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While Lil Nas X‘s new music feed has gone somewhat dark over the last few months, the singer is back with a promise — there will be “Light Again.” In a post to his social media accounts on Tuesday (Nov. 12), Lil Nas announced that he would at last be officially releasing his next single […]

It’s been almost 11 months since Lil Nas X boldly declared that “b—h I’m back like J Christ.” Now, the singer promises, he’s actually back for good. In a video posted to his X account on Sunday night (Nov. 10), the rapper revealed that “phase 1” of his new era begins on Monday (Nov. 11). […]

After the 2024 presidential race was called for Donald Trump on Wednesday (Nov. 6), plenty of people flocked to social media looking for catharsis. One such person was singer-songwriter Maren Morris, who decided to give those people something to listen to. In a post to her Instagram Stories on Wednesday night, the “Push Me Over” […]

In the wake of Donald Trump’s stunning win in the 2024 presidential election, singer-songwriter Ethel Cain is letting out her rage. 
In a post to her Tumblr on Wednesday (Nov. 6), the “American Teenager” singer laid into the American political system, decrying the methods by which members of the electorate are turned against one another. “The problem is that America has beaten down its people for decades and gotten them weak and desperate and now promises a way out, a way to transcend and rise above, through selling out their fellow man,” she wrote. “An embarrassingly large chunk of white men are just straight up nazis these days as a way to dissociate from the rest of the carnage around them, even if they’re broke and uneducated and from an impoverished background themselves.” 

Cain, who has been a vocal critic of both the Republican and Democratic tickets in the 2024 election, went on to say that modern political discourse has made everyone “so incredibly hateful,” and warned that the president-elect was far from the only issue in our current system. 

“It’s not even about Trump at this point. He’s gonna get in office and do whatever he does and it’s gonna be a mess but whatever. This is indicative of deeper problem,” she wrote. “There is no solidarity and there is no love. Trump being in office or not doesn’t change the fact that America is a breeding ground for violent hatred … if anything COULD be done about it, Trump certainly wouldn’t do it. Honestly, Kamala probably wouldn’t have either. We are so deeply f–ked.”

The singer went on to deliver a direct message to any Trump supporters reading her post: “If you voted for Trump, I hope that peace never finds you. Instead, I hope clarity strikes you someday like a clap of lightning and you have to live the rest of your life with the knowledge and guilt of what you’ve done and who you are as a person,” she wrote.

As for the rest of her followers, Cain said that since “we can’t count on the government,” it would come down to them. “Just keep up the good fight in your own personal lives,” she wrote. “That’s literally the only thing to be done at this point. Stay safe out there. Maybe buy a gun.” 

Cain joins a rising chorus of voices reacting negatively to Trump’s re-election. Cardi B wrote “I hate y’all so bad” after the race was called for the Republican nominee, while Billie Eilish said that his win represented “a war on women.” 

All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.
Betty Who is turning her uplifting ’80s infused pop music into the ultimate beauty tool through a new campaign with e.l.f. Cosmetics. The two teamed up to release a Get Ready With Me album featuring a mix of artists including Who that promises to only bring inspiring vibes as you complete your going out makeup looks — and the 33-year-old opened up about her makeup secrets.

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Her single off the album titled “Wings” doesn’t just aim to help you bring out your “inner light,” but acts as a bridge between beauty and music. The “Somebody Loves You” singer can relate to the messaging herself especially when reflecting on early in her career; when she while exploring stage makeup and discovering what techniques stuck with her the most.

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“A winged eyeliner was the only thing I knew how to do, really, that seemed impressive to me at the time” she says in an interview with Billboard.

Her eyeliner of choice? E.l.f.’s H20 Proof Eyeliner Pen, which is under $15 and features a precision felt tip to easily go from thin to thick lines.

Amazon

e.l.f. H2O Proof Eyeliner Pen

As you craft your wing or simple line across the lid, the eyeliner’s formula is quick-drying to avoid any smudging. Plus, its vitamin-infused ingredients will help nourish your lash line for practically all-day wear.

