KPop Demon Hunters continues to take over the Hot 100 with songs from HUNTR/X and the Saja Boys, while Morgan Wallen continues to remain a staple in the top 10.
Tetris Kelly” This is the Billboard Hot 100 top 10 for the week dated Aug. 30. New in the top 10: HUNTR/X shows us “How It’s Done,” “Just In Case” slips to No. 9. As does Bieber’s “Daisies” to eight. “Lose Control” spends another week at seven. “Love Me Not” is down to six. “Soda Pop” hits a new No. 5 peak while “Your Idol” is still at four, and Morgan and Tate at No. 3. Alex Warren’s ordinary falls to two, and grabbing a second weekend No. 1 is “Golden” from KPop Demon Hunters.
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Despite HUNTR/X and Saja Boys’ conflicts (and certain members’ conflicted feelings toward each other) in Netflix’s KPop Demon Hunters, the acts team up to score half the top 10 on the Billboard Global 200 chart.
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HUNTR/X’s “Golden” adds a sixth nonconsecutive week at No. 1 on both the Global 200 and Billboard Global Excl. U.S. charts. In July, the song became the first leader on each list for the act, whose music is voiced by EJAE, Audrey Nuna and REI AMI.
Meanwhile, HUNTR/X’s “How It’s Done” holds at its No. 5 Global 200 high and “What It Sounds Like” lifts 11-10, becoming the act’s third top 10.
Along with the trio’s three entries, Saja Boys place at No. 3 with “Soda Pop,” which keeps at its peak rank, and No. 4 with “Your Idol,” which has also reached No. 3. Both songs are sung by Andrew Choi, Neckwav, Danny Chung, Kevin Woo and samUIL Lee.
Since the Global 200 began in September 2020, KPop Demon Hunters is the first soundtrack to stack five simultaneous (or total) top 10s. It joins 10 other albums whose songs have claimed half the region or better concurrently: Bad Bunny’s DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS (this January-February) and Un Verano Sin Ti (2022); Kendrick Lamar’s GNX (2024); Taylor Swift’s The Tortured Poets Department (2024), 1989 (Taylor’s Version) (2023) and Midnights (2022); Drake’s For All the Dogs (2023), Her Loss, with 21 Savage (2022), and Certified Lover Boy (2021); and Harry Styles’ Harry’s House (2022).
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” leads the Global 200 with 113.5 million streams (down 4% week-over-week) and 16,000 sold (up 10%) worldwide in the week ending Aug. 21.
The only song not from the KPop Demon Hunters soundtrack in the Global 200’s top five, Alex Warren’s “Ordinary,” repeats at No. 2 after 10 weeks on top beginning in May.
“Golden” tops Global Excl. U.S. with 80.9 million streams (down 6%) and 8,000 sold (up 9%) 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” buzzes 4-3 for a new high; BLACKPINK’s “Jump” falls 3-4, after it led in its debut week in July; and “Your Idol” is steady at No. 5 best.
The Billboard Global 200 and Billboard Global Excl. U.S. charts (dated Aug. 30, 2025) will update on Billboard.com tomorrow, Aug. 26. 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.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-08-25 18:55:442025-08-25 18:55:44‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Hits Are Half the Billboard Global 200’s Top 10, Led by HUNTR/X’s ‘Golden’ at No. 1
Oasis brought their long-awaited Live ’25 reunion tour to Toronto for the first date of their North American tour on Sunday night (August 24).
It’s the first time the quintessential Britpop band has come to Canada in 16 years, and they made it count. Rain started coming down a little after halfway through the concert, during “Stand by Me,” and never abated, but Oasis didn’t shorten their setlist.
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The band played songs from throughout their catalogue: six songs from their classic debut Definitely Maybe, eight from their beloved sophomore album (What’s The Story) Morning Glory? and many others from throughout their career. With a few exceptions, they played mostly crowdpleasers from their ’90s peak, with only two songs coming from the year 2000 or later.
For those paying attention to the first leg of their reunion tour in Europe, there were no surprises. This was the same 23-song setlist Oasis played from their opening reunion show in Cardiff, Wales to their last one before North America in Dublin, Ireland. But fans who came to belt along with classics like “Wonderwall” and “Don’t Look Back in Anger” were not disappointed, letting themselves get fully soaked to stay until the encore.
