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Categoría: Billboard

Kapo & Wisin’s ‘Luna’ Goes No. 1 on Latin Airplay Chart

Kapo and Wisin’s “Luna” rockets to No. 1 on Billboard’s Latin Airplay chart, climbing from No. 11, on the ranking dated Sept. 6. “Luna” leads in its 15th week, becoming the fourth song to take 15 weeks or more to claim the top slot in 2025, out of the 30 leaders this year. Explore See latest videos, charts and news “Luna” surges to No. 1 on the overall Latin Airplay chart boosted by gains on multiple Univision-owned stations, including San Jose, Calif.’s KVVF, Dallas’ KDXX, Houston’s KAMA, Chicago’s WVIV and Phoenix’s KQMR. The song ascends with the Greatest Gainer honors awarded weekly to the title with the biggest gain in audience impressions among the 50 songs on the tally. “Luna” flies to No. 1 with 9.3 million audience impressions earned in the United States during the Aug.22-28 tracking week, according to Luminate: that’s a 62% growth from the week prior. As “Luna” lands at the summit in its 15th week, it becomes the fourth track in 2025 to take 15 weeks or more to secure the top slot. Here’s a look at those slow-burn hits: Weeks to No. 1, Artist, Song, Chart Date18, Natti Natasha, “Desde Hoy,” June 2118, Myke Towers, featuring Darell, “Otra Noche,” Feb. 2217, Danny Ocean & Kapo, “Imagínate,” April 2615, Kapo & Wisin, “Luna,” Sept. 6 With “Luna” taking the Latin Airplay crown, Kapo claims his third champ, all within five months. Previously, the Colombian replaced himself at No. 1 as “Más Que Tú,” with Ozuna, ceded the throne to “Imagínate,” with Danny Ocean (April 26-dated list). Wisin, meanwhile, moves up with 23 chart-toppers. He last scored a champ through “Soy Yo,” with Don Omar and Gente De Zona, in 2022. Thanks to its radio haul, “Luna” debuts at No. 34 on the multi-metric Hot Latin Songs chart, Wisin’s first appearance since 2023. All charts (dated Sept. 6, 2025) will update on Billboard.com tomorrow, Sept. 2 (one day later than usual due to the Labor Day holiday Sept. 1). For all chart news, you can follow @billboard and @billboardcharts on both X, formerly known as Twitter, and Instagram. 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

La Arrolladora Banda El Limón Leads Mexican Independence Day in Zócalo

La Arrolladora Banda El Limón de René Camacho will be in charge of entertaining the patriotic celebrations in Mexico. The legendary Sinaloan band will arrive at the capital’s Zócalo, the country’s most important public square, on Sept. 15 for the Grito de Independencia, President Claudia Sheinbaum announced on Tuesday (Sep. 2). Explore See latest videos, charts and news “Let’s see the surprise for September 15,” said the Mexican president during her usual morning press conference to announce this year’s invited group through a video. This year, the traditional Grito de Dolores from the National Palace, where President Sheinbaum lives and works, will be doubly symbolic because it is the first time that a woman has led the ceremony as the head of state of the Latin American country. This act emulates the call for insurrection against Spanish rule that priest Miguel Hidalgo made in the early hours of Sept. 16, 1810, in Guanajuato. Opening for La Arrolladora will be the group Legado de Grandeza, a Mexican-American collective that performs the “Himno Migrante” (meaning “Migrant Anthem”), honoring the inspiring stories of Mexican migrants in the United States. Mexican singer and actress Alejandra Ávalos will also perform, according to the official lineup. La Arrolladora Banda El Limón thus joins a long list of national and international artists who have performed at the world’s second-largest public square, surpassed only by Tiananmen in Beijing. The Zócalo has hosted artists such as Paul McCartney, Justin Bieber, Manu Chao, Shakira, Rosalía, Café Tacvba, Fito Páez and the late icon of Mexican regional music Vicente Fernández, among many others. This coming Saturday (Sep. 6), Puerto Rican rapper Residente will join that select list when he performs a concert at the same venue. The record for attendance at free concerts held in Mexico City’s main square, known as the “Primer Cuadro,” is held by the Argentine rock band Los Fabulosos Cadillacs, who achieved the milestone of gathering 300,000 people on the night of June 3, 2023. This surpassed Grupo Firme, who previously set the record by drawing 280,000 attendees in September 2022, according to figures from Mexico City’s government. This past March, La Arrolladora Banda El Limón earned their 19th No. 1 on Billboard‘s Regional Mexican Airplay chart with their hit “Una Historia Mal Contada” from the album of the same name. Source link

