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Categoría: Billboard

Best New Music of the Week Poll

September was full of new music releases, and the last week of the month was no exception. As the seasons officially transition over from summer to fall, Doja Cat, Mariah Carey and several more artists dropped albums the week of Friday, Sept. 26. The rapper’s, titled Vie, shows Doja triumphantly returning to her pop-inspired sound, with SZA stepping in for a sequel to their Billboard Hot 100-topping hit “Say So” titled “Take Me Dancing.” Mimi’s album, Here for It All, marks her first full-length since 2018’s Caution and features production from Anderson .Paak — who also costars with Carey in a flirty music video showing off the pair’s chemistry amid dating rumors. But those are just two of the highly anticipated LPs that dropped this week. Young Thug returned with new album UY Scuti, while Olivia Dean built on the momentum of her hit “Man I Need” by unveiling The Art of Loving. Rauw Alejandro is also back with Cosa Nuestra: Capítulo 0, and Geese shared Getting Killed. Plus, Tate McRae released “Tit for Tat,” her first proper single since her sophomore album, So Close to What, reached No. 1 on the Billboard 200 in March, while 5 Seconds of Summer reunited after a yearslong break to drop “NOT OK” ahead of new album Everyone’s a Star! Going into October, that’s a lot of new music to get through — but Billboard still wants to know which release you’re loving the most at the start of fall 2025. Tell us by casting your vote in the poll below. Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox Sign Up Source link

HARDY’s ‘Country! Country’ Album: All 20 Tracks Ranked

In August, Eric Church declared HARDY “one of the greatest songwriters Nashville has.”  That’s high praise coming from a singer-songwriter who almost everyone in Music City would declare the same. For sure, in less than a decade, the talented HARDY has become a top go-to songwriter in Nashville, responsible for co-writing great songs for other artists that stand out among the best cuts in their catalogs, including “God’s Country” for Blake Shelton and “Sand in My Boots” and “I’m a Little Crazy” for Morgan Wallen. HARDY, who just headlined Madison Square Garden for the first time, has also written songs for himself that have resonated greatly for their emotional heft, among them “Wait in the Truck” (featuring Lainey Wilson) and “Give Heaven Some Hell.” For Country! Country!, HARDY’s first album since rock album, Quit!! a year and a half ago, as the title indicates he leans heavily into his country country roots growing up in Philadelphia, Mississippi (population: 6,900). The album celebrates his tremendous love for what it means to be raised hunting and fishing and away from city life, which he seems to thoroughly disdain. As he celebrates Hank, George, Waylon and other good old boys, his slavish, unwavering devotion to country comes more through the often-heavy-handed lyrical content than the musical styles: HARDY is more of the hunting-fishing-outdoorsy country purist rather than the kind that sings about the girl in cutoffs in the front seat of the truck that dominated the Bro Country movement. Many of the songs mix country with a soft pop tilt or a rock sheen, though there are enough tunes here that bring the twang. HARDY could have just as easily called the album Death! Death! His other obsession on the album is dying, and sometimes he even combines the two subjects in the same song. He jokes about it in album closer, “Everybody Dies.” At 20 tracks, the Joey Moi-produced album occasionally feels overstuffed and redundant, especially when he takes the same topic, as with “Gun to My Head” and the far superior “Take the Country and Run” and drives it into the ground. But for every song that feels like it could be cut, there’s a tune that touches a nerve, like “Goodbye,” or that takes a surprising twist on a topic such as “I’d Go Crazy Too.”  Vocally, he’s never sounded better, especially when he takes on his haters on the humorous and pointed “Y’all Need Jesus,” evangelizes country life on “Favorite Country Song,” or writes his own eulogy on “Bottomland.” Below is an early take on Country! Country!  “Keep It Country” Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } Like a zealot for his cause, HARDY tells the folks back home, he’ll make his return but for now he’s on a mission to spread their way of life to folks in the big city. He’s traded in dirt roads for city lights, but it’s temporary and hopefully he can make some converts along the way. “I’m just singing in the lights/ Tryna keep this way of life alive and I’ll be back I swear/ ‘Til then I’ll keep it country ‘round here.” “Bro Country” (feat. Ernest) Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } This is not your father’s Bro Country anymore. HARDY, in the album’s twangiest song, looks back at the Bro Country movement that acts like Florida Georgia Line ushered in more than a decade ago, and gives it slight shade for moving country away from staples like Hank, George, etc.  He admits, “I’ve been that drunk redneck signing your songs,” but is happy to be part of the next generation that has helped bring it back to basics. Nice plug for “Billboard Country Top 10” in the lyrics. Thanks! “Buck on the Wall” Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } A driving nostalgic look at the cabin his grandfather built adorned with a buck mounted on the wall his grandfather killed. His grandfather is dead (and obviously so is the deer), but HARDY’s determined to kill a buck so there’s a matching set, though it destroys him that his grandfather won’t be there to hunt with him. Will surely appeal to generations of hunters. “Gun to My Head” Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } HARDY appreciates the country life, as he stresses over and over on this track that sounds like it could have been recorded by Lynyrd Skynyrd. But on “Gun to My Head,” he’s just getting boorish. Give him the sounds of the whippoorwills over the sights of the big city. Even if someone puts a gun to his head, he won’t give up the country and, as he sings, “The only way I’m goin’/ Is in boots in the back of a hearse.”  I don’t know who’s making HARDY feel like it’s an either/or proposition, but we get it, pal. By the time you get to this track, which is No. 16 on the album, you feel like you’ve been hit over

