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How Is the Portola Lineup Designed? The Fest Founder Talks Strategy

“Every festival booker has their own process,” says Danny Bell, the founder and booker of San Francisco’s Portola. “Mine is definitely more mad scientist-y than other people’s.” Bell’s metaphorical lab is a spreadsheet, which he begins tinkering with a year before the festival itself. The sheet allows Bell to see “all the different looks at once,” he says. “You have your money grid, your mock set times, your poster.” He’s made algorithms that let him organize it by an artist’s subgenre, gender, race and home country. There’s one designed around when the sun sets and when there’s full dark. He works to select a group of artists who are unlikely to play any of the same tracks twice over the weekend. “Can you do it quicker?” Bell, the SVP of talent at Goldenvoice, asks rhetorically while talking to Billboard over Zoom from his office in San Francisco. “For sure. There’s probably a much simpler way, but I do it like this. I want to make sure to have all these different visualizations because this stuff is is important. It all works together.” From these datasets eventually emerge the lineup and set times for Portola, which since its 2022 debut has become a dance festival circuit standout for putting artists who helped develop the dance/electronic genre alongside many of the moment’s most essential stars and emerging artists. Every year Bell also reserves a set time for a pop icon, a space that in 2025 belongs to Christina Aguilera, who Bell promises will perform “banger after banger.” While Portola has put a whole host of big names in front of the 40,000-person crowd that gathers at the festival site at San Francisco’s Pier 80 (past headliners have included Flume, The Chemical Brothers, Eric Prydz, Skrillex, Rüfüs du Sol and Justice), this year puts an especially heavy emphasis on “showcasing the legends and pioneers of the scene and some of the most influential people the last 30 years,” Bell says. “This lineup is a real ode to to where the current sounds and state of electronic music came from.” He’s not being hyperbolic. The fest this weekend (Sept. 20-21) will unpack the influence of the ’90s era U.K. underground via sets from Underworld, The Prodigy and The Chemical Brothers, all of whom bent electronic music to harder, darker and more intense shapes during their heydays. There will also be U.S. artists whose work functioned as inflection points for the development of indie dance and dance punk — namely LCD Soundsystem, The Rapture and Moby. The Rapture’s performance comes towards the start of a reunion tour happening fifteen years after the NYC group’s last headlining run. Meanwhile Moby, who hasn’t toured the U.S. extensively in years, will perform with a live band and run through much of his 1999 LP Play, an album whose prolific syncing helped introduce electronic music to a generation of young people living far from clubland. These acts are matched by several of the moment’s key scene stars, with the lineup’s other big font names being Peggy Gou, Dom Dolla, Mau P and Chris Lake and Chris Lorenzo playing as Anti Up. “We now have fans who’ve been deep in the genre for 15-plus years, but 2010, 2011 and 2012 were the early days of electronic music being popular in the U.S.,” says Bell, who in this era was booking shows for HARD in Los Angeles. “Back then everyone was just learning about these artists for the first time. No one knew if Carl Cox was a new act or a legacy act.” But with the people who got into dance music in this era now staring down middle age, “people have had enough time to dig deeper into the history and really understand who the pioneers were and where these sounds came from,” says Bell. “That’s allowed acts like The Chemical Brothers and Underworld to have a stronger and larger U.S. fanbase than they had before.” To wit, a new wave of demand for these acts manifested in The Chemical Brothers and The Prodigy both drawing huge crowds at Coachella 2023 and 2025, respectively. Meanwhile Underworld’s Boiler Room set from London has clocked 1.4 million views since it was put online three weeks ago. “When I started in festivals, the acts that were being played on Spotify Mint [the streamer’s mainstream dance playlist] were like, Alesso and Avicii,” says Bell. “It was all progressive house and some dubstep.” With Mint now populated by artists like Sammy Virji, Fred again.., Sara Landry, Ki/Ki and Kettama — all of who have played Portola in years past or who will be there this year — Bell says it’s been “really fun and rewarding to see the acts I work with who I’ve considered left of center and really progressing the sound and the scene making their way up the ladder to be the artists Spotify Mint is programming.” Portola 2024 Scott Hutchinson There’s also the lineup contingent Bell lovingly and correctly refers to as “the divas.” In 2023 this was Nelly Furtado, who performed her ’00s-defining hits “Turn Off the Light,” “I’m Like a Bird,” “Say It Right” and “Promiscuous.” Last year, Natasha Bedingfield drew a tightly packed crowd that included fellow lineup artist Four Tet, while performing her pop holy trinity of “Pocketful of Sunshine,” “These Words” and “Unwritten.” This year, Aguilera is teed up to deliver her own arsenal of generational anthems. “She knows what the assignment is,” says Bell — who also places previous Portola artists like Cobrah, Slayyter and Charli xcx in this diva category, a realm of the lineup that will also be filled by Ravyn Lenae this weekend. Delivering these pop moments has helped Portola carve out a kind of quirky, if-it-feels-good-do-it identity that also manifests on the event’s Instagram, a channel that’s often deliciously unhinged and IYKYK funny. “That’s another part of the ethos of the festival,” Bell says. “It’s very serious music, but presented in a very unserious way.” The social media team