While there are many eyeliner techniques that claim to be the best, for the star, the secret to crafting the perfect winged eyeliner is knowing your eye shape.

“Whether it’s like my eyes are hooded, so it will look different on my eye than it will on my best friends,” she says. “And I think that it’s such a fun way to experiment and explore your self-expression through makeup. My individual wing is something that I’m always experimenting with and trying to get closer and closer to being the perfect eyeliner.”

It’s not just the skills she looked to hone in on though, the “Ignore Me” singer’s relationship with makeup has evolved over time shifting from a tool she relied on the daily, to a form of art that she uses to emphasize her natural beauty.

“I don’t have to put on a huge eyelash to feel like I’m allowed to be out in the world,” she says. “Instead of trying to change who you are, it’s about trying to accentuate who you are and it took me a little while to figure that out.”

Keep reading to shop some of her favorite makeup in addition to her holiday gifting picks.

Amazon

e.l.f. Glow Reviver Lip Oil

Right now, the makeup product that Who is “obsessed” with happens to be the brand’s viral lip oil. Not only has it been considered a dupe for Dior’s popular lip oil, but comes with a nourishing formula that helps hydrate lips while providing a hint of color. For the singer especially, she finds it enhances her makeup saying she finds it brings “everything else to life.”

“That’s one of my favorite products to use on stage and just in life in general,” she says. “I think I have six of them now, and there’s one in every bag that I own just waiting for me to take out into the world.”

And when she’s performing on stage, Who has been experimenting with e.l.f.’s Power Grip Prime, which she claims is the primer “meant to keep everything on your face.”

“No matter what, I’m a sweaty little girl, I’ll tell you what,” she explains. “Because we dance so much, I often feel like I come off stage and I’ve done my best to keep [makeup] on my face. But if both my eyelashes are hanging on, I am very, very happy.”

Amazon

e.l.f. Power Grip Primer

The formula has gone viral for its long-lasting capabilities with more than 30,000 Amazon shoppers having purchased the primer this month. Using a gel-based formula, it aims to go on clear without clogging pores making it a universal shade to prep your skin with.

While the above makeup products make ideal celeb-approved beauty tools, Who also dropped a couple of gift picks for anyone looking to pick up a Betty Who-approved gift for the fan in your life.

Amazon

ETSPIL Embroidery Kit for Beginners (3-Pack)

One of the singer’s best gifts she’s ever surprised someone with was handmade cross-stitched picture from her and her best friend’s favorite movie The Swan Princess.“That was one of my favorite gifts I’ve ever given because it took me so long, and it ended up being really cute,” she tells.If you’re new to the craft, this embroidery kit comes with three different pieces that you can cross-stitch a picture onto as well as all the possible tools you’ll need. Included are different sized needles, thread and a stitch ripper in addition to step-by-step instructions.

Amazon

Hyperice Normatec 3 Compression Boots

The songwriter still treasures a pair of compression boots that her husband got her during her time as Persephone in the broadway musical Hadestown. If you’re looking to splurge on the performer or athlete in your life, these compression boots will help stimulate bloodflow through massage. You can choose from seven different levels depending on your needs while the zip closure makes it easier to get in and out of.

“It has changed my life,” she says. “I wear them all the time, so that was one of the best [gifts] I’ve ever gotten. I was like, this is exactly what I need right now.”

For more product recommendations, check out ShopBillboard‘s roundups of the best gifts for musicians, gifts for singers and music lover gifts.

Election Day is less than a week away, and viral comedian Randy Rainbow is making one last pitch against former president Donald Trump in his latest parody video.
On Tuesday (Oct. 29), Rainbow sat down for one more fake interview with the twice-impeached former president, checking in on him as the businessman-turned-politican heads into the final stretch of his campaign (“You look like s–t, how are you feeling?” Rainbow asked with a smile), before wondering aloud why the polls were so close. “I can’t sleep nights,” Rainbow declared. “I keep imagining the dark, hate-filled, Orwellian, deep-fried, comb-over, fever dream hellscape this country will become if your crazy a– wins!”

