Pusha T is the latest artist to get into the coffee game, officially launching his own brand.

Though his name might sound as though coffee isn’t his first preference, the rapper has dug deep into his discography for the nascent brew, dubbed Grindin’ Coffee after Clipse’s 2002 debut single, “Grindin’”, which hit No. 30 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Pusha’s blend first made its debut earlier this month as part of a pop-up event in Los Angeles, alongside Tyler, the Creator’s Camp Flog Gnaw festival. Per a press release, it’s described as a “highly caffeinated blend” of “strong black coffee reflecting the artist’s taste”.

“All my dreams and ideas start from my passions,” said of his new product on social media. “Luckily, I have been able to find partnerships and platforms to help bring my visions to life. This is just a piece of me and how I start my day.”

The nascent announcement of Grindin’ Coffee follows Pusha T’s recent description of fellow rapper Kendrick Lamar as “the lyric king”.

During a panel at Revolt World in Atlanta, the Virginia MC spoke highly of his fellow rapper after being asked by moderator Walter Tucker what he thought about Lamar’s impact on rap music.

“It’s amazing,” Pusha said of Lamar’s impact on rap music during a panel at Revolt World in Atlanta in September. “I’m sure people have said and have told him his whole career, ‘Oh, my God. You rap good. You’re great, but you rap too much. You need to make a song like this. You need to do that.’ It’s amazing to watch him be exactly who he is, be the lyric king.”

“And people who never even listen to lyrics are reciting his freestyles, his battles, his songs,” he added. “It’s great to watch. And it’s great for what it is we do in lyric-driven hip-hop. It’s great to see.”

Days after Rod Stewart was confirmed as the first artist to be performing at the 2025 edition of England’s Glastonbury Festival, the British singer has revealed it’ll come with a large financial cost.

Speaking to talkSPORT on Wednesday (Nov. 27), the veteran musician told the hosts that he required no time to mull over the offer, claiming he accepted the opportunity to perform “immediately”.

“It’s a great honour, it’s going to cost me a fortune to do it – $300,0000,” he explained. ” “I’ve got to bring all my band back from America, of course Glastonbury don’t pay for that.

“But I don’t care if it cost me $1,00,000, I would have done it. It’s a great honour. It really is the greatest honour.”

Stewart was announced by the festival as their first confirmed performer of 2025, lining up for the Sunday teatime Legends slot. “I’m proud, ready and more than able to pleasure and titillate my friends at Glastonbury in June,” Stewart said of the performance.

This will be Stewart’s first appeance at the festival since he headlined the Pyramid stage in 2002. Other artists who have performed in the Legends slot include the likes of Shania Twain, Yusef/Cat Stevens, and Diana Ross in recent years. Kylie Minogue, Dolly Parton, James Brown, and Al Green have also appeared on the stage over the years.

Stewart will return to North America in March as part of One Last Time 2025 tour. With various dates scheduled betwen March and August, he’ll also be returning to The Colosseum at Caesars Palace throughout March, May and June for more shows in his extended Las Vegas residency.

News of his extended stay in Vegas came just hours after the musician was forced to cancel his 200th and final show of his 13-year residency. “Most people can work with strep throat but obviously not me,” he told disappointed fans. “I’m absolutely gutted.”

Charli XCX is making sure her homecoming tour is kicking off in a big way.

The English musician launched the U.K. leg of her global Brat tour on Wednesday (Nov. 27) with a headline performance in Manchester, which expectedly leaned heavily on her culture-defining sixth album.

Nearing the halfway point of her set on Wednesday, Charli XCX turned her attention to late friend and collaborator SOPHIE, who died suddenly in February 2021. “This is the first time I’ve performed this song,” Charli XCX said before launching into the remix of “So I’ for the first time. “This song is for SOPHIE.”

