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Swedish House Mafia Opener Yves Tumor Responds After Being Booed

Yves Tumor has responded after being booed by the crowd during the artist’s opening set for Swedish House Mafia. The performance happened on Thursday (Sept. 11) at Arthur Ashe Stadium in Queens, N.Y. Videos posted of the opening set show the experimental electronic artist playing industrial electronic music and also lying on the decks during parts of the show, with other footage showing members of the large crowd booing Tumor’s performance. The situation got messier after the show, when Tumor posted a video to Instagram Stories saying that “if anyone’s curious how the show went, I just got booed offstage for playing the best set of the night by a bunch of the corniest people I’ve ever seen in my f–king life.” “This city is truly hell on earth,” the artist continued in the video that showed debris being thrown at a poster of New York City. “I thought L.A. was bad. I thought Berlin was bad. I thought Paris was bad. Berlin is definitely worse.” In a series of other Stories posted to Instagram, Tumor shared a screenshot of negative reactions to the set and wrote, “these subhumans are already spamming my comments. That’s how much they loved it they had that much energy to search me. I truly love my stalkers.” Another Story shows Tumor’s response to the question “What’s the genre called” to which they write “blatant racism.” Another appears to be a screenshot of a text message sent by Swedish House Mafia’s creative director Alexander Wessely saying, “I’m so sorry, that was f–ked up…. You killed it me and the guys loved it.” Meanwhile, in the charged comments section of a post about about the situation on the Instagram account of EDM House Network, deadmau5 wrote that “This entire comment section is a great litmus test of what EDM is all about right here,” a statement nodding to the culture wars that are common within the scene as underground and more commercial scenes and sounds collide. A representative for Tumor did not immediately respond to Billboard‘s request for comment. Swedish House Mafia is performing in New York City again Friday (Sept. 12) Under the K Bridge Park in Brooklyn. Their performance at Arthur Ashe Stadium made them the first electronic act to ever headline the venue. Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox Sign Up Source link