Before their customary “F—in’ in the Bushes,” (2000) the walk-on intro track they’ve used for over a decade, they also played Canadian rock legend Neil Young’s “Rockin’ in the Free World” before coming onstage at 8:45 p.m. ET.
Earlier, opening band Cage The Elephant played their own 11-song set, including three Billboard Canadian Hot 100-charting hits: “Ain’t No Rest For The Wicked,” “Shake Me Down” and “Come a Little Closer.”
After another date at the new Rogers Stadium tonight (August 25), they will travel to Chicago, East Rutherford (New Jersey), Los Angeles and Mexico City.
Find the full setlist from night 1 in Toronto below, and find the full show recap here.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-08-25 18:52:162025-08-25 18:52:16Oasis Live ’25 Reunion Tour Setlist in Toronto: Every Song They Played at First North American Show
The last time Oasis played Canada, they left on a sour note.
At Virgin Festival on Toronto Islands in 2008, Noel Gallagher was attacked by an intoxicated fan, who pushed him into a speaker and broke three of his ribs. It turned out to be their final time in the country, as Noel and his brother and band co-leader Liam Gallagher had a bitter sibling rivalry that took well over a decade to resolve.
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Now, 16 years later, they’ve returned to Toronto on a much higher note: reunited for the blockbuster Oasis Live ’25 tour, beginning the North American tour at Rogers Stadium. Oasis was one of the first acts announced for the 50,000-capacity outdoor venue, and they made it count on night 1 on Sunday (August 24), delivering a packed setlist of fan-favorites despite a downpour of rain that lasted for the second half of the concert.
“You have one last chance to prove that you loved us all along,” Oasis told North America in a billboard before announcing the tour.
Toronto showed they definitely have.
Liam and Noel Gallagher were joined by Paul “Bonehead” Arthurs (guitar), Gem Archer (guitar), Andy Bell (bass) and Joey Waronker (drums).
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-08-25 18:40:412025-08-25 18:40:415 Best Moments as Oasis Open North American Leg of Live ’25 Reunion Tour in Toronto
In the 1970s, ‘80s and ‘90s, many blockbuster movies were practically synonymous with the music featured in them or on their star-packed soundtracks.
For some films, music was woven into their plots, making for a natural fit, such as the dance-floor odes Saturday Night Fever and Footloose.
In other cases, musical superstars segued to on-screen starring roles — and did double duty by supplying memorable songs, such as Prince with Purple Rain and Whitney Houston with The Bodyguard and Waiting to Exhale. Meanwhile, Dirty Dancing became a vehicle for star Patrick Swayze to make his chart debut as a recording artist.
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Other soundtracks, such as two entries in the Beverly Hills Cop franchise, largely became collections of smash songs, regardless of their cinematic ties.
Not only did soundtrack songs enhance moviegoers’ experiences, but many became big hits on the Billboard Hot 100, with multiple soundtracks generating three or more top 10s.
By the 2000s, the flow of soundtracks packed with hits had stalled. A Billboard story in 2004 outlined various reasons for their decline, from oversaturation to filmmakers attempting to make songs work in storylines and rising artist fees.
Now, after a drought of 28 years, a soundtrack has generated not only three, but four Hot 100 top 10s once again: Netflix’s animated KPop Demon Hunters. The set slays with HUNTR/X’s “Golden,” which first hit No. 1 on the Aug. 16 chart, and “How It’s Done” and Saja Boys’ “Your Idol” and “Soda Pop.”
The soundtrack has also become the first to have boasted four Hot 100 top 10s simultaneously, surpassing Saturday Night Fever and Waiting to Exhale, each of which stacked three at a time. The latter, notably, yielded a record five total top 10s.
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“It’s so thrilling that people are hearing the songs in two ways,” KPop Demon Hunters executive music producer Ian Eisendrath previously told Billboard. “Some are loving the film, and the film is making the songs hits … and then some people are just encountering the songs, and the songs are making the film hit.”
Popcorn and pop hits: Here’s a look at soundtracks that have spun off three or more Hot 100 top 10s.