“So I” had been written in repsonse to SOPHIE’s passing, telling NME it had been written about “dealing with grief”. SOPHIE and Charli XCX’s relationship dated back to 2015 when the pair announced a collaboration, which resulted in the late musician taking on production roles for Charli XCX’s Vroom Vroom EP and her Number 1 Angel album. The original version of “So I” received its live debut at the 2024 Billboard Women In Music Awards in March.

The Brat tour continued to London on Thursday (Nov. 28), with a handful of special guests taking part in the event. Launching the evening with the Shygirl remix of “365” with Shygirl herself, the set also featured the addition of Charli XCX’s fiancé, The 1975 drummer George Daniel.

Daniel’s appearance was notable for diehard fans, with his appearance during “Apple” resulting in his decision to finally relent from his long-standing refusal to do the song’s viral TikTok dance.

The set’s encore welcomed a number of special guests to the stage, including Caroline Polachek, who joined in for for the live debut of “Everything Is Romantic” and a version of her own song, “Welcome to My Island”. Likewise, Swedish singer Robyn teamed up with Yung Lean for a performance of “360” before running through her own hit single, “Dancing on My Own”.

The Detroit Lions got a win on Thanksgiving Day – and so did Shaboozey, who was the halftime act for the first of the National Football League’s three games on Thursday. 

The seven-minute performance featured a medley of three tracks from the six-time Grammy Award nominated country singer-rapper’s latest album, Where I’ve Been, Isn’t Where I’m Going – “Last of My Kind,” “Highway” and, of course, “A Bar Song (Tipsy),” currently tied for the longest-running No. 1 song on the Billboard 100 at 19 weeks.

Shaboozey, sporting a Lions varsity jacket for the occasion, was accompanied by his touring band as well as a 10 local onstage dancers choreographed by Fatima Robinson, with the Lions cheerleaders on the field in front of the stage and a crowd of 500 fan volunteers behind it. 

“Our goal is to be able to bring artists and music that we feel are going to resonate with a broad audience, with families, and also try to be as culturally relevant as possible – I don’t know if that applies to any artist more right now than Shaboozey,” Seth Dudowsky, the NFL’s head of music, told Billboard after the performance on Thursday.

He said the league began considering at its Thanksgiving halftime artists near the start of the current season and chose Shaboozey around mid-September. “With the NFL of course we want to work with the biggest artists and…artists who are on the rise. So, really, this was just the perfect timing and the perfect artist.”

Shaboozey was followed on Thursday by Lainey Wilson during halftime of the Dallas Cowboys-New York Giants game in Arlington, Texas – with a surprise duet with Jelly Roll – while Lindsey Stirling did the honors for the Green Bay Packers’ home game against the Miami Dolphins at night. Millions, of course, saw Shaboozey’s segment – well-received by the crowd despite echoey sound in portions of the stadium – on CBS as they were watching the NFC conference-leading Lions hang on for a 23-20 victory over the Chicago Bears. But there was plenty viewers didn’t get to see – but Billboard did thanks to being on the spot on Detroit’s Ford Field…

Not Finally Over

The show didn’t stop when the music did on Thursday. Instead Shaboozey came off the stage and beelined for the Lions’ sideline, where he slapped hands and posed for selfies with fans along the front row – at one point hoisting himself up to get even more up close and personal. He spent a fair few minutes with the crowd and continued as he went through the team tunnel, greeting a group of U.S. Marines who served as the pre-game color guard, as well as stagehands, and posing for more selfies with fans seated in the stadium’s premium Tunnel Club. 

Bruce Rodgers, the halftime show’s production designer, was not surprised by the unscripted “encore.” “Having met him, I’m not surprised at all,” Rodgers, whose Salem, Conn.-based Tribe, Inc. is preparing for its 19th Super Bowl in February, told Billboard. “He’s just a really cool dude. When you get an artist like this who’s so quickly elevated in their musical career, they still remember how to be regular folks and they want to connect.”