Best New Latin Music Poll

This week, Billboard’s New Music Latin roundup and playlist — curated by Billboard Latin and Billboard Español editors — features fresh new music by Sebastián Yatra, who recruits Belinda, Gente de Zona and Lucho RK for “Canción Para Regresar, and Corina Smith’s latest album, Menos Triste, Más Mami, to name a few.  About her new album, Smith said in a statement that the LP “marks a genuine turning point in my life.” The Venezuelan artist added, “It was created at a time when I wasn’t as sad as before, yet far from feeling OK. I knew I had to move forward, open up and start anew … but the wounds I carried were still fresh. This album wasn’t written from certainty, but from the real confusion of being caught between the past and the unknown future, unsure of what I truly wanted.” Meanwhile, Yatra — with an eclectic group of artists in tow — dropped “Canción Para Regresar,” powered by a fusion of reggaetón with pop and tropical rhythms. According to a press release, the song was born in Ibiza during a session between Yatra and Lucho RK at Casa BRESH. Other new releases this week include music from Rauw Alejandro, who dropped Cosa Nuestra: Capítulo 0, Boza and Sech’s “Paris” and Natti Natasha’s “Cuando Las Traje Aquí,” an emotional track she premiered on Sept. 25 at Premios Juventud 2025. 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. 29. Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox Sign Up Source link

