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Looking for some motivation to help power you through the start of another work week – particularly as we get within striking distance of the end of the year? We feel you, and with some stellar new pop tunes, we’ve got you covered.

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See latest videos, charts and news

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These 10 tracks from artists like Rebecca Black, UPSAHL, Bree Runway & Stormzy, Cuco, BLK ODYSSY & BNXN (fka Buju) 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.

UPSAHL, “Kickflip”

UPSAHL’s new EP Sagittarius explores complementary and contradictory facets of her personality. Opening track “Kickflip” finds the alt singer-songwriter in an uncompromised state of casual confidence as she declares, “Wow, I just fell in love with myself” over a shuffling rhythm and some fuzzy little guitar hiccups.  – Joe Lynch

Porsh Bet$, “364”

Rising independent talent Porsh Bet$’s returns with “364,” a gentle, contemplative tribute to a relationship that ended just one day shy of a calendar year. Bet$’s voice is marinated in sweet melancholy, as if he knows the goodbye is final but hasn’t yet finished sneaking a few glimpses in the rearview mirror. – J. Lynch

BLK ODYSSY & BNXN fka Buju, “Lay Low”

BLK ODYSSY’s (Sam Houston) aptly titled “Lay Low” is a smooth, syncopated slice of lush R&B with elements of cool jazz and Afrobeats, the latter thanks in part to Nigerian singer-songwriter BNXN, who keeps the energy percolating even while the vibes remain chill. – J. Lynch

Bree Runway feat. Stormzy, “Pick Your Poison”

Fresh off a five-track EP titled Woah, What a Blur!, Bree Runway said in a statement she is “pressing restart after what a blurry year this has been … I became alive again putting this together.” Standout track “Pick Your Poison” features a more meditative Stormzy, as he opens with a simple wish in his warm and calming tone: “When you pick your poison, I just hope it’s me.” – Lyndsey Havens

Daniel Seavey, “Runaway”

After making his solo debut with the explosive “Can We Pretend That We’re Good?” the Why Don’t We co-founder is back with the similarly punchy and experimental “Runaway.” The self-produced song seamlessly slithers through thunderous production to tinnier, grittier beats before closing with an unexpected piano melody. With Seavey on his own, it’s clear he’s overflowing with ideas — and wasting no time exploring them all at once. – L. Havens

Rebecca Black, “Look at You”

Written about a best friend, Rebecca Black’s latest single, the uptempo “Look At You,” gives fans a crisp idea of what to expect from her upcoming debut album. Equal parts confessional (“I’m so jealous of you”) and rallying (“She’s got nothing on you, I hope you see that now”), the electric riffs help Black’s delicate, airy vocals hit home. – L. Havens

Ella Jane and Charlie Hickey, “Sore Loser”

Brooklyn-based newcomer Ella Jane tapped Saddest Factory’s Charlie Hickey for “Sore Loser,” a raw and clever ode to those who aren’t often victorious in the game of love (or life). “I’m getting kinda sick of watching the scoreboard … I don’t think I can play you anymore,” Jane admits. Hickey’s own verse finds victory in being vague, leaving the listener to decide if the two are opponents or teammates. – L. Havens

Cuco, “Pendant”

Loss is never easy to experience and can be even harder to articulate, but Cuco does so on new track “Pendant” with humility, grace and reverence for the person who is no longer with him. The track kicks off with a forlorn piano melody, which accompanies the Mexican-American artist’s dreamy delivery as he sings, “Crawlin’, now you’re walkin’/ Then you’re running out of time/ Forgot to reminisce/ But don’t forget to say goodbye.” Sometimes, there’s freedom and bliss in letting go, as seen in this song’s seismic shift to an uplifting psychedelic groove where Cuco assures himself, “I’ll find my way, I’ll be okay.” – Starr Bowenbank

Surf Rock Is Dead, “pretenders”

The plucky electric guitar notes and booming drumbeats of Surf Rock Is Dead’s “pretenders” (the opening song on the band’s new EP, Drama) lets listeners know that tension is on the horizon. According to the band, the song — through a fuzzy blanket of psychedelic rock — explores the ennui and despair of knowing a relationship is reaching its end. – S. Bowenbank

The Greeting Committee, “Anything But You”

The Greeting Committee’s latest effort “Anything But You” sums up falling in love – the stolen kisses, moments spent waiting by the phone, sloppy dances and more – in song form. The instrumentation matches the lyrics’ sunny vibes perfectly, flitting between sappy acoustic and electric guitar as well as a small but noticeable element of country twang throughout the indie gem. – S. Bowenbank

Taylor Swift opened up Monday (Dec. 12) about how her approach to creativity has changed as she moves into the next decade of her career.

The topic came up when the superstar sat down with acclaimed director Martin McDonagh as part of Variety‘s annual Directors on Directors series. “Do you feel like your songwriting is different now? Even if you’re talking about a heartbreak song, are you different in writing now as opposed to how you were when you were 22?” the Banshees of Inisherin filmmaker asked Swift, comparing All Too Well: The Short Film to the original album cut from 2012’s Red.

“Yes. I definitely feel more free to create now,” the pop star-turned-director replied. “And I’m making more albums at a more rapid pace than I ever did before, because I think the more art you create, hopefully the less pressure you put on yourself. It’s just a phase I’m in right now. And everybody’s different. There are people who put an album out every five years and it’s brilliant and that’s the way they work. And I have full respect for that. But I’m happier when I’m making things more often.”

Swift also shed light during the discussion on how she tackled making the Grammy-nominated short film for “All Too Well (10 Minute Version),” starring Sadie Sink and Dylan O’Brien, and how it might impact her upcoming directorial debut for Searchlight Pictures.

