Pop
Page: 543
Doja Cat seemed to be enjoying some summer lovin’ on Wednesday (June 7) when she was spotted on a yacht kissing comedian J. Cyrus. In photos shared by Complex, the duo are seen holding hands and kissing while enjoying the sun in Los Cabos, Mexico. They haven’t publicly confirmed their relationship, as Doja is often […]
Taylor Swift rewrites the mark for the most top 10 hits in the history of Billboard’s Adult Pop Airplay chart, as “Karma” climbs from No. 11 to No. 8 on the list dated June 17. The song, released on Republic Records, becomes Swift’s 28th Adult Pop Airplay top 10, surpassing Maroon 5 for the record […]
Billboard’s Friday Music Guide serves as a handy guide to this Friday’s most essential releases — the key music that everyone will be talking about today, and that will be dominating playlists this weekend and beyond.
Explore
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
This week, Sam Smith gets “vulgar” with the Queen of Pop, Rosalía stays active in the studio, Niall Horan presents his latest solo vision and BTS salutes ARMY. Check out all of this week’s picks below:
Sam Smith with Madonna, “Vulgar”
As “Unholy” became the first Hot 100 chart-topper of Sam Smith’s career last year, the Kim Petras collaboration doubled as their most unlikely hit to date, its sweaty electro-pop chants a far cry from the elegant vocal showcases that made Smith a superstar. “Vulgar,” then, represents a logical next step into that sound, as well as an exciting proposition as a Smith-Madonna team-up: a throbbing, purposely provocative banger that challenges all haters (“Say we’re ridiculous, we’ll just go harder!” Smith and Madge declare in unison), the single uses backlash as fuel, lets Madonna flip off the world, and potentially gives Smith another club-thumping hit.
Rosalía, “Tuya”
Although Rosalía released her acclaimed MOTOMAMI album a little over a year ago and has been traveling the world in support of the full-length, the Spanish superstar has continued one of the most prolific recording periods of her career with a handful of one-off tracks, as well as her RR project with Rauw Alejandro. New single “Tuya” crystallizes her sonic aspirations: the slithering track mashes up reggaeton with the Japanese instrument koto underneath Rosalía’s trademark vulnerability, showcasing an artist who continues to expand her profile but refuses to rest on her laurels.
Niall Horan, The Show
Three quarters of a decade removed from the last One Direction album and three albums into a subsequent solo career, Niall Horan has, at long last, settled into himself. After 2017 debut Flicker kick-started his solo artistry with some surefire radio hits (“This Town,” “Slow Hands”) and 2020’s Heartbreak Weather featured a handful of sonic chances (“Nice To Meet Ya,” “Put a Little Love on Me”), The Show, Horan’s best album to date, tells us what type of long-term career he wants to fashion by splitting the difference and achieving consistency.
Click here to read a full review of Horan’s new album.
BTS, “Take Two”
This month marks the 10-year anniversary of BTS, a group that revolutionized the reach and perception of Asian pop artists in North America and around the world — and as their downtime continues and various members score solo hits, the collective has offered fans a reflective new single that hopefully sets the stage for their second act. The best moments on “Take Two” involve two BTS members harmonizing, their voices intertwined as they croon about youth and their shared gratitude; the solo projects have been satisfying in recent months, but the power of a fully aligned BTS remains singular.
J Hus feat. Drake, “Who Told You”
If “Search & Rescue” — a downbeat single, released in April, about wanting to be saved by a monogamous relationship — served as Drake’s springtime smash, “Who Told You,” a new team-up with British rapper J Hus, may very well become his summer hit, an upbeat, Afrobeats-adjacent take on the idea that too-cool-for-school guys need to report to the dance floor, too. Drake changes up his flow to match his collaborator and beat, but still relies upon his tough-guy charms and melodic rap skill set, making “Who Told You” a throwback to his guest spot days of yore, when he was assisting artists like Rihanna, 2 Chainz and French Montana on party hits.