Rodgers added that Shaboozey was “so excited” about the halftime engagement, and also “so nervous. You could tell he was just overly excited but also super nervous, but he just kept working and working, and of course when you get in a room with 60,000 people (64,275, according to the Lions) and you’re an artist like that, it just turns on what you need.”

Raising The Bar

Rodgers and Tribe were brought in by the Lions to elevate the halftime show – a gig that was even more challenging, in some ways, than the Super Bowl.

“I’ve learned how to get a show on the field in under seven minutes and off the field in under six – that’s what we have to do for Super Bowl,” Rodgers said. “Here I have to get it on in five and a half and off in four, so it’s even more intense. And we have one tunnel here, and that’s the same tunnel the athletes have to use. So there’s a lot of coordination.”

Rodgers and company made a trek to Detroit in early November to scope out the venue and presented a selection of designs for Shaboozey and his team to choose from. The Tribe gang – Rodgers and eight production supervisors who regularly work with him on the Super Bowl – then trained a crew of 400 local stagehands and 15 local supervisors on the operation. “You start and you’re doing it in 20 minutes, and by the second day of rehearsal you’re down to five minutes,” Rodgers says of the stage, which was broken up into 10 sections and stored on the stadium’s sidelines, discreetly hidden by large square pads. “There’s a certain way to build these things in front of crowds like this. We’ve just learned techniques, and how to train folks.”

Thursday’s performance was preceded by two days of rehearsals, including having the 500 fans come in the previous afternoon. On game day things went without a hitch, with the separate sections rolled into the tunnel and packed up by the time the game finished.

Getting a Kick Out of It

While Shaboozey was on stage the Lions and Bears’ placekickers and punters came onto the field for their usual second half preparations. The Lions’ Jack Fox even did his warm-up shimmy in time to “A Bar Song (Tipsy).”

…And All The Trimmings

Shaboozey wasn’t the only big star inside Ford Field on Thursday.

Detroit resident and Lions regular Eminem was in the house, shown on the video screens during the second quarter while his “Lose Yourself” was playing over the PA. James Hetfield of Metallica – one of Lions head coach Dan Campbell’s favorite bands – was not there in person but delivered a taped prompt to fire up the crowd during the second half. 

Longtime Detroiter and “old school Lions fan” Tim Allen was also at the game, visiting the sideline pre-game with his wife Jane Hajduk – a big Shaboozey fan. “We were up in Leland (Michigan) all summer, and every time ‘A Bar Song (Tipsy)’ came on they’re all dancing. She loves it.” Hajduk quickly noted, however, that “we’re huge football fans, and Shaboozey is a bonus.”

Allen is preparing for the Jan. 8 premiere of his new ABC sitcom, “Shifting Gears,” about a widower suddenly living with his estranged daughter and her teenaged children. “At my age, I know exactly what I like to do,” Allen says. “I can’t believe they found a subject I liked. I always wonder what Tom Brady said in Tampa Bay when they go, ‘Here’s the offense we’re looking at’…and he says, ‘What I need is two slot receivers that are intermittent’…At some point the jockey’s gonna have to ride the horse. But I’m excited about it.”

Fellow actor and singer-songwriter Jeff Daniels was around pre-game as well, performing a song about the Lions – “The Curse of Bobby Layne” – during the pre-game show. Daniels, who previously wrote a song called “Silver and Honolulu Blue” about the Lions’ “decades of darkness,” is hoping to record the new track for release in the near future. 

“If I do the song right, maybe they’ll ask me some day” to perform for Thanksgiving halftime, quipped Daniels, whose new independent film “Reykjavik,” about U.S. President Ronald Reagan and Soviet Union leader Mikhail Gorbachev’s 1986 nuclear summit in Iceland, is due out next year. Daniels headed to his home in Chelsea, Mich., to watch Thursday’s game but explained that the Thanksgiving game “is as traditional as turkey for Lions fans. It’s just been in our lives since the beginning of time – or the NFL. It’s a great day – especially if we win, which we haven’t done for a long time now, even with this team. So we’re hoping today’s different.

