rock music
With its first Latin Grammy nomination, the Mexican rock trio The Warning crowns 2024 as a great year after several proven achievements. The groupâs latest album, Keep Me Fed, consolidated the Villarreal VĂŠlez sisters on the international scene; in addition, it managed to debut on multiple Billboard charts, and embarked on an ambitious tour through Europe and the U.S.
Explore
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
Furthermore, Paulina Villarreal received the Drumeo Award for the best rock drummer, at only 22 years old.
âThese achievements are the reaffirmation that as a Mexican I can also make a rock band and I can take it internationally,â Paulina says excitedly to Billboard EspaĂąol. âIt doesnât have to stay only in my country, only in my community; I can explore new facets, meet new people, and I can have an international career. And for us to have achieved this, sometimes we donât believe it!
Trending on Billboard
Their first Latin Grammy nomination, in the category of best rock song for the single âQuĂŠ MĂĄs Quieresâ, represents a significant achievement in the history of the group â- also made up of vocalist and guitarist Daniela Villarreal and bassist Alejandra Villarreal â as it symbolizes the pride of singing in Spanish, their native language.
The Warningâs repertoire is mostly in English, their second language, since the band is originally from Monterrey, a city bordering the U.S.
âSinging in Spanish has always been fundamental to our musical and personal identity, and this nomination celebrates our dedication to keeping that connection with our roots alive,â Daniela says.
âQuĂŠ MĂĄs Quieresâ was co-written by Anton Curtis Delost, Far and Crosses guitarist Shaun LĂłpez, Kathryn Ostenberg, MĂłnica VĂŠlez and The Warning. In it, the band captures the strength and energy that characterizes it.
The single is included on Keep Me Fed, The Warningâs fourth full-length album, recorded in Monterrey and released at the end of last June. In the words of the bandâs vocalist: âIt is the result of our rawest emotions and the most meaningful connections with the people we have met and worked with in recent years.â
With Keep Me Fed, The Warning has established itself on the international rock scene, debuting on a variety of Billboard charts, including No. 1 on Emerging Artists, No. 2 on Top Rock Albums, No. 4 on Top Hard Rock Albums and No. 6 on Top Album Sales. On sharing a rock band as sisters, Daniela says that it has been a pleasant experience, with many funny and enjoyable moments.
âObviously sometimes we argue, but we work very well together,â she says. âWe started music from a very young age, so we grew up with a mentality of taking care of ourselves and knowing how to work together for the goals that we want to achieve for all of us. We are very attentive to taking care of ourselves and our feelings.â
Recently, The Warning performed in October at the 2024 Aftershock Festival in Sacramento, California, where the group shared the bill with icons from the metal scene such as Iron Maiden, Pantera, Slipknot and Mastodon. They also opened shows for Evanescence in Canada.
In Mexico, tickets for their Feb. 6 and 11, 2025 shows at the capitalâs Auditorio Nacional sold out in 48 hours. They will also perform on Feb. 13 at the Telmex Auditorium in Guadalajara, and on Feb. 22 in Monterrey, at the Citibanamex Auditorium.
Travis Scott, Drake, Lizzo⌠and Jean Dawson. The list of artists that R&B superstar SZA has collaborated with in 2023 is stacked with some of the music industryâs biggest names, but a Gen Z genre-non-conforming auteur from San Diego gifted the âKill Billâ singer her most poignant duet of the year just in time for fall (Sept. 22).
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
âNO SZNS,â a breezy reflection on the all-consuming stupor of California heat, combines both artistsâ penchant for introspective songwriting, unflinching examinations of the most incomprehensible of human emotions, and instrumental arrangements that pull from indie rock as readily as they pull from hip-hop and soul. Its music video, a cinematic take on childhood laced with arguments and discord, finds Dawson stepping behind the camera, bringing SZA into his intimate and idiosyncratic visual world.
The new track follows a slew of projects (âside quests,â as Dawson describes them) that are filling the void between 2022âs Chaos Now* â a grungy, ambitious set that featured collaborations with Earl Sweatshirt and production contributions from Isaiah Rashad â and the Mexican-American artistâs forthcoming LP. While he is still unsure of the timeline for his next studio effort, Dawson is certain the album will be âbeautiful,â mostly because he has completely rejected the compartmentalization circus that has consumed much of the music business.