Addiction, Recovery & Ozzy as a ‘Muse’

“It’s hard, and it’s supposed to be hard. If it was easy, I wouldn’t have needed to take these steps in the first place — in terms of sobriety and the album,” Trapper Schoepp tells Billboard of his new album, Osborne, out Friday (Sept. 19) on Blue Élan Records. The Wisconsin-raised singer-songwriter is usually sorted into the ‘Americana’ category and describes himself as a “folk artist” when talking to Billboard, but Osborne is a rock record in both spirit and sound, from its cover art (a flaming electric guitar enters his mouth) to its take-no-prisoners lyrics to the catharsis of his raw yet sweet voice. Even when Osborne dips into country or wraps with a hint of reggae, its songs rip – if only in the sense of ripping off a Band-Aid. Explore See latest videos, charts and news “I wanted to sing about the opioid epidemic as someone who has experienced it firsthand,” he says over a Zoom, sitting in front of a painting he made while at Hazelton Betty Ford clinic in 2024. “I’ve seen the horrors of it firsthand as well.” While some artists (Jelly Roll, Tyler Childers) are becoming more vocal about the opioid epidemic in America, there aren’t too many musicians writing about opioid addiction, especially considering how widespread the problem is (from Jan. 2021 to June 2024, 43% of overdose deaths in the U.S. involved opioids) and how many artists do talk openly about issues with alcohol or other drugs. With Osborne, Schoepp is hoping to be part of that change. “I think we often speak of sobriety as the act of giving something up. I’m working on reframing quitting as gaining something, whether that’s sanity, health, family,” he shares. Produced by Mike Viola and Tyler Chester, the album offers a galvanizing portrait of pain, hard-fought recovery and hope over the course of 11 arresting, hard-charging and oftentimes beautifully melodic songs. Recovery may be a constant state, a perpetual work-in-progress, but on Osborne, Schoepp the musician feels fully arrived. “I’m trying to get in that mindset of thinking about recovery as something that emphasizes liberation,” he explains. “I may have some hard, hard days, but at least I know I’m a better dude.” If you or someone you know is struggling with substance abuse or addiction, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) National Helpline at 800-662-HELP (4357) is available 24/7. The Osborne album is in large part about your addiction and recovery. Did any of the songs pre-date your time in rehab, or did you write the songs after? I had already written a full country album that I was going to record. I exited Hazelton in May and I had this commitment to record an album in June. It was not in my plans that I was going to go to rehab. This was a drastic measure by way of drastic circumstances. I was in a state of psychosis, mania – I had gone mad. I was like Mulder in an episode of The X-Files where I felt I was on to this greater truth and everyone was out to get me. It was really like this episode of X-Files in my mind. When I went to rehab, the first night I brought a lot of paper and a pen. I left my cell phone, and I didn’t intend on writing songs. But the first night I got into treatment, I landed in the Osborne unit. And it was so funny, because on the way to Hazelton — on the Amtrak, there — I had texted a picture of Ozzy Osbourne to my friend. It was a quote that he had, it said, “Hazelton, that was a tough one. They don’t f–k around.” And I just laughed. I sent a screenshot to my friend and then lo and behold, I was in the Osborne unit. Which is a letter off from Ozzy’s surname, but the patients there associated it with heavy metal. It just had this heavy metal vibe. With it being tied in a way to Ozzy Osbourne, I used him as this strange spiritual guide and muse to write these songs in my recovery. So you were writing in the clinic. A big part of recovery and rehab is writing about your experience. So I wanted to get two birds stoned at once, and just go for it and write stream-of-consciousness. The first night I got there, I wandered around in the woods and I wrote this song “The Osbournes.” When I got out, I sent Mike (Viola) a new song that I’d written. He was like, “What is this? This is totally different, and it’s really good.” (After I was out) we ended up at a church basement in Glendale, California, and it was a surprise to me that it was in a church basement. With Ozzy and the church and all this sort of Satanic exorcism stuff in my head, we joke that the album was like my exorcism. I had to get it all out in one swoop, sort of in atonement for my sins. If you do a lot of drugs, you have to pay the toll. The album is like an open wound that I’m letting everybody see. “Loaded” is an excellent album opener, and I love the lyric about being handed a loaded gun. Is that a reference to prescriptions? Yeah, opioid prescriptions. When I was 20 years old, I had spinal decompression surgery, and the best way that they treated all of that at that time was the Sackler brothers’ method: on a scale of one to 10, how do you feel? And you’d go up and you’d say (a number), and they popularized this idea of chronic pain, pain that cannot be cured. You must treat it forever with painkillers. I think painkillers can be of great use to people in hospital settings, but when they’re in everyone’s house, every grandma’s cabinet and kids are going in there and