Odeal on Justin Bieber, Songs’ Inspiration and Helping African Artists

Growing up in the United Kingdom, Odeal would watch the MOBO (Music of Black Origin) Awards and think, “One day, I’m going to be on that stage.” In February, his childhood prediction came true: The now-25-year-old British Nigerian singer performed the viral TikTok dance for his sizzling 2024 hit “Soh-Soh” there — one of three times Odeal happily took the stage to perform and accept his first-ever awards, for best newcomer and best R&B/soul act. “For it to finally happen… dreams actually do come true,” he says. Four months later, he attended the BET Awards as a nominee for best new international act. “To be recognized at home with the MOBOs was great. And then to be recognized at an international level was even bigger,” he says. “That was confirmation I was on the right track.” AMIRI top, pants, belt and shoes; Hatton Labs jewelry; Hublot watch. Malike Sidibe Odeal sits at the intersection of Nigerian Afro-fusion and alté acts who are blending African styles with other genres and U.K. R&B artists who are making noise abroad. And his shape-shifting sound has steered him into studios with an accordingly wide range of artists within the last year, including Kaytranada, Jermaine Dupri, Kehlani and DJ Maphorisa. The lattermost remixed Odeal’s “Blame U” from his 2024 EP, Lustropolis, with fellow South African producer-artist Xduppy. During the past year, Justin Bieber couldn’t stop playing the original track on his Instagram Stories and posts. “I’m super grateful he was tapping in,” Odeal says. “I was aware he was working on his album, and I’m glad that that song was with him during that time.” Outside of DJ’ing Paris Fashion Week parties, Odeal has graced festival stages around the world, including Afro Nation Portugal, the world’s biggest Afrobeats festival, and Wireless Festival, where Drake headlined each night. He says he wants to “touch more people around the world” with his soul-­stirring songs that transcend musical and geographical borders. Born Hillary Dennis Udanoh in Germany (where his mother lived) and raised in Spain (where his father lived and his parents met), the United Kingdom and Nigeria, Odeal had a cosmopolitan upbringing, which helps explain his international appeal. While attending secondary school in the United Kingdom, Odeal recorded his first song at an after-school youth club before it shut down weeks later — leaving him without access to its recording equipment. At 14, after Odeal moved from the United Kingdom to Awka, the capital of Nigeria’s Anambra state, his cousin began regularly taking him to a local studio so he could watch different artists work. “I was more into R&B. And they were like, ‘R&B doesn’t work over here,’ ” he told Billboard in January, when he was honored as the inaugural African Rookie of the Month. He studied Nigerian artists’ beat choices and melodies during those sessions and then moved to Lagos the following summer hoping for another shot at making it, but to no avail. When he returned to South East London at age 15, Odeal noticed the rise of Afroswing — a local amalgam of Afrobeats, dancehall and hip-hop — and formed the group TMG with fellow British Nigerian artists Curtis J and Zilla. They disbanded after a little over a year in 2016 and Odeal went solo, independently releasing his debut EP, New Time, in 2017. Purple Brand Jacket, 3.Paradis pants, AMIRI belt, Hatton Labs and Annabel B jewelry, Hublot watch. Malike Sidibe Since then, he’s continued building his emotive, experimental sonic world. Spending time at Lagos beach houses and with a South African Nigerian woman named Zuri Awela (whose identity and relationship to him Odeal has kept vague) inspired last summer’s Sunday at Zuri’s EP. Standout track “Soh-Soh” earned co-signs from SZA and Ciara and marked Odeal’s first entry on the Billboard U.S. Afrobeats Songs chart, peaking at No. 12. While Sundays at Zuri’s heated up dancefloors across the globe, Odeal’s intentional approach to making music meant he was ready to slow things down for his subsequent project: “In the summers, I make records that are more reminiscent of my African side,” he explains. “And in the winters, when things mellow out, all the other sides come out to play, like R&B.” His release strategy also plays an essential role in his brand/creative collective, ­OVMBR, which stands for Our Variances Make Us Bold and Relentless. After being hospitalized in November 2017 due to a life-threatening illness, Odeal contemplated the kind of legacy he wanted to leave behind. Since then, he’s released more music in November than any other month in the year, including 2024’s Lustropolis, his first project under LVRN that yielded the Summer Walker collaboration “You’re Stuck.” With his latest EP, July’s The Summer That Saved Me, Odeal celebrates his freedom to explore the world. Most of the seven-track project was recorded in a 10-day period at a Los Angeles home studio, where Afrobeats superproducers GuiltyBeatz and P2J and R&B virtuosos Jack Dine and Cam Griffin congregated to craft Odeal’s vibrant, vulnerable sound. Surprisingly, the lead single, “London Summers,” was recorded in L.A. because “I had to chase the sun. It wasn’t sunny in the U.K. at the time, and we needed a project before summer,” he explains. However, “London Summers” captures the best time of the year back home, when everyone is “having a drink, vibing, music playing,” he recalls. “The sun definitely brings out a different side to people.” Odeal conceived another of its tracks, “Miami,” on the beaches of Spain, where he had headed for some R&R before meeting with producer Harry Westlake. The song features Leon Thomas, whom Odeal had connected with on social media before Odeal’s A&R executive, Abraham Kamara, suggested the “Mutt” singer would sound great on the track. The acoustic ballad was “the first breakthrough” of the project, Odeal says. “Nothing felt like it was real until I had that song.” Malike Sidibe This fall, Odeal will hit the road for some festival performances — but he stays relatively mum when asked about new music dropping in