Young Thug’s ‘UY SCUTI’: The 13 Best Lines

King Spider has made his triumphant return. Check out some of our favorite bars from his new album. 9/26/2025 Young Thug jumps into the crowd during the 2025 Lyrical Lemonade Summer Smash at SeatGeek Stadium on June 22, 2025 in Bridgeview, Illinois. Barry Brecheisen/Getty Images Young Thug is officially back. Last night, he dropped his long-awaited UY SCUTI album, his first project after being released from jail last Halloween after a highly publicized trial that took three years from his life and career. His transition back so far has been a rough one. There’s the situation with Gunna and then there’s the leaked jailhouse phone calls and interrogation room audio and the fallout that all cause which led him to address everything in an emotional interview and then on “Miss My Dogs.” And you can hear some of those same emotions pour out on tracks like “Catch Me I’m Falling” and “Sad Spider,” but everything is balanced out with songs like “Yuck” and “I’m So Dope.” Thug hasn’t quite returned to form just yet and I was expecting some funnier lines and more s—t talking’, so I suggest that we all remain patient with him as he takes time to find his bearings. He might have to explain that weird album cover and the last verse on the intro “Ninja,” though. Like what’s up with that? I’m also wondering why Drake didn’t make the album and why Future was only on one song, and don’t want to speculate. Anyway, Thugger’s fourth studio album is a 21-track affair that features that features Ken Carson, Cardi B, T.I., Mariah the Scientist, Lil Baby, Sexyy Red, 21 Savage, Travis Scott, Quavo, Lil Gotit, 1300SAINT, Future and most notably, YFN Lucci due to their long, complicated history. Check out our picks for the 13 Best Lines on Young Thug’s UY SCUTI album below. “We put that s—t on when it’s borin’” Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } Song: “Whoopty Doo”Who said it? Young Thug I can relate to this line because I might throw on some deadstock sneakers you’ve never seen before just to run errands. Y’all don’t really be puttin’ that s—t on, for real, for real. “Baby, come and tell ’em how you got me out the jam/ Yeah, I’m gettin’ richer than that p—y Uncle Sam” Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } Song: “F—king Told U”Who said it? Young Thug I would be upset with the state too if I were Young Thug, so I feel him. “Pushin’ Peter, I need me a Kangol/ Ain’t a place in America I can’t go” Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } Song: “Pardon My Back”Who said it? Young Thug There’s been much debate about what “pushin’ p” really means, but one thing we can agree on is that the “p” stands for “pimp’ and/or “player” as exhibited here because some players and pimps have been known to rock a Kangol in their day. Thanks for coming to my Urban Dictionary TED Talk. “Drinkin’ two-liter, ride a two-seater, ridin’ with a eater” Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } Song: “Money on Money”Who said it? Young Thug Who’s your favorite eater? Comment below. “The Phantom, the Rolls, I don’t know/ The eaters go everywhere I go” Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } Song: “Money on Money”Who said it? Future The life of a successful rapper is truly a sight to behold. “Pull out and stunt, got ’em jealous/ I done got wings on my back ’cause I’m fly like propeller/ Wintertime, rockin’ the Pelle/ I take a trip to New York and then fly back to LA/ I’m with Slime in Philly/ Look how I rock that s—t, I’m a Roc-A-Fella” Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } Song: “Revenge”Who said it? 1300SAINT I want to believe that Saint made a Freeway and Beanie Sigel “Roc the Mic” reference at the end there. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it. Sidebar: The “fly like propeller” line reminds of the time Roc Marciano once said, “Fly, you might find me in a spiderweb.” “Look, I got the Snow White Richie, face extra large/ Seven big bodies, ain’t no seven dwarves/ Got more diamonds than a deck of cards” Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should

HARDY on New Album ‘Country! Country!’

