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H.E.R. Is Top Nominee at 2021 Soul Train Awards; Maxwell & Ashanti to Receive Special Awards: Exclusive

H.E.R. leads the 2021 Soul Train Awards nominations with eight nods. Jazmine Sullivan and Chris Brown follow with six nominations each.

Wizkid and Tems are next in line with five nods each, followed by Blxst with four. Silk Sonic, Doja Cat, and Yung Bleu each have three nods.

H.E.R., Sullivan and Wizkid are each nominated for three marquee awards – song, album and video of the year. Silk Sonic, the duo comprised of Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paak, are nominated for both song and video of the year for “Leave the Door Open,” a No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100.

The Soul Train Awards, which recognizes the best in soul and R&B, will be taped at the legendary Apollo theater in Harlem on Nov. 20. It will premiere on Sunday, Nov. 28 at 8 p.m. ET/PT on BET and BET Her. As previously announced, Tisha Campbell and Tichina Arnold will co-host the show for the fourth consecutive year.

The show will be special on two counts. This will mark the first time the show has been taped at the Apollo (or in New York, for that matter). It will also honor the 50th anniversary of Soul Train, which made its debut in October 1971.

Maxwell will receive the Legend award, which has gone in recent years to Babyface (2015), Teddy Riley (2016), Toni Braxton (2017), Erykah Badu (2018) and Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis (2019).

“It’s an honor to be presented with the Legend award by a community that’s been growing with me throughout my career,” Maxwell said in a statement. “I’m so grateful to be sharing this moment with everyone and returning to the Apollo for an evening of excellence.”

Ashanti will be the recipient of the Lady of Soul honor, won in recent years by Jill Scott (2015), Brandy (2016), SWV (2017), Faith Evans (2018), Yolanda Adams (2019) and Monica (2020).

“I’m honored to be recognized as this year’s Lady of Soul honoree,” Ashanti said. “This is a full circle moment for me because I received the Aretha Franklin entertainer of the year award at the Lady of Soul Awards in 2002. As we commemorate 50 years of Soul Train, I’m proud to be a part of this legacy and to return to the Apollo to celebrate.”

BET Soul plans to dedicate a full hour to music videos by Maxwell and Ashanti, starting Wednesday (Nov. 3) at 10 a.m. ET. Check local listings.

Connie Orlando, EVP, specials, music programming & music strategy, will oversee the show, with Jamal Noisette VP, specials, music programming & music strategy, set to co-executive produce for BET. Jesse Collins Entertainment’s Jesse Collins and Jeannae Rouzan–Clay will serve as executive producers.

Here’s the complete list of nominees for the 2021 Soul Train Awards:

Song of the year:
Blxst feat. Ty Dolla $Ign & Tyga – “Chosen”
Bruno Mars, Anderson .Paak (Silk Sonic) – “Leave the Door Open”
H.E.R. – “Damage”
Jazmine Sullivan – “Pick Up Your Feelings”
Wizkid feat. Tems – “Essence”
Yung Bleu feat. Drake – “You’re Mines Still”

Album of the year:
Blxst – No Love Lost
Doja Cat – Planet Her
Giveon – When It’s All Said and Done… Take Time
H.E.R. – Back of My Mind
Jazmine Sullivan – Heaux Tales
Wizkid – Made in Lagos

Video of the year:
Bruno Mars, Anderson .Paak (Silk Sonic) – “Leave the Door Open”
Chris Brown, Young Thug feat. Future, Lil Durk, Latto – “Go Crazy (Remix)”
H.E.R. – “Damage”
Jazmine Sullivan – “Pick Up Your Feelings”
Normani feat. Cardi B – “Wild Side”
Wizkid feat. Tems – “Essence”

Best R&B/soul female artist:
Alicia Keys
Doja Cat
H.E.R.
Jazmine Sullivan
Jhené Aiko
SZA

Best R&B/soul male artist:
Blxst
Chris Brown
Giveon
Lucky Daye
Tank
Usher

Best collaboration:
Chris Brown, Young Thug feat. Future, Lil Durk, Latto – “Go Crazy (Remix)”
Doja Cat feat. SZA – “Kiss Me More”
H.E.R. feat. Chris Brown – “Come Through”
Jazmine Sullivan feat. H.E.R. – “Girl Like Me”
Wizkid feat. Tems – “Essence”
Yung Bleu feat. Drake – “You’re Mines Still”

Best new artist:
Blxst
Capella Grey
Morray
Tems
Tone Stith
Yung Bleu

Certified soul award:
Anthony Hamilton
Ashanti
Charlie Wilson
The Isley Brothers
Jam & Lewis
T-Pain

Best dance performance:
Chloe X Halle – “Ungodly Hour”
Chris Brown, Young Thug – “City Girls”
Lizzo Feat. Cardi B – “Rumors”
Normani Feat. Cardi B- “Wild Side”
Usher – “Bad Habits”

Best gospel/inspirational award:
Brian Courtney Wilson
James Fortune
Kelly Price
Kirk Franklin
Maverick City Music
Tasha Cobbs Leonard