With the premise set, Rainbow launched into his latest parody track, “Magadu.” Lifting the melody of Olivia Newton-John and the Electric Light Orchestra’s 1980 hit “Xanadu” from the film of the same name, Rainbow immediately takes the song’s premise of a mythical, heavenly place in the track’s title and flips it on its head.

“A place where nobody wants to go/ A country so lame and low/ They call it Magadu,” he sings. “But if you vote for this bag of d–ks/ As soon as Nov. 6/ We’ll be in Magadu!”

As Rainbow speculated about the “dark dystopia of absurd extremes” that would occur under a second Trump presidency, the singer made sure to point to Project 2025, the much-discussed 900-page document outlining a plan for Trump to consolidate power in his second presidency and help impose ultra-conservative policies around the country.

“In the year of Project 2025/ Those creeps gonna kick their creepy plans into overdrive/ No more protections or kindness or joy/ And guess who’s gonna be their poster boy?” Rainbow sings on the bridge. “When Planet Earth dries up and demagogues thrive/ No education and nobody’s free/ They’re gonna set us back a century.”

Closing out his song, Rainbow made his choice in the 2024 election clear as a clip of Vice President Kamala Harris saying “we will not go back” played alongside his final plea: “Let’s no go there, there’s no clean air/ Don’t wanna go, girl, just say no to Magadu!”

Watch the full video above.

As we head into the Halloweekend, amp up your spooky playlists with these tracks from your favorite queer artists. Billboard Pride is proud to present the latest edition of Queer Jams of the Week, our roundup of some of the best new music releases from LGBTQ artists.

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From Lady Gaga’s sickening return to Halsey’s persona-shifting album, check out just a few of our favorite releases from this week below:

Lady Gaga, “Disease”

For anyone who’s been hoping for Gaga to return to her Fame Monster era sound, let “Disease” serve as a reward. The pounding new dark-pop single sees Gaga reaching back into her early career to recapture the glory of her twisted pop origins. With some chopped-and-screwed pop production courtesy of Andrew Watt and Cirkut, as well as some top-tier vocals from Gaga herself, “Disease” is the exact kind of brooding pop creation that will fuel your Halloween celebrations for the next week.

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Halsey, The Great Impersonator

There’s no doubt that Halsey has been through quite a lot over the course of the last few years. On The Great Impersonator, she tries to put all of that into an emotional context for her listeners, all while paying tribute to the icons that helped make her the artist that she is today. Whether she’s singing about helping her lover deal with their own pain (“Panic Attack”) or struggling through a diagnosis that nearly killed her (“Life of a Spider”), the singer pours every ounce of emotionally resonant songwriting that she can fit into this constantly-shifting LP.

Gigi Perez, “Fable”

Following up on the success of her queer love anthem “Sailor Song,” Gigi Perez is taking her moment in the spotlight to honor her late sister. On “Fable,” the singer-songwriter examines her own grief and its impact on her spirituality, as her plaintive voice pierces through the gentle strums of her acoustic guitar. “So share me your plan/ If I implore you, could I be your lamb?” she asks near the song’s end. “I look for the truth in the back of your hand/ And I look into the open sky.”

Soccer Mommy, Evergreen

Even when you’re going through a hard time, Soccer Mommy’s Sophie Allison wants to make sure you know that finding peace is Evergreen. Throughout her stunning new album, the singer-songwriter shares some of her most raw, honest lyrics to date, all over a bed of lush, gorgeous indie rock melodies. Even when the subject matter gets dark, Allison makes sure to provide plenty of light at the end of the tunnel, making Evergreen a must-listen this fall.

Katie Gavin, What a Relief

On What a Relief, MUNA lead singer Katie Gavin flexes her own particular brand of singer-songwriter mastery. The perfectly-curated album sees the artist leaning into specificity, singing about emotional unavailability (“Inconsolable”), feeling like you’re not fulfilling your partner (“As Good As It Gets” featuring Mitski), and even the cycles of motherhood (“The Baton”). She does it all with a razor-sharp ear for sound and lyricism, putting What a Relief above even some of its loftier expectations.