Josh Ross, ‘Hate How You Look’: Story Behind the Song

When Josh Ross peaked at No. 2 with “Single Again” on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart dated July 26, it marked his first appearance in the top 5. Now he’s back with a single, again, and the lyric finds his character single. Again. Explore See latest videos, charts and news And it comes with a title, “Hate How You Look,” that appears to be something it’s not. It’s kind of like an online headline that entices people to read the story, only to find out the contents aren’t quite what the title suggested. Ross bristles at the comparison. “It’s nothing like clickbait,” Ross says. “That does not work.” True that. Clickbait annoys readers once it’s clear they’ve been duped. But with “Hate The Way You Look,” the “dupe” is the whole point, and the listener is likely to appreciate it once it’s obvious. “You wonder,” Ross says, “is it actually just going to be a mean song? Like, ‘I just hate how you look.’ And then you listen to it, you realize that it’s a guy that’s like, ‘Dang, she looks good,’ and you’re actually kind of complimenting her. I’m a fan of titles like that.” The title comes compliments of songwriter Christian Yancey, who brought it to an appointment at Nashville’s Combustion Music with Nick Sainato, Chris McKenna and Jessica Farren in February 2024. “Hate How You Look” was intriguing – “It’s kind of an abrasive title,” Farren notes – but it was also a title that might make a consumer click “Play” when it appeared on a Spotify screen. “Especially with the Nashville flip,” Farren says, “it’s like, how can the title make you think something when you see it that is completely the opposite of what it means? And we were like, ‘Oh, that feels like money.’” Sainato developed a rock-leaning guitar background that seemed appropriate, then brought the whole session to a brief halt when he choked on Sour Patch candies. “I was sweating so bad,” Sainato recalls. “I texted my wife immediately” ‘I literally almost choked!’ And then we went and wrote the rest of the song.” They focused initially on the chorus, starting most of the lines with the word “hate” to tie in with the “I hate how you look moving on” hook. The first line was a doozy: “Hate how you look in that one, that you know I love red dress.” Even reading the lyric sheet, it’s arguably confusing. “My favorite songs have lines like that,” McKenna says. “Like, ‘What did he just say?’ Or, ‘Why did he say it that way?’ I think that’s kind of one of those lines. It almost doesn’t sound like perfect English.” Perfect punctuation helps. The lyric makes more sense if it’s presented, “Hate how you look in that one-that-you-know-I-love red dress.” It’s a mouthful to sing, but the words all fit sonically with the phrasing, which matters more than how it looks on a screen. “We’re all kind of syllable Nazis,” Farren quips, “like, making sure the words fit that perfectly and not compromising.” They constructed a relentlessly melodic chorus, each phrase built with a series of singable, stair-step notes. “I’m not really a great singer,” Sainato says. “So whenever you get to a chorus and I can sing it, I’m like, ‘That’s something. This feels like something real.’” In the middle of that chorus, the melody took a short breather, and they inserted what’s arguably the hookiest part of the song – the word “I” stretched into two syllables – before the lines kick back into their original relentless pace. When they turned to the verses, they pitched them an octave lower, which makes the chorus seem even more energetic. And in that smokier tone, they fashioned several vignettes of the woman coaxing attention in the room. Unusually, they left the setting a mystery until they developed a bridge, finally informing the listener that the song occurs in a bar. “I don’t think we really knew until we wrote that line,” Farren says, “that it was just the moment in time.” Yancey sang lead on the demo, which used a banjo with a Keith Urban vibe. Yancey pitched it to Ross, and he took to it right away, putting it on a playlist of potential new songs he could listen to periodically and play for others. “That was one that just kind of kept sticking itself out,” Ross says. Producer Matt Geroux (Matthew West, Chris Housman) thought highly of it, too, though no one from Ross’ team responded when they sent it. Subsequently, Geroux used artificial intelligence to replace Yancey’s voice on the demo with a semblance of Ross’ sound. The writers were a tad surprised when they heard the revision. “I’ve never had a label or a team send back a version of A.I. with their own artist on it like that,” McKenna says. “I feel like that can get a lot of songs across the finish line.” It certainly helped with “Hate How You Look.” The team thought it could be a hit, though Ross and Geroux determined they should segue from the demo’s Urban vibe to something harder. They cut the instrumental tracks in Geroux’s studio, toughening up the supporting instrumentation as they built it. “Even the guitar riff, I just doubled that and found a unique sound,” Geroux says. “I did a 12-string guitar patch and just fucked it up as much as I could – put it out of tune and put a warble effect on it.” They tried an obvious electric guitar solo, but opted instead for Justin Schipper’s atypical steel. “I think that’s the coolest part about that song,” Ross says. “It really rocks and moves along, but then the solo is a pedal steel solo, and it kind of all blends together in a perfect balance.” The A.I. vocal on the revised demo presented a small problem – Ross got used to that sound and instinctively emulated it when he cut his final vocal. Geroux

‘KPop Demon Hunters’ ‘Golden’ Is No. 1 Single in U.K. for Sixth Week

It’s another “Golden” week on the U.K.’s Singles Chart as the KPop Demon Hunters’ hit notches a sixth non-consecutive week at No. 1 on Friday (Sept. 12). The hit song from the Netflix animated film is the most successful K-pop song ever on the U.K. charts, and only the second No. 1 single following PSY’s “Gangnam Style.” “Golden” is credited to HUNTR/X, and is sung by EJAE, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami. The song is now in its fourth week at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. Two further songs from the film also appear in the top 10, with Saja Boys’ “Soda Pop” and “Your Idol” both bumping two spots at No. 4 and No. 7, respectively. Olivia Dean’s “Man I Need” holds strong at No. 2, her highest ever position on the U.K. Singles Chart. The song currently sits at No. 55 on the Hot 100, up 27 places week-on-week. Sabrina Carpenter’s “Tears” is a non-mover at No. 3, and Disco Lines and Tinashe’s “No Broke Boys” closes the week at No. 5. There’s new entries in the top 40 for Carpenter’s “When Did You Get Hot?” at No. 9, and Lady Gaga’s “The Dead Dance” from Netflix’s Wednesday season two at No. 13.  Vintage hits from a number of big names have made the most of viral moments, with Coldplay’s 2000 song “Sparks” rising to a new peak of No. 18, Gorillaz’ “Feel Good Inc” rising three spots to No. 27 and Rihanna’s 2008 song “Breakin’ Dishes” lifting one spot to No. 30. Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox Sign Up Source link