Janelle Monáe, The Age of Pleasure
After spending so much of her recording career constructing narratives and multilayer concepts, Janelle Monáe wants to party on new album The Age of Pleasure, a well-deserved celebration that may also be the most front-to-back satisfying listen in her catalog. Although the ambition of her previous projects remains, it’s pointed at straightforward R&B grooves and immediate pop hooks: songs like the boisterous “Champagne Shit,” swaying “Water Slide” and sexually charged “Lipstick Lover” invite the listener to get lost in their sensual worlds, while Monáe acts as a tour guide to her beautifully messy desires.
Selena Gomez is looking for love, especially where cute athletes are concerned. In a new TikTok, the 30-year-old pop star hilariously advertised to a group of soccer players that she’s single and ready to mingle, even if she’s admittedly “a little high maintenance.” Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts […]
Back in 2020, three-ish months into the pandemic, Jayda Guy, who DJs and produces as Jayda G, put out a single titled “Both of Us” — walloping yet tender piano house, bruising but more than a little bruised. In the world of underground house music, there’s no guarantee that an irresistible track will travel; many of the finest producers barely earn streams. But “Both of Us” became a minor hit, earning close to 50 million plays on Spotify, critical enthusiasm, and a Grammy nomination. It also brought a new set of expectations to Guy’s DJ gigs: A lot of people showed up to hear that single.
Explore
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
“I come from this crate-digging kind of scene, where I would be just playing things that I love, finding these random tracks and exposing them to people,” she tells Billboard. Post-“Both of Us,” “I’m just trying to always get creative with it, whether that’s trying to play it at a high point within the set, leaving it to the very end, or playing different versions of the track,” Guy continues. “How do you build up to that? It’s a great challenge to have.”
Friday brings Guy, her first new album since that trajectory-altering release. (She released an enjoyable installment of the DJ-Kicks mix series in 2021 that included one new production, the bouncy throwback “All I Need.”) And while there are club-pop moments — notably “Blue Lights,” which chugs like a late-night drive on an open highway, and “Scars,” with its ’90s house tones — Guy is not going out of her way to cater to the euphoria-seeking fans who fell hard for “Both of Us.” Instead, she turns inward, penning a searching, at times solemn album, based on the experiences of her father William, who died when she was 10.
“I had the idea for the album for a long time,” Guy says. But until the pandemic hit, grounding a DJ used to a relentless gigging schedule, she “really didn’t have the time, energy and space to tackle what that would look like emotionally.”
The source material for Guy is more than 11 hours of archival videotapes that William made before his death. These cover growing up in Kansas, enlisting in the Vietnam War, riots in Washington D.C. in 1968, moving to Canada, the failure of his roofing business, and his eventual pivot into social work. “He had recorded him talking about his life because he knew he was going to pass [away], so he was able to take the time and kind of relay all this information and stories to me and my family,” Guy explains. “When the pandemic hit, I could really sit with the tapes, watch them, dive into his world.”
Theme in hand, Guy also made two notable changes to her writing and recording process. As a producer known for house music, she typically built a musical bed first, leaving lyrics for the end. “But because I wanted to be very intentional with the lyrics, I started with those,” she says. She calls writing this way — words first, rhythm later — “difficult and challenging and really interesting all at the same time.”
Guy also threw herself into the role of lead vocalist, which she had only embraced for the first time on “Both of Us” — it made little sense for another singer to deliver lines as personal as these. “Leading up to this album, I started taking vocal coaching lessons,” Guy says. “Before that, I didn’t really know how to carry a tune. I still have so far to go, but it’s really fun to learn.”
Guy strikes two balancing acts simultaneously. The first is emotional. Guy “shares her grief and her loss, there’s a core of pain” in the lyrics, says Jack Peñate, who co-produced the album. “But she does it with acceptance and jubilance” and flickers of dancefloor momentum.
“I thought this could have a real darkness around it,” Peñate adds. “But what happened was the opposite — we seemed to be able to run with the idea of celebrating Jayda’s father and her relationship with him.”
Musically, Guy and Peñate walked another tightrope: Some musical references were pegged to William’s stories from the ’60s and ’70s and some to Guy’s youthful memories of her father. “That was very nerdy, working out what synthesizers would be best to tie it to a timeline,” Peñate says. But “we never went pastiche with it,” he continues. The goal was to make sure “this sits in a place that you can drive around London and listen and it feels fresh.” (Guy was based in Berlin for a while before moving to London, where she feels far more at home — “house music is really more in the mainstream [there] in a very different way,” she says.)
