Rock
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James Bayâs âUp All Night,â a collaboration with The Lumineers and Noah Kahan, jumps two spots to No. 1 on Billboardâs Adult Alternative Airplay chart dated Oct. 12. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news The song marks Bayâs first No. 1 on the survey, as well as his […]
In a year when famously battling brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher defied the odds and announced they were burying the hatchet and reuniting after a decade-and-a-half of incessant public sniping, Pink Floydâs David Gilmour made it crystal clear that he is never, ever getting back together with the bandâs former bassist/singer Roger Waters.
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Asked by a fan in a Guardian reader interview if heâd ever perform again on stage with Waters, Gilmour said âabsolutely not.â Then, in a pointed attack seemingly aimed at some of Watersâ more controversial comments in recent years about the war in Ukraine and his seeming support of Russian dictator Vladimir Putin and authoritarian Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro, Gilmour took fire at the Floyd co-founder.
âI tend to steer clear of people who actively support genocidal and autocratic dictators like Putin and Maduro [president of Venezuela],â Gilmour said. âNothing would make me share a stage with someone who thinks such treatment of women and the LGBT community is OK.â
Waters has frequently stirred controversy with his political views about Israel and the war in Ukraine. His comments about the government of Israel led to his record company, BMG, dropping the Floyd co-founder and solo performer earlier this year after Berlin police opened an investigation into the imagery in a May 2023 Waters show in that city. Officials said the probe was launched over âsuspicion of incitement to public hatredâ related to costumes that appeared to replicate Nazi uniforms and claims that Watersâ show desecrated the memory of Holocaust victim Anne Frank.
Water denied the claims, writing on X, âMy recent performance in Berlin has attracted bad faith attacks from those who want to smear and silence me because they disagree with my political views and moral principles. The elements of my performance that have been questioned are quite clearly a statement in opposition to fascism, injustice, and bigotry in all its forms. Attempts to portray those elements as something else are disingenuous and politically motivated.â
During the show, Waters wore a costume resembling the Nazi SS soldier uniform â a long black coat with a red armband â while pointing a fake rifle at the crowd, with the singer saying later that the âdepiction of an unhinged fascist demagogueâ has been featured in his past live performances since the release of the 1980 Pink Floyd film The Wall. In May 2023, a number of Jewish groups and politicians rallied against Watersâ concert in Frankfurt, Germany, accusing the singer of antisemitism after unsuccessfully pushing to have the show cancelled. It took place in the cityâs Festhalle, where more than 3,000 Jews were rounded up, beaten and abused by Nazis before being sent to concentration camps in 1938.
Waters, who has frequently drawn the ire of the pro-Israel community for his vehement support of the BDS movement, which calls for boycotts and sanctions against the state of Israel, again rejected the claims of antisemitism.
A month later, the Biden administrationâs State Department weighed in on what it called Watersâ âlong track record of using antisemitic tropesâ and the German show it said âcontained imagery that is deeply offensive to Jewish people and minimized the Holocaust.â
Gilmour and Waters have been at odds since the bassist split with the group in 1984, trading barbs in the press as Waters continues to tour and perform Floyd music alongside his solo material, while the Gilmour-led Floyd ceased touring in 1994.
Pink Floydâs musical assets â not including their publishing â were recently bought by Sony for around $400 million.
MĂśtley CrĂźe are headed back to Las Vegas. The long-running metal band announced their latest Sin City stay-put on Thursday (Oct. 3), The Las Vegas Residency, which will find them playing an exclusive limited run of 11 shows at Dolby Live at Park MGM from March 28-April 19, 2025.
âMĂśtley CrĂźe and Las Vegas have always been the perfect combination of extravagance and decadence. Weâve always loved the idea of the Vegas residency, because weâve always loved the idea of staying in one location to build a unique show for the fans,â the band said in a statement. âWeâre excited to get into rehearsals and work up a lot of songs that have been requested by the fans for years.â
The CrĂźeâs third Vegas residency is being billed as a âtell-all show [that] will immerse the audience in the bandâs history, leading all the say through their record-breaking Stadium Tour.â They previously set up shop in Vegas in 2012 for MĂśtley CrĂźe Takes On Sin City and 2013 for Evening in Hell.