Shakira’s Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran Tour Surprise Artists

Since launching her Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour in Brazil earlier this year, Shakira has surprised attendees by inviting a number of fellow hitmakers to join her onstage. From Grupo Frontera, Carlos Vives and Maluma — all three joined her in Latin America — to Wyclef Jean, Alejandro Sanz, Ozuna and Rauw Alejandro in the U.S. leg of the tour. All of the aforementioned have collaborated with her in the past, and for each guest, Shakira has penned heartfelt messages on social media. “Sharing the stage with a longtime friend will always be a highlight,” she wrote about Wyclef Jean on Instagram, who joined her in New Jersey to perform “Hips Don’t Lie,” which spent two weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2006. With Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran Tour in full swing, Shakira was No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Tours chart for March. She also led last February’s list with $32.9 million but doubles her earnings on the newest update. Furthermore, the Live Nation-produced stint landed at No. 2 on Billboard’s midyear Boxscore report, grossing $130 million between Mexico and South America. After touring stadiums in the U.S. over the summer, with stops in Chicago, Atlanta, Miami and Las Vegas, Shakira’s Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour returns to Latin America with additional shows in Mexico, Colombia, Paraguay, Ecuador, Chile, Peru, Uruguay and Argentina. Here are all the surprise artists who have appeared at Shakira’s Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran Tour, so far: Grupo Frontera Image Credit: OCESA/José Jorge Carreón The Mexican American tejano band joined Shakira at the top of her tour during a stop at Mexico City’s Estadio GNP Seguros. “Last night you guys made it epic!!! What a thrill when I welcomed Grupo Frontera on stage. I jumped up and down like a little girl! You guys rock,” Shakira wrote on Instagram. Maluma During the Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran stop in Medellín, Colombia, Shakira brought out local hero Maluma. Both rocked the stage singing their hit teamup “Chantaje.” “Thank you Maluma for singing with me this song that marked a milestone in the history of Latin music with three billion plays!!!! I would sing it with you one and a thousand times more!!!! I love you,” the Colombian star expressed on social media. Carlos Vives Vives also joined Shakira during a stop in Medellín where the pair sang “La Bicicleta.” “Carlos Vives came to cheer me up even more with La Bicicleta!!!! Carlos you are a living legend!!! I love you my brother,” Shakira captioned a post on Instagram. Alejandro Sanz Image Credit: Nicolas Gerardin Shakira launched the U.S. leg of Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran Tour with superstar Alejandro Sanz as surprise guest in Charlotte, N.C. where they sang their classic collab “La Tortura.” “Alejandro Sanz how they applauded you last night!!! A thousand years may pass with a thousand more but what happens to us on stage will continue to be unique,” Shakira wrote on Instagram. Sanz also accompanied Shak during her two shows in Miami at the Hard Rock Stadium on Friday (June 6) and Saturday (June 7). Wyclef Jean Image Credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images The Haitian rapper and singer joined Shakira to perform their 2005 smash “Hips Don’t Lie” during one of her shows at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. About their reunion onstage, Shakira wrote, “Sharing the stage with a longtime friend will always be a highlight! Thanks for coming once again Wyclef Jean.” Ozuna Image Credit: Nicolas Gerardin Ozuna stopped by the MetLife Stadium to sing “Monotonía.” “What an unforgettable first night at MetLife!! What a crowd!! ¡And Ozuna , you are incredible! Thanks for making this night even more magical,” the “(Entre Paréntesis),” singer captioned a social media post. Rauw Alejandro Image Credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Live Nation Rauw Alejandro, also on tour, joined Shakira to perform their electrifying collab “Te Felicito.” “Rauw! What a way to close out two insane nights at MetLife stadium,” Shakira posted. Manuel Turizo Image Credit: Nicolas Gerardin During her second Miami show at the Hard Rock Stadium on June 7, Shakira was joined by Manuel Turizo for a performance of their sultry reggaetón “Copa Vacía.” The track, about unrequited love, reached No. 4 on the Latin Pop Airplay chart in July 2024. Bizarrap Image Credit: Nicolas Gerardin During the second Miami night of her Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran Tour, the Colombian artist also brought out Bizarrap. The Argentine DJ and producer hyped up the crowd for the grand finale, where he backed up Shakira’s energetic performance of “Shakira: Bzrp Music Sessions, Vol. 53.” Danna On Aug. 26, Mexican singer and actor Danna became the first female artist to join Shakira during her Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour. During one of her stops in Mexico City’s GNP Seguros Stadium, Shakira invited Danna to sing her hit song “Soltera.” “Shaki, Mexico is your home, Mexico loves you,” Danna told the Colombian star. “May they keep welcoming you with this kind of love!” Belinda Image Credit: Cris Cornejo On Aug. 30, at the Colombian artist’s 11th concert at GNP Seguros Stadium in Mexico City, Mexican star Belinda joined Shakira to perform “Día de Enero” together. “I love you. Thank you for this opportunity — I’ll never forget it,” Belinda expressed after their special performance. Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox Sign Up Source link