The decade-hopping blend is realized most effectively in tracks like “When She Dance,” a disco stomp with a handsome, snapping mid-section full of volleyed vocal harmonies, and “Meant to Be,” which folds the impeccably slick guitar of ‘80s R&B into a more modern thump. The latter is based on a period of tumult for William: He was forced to shut down his business and work at the local lumber mill, which Guy calls “a real low point.” But he ended up returning to school and becoming a social worker, finding a vocation that she says “gave him so much purpose within his life.”
The song alludes to those events. “But it’s also about me reflecting on the fact that I don’t get to hear the stories directly,” Guy continues. “It’s bittersweet, learning the kind of man my father was — but having to learn it from these tapes, versus in person.”
Writing and recording Guy was full of similar moments. “It was truly cathartic in a way that you rarely get,” Peñate adds. “Someone’s actually kind of processing grief through the creative process. It’s a cliché, but: For music to in any way be a part of healing? That’s why we do it.”
Arlo Parks knows her art can’t please everyone — a notion she leaned into on her second album, My Soft Machine, which arrived May 26 on Transgressive Records. Following her critically acclaimed 2021 debut, Collapsed in Sunbeams, which earned the London-based 22-year-old a best new artist Grammy nomination, her poetically complex and genre-agnostic follow-up doesn’t fit neatly into any boxes designed to cluster Black, women or queer artists — as intended.
Explore
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
Inspired by a wide breadth of musical artists (Deftones, Tyler, The Creator) and writers (Zadie Smith, Ocean Vuong), Parks says, “I think my music is pretty cool. I know where it is coming from contextually, and people who enjoy my music understand that, too, and that’s all that’s important to me.” She has since found her people within the indie and queer music scene, and now comfortably takes her place among the canon of artists confidently creating outside the norm. “I definitely have that desire for community-building and just being a student of other people’s processes,” she says.
As you were making this album, did a cohesive ethos emerge?
Initially, it was very much a collection of songs made with different people as little isolated moments of magic in the studio. Then when I sat down at Electric Lady [Studios in New York] to listen to the demos, I was like, “There’s a thread here.” I am saying a lot more. I am pushing away from the more minimal, soul-based sound of Collapsed in Sunbeams. I want to dig into my tastes. I want to wear my influences on my sleeve. I want to create something that feels a lot more sculpted rather than more instinctive — that was very much my energy for Collapsed in Sunbeams. But I really want to chip at marble over time with this. The thread or the ethos is something I realized after the fact rather than going into it with a mission statement. I was like, “This is about my life rather than observing other people.” That was at the core of everything.
Album single “Pegasus” features Phoebe Bridgers. How did that come about?
We’ve sung before, but never on [a] record. We’ve done some covers and played together at Coachella. I’ve always looked up to her as a vocalist and as a storyteller, and also as a shape-shifter. She can go on a SZA track or a Kid Cudi track, she can go wherever and blend into the world while still being completely herself. I love features that feel organic. I did feel that sense of kinship between our voices. It felt natural to ask her, and she said yes. The rest is history.
Do you strive to be a shape-shifter like Phoebe?
It’s definitely something that I want to do because my tastes stretch so far. I would be just as happy on a song with Aphex Twin or Actress as I would be with Dean Blunt or Tyler, The Creator. I love music as a whole. Whether I’d be any good fitting into their worlds, I don’t know. My favorite thing about being in the studio or meeting other artists and sending each other poetry or fragments of writing [is] being like, “I would have never thought to put it that way.”
Are there any other artists you have that exchange with?
One of my favorite people to get recommendations [from] on music, poetry, novels is definitely Lorde. I have never met anyone with her breadth of knowledge and her taste. She recommended a [short story] collection by Lucia Berlin called Evening in Paradise and this book called Animal Joy [by Nuar Alsadir] that happened to already be on my reading list. It’s kind of magical. Not everybody is connected, but especially in the indie space, we are friends and support each other. You never feel like you’re alone in anything, which is really nice.
What other artists inspire you?