(Small print, like the credits at the end of a movie: Only soundtracks with three or more Hot 100 top 10s released from them as singles are included below. So, no Help! by the Beatles, as the title track and “Ticket To Ride” were released from the 1965 album’s U.S. version but third No. 1 “Yesterday” was not on its American tracklist. Plus, 1985’s Miami Vice TV soundtrack houses three top 10s, but Tina Turner’s “Better Be Good to Me” was released as a single from her album Private Dancer and became a hit a year earlier. Meanwhile, 1998’s City of Angels includes three songs that became top 10s on the Radio Songs chart, but Alanis Morissette’s “Uninvited” was not released as a commercial single and never hit the Hot 100.)
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-08-25 18:30:392025-08-25 18:30:39‘Saturday Night Fever’ to ‘KPop Demon Hunters’: Soundtracks With Three or More Hot 100 Top 10s
Offset opened up about Drake’s relationship with the Migos, and the Atlanta rapper says the 6 God never charged the trio a dime for features.
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On the heels of dropping his KIARI album, Set joined the Full Send Podcast on Friday (Aug. 22), where he gave Drake his flowers for always looking out for the Migos.
“That’s my dog, I f—k with Drake,” he said. “Always showed love. Always pulled up to the video shoots, all that s–t. Don’t make a hassle, don’t be charging nothing.”
Offset went on to explain that Drake went out of his way to make sure the business side of their collaborations was fair. “Even when we was little n—as, a lot of artists his size would bully the record like, ‘I’ma do it, but I want all of the publishing.’ He didn’t do none of that s—t,” Set said. “Equal splits.”
The Drake-Migos relationship dates back to the OVO boss hopping on the remix to 2013’s “Versace.” They’ve also joined forces on tracks such as “Walk It, Talk It” and “Having Our Way.” Offset and Drake were also both featured on Metro Boomin’s “No Complaints” hit.
Drake also brought the Migos on tour when they linked up for the Aubrey & the Three Migos Tour in 2018, which trekked through North America.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-08-25 18:30:382025-08-25 18:30:38Offset Says Drake Never Charged Migos for Features & Gave Equal Publishing Splits: ‘Always Showed Love’
Bryson Tiller has spent almost a decade trying to outrun the ghost of his debut album. Trapsoul is now triple platinum, and as it encroaches in on its 10th anniversary in October, still remains one of the most influential R&B projects of the 2010s — or maybe even ever.
Take the unequivocal transparency of rap, marry it to the emotional catharsis of R&B and set it over signature R&B samples like K.P. and Envyi’s “Swing My Way” or Jodeci’s “Alone,” and you have the sub-genre namesake at the heart Trapsoul. While Brent Faiyaz, Ella Mai, H.E.R., and countless other R&B acts have emerged from the subgenre’s ashes, Tiller has spent the last decade reckoning with the album’s impact. Tiller’s sophomore effort True to Self was a slump, a conversation about signing to Drake’s OVO Sound never materialized, and he soon after put his third album on ice. Tiller admits he then spitefully tried to recreate the Trapsoul energy with 2020’s Anniversary, just to prove to his longtime critics: “It cannot be done.”
“I even pulled songs from the Trapsoul era that didn’t make Trapsoul and put ’em on there,” Tiller told Billboard over Zoom. “Even after I dropped Trapsoul 2, people still were like, ‘Hey, we want Trapsoul 2!’”
Tiller then dropped off a Christmas album and his experimental eponymous album in 2021 and 2024, respectively. The latter at times went full pop (“Assume the Position”) and full blown hip-hop (“Whatever She Wants”) with hardly any regard for the singer’s Trapsoul base. The goal was simple: Create anything and everything to flex creative versatility, and to silence the trolls once and for all. If you ask Bryson Tiller: “It was a success, fo’ sho.”
Now freer than ever, his latest double album Solace & The Vices — the latter dropped on Aug. 8, while the former comes out October 2 — finds Tiller in a creative flow state. He raps when he wants, sings when he wants, and he sounds like he’s having a blast even when he’s crooning about his struggles. The result is Bryson Tiller’s most authentic project yet, and likely his first entirely unclouded by Trapsoul‘s fog. He talks with Billboard about all of it below.