“Every aspect of my job as a singer has affected the way that I am as a director,” the “Anti-Hero” singer said. “I’ve occasionally been in a film for very short periods of time. I really want someone to feel comfortable. If they want to be able to look at the monitor, or they want to know how it’s set up, they should be able to. But I think it’s helpful when people know what story it is they’re telling. I’ve been part of things where you didn’t know the script, and no one knew what the story was.

“And so as much as I like to be secretive about projects I’m making,” she concluded, “you have to trust the people that you’re making something with to let them know this is exactly why this matters.”

Read Swift’s full Directors on Directors conversation with McDonagh here.

Jennifer Coolidge sat down for a one-on-one conversation with Ariana Grande and credited the pop star for helping launch the career renaissance she’s been enjoying for the past several years.

“I’m curious if you know that when people ask about how my life has changed … Yes, I got to do White Lotus, but I think it really started with you asking me to be in the ‘Thank U, Next”‘ video,” the actress gushed to Grande as part of her Entertainment Weekly Entertainers of the Year cover story published Monday (Dec. 12).

“I mean, from there I got Promising Young Woman and this whole thing,” she continued. “You were sort of the instigator. I really believe that. I think if you hadn’t put me in ‘Thank U, Next’ and done that imitation, I don’t think I would be here where I am.”

While the “Positions” singer was quick to brush off the credit as “absolutely the most untrue thing I’ve ever heard in my life,” Coolidge was insistent. “No, I really think that! And I think it’s pretty cool,” the award-winning actress said. “I was kind of flatlining, and you got things going for me. I just want to thank you. I know you’re a very humble person, you wouldn’t admit to it, but I’m just going to thank you.”

Elsewhere in the chat, Coolidge dished to Ari on her comedy heroes (Catherine O’Hara, the casts of Monty Python and Absolutely Fabulous), her secrets to ad-libbing on set, what’s still on her career bucket list (a “really cool” Broadway play) and more.

Check out Coolidge’s uproarious Entertainer of the Year cover below.

“You know, writing pop music is really complex,” Dan Reynolds says, stretching the word “really” with an emphatic earnestness in his voice. Dressed in a perfectly fitted white tee and gray plaid trousers while convening with his Imagine Dragons bandmates in a private room at the Equinox Hotel in downtown New York City, the voice behind some of the biggest rock hits of the past decade is explaining why he considers himself a pop songwriter. 
“It’s so funny to me when people are like, ‘Well of course I could do pop music, but I choose this [other genre],’” he continues. Reynolds and his bandmates — guitarist Wayne Sermon, bassist Ben McKee and drummer Daniel “Platz” Platzman — are overlooking Manhattan’s bustling Hudson Yards, have just wrapped the third leg of their Mercury World Tour in support of their sixth studio set, this year’s double album Mercury — Acts 1 & 2. “I’m like, ‘Great pop music? Like, big songs that live on? That’s actually really hard.’”

Imagine Dragons presents itself as a new-school rock group, with a guitar-heavy sound and colossal beats influenced in equal parts by hip-hop, folk, industrial rock and electro-pop. But the frontman’s knack for crafting universal anthems is rooted in an understanding of the hooks found in top-tier pop music.

Ever since the Las Vegas quartet’s 2012 debut album, Night Visions, sent singles like “Radioactive,” “Demons” and “It’s Time” roaring into the mainstream consciousness, Imagine Dragons have grown to become arguably the biggest rock band in America, presenting a decade of evidence that mainstream guitar-driven music is not dead by consistently scoring hits on a myriad of charts, including within the upper reaches of the Hot 100.

The success that the band has reached over the course of the last ten years is at a level that even most pop stars can only dream of: more than 17 million equivalent album units with 14.8 billion official on-demand streams in the U.S., per Luminate; nineteen Hot 100 hits, 5 top 10 albums on the Billboard 200, 12 entries on the Radio Songs chart (including 7 top 10 hits and 2 No. 1s), nearly two dozen top 10 hits on the Hot Rock Songs chart; and four monster singles (“Radioactive,” “Demons,” “Believer” and, as of last July, “Thunder”) certified Diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America, which began counting on-demand streams towards certification in 2013. For the record, that last tally is more than any other band, and only one less than Bruno Mars’ high-water mark of five.

“We typically don’t talk numbers much, because it’s just… I don’t even know that it’s overwhelming, we just don’t, really,” says Reynolds, his brow furrowed. “When it’s so wild like that, I think there’s no way to wrap your head around it. It all feels like a simulation – weird, crazy, just like, ‘OK! What does that even mean?’”

And yet, despite the steady string of chart-toppers, mind-blowing statistics and enormous worldwide fandom, it can feel like the Dragons have also somehow spent the entirety of their career flying under the radar — or, at the very least, outside the glow of critical acclaim and serious media consideration.

Just take “Bones,” their latest crossover hit from 2022’s Mercury — Acts 1 & 2. With its chanted chorus, warped vocals and lyrics tinged with cynicism (“My patience is waning/ Is this entertaining?”), the single has so far peaked at No. 6 on the Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart and garnered 139.9 million on-demand streams, according to Luminate. It was preceded by an even bigger smash in “Enemy,” featuring the rapper J.I.D, which landed itself in the top 5 of the Hot 100, at No. 3 on both Billboard Global charts and at No. 1 on Radio Songs, amassing 371.5 million U.S. on-demand streams. In reality, the official numbers for “Enemy” don’t even do the song’s impact justice: the track was also featured on the soundtrack for the Netflix animated series Arcane: League of Legends, which sparked another quarter-billion video streams of user-generated content associated with the wildly popular video game.