If you take Björk, Poly Styrene [of X-Ray Spex] or Arthur Russell, there is an outsider quality to a lot of the music that I love. I love the things that people found strange at the time, with these little idiosyncrasies and the things that made them slightly offbeat or slightly outside of the normal. It taught me that was OK and that you can just be, and that you’ll find your people.
In October, you’re playing the festival All Things Go, which boasts a lineup heavy on queer representation. How are you feeling about that gig?
It’s actually all my people. I feel so excited to have lineups that have moments like that where queer people and nonbinary people and talented human beings are given that space to come together. It’s like one massive family, especially on the second day with me and Ethel Cain and MUNA and boygenius and beabadoobee. I love the idea of creating more of those kinds of queer-positive spaces at festivals. There’s a lot of freedom and power in that.
This story will appear in the June 10, 2023, issue of Billboard.
If imitation is truly the sincerest form of flattery, then Lily-Rose Depp is loving everything Chloe Fineman is doing. The star of the controversial HBO music biz drama The Idol proclaimed herself a big fan of the master SNL impressionist’s take on the series’ chain-smoking, micro-bikini-wearing protagonist, Jocelyn after Fineman posted a killer clip sending up the show’s dark vibe.
“I’m loling 🤣🤣🤣🤣 ….. and ur makeup looks bomb,” Depp wrote in comments on a clip Fineman posted on Thursday (June 8) in which she mocks Jocelyn’s copious cig-smoking habit and the (spoiler alert) final image from the pilot of the troubled pop star’s head enveloped inside a red scarf.
“My audition for THE IDOL (must have got lost in the mail),” Fineman captioned the clip she made in the midst of the Hollywood writer’s strike that has put SNL — and everything scripted in TV and movies — on ice. “Music should sound like a slut, or a whore,” Fineman says in her finest disaffected vaguely Valley Girl accent as Jocelyn while puffing on four skinny cigarettes and wearing a frilly red robe in a sharp send-up of the show’s firmly male-gaze vibe.
“Anyway, I met this guy last night, his name is Tedros… he was dressed in a bat cave, but I think he’s gonna, like, change my career,” Chloe-as-Jocelyn confesses about The Weeknd‘s (who now goes by his given name, Abel Tesfaye) creepy, duster-wearing cult-leader character in the HBO series that debuted last weekend.
In a brilliant spoof of the final scene from episode one — in which Tedros convinces Jocelyn to put a red scarf over her head, secured by tying a belt around her neck as a prompt to find her truest, sexiest voice — the mock Tedros says, “now sing like you can f–k!”
That’s all the motivation Fineman needs to belt Cher’s “Believe,” while polishing off four more smokes and doubling down on the Tedros’ mandatory sex quotient, saying, “music should sound like it’s poly, or bi… like music doesn’t have a gender, it just f–ks, you know?” She then screeches Natasha Bedingfield’s “Pocket Full of Sunshine” and Jewel’s “Hands” from beneath the scarf before slipping into something way less comfortable — Jocelyn’s barely-there bikini — for a hilarious run through the choreo for “the song I hate.”
As promised, Tesfaye — a co-creator of the series — dropped two more songs from its soundtrack on Friday (June 9), Jocelyn’s vapid-on-purpose, good-girl-gone-freaky single “World Class Sinner/I’m a Freak” (aka the song she “hates”) and the ominous score piece “The Lure.”
Those songs follow on the heels of “Double Fantasy,” featuring Future and produced by Mike Dean and “Popular,” featuring Madonna and Playboi Carti.
Watch Fineman’s video and listen to the songs below.
https://open.spotify.com/album/6E3IPXh38G7UHLqVdfIY5h?si=a5fGiwk_ToetBnx6oTKAyA
Niall Horan is welcoming you to The Show. The crooner unveiled his much-anticipated third studio album on Friday (June 9). “This album is a piece of work I’m so proud of and now it’s time to pass it over to you to go and make it your own,” Horan wrote on Instagram when announcing the album […]
BTS is celebrating 10 years since their debut with a gift to fans. The superstar group unveiled their newest single, “Take Two,” on Friday (June 9), which is a nod to BTS’ “second chapter” and an “ode to their fans,” affectionately called ARMY, according to a statement from HYBE. Before the song was even released, “Take […]
State Champ Radio