The Lions’ victory was, in fact, the first time since 2016 that the team won the annual holiday matchup.

Lainey Wilson got a little help from her friend for her Thanksgiving halftime show at the Cowboys vs. Giants game, enlisting Jelly Roll to perform their hit duet “Save Me.”

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The duet — which topped Billboard‘s Country Airplay chart for two weeks last year — was part of Wilson’s five-song set at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, which kicked off with “Heart Like a Truck.” Wilson sauntered onto the field in an all-white outfit, complete with a white cowboy hat and long white coat. She ditched the coat as she hit the stage for “Straight Up Sideways,” being joined by the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders for a dance number.

After “4x4xU,” Jelly Roll hit the stage to wild cheers for “Save Me.” It was clear how comfortable the pair have gotten performing the more than year-old hit, as they confidently hit the vocal harmonies and drove home the song’s emotional message.

“The incredible Lainey Wilson!” Jelly Roll hollered as they wrapped the song and he headed off stage to make way for Wilson’s final song, “Wildflowers and Wild Horses.”

In a 2023 interview with Billboard, Jelly Roll told the story behind the Whitsitt Chapel duet, explaining that he was really looking for something to save him from himself — and writing the song was part of that process. “I was in the thick of it — I knew the lifestyle I was living at that moment wasn’t one that could be sustained,” he said. “I needed to make changes in my life, and it was my personal cry for help. Thankfully now I can say I’ve made a lot of positive changes, but I’m still a work in progress.”

Earlier in the day, Shaboozey led the halftime show for the Lions vs. Bears Thanksgiving face-off at Detroit’s Ford Field. Next up, the Packers take on the Dolphins at Green Bay’s Lambeau Field.

See a taste of Lainey and Jelly’s duet below:

Drake is heading back to Australia and New Zealand in early 2025.

On Thursday (Nov. 28), the Canadian superstar revealed the dates for his upcoming The Anita Max Win Tour, which marks first visit to the region since 2017.

The Live Nation-produced tour launches with two nights at Melbourne’s Rod Laver Arena on Feb. 9-10 and wraps with back-to-back shows at Auckland’s Spark Arena on Feb. 28 and March 1. The seven-date tour will also make stops in Sydney and Brisbane. See the full tour itinerary below.

Tickets will be available for purchase through various presales beginning Tuesday (Dec. 3). The general onsale begins Dec. 6 at 12 p.m. local time.

The Anita Max Win Tour is named after a viral moment from Drake’s December 2023 livestream on Kick, where he introduced a new “alter ego” named Anita Max Win. The name is a playful pun on the gambling phrase “I need a max win,” referring to hitting the maximum payout on a slot machine.

Drizzy first hinted at the tour on Nov. 24 during a livestream with gaming streamer xQc, saying, “February 9th for anybody that’s watching from Australia, I’m coming back to Australia for the first time in eight years. Coming back to Australia on tour. Melbourne, Sydney, Gold Coast… February 9 ’til like… March something.”

This marks a major return for Drake’s Australian and New Zealand fans, who last saw him live during the Boy Meets World Tour in 2017. “Funny enough, it’s actually called the Anita Max Wynn Tour,” the Toronto MC said during the xQc livestream.

In August, Drake also announced his forthcoming collaborative album with PARTYNEXTDOOR. PND recently went live on Instagram, sharing exciting news about the joint project. “Guys, I have one more show left on this tour,” PARTYNEXTDOOR told his followers. “Then the album is getting finished. That’s all I gotta say.”

Drake’s tour announcement is especially noteworthy as it coincides with Kendrick Lamar’s highly anticipated Super Bowl Halftime Show performance on Feb. 9 — the same date as the start of Drake’s tour. The two rappers have been at the center of a well-publicized rivalry in 2024, trading shots through diss tracks like Lamar’s “Not Like Us” and Drake’s “Push Ups.” Lamar also recently dropped his surprise album GNX, adding more fuel to the fire.

