Kanye West’s Donda listening party at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta last Thursday, Aug. 5, set a new livestream record for Apple Music, pulling in 5.4 million viewers, sources tell Billboard.

For context, the total is more than double the current livestream record on Twitch — and approaches the 2020 Primetime Emmys, which pulled in an audience of 6.1 million people across the U.S. last September — making it one of the biggest livestream events in the past year. Sources say the Donda listening party generated over 1.1 million tweets at its peak, outpacing Twitter activity for the 2020 MTV VMAs.

West held a first Donda listening event on July 23 and since then has been living at Mercedes-Benz Stadium while putting the finishing touches on Donda, his 10th studio album. Between the two listening parties, West made considerable tweaks to the album, adding and removing features and entire songs, so it remains to be seen what the definitive version of Donda will sound like once the album is released. After numerous delays, Donda is expected to be released in the coming weeks.

The second event on Aug. 5 also pulled in $7 million in revenue from in-person merchandise sales, sources say. The highest-grossing U.S. tour since 1990 — when Billboard Boxscore began tracking touring data — is Taylor Swift’s Reputation Stadium Tour in 2018, which grossed just under $7 million per show. That number also matches the revenue for the first drop from Yeezy x Gap, West’s new collaboration with the Gap, which former Gap CEO Mickey Drexler told Yahoo Finance generated $7 million overnight when a $200 blue puffer coat was released in June.

The upcoming project is filled with features from a plethora of artists including Jay-Z, Travis Scott, Kid Cudi, Playboi Carti, Baby Keem, Roddy Ricch, and Jay Electronica, among others. West also partnered with Apple-subsidiary Beats on commercials featuring American track and field star Sha’Carri Richardson to announce the album, which a source says have generated over 35 million views to date across platforms. Since the album was announced, it has generated over 6 million tweets on Twitter, sources tell Billboard.

Apple and Beats did not respond to requests for comment.

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Billie Eilish is Happier Than Ever on her latest No. 1 album — but is the Billboard 200 top three younger than ever?

Nineteen-year-old Eilish leads the way, debuting at the top of the Billboard 200 albums chart this week with Happier Than Ever, and she’s followed by two fellow teenagers: 17-year-old The Kid LAROI at No. 2 with F*ck Love and 18-year-old Olivia Rodrigo at No. 3 with Sour.

So has that ever happened before? On the new Billboard Pop Shop Podcast, Keith takes a trip down memory lane to see if there’s ever been another trio of teenagers in the top three before. Listen to the new episode to hear his findings:

Also on the show, we’ve got chart news on Prince’s new album Welcome 2 America scoring the late legend his highest-charting new album in more than a decade and The Kid LAROI and Justin Bieber taking over at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 with “Stay.” Plus, we’ve got news about The Weeknd’s latest single “Take My Breath,” new music coming from Lizzo and a very special guest this week, and drama surrounding the 2014 hit song “Bang Bang” from Jessie J, Nicki Minaj and Ariana Grande.

The Billboard Pop Shop Podcast is your one-stop shop for all things pop on Billboard’s weekly charts. You can always count on a lively discussion about the latest pop news, fun chart stats and stories, new music, and guest interviews with music stars and folks from the world of pop. Casual pop fans and chart junkies can hear Billboard’s deputy editor, digital, Katie Atkinson and senior director of Billboard charts Keith Caulfield every week on the podcast, which can be streamed on Billboard.com or downloaded in Apple Podcasts or your favorite podcast provider. (Click here to listen to the previous edition of the show on Billboard.com.)  

After a public battle with Tommy Silverman’s storied label, Tommy Boy Music, De La Soul are back in control of their creative legacy and plan to bring their first six studio albums to streaming services later this year.

The iconic hip-hop trio has been trying to get its Tommy Boy recordings on streaming services for years, but abandoned the plan in 2019 when they couldn’t come to terms with the label, hung up on agreeable royalty splits and the cost of licensing samples included in the tracks. But when Reservoir Music acquired 40-year-old Tommy Boy in June, the group resumed its effort.

“We have finally come down to a deal between ourselves and Reservoir Media to release our music in 2021,” De La Soul member David “Trugoy” Jolicoeur said in an IG Live video posted Tuesday (Aug. 10). “We’re trying to work hard and diligently along with the good folks at Reservoir to get this done. We sat down and we got it done pretty quick … maybe in two weeks’ time tops. A totally different approach than what was happening with Tommy Boy. And I’m not speaking to bash Tommy Silverman or Tommy Boy in any way. But we’re happy that chapter is over and done with and looking forward to our relationship with Reservoir Media.”

Reservoir confirmed the deal with Billboard but would not disclose terms.

