctor and guess what he told me/ Guess what he told me/ He said, ‘Girl you better try to have fun no matter what you do’/ But he’s a fool.”
Carlile then let out a high, lonesome wail as both women appeared to get in their feelings about the Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 ballad that turned O’Connor into a global superstar, for good and ill. Neither made the song about them. But what made the song theirs in that moment was the clear conviction that it meant something special to both women, and to all of us, a gift they honored by sharing it with their most adoring fans as the raw feelings were still very fresh.
“You never know what people are going through,” P!nk said after the performance. “It’s not that hard to give people a smile… we’re all learning that lesson together now.”
It was a wise and painful message on what was an otherwise joyous night. And without saying it, they ended by looking deeply into each other’s eyes and beautifully singing the words that will now cement O’Connor’s memory in our hearts and minds forever: “Nothing compares to you.”
Watch video of the performance below.
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J-pop idol Shinjiro Atae is ready to open up to the world about his sexuality.
During a free fan event at Line Cube Shibuya in Tokyo on Wednesday (July 26), the Kyoto-born singer officially came out to his fans as a gay man. Speaking to a crowd of approximately 2,000 fans according to a press release, Atae spoke at length about his decision to come out and what he hoped it meant for fans struggling with a similar process.
Atae then took to his Instagram to announce the news to the rest of his fans who were unable to attend the event. “To all my fans, today was a very special day for me,” he wrote. “For years, I struggled to accept a part of myself … but now, after all I have been through, I finally have the courage to open up to you about something. I am a gay man.”
Acknowledging that for a long time he “could not even say it” to himself, the J-pop singer said that he eventually accepted who he was and decided to share his truth with the world. “I’ve come to realize it is better, both for me, and for the people I care about, including my fans, to live life authentically than to live a life never accepting who I truly am,” he wrote.
Atae first debuted as a founding member of the popular J-pop group AAA, which debuted in 2005 and went on hiatus in 2021. Since joining the group, Atae also began his own solo music career, which has garnered him over 11,000 monthly listeners on Spotify.
To celebrate his coming out, Atae released a new song and music video titled “Into the Light.” Throughout the English track, Atae details living life as different versions of himself before stepping into the titular light, telling his fans that “You opened the door/ So I could open my heart.”
Along with revealing that he would be releasing the full footage of his speech from the fan event on Thursday (July 27), Atae closed his Instagram post by thanking his fans for their unwavering support throughout his career. “When I think of my work in the entertainment industry and the many things for which I am grateful, it is my relationship with my fans that first comes to mind,” he wrote. I thank you guys from the bottom of my heart for standing beside me over the years. I’d also like to thank my family, friends, staff members and my fellow AAA members for providing me their full support throughout this process.”
Check out Shinjiro Atae’s full Instagram post, as well as his music video for “Into the Light,” below:
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