Sabrina Carpenter’s ‘Man’s Best Friend’ No. 1 on U.K. Chart for 2nd Week

Sabrina Carpenter’s Man’s Best Friend is No. 1 for a second consecutive week on the U.K.’s Official Albums Chart dated Sept. 12. The “Manchild” singer’s seventh studio album is her second LP to hit the top spot following 2024’s Short n’ Sweet. Man’s Best Friend also currently reigns atop the Billboard 200, with single “Tears” landing at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100. Carpenter performed “Tears” at the MTV VMAs in New Jersey on Sept. 7. During her slot, she honored ballroom icons and displayed messages showing support for the trans and LGBTQ communities. Explore See latest videos, charts and news After leading in the midweeks, Britpop icon Suede eventually land at No. 2 with its new LP Antidepressants. The group has topped the charts three times in the past with debut LP Suede (1993), Coming Up (1996) and Head Music (1999). It’s the group’s 10th top 10 appearance on the U.K. Official Albums Chart.  Oasis’ singles collection Time Flies… 1994-2009 holds its place in the top five, ending the week at No. 3 following a dominant summer on the charts. In the build-up to his new album Play, Ed Sheeran’s +–=÷× (Tour Collection) closes at No. 4; Fleetwood Mac’s greatest hits 50 Years: Don’t Stop rounds out the top five. There are new entries for Merseyside band Red Rum Club’s BUCK (No. 7), Saint Etienne’s International (No. 8), Tom Odell’s A Wonderful Life (No. 12) and Faithless’ Champion Sound (No. 15). Following the surprise release of a sequel to the No. 1 album of the same name, Justin Bieber’s SWAG rebounds 77 places to No. 10. Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox Sign Up Source link

Best New Latin Music This Week Poll

This week, Billboard’s New Music Latin roundup and playlist — curated by Billboard Latin and Billboard Español editors — features fresh new music, including releases by GALE, Rauw Alejandro, Yami Safdie and Kapo in collaboration with Camilo, to name a few. Puerto Rican singer-songwriter GALE offers the rebellious and honest “Ciao!,” a synth-pop track she described in a statement as “fun and sexy.” She added, “‘Ciao!’ is about stepping out of the gray area with someone, putting down the ultimatum and saying, ‘Either you decide now … or ciao!’ Sonically it’s my synth-pop throwback anthem, made to dance, let go and show off all your weird moves. It’s also unapologetically direct.” Meanwhile, Rauw Alejandro offers “GuabanSexxx,” an advance track from his upcoming album, Cosa Nuestra: Capítulo 0. The new song is a riveting fusion of house, bomba and plena — a continuation of the superstar’s tropical flair. Other new releases this week include Siddartha’s “Tú y Yo y Tú,” Kapo and Camilo’s collab “Esta Es Tu Casa Nena” and Los Plebes del Rancho de Ariel Camacho team up with Peso Pluma for “Haciendo Memoria.” In the Sept. 5 poll, Melanie Santiler and Cimafunk’s “Ese Besito” won with more than 86% of the vote. Which release this week do you think is best? Give these new releases a spin and vote for your favorite new Latin music release below: Editor’s Note: The results of the weekly New Music Latin poll will be posted if the poll generates more than 1,000 votes. This poll closes at 7:30 a.m. ET on Monday, Sept. 15. Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox Sign Up Source link

Filtran supuestos mensajes de Maju y su productor: “Desperté pensando en ti”

Redacción Panamericana Magaly Medina afirmó tener los supuestos chats entre Maju Mantilla y el productor de Arriba mi gente que confirmarían infidelidad. Magaly Medina sorprendió al asegurar que tuvo acceso a los supuestos mensajes románticos entre la exreina de belleza Maju Mantilla y Christian Rodríguez, productor de Arriba mi gente. Aunque no mostró capturas por tratarse de información privada, la ‘Urraca’ no dudó en exponer el posible contenido de algunos chats. Durante su programa, Medina dejó entrever que uno de los supuestos mensajes filtrados sería: “Desperté pensando en ti”, lo que, según ella, confirmaría que se trataba de una relación extramatrimonial. Te puede interesar Maju Mantilla: productora revela otra supuesta infidelidad con actor colombiano Magaly revela supuestos chats de Maju y su productor Frente a las críticas de su audiencia por no mostrar pruebas visibles, Magaly fue enfática en su explicación: “No puedo mostrar los chats porque pertenecen al entorno privado de Maju Mantilla, pero sí he tenido acceso a leerlos. Tampoco me voy a poner a leer hoy lo que es evidente: estamos hablando de una relación extramatrimonial”, expresó la ‘Urraca’. Además, recalcó que el tono de las conversaciones deja poco espacio para la duda: “Es una comunicación bastante amorosa, romántica, de dos personas que tienen un vínculo romántico”, sostuvo la periodista de espectáculos. Te puede interesar Maju parcha y manda indirectas a Gustavo Salcedo: “Hace 2 años no hice ningún señalamiento” Maju se pronuncia sobre supuesta infidelidad Ante esta ola de especulaciones, Maju Mantilla se tomó un espacio en Arriba mi gente para referirse a la situación, aunque evitó confirmar o desmentir lo señalado. “Yo jamás voy a hablar de los problemas de mi vida privada porque he dicho que lo voy a resolver en mi privacidad. Ahora con más razón porque el señor Gustavo Salcedo y yo hemos firmado una conciliación donde nos comprometemos a no hablar el uno del otro”, declaró. Con estas palabras, la presentadora insistió en mantener su vida íntima fuera del foco mediático, a pesar de la presión de la opinión pública. @josepastord Esto confirmooo!!!😨🔥🚨Ig:josepastord💥 #majumantilla #peruanos #fyp ♬ sonido original – JOSS Source link