Corook, “Crumbs”

For all of their charming-and-quirky tracks about fearing snakes and life as a fish, singer-songwriter Corook has scores of songs underlining their own insecurities. “Crumbs,” the latest off the singer’s forthcoming album, very much falls into the latter camp as Corook unpacks a lifetime of self-criticism, and returns to its source. With crystal-clear vocals and emotionally engaged lyrics, “Crumbs” will have you reaching for the tissues within moments.

Sade, “Young Lion”

What makes Sade’s first song in six years so remarkable is more than the singer’s inimitable voice — it’s her emotionally raw songwriting. Sung directly to her trans son Izaak, Sade’s “Young Lion” serves primarily as an apology from a mother who wishes she had seen the struggle her child was going through sooner, as she sings over a stunning chorus that her baby will “shine like a sun,” regardless how the world perceives him.

Check out all of our picks on Billboard’s Queer Jams of the Week playlist below:

It’s been six years since soul-pop icon Sade released her last single — and now that she’s back, she has plenty to say.
On Friday (Oct. 25), the Red Hot Organization dropped an EP titled Transa: Selects, a collection of songs off of the non-profit’s upcoming compilation album, Transa, intended to bring awareness and understanding from the public at large to the transgender community. The first song on Friday’s EP is Sade’s “Young Lion,” a tender apology to her trans son, Izaak Adu.

Over a fluid, moving string section, Sade sings directly to Izaak, expressing regret for her lack of understanding throughout his life. “You must have felt so alone/ The anguish and pain/ I should’ve known,” she sings on the powerful opening verse. “With such a heavy burden/ You had to carry all on your own/ Forgive me, son/ I should’ve known.”

While Sade lets her words speak for herself on the album, her son Izaak shared his thoughts on the touching track in an interview with Rolling Stone. “Though there was nothing I needed to forgive her for, the lyrics ‘Forgive me, son, I should have known,’ struck a chord,” he said. “My mum never tried to oppress the boy; I silently always knew I was. She always let me be me.”

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The remainder of Transa, due out on Nov. 22, features more than 100 artists creating over 3 hours of music in an eight-chapter project, all dedicated to the multifaceted trans experience in the world today. With artists including Sam Smith, Beverly Glenn-Copeland, Andre 3000, Jeff Tweedy and plenty creating music for the project, Transa aims to get audiences to think critically about the way we treat transgender people in order to help create “a future oriented around values of community, collaboration, care and healing,” as Dust Reid, the album’s co-creator, said in a statement.

Listen to Sade’s “Young Lion” below:

When Katie Gavin announced that she would be releasing a solo project, she expected the backlash to be worse. Seated in the living room of her grandmother’s house on a September afternoon, the 31-year-old singer chuckles nervously as she looks back at the announcement. “I thought they might get mad at me,” she says of her fans.
As one-third of the self-described “greatest band in the world” MUNA, it makes sense that Gavin would be nervous. Over the course of the last decade, she and her friends Naomi McPherson and Josette Maskin have built the kind of impassioned fan base that most indie acts only dream of. Between sold out shows at iconic venues like Los Angeles’ Greek Theater and headlining slots at beloved alt-rock festival All Things Go, MUNA has grown to fit the legend its members created around it — meaning any perceived threat to its existence could be met with vocal opposition.

With the benefit of hindsight, Gavin says that fear is a nice problem to have. “It’s a good thing, ultimately, to have a project where people are invested in what you’re going to create next,” she says.

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That anger from her fans never quite materialized — in fact, they overwhelmingly expressed enthusiasm for What a Relief, Gavin’s debut solo LP due out Friday (Oct. 25) via Saddest Factory. Described by Gavin as “Lilith Fair-core,” the album is interested less the genres of its songs, and more in their emotional lyrics — tracks charting the cyclical concept of motherhood (“The Baton”), emotionally inauthentic romance (“Sanitized”) and the grief of losing a pet (“Sweet Abby Girl”) all bear Gavin’s stamp of remarkably poetic-yet-lucid songwriting.