Was making a double album an intentional act while you were building Solace & The Vices, or was it something that kinda just happened during the creative process while you were in the studio?
It happened during the creative process while I was in the studio, for sure. I was working on the first part of the album and just got a little tired of talking about my feelings. I was just like, “I’m ready to have fun, summertime’s coming.” I didn’t wanna listen to the type of music I was making during this season, so I was like, “I’m gonna make something fun.”
You sound like you’re having the time of your life on Vices. What role did joy play while you were making that album?
Definitely intentional, I was just so thrilled to stop working on the other project that I just got right to it. I think I even started making one song while I was finishing [Solace], but I was like, “All right, I can’t get too carried I away. I gotta finish this album first.”
What was the reason behind tapping in mostly with Florida artists on this record? You mentioned that you moved to Miami.
My goal was to have only Florida artists on this record, but Bun B is from Houston and BabyDrill is from Atlanta. I just spend a lot of time there. I love the energy there. I think [Florida artists] are all amazing, there’s a lot of legends from Florida. There’s something about Florida music that just does it for me.
You tapped in with a few of those legends, including most importantly Plies. What was the conversation like to get him on “200 Bands?”
He’d wanted to work with me for a while, so we linked up and actually worked on some other stuff for his project and what not. But yeah, I had the song and was like, “Yo, bro, be a part of this” and he sent it back in 72 hours.
You’ve talked a lot about the negative reception to your sophomore album True to Self and how everyone is always comparing everything to Trapsoul. What has it been like over the years pushing back against the criticism of your music post-Trapsoul, and have you ever made something that feels creatively authentic to you but then tossed it because you didn’t know whether the fans would like it?
I’m glad you said it, because for the second album, I definitely psyched myself out. When that came out, I lost my confidence, and then I started working on an album called Serenity, and then I really psyched myself out. I was like, “Yo, I can’t even do this album because I don’t feel in control of my career right now. I don’t feel like I’m in control of what I do creatively.”
Fans are telling me what I need to do and, I don’t know, I just didn’t feel like I was in control. So at that point, I was like, “Alright, I think I’m gonna take a break for a little while.” Then my grandma passed, and I was like, “OK, you know what? The five year anniversary for Trapsoul is coming up so I’m gonna do what the fans have been asking me to do just to prove that it can’t be done. I’m gonna make Trapsoul 2, but I’m gonna call it something different. I’m gonna call it ‘Anniversary’ and pay homage to the anniversary.” You look the album covers are damn near the same. That was just to prove: It cannot be done.
You felt like you can’t make these guys happy.
Yeah, it was so annoying. That type of stuff really makes me not wanna make music at all because, like, I can’t enjoy it. So I made the Bryson Tiller album and collaborated with people for the first time. Worked with writers for the first time. I was like, “I’m gonna do as many different vibes as I can.” It’s not like I was changing my sound, but just doing different things to kind of break the creative restraints people put on me. So I was like, “I’m gonna have a f—king pop song on here! I’m gonna have a song with no Auto-Tune.” Just all different types of stuff, and I’m gonna have some Trapsoul type stuff on there, but all just to kinda free myself from all the restraints.
Did it work?
It worked, it felt so good. I was like, “OK, now everybody will leave me alone! They’ll clearly see I’m doing whatever the hell I want. This is Bryson Tiller now and all the things Bryson Tiller is capable of. Leave me the hell alone, so I can just create.” It was a success, fo’ sho. Now I feel free, and I don’t think anybody was expecting another project this soon. I was like, “OK, cool, now I can keep going silently without them even knowing. I can just do my own thing.” So with [Vices], I was just excited to do me. I got back to writing for myself again.
Yeah the way you approached Vices it felt like you were just in a creative flow state. You didn’t feel confined to the structures of what a Bryson Tiller song should be.
Yeah, and that came from really seeing the success of “Whatever She Wants.” In the midst of me finishing the Bryson Tiller album, I got so tired of working on it. There was so much going on at that time. So I was like, ‘I’m gonna go to Miami and make some mixtapes.’ I went to Miami and made Slum Tiller Vol. 1. Fans were f—kin’ with it, some fans weren’t because they don’t like when I rap, they like when I sing. But I didn’t really care I was just doing me. This was me taking the shackles off.