Bob the Drag Queen Making Broadway Debut in ‘Moulin Rouge’

Bob the Drag Queen has had a very good last few years. But the latest development in the drag star’s career promises to be spectacular, spectacular! On Friday (Sept. 19), the producers of Moulin Rouge! The Musical announced that Bob will make his Broadway debut in the Tony Award-winning show for a limited eight week engagement. Taking over the role of Harold Zidler, the vaudevillian emcee of the titular club in the show, Bob is set to begin performances on Jan. 27, 2026. In a statement released alongside the news, Bob shared his excitement at getting to finally appear on the Great White Way. “Being on Broadway has always been a dream of mine,” he said. “I moved to NYC almost 17 years ago to pursue it. Some roads take a while.” That particular road has been paved with plenty of success for the performer — after taking home the crown on season 8 of RuPaul’s Drag Race, Bob has since gone on to sell out multiple stand-up comedy tours, wrote and released a New York Times bestselling novel with Harriett Tubman: Live in Concert and even traveled the world as the emcee and special guest for pop superstar Madonna’s Celebration Tour. Most recently, Bob appeared on the Emmy Award-winning third season on The Traitors, where he famously competed as one of the titular robed villains, attempting to eliminate fellow contestants like Gabby Windey, Dylan Efron, Dorinda Medley and more. After fans grew upset that Bob led the charge on eliminating Real Housewives stars Medley and Chanel Ayan, Bob made it clear that he would not apologize for his actions. “Do these Housewife fans think I’m scared?” he wrote. “Honey, I survived Drag Race Twitter. At least DR fans tweet from their real profiles.” Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox Sign Up Source link

Miley Cyrus Gets Deep About New Song ‘Secrets’: ‘A Peace Offering’

Miley Cyrus has already talked about how one of the new bonus tracks on the just-released deluxe edition of her visual album Something Beautiful was written in honor of her dad, country star Billy Ray Cyrus. But in an Instagram post on Friday morning (Sept. 19), just hours after the expanded LP dropped, Miley went deeper, explaining that the song was an attempt to heal a rift that had opened up between them. “This song was written as a peace offering for someone I had lost for a time but always loved. In my experience, forgiveness and freedom are one and the same,” she wrote of the soaring ballad featuring two of her dad’s favorite musicians. “Thank you to Lindsey Buckingham & Mick Fleetwood for bringing magic to the music,” she added of her collaborators, former Fleetwood Mac bandmates guitarist Buckingham and drummer Fleetwood. “This song is for my dad.” The post was accompanied by what appears to be a new video for the song, in which Cyrus wears a gauzy white headdress and matching diaphanous, flowing gown, as well as a black dress matched with a sparkling black mask. “Oh, I wanna be the one, I wanna be the one/ I wanna be the one, I wanna be the one/ Anywhere you run/ You know I’ll follow/ Anywhere you go, anywhere you go/ You know I’ll follow,” she sings on the track. The following verse features emotionally raw lyrics about the difficulty of being a caretaker of your heart while wishing freedom for those you love. “Love is not a prison/ I’m not a guard, no/ So even when I’m holding you/ I won’t lock you up,” she sings. “You can come and go as you want/ Would you like to be lonely?/ Your word is all I want.” Billy Ray has been hyping the song all week, writing on Tuesday (Sept. 16) that he “can’t wait for everyone to hear the whole song!!! It’s amazing!!!!!,” then adding on Friday morning, “Best birthday gift a dad could ever ask for. Thank you @MileyCyrus for ‘Secrets’… a song straight from your heart to mine. The memories we’ve made together mean the world to me, and seeing you soar with your music makes me prouder every single day. Having Lindsey Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood on this track is pure magic. Here’s some memories through the years with Miley… hope y’all enjoy this as much as I do.” Speaking on Monica Lewinsky’s podcast in June, Cyrus said writing the song helped her resolve some long-running tensions between her and her father. “I wrote this song about my dad because I wanted him to tell me even though there were secrets, even though I didn’t really want to know,” she said. “I wanted to be the one he felt safe enough to tell me the things that were damning and damaging to the family. I wanted him to think that as a middle child, I’m old enough that I could take some of that.” The deluxe edition of the album also features another new track, the majestic, jazzy 13-minute mind trip “Lockdown” featuring Talking Heads singer David Byrne. Listen to “Secrets” below. Source link