Ten years in, Imagine Dragons are a rarity – a rock band producing genuine hits on pop radio, capturing hip-hop listeners and bringing in fans from across all kinds of generational and genre divides. And yet, Imagine Dragons didn’t score a single Grammy nomination when this year’s spate of nods was announced, their latest album was largely ignored by critics upon its arrival, and both “Enemy” and “Bones” went unremarked upon by popular music outlets after being sent to radio. 

For his part, Rick Rubin sees something special in the Dragons. “It’s a band of virtuosos beyond the instruments that each member is known for,” says the legendary producer, who helmed “Enemy,” “Bones” and the rest of the group’s latest double album. “The songwriting is very, very strong, and they treat each song based on the identity of the song, not the identity of the band… Most bands aren’t capable of this metamorphosis. Dan’s personality as the singer is signature enough [on its own] to let us know it’s Imagine Dragons.”

According to the band members, that commitment to treating each song as its own entity has been intentional from the beginning of their career. Reynolds points to their pedigree as graduates of Berklee College of Music as the foundation for the diverse musicality of their catalog: “It makes writing pop music fun because they have such a depth of jazz musicianship,” he says. Sermons adds, “As far as genre, too… people see as a [positive] that we’ve really never felt stuck in any one sound.” 

The guitarist cites the way the band has veered from the folksy stomp of “It’s Time” to the buoyant pop of “On Top of the World” to electro-pop (2018 Origins-era single “Bad Liar”), hip-hop (Origins deep cut “Bullet in a Gun”), industrial rock (early Mercury B-side “Cutthroat”) and arena rock (“Believer”) as proof of their maneuverability. “So we just do whatever we want ’cause, amazingly, our fans let us do that.”

And over the years, Reynolds’ songwriting has fueled that penchant for genre-hopping. The frontman’s sweeping lyricism puts a megaphone to the internal conflicts and emotions we all face — from rage, regret and inadequacy to perseverance, triumph, courage and hope — and then presents them to the masses. “Demons,” the quartet’s second top 10 single, is a perfect example: a mid-tempo ballad that cycles through nearly all the aforementioned feelings in less than three minutes, as Reynolds’ gravelly voice wails, “Don’t get too close/ It’s dark inside/ It’s where my demons hide.”

“I think the success of their music is a demonstration that personal is, at its core, universal,” says Mac Reynolds, the band’s longtime manager (and Dan’s brother). “Dan has always been insistent on writing his own lyrics and going to a vulnerable place, and people feel and relate to that vulnerability in a powerful way. When you find yourself in a song, your connection to it sticks around for a long time, and diamond records are more about longevity than anything else in the end.”

For his part, the frontman can’t put a finger on the secret to why his songs tend to touch fans on such an elemental level. “I think there’s just a place that feels very personal with music,” he says. “And I think that personal level of lyric connects with people in a different way. I think we do it in a specific way that feels very specific to Imagine Dragons. And it just seems to connect us with people who feel a similar way, whether it’s about depression or joy or sorrow or…It’s all very emotion-based, whereas not all music is that way, right?”

Another unique ingredient to Imagine Dragons’ success is the fact that they’ve largely been left to their own devices in charting their own narrative — choosing singles and in some ways A&R’ing each of their albums. “It feels very self-guided with the best possible team standing underneath us,” Reynolds says of working with KIDinaKORNER, the Interscope Records imprint the band has been signed to since 2011. “But we certainly are the masters of our [fate] when it comes to creative, when it comes to the songs. We’ve chosen them and it’s worked.”

Case in point: “I remember when we were picking ‘Believer’ as the lead single for [2017’s] Evolve, there were people who did not want that song to be the lead single that were very prevalent in our artistic life with the label,” the frontman continues. “They still, at the end of the day, said, ‘OK, we’ll let you guys go with it.’ But I remember sitting down in the meeting with our label and someone very powerful saying, ‘That song will never be a hit.’ And we said, ‘I disagree, that song will be a hit.’ That’s exactly how it went.” “Believer” peaked at No. 4 on the Hot 100, reigning over the Hot Rock Songs chart for a whopping 29 weeks and even putting it on par with 2012’s “Radioactive” as one of their biggest hits to date.

Reynolds and his bandmates have always painted with grandiose strokes in the studio, and their Herculean songs get to be played for audiences the world over on a near-constant basis — thanks to the foursome’s status as dedicated road warriors who keep leveling up their venue size to match their bombastic sonic palette.

Having graduated step by step from bars and clubs to amphitheaters and arenas over ten years’ worth of touring, the quartet finally added stadiums to their 2022 live slate for the first time, selling out everywhere from Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City and Allegiant Stadium in their native Las Vegas to Toronto’s Rogers Centre and Banc of California Stadium in L.A. (The European leg of the tour this summer also included stops at more eclectic venues in order to meet demand — from equestrian racecourses in Milan and Paris to an unfinished civil and military airport in northern Poland.) Overall, the 59 shows throughout the year grossed $87.5 million and sold a total of 1.1 million tickets, according to Billboard Boxscore. On the year-end Boxscore charts, the band finished at No. 21 on Top Tours, No. 13 on Top Ticket Sales and No. 10 on the Top Rock Tours tally. 

“It feels like we’re on the biggest stage we’ve ever been on in our lives, but it also feels like we belong there,” McKee says. “It feels like we’re in our element, like this is the environment that this music and our performance thrives best in. And it’s great. We’ve never had, I think, enough room to fully spread our wings before. And now it’s just a giant canvas for us to paint upon.”