âI want to build music without having to focus on everything that I am,â he says. âI want to fractalize myself.â
In paying special care to each facet of his being that makes him an artist who has enraptured a sprawling ever-growing audience across races, ages, and genres, Dawson continues to follow Princeâs uncompromising, do-it-himself blueprint. Whether itâs incorporating his native Spanish tongue into his music at his own pace or touring alongside acts as disparate as Interpol and Lil Yachty, Jean Dawson is currently undergoing yet another metamorphosis â and heâs particularly excited about what lies ahead and how he can continue to subvert everyoneâs expectations. âI want you to guess,â he teases.
In an intimate conversation with Billboard, Jean Dawson opens up about his upcoming European headlining tour, his thoughts on the utility of record labels, trying to figure out âwhat James Blake would sound like if he was Mexicanâ with his upcoming project, nostalgia and iPad kids.
[embedded content]
Walk me through how âNo SZNSâ (with SZA) came to be.Â
In the DMs. Thatâs how we started talking. She liked the music a whole lot. I think it was maybe a day after she had DMed me â she was working on her album [SOS] at the time â we hung out for several hours and just talked. It was sick. I didnât realize how alike we were in a lot of different ways, and we worked on some other stuff.Â
[âNo SZNSâ] I had been working on prior, just like arrangements and stuff like that. Thereâs a lot of instrumentation on it, so I think I hit a wall at some point with the song â and then I met SZA. I was like, âOh, maybe she can finish my sentence.â I showed it to her, and she was like, âYeah, Iâm super down. This is awesome!â So, she wrote her verse, recorded it, and workshopped it for a little bit. Itâs not the most intense story of all time, but itâs definitely like, âYou had to be there.â
What was your favorite moment shooting the âNO SZNSâ music video?Â
My favorite moment in that video had to be when the two parents were arguing. In the video, SZAâs played by a little girl named Bliss, and Iâm played by a little boy named Brave â thatâs their actual government names. Theyâre sitting and coloring and their parents are behind them arguing. Like many peopleâs childhoods, my childhood was a lot like that. [I went to] the two actors that we had hired and talked to them about their intentionality, how theyâre arguing, and what they should argue about. It was really real. Theyâre arguing about the father needing to be there, and the momâs, like, âI just need you here.â And the dadâs like, âIâm working, Iâm here. Iâm here right now, but I need to work to provide.âÂ
I almost cried. I was like Oh, sât. It got too real for me. Bliss and Braveâs mom and dad are our family friends, so theyâre sitting by, and Iâm just watching [the kids] be like, Damn, our parents are not like that. That made me really happy. That was one of my favorite moments of shooting it and as being a director on that.Â
SZA is far from your first high-profile collaborator. How important is it for you to truly understand and know your collaborators on a personal level?Â
I never collaborate with somebody I donât know. I have a rule of thumb in music. Thereâs a lot of people that come from a lot of different traumas and environmental factors that cause them to be a certain kind of way. Sometimes, you get people that have been treated like sât their entire life, and now theyâre in a position of power, so they get their lick back on people who donât necessarily need it. Sometimes, Iâll look at artists and be like, âDamn, I really donât like you. I like the music, but I really donât like you.âÂ
So, spending time with SZA only verified that I was a fan of her as a human being. And the same thing goes for anybody that I work with. I have the capacity to live on my own terms, so I just donât spend time in places I donât want to be in. If I already like spending time with you, then making music will probably be automatic. Itâs like breathing, you donât even have to think about it.Â
But thereâs a lot of times where itâs not bad where Iâm just like, âYouâre cool to me, I never have to see you again.â SZA was not one of those people.Â
Her career arc has been incredible to watch. Do you want something like that for your career? Or are there bits of it that youâd like to make fit your vision for yourself?Â
Itâs funny because a lot of people that have worked around us say our arcs are similar. I donât necessarily look at peopleâs success rate in terms of how popular they are, I look at how great they are because that will stand the test of time. Mad people get popular for a little bit of time, theyâre here and then theyâre gone. Iâve made it very, very clear to myself that having a job in music is the only thing I want to live for â so Iâve been doing it for 13 years, and now Iâm getting considered to be a ânew artist,â which is totally fine with me. That just means that my legs are very long.Â