Demi Lovato Says Husband Jordan Lutes Learning to Guitar For Proposal

There are many ways you can make your marriage proposal special. But for Demi Lovato, husband Jordan “Jutes” Lutes popped the question in the most perfectly perfect way possible. In an interview this week with SiriusXm’s “Morning Mash Up” show, Lovato revealed that when Lutes proposed to her in December 2023 he learned to play guitar in order to perform a song her wrote for the special occasion. “He did learn to play the song on guitar that he wrote, and it was so beautiful. He made a song that was about our journey together,” Lovato told host Stanley T of the original tune. “It had all these little Easter eggs in it, and it was so special and beautiful, and he proposed to me with that, and it was just so thoughtful and he’s the best.” Lovato said she never saw the special treat coming and was caught completely off guard. “Because we had talked about getting engaged and he was like, ‘Okay, you know, I don’t want to do it this year because I feel like it’ll get overshadowed by the holidays,’ so let’s just revisit next year and I was like, ‘Yeah, whatever. Take your time,’” she said of the song whose title she did not share. “And then he proposed to me, and I was so shocked. I was so shocked and I normally, I’m not like, normally I can sense when something’s coming, but I was so shocked about this.” Lovato and Lutes got married in California on May 25. Ottawa native and independent musician Lutes co-wrote a number of tracks on Lovato’s 2022 Holy Fvck album, including “Substance,” “Happy Ending” and “City of Angels.” Demi’s ninth studio album, It’s Not That Deep, is due out on Oct. 24, with the singles “Fast” and “Here All Night” released as singles so far. Lovato told the Mash Up team that she and Lutes work “really well together,” and though they didn’t write a lot on her upcoming LP, he did write a song that made the final tracklist. “He wrote it and I was like, ‘Wait, I love that!’ and he was like, ‘You can have it,’” she said of the song “In My Head.” Earlier this week news broke that Lovato and the Jonas Brothers are working on a third installment of the franchise that made them both stars. Nick, Joe and Kevin are slated to reprise their roles as the Gray brothers and executive produce alongside Lovato on Camp Rock 3. Watch Lovato discuss the proposal below. Source link

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RAYE Shares New Single, Announces Second Album and Global Tour