HUNTR/X’s ‘Golden’ No. 1 on Global Charts for Seventh Week

HUNTR/X continues slaying all competitors (demon or otherwise) as “Golden” leads the Billboard Global 200 and Billboard Global Excl. U.S. charts for a seventh week each. In July, the song became the first No. 1 on each list for the act, whose music is voiced by EJAE, Audrey Nuna and REI AMI. Songs from Netflix’s animated smash KPop Demon Hunters account for half the Global 200’s top 10 for a second week. Below “Golden,” Saja Boys remain at No. 3 with “Soda Pop” and No. 4 with “Your Idol,” with both having reached No. 3; both are sung by Andrew Choi, Neckwav, Danny Chung, Kevin Woo and samUIL Lee. Plus, HUNTR/X’s “How It’s Done” holds at its No. 5 high and “What It Sounds Like,” likewise from the movie and soundtrack, jumps 10-7 for a new best. Elsewhere, Stray Kids’ “Ceremony” bounds in at No. 8 on Global Excl. U.S. and No. 10 on the Global 200. The Billboard Global 200 and Global Excl. U.S. charts rank songs based on streaming and sales activity culled from more than 200 territories around the world, as compiled by Luminate. The Global 200 is inclusive of worldwide data and the Global Excl. U.S. chart comprises data from territories excluding the United States. Chart ranks are based on a weighted formula incorporating official-only streams on both subscription and ad-supported tiers of audio and video music services, as well as download sales, the latter of which reflect purchases from full-service digital music retailers from around the world, with sales from direct-to-consumer (D2C) sites excluded from the charts’ calculations. “Golden” tops the Global 200 with 120 million streams and 17,000 sold (up 6% week-over-week in each metric) worldwide in the week ending Aug. 28. Gains for the song were helped by KPop Demon Hunters’ sing-along wide release in movie theaters Aug. 23-24 and that version’s premiere on Netflix Aug. 25. The only song not from KPop Demon Hunters in the Global 200’s top five, Alex Warren’s “Ordinary,” is steady at No. 2 after 10 weeks on top beginning in May. Stray Kids’ “Ceremony” launches at No. 10 on the Global 200 with 44 million streams and 10,000 sold worldwide. It starts at No. 8 on Global Excl. U.S. with 35.9 million streams and 5,000 sold outside the U.S. The song — from Stray Kids’ Karma: The 4th Album, which arrives as their seventh No. 1 on the Billboard 200 — is their third top 10 on each global chart, after “Chk Chk Boom” and “LALALALA.” The two tracks also reached No. 10 on the Global 200, in August 2024 and November 2023, respectively. On Global Excl. U.S, they hit respective Nos. 4 and 6 peaks. “Golden” leads Global Excl. U.S. with 86 million streams (up 6%) and 8,000 sold (up 2%) outside the U.S. “Ordinary” holds at No. 2 on Global Excl. U.S., following eight weeks at No. 1 starting in May; “Soda Pop” repeats at its No. 3 high; BLACKPINK’s “Jump” stays at No. 4, after it led in its debut week in July; and Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars’ “Die With a Smile” rises 7-5 following 17 weeks at No. 1 beginning a year ago this week. The Billboard Global 200 and Billboard Global Excl. U.S. charts (dated Sept. 6, 2025) will update on Billboard.com tomorrow, Sept. 2 (one day later than usual due to the Labor Day holiday Sept. 1). For both charts, the top 100 titles are available to all readers on Billboard.com, while the complete 200-title rankings are visible on Billboard Pro, Billboard’s subscription-based service. For all chart news, you can follow @billboard and @billboardcharts on both X, formerly known as Twitter, and Instagram. Luminate, the independent data provider to the Billboard charts, completes a thorough review of all data submissions used in compiling the weekly chart rankings. Luminate reviews and authenticates data. In partnership with Billboard, data deemed suspicious or unverifiable is removed, using established criteria, before final chart calculations are made and published. It’s free Billboard charts month! From Sept. 2 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