HARDY’s new album Country! Country!, out today (Sept. 26) on Big Loud Records, gives fans a potent reminder that his recent rock tilt hasn’t erased his country bona fides in the slightest. This is, after all, the same artist who saw one of his earliest successes with a swaggering, tongue-in-cheek anthem called “Rednecker.” Explore See latest videos, charts and news Across the past decade, HARDY has become one of Nashville’s most prolific, versatile voices, a songwriter and artist who can put forth a twangy country anthem as easily as a bone-rattling rock song. Thus far, his career as an artist is marked by three No. 1 hits on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart (“Truck Bed,” “Beers on Me” with Dierks Bentley and Breland, and “One Beer” with Lauren Alaina and Devin Dawson) and a trio of No. 1s on the Hot Hard Rock Songs chart (“Psycho,” “Rock Star” and “Sold Out”). That’s in addition to the many songs he’s penned for other artists including Morgan Wallen, Carrie Underwood, and Blake Shelton. After releasing Hixtape Vol. 1 in 2019, followed by his debut country album A Rock in 2020, HARDY spent the past few years diving headlong into his hard rock influences. In 2023, he unveiled the mockingbird & The Crow, a split-down-the-middle hybrid of country anthems and fury-fueled rock with lyrics that still held country signifiers. That record paved the way for 2024’s Quit!!, which leaned even harder into his rock and metal influences, with collaborations alongside Fred Durst (Limp Bizkit) and Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Chad Smith. He embraces the freedom of genre-bending, saying, “At the end of the day, music should not come with a rule book. I think it’s cool that people are bouncing around [genres]. A lot of people roll their eyes like, ‘Oh, so-and-so’s doing a country album now.’ But music should have no rules, and I’m here for it.” His new album not only declares his passion for the country music genre hasn’t dimmed (most notably on songs such as “Take the Country and Run” and “Keep It Country”), but gives glimpses into his earliest songwriting, while offering a clear-eyed purview of the shifts the country music sound has seen over the past few years. The Mississippi native studied songwriting at Middle Tennessee State University. In 2018, he was one of the first songwriters to be part of Relative Music Group, formed by Dennis Matkosky and his son Jesse Matkosky. HARDY earned his first No. 1 Billboard Country Airplay hit as a writer with the Morgan Wallen/Florida Georgia Line collaboration “Up Down” and went on to sign with Big Loud Records. The new album’s “Dog Years,” written from the perspective of a faithful canine companion in its twilight years, looking back on his life with his human friend, is a decade-old solo write from HARDY. “It’s one of the oldest songs in my catalog,” he says. “That was on my Schedule A, a list of songs you bring into your publishing deal. I can’t believe nobody ever cut it, and I just never had a place for it beforehand,” he says, adding that the song resurfaced after Miranda Lambert heard it and asked him to perform it at a MuttNation charity event. The new album’s “Bro Country” finds HARDY and his vocal collaborator/ co-writer ERNEST revisiting the legacy of the musical style that dominated country radio in the 2010s, while also acknowledging how musical tastes have shifted since then. As a writer, HARDY contributed to multiple songs of the era, such as “Up Down.” “We always knew we were going to sing it together, whoever ended up cutting it first, and I beat him to it,” HARDY says. “Some feathers may have gotten ruffled in town, with people thinking I was calling a whole genre irrelevant, but that’s not what it’s about. It’s really more about how times change, and that’s okay.” Mortality threads through much of his Country! Country! project, whether in the haunting “Goodbye” or “We’re All Going to Die.” “Bottomland” finds him pondering what the funeral service will be like after his passing. The video for the song features HARDY singing while lying in a casket in the ground— imagery that isn’t entirely foreign to him. Before chasing his dreams in Nashville, HARDY once worked for a local cemetery department in Mississippi. “I did that for about six months or something,” he recalls. Of filming the graveyard scene, he adds, “It really wasn’t that bad, to be honest. I had to do a music video once in a straight jacket [his video for ‘Psycho’], and I felt like that was more claustrophobic than the grave was. Sadly, it was kind of cozy down there.” Living life to its fullest is a concept that weaves throughout the project. “Even a song like ‘Luckiest Man Alive,’ it’s recognizing your mortality,” he says. “But it challenges you to want to be a better person, and live a better life. I feel like it’s just a hodgepodge of all of that.” He says some of that thematic thread likely stems from a 2022 accident, when HARDY and other members of his team were significantly injured when a tour bus they were traveling in overturned on I-40 while returning to Nashville. Nearly a year later, he canceled several shows, citing panic attacks and anxiety. “I think probably subconsciously, although it’s been a couple of years now, the bus accident really shed a pretty bright light on my mortality and how fragile life is in general,” he reflects. “Since then, I’ve maybe been in this headspace of, ‘Hey, don’t think it can’t happen to you, because it definitely can.’” He says therapy has been a key to healing: “I kind of had my mental breakdown a year after that, and then I went to a lot of therapy and took all the right steps to deal with trauma. I’m way on the other side of it now.” The album also holds moments of his signature wit