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A presale for members of the bandâs S.I.N. fan club will begin at 10 a.m. PT on Friday (Oct. 4), with information available here. A Citi card member presale will begin at 12 p.m. on Friday through 10 p.m. PT on Oct. 10, details here. The public onsale will kick off on Oct. 11 at 10 a.m. PT here. The band said a portion of the proceeds from ticket sales for the residency will be donated to the Nevada Partnership for Homeless Youth.
Friday also marks the release of the bandâs new EP, Cancelled, featuring the previously released singles âDogs of War,â the title track and a rock-ified cover of the Beastie Boysâ âFight For Your Right.â To celebrate the EPâs release, the CrĂźe will play a series of club shows in L.A. next week, including a gig at the Troubadour on Oct. 7, the Roxy on Oct. 9 and Whiskey a Go Go on Oct. 11.
In conjunction with the sold-out HÜllywood TakeÜver club shows the band has teamed with Global Merchandising Services for a series of exclusive drops from Represent, Prince Street Pizza, Rainbow Bar & Grill and Hot Topic during the week of gigs. Prince Street will be offering the 4-slice  MÜtley Crße Combo at their eight L.A. locations, with each band member picking their favorite Prince St. favorite.
The Rainbow pop-up will feature exclusive, band-curated merch and a co-branded T-shirt and pint glass combo available with purchase of CrĂźe-inspired drinks such as the Dr. Feelgood RX, Kickstart my Heart-Tini and the Without You mocktail. Represent will have a limited-edition shirt at their L.A. store and Hot Topic will have a limited-edition T-shirt.
The MĂśtley CrĂźe The Las Vegas Residency show dates:
March 2025: 28, 29
April 2025: 2, 4, 5, 9, 11, 12, 16, 18, 19
Could there be anything more on-brand than Tim Walz losing it over Bruce Springsteenâs endorsement of Kamala Harris for President? The Minnesota Governor who is running as current Democratic V.P. Harrisâ running mate had a typically enthusiastic, joyful response to the full-throated stamp of approval from The Boss in a three-minute video the rock icon posted on Thursday (Oct. 3).
âWow. As a lifelong fan of The Boss, I couldnât be more honored to have his support,â Walz wrote on X Thursday night along with a repost of the plainspoken video from the âBorn in the U.S.A.â singer who referred to Harrisâ Republican opponent Donald Trump as the âmost dangerous candidate for President in my lifetime.â
Springsteen, who was a vocal supporter of President Joe Biden in his 2020 election run â he narrated a âHometownâ ad for the Biden campaign â took on a somber tone for the clip filmed in an empty diner in which he speaks directly to camera to deliver a plainspoken explanation of why heâs backing the Democratic ticket.
âWe are shortly coming up on one of the most consequential elections in our nationâs history,â he says. âPerhaps not since the Civil War has this great country felt as politically, emotionally and spiritually divided as it does at this moment. It doesnât have to be this way. The common values, the shared stories that make this a great and united nation are waiting to be rediscovered and retold once again. That will take time, hard work, intelligence, faith and women and men with the national good guiding their hearts.â
Springsteen goes on to praise the bedrock values he says Harris believes in, including âfreedom, social justice, equal opportunity, the right to be in love with who you want,â while ticking off a list of what he says are the disqualifying attributes of twice impeached convicted felon Trump. âHis disdain for the sanctity of our Constitution, the sanctity of democracy, the sanctity of the rule of law, and the sanctity for the peaceful transfer of power should disqualify him from the office of president ever again. He doesnât understand the meaning of this country, its history or what it means to be deeply American,â the singer says.