Drake Denies Fake Abs Rumors During Bobbi Althoff Interview

Drake and Bobbi Althoff linked up for another interview on Tuesday (Sept. 2), which kicks off her Not This Again podcast. Drizzy and Althoff sat down for about 80 minutes, touching on their “feud,” Drake’s rumored ab procedure — which he denies — and Rick Ross. Drake and Bobbi’s first interview came as part of her The Really Good Podcast in 2023, which was eventually deleted months later. The OVO boss admitted they got into a “tiff,” which resulted in them pulling the interview altogether after Althoff attended an It’s All A Blur Tour show in Los Angeles. “You made me feel like our interview was the reason your life was bad,” he said. “So I just said I’m gonna get rid of the interview and you won’t ever have to see it again a day in your life.” Explore See latest videos, charts and news Drake also addressed the allegations of him having cosmetic surgery on his abs, as fans peppered him with ab sculpting speculation following a shirtless selfie he posted to Instagram in June. “No,” he bluntly replied when asked about ever having ab surgery to get a six-pack. He then joked about Metro Boomin trolling him with the “BBL Drizzy” diss, but admitted he may have edited the special effects and filter surrounding the photo using an app. “I think it was just like I came from the gym. I was sweaty in that pic,” he said. “Maybe I like heightened the saturation or something on it. I hit it too hard. They don’t look like that. You saw them.” Outside of Kendrick Lamar, Rick Ross was another artist feuding with Drake last year, and Drizzy sniped back during the interview, calling out Rozay for having fake jewelry with a jab that went over Althoff’s head. “You’ve never seen someone ice Rosé? Well, talk to every jeweler in Miami that has fake diamonds,” he quipped. Throughout their chat, Drake also reflected on being arrested in Sweden for nine hours, why he feels his first interview with Bobbi paved the way for rappers to connect more easily with streamers and WWE diva Rhea Ripley, his current muse filling up his Instagram For You page. Watch the full interview below. Source link

Miguel Announces Release Date For 5th Studio Album, ‘CAOS’

Miguel has been warning us that CAOS is on the horizon for most of this year. On Tuesday (Sept. 2) he finally confirmed when the mayhem will come when the singer revealed that his fifth full-length studio album, CAOS, is due out on Oct. 23 from ByStorm Entertainment/RCA Records. The release, which will coincide with the singer’s 40th birthday, is a “personal and artistic rebirth,” according to a release announcing the project that was eight years in the making. “To rebuild, I had to destroy myself. That is the core confrontation of CAOS,” Miguel said in a statement. “Through my personal evolution, I learned that transformation is violent. CAOS is the sonic iteration of me bending that violence into something universally felt.” Miguel has been teasing out glimpses of the long-awaited full-length follow-up to 2017’s Billboard 200 No. 9-charting War & Leisure LP on his socials all year, including in April when he posted a series of pics in which he is modeling a baseball hat with the album’s logo consumed by flames and what look like doctored billboards with the LP’s title alongside CAOS Cola soda bottles. In late April came a mega-mix of actors, politicians and athletes saying “chaos,” followed by an appearance at the Roots Picnic in April in which he performed in front of a huge, burning CAOS logo and a mid-August post featuring a woman with the album’s title tattooed on the inside of her lip. To celebrate the news, Miguel has posted the album’s title track on his own S1C.LA platform, where you can sample the three-minute bilingual song that opens with a monologue in Spanish backed by a chorus before the beat kicks in. The experimental track mixes psychedelic pop and flamenco guitar with yearning, falsetto vocals and Miguel’s signature alluring R&B vibe. The album description promises “a fearless exploration of the emotions and experiences that have shaped Miguel’s life. Boldly genre-defying, the project captures the beauty and volatility of transformation — where destruction becomes creation, and pain evolves into growth.” The release also promised that in the upcoming weeks the singer will offer fans “unprecedented access” into the “personal and universal chaos that shaped the album — giving rare insight through music and visual storytelling” as it invites fans to confront, and harness, the chaos in their lives. Earlier this year, BTS’ j-hope dropped his Miguel collab “Sweet Dreams.” Check out the album cover and some teaser videos below. @miguel Mara and Mezcal . CAOS directed by @miguel @eitisga creative direction @margaretzhang dop @hakunamatata_jiang creative production @themimiproject production @push.xyz eps @fumanfu @hiddensss line production @bunnyixin0127 project management @zoeiii_m mua @freyaisasheep.mua wardrobe @s1c.la ♬ original sound – Miguel noreferrer”>   Source link