See Drake’s Anita Max Win Tour dates below.

Feb. 9: Melbourne, Australia (Rod Laver Arena)
Feb. 10: Melbourne, Australia (Rod Laver Arena)
Feb. 16: Sydney, Australia (Qudos Bank Arena)
Feb. 17: Sydney, Australia (Qudos Bank Arena)
Feb. 24: Brisbane, Australia (Brisbane Entertainment Centre)
Feb. 28: Auckland, New Zealand (Spark Arena)
March 1: Auckland, New Zealand (Spark Arena)

Ye has dropped a futuristic music video for “Bomb.”

On Wednesday (Nov. 27), the superstar rapper — formerly known as Kanye West — unveiled on YouTube the post-apocalyptic visual, which features his daughters North and Chicago racing through a barren desert alongside monstrous creatures.

In the surreal clip, North, 11, and Chicago, 6, take the wheel of a Tesla Cybertruck, speeding past furry gremlin-like beasts that evoke the hot rod monster art of Stanley Mouse. Rapper Yuno Miles also makes a cameo, joining the high-speed chase while wearing a black mask.

North, dressed in an oversized jacket with a furry hood, raps in Japanese, while Chicago, sporting cute buns, chimes in midway with the catchy lines: “I like to have fun/ I like to go to the beach/ I like the sun/ You know it’s Chi/ I only wave when I’m telling them ‘bye.’”

Proud mom Kim Kardashian reposted the video on her Instagram account, writing, “BOMB ft. North West & Chicago West.” Ye and Kardashian are also parents to sons Saint West, 8, and Psalm West, 5.

“Bomb” is featured on Ye and Ty Dolla $ign’s Vultures 2, which was released in August and debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 albums chart.

In September, Ye brought all four of his children on stage for a performance of his shelved Vultures track “Everybody” during a concert at the Wuyuan River Sports Stadium in Haikou, China. Earlier this year, North joined Ye at his Vultures listening event in Paris, where she sang along to the track “Talking” from the album.

Watch Ye’s “Bomb” music video on YouTube below.

The NFL announced during its Thanksgiving Day (Nov. 28) broadcast on FOX that Jon Batiste is set to sing the national anthem prior to Super Bowl 2025 kick-off in New Orleans on Feb. 9.

In addition to the five-time Grammy-winning artist’s “Star-Spangled Banner” performance, the NFL tapped Louisiana natives Trombone Shorty, Lauren Daigle and Ledisi as part of the Big Game’s pre-game entertainment. Batiste’s fellow Grammy winner Ledisi will hit the Caesars Superdome field to perform “Lift Every Voice and Sing.”

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“We’re honored to work with this year’s pregame lineup to celebrate the rich musical legacy of New Orleans and the entire state,” NFL head of music Seth Dudowsky said in a statement. “The Super Bowl is a rare moment to unite fans around the world, and this year’s performers will bring the energy, soul and vibrant sounds of the region to a global stage, as we kick off Super Bowl LIX with a celebration to remember.”

Batiste is coming off the release of his Beethoven Blues album, which earned the 38-year-old his first No. 1 on Billboard’s Classical Albums chart. The project is the first of a forthcoming series of solo piano albums from Batiste.

Kendrick Lamar will serve as the headliner for the highly anticipated Super Bowl LIX halftime show in the Big Easy. The Apple Music halftime show is executive produced by Roc Nation in combination with Jesse Collins.

“Rap music is still the most impactful genre to date,” Lamar said at the time of his halftime announcement. “And I’ll be there to remind the world why. They got the right one.” K. Dot’s pgLang creative agency will provide direction for his performance.

There’s still a ton of football to be played this NFL season before Super Bowl Sunday (Feb. 9) on FOX arrives.

Cynthia Erivo is weighing in on whether movie-goers should sing along to Wicked in theaters.