Springsteen is among a long list of A-list stars whoâve lined up to support the Harris/Walz campaign, joining Taylor Swift, BeyoncĂŠ, Billie Eilish, Olivia Rodrigo, Stevie Wonder, Lil Nas X, Maren Morris, Barbra Streisand, Ariana Grande, Stevie Nicks, Cardi B, Katy Perry and many more. Trump also picked up an endorsement this week from Shazam star Zachary Levi, after the actorâs preferred candidate, vaccine conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. abandoned his bid. In addition to the Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget actor, Trump has been endorsed by Kanye West, Elon Musk, Kid Rock, Hulk Hogan, Randy Quaid, Amber Rose, Russell Brand, Rosanne Barr and Rob Schneider.
See Walzâs reaction below.
Sitting in her childhood bedroom and noodling on her guitar in February 2024, 24-year-old Gigi Perez was thinking about the scope of her songwriting. Sheâd been ruminating for a while on the idea of a frantic kind of love, and how to connect it to her lyricism. âWhen that person is so constant in your life, itâs kind of like you fall into it, and you have nothing else to grasp on to,â she tells Billboard. âIt came from that desperate place.â
All of a sudden, a line popped into her head: âKiss me on the mouth and love me like a sailor.â As she kept strumming and writing out new lines to add to the chorus of her growing song, the singer-songwriter realized she wasnât the only one listening. âMy door happened to be open, and my little sister walks by and says, âOh, Gigi, thatâs really awesome,â â she recalls.
And as the idea has moved from work in progress to completed product, itâs clear that the world feels the same way. After Perez began teasing the track in earnest on her TikTok in the spring, users quickly latched onto the hook, clamoring to hear a full version. They finally got to hear it on July 26, when Perez unveiled âSailor Song,â a stirring, emotionally raw ballad that sees Perez turning her feelings of longing into a sweeping, queer-coded love song. The song debuted on the Aug. 31-dated Billboard Hot 100 at No. 98, and it has since spent six weeks on the chart, reaching a No. 46 high on the list dated Sept. 28.
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For Perez, the sudden, rapid success of âSailor Songâ feels like a culmination of all the work sheâs put into her independent career â and one that enabled her to accept a record deal with Island Records in September. âI feel truly ready for this,â she says. âAnd I know exactly what Iâm looking for.â
Perez walks Billboard through the writing process of âSailor Song,â explains why she learned how to produce her own work and breaks down what it means to have a queer love song making waves in modern pop culture.
When did you first start working on âSailor Songâ? What was the original idea that led you to making this?
A lot of the process for me is typically just having my guitar and freestyling, and thatâs mostly how the songs come â I was in that progression of writing, and I just said, âKiss me on the mouth and love me like a sailor.â So, I kept going; I had the chorus done that night.
It really just stayed as a chorus for a while, and the lyrics had changed. There were certain little words that changed the meaning of what [the song] was. Once I had written the verses, I pulled a melody from another song I had written and put that into this song. It really is one of those things where it was a puzzle putting it together, but there wasnât much resistance. Other times, in order to get something like that, you have to really dig for it.
I love a song that is good at creating imagery without having to explicitly spell out the imagery â the use of the sailor as an image almost makes the song feel mythical in scale, which is really effective.
Thereâs something about this thought â and I donât know if itâs because I grew up by the water and spent so much time in my childhood at the beach â that little by little, these beach and sea and water themes just kept appearing in my songs. Itâs really sweet because I was thinking, âHow do you compile the things that are on your heart and that you want to say in a way that makes sense?â It wasnât until âSailor Songâ that I looked back and was like, âThereâs been a whole path being laid subconsciously,â which is very cool.
I was struck by the fact that your voice sounds like itâs in the distance on this track â what did your setup look like when recording and producing âSailor Songâ?
I went into this chapter of my life [feeling] in my soul like I hit a point where I wasnât collaborating with people because I wanted to, but because I relied on it. There was a lack of expression on the production side, [but] I think things ended up falling together perfectly. I moved back home, and in the same way I taught myself the guitar, I watched a bunch of YouTube videos and messaged the collaborators who I really admired to ask them questions about producing. It was a lot of throwing things at the wall and learning little things here and there. Like, how does EQ [equalization] really work? What is a compressor? I was allowed time to really experiment with production and recording. It makes me feel the same way that I felt when I was 17 â thatâs something I keep coming back to: That first rush of recording, when I was just doing it with my high school band, and we were just uploading files on Spotify and SoundCloud.