Margo Price Revisits Country Roots on ‘Hard Headed Woman’

When Margo Price stepped onstage at the Grand Ole Opry on Friday night (Aug. 29) to present songs from her new album Hard Headed Woman (which released the same day), she donned a piece of country music history, the same green chiffon gown that Loretta Lynn wore the night she became the first woman to win the Country Music Association’s top honor, entertainer of the year, in 1972. Explore See latest videos, charts and news Since her debut 2016 album Midwest Farmer’s Daughter, Price has proven herself a student and inheritor of Lynn’s bold, uninhibited brand of storytelling, as Price has forged her own reputation as an artist unafraid of expressing frank truths, championing equality, and speaking out against societal and political injustices ranging from income disparities (“Pay Gap”) to gender inequality (“Wild Women”). Price visited the late Lynn’s Coal Miner’s Daughter museum, located in Hurricane Mills, Tennessee, to try on potential outfits for the Opry performance. “Just getting to try on so many of her iconic pieces, there were probably 10 dresses that we pulled, and we must’ve been the same exact size because each one I put on, it was like, ‘I have to wear this one,’” Price tells Billboard. “I’m so grateful to the family for letting me borrow it. Loretta was so supportive of me. I was in tears multiple times, just thinking about how lucky I am to get to carry on this tradition of songwriting and storytelling, just being a bold woman in country music, like Loretta was.” Whereas Price’s 2023 projects Strays and Strays II tilted into psychedelic-inspired sounds, Hard Headed Woman reconnects Price to her country roots. The project also marks Price’s first Nashville-recorded album, created at the historic RCA Studio A, after previously recording her albums in Memphis and Los Angeles. “I wanted to be able to embrace the things I love about Nashville and use the studios and incredible players,” Price says. Though she had previously recorded a handful of songs in Nashville, it was the 2024 collaboration she recorded at RCA Studio A with Billy Strings, “Too Stoned to Cry,” that inspired her to make the album in that historic space. “This audio space was at the peak of, in my opinion, audio engineering and recording,” she was explains. “I was like, ‘I’ve got to get back here to do an album.’ It’s not cheap but for me, it was worth it to be able to work in that space. You can just hear the room all over the album. It’s a return to what I was doing, but also a step forward. I’m coming back to all this with so much more knowledge.” She reunited with producer Matt Ross-Spang, who produced Midwest Farmer’s Daughter. “We would be in the studio for hours, sometimes 12-14 hour days, just getting lost in mixing songs, recording, hanging out late and ordering sushi at 10 o’clock at night,” Price recalls. The album’s first single, “Don’t Let the Bastards Get You Down,” feels like classic Price, offering a stinging rebuke to exploitative music industry types and other “tone deaf sons a b–ches” that attempt to hinder creatives’ career potential. Written by Price, her husband, musician Jeremy Ivey, and Rodney Crowell, the song also credits Kris Kristofferson, as the song was inspired in part by Kristofferson’s public support for Sinead O’Connor. During O’Connor’s October 1992 performance at Madison Square Garden as part of a Bob Dylan tribute event, the audience nearly drowned out O’Connor’s performance (O’Connor was in the midst of receiving backlash after she had a few weeks earlier torn up a photo of Pope John Paul II in an act of protest against sexual abuse within the Catholic church). After Kristofferson was asked by event organizers to escort her offstage, the revered singer-songwriter instead joined O’Connor onstage and encouraged her, “Don’t let the bastards get you down.” “My husband [Jeremy] and I started writing it several years ago. We wanted to get back to the lyrical storytelling and we were writing for a movie at the time that somebody had written, this script [that] was loosely based on my life,” Price says. “The movie never happened and then we had this song. It was strange all the things that kind of brought me around full circle. We wanted to brush the song up a bit, and we took it to Rodney Crowell, and just continued to dial it all in. It’s been so cathartic to sing that one live and it feels like it’s taken on a life of its own, the way the world is going.” Guests on the set include Jesse Welles and Tyler Childers, both known for their nuanced perspectives on political and social issues. Welles joins on “Don’t Wake Me Up,” with Childers featured on “Love Me Like You Used to Do.” “I love Tyler’s voice so much and we go back nearly a decade as friends and peers and we got to grow up together in this business,” she says of Childers. “I met Jesse at Farm Aid and I’m such a fan of his writing. I felt like he could really deliver something great on the harmonies.” The video for “Don’t Wake Me Up” features Price making her way through numerous settings mentioned in the dreamy song, from a cow pasture to a strip club, with Price at one point leading a group of dancers. “My sister did the choreography for it,” Price says. “Just being on a shoot like that, where it’s like every single person was non-binary, or queer or a woman, it was like we were all just in it together.” She covers the George Jones/Jimmy Peppers song “I Just Don’t Give a Damn,” and with the blessing of Waylon Jennings’ widow Jessi Colter, also includes a version of the Jennings-written “Kissing You Goodbye,” a song Price performed at Farm Aid 2024 (she joined the organization’s board in 2021). “Jessi told me about that song about seven years ago, when I was