I got asked yesterday, âHow do you feel about possibly becoming very, very famous?â And I donât feel anything about it â as much as it sounds like a cool answer. Me being dismissive isnât something for aesthetic. As long as I can make music for the rest of my life, Iâm not really worried about much. I think that [SZAâs] getting the praises she deserves â and sheâs been deserving of for a long time â and Iâm just happy to stand with somebody that believes in me so much. Sheâs definitely stuck her neck out very, very long for me. If I have the success of SZA, awesome. If I have the success of somebody you never know, awesome too. Itâs one and the same for me.Â
On your Wikipedia page, they describe you as an âexperimental popâ artist. What do you make of that phrase?Â
You know what? I donât mind. Experimental pop. I feel like that may be the closest thing to what I do. Me and DQ â my big sister, publicist â weâve talked about this for a long time. We talked about how people perceived me and she understands, and I understand, that I donât like being perceived. I donât like my music being perceived in any kind of way, but you can perceive me. I feel like âexperimental popâ is fine. I like hooks, and thatâs pop. I like songs that people want to sing. Â
The experimental part⌠I also donât want to be bound by any one construct. Early on I decided Iâm going to find all the rules and then pick ones not to follow. And thatâs kind of how I ended up making music in the first place. Thatâs why people were like, âBut itâs rock, but itâs not rock, but itâs this and itâs that.â One of my favorite artists, Prince âIâll never compare myself to that man, but what Prince was able to do was make music that was Prince: It wasnât necessarily rock or pop or R&B. It was Prince.Â
When people started trying to define me for the sake of utility, like, âOh, where do we place this?â â place it everywhere. Itâll work.Â
On the spectrum of visibility, thereâs a middle ground where people see one side of you, but not all of you. The concept of the multiplicity of the self⌠how does that inform the way you incorporate different languages in your music?Â
As a Black and Mexican person, Iâve learned my entire life how to code-switch, because some language is going to make some people uncomfortable. So, Iâm like, âOK, I canât go up to this white dude and be like, whatâs up, my nâa,â itâs not going to work. The reason why Iâll go from Spanish to English to quote-unquote Ebonics to whatever, itâs because the voice is an instrument. It just depends on what I need. Iâm not going to use an electric guitar for a part that needs an acoustic guitar, and Iâll rather use a, you know, a fâing baritone guitar. When I use my different languages, it makes it easier for me to understand myself because Iâm not just one thing. Â
Iâm trying to spend my time being more similar to everything than dissimilar. I think a lot of times creatives get in this place where theyâre like, âIâm so different,â and Iâm tired of being different. Not in the way that I want to assimilate to any idea â Iâm tired of being different because itâs not a choice. A lot of people spend their lives separating themselves, and I want to spend more of my life doing what I do in my music. Spanish and English go together because itâs one and the same. Some things I can say better in Spanish than I can in English and some things I can say better in English than I can in Spanish.Â
My dad was a thug, so a lot of my tongue comes from my father, and then my mother learned English through Black folk. Her English is also proper because Mexican people have the propensity to have to learn English a certain kind of way because they think that they have to. And here, especially when youâre first generation or second generation, you adhere to a status quo of language, or else youâre considered to be âcountryâ or something. And my mom could give two fâks, but she also was, like, âYâall going to read these books before you go to bed. A lot of them.âÂ
Yâall wasnât no iPad kids!Â
Bro, Iâm telling you! You seen iPad Dog?Â
What?!Â
Thereâs an iPad dog. Itâs fire. I played the game, and he jumps on the screen, and he taps the screen and sât.Â
This is not OK.Â
I try and spend less amount of time on technology as I possibly can and everybody said, âYou need to do this. You need to do that.â Iâm like, âYou know what? Iâm going to take a walk.â I feel like weâre just getting to that age, where weâre turning into old people â because remember how much we were outside?Â