“I think that being outdoors feels [like] that’s where Dragons are supposed to be,” Reynolds adds. “Something about the open sky and the songs and the grandiosity of it all…It just all feels like, you know, if we could’ve imagined it, this is where we would want to be.”

It’s certainly all a far cry from their earliest days, when they were playing shows on top of parking garages and opening for AWOLNATION in the wake of Night Visions’ release, still going to their own merch table after each set. “Back then, it was all of us and our entire crew packed onto one bus with, like, a trailer hauling our equipment behind us,” McKee recalls, likening the time to “Pirates of the Caribbean or something. And now it’s, you know, 20 different big rig trucks and I don’t even know how many buses hauling around our stage everywhere.”

As for how their live show could rise even higher in the future, Reynolds cites U2’s famous 360° Tour from 2009 to 2011 as an example of how to innovate down the line. The singer references Bono and co. as a personal inspiration for a multitude of reasons, from the veteran rockers’ approach to touring to their longstanding activism as a band. 

“I grew up listening to a lot of U2,” he says, calling The Joshua Tree one of his all-time favorite records. “I always saw them being involved with worldwide causes. And it felt real and it felt impactful and it felt important. And it was also part of the band….It felt like a full circle thing. Like, it was more than music.” To that end, Imagine Dragons have championed the LGBTQ+ community, pediatric cancer patients and women in the recording industry with initiatives like LOVELOUD, the Tyler Robinson Foundation and McKee’s ongoing partnership with the Women’s Audio Mission.

Earlier this year, Imagine Dragons also added aiding Ukraine’s fight against Russian invasion to their list of causes, after President Volodymyr Zelenskyy personally reached out to the band — given their massive popularity in the war-torn country — for a one-on-one meeting. “His two big things were, ‘One, when you’re on tour, tell the people in America not to forget about us. Please help us get in the headlines and keep us in the headlines because we need help,’” Reynolds recalls. “‘And two, a real way you can help is the United 24 effort,’” referencing a government-sponsored initiative to provide desperately needed ambulances in the war-torn country.

Holding court with a world leader would’ve been unthinkable for the Imagine Dragons ten years ago, back when they were scraping by on the verge of releasing Night Visions. Their debut album has since cemented its place at No. 7 on Billboard’s end-of-the-decade chart for the entire 2010s, just behind the likes of fellow behemoths such as Adele’s 21, Taylor Swift’s 1989 and Ed Sheeran’s Divide.

“It feels like yesterday, for sure, in some weird ways,” says Reynolds of the Night Visions era. “But it also feels like a lifetime ago. Being in the studio doing, like, the stomp-claps for ‘It’s Time’ at the Palms, banging on all the trash cans and stuff for ‘Working Man’ and ‘Nothing Left to Say’… a lot of cool memories come back that were a very youthful Imagine Dragons, where we were just having fun experimenting.”

To celebrate its milestone 10-year anniversary, Imagine Dragons reissued a super deluxe edition of Night Visions earlier this year, featuring two previously-unreleased demos from the album’s recording sessions, though Reynolds admits there were upward of 200 other Night Visions-era songs they could’ve chosen to dust off from the vault. In fact, he jokingly throws out the idea of releasing a “super, super, super deluxe” edition somewhere down the road for the band’s 30th anniversary. Or maybe a 300-song holographic retrospective for their 50th, McKee gleefully counters.

And while the band may or may not be serious about someday unleashing Night Visions on the world in its entirety, they’re now looking to the future and what’s left for the Dragons to conquer.

“Sustainability, I think, is our ultimate goal,” Reynolds says. “To do this as long as we can. I mean, look – we certainly are always driven. To the point where just the other day, we were like, ‘What could our next record sound like if we do this? This could be really cool. Maybe we do it here with these people in this way…’ But we believe that there’s still a lot of gas in the tank, and we’re determined to push ourselves and try to be the best versions of Imagine Dragons we can, and make our show better and bigger.

“Yeah, I don’t know,” he concludes with a sigh. “We dream endlessly, and at this point, we’re looking to just keep dreaming.”

Several Swifties woke up Monday morning (Dec. 12) to discover that a new ray of hope had dawned. Weeks after countless dreams were crushed by the catastrophic Ticketmaster presale for Taylor Swift‘s 2023 Eras Tour — which left many fans without tickets to Swift’s first tour in four years in spite of their preassigned “Verified Fan” statuses — the 32-year-old pop star unveiled a surprise second round of ticket sales specifically geared toward those who missed out.

Certain fans found out they were selected for the Verified Fan sale 2.0 upon receiving an email from Ticketmaster. “Congratulations, you have been selected to participate in a limited-time opportunity to request to purchase 2 tickets to Taylor Swift The Eras Tour,” the email read. “You were selected for this opportunity because you have been identified as a fan who received a boost during the Verified Fan presale but did not purchase tickets.”

“We apologized for the difficulties you may have experienced, and have been asked by Taylor’s team to create this additional opportunity for you to purchase tickets,” it continued, noting that the ticket purchasing window will begin sometime before Dec. 23, with invitations issued on a staggered basis by tour date in each city.

Naturally, Swifties far and wide are rejoicing following the news that many of them will get a second chance at attending an Eras Tour show and coming face-to-face with the “All Too Well” singer, who publicly condemned Ticketmaster’s handling of the original Verified Fan sale in November. The ticketing service experienced mass outages caused by a historic amount of hopefuls flooding its site on sale day, a commotion that wasn’t helped by the surplus of fans to whom Ticketmaster had assigned special Verified Fan presale codes.