This is me exercising my ability. And that was so fun I was like, “I’m gonna do a Vol. 2.” So I did Vol. 2 and that’s where I got “Whatever She Wants.” It caught some fire and I really didn’t wanna put it on the album at that moment. I actually kinda wanted to shelf the Bryson Tiller album and just work on a whole album that was like “Whatever She Wants.” So Vices kinda became that, but I wish I could have wrote that energy from the “Whatever She Wants” song.
So now that the shackles are off, have you thought about revisiting Serenity and seeing if you could make it the way you wanted to?
With Serenity I didn’t even feel at peace. I couldn’t create freely. To me that album was like, I’m gonna make this album when I feel like I’m no longer doing it for the money. It has nothing to do with money or critical acclaim, charts, numbers, and I think I’ve reached that point now. Even with Solace & Vices I’m not at all thinking about none of that. My label was just like, “Hey, unfortunately were not gonna be able to submit it to the Grammys.” I was like, “I don’t care about that at all.”
I don’t care about Grammys. I don’t even think it’s Grammy-worthy in the end. It’s not even about whether it’s worthy or not to be honest, It’s more like, I just don’t care. I just wanna give people the music. I wanna give people moments so we can share those moments together at a concert. That’s all I care about.
Anyways, back to Serenity. Now that I’m in a space of feeling so free and not having to worry about having a super-hit, chart-topping album, now I can create Serenity because it’s no longer about that. It’s just about me communicating my feelings the way they need to be communicated and just making music.
I’ve accepted the fact that nothing great, no matter what it is, is gonna be liked by everybody. No matter what, whether it’s a video game, album, movie, I’ve seen some of my favorite movies of all time that I thought were so brilliant to the point where I was like: “Man, I gotta rethink some things.” Then you go online and people are bashing it. You can’t win no matter what. Once I accepted that, that was when I found my freedom, my Serenity, my peace of mind.
So Serenity might see the light of day is what you’re saying?
Definitely, I’ve already started working on it again.
Kinda going off that, if you ever were to sign to OVO, where would you rank you Drake and PARTYNEXTDOOR among other rosters and other labels if it were to happen?
We’d be the best team in the game, for sure. 1000% nobody would be ever to f—k with us. Point blank period.
What’s your relationship like now that the OVO conversation kinda came and went?
Everything’s cool with OVO man. I was just kicking it with [Drake] out there in London when I did the Wireless thing. Maybe I’d be bitter if I was broke and unsuccessful. Life is great man, my life is awesome I’m just blessed to be where I’m at.
I gotta ask you about your video game. What’s the status of the game so far? How is it going over at Trapsoul Games?
The game is coming along great. Been working on it for like five years. We put a lot of time into it. I didn’t really get my first art assets until like 2021, and it was moving kinda slow, but now my art team is very solid. Things are really, really cooking right now. It’s a lot of work, but it doesn’t even feel like work. I wake up every single day and I do that, you know?
Did you ever run into obstacles for being an R&B singer trying to get into video games?
There’s definitely obstacles because first I was like, “OK, maybe I should just intern for one of my favorite game studios.” But then I was like, “Why would they wanna hire me?” I don’t know anything. It’s almost like if a guy comes up to me on the street and is like, “Hey man, I’m really good at music. Can I intern for you?” It’s just like…I don’t know you. So I was like at this point: Maybe I should just make my own game.
You’ve always found some way to implement video game sounds into your music, and did so again on “First Place.” What role do video games play in your creative process as a singer songwriter?
I look at everything like a video game. Life is a video game, man. Things will happen, somebody might say something to me and I’ll be inspired by it… I’m always trying to get to the next level when it comes to my ability to song write and be an artist.
What’s your Game of the Year pick so far?
Damn, I wanna say, it but I don’t wanna give away the type of game I’m working on right now, and it’s a game that’s in the same genre — but I don’t wanna say it so: People might hate me for this, but Game of the Year every year is gonna be Apex Legends.
Octane and Fuse are my go-to’s, and people troll me hard for that.
Nah man, you gotta rock with you like. I’m a Mirage man, I’ve been a Mirage man since day one, pre-season. Gotta stick with what you know.