Itâs impossible to talk about contemporary tech without also speaking about algorithms. Has the rise of algorithms in the music industry impacted your ability to create freely, either explicitly or subliminally? How does it impact the way you promote releasing and promoting your music?Â
In the â90s, people hated MTV, because if you didnât get on TV, you werenât going to go up. Same thing goes with even before that. In the â70s, â80s, if the disc jockey didnât fâk with you, you wasnât going nowhere. Youâre gonna end up another vinyl thatâs in the thrift store that people donât listen to.Â
Weâre in a time now where data collection is so important for people to optimize. Itâs all about optimization. That optimization has become so clear that you donât even have to pick your own music anymore. I think thereâs a lost love there. It can lead to you not having the sense of discovery. Â
When I was coming up, I would have to go on YouTube wormholes to try and find new stuff. Iâm like, âOh, thereâs this artist, and then thereâs this artist. Holy sât! What is this? This is crazy!â I think now itâs optimized to a point where so many of those steps are gone, which bottlenecks the industry. Thereâs, I donât know, 100,000 songs uploaded to Spotify and Apple Music daily. Thereâs only going to be a few that get past the threshold of playlisting to where more people will listen to them.Â
Since we have so many people making music, we have lottery winners, which Iâm never going to be mad at. We have people that win the TikTok lottery, or itâs like you had a single part of a song that people love, and itâs giving you a career hopefully. A lot of times, itâs probably a scary position, because you havenât built an infrastructure to support that growth â so youâre going to topple over and people are not going to know who you are in the next following year. I donât think thereâs a good or bad way to do it. I donât know if itâs necessarily going to decide sât for us. Itâll just make it easier for us not to have to ever make a decision.Â
Iâm pro-innovation, but Iâm also pro-tradition. If you want to go look for music and find a diamond in the rough, do that. I was 17 when I first got found on SoundCloud. I think whatâs conducive to me making music is Rick Rubin telling me, âTake your time,â and Jay-Z telling me in my face, âYouâre great.â Iâll take that over the algorithm telling me that my sât is popping.Â
[embedded content]
I think your attitude towards the power of algorithms plays out in how you structure your releases â youâre not one to tack standalone singles onto a project to play the streaming game, for example. So, walk me through two of your projects from this year: Xcape and Destruction for Dummies.Â
Itâs supposed to be a trilogy, thereâs two out now. Iâm trying to think when the next one will come out. The last installment is supposed to be called ArcoĂris â âRainbowâ in Spanish â but Iâve just been doing a bunch of other stuff.Â
On âXcape, Pt. 1â Jean Dawson as âPhoenix,â [Phoenix] is the more aggressive, I have something to say, loudmouth kid. On the next installment, âDestruction for Dummies, Pt. 2â Jean Dawson as âNightmare,â I had just got out of a relationship, and I was feeling it for real. It was the perfect excuse to find this Eeyore-type personality. Boohoo is the next person for ArcoĂris, and heâs the pity party guy, where itâs like: Feel bad for me, and not in the way where Iâm going to tell you why to feel bad for me.Â
I think my headspace when I was making those⌠I wanted side quests. I wanted to make a chapbook or an anthology series that wasnât canon. In anime, thereâs things that are non-canon events, and thatâs kind of what these side quests have been. Itâs not like a body of work where my idea from A-Z is complete. It allows you to work out your own ideas without being constrained to the sound of an album, but also not an EP.Â
So, in that case, what have you settled on as far as the next album is concerned?Â
Iâm trying to think when it will come because I have two plans. Either Iâm going to go away for three years and just disappear, or Iâm going to put an album out next year, I donât know. I believe weâll have a lot of Spanish. Iâm also trying to do music in Spanish that hasnât been done before because some stuff in Spanish â like trap music â has been done. The stuff thatâs supe- popular with regional music right now, itâs being done. Itâs being done very well. Iâm trying to find the space in my brain to figure out what James Blake sound like if he was Mexican. Iâm not saying that Iâm gonna do that, but Iâm just saying thatâs my line of thinking.Â