Jason Kelce Reacts to NBA Star Josh Hart’s Ask to Meet Taylor Swift

Jason Kelce knows that his future sister-in-law is in high demand. In a hilarious moment from his recent appearance on Josh Hart and Jalen Brunson’s Roommates Show podcast, the retired Philadelphia Eagles center responded to one of the New York Knicks star’s requests to meet Taylor Swift with a response that essentially boiled down to “You’re on your own, kid.” In a clip from the episode posted Thursday (Sept. 25), Brunson encourages Hart to ask Kelce “the question you wanted to ask him.” When Hart can’t remember which question his teammate is referring to, Brunson tells the New Heights podcaster, “He wants to meet Taylor.” As the show’s live audience cheers at the mention of Swift’s name, Kelce nods and says, “He wants to meet Taylor?” The former NFL star then makes it clear that there’s nothing he can do to help Hart with his request, even if the pop star is now engaged to Jason’s younger brother, Travis Kelce. “Get in line, buddy!” Jason tells the basketball player. The podcast episode comes about a month after Swift and Travis announced their engagement. Sharing photos in August of the Kansas City Chiefs tight end down on one knee and the 14-time Grammy winner showing off her sparkly new ring, the couple wrote on Instagram, “Your English teacher and your gym teacher are getting married.” Shortly afterward, Jason congratulated his brother and Swift on “the proposal heard ’round the world” in a solo segment on the siblings’ New Heights podcast. Podcaster Kylie Kelce, who is married to Jason, also recently told Good Morning America that their four daughters are “thrilled” to welcome the hitmaker into their ranks. “They’re so excited they’re getting another aunt,” Kylie said. “And we could not be more excited for them and what the future holds. We love love, and we love Taylor and Trav.” See the moment Jason hilariously squashed Josh Hart’s dreams of meeting Swift below. Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox Sign Up Source link

Purity Ring, Madeon, Disclosure & More

This week in dance music: We recapped last weekend’s Portola 2025 fest in San Francisco, and Armada Music opened a 7,000 square foot creative space in London’s Shoreditch neighborhood. The six floor facility is built out with recording studios, an event space, listening rooms and other bells and whistles. Fortnite announced that The Daft Punk Experience will launch within the gaming platform on Sept. 27 and feature 31 songs from the duo’s esteemed catalog, and Bye Bye Plastic, the organization co-founded by Blond:ish that aims to bring down the use of single-use plastic in the dance scene, announced a new initiative called Zero Plastic Club: NYC. Launching during Climate Week: NYC (Sept. 21-28), the initiative will work to eliminate 42 tons of waste from New York’s nightlife industry annually by working with the city’s nightlife community to reduce and eliminating the use of plastic bottles, cups, wristbands and other single-use items used at shows and parties. And in a move many DJs have long been asking for, Serato announced that it’s now integrated with Spotify, with DJs now able to mix directly from the DSP’s entire catalog in real time. This integration also launched in djay, the DJing software made by Algoriddim. Meanwhile, the operators behind Miami’s Club Space brought a countersuit against Insomniac Events, alleging “predatory tactics and greed” in regard to a soured partnership over the Miami venue Factory Town. Calvin Harris’ former business manager responded to fraud claims, saying he’s never stolen from anybody after accusations that he abused his access to Harris’ finances. Billboard‘s August Dance Rookie of the Month Ninajirachi earned a record eight ARIA nominations, including nods for album of the year and best solo artist, with fellow Aussie star Dom Dolla also earning seven noms. Fred again.. announced a ten show run and ten different cities in support of his new USB002 project, with the shows only being announced in the days preceding them. We shared an exclusive clip of the Kygo: Back at the Bowl concert film that’s opening in theaters across the U.S. today, we shared exclusive Dirtybird Campout x Northern Nights 2025 sets from UNIIQU3, Moody Jones, Life on Planets and J. Phlip and we announced CLUB Billboard, a livestream DJ series that will feature DJs play the most essential Latin music of the moment. And last but never least, these are the best new dance tracks of the week. Purity Ring, Purity Ring Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } The experimental electronic duo return with their fourth studio album (and first LP and five years), a self-titled, 13-song project that encapsulates all the delicacy, style and sharp celestiality that have long made the Canadian pair a cult favorite. The album, weighted by the previously released single “many lives,” “part ii,” “place of my own” and “imanocean” comes ahead of a 23-date North American tour that starts Oct. 18, in Ventura, Calif. Purity Ring is out on The Fellowship. Listen to it here. Madeon, “Hi!” Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } Madeon launches a new era with a new and punched up sound, with the French fav officially entering his punk phase. Does it work? As the song itself exclaims a few times, “we love it.” The aptly named “Hi!” buzzes with raucous energy, with Madeon adding enough electronic elements to the tight, two minute, 22 second track to create connective tissue between his previous oeuvre and this new one. “I was making a completely different kind of music but then something happened to me and I switched it all up,” the producer says. “This electronic punk sound became ‘Hi!’ It’s urgent laptop rock. It has to be right now. I love this music so much ’cause I didn’t expect it, it kind of erupted.” “Hi!” is out on Mom + Pop. Listen to it here. Rochelle Jordan, Through the Wall Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } Perpetually one of the coolest artists in the scene, Rochelle Jordan releases her 17-song new album, Through the Wall, today. While there’s a lot of music to be had on it, the album also moves as quickly and fluidly of a great night out, with the British-Canadian artist fusing R&B and house into sumptuous productions that play out over an hour. Her upcoming live dates include shows in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York and Seattle throughout November and December. Through The Wall is out on EMPIRE. Listen to it here. Indira Paganotto & Nile Rogers, “Arte Como Amante” Trending on Billboard if ( !window.pmc.harmony?.isEventAdScheduledTime() ) { pmcCnx.cmd.push(function() { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 2, } } }, playerId: ‘4057afa6-846b-4276-bc63-a9cf3a8aa1ed’, playlistId: ‘b7dab6e5-7a62-4df1-b1f4-3cfa99eea709’, }).render(«connatix_contextual_player_div»); }); } else { // This should only be get called when page cache is not cleared and it’s event time. window.pmc.harmony?.switchToHarmonyPlayer(); } Eras and styles of dance music collide happily on “Arte Como Amante,” a fiery collab from Spain’s Indira Paganotto and dance world architect Nile Rodgers, who met during Miami Music Week this past March and subsequently got in the studio together. Rodgers’ iconic guitar work is all over this one (especially on its grand finale of an ending) with Paganotto taking the production into the thrilling realms of psytrance and techno

‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Hit ‘Golden’ No. 1 on Top Movie Songs Chart Again

You’re not seeing double: For the first time since Billboard’s Top Movie Songs chart, powered by Tunefind (a Songtradr company), began last October, the entirety of the 10-position chart comprises the ranking from one month to the next. After taking up eight of the July 2025 tally’s 10 positions, music from KPop Demon Hunters keeps those same eight songs on the August survey, while the other two songs from last month — both from Superman — also stay on the list. Rankings for the Top Movie Songs chart are based on song and film data provided by Tunefind and ranked using a formula blending that data with sales and streaming information tracked by Luminate during the corresponding period of August 2025. The ranking includes newly released films from the preceding three months. Though its makeup remains the same, the August Top TV Songs list’s order is a bit different. Though don’t tell that to HUNTR/X’s “Golden,” which tops the chart for the second month. The Netflix film’s runaway hit that’s spent six weeks so far atop the Billboard Hot 100 since mid-August accumulated 163.4 million official on-demand U.S. streams and sold 36,000 downloads throughout August, according to Luminate, as KPop Demon Hunters, released June 20, became an ever-growing phenomenon, even spurring a limited theatrical singalong release in late August. Ultimately, Top TV Songs’ top seven is occupied by KPop Demon Hunters songs. But while Saja Boys’ “Your Idol” ranked at No. 2 on the July survey, it’s the same boyband’s “Soda Pop” that takes the runner-up spot for August (91.1 million streams, 14,000 solds), while HUNTR/X’s “How It’s Done,” No. 6 on the previous list, vaults to No. 3 (85.6 million streams, 11,000 sold). As for the two songs from Superman, which premiered in theaters July 11, the film is represented again by Teddybears’ Iggy Pop-featuring “Punkrocker” and Noah and the Whale’s “5 Years Time,” at Nos. 8 and 10, respectively. “Punkrocker,” which racked up 10.1 million streams and 4,000 paid downloads in August, recently reached Billboard’s Alternative Digital Song Sales chart, sparked by its Superman synch, including two weeks at No. 1 (July 26 and Aug. 2). See the full top 10 below. 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. Rank, Song, Artist, Movie “Golden,” HUNTR/X, KPop Demon Hunters “Soda Pop,” Saja Boys, KPop Demon Hunters “How It’s Done,” HUNTR/X, KPop Demon Hunters “Your Idol,” Saja Boys, KPop Demon Hunters “Free,” EJAE & Andrew Choi, KPop Demon Hunters “What It Sounds Like,” HUNTR/X, KPop Demon Hunters “Takedown,” HUNTR/X, KPop Demon Hunters “Punkrocker,” Teddybears feat. Iggy Pop, Superman “Takedown,” TWICE, KPop Demon Hunters “5 Years Time,” Noah and the Whale, Superman Source link