Young Thug and Gunna’s Tumultuous Relationship: A Timeline

The two former collaborators are now in the midst of a deep feud, Billboard breaks down how we got here. 9/2/2025 Gunna and Young Thug attend 2021 Revolt Summit at 787 Windsor on November 13, 2021 in Atlanta. Prince Williams/FilmMagic While Young Thug and Gunna used to be the closest of friends, there has been an insurmountable amount of tension brewing between the two Atlanta rappers in recent months. Since being released following his YSL RICO case in Georgia, Young Thug has continuously thrown jabs at his former labelmate Gunna over allegations that he cooperated with law enforcement to secure his freedom. While the issues between the two rappers haven’t played out in the public view much, Thug did admit to GQ that relations between them weren’t what they used to be. “I know everybody wonders [what our relationship is like now],” Thugga noted in April, before saying: “I don’t know.” He did not elaborate further, leaving more questions than answers. As fans started to accept that maybe they’d never fully learn about what happened between Wunna and Thugga, things finally came to a serious head on Tuesday (Sept. 2). Alleged leaked phone calls of Young Thug speaking to 21 Savage from jail hit the internet, all but confirming that the once-fruitful relationship between Gunna and Young Thug was no more. So the question remains: How did such close ties between two Atlanta stars unravel so quickly? From the pair’s early days before the rise of YSL to subliminal disses and plenty of tweet-and-deletes, there are a lot of breadcrumbs leading us to this very moment. Here is the full breakdown of Gunna and Young Thug’s relationship and a look at how things got to this point. 2015: Young Thug and Gunna Meet for the First Time Gunna and Thugga first interacted back in 2015, after they were introduced through mutual friend and local Atlanta community leader Keith “King” Troup. At the time, Young Thug was deep in his Barter 6 run, and Gunna stopped by the rapper’s “With That” music video shoot for an introduction. While the pair became friends, their bond was then strengthened following the death of Troup in December of 2015, which Gunna has spoken extensively about. “He was like my uncle,” Gunna told Billboard in 2018. “Troup would always try to tell us, ‘Get some money. Stay out of trouble.’ He always tried to let us know there’s more to this.” August 26, 2016: Gunna Hops on Young Thug’s “Floyd Mayweather” With Travis Scott and Gucci Mane Young Thug officially introduced Gunna to the world in 2016 with the release of his album Jeffrey. On the album’s second track “Floyd Mayweather,” Gunna dropped off his first official verse affiliated with YSL. Turns out, it was only the beginning. “Do this s—t all on my own, don’t need no deal,” Gunna and Thug spit simultaneously. October 14, 2016: Gunna Drops Drip Season and Thug Announces YSL Records While the timeline is a biz hazy, Gunna dropped off his debut Drip Season mixtape on YSL Records on October 14, 2016. Thugga appeared on the track “Cop Me a Foreign,” and a few weeks later, Thug announced his newly founded record label. It’s likely that Gunna and Thug spoke about this months before Drip Season’s release, but Gunna wouldn’t officially join the YSL roster for a few more months. February, 2017: Young Thug Announces Gunna Will Join YSL Records Around February 2017, Gunna officially linked with YSL Records. From that point on, it was all hands on deck, as Gunna dropped off Drip Season 2 and his critically lauded Drip Harder mixtape with Lil Baby by 2018. Thug would of course be featured on both, on the songs “Secure the Vibe” and “My Jeans.” Gunna’s run would continue with 2020’s WUNNA and 2022’s DS4EVER as his career really started to take off. May 9, 2022: Young Thug and Gunna Arrested as Part of YSL RICO Case In May of 2022, Young Thug and 26 other YSL affiliates were arrested as part of the sprawling RICO Case against them. Thug of course faced the most charges, with police alleging he was the leader of a criminal “gang” masquerading as a record label. Wunna turned himself in two days later on May 11, and was charged with a single count of conspiracy to violate the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. They were both denied bond on multiple occasions. December 14, 2022: Gunna Takes Plea Deal in YSL RICO Case Gunna then accepted his much-discussed Alford plea deal in 2022. As the Young Thug and YSL RICO trial heated up, Gunna was among many of the early YSL affiliates to take a plea deal. His career took a big hit as a result, with allegations of Gunna being a rat spreading around all corners of the hip-hop landscape. The Drip or Drown rapper put out a statement via his lawyers denying this allegation, and claimed he at no point cooperated with law enforcement. Still, allegations of him being a “snitch” spread far and wide, and threatened to dampen his, at the time, spotless hip-hop career. The situation was then made worse when court footage emerged showing Gunna answering “yes” to numerous key questions involving YSL, including that the label was allegedly a gang and that crimes were committed under the roster. June 16, 2023: Gunna Drops a Gift & a Curse, Young Thug Returns With Business Is Business Six months after striking his plea deal, Gunna returned with his comeback album, A Gift & a Curse. The featureless YSL Records release dropped on June 16 and included some subliminal shots aimed at the snitching allegations as a whole. The album was a surprising success despite the allegations, and in turn gave him a commercial hit record with “fukumean.” The song hit No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100, and was inescapable on apps like TikTok. A week later, Thug himself returned with Business Is Business. Neither artist was featured