“Taylor swift going out of her way to make sure ticketmaster gives ALL fans who got a verified boost a chance to get tickets…,” tweeted one Swiftie on Monday. “This is why we love her.”

Other fans, however, expressed disappointment that they had been shut out of the Verified Fan program a second time over. “HOW did i not get chosen for verified fan presale even though i have a boost, not get tickets on capital one presale AND not receive this email from ticketmaster for tickets?” tweeted another. “I’m soooo sad 🙁 anyone wanna help a girl get to nashville :(”

See more Swiftie reactions to Taylor Swift’s surprise second Verified Fan presale with Ticketmaster below.

taylor swift going out of her way to make sure ticketmaster gives ALL fans who got a verified boost a chance to get tickets… this is why we love her 🤍— The Eras Tour (@tswifterastour) December 12, 2022

GUYS I GOT THE E-MAIL 😭😭😭😭 … But i don’t want to get so many hopes bc the last time was awful. Btw i was not boosted, but i was a verified fan with a code. So i hope there is a chance for all of us.🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞🤞 #TheErasTour pic.twitter.com/tWoieb36qe— Jo📖TaylorSwiftArtistOfTheDecade (@SwiftiePost) December 12, 2022

taylor and her team getting ticketmaster to select people for verified fans again is not what i was expecting to wake up to today but it’s the best thing actually.. i really hope that everyone will actually be able to get tickets without any errors— jill 🎄 (@wildestdagger) December 12, 2022

TAYLOR GETTING THEM TO CONTACT VERIFIED FANS FOR THE REST OF THE TICKETS☹️ i love her too much so many deserving people are gonna get another chance now— hana (@wreckmyyplans) December 12, 2022

HOW did i not get chosen for verified fan presale even though i have a boost, not get tickets on capital one presale AND not receive this email from ticketmaster for tickets? i’m soooo sad 🙁 anyone wanna help a girl get to nashville 🙁— taylor🕰🫶 (@TAYLORNOTSWlFT) December 12, 2022

Waking up to an email about #TaylorSwiftTheErasTour tickets on this fine Monday was NOT on my end-of-year bingo card, but thank you. 🥲🥳🥳— Stephanie D’Amico ☀️ (@writemesteph) December 12, 2022

Calling Carat and all Little Monsters! Over the weekend, SEVENTEEN hit the LA3C Festival, and three of its members conquered the Wednesday dance challenge in the process.

Stopping to chat with Billboard‘s Tetris Kelly, Joshua, Dino and Mingyu positively nailed the viral TikTok choreography set to Lady Gaga‘s “Bloody Mary,” re-enacting the moves of Jenna Ortega’s Wednesday Addams as Mother Monster’s sped-up vocals sang, “I’ll dance, dance, dance/ With my hands, hands, hands/ Above my head, head, head/ Like Jesus said.”

Ortega revealed in a November interview that she was actually ill with COVID-19 while shooting the now-famous dance sequence — which is actually set to The Cramps’ 1981 single “Goo Goo Muck” — but didn’t receive a positive test result until after she’d finished filming the scene.

And while the Born This Way deep cut doesn’t actually appear anywhere in the Netflix series, the TiKTok trend reached a fever pitch when Gaga slipped into her best goth schoolgirl apparel to rock out to the choreography herself.

Meanwhile, all 13 members of SEVENTEEN also hit day one of LA3C to light up the stage with a fiery hourlong set featuring “HOT,” “Left & Right” and “Very Nice” — the latter of which they repeated an incredible six times due to demand from the ecstatic audience.

In September, the K-pop idols unfurled Sector 17, a repackaging of their 2022 studio set Face the Sun with lead single “_World” as well as added tracks “Circles,” “Fallin’ Flower” and “Cheers.”

Watch Joshua, Dino and Mingyu dance it out to “Bloody Mary” below.

LA3C is Penske Media Corporation’s new music, art and food festival celebrating Los Angeles’ culture and diversity. PMC is also the parent company of Billboard.

One of the Philippines’ breakout music stars is expanding his global reach via a new tour and growing team. Billboard can exclusively share that James Reid will kick off the new year by touring North America for the first time since hitting the entertainment scene more than a decade ago. The singer-songwriter’s LOVESCENE North American Tour takes its name from Reid’s latest album.

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Released in October, LOVESCENE has been promoted with two singles so far: “u & I” and its latest “Lie to Me,” which features California singer-songwriter Destiny Rodgers, also signed to Reid’s Careless indie label.

As part of Reid’s global team, Wasserman will handle the tour (Wasserman Music represents the singer for worldwide booking, minus the Philippines) and join previously announced management Transparent Arts (the company founded by Billboard Hot 100 chart-toppers Far East Movement that spotlights Asian talent on a global scale).

The trek kicks off in late January in Houston, and heads across the U.S. and Canada before closing in late February in Los Angeles. Tickets will be available for pre-sale through James Reid’s Bandsintown page on Dec. 14, and go on sale on Dec. 16. More information will be shared via James Reid’s social media.

See the full list of his concert dates below.