Sublime’s ‘Ensenada’ Is No. 1 on Alternative Airplay Chart

Sublime has its first No. 1 on Billboard’s Alternative Airplay chart in close to 30 years, crowning the Sept. 20-dated tally with “Ensenada.” The song is the act’s second ruler and first sung by Jakob Nowell, son of late frontman Bradley Nowell. The band previously led in 1996 with “What I Got,” which crowned the ranking five months after Bradley Nowell’s overdose death that May. Sublime’s wait of 28 years and 10 months between No. 1s is the lengthiest in the Alternative Airplay chart’s 37-year history, surpassing Sum 41’s 22 years, six months and three weeks between “Fat Lip” in 2001 and “Landmines” in 2024. In between “What I Got” and “Ensenada,” Sublime reached Alternative Airplay with four tracks, paced by a pair of No. 3 peaks in “Santeria” and “Wrong Way,” both in 1997. Additionally, the band Sublime With Rome, which at first featured the surviving Sublime members plus frontman Rome Ramirez, hit the chart with four songs in 2011-19. Explore See latest videos, charts and news “Ensenada” concurrently reaches No. 1 on the all-rock-format, audience-based Rock & Alternative Airplay chart, marking Sublime’s first leader since the ranking began in 2009. In the week ending Sept. 11, it surged 51% to 4.1 million audience impressions, according to Luminate. “Ensenada” became Sublime’s first entry on Mainstream Rock Airplay in almost 29 years when it debuted at No. 38 on the Aug. 23 tally; it places at No. 40 on the latest survey. “Ensenada” previews Sublime’s next album, for which a release date has not been announced. It’s the band’s first LP since 1996’s self-titled release, which has accumulated 10.9 million equivalent album units to date. All Billboard charts dated Sept. 20 will update Tuesday, Sept. 16, on Billboard.com. It’s free Billboard charts month! Through Sept. 30, subscribers to Billboard’s Chart Beat newsletter, emailed each Friday, can unlock access to Billboard’s weekly and historical charts, artist chart histories and all Chart Beat stories simply by visiting the newly redesigned Billboard.com through any story link in the newsletter. Not a Chart Beat subscriber? Sign up for free here. Source link