As MUNA’s in-house lyricist, Gavin found herself in 2019 with a backlog of what she refers to as “MUNA castoffs” — songs she wrote and presented to her bandmates, but that ultimately didn’t fit within the trio’s creative vision for themselves. “There is a tonal difference that speaks to the scale of things — MUNA has become so ambitious, so the songs have to be scalable to a certain size,” she explains. “A lot of these songs feel like they live in a much smaller world.”

But when she shared a selection of those songs with her friends Eric Radloff (known on-stage as Okudaxij) and Scott Heiner (MUNA’s original drummer), they both told her how much they loved them. “They were the first fans of this solo project,” she says. “I wasn’t really thinking about doing anything with them until that started happening, where I started to realize, ‘Oh, there’s enough of these songs that it’s become something else.’”

Radloff invited Gavin to play a “secret set” at a February 2020 show of his, allowing her the space to learn “what it would feel like to play these songs as just me,” she recalls. By the time she was done, she knew that she had something special. When COVID-19 shut the world down the following month, Gavin got to work with Radloff and Heiner arranging the songs for a potential solo release.

The spirit of sharing songs she wrote with her friends suffuses the finished product of What a Relief, making the case for Gavin as one of the most talented songwriters working today. It’s a strong case to be made — outside of writing all of MUNA’s songs, Gavin has garnered a number of co-writes with artists like Maren Morris and The Japanese House, which she says has only contributed to a “shift in my confidence” that allowed her solo LP to exist.

“One of the things that’s interesting about co-writing is, if I’m in a room with someone else, I naturally attune more to what they want. I can lose my own sense of what I want,” she says. “I have had to both develop that and try to practice that, while also simultaneously accept who I am and be honest about it when I’m working so that I can navigate and find a way that works for me. It’s kind of about self-advocacy.”

Part of that practice means knowing when she is not the best fit for a job — when it came to fine tuning the sound of her album, Gavin says that she offered her input, but gave producer Tony Berg and his team of engineers and mixers like Will Maclellan the space they needed to make What a Relief soar. “I wish that this wasn’t true, but my instinct was to say that I am a pillow princess in the studio — I don’t care what microphone we use, I just want to be able to tell you if I like it!” she exclaims. “I think part of getting older and developing as a creative is understanding delegation, and not trying to be in control of something if that’s not your passion.”

While the project spans a wide variety of genres, Gavin acknowledges that much of the record settles somewhere within the range of folk music, in the vein of her heroes like Joni Mitchell, the Indigo Girls and Tracy Chapman. Violins, mandolins and guitars pepper the album’s various backdrops, as Gavin sings directly to the human condition of looking to change. As she says: “I’m gonna fiddle.”

One of the album’s most beloved singles, “Inconsolable,” even dips into bluegrass, featuring the vocals of Sean and Sara Watkins of string-band Nickel Creek. But Gavin reveals that, had it not been for her friend and label boss Phoebe Bridgers, the song may not have existed in its current form.

“We had kind of done this, like, Ben Folds, Regina Spektor-esque piano version of it, and it just wasn’t hitting the same way. We only had a few days left in the studio, and Phoebe was like, ‘I liked it when it was bluegrass,’” she says. Once they had the Sean and Sara in the room, the song finally clicked. “We ended up recording the song in about 10 minutes, I think we did a total of two takes.”

The song doesn’t come as a complete shift for fans of MUNA — on 2022’s affirming anthem “Kind of Girl,” the pop trio leaned into the stylings of country ballads to better convey the emotional heart of the song. But Gavin explains that there is a potent lyrical difference between a song like “Kind of Girl” and one like “Inconsolable.” “It sounds weird — I think there is this difference between singing ‘work in the garden’ (on ‘Kind of Girl’) and singing ‘baby lizards’ (on ‘Inconsolable’),” she quips.