What’s your rank?
I went Predator in season three but — I don’t wanna say it was easy to go Pred — but it was doable. Now it’s way more challenging because you have to hold Pred when you get Pred.
The closest I’ve come is like silver two.You’re a beast.
Oh s—t, nah it’s a grind but I always get it done.
What about your favorite video game characters of all time?
I’m gonna put Mario in there, he’s an absolute legend. Niko Bellic from Grand Theft Auto IV is in there, he’s super inspiring. He’s like the nicest of all the characters, but he’s also the most badass out of all the GTA characters in my personal opinion. Next, I’ll probably have to say Kirby. I love Kirby so much because he can be anybody or anything. I got Kirby tattooed on me, and I relate to Kirby a lot when it comes to music and stuff like that. Oh, and Mirage!
In closing, how is Breezy Bowl going at this point? What have you learned from Chris Brown about how to navigate this industry as an R&B singer?
Man, I’ve learned a lot more when it comes to like — he’s really a showman. So watching him go out on that stage, he gives it 150, 200% every single night. He really loves it and you can tell. That’s what I love about him, and the highlight of the tour for me was when we got in the studio first night of the tour. He played me some songs, and “It Depends” was one of them. He sent it to me and I didn’t end up recording it until like six cities later.
What was it like performing the song together for the first time at MetLife?
I wanted to do it differently. I was kinda telling them that I wanted to have a little bit of a different experience. I don’t really know.
How so?
I don’t know, I just had a different creative idea. I won’t share it because I still wanna see if we can execute it. But it was cool to be on stage with him. That’s a moment in itself.
How do you feel about the state of rap versus R&B right now?
Some of my favorite rap songs of all time have a bunch of melody in ’em, or some R&B fused into ’em. So I think the world should kind of focus on bringing the two together, like have rappers made more melodic stuff. Cause every time I go to the club now, that’s why I really don’t even like going no more, cause I just can’t bear to hear too much rap music. I love rap music, but I don’t know.
It’s one type of energy.
Exactly. I feel like singles come to the club to meet their potential wife or person or wanna just feel good about themselves and talk to a girl. So I feel like you gotta throw some R&B in there so people can really get the courage. My favorite R&B song comes on I’m gonna have the courage to go and talk to the girl that I been wanting to talk to all night.
I agree, I’m not exactly trying to talk to anyone when Three 6 Mafia is playing.
You know what I’m saying? Especially when she’s trying to shake ass, and I’m tryna talk to her. Now it just looks like I only care about her shaking her ass.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-08-25 18:20:412025-08-25 18:20:41Bryson Tiller Talks ‘Solace & The Vices,’ His Upcoming ‘Serenity’ Album & The Freedom of Leaving ‘Trapsoul’ Behind
Carrie Underwood, Luke Bryan and Lionel Richie are set to return to the judges’ seats when American Idol launches its ninth season on ABC and Hulu in 2026, the singing competition announced on Monday (Aug. 25).
The upcoming season, which marks the music competition’s 24th season overall, will again search for America’s next big music superstar. On social media, Underwood, Richie and Bryan shared a “Back-to-School” themed video in preparation for the new season.
“Class is back in session,” Bryan said in the video clip.
Former American Idol champion and eight-time Grammy winner Underwood appeared to be packing lunchboxes in her video segment, saying, “And this year, we’re majoring in music as we help launch your dreams.”
Richie, shown holding what seemed to be a thermos of coffee, said, “Hello! I’m your professor of positivity.” Bryan chimed in, “Professor of Fun here. Serious … but fun,” and Underwood added, “Sign up for my class and you’ll be blown away,” seemingly referencing her own 2012 album by the same name.
“The three judges are back for another amazing season of IDOL University,” Richie said. “The only thing that’s missing is you.”
This will be the ninth season in which Bryan and Richie have sat together on the judging panel. Only one other pair sat on the judges panel together for nine seasons – Simon Cowell and Randy Jackson, from Seasons 1-9. (Fellow original judge Paula Abdul left after Season 8.) Jackson remained on the panel through Season 12.
Auditions for the new season will begin on Tuesday, Aug. 26, when the live, virtual auditions search, “Idol Across America,” happens in all 50 states and Washington, D.C.