RAYE has shared her bombastic new single “Where Is My Husband?” and announced news of a global tour for 2026. The London-born songwriter revealed the This Tour May Contain New Music dates on her Instagram, which begins in Europe at the Polish city of Łódź on Jan. 22 and travels through mainland Europe over the following weeks.  The U.K. and Ireland leg begins on Feb. 17 at Manchester’s Co-op Live, before dates in Glasgow, Birmingham, London and Dublin. The run includes two shows at London’s 20,000-capacity O2 Arena on Feb. 26 and 27. The tour will be supported by her two sisters ABOSLUTELY, and AMMA, both of whom are performers in their own right. Explore See latest videos, charts and news The run then transfers to North America from March 31 and kicks off in Sacramento, Calif. at the Channel 24 venue. She’ll then hit major cities and venues such as New York’s Radio City Music Hall and conclude at Los Angeles’ Greek Theatre on May 12. See the full dates below. The tour poster also confirmed that “the album is coming” and pre-orders for her sophomore album are now available on her website. The LP is yet to have a title, artwork or release date. “The album is not done yet okay, but let’s just trust the process,” she added in her Instagram caption. Her debut LP My 21st Century Blues was released in 2023. Tickets for the shows go on sale on Sep. 25 at 10 a.m. local time from RAYE’s website. Fans in the U.K., France and Germany can access a pre-sale on Sep. 23 at 10 a.m. when they pre-order a copy of her forthcoming album. “Where Is My Husband?” has been performed live by RAYE during her live run at festivals including Glastonbury back in June. Speaking to British Vogue in a new cover story, she reflected on the new LP and its contents: “My first album was very devastating in parts,” she said in the feature. “In the second album, I feel this need for hope for myself and wanting that to translate to others.” On Oct. 2, she will recognised at the Ivors Academy Honours event in London for her campaigning for a fairer and more equitable landscape for songwriters like herself. Beyond her own work, RAYE has written for a number of artists such as Charli xcx, Beyoncé, Jennifer Lopez and more. RAYE’s This Tour May Contain New Music 2026 tour dates Jan. 22: Lodz, Poland @ Atlas Arena Jan. 24: Berlin, Germany @ Uber Arena Jan. 25: Prague, Czech Republic @ O2 Arena Jan. 27: Amsterdam, Netherlands @ Ziggo Dome Jan. 30: Bologna, Italy @ Unipol Arena Feb. 1: Antwerp, Belgium @ AFAS Dome Feb. 3: Copenhagen, Denmark @ Royal Arena Feb. 5: Oslo, Norway @ Unity Arena Feb. 7: Stockholm, Sweden @ Avicii Arena Feb. 10: Cologne, Germany @ Lanxess Arena Feb. 11: Zurich, Switzerland @ Hallenstadion Feb. 13: Barcelona, Spain @ Palau Saint Jordi Feb. 15: Paris, France @ Accor Arena Feb. 17: Manchester, UK @ Co-op Live Feb. 20: Glasgow, UK @ OVO Hydro Feb. 23: Birmingham, UK @ bp pulse LIVE Feb. 26: London, UK @ The O2 Feb. 27: London, UK @ The O2 March 4: Dublin, Ireland @ 3Arena March 31: Sacramento, Calif. @ Channel 24 Apr. 2: Vancouver, BC @ Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Center Apr. 3: Seattle, Wash. @ WAMU Theater @ Lumen Field Apr. 6: Denver, Co. @ Fillmore Auditorium Apr. 8: Minneapolis, Minn. @ State Theatre Apr. 10: Chicago, Ill. @ Auditorium Theatre Apr. 12: Montreal, QC @ Place Bell Apr. 13: Toronto, ON @ Coca Cola Coliseum Apr. 15: New York, N.Y. @ Radio City Music Hall Apr. 19: Philadelphia, Pa. @ The Met Presented by Highmark Apr. 20: Boston, Mass. @ MGM Music Hall at Fenway Apr. 26: Washington, D.C., USA @ The Anthem Apr. 28: Atlanta, Ga. @ Coca Cola Roxy Apr. 29: Nashville, Tenn. @ Ryman Auditorium May 1: Houston, Texas @ 713 Music Hall May 3: Dallas, Texas @ South Side Ballroom Source link

‘What a Year We’ve Had’