Saja Boys, ‘Diet Pepsi,’ ‘Coca-Cola’ Bubble Up in 2025

This year finds artists quenching fans’ thirst for pop hits, literally. On the latest, Sept. 20-dated Adult Alternative Airplay chart, St. Paul & the Broken Bones make a fizzy lift to No. 10 with “Sushi & Coca-Cola.” (It’s the act’s third top 10 on the tally and first since 2018.) In February, Addison Rae earned her first top 10 on a Billboard radio chart — fittingly, Pop Airplay — with “Diet Pepsi.” Meanwhile, Saja Boys’ addictive confection “Soda Pop,” from Netflix’s KPop Demon Hunters, has spent the last four weeks bubbling in the Billboard Hot 100’s top 10, reaching No. 5. A year after Sabrina Carpenter’s “Espresso” became a buzzy smash, hitting No. 3 on the Hot 100, listeners’ musical tastes have segued to carbonated caffeinated treats. Historically, other artists have had the moxie to make such hits. In 1945, the Andrews Sisters enjoyed one of their biggest songs, the pre-rock era track “Rum and Coca-Cola.” (Coca-Cola hit the marketplace in 1886; notably, eight years before Billboard, whose own tag line in the 2000s was “Experience the Buzz.”) The Beatles’ 1969 Hot 100 No. 1 “Come Together” includes Coca-Cola in its lyrics (though with a quite different accepted meaning). Perhaps most famously, the New Seekers and the Hillside Singers poured concurrent hits on the Hot 100 in 1971-72 with “I’d Like to Teach the World to Sing,” with their versions climbing to Nos. 7 and 13, respectively. The song originated as a beloved Coca-Cola jingle “Buy the World a Coke,” sung by the Hillside Singers. In 1979, Mel Tillis’ “Coca Cola Cowboy” chugged to No. 1 on Hot Country Songs. In 1988-89, R.E.M. uncapped an Alternative Airplay No. 1 with “Orange Crush” (also not just about the drink). Britney Spears’ debut LP, 1999’s …Baby One More Time, which ruled the Billboard 200 for six weeks, begins with three hit singles — the Hot 100 No. 1 title cut, “(You Drive Me) Crazy” and “Sometimes” — before fans were further introduced to her with her own “Soda Pop.” By 2023, EXO’s “Cream Soda” added a sweet vanilla flavor to the Billboard Global 200, Billboard Global Excl. U.S. and World Digital Song Sales charts. Plus, “If You Could Only See” hit No. 1 on Mainstream Rock Airplay and the top 10 on Adult Pop Airplay in 1997, becoming the signature song for (who else?) Tonic. All charts dated Sept. 20 will update Tuesday, Sept. 16, on Billboard.com. It’s free Billboard charts month! Through Sept. 30, subscribers to Billboard’s Chart Beat newsletter, emailed each Friday, can unlock access to Billboard’s weekly and historical charts, artist chart histories and all Chart Beat stories simply by visiting the newly redesigned Billboard.com through any story link in the newsletter. Not a Chart Beat subscriber? Sign up for free here. Source link

Filtran supuestos mensajes de Maju y su productor: “Desperté pensando en ti”

Magaly Medina sorprendió al asegurar que tuvo acceso a los supuestos mensajes románticos entre la exreina de belleza Maju Mantilla y Christian Rodríguez, productor de Arriba mi gente. Aunque no mostró capturas por tratarse de información privada, la ‘Urraca’ no dudó en exponer el posible contenido de algunos chats. Durante su programa, Medina dejó entrever que uno de los supuestos mensajes filtrados sería: “Desperté pensando en ti”, lo que, según ella, confirmaría que se trataba de una relación extramatrimonial. Te puede interesar Maju Mantilla: productora revela otra supuesta infidelidad con actor colombiano Magaly revela supuestos chats de Maju y su productor Frente a las críticas de su audiencia por no mostrar pruebas visibles, Magaly fue enfática en su explicación: “No puedo mostrar los chats porque pertenecen al entorno privado de Maju Mantilla, pero sí he tenido acceso a leerlos. Tampoco me voy a poner a leer hoy lo que es evidente: estamos hablando de una relación extramatrimonial”, expresó la ‘Urraca’. Además, recalcó que el tono de las conversaciones deja poco espacio para la duda: “Es una comunicación bastante amorosa, romántica, de dos personas que tienen un vínculo romántico”, sostuvo la periodista de espectáculos. Te puede interesar Maju parcha y manda indirectas a Gustavo Salcedo: “Hace 2 años no hice ningún señalamiento” Maju se pronuncia sobre supuesta infidelidad Ante esta ola de especulaciones, Maju Mantilla se tomó un espacio en Arriba mi gente para referirse a la situación, aunque evitó confirmar o desmentir lo señalado. “Yo jamás voy a hablar de los problemas de mi vida privada porque he dicho que lo voy a resolver en mi privacidad. Ahora con más razón porque el señor Gustavo Salcedo y yo hemos firmado una conciliación donde nos comprometemos a no hablar el uno del otro”, declaró. Con estas palabras, la presentadora insistió en mantener su vida íntima fuera del foco mediático, a pesar de la presión de la opinión pública. @josepastord Esto confirmooo!!!Ig:josepastord #majumantilla #peruanos #fyp ♬ sonido original – JOSS La entrada Filtran supuestos mensajes de Maju y su productor: “Desperté pensando en ti” se publicó primero en Radio Onda Cero. Source link

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