On Idol‘s most recent season, Mississippi teacher Jamal Roberts emerged as the winner. He performed a version of the song “Heal,” written by Tom O’Dell, which went on to reach No. 1 on the Hot Gospel Songs chart. Roberts then released the biographical song “Mississippi.”
“I wanted to paint a picture of what I miss and what I’ve come from and that what I do currently in Mississippi that gives me that ease and that peace of mind,” he toldBillboard of the track in July. “And in the song, if you listen closely, you’ll hear how I feel.”
Watch the new teaser featuring the returning judges below:
Lil Nas X is facing four total felony charges over accusations that he attacked police officers and resisted arrest on Thursday (Aug. 21), while wandering naked in Los Angeles.
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Prosecutors confirmed to Billboard on Monday (Aug. 25) that they had charged “Old Town Road” rapper (born Montero Hill) with three counts of battery with injury on a police officer and one count of resisting executive officer over the alleged incident, which saw the star hospitalized.
In a statement last week, the Los Angeles Police Department said Lil Nas had “charged at officers and was taken into custody” after they found him wandering nude on Ventura Boulevard in the San Fernando Valley. He was later taken to a hospital to be treated for a “possible overdose.” A widely circulated video showed Lil Nas walking the streets in only white underwear and white cowboy boots.
An arraignment hearing for Lil Nas is scheduled for later on Monday. If eventually convicted of battery with injury on a police officer, the star could face up to three years in prison for each count. Reps for the the rapper did not immediately return a request for comment.
TMZ first published the video of Nas roaming Los Angeles in the buff. In the video clip, he tells the person filming, “Don’t be late to the party tonight,” while mimicking a series of dance moves. The incident came a day after he cleared his Instagram page, updated his name on the app to “Queen Madeline” and began repopulating it with a series of odd posts of himself in a series of costumes.
Monday’s charges came after Lil Nas sat in jail all weekend. On Friday, a spokersperson for the LAPD told Billboard that the artist “cannot be cited out,” and that “it is mandatory that he appears before a judge before he is released.”
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-08-25 18:05:192025-08-25 18:05:19Lil Nas X Charged With 4 Felony Counts for Allegedly Attacking Police During Naked Walk in L.A.
With the 2026 Grammy eligibility period ending this Saturday (Aug. 30), some of hip-hop’s and R&B’s buzziest acts raced to get their new projects out before the deadline, resulting in one of the most crowded New Music Fridays of the year.
Doja Cat returned with some ’80s flair via “Jealous Type,” Offset and Earl Sweatshirt gave soul-baring life updates on their respective new albums, Kiari and Live Laugh Love, and BigXthaPlug mounted a full-throttle country crossover play with his new I Hope You’re Happy project. BigX, who’s had a banner year between Beyoncé dancing to “The Largest” on her Cowboy Carter Tour and earning his first Hot 100 top 10 hit with the Bailey Zimmerman-assisted “All the Way” (No. 4), was unfortunately arrested in North Texas last Friday (Aug. 22) for marijuana and weapon possession, marking his second booking in six months.
BigX is far from the only rapper currently entangled with the law. Drake, who is still in the middle of his controversial lawsuit against UMG, made headlines over the weekend for taking jabs at music journalist Rob Markman and announcing his second podcast interview with Bobbi Althoff. “Welcome to a much more refined, poised and pleasant podcast,” he joked in a promotional video. “I’m trying to get you brand deals. I was trying to pitch… Welcome to a much more scenic, serene and sexy [podcast].”
With Fresh Picks, Billboard aims to highlight some of the best and most interesting new sounds across R&B and hip-hop — from Lecrae’s emotional new single to Victoria Monét and Ludmilla’s globe-uniting collaboration. Be sure to check out this week’s Fresh Picks in our Spotify playlist below.
https://i0.wp.com/neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/station.nez_png.png?fit=943%2C511&ssl=1511943Yvetohttps://neztelinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/nez_png.pngYveto2025-08-25 17:50:182025-08-25 17:50:18R&B/Hip-Hop Fresh Picks of the Week: Lecrae, Ludmilla & Victoria Monét, Flo Milli & More