2023 James Reid LOVESCENE North American Tour Dates

Jan. 29, 2023 – Houston, TX – Downstairs at White Oak Music Hall

Feb. 1, 2023 – Richmond, VA – The Broadberry

Feb. 4, 2023 – Ashbury Park, NJ – Asbury Lanes

Feb. 5, 2023 – New York, NY – Bowery Ballroom

Feb. 7, 2023 – Toronto, ON – The Opera House

Feb. 9, 2023 – Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall

Feb. 11, 2023 – Winnipeg, MB – Exchange Event Centre

Feb. 14, 2023 – Calgary, AB – AB – Bella Concert Hall

Feb. 16, 2023 – Vancouver, BC – Hollywood Theatre

Feb. 19, 2023 – Seattle, WA – The Showbox

Feb. 21, 2023 – San Francisco, CA -The Regency Ballroom

Feb. 24, 2023 – San Diego, CA – Music Box

Feb. 26, 2023 – Los Angeles, CA – Troubadour

For this year’s update of our ongoing Greatest Pop Star by Year project, Billboard is counting down our staff picks for the top 10 pop stars of 2022 all this week. At No. 10, we remember the year in Nicki Minaj — who topped the Hot 100, owned the VMAs, and generally reasserted her dominance in 2022.
The presence of women in hip-hop has surged over the last decade, but Nicki Minaj never lost her ‘Queen of Rap’ title. Throughout 2022, Billboard’s 2019 Game-Changer honoree skillfully demonstrated prestige in music, from occasional guest features to being lauded by MTV for her iconic evolution. Over a decade on from the release of her 2010 debut album Pink Friday, the 40-year-old remains a force to be reckoned with.

Four years after dropping her fourth LP Queen, 2022 kicked off the era of Minaj’s long-awaited comeback. Post-Queen, Minaj had spent the earlier part of the decade surprising her dedicated Barbz with standalone singles (“Megatron,” “Yikes”) and hit collaborations with Doja Cat, BIA, Ty Dolla $ign and others, while also re-releasing her fan favorite mixtape, 2009’s Beam Me Up Scotty, to DSPs. The Queens-raised artist – who continued her musical impact over the past three years without so much as a full-length solo project – powered into the new decade laser-focused on being a versatile rap mainstay.

In February of this year, Minaj and Atlanta rhymesayer Lil Baby teamed up for the ruthless trap anthem “Do We Have a Problem?” The track ruled Billboard‘s Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, while also debuting at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100. After the birth of her son in 2020, Minaj’s re-emergence was sealed as she followed that up a week later with second Lil Baby collaboration “Bussin,” also reaching the chart’s top 20.

The following month, Minaj went deep into her fashion bag, becoming the face of Marc Jacobs’ Spring 2022 “Heaven” collection, donning edgy couture and colorful wigs reminiscent of her early mainstream career. Also in March, Minaj passed the rap torch to Trendsetter artist Coi Leray, featuring on Leray’s fiery “Blick Blick,” which reached No. 10 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs. The “Blick Blick” rollout was slightly chaotic, as Leray’s father, rapper Benzino, prematurely revealed the collaboration on Clubhouse, sending Minaj to nearly pull her verse. 

Keeping her appearance on “Blick” – even popping up in the technicolor music video – Minaj went full steam ahead, tapping Fivio Foreign for the one-off single “We Go Up.” The five-minute braggadocious drill rap cut would eventually receive a gritty music video filmed in Foreign and Minaj’s NYC hometown, and exclusively appeared on Minaj’s greatest hits compilation Queen Radio: Volume 1. “We Go Up,” which landed at No. 15 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, would be the fourth collaborative single under Minaj’s belt in 2022. The momentum she built on features resembled her 2010s phase, where the rapper could make any song her own with a knockout verse, and would later help her explode on her first solo Hot 100 chart-topper. 

But before that, in May, Minaj appeared arm-in-arm with fashion designer and Burberry chief creative officer Ricardo Tisci at the 2022 MET Gala. After gracing the red carpet with a memorable all-black Burberry ensemble and body embellishments from British makeup artist Pat McGrath, Minaj would also embark on a new business deal that month, announcing her new role as creative director of Maxim. The venture would also place Minaj as MaximBet’s special advisor for licensed sports betting and iGaming. Burgeoning as a tastemaker in music and entrepreneurial moves, Minaj utilized 2022 as a year to flex her transcendent influence over the new generation of female rap.

By July, the summer music festival season saw a Minaj takeover, as the artist headlined New Orleans’ Essence Music Festival and London’s Wireless Festival. Her return to festivals since making a surprise guest appearance during Ariana Grande’s Coachella set in 2019, Minaj hit the New Orleans’ Caesars Superdome as a seasoned virtuoso. 75,000 fans clamored over Minaj’s extensive catalog during an hour-long set, rapping along to classics both of her own (“Beez In the Trap,” “Super Bass,” “Chun-Li”) and in a supporting role (Beyoncé’s “Flawless (Remix),” BIA’s “Whole Lotta Money (Remix)”, A$AP Ferg’s “Plain Jane (Remix)”).

Although Barbz were disappointed that Essence Fest opted not to livestream Minaj’s set at the last minute, more festival pandemonium ensued as the rapper went across the pond for Wireless Festival. Coordinating multiple outfit changes for the show at London’s Finsbury Park – which experienced a 30-minute delay. Minaj closed out her energetic Wireless Festival set as rap royalty. The Queen of Rap even attempted to hold a meet and greet with fans at Camden’s Cafe Koko following her Sunday performance, but police officials shut down the event as crowds flooded nearby roads.

In the weeks following Minaj’s festival sets, she promised a six-part docuseries and new music under a “Nick James” alter ego, teasing lustful single “Super Freaky Girl,” which sampled Rick James’ 1981 funk smash “Super Freak.” “Super Freaky Girl” played as a near-spinoff to Minaj’s 2014 “Baby Got Back- sampling hit “Anaconda,” which made the song a viral sensation on TikTok. In August, Minaj, Drake and Lil Wayne held a triumphant Young Money reunion during the first “October World Weekend” of Toronto’s OVO Fest, where Minaj debuted “Super Freaky Girl” on the Budweiser Stage. 