In an interview (via TMZ) during the 2024 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade on Thursday (Nov. 28), the 37-year-old actress and singer, who plays Elphaba in the live-action adaptation of the Broadway musical, shared her thoughts on the ongoing debate about fans singing along during the film.

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“Have you weighed in on whether or not it’s OK to sing in the theater? ‘Cause a lot of people are singing in the theater,” Today Show co-host Hoda Kotb asked Erivo during their brief conversation on NBC.

“Good! I’m OK with it,” Erivo replied with enthusiasm. “We’ve spent this long singing it ourselves, it’s time for everyone else to join in. It’s wonderful.”

The topic of theater etiquette recently made headlines after an AMC Theaters preshow advisory video raised the issue of audience behavior. “At AMC Theaters, silence is golden. No talking. No texting. No singing. No wailing. No flirting. And absolutely no name-calling. Enjoy the magic of movies,” the message read, according to The Independent.

Meanwhile, Wicked — which also stars Ariana Grande as Glinda — dominated the pre-Thanksgiving weekend box office, debuting at No. 1 with a global haul of $164.2 million. Since its release on Nov. 22, the Jon M. Chu-directed film has been met with widespread praise, particularly for the performances of its lead actresses in these iconic roles. The second part of the Wicked adaptation is scheduled for release in November 2025.

For those eager to belt out hits like “Defying Gravity” and “The Wizard & I,” a sing-along version of the film will hit theaters on Christmas Day. The special screenings are expected to play at roughly 1,000 theaters across North America, according to Variety. Exact locations and showtimes are yet to be confirmed.

These interactive screenings, which will allow audiences to sing along to Stephen Schwartz’s famous score, are modeled after similar events for other movie musicals like The Greatest Showman. The sing-along version of Wicked will be released just over a month after the film’s initial premiere on Nov. 22, following more than three years of production.

The two-part Wicked adaptation, based on both the Broadway musical and Gregory Maguire’s novel, began production in 2021. The film features live vocal takes of songs like “Popular,” “What Is This Feeling?” and “Dancing Through Life.”

In addition to Erivo and Grande, Wicked stars Jeff Goldblum, Michelle Yeoh, Jonathan Bailey, Ethan Slater, Bowen Yang, Peter Dinklage and Marissa Bode.

Tame Imapala mastermind Kevin Parker has further diversified his role within the music industry, this time launching a new musical “ideas machine”.

Dubbed Orchid, the new device is less of an instrument and more of a digital polysynthesizer designed for musicians and producers to explore new ideas.

Per a press release, the way Orchid works is “by employing a unique chord logic system, combined with a multitude of ways to shape and alter the chords to maximize creative musical expression”.

“All this is brought into sonic existence by a lush and powerful 16-voice polyphonic synth engine with onboard ambience and modulation FX, plus a separate bass synth engine solely for bottom end,” it continues.

Designed by Telepathic Instruments co-founder Ignacio Germade, Orchid largely operates as a chord generating system. A ’70s-styled product video shows Orchid in action and illustrates how an operator can choose a root note from its single-octave keyboard, and utilise a its eight “chord-type selecting and chord modifying keys”.

Put simply, hitting the ‘E’ on the keyboard and the ‘Minor’ chord modifying key will provide an E minor chord, with the ability to modify it further.

Orchird also utilises a patent pending voicing system which uses a rotary encoder to “re-pitch and re-position chords”, ultimately expanding the chords’ potential outside of the 12 keys found on the unit. The Strum, Slop, Arpeggiator, Pattern and Harp performance modes also add versatilty to the way the aforementioned chords are ‘played’ by the user as well.

“While other chord generators deliver a static and rigid outputting platform, Orchid paints a new landscape,” the press release adds.

Orchid is set to be released in December, with 1,000 units made available to US buyers at a cost of $549. A wider launch will follow in 2025.

Parker’s Tame Impala project last released an album in 2020, with The Slow Rush peaking at No. 3 on the Hot 100 – one position higher than its Platinum-selling predecessor, 2015’s Currents.