“We have reached a new long-term agreement with De La Soul that gives the group a new voice and interest in how their historic catalog will be distributed,” a company spokesperson said in a statement. “Reservoir couldn’t be happier to come to an agreement with De La Soul, one of the most important groups in the history of hip-hop, and it’s an honor to partner with them and make these classic albums available to the fans after all this time.”

Added Faith Newman, Reservoir executive A&R and catalog development, in a statement: “Life can be funny when things come full circle. I’ve known the guys for over 30 years and it’s so exciting to be a part of this rebirth.”

Tommy Boy’s catalog included a treasure trove of hip-hop master recordings with more than 6,000 songs in all including work by Coolio (“Gangsta’s Paradise”), House of Pain (“Jump Around”), Afrika Bambaata & the Soulsonic Force (“Planet Rock”) and De La Soul (“Me Myself and I”).

The six albums comprising De La Soul’s Tommy Boy catalog include their 1989 seminal debut 3 Feet High and Rising and De La Soul Is Dead. Through memorable singles like “Plug Tunin’,” “Me Myself and I,” “The Magic Number,” “Eye Know” and “Say No Go,” 3 Feet High and Rising not only ushered in a new, psychedelic era with the group’s distinctive brand of alternative rap but also scored platinum and No. 1 status on Billboard’s Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. Its game-changing influence was further cemented in 2010 when the album was added to the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry.

However, De La Soul’s use of uncleared samples from Hall & Oates, the Turtles and others in those early days of rap on 3 Feet High and Rising and follow-up De La Soul is Dead also sparked years of legal issues. The end result: the group’s early classic records have been withheld from streaming platforms for decades.

De La Soul’s fight to release their catalog on streaming services — and to rectify terms of the Tommy Boy contract they signed as teenagers — went public in February 2019 when the group aired grievances about their copyright issues with Tommy Boy on social media. Two years earlier, Tommy Boy founder Silverman had re-purchased the label from former partner Warner Music.

In a lengthy interview with Billboard that March, the group — whose additional members include Posdnuos and Maseo — said Silverman allegedly offered them a 90/10 split of the profits if he were to take their music to streaming services. At that point, De La Soul launched a boycott on social media, which drew the support of Nas, Questlove and Jay-Z, among others.

In August 2019, in the wake of their debut album’s 30th anniversary, De La Soul ended negotiations with Silverman. In a statement issued on Instagram at the time, Jolicoeur said, “After 30 years of profiting from our music and hard work… and after 7 long months of stalled negotiations, we are sad to say that we’ve been unable to reach an agreement and earn Tommy Boy’s respect for our legacy … we’ve decided we will not do our 30+ years the disservice of settling on Tom Silverman’s terms.”

On Tuesday, however, Jolicoeur’s tone was notably different. “I think we needed new soil to work with,” he continued on IG Live, speaking of the new arrangement with Reservoir. “These good people are looking after us to do the right thing by ourselves, our music, our legacy and, of course, the fans.”

Most veteran country acts, were they forced to identify themselves by a particular recorded accomplishment, would point to a mass appeal, mainstream achievement: several years of consecutive radio hits, an identifiable country single or maybe a massive pop breakthrough.

The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band has all those things: a string of 15 top 10 singles that made the act a key country-radio presence from 1983 to 1988; a 1987 chart-topper, “Fishin’ in the Dark,” that still appears in some gold rotations three decades later; and the million-selling 1970 pop single “Mr. Bojangles.” But if there’s one studio achievement that most defines the band, it’s arguably the album Will the Circle Be Unbroken.

This week marks 50 years since the band recorded the 38-track set in six focused days at Nashville’s Woodland Sound Studios. Originally released on three vinyl discs in the fall of 1972, it never spawned any actual hit singles, though it did peak at No. 4 on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart. People heard about it through word-of-mouth, Dirt Band concerts and significant critical attention, given in great part because it was a grand experiment that managed to cross multiple gaps — generational, cultural, stylistic and geographical — in an era when America was divided by urban violence and the Vietnam War.

“I have close friends that said, ‘You kind of helped bridge that gap between my dad and me; we would put this record on, have something in common,’ ” recalls founding member Jeff Hanna. “Those are really profound things to hear about a record.”

A cover of “I Saw the Light” with Roy Acuff logged a Grammy nomination in 1971, while the entire album made the final ballot a year later. And artists such as Bruce Springsteen and Bruce Hornsby have told Hanna that Will the Circle Be Unbroken was a gateway for their understanding of American roots music.