Billie Eilish Reacts to Brother Finneas, Claudia Sulewski’s Engagement

Billie Eilish is happier than ever after learning of Finneas‘ engagement to Claudia Sulewski. The couple announced that they got engaged on Wednesday (Sept. 24), sharing photos of the outdoor proposal and writing in a joint Instagram post, “forever and ever 9.22.” Sulewski also shared a video with Finneas modeling her new diamond ring on TikTok, captioning it, “we’re getting marrieddd.” The comments of both posts were full of messages of congratulations from friends and fans alike. Eilish’s reaction, however, was particularly sweet, with the pop star resharing her brother’s announcement on Instagram Stories and typing out a crying emoji with two hearts Thursday (Sept. 25). The singer then posted a screenshot of herself on FaceTime with Sulewski on the day of the proposal, with the influencer shakily showing off her ring as an excited Eilish reacts in the top left corner with her jaw dropped. After meeting on a dating app, Finneas and Sulewski got together in 2018. The musician often appears in his fiancée’s vlogs on YouTube, and for a while, the couple hosted a podcast together called We Bought a House. Finneas has also penned a number of love songs for Sulewski — including 2019’s “Claudia” — and the influencer directed and costarred in his 2022 “Mona Lisa, Mona Lisa” music video. Through her relationship with Finneas, the I Love My Dad actress has also developed a close friendship with Eilish. The siblings and Sulewski often attend award shows as a group, while the two women appear in each other’s Instagram photos from time to time. In Sulewski’s 2020 pre-Oscars vlog, the “Bad Guy” artist at one point enters the room and wraps her future sister-in-law in a big hug. Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox Sign Up Source link

‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Song ‘Golden’ Is No. 1 U.K. Single for 8th Week

“Golden” from Netflix’s smash animated movie KPop Demon Hunters is No. 1 for an eighth week on the U.K. Singles Chart on Friday (Sept. 26), and equaled a long-standing record as a result. The song — credited to HUNTR/X and voiced by EJAE, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami — is now tied for the longest-running No. 1 single for an animated act. The Archies’ “Sugar Sugar” also ruled on the U.K. Singles Chart for eight weeks back in 1969, while “We Don’t Talk About Bruno” from Disney’s 2022’s Encanto achieved seven weeks. Additional songs from KPop Demon Hunters also chart this week with Saja Boys’ “Soda Pop” (No. 5) and “Your Idol” seeing success (No. 6). As she releases her sophomore album The Art of Loving, Olivia Dean settles in at No. 2 for a fifth consecutive week with her song “Man I Need.” The breakthrough track is also up to No. 30 on the Hot 100, her highest ever placing in the U.S. Lewis Capaldi scores the week’s highest new entry with his track “Something in the Heavens.” The song ends the week at No. 3 and gives Capaldi his 10th top 10 single on the U.K. charts. Recent song “Survive,” his first release following a lengthy hiatus from music, hit the top spot upon release back in July. RAYE’s comeback track, “Where Is My Husband?,” storms straight into the top five to finish at No. 4; the 27-year-old already has a U.K. No. 1 single to her name with “Escapism” (2022). Earlier this week, she announced that she was adding additional dates to her upcoming 2026 U.K. arena tour, taking her to six nights London’s 20,000-capacity O2 Arena. In the week that she announced the birth of her third child, Rihanna sees more surprise success for her 2007 track “Breakin’ Dishes,” which is up to No. 19, the first time the track has reached the top 20. Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox Sign Up Source link

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