Thereâs going to be more Spanish involved, just cause my grandma was like, âWhy donât you make more music In Spanish?â And I was like, âFâk. She called me out.â Honestly, the only reason I hadnât is because some of the things I have to say, I canât say in Spanish. Which is kind of a lame reason, and now when she put me on the spot, Iâm like, âDamn, I really donât have that reason, because itâs my first language.â I need to actually do it because I want to do it now. Before, I felt like it was maybe forced or something, and I didnât want to use it as kudos or a pony trick. Itâs like, âNo, dude, itâs my language.âÂ
[People] hear me speak Spanish, or when they hear a song in Spanish, theyâre like, âNo, you donât understand what that makes me feel.â So, for that full-length project, Iâve been working with some legendary aâ people that Iâm super excited about. I canât name them yet, but just as a callback, theyâll know later. I think the next album is going to be beautiful, from what I know right now.Â
You have a couple of shows towards the end of the month. What can fans expect from those performances?Â
Yeah, I have a show with Interpol â the legendary band â and we play the Greek in L.A. I have some headline shows as well. Iâm excited. The West Coast is my region. Then, Iâm supporting Yachty in Europe, which is going to be awesome â Iâm a massive Yachty fan. The West Coast gets a lot of me because I live there, so the West Coast and Denver are the two places Iâve performed the most for some reason. I mean, Denver ⌠I love those mountain kids, theyâre sick.Â
Iâm approaching the music that I already made differently. The way that itâs structured, the way that itâs played, I have the band learning the songs again â but in a different format, just because I donât want the perception to be like âJean Dawson is rock and rollâ or Jean Dawson is this or that. No, I want you to guess. And I donât want it to be spoon-fed to you. Iâm just going to make them a little more interesting and just like⌠What the fâk is going on? I learned that from watching BjĂśrk live a few times, where Iâm like, âWhat the fâk is she doing? This is crazy!âÂ
Then when we head over to Europe â itâs my first time â so weâre going to do all of it, starting in Oslo and ending in Vienna. Growing up Mexican, travel is not something that is normalized, because our parents canât do it â a lot of [our] parents are undocumented. Iâm going to make a lot of music out there too. Iâm stoked. And I know my European audience and my U.K. audience is stoked because they were like, âJeanâs never gonna come here,â and now theyâre going to travel with us! Thereâs caravans of people that are going to Stockholm, Cologne, Paris, theyâre going to see it all.Â
How does it feel knowing that youâve built all of this from the ground up?Â
Grateful above anything else. I got jaded to it a little bit at first, because I was never popular in school, and I was never deemed as cool. So, when it first starts to happen, I kind of have an [aversion] to it because it doesnât feel real⌠until I toured the first time. I saw the Black, the brown, the white kids â it felt like I came home from war every time they saw me. Theyâre like, âOh my God!â and Iâm like, âOh, sât!â I got to see their faces and⌠if itâs not for [them], I really canât do this.Â
Anything that they want from me, Iâll stop in the middle of my food and take photos. They find me at the airport now, and itâs fâing crazy. Yâall just need to relax, but anything you want, you got it. Iâll sit and talk for two hours with some kid thatâs telling me about how they want to start making music, and Iâm just like, âDo it!â I donât like giving advice because I donât know sât, but hereâs what I could tell you I did wrong, and maybe you can circumvent those wrongs. I feel very blessed above anything else and privileged to be able to have my job just be expressing myself and people relate to it. Itâs fâing crazy.Â
You mentioned that you werenât considered cool growing up, and now youâre kinda the epitome of cool for a lot of people. Who are your style icons? Who are your film icons?Â
I was never cool in high school, because the high school I went to wasnât hip on Tumblr and I was a Tumblr kid, so the sât that I knew, they had no idea. I was wearing like post-[A$AP] Rocky style â who is definitely an inspiration of mine, amongst a lot of different things, but style specifically.Â
Post-Rocky Tumblr was crazy as hell, and I was just showing up to school in San Diego, where nobody gave a fâk about what youâre wearing, in some crazy sât that I got on eBay. That made me a weirdo. Even when I was getting fits off that â if I was in New York, theyâre like, âOh, sât, he got that sât onâ â where I was from, it was like, âThatâs weird. He reads anime. He always has a girlfriend. He donât talk to nobody.â I smoked cigarettes in the parking lot like, I had no fâing cool points.Â