Emilia Performs in Mexico’s Auditorio Nacional: 5 Most Iconic Moments

Emilia is the new global sensation of Argentine pop, and her successful stop in Mexico confirms the rapid rise of her popularity. In less than a year, the singer-songwriter went from performing in mid-sized theaters to conquering major venues like the iconic Auditorio Nacional in Mexico City. On Sunday (Aug. 31), she took the stage there to close the Latin American leg of her Emilia Tour 2025. Her show at the so-called “Coloso de Reforma” turned into an electrifying evening full of dance, sparkle and glamour. It was a moment of deep and special connection between the performer and the 8,500 attendees, according to figures from OCESA, the majority of whom were women in their 20s. Some even went the extra mile by mimicking her outfits with shiny clothing, hats, and boots. The urban pop of the artist born in Nogoyá, Argentina, filled the venue on the touristy Avenida Paseo de la Reforma with songs like “Exclusive.mp3,” “IConic.mp3,” “Facts.mp3,” “cuatro veinte,” “Jagger.mp3,” “Jet_Set.mp3,” “Ojitos_Verdes.mp3” and “Mi otra mitad.” These tracks had the loving audience dancing and singing along, making Emilia feel right at home. The show transitioned from the energy of her most popular pop songs to heartfelt ballads and emotional personal moments that brought the singer to the verge of tears. It then erupted into a lively dance sequence with the rhythm of cumbia, paying tribute to her roots. Emilia’s tour continues in L.A. with two consecutive concerts at The Wiltern theater on Wednesday and Thursday (Sep. 3-4), and concludes in New York this weekend with two shows at the Brooklyn Paramount on Saturday and Sunday (Sep. 6-7). Here are five standout moments from Emilia’s debut on Aug. 31 at the Auditorio Nacional in Mexico City. Cumbia Love The cumbia fervor among Mexicans and Argentines was sealed with the performance of “Perdonarte, ¿Para Qué?” (meaning “Forgive You, What For?”) — her collaboration with Los Ángeles Azules — which got everyone dancing and sparked a massive singalong. One-of-a-Kind Connection Emilia’s connection with her fans is very authentic and honest. She knows this and honors it by allowing herself to be pampered with every gesture, word, gift and detail they offer her. During the evening, she received several gifts, including a small doll knitted with yarn and a white sweatshirt with a picture of her dog Roma and the word “Princesses,” which she wore to sing “Guerrero.” 2000s Vibes From the start of the show, the audience was immersed in a party dedicated to the vibe of the 2000s, with video games, computer animations and costumes that included glitter, silver mini-shorts, platform shoes and colorful makeup. Emilia wore different outfits throughout the night, and in one segment she invited a group of fans who imitated her with some of her looks onto the stage. Song for a “Guerrero” One of the most emotional moments of the night came with “Guerrero” (meaning “Warrior”), the last track on her 2023 album .MP3. It’s a song she wrote in honor of her father, Pedro Mernes, who fought a tough battle against cancer. “It’s so hard for me, and I hope this song can embrace all the people who are going through a battle,” she said, visibly moved. “A big hug to all the warriors, I love you.” “We Did It!” Emilia did not hide her excitement about her debut at the Auditorio Nacional, one of the most important venues in Latin America. “It’s so amazing to be here, seriously, I still can’t believe it! Look how far you’ve brought me, to theAuditorio Nacional!,” said the Argentine singer. “Thank you so much, it’s a dream come true, from the bottom of my heart, thank you so much.” The audience responded with shouts of support: “Yes, we did it, yes, we did it!” The singer admitted that it might take her days or months to digest what happened that night on that legendary stage. In those moments of honesty where she opened her heart to her fans, Emilia said that “La Balada,” a song from her 2022 debut album ¿Tú Crees En Mí?, was very important to her and asked them to accompany her with the light from their cell phones. “I wrote this song for someone who tried to make me believe that I would never achieve anything, and I almost believed them,” the artist explained. Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox Sign Up Source link

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