As far as the recording and what happened, I use an SM7 [microphone], and I started doing this thing [while recording my voice] where I do three vocals and I pan [one] a little bit to the left, [one] a little bit to the right and one right in the middle. And then I threw in certain kinds of reverbs that give it a roomy kind of sound. I also have an amazing mixer, Matt Emonson, and he just takes it away from there. I just wanted something that felt really intimate and yet really big.
Once you started teasing this song on TikTok, it blew up and fans were itching to hear the full thing. What was that like for you to witness in real time?
I was really happy. I feel like Iâd gotten to a certain point where I just started enjoying music again in a way that I truly felt like was honoring my happiness. That was the main principle that I felt through being independent and being able to work on music in a different way. And then when I saw that people were really enjoying it, I was like, âThatâs so genuinely awesome.â It was a slow burn in terms of getting to where itâs gotten to now but to know that it was something that really pulled on people means everything to me.
One of the things in life that Iâve struggled with â and part of why I decided that I wanted to be an artist â is the feeling of loneliness that comes with the lie that no one understands you. I think about the artists that changed my life in that way, and one of the first gay projects that I had that with was Troye Sivanâs [2015 debut album] Blue Neighbourhood. That changed my life. I couldnât even imagine that somebody could be there for me during a time when I couldnât express or understand what I was feeling. I didnât grow up in a space where that was something that existed, and if it did, it was very taboo. Itâs so beautiful now that thereâs so much media that really highlights the gay and queer experience. Kids need that. Actually, people in general, not just children. There are still people all around this world [who] live in an online world and escape through music. Itâs very special to me that, in any capacity, I could be a part of that.
To that point, it feels like queer messaging in music is having a genuine moment this year where songs that are about queerness are hitting the charts in a major way. What is your reaction to that level of visibility in the mainstream?
I think weâre only scratching the surface right now. Representation is so, so important. Itâs the thing that gives people the courage and the ability to dream that you can do whatever. You, as a person, can take up space. I think thereâs an identity part of it, and then thereâs just the actual human part of it, and those two things are very important to me. Every queer artist is going to share their story and their identity differently. Iâm only one person, and my message is only going to connect [with] and reach the people that itâs meant to. Thatâs why I think it opens up the bridge [for other artists], and Iâm really excited to see everything thatâs happening in queer music.
You recently signed to Island Records â what has the transition from independent artist to being signed at a major looked like for you so far?
I feel so blessed. Itâs been such a weirdly spiritual experience, in terms of things happening behind the scenes. It feels like this thing is really guided. I didnât know a year ago that any of this would happen, and I think I had a very clear vision where I said, âIâm going to stay independent, and this is the way Iâm going to do it.â The fact that that has changed [means] Iâm so grateful for all of the experiences that Iâve had over the last few months to lead me to this moment. Theyâre going to be an amazing home.
A version of this story appears in the Sept. 28, 2024, issue of Billboard.
Three decades after its original run on the Billboard Hot 100, Alphavilleâs âForever Youngâ is No. 1 on a Billboard chart, reigning over the TikTok Billboard Top 50 tally dated Oct. 5.
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The TikTok Billboard Top 50 is a weekly ranking of the most popular songs on TikTok in the United States based on creations, video views and user engagement. The latest chart reflects activity from Sept. 23-29. Activity on TikTok is not included in Billboard charts except for the TikTok Billboard Top 50.
âForever Youngâ sported its original Hot 100 run over a three-week period in spring 1985, during which it peaked at No. 93. It returned to the ranking in 1988-89 following a re-release, rising as high as No. 65 in December 1988. 2024 marks the songâs 40-year anniversary, as it was released on Alphavilleâs self-titled debut album in September 1984.
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Alphaville has reigned on a Billboard chart once before; âBig in Japanâ topped Dance Club Songs for two weeks in 1984.