I go to college and itâs still kind of the same thing. Itâs like, frats and stuff like that, which is all fine. But Iâm not gonna wear no Sperrys. The Internet gave a place for whatever I am to be deemed as cool. Rocky, heâs the best-dressed person, period, I think ever. I donât have Rockyâs body, nor Rockyâs paycheck, so Iâm not necessarily doing what Rocky does, but he definitely is the most well-dressed person taste level-wise. Also, Kurt Cobain â â90s grunge is something that lets me be super lazy and people think that itâs tight. Â
Then in the film world, music for me is a visual language. If you listen to my songs, most of them are metaphorical. Most of the time Iâm talking about something that I can see, but Iâve never seen. Iâve been really, really inspired by movies my entire life. I spent a lot of time by myself, meaning that I spent a lot of time in front of the TV because when you donât have nobody around, the TVâs gonna keep you company. I guess that was my version of my iPad.Â
Letâs talk about hype. How does the concept of hype register in your mind? Whether itâs industry hype or hype from fans, how do you keep yourself from getting lost in all the different voices trying to define you?Â
Hype is important when people are excited about you. When people are excited about you, you should feel excited. I donât think thereâs anything wrong with feeling connected to a moment that feels more potent than most. I also idolized people like Earl Sweatshirt, who, in my opinion â heâs someone who since has become a friend and collaborator â Earl was always able to circumvent the current of something. In one of his albums, he said, âtrend-dodging,â and that stuck with me. Itâs like, âWhy do that when I can do the thing that I actually like?â But I also donât think thereâs anything wrong with trends. I feel like some people just need a sense of identity and they need a little help to get there.Â
I think the idea of hype or your audience being excited about things is cool. Industry hype â itâs hard to get. Itâs easy to get disillusioned by industry hype because everybody at one point is going to have their moment where everybody looks at them, and I feel like if you donât get caught there, you wonât get Medusaâd. And being Medusaâd, itâs like youâre gonna get turned into stone because youâre watching too hard how people are watching you. I think if you acknowledge it and move on, then youâll never get stuck trying to chase that high. Thatâs how you end up the oldest nâ-a trying to be cool with young kids. You want that same feeling you felt when you were 21 and brand new. It serves its purpose, but as long as you donât get caught in it, youâll be fine.Â
Youâve accomplished an incredible amount while being independent, where do you stand on the utility of record labels?Â
People have always asked me, âWhy donât you like labels?â Itâs not that I donât like labels, I just have never been signed because the business that Iâve been offered, Iâve never been aligned with. The things that they offer I donât necessarily need, and the things that I need, they didnât necessarily offer. So, Iâm not pro-label and Iâm not anti-label. Iâm anti-bad business. Iâve structured my career in a way where the utility of a label wasnât paramount. Itâs totally fine if you want to go buy your house in cash, but I donât think you should be mad at the bank for giving you a loan. Iâm not saying labels are just banks, but one of the biggest things that theyâre able to do is give you utility that you might not be able to get or have. Â
Since I didnât need that â not because I came up rich, but because I figured out a business strategy early to circumvent the fact that I donât need to take out the highest-interest loan â I can get it to a place to where I go to a label and we can see eye to eye on what utilities I need and what numbers they want to see back as a return on investment. I wanted to become an artist with a high ROI, and in order to do that, itâs going to take time. Â
I havenât necessarily needed a label on my come-up because Iâve had such a strong foundational team from management. Weâve built a little army. Weâre small, but weâre scrappy and we get sât done, and I donât think itâs because weâre particularly talented. I think itâs because we care a lot. Now, at this point in my career, Iâm most likely going to sign this year to somewhere because I think the growing of our infrastructure is super important â just for the growth of our artist project. My entire team is Jean Dawson. Itâs not just me. Iâm the face and Iâm the word, but we need to grow and in order to do that, thereâs going to be some things that we need facilitated that are outside of our abilities. Â