Contributing to the recent sample and interpolation trend in pop music, “Super Freaky Girl” made a massive debut atop the Billboard Hot 100 following its full August release , marking Minaj’s first No. 1 single as a solo artist. “Super Freaky Girl” was also just the second solo single by a female rap artist to top the chart since Ms. Lauryn Hill’s 1998 song “Doo Wop (That Thing).” Accompanied by a Barbie and Ken-inspired music video directed by Joseph Kahn, Minaj continued to support the chart-topper by reviving her zany alter ego Roman Zolanski on “Super Freaky Girl (Roman Remix).”

Minaj kept the heat scorching near summer’s end, releasing Queen Radio Volume 1 and delivering a career-spanning Video Vanguard Award performance at the 2022 MTV Video Music Awards. The artist, who co-hosted the 2022 VMAs with fellow Queens native LL Cool J and Jack Harlow, made her telecast awards show comeback, offering a 10-minute set with self-referential easter egg nods for longtime Barbz. Minaj opened her set in a plastic box replica of her 2007 mixtape Playtime Is Over, while the Head Barb reimagined her dominatrix Roman Zolanski role in Kanye West’s 2010 “Monster” music video. The camera then panned out to reveal that Minaj was her own Barbie Dreamhouse, with one section resembling Queens nail salon Poly Nails, where Minaj filmed her 2007 music video for Playtime Is Over cut “Wuchoo Know.” Without missing a beat, Minaj ended her incandescent performance with “Super Freaky Girl” fun, turning the VMAs into a full-blown celebration of her legacy.

After accepting the Video Vanguard Award, Minaj was off to more “Super Freaky Girl” promotion, partnering with restaurant chain Chili’s in September for ‘Barbz Day’ and cranberry-flavored $5 Barbaritas. Minaj also curated a third “Super Freaky Girl” official remix, an all-star “Queen Mix” featuring JT of City Girls, BIA, Maliibu Miitch, Akbar V and Katie Got Bandz, where the femcees repped their respective cities. Also on the Queens Radio compilation was a remix to “Likkle Mix” by dancehall artist Skeng, and in late-September, Minaj would co-star in the song’s graffiti-music video. “Likkle Mix” would ultimately nab a “Fine Nine” remix to make the “Super Freaky Girl (Remix)” look modest by comparison. Minaj and Skeng recruited eight women from across dancehall and rap, including Spice, Lisa Mercedez, Lady Leshurr, London Hill, Patrice Roberts, Destra Garcia, Pamputtae, and Dovey Magnum.

Minaj continued to hop from one genre to the next, featuring on Yung Bleu’s “Love in the Way” and 2022 FIFA World Cup anthem “Tukoh Taka” with Colombian vocalist Maluma and Lebanese singer Myriam Fares. The rapper didn’t ease up on dominating festival stages, headlining New York’s Powerhouse and Rolling Loud New York at Queens stadium Citi Field. Minaj would also rack up additional awards, from MTV Europe Music Awards’ best hip hop artist and best song and the American Music Awards’ favorite female artist – rap/hip-hop. She would also later get into an all-out Twitter spat with Atlanta rapper Latto over the 2023 Grammy nominations – Minaj was upset that her own crossover hit was moved from the rap categories to the pop ones while Latto’s was allowed to stay. But it would be Latto’s Hot 100 top five hit “Big Energy” that scored a best melodic rap performance nomination, while “Super Freaky Girl” received none.

“Say So” collaborator Doja Cat protested the Grammy slight, but let 2022 show that Minaj can’t be phased. In separate features with Interview and i-D – conducted by actress Jada Pinkett Smith and City Girls’ JT, respectively – the year’s digital songs best-selling rap artist talked up her fifth solo album, teasing that her best work has yet to come. With her eyes on the future, Minaj’s year as a hip-hop luminary has positioned the artist back at the top of her game.

When the 2023 Grammy Award nominations were announced in mid-November, the Big Four categories included a slew of household names: Beyoncé, Adele, Harry Styles, Taylor Swift, Kendrick Lamar, Bad Bunny, Doja Cat, Lizzo. None of them were surprises. The Grammy noms were star-studded to reflect the past year in popular music: Following a pandemic-stricken period in which pop’s upper tier mostly held off on releasing new projects, 2022 was dominated by the A-listers, many of whom made good on the commercial promise of their returns and added new hits to their impressive résumés.

“We’ve had almost every global superstar release music within a 12- to 18-month span,” says Joe Hadley, Spotify global head of artist partnerships and audience. Some of that overabundance of big names can surely be chalked up to coincidence: Artists like Adele, Beyoncé and Lamar had been dormant as recording artists for over five years before finally having new albums ready within an eight-month span, for instance. Yet their respective returns were combined with prolific artists like Swift, Drake, Doja Cat and Jack Harlow releasing new material this year after an active 2021; bankable names like Styles, Bad Bunny, BTS, Lady Gaga and The Weeknd headlining a crowded touring field; and reliable hit-makers like Lizzo, Post Malone, Sam Smith and Nicki Minaj collecting more top 10 Billboard Hot 100 hits, making 2022 feel like a nonstop star parade.

“Anytime we have superstars putting out music, it’s good for the fans, for radio, for streaming,” says Mark Medina, program director for WHTZ (Z100) New York. (Indeed, recorded-music revenue in the United States grew 9% in the first half of 2022 compared with the same period in 2021, according to the RIAA.) Most of the major projects were spaced out across the calendar year, from Adele’s 30 last November to Styles’ Harry’s House in May to Swift’s Midnights in October, which gave each artist ample room to dominate listener attention and the cultural conversation. Even when their hits competed on the Billboard charts, streaming playlists and radio, as Medina says, “The more the merrier. You could never have too much good music from megastars, and we’ll always find a way to make that work.”