Occasionally the musical universe conjures astonishing success stories that we might never have thought to ask for and had no right to expect. Depending on who you’re talking to, Kneecap, a fiery, sharp and dexterous rap trio from West Belfast who have seen a wild ascent over the past year, might fall into that bracket. Explore See latest videos, charts and news It’s a sentiment clearly shared among the thousands that descended upon London’s OVO Wembley Arena on Thursday night (Sept. 18), an audience that skewed across multiple generations. Since they released their debut project 3CAG in 2018 (their first full-length record, Fine Art, followed last year), it’s been argued that the appeal of Kneecap has been centered as much – if not more – around the collective giddiness they inspire as much as the music itself. Whichever it is, the concourse felt bulging at the seams with an unending sea of football shirts in varying green hues, keffiyehs draped across shoulders, and Irish accents of every lilt. Everything from Abbey Road-aping poster prints and Kneecap-branded crew socks to sweat bands and tricolour balaclavas could be found at the merch stand. Such was the size of the crowd near the bar, that arena staff were left to direct punters through the jubilant mob with the focus and movements of a team of aircraft marshals. The build-up to this headline show had been dizzying. Less than a year ago, Kneecap were playing London venues that were merely a fifth of the size compared to OVO Wembley’s 12,500 capacity, but nearly 12 months on and they are one of the most hotly debated acts of 2025, continually garnering headlines (and new fans) the world over. Over the summer, rapper Mo Chara attended two court hearings over what his bandmate Móglaí Bap has called a “trumped up” terrorism-related offence for allegedly displaying a Hezbollah flag – a proscribed terror group by U.K. law – in resurfaced footage from a past concert, a charge he denies. Mo Chara is on unconditional bail and will return to the Westminster Magistrates’ Court next week (Sept. 26); the proximity of the upcoming hearing means the band had to cancel their planned U.S. tour this fall. Kneecap’s vocal and longstanding opposition to Israel’s treatment of Palestinians in Gaza first brought them global attention back in the spring, after they ended their Coachella set by describing Israel’s military action as a US-funded genocide. In following months, the former X Factor judge Sharon Osbourne called for their US work visas to be revoked, while a number of their U.K. and European summer festival sets were pulled, including TRNSMT in Glasgow.   Yet they have marched on. Kneecap’s live show continues to be a medium for their message; prior to their set at OVO Wembley, they welcomed Massive Attack members Robert Del Naja and Grant Marshall to the stage, who aired a moving anti-war video. Palestine flags were waved across the crowd and draped across seats as a giant one was displayed on screen. Fontaines D.C.’s “I Love You,” a song written about disillusionment and political violence, blared over the speakers in the moments afterwards. That ineffable charge continued to feel palpable as the lights went down and a thunderous roar went up. “What a year we’ve had,” said Mo Chara a few songs in, making scarce reference to recent events and instead directing his energy towards speaking about the Palestine cause in vivid and passionate language.  Behind the decks, a mischievous, trigger-happy DJ Próvaí occasionally came in a beat too early, adding an air of levity to the occasion. Kneecap zipped through tracks at high speed: 21 songs in barely an hour. It was a smartly relentless approach that encouraged fans to rearrange themselves into a series of moshpits, egged on by Mo Chara. The frenzied energy carried a show that didn’t have much visual excitement beyond a screen showing animated illustrations, or amorphous blobs of colour during “Rhino Ket.” In between the roaring maximalism of tracks like “I’m Flush” and “Parful”, there was space for an emotional exchange with longtime collaborator Jelani Blackman, who joined Kneecap for “Harrow Road.” For the rest of the night, Mo Chara and Móglaí Bap played the role of solicitous emcees, introducing songs, thanking the crowd for their support and encouraging security to hand out more water to those along the barrier. Most touching of all was watching the group – known to many as little more than a rowdy, subversive force of nature – pause to highlight and take in the significance of how, as a predominantly Irish language act, they managed to fill out such a vast room. “This means the absolute world to us,” they said repeatedly, standing tall and proud. Source link

Miley Cyrus Shares ‘Something Beautiful’ Deluxe Edition

Miley Cyrus is back with more of Something Beautiful. As promised in a social post earlier in the week, the veteran pop singer has dropped the deluxe edition, featuring the original LP’s 13 songs, plus two new tracks featuring rock icons. The first of those fresh cuts is a number Cyrus has been teasing for several weeks, “Secrets,” a sweeping ballad featuring former Fleetwood Mac bandmates drummer Mick Fleetwood and guitarist/singer Lindsey Buckingham. Explore See latest videos, charts and news The now 15-track expanded LP closes with a collaboration featuring David Byrne, called “Lockdown.” It’s not the first time Cyrus and Byrne have made music together. The “Wrecking Ball” singer swung onto the stage with the Talking Heads legend in 2022 for her NBC New Year’s Eve special, when they performed hit a duet on David Bowie’s “Let’s Dance” as well as Byrne’s “Everybody’s Coming To My House.” Cyrus’ ninth studio album, Something Beautiful arrived in May and includes collaborations with members of the bands Alvvays, Model/Actriz, the War on Drugs, as well as Danielle Haim, Flea, model Naomi Campbell and Brittany Howard. The album was accompanied by a musical film written and co-directed by Cyrus that premiered at this year’s Tribeca Film Festival and then played in theaters for one-night-only in June before moving to streaming on Hulu. Something Beautiful peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard 200, and is one of Cyrus’ 15 top 10 appearances on the albums chart, a tally that includes five leaders. She has led the Billboard Hot 100 on two occasions, with 2013’s “Wrecking Ball” (for three weeks) and 2023’s “Flowers” (for eight weeks). The album release was followed with the short film of the same name. After its Tribeca premiere, Something Beautiful was shown as a one-night-only screening across North American theaters on June 12 and internationally on June 27. Cyrus attended a listening event for fans in Los Angeles earlier this year, where she remarked: “I love making music with everybody on this carpet – I don’t do stages now,” a nod to news that she has no desire to tour again. Stream Something Beautiful (Deluxe) below. Source link

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