In the beginning, I didnât want to do that because I wanted to not only own my albums â I own all my albums â I didnât want the constraints of âthis needs to be successful or else somebody loses their job.â And thatâs because I care about other human beings outside of myself. I think that doing it indie is noble and I think it serves its purpose, but at a certain point, youâre gonna hit a glass ceiling. And, also, starting off with the label, youâre gonna hit a glass ceiling. I think you need to get your career to a place where itâs stable enough to where you donât need a label. Then go to a label. Or get your career to a place where, with or without a label, youâre going to be fine, because then you can add fuel to the fire by having stronger arms. You need to know how to allocate your money.Â
I got offers from my first album to my last album. Offers have always been on the table, but Iâm like, âIâm not gonna waste your time and yâall money because Iâm not gonna waste my time, and Iâm not gonna waste my sanity trying to chase some money that I know I couldnât get back.â I guess the best advice I can give to anybody thatâs thinking about signing or not signing is to really know what you need. If you need money, go do shows, and if youâre not in a position where your shows pay you, then work more and get to a place where doing shows pays you. And then when you get to a place where you need money to expand, then you can go to a label and know why you need it. For anybody that wants to stay indie, do a lot of shows, sell merch, get really comfortable with direct-to-consumer, and having your audience be proud to pay for what you do.Â
Journeyâs new manager, Mike Kobayashi, confirmed late Tuesday he was âjust hired,â taking over from player-managers Neal Schon and Jonathan Cain after a roller-coaster year.
The classic-rock fixture sold 296,000 tickets and grossed $31.9 million on its 2022 arena tour, according to Billboard Boxscore, doubling the revenue pace of its previous headlining tour, in 2017, which grossed $31.7 million over 67 shows.
But the band ended 2022 with an internal squabble over an American Express card: Lead guitarist Schon sued keyboardist Cain last month for refusing to give Cain access to an account representing âmillions in Journey fundsâ; Cain responded that Schon was ârunning up enormous personal chargesâ on the account.
The lawsuit, pending in California Superior Court, is one of several legal disputes involving Cain and Schon, one of the bandâs founders, and other Journey members in recent years. In 2020, the two musicians sued drummer Steve Smith and bassist Ross Valory, accusing them of improperly trying to take control of the band name; Valory filed a counter-complaint, and the lawsuit ended with a 2021 settlement in which Smith and Valory left the band.
And after Schon and Cain trademarked names of many of the bandâs hits, such as âWheel In the Sky,â former frontman Steve Perry filed an action in U.S. Trademark Court in September to stop the process. Perry cited a long-running band partnership agreement that requires Schon and Cain to get his permission to make these kinds of trademark moves.
Kobayashi, who also manages fellow road warriors Def Leppard, did not respond to requests for further comment on his new position with Journey.
Journey hasnât had a new hit in decades, but the band remains a top-tier touring act and occasionally scores high-profile synchs in shows like The Sopranos and, last spring, Stranger Things, the Netflix series that revived Kate Bushâs âRunning Up That Hillâ on the charts.
Round Hill Music has signed a worldwide publishing administration agreement with Coheed and Cambria, the progressive rock band that has recorded 10 studio albums and generated 3.4 million album consumption units in the U.S., according to Luminate. The band, fronted by Claudio Sanchez, is signed to Round Hill Music via its Fund 3 Plus vehicle.
âWe are pleased to welcome Claudio and the band to the Round Hill family,â the companyâs head of creative services John Baldi said in a statement. âOur team is excited to explore creative outlets and opportunities for their music and provide support wherever we can on their current release, âVaxis Act II.â
The latter album has generated 55,000 album consumption units worth of activity since its release in February this year.
âOur music is dramatic and cinematic,â Sanchez said in a statement. âWeâve been looking for a home that will facilitate getting Coheed and Cambria front and center in the sync world. The folks and Round Hill have a firm grasp of our vision and an added creativity that will help achieve or goals, and we couldnât be more excited about taking this journey together.â
-
Pages