Part of the reason why pop music was so top-heavy this year is simple: The biggest artists delivered hits that matched their statures. Adele is no stranger to the peak of the Hot 100, but by spending 10 nonconsecutive weeks at No. 1, “Easy on Me” matched the longest chart reign of her career. Later, Beyoncé scored her first solo Hot 100 chart-topper in 14 years when “Break My Soul” powered to No. 1 upon the July release of Renaissance. And after folk-leaning singles like “Cardigan” and “Willow” summited the Hot 100 in 2020, Swift returned with the ultra-catchy “Anti-Hero,” which has spent its first six weeks at No. 1 and, Medina says, has “big, big mass appeal” at pop radio.

Meanwhile, Styles and Bad Bunny scored the biggest years of their respective careers thanks to chart-topping albums, multiple top 10 hits and mega-selling tours. For Styles, whose 2019 album, Fine Line, unlocked his potential at pop radio, “As It Was” spending a whopping 15 weeks at No. 1 — the longest leader by a solo artist in Hot 100 history — demonstrated just how inescapable the former One Direction member has become on his own. “With Harry, it all rolled out together: He had this career growth from album to album, a great pop record, streaming and research [numbers], celebrity,” says Medina. “Everything was there.”

And just as Styles’ studio output fueled 15-night residencies at venues like New York’s Madison Square Garden and Inglewood, Calif.’s Kia Forum, Bad Bunny’s massive Un Verano Sin Ti album — which has spent 12 nonconsecutive weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 this year, the most of any project — helped the Puerto Rican star graduate from arenas to stadiums. He finished 2022 as the year’s top touring act, crushing his own record for highest-grossing Latin tour in Billboard Boxscore history as his World’s Hottest Tour grossed $373.5 million from 1.8 million tickets across 65 shows. “Bad Bunny absolutely leveled up on the road in a way that was pretty unique,” says Jesse Lawrence, founder and president of TicketIQ.

The end of 2022 doesn’t necessarily mean that pop’s biggest superstars are about to go into hibernation, though: With stadium tours from Swift, Bruce Springsteen, P!nk and Ed Sheeran on the books for next year, Lawrence believes that 2023 will be more significant for top-level tours than 2022 has been. “This time last year, there was still uncertainty about the pandemic dragging on into 2022, and there was too much risk for some of the megatours, which we’ll see in 2023,” says Lawrence. Plus, there’s one superstar whom Medina is “most interested in watching, as a fan and as a programmer,” for a potentially massive 2023: Rihanna, who will headline the Super Bowl halftime show in February and hopefully follow up the Black Panther: Wakanda Forever No. 2 single “Lift Me Up” with more new music.

Even if 2023 isn’t quite as jam-packed with new releases from A-listers, Hadley believes that some of the budding stars who broke through in 2022, including Steve Lacy and Zach Bryan — both of whom also recently scored Grammy noms — are poised to join that upper-class conversation. “I’m [always] thinking about superstar releases,” he says, “but I also think it’s a really exciting time for the next generation of superstars.” 

This story originally appeared in the Dec. 10, 2022, issue of Billboard.

Taylor Swift gave some Swifties an early Christmas present on Monday morning (Dec. 12) when some fans who signed up for the Verified Fan presale for her Eras Tour last month who were unable to land tickets were notified that they were getting a second chance. An unknown number of fans who signed up for the Ticketmaster Verified Fan pre-sale who were locked out when shows went on sale last month due to a crush of demand were notified that they will have an opportunity to participate in an upcoming sale.

Taylor Swift Fans Sue Ticketmaster Over Tour Presale Debacle: ‘Massive Disaster’

12/12/2022

“Congratulations, you have been selected to participate in a limited-time opportunity to request to purchase 2 tickets to Taylor Swift The Eras Tour,’ read the note. “You were selected for this opportunity because you have been identified as a fan who received a boost during the Verified Fan presale but did not purchase tickets,” the note continued. “We apologized for the difficulties you may have experienced, and have been asked by Taylor’s team to create this additional opportunity for you to purchase tickets.”

The note says that the ticket purchasing window will begin sometime before Dec. 23, with invitations issued on a staggered basis by tour date in each city. Fans will get additional information and instructions on how to submit their request at an as-yet-unannounced future date.

Last month, Ticketmaster issued a formal apology to Swifties after the chaotic sales process for her 2023 Eras Tour left many on the outside looking in. “We want to apologize to Taylor and all of her fans — especially those who had a terrible experience trying to purchase tickets,” Ticketmaster tweeted on Nov. 18. “We feel we owe it to everyone to share some information to help explain what happened.”

The debacle stemmed from the crush of fans trying to enter Swift’s presale for her 52-date Eras Tour, which initially caused the system to crash shortly after launch as 14 million fans and billions of bots flooded the site, causing service disruptions. Ticketmaster noted that more than 3.5 million fans pre-registered for Swift’s Verified Fan program, with 90% of the ticket inventory vanishing in the first two days of the pre-sale. The botched sale has since sparked interest from a number of lawmakers in Washington and across the country interested in probing whether Ticketmaster and parent company Live Nation have abused their huge market share in the live music industry.

A spokesperson for Ticketmaster had not returned Billboard‘s request for additional information on the Verified Fan ticket release at press time; a spokesperson for Swift had not official comment.