Early in the process of creating her album, Gavin went to McPherson and Maskin, telling them that she wanted to release the LP as a solo project. Despite some jokes shared on an episode of their podcast Gayotic (“What was the reason you wanted to do this without Naomi and I?” Maskin pointedly asked), both of Gavin’s bandmates supported the idea, with Maskin even playing a series of backing instruments on the final version of the album.

“I’m so grateful that they’ve been super, super supportive,” Gavin beams. “The only thing that they’ve ever expressed concern about is my own workaholism, because this just means that I took on a second job — they would both check in, like, ‘Cool, are you okay?’”

The individual band members’ work ethic, though, is what has helped MUNA become a cult favorite in pop spaces. With the trio’s oft-cited status as the leading “queer heroes” of pop music, Gavin has noticed the outsized rise of queer artists over the last year, with pop stars like Chappell Roan, Reneé Rapp and others breaking through to mainstream audiences in a way that once felt impossible.

“It makes me really emotional, I see these young people that are coming up as actual superheroes,” Gavin says. The singer is hesitant to take too much credit for the current state of queerness in pop music (“There’s a loud voice in my head saying, ‘This would have happened regardless, b—h,’” she laughs). But she eventually admits that she is watching, in real time, as she and her two best friends at least help in making lasting change.

“If you keep your head down and work and believe that what you’re doing with your friends is cool, you can eventually, in ten years, shift f–king culture,” she says. “It’s wild how far your impact can go if you’re consistently trying to ground [yourself] in the world that you want to be in.”

But there are aspects of the current ascent of LGBTQ+ artists that Gavin is wary about — especially when it comes to how non-straight and non-cisgender identities are already being viewed as trends for the music industry to capitalize on.

“That’s how the current stage of capitalism that we are in functions,” she says with a sigh. “Every time the structure realizes that it can profit off of a new identity, there is a choice presented to people of that identity — do I want to assimilate and take on those privileges?”

Gavin validates many artists’ choice to accept those benefits — after all, “everyone’s in such desperate financial situations that it makes sense.” But she makes it clear, when it comes to both MUNA and her solo career, that she’s more interested in building a sustainable future for herself and artists like her.

“There are so many people that I see as siblings in my community who are not safe in this moment, and I want to be with them. I don’t want to be with the straights,” she says. “So we’re going to continue pushing the envelope and making it clear that we’re not happy to be ‘part of the club.’”

For fans hoping to see Shakira “Whenever, Wherever” they can, the Queen of Latin Music has some good news.
On Monday (Oct. 21), InterPride and the Capital Pride Alliance announced that Shakira would serve as the official headliner for WorldPride 2025. Taking place in Washington, D.C., the official Welcome Concert for the annual festival will take over the city’s Nationals Park on Saturday, May 31.

The headlining concert comes as a part of Shakira’s upcoming Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour. After initially intending to bring her shows to arenas around the globe, the singer and Live Nation recently announced that they would be upgrading the She Wolf’s tour to stadium venues. “The demand for tickets and more shows has reached the point that our tour now requires stadiums in the USA and more dates so I can see as many of you as possible,” Shakira wrote in a statement. “We’re elevating my North America run from arenas to stadiums and the dates will be shifted to May 2025, right after my Latin American tour.”

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Among the new set of stadium dates Shakira announced on Monday is her headlining set for WorldPride 2025. In a statement, Capital Pride Alliance’s executive director Ryan Bos shared his excitement for the upcoming show. “It’s the biggest event of the year and we are thrilled to welcome Colombian pop legend Shakira to D.C. for a truly momentous evening of love, pride, and community – celebrating the final week of extraordinary celebrations,” he wrote.

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Held in different locales each year, WorldPride 2025 will help honor the 50th anniversary of D.C.’s first-ever pride celebrations. Taking place over two weeks (starting on May 23 and ending June 8), the annual celebration will feature multiple concerts, parades, parties and other events to commemorate the occasion.

Tickets for Shakira’s headlining performance at WorldPride 2025, along with the rest of her Las Mujeres tour dates, go on sale Friday, Oct. 25, at 12 p.m. local time on her website. Fans can register for the presale until Tuesday, Oct. 22, at 11:59 p.m. ET.