The Dirt Band members — John McEuen, Jimmy Ibbotson, Jimmie Fadden, Les Thompson and Hanna — were all 23 to 25 years old when they arrived in Nashville from the West Coast to cut the album in an unlikely series of collaborations with numerous country and bluegrass figures who were past their commercial primes: Acuff, Earl Scruggs, Maybelle Carter, Merle Travis and Jimmy Martin.

But hits were never the point. It was about a younger generation paying homage to the music and the artists who inspired them, even if the elder artists were somewhat skeptical. Scruggs and Travis had both met the Dirt Band previously, but others needed persuasion. Acuff was resistant, and even after the sessions, he admired their musicianship while struggling with their appearance.

“They are very nice young boys,” he told The Tennessean. “But if I ever saw them again without their hair, I’d never know them. I don’t even know if I would recognize them if I saw them again just like they are.”

Bill Monroe declined entirely, dissuaded apparently by their California history, hippie fashion and recent top 40 status.

“He didn’t think his fans would understand us playing whatever that was that we played,” says Hanna. “I don’t think he realized at the time that we weren’t going to come in the studio with a full drum kit and Marshall amps and wild pedals.”

Fortunately, everyone else locked into Scruggs’ belief in the project, and the work progressed steadily beginning Aug. 6, with the Dirt Band taking one day off amid a daily schedule of nine to 13 hours of recording. The group even took a side trip on Aug. 12 to cut more material at the Columbia Recording Studios for the Earl Scruggs Revue album I Saw the Light With Some Help From My Friends.

Will the Circle Be Unbroken allowed the California kids to join their heroes on a raft of signature titles, including The Carter Family’s “You Are My Flower,” Acuff’s “The Precious Jewel,” Travis’ “Dark as a Dungeon,” Hank Williams’ “Honky Tonk Blues” and the much-covered “Orange Blossom Special” and “Soldier’s Joy,” the latter featuring McEuen playing the banjo of late Grand Ole Opry icon Uncle Dave Macon.

“That was the stuff that really got our blood going when we were kids,” says Hanna. “So for me to be able to lean over Doc Watson’s shoulder and sing harmony on ‘Tennessee Stud,’ that was priceless.”

Manager-producer William E. McEuen envisioned the Circle concept, patterned after a 1960 blues album, Down South Summit Meetin’, that featured Brownie McGhee, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Big Joe Williams and Sonny Terry playing their material with interstitial chatter from the studio floor included.

In that format, hearing Watson and Travis meeting for the first time at Woodland or having Acuff stress the importance of nailing a song on the initial take (“Let’s do it the first time, and the hell with the rest of it.”), Circle makes the legends as real and as workmanlike as the blue-collar, life-and-death songs that form the album’s backbone.

Circle had a significant long-tail effect. It went gold in 1973, platinum in 1997, and earned induction into the Grammy Hall of Fame and the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry. Additionally, six of the album’s tracks were heard during episode six of the 2019 PBS documentary Country Music: A Film by Ken Burns.

Adding to the album’s place in Dirt Band lore — and in country music history overall — the band compiled two more volumes, in 1989 and 2002, snaring two Grammys and five additional nominations in the process.

The durability of that album continues, too, particularly since the Dirt Band has landed a foot in several different genres, spurring curious fans who might not have otherwise been exposed to investigate the album, and in turn learn about the icons the band was celebrating. Because of that, Circle reaches its 50th anniversary having introduced scores of fans and musicians to country music and Americana.

Says Hanna: “It casts a mighty big shadow.”

Fall Out Boy said hello to the Hella Mega Tour again on Tuesday night (Aug. 10) after the group missed three dates due to an unspecified member of their touring crew contracting COVID-19.

The quartet returned to the road at Detroit’s Comerica Park, happy to be rejoining tourmates Green Day, Weezer and The Interrupters.

“This week has been a bit of a clusterf— for our band,” bassist Pete Wentz told the crowd near the start of Fall Out Boy’s hourlong set. “But we appreciate you guys being here with us — maybe us being here with you,” Wentz added before launching into their 2015 Billboard Hot 100 hit “Uma Thurman.”

Weezer’s Rivers Cuomo also celebrated Fall Out Boy’s return to the stage. “Fall Out Boy’s back! Very excited,” Cuomo announced during his band’s set. Noting that Weezer had played “Sugar, We’re Going Down” in their tourmates’ stead, he said, “I’m not gonna do that tonight. It would be weird. Plus, they sing it really awesome.”

Wentz also had an answer for anyone who questions rock ‘n’ roll’s current drawing power. “We decided to challenge that theory and put together the biggest f—ing rock tour this summer,” he said of the Hella Mega outing.

Looking over a crowd of more than 30,000, he noted that “it’s pretty f—ing evident the kids still listen to rock ‘n’ roll!”