âForever Youngâ ties Jordan Adetunjiâs âKehlaniâ for the longest amount of weeks between TikTok Billboard Top 50 debut and first week at No. 1 since the listâs September 2023 inception. It reigns in its 10th week on the survey after initially debuting on the Aug. 3 ranking. It had reached a new peak of No. 2 on the Sept. 28 chart.
The song is used in a variety of ways on TikTok. Trends include edits of fictional characters (many of whom died young), inward-looking content about aging and reminiscing about younger days, a choreographed theme where one creator picks up the other and spins them around while spraying a water bottle in slow motion, and more.
Over the last few weeks, âForever Youngâ has also returned to Billboardâs Alternative Digital Song Sales charts thanks to the TikTok resurgence; it appears at No. 10 on the latest survey via 1,000 downloads in the week ending Sept. 26, according to Luminate. It also pulled 2.1 million official U.S. streams in that span.
The TikTok Billboard Top 50 coronation of âForever Youngâ comes ahead of Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham-Carterâs âBy the Sea,â from the soundtrack to the 2007 film Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, which vaults 32-2 in its second week on the chart.
The trend on the 17-year-old song? Generally lip-synching to the songâs opening âOoh, Mr. Todd/ Iâm so happy/ I could eat you up, I really couldâ lyric, while others skip the lip-synching and simply kiss someone or something to Bonham-Carterâs cues from the tune.
Another debut from the Sept. 28 chart, NLE Choppa and 41âs âOr What,â ranks within the top three for the first time, jumping 44-3, mostly via lip-synching uploads. The song was released Sept. 6 and earned 3.2 million streams in the week ending Sept. 26, up 73%.
Odetariâs âKeep Upâ (No. 14), leaps into the top four, rising 14-4 in its second week on the list. It ties Odetariâs top-performing song on the tally, equaling the No. 4 peak of âI Love You Hoe,â co-billed with 9Lives, in September 2023.
Released in mid-July, âKeep Upâ has exploded in recent weeks thanks to a dance trend. It concurrently hits a new peak of No. 6 on the Hot Dance/Electronic Songs chart, accumulating 5.8 million streams, up 39%, as the rankingâs greatest gainer in that metric.
IV of Spadesâ âCome Inside of My Heart,â the previous No. 3 on the TikTok Billboard Top 50, rounds out the top five, while Ken Carsonâs âOverseasâ jumps 23-6 in its second week, nearly six months after its April release.
Carsonâs TikTok success with âOverseasâ is owed mostly to lip synchs, usually to the songâs lyric of âThat boy repeat everything he hear like a parrot, he a bâch/ The last bâch I broke up with slit her wrist.â
âOverseasâ earned 3.2 million streams in the week ending Sept. 26, a gain of 7%.
Two more songs hit the top 10 of the TikTok Billboard Top 50 for the first time: Freak Nastyâs âDaâ Dipâ and Olivia Rodrigoâs âDeja Vuâ at Nos. 7-9, respectively. âOr Whatâ is led by lip synchs and âDaâ Dipâ by a dance trend (notable since the song, which peaked on the Hot 100 at No. 15 in 1997, is inherently named for a dance), while âDeja Vuâ gains from the âand suddenlyâ trend.
See the full TikTok Billboard Top 50 here. You can also tune in each Friday to SiriusXMâs TikTok Radio (channel 4) to hear the premiere of the chartâs top 10 countdown at 3 p.m. ET, with reruns heard throughout the week.
Paul McCartney uncorked the live debut of what has been billed as the âfinalâ Beatles song, 2023âs âNow and Then,â during the marathon kick-off of the South American leg of his Got Back tour in Montevideo, Uruguay on Tuesday (Oct. 1). Sitting at a piano as the AI-assisted Peter Jackson-directed video for the song unspooled […]
Queens of the Stone Age will be back on the road next summer after cancelling a run of 2024 shows due to unspecified health issues affecting singer/guitarist Josh Homme. The band called off eight festivals shows on their End Is Nero tour so Homme could fly back to the U.S. for what was described at […]
Inside the inaugural New York edition of the celebrated All Things Go music festival, including exclusive portraits of MUNA, Soccer Mommy, Towa Bird and more performers.
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