The Ashford and Simpson songwriter’s award:
“Can’t Let It Show” – written by: Kate Bush, Durrell Babbs (Tank)
“Come Through” – written by: Carl Mccormick, Chris Brown, H.E.R., Kelvin Wooten, Michael L. Williams Ii, Tiara Thomas (H.E.R. Feat. Chris Brown)
“Damage” – written by: Anthony Clemons Jr., Carl Mccormick, H.E.R., James Harris, Jeff Gitelman, Terry Lewis, Tiara Thomas (H.E.R.)
“Essence” – written by: Ayodeji Ibrahim Balogun, Oniko Eddie Uzezi, Oniko Evawero, Richard Isong, Temilade Openiyi (Wizkid Feat. Tems)
“Leave the Door Open” – written by: Bruno Mars, Brandon Anderson, Dernst Emile Ii, Christopher Brody Brown (Bruno Mars, Anderson .Paak, Silk Sonic)
“Pick Up Your Feelings” – written by: Blue June, Chi, Audra Mae Butts, Jazmine Sullivan, Kyle Coleman, Michael Holmes (Jazmine Sullivan)

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Starsailor set December release for 20th anniversary edition of ‘Love Is Here’

Starsailor have announced a deluxe reissue of their debut album, ‘Love Is Here’, commemorating its recent 20th anniversary.

Initially released on October 8, 2001, the new edition of the album will land on December 10, with pre-orders for two-disc CD and vinyl pressings available now. The first disc will comprise the standard 11-song version of ‘Love Is Here’ that fans are well acquainted with, while the second offers a total of 10 bonus tracks including demos, covers and re-recorded tracks.

The band remade five songs from ‘Love Is Here’ for the new release – ‘Good Souls’, ‘Alcoholic’, ‘Fever’, ‘Way To Fall’ and the title track – with frontman James Walsh explaining that fans can expect more than just updated mixes. He’s promised “new arrangements and new sounds”, describing ‘Way To Fall’, for example, as “much more understated and gentle than the original”.

As for the new version of ‘Good Souls’, Walsh hypes it up as “[evoking] the powerful song it’s turned into after numerous big live performances where it’s had to take on a larger life than the subtle studio recording on [‘Love Is Here’]”.

Among the other bonus tracks are a demo version of ‘Coming Down’, an acoustic performance of ‘From A Whisper To A Scream’ pulled from Starsailor’s January 2006 session on KCRW, and covers of songs by Bill Withers (‘Grandma’s Hands’), The Flying Burrito Brothers (‘Hot Burrito #2’) and Van Morrison (‘The Way Young Lovers Do’).

Take a look at the cover art and tracklisting for the 20th anniversary edition of ‘Love Is Here’ below:

CD1/LP1
1. Tie Up My Hands
2. Poor Misguided Fool
3. Alcoholic
4. Lullaby
5. Way To Fall
6. Fever
7. She Just Wept
8. Talk Her Down
9. Love Is Here
10. Good Souls
11. Coming Down

CD2/LP2
1. Good Souls (20th Anniversary Version)
2. Alcoholic (20th Anniversary Version)
3. Love Is Here (20th Anniversary Version)
4. Fever (20th Anniversary Version)
5. Way To Fall (20th Anniversary Version)
6. From A Whisper To A Scream (KCRW Session)
7. Grandma’s Hands (Bill Withers Cover)
8. Hot Burrito #2 (The Flying Burrito Brothers Cover)
9. Coming Down (Band Version – Original Demo)
10. The Way Young Lovers Do (Van Morrison Cover)

NME gave ‘Love Is Here’ a four-star review upon its original release, with writer Victoria Segal calling it “a lyrically deft record” and “a sequence of hazy, enigmatic vignettes about meeting strangers in cinemas or while sheltering from the weather, about arguing all night and watching the clock until dawn”.

The post Starsailor set December release for 20th anniversary edition of ‘Love Is Here’ appeared first on NME.

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Griff announces UK, US and European headline tours for 2022

Griff has announced details of a UK headline tour for March 2022, which will follow on from a US and European run – check out the dates below.

READ MORE: Griff live in London: a slick operation ready for bigger rooms

Taking place in March, the seven-date UK run will include a show at London’s O2 Academy Brixton. It kicks off at Brighton’s Chalk before moving through Bristol, Manchester and Leeds. The tour will end with shows at Glasgow’s SWG3 and Dublin’s The Academy.

Before that though, Griff will play nine shows in America (her first US tour) and eight in Europe. The full list of dates is as follows:

JANUARY 2022
25 – Songbyrd, Washington, DC
26 – The Bowery Ballroom, New York, NY
28 – The Sinclair, Boston, MA
29 – The Foundry at The Fillmore, Philadelphia, PA
30 – Velvet Underground, Toronto, ON

FEBRUARY 2022
01 – Schubas, Chicago, IL
04 – Rickshaw Stop, San Francisco, CA
06 – The Roxy Theatre, Los Angeles, CA

MARCH
03 – Hotel Cecil, Copenhagen
05 – Bahnhof Pauli, Hamburg
07- Parkteateret, Oslo
08 – Nalen Klubb, Stockholm
11 – Berlin, Lido
13 – Paradiso Noord, Amsterdam
14 – Luxor, Cologne
15 – Botanique Orangerie, Brussels
17 – La Gaite Lyrique, Paris
19 – Chalk, Brighton
21 – O2 Academy, Bristol
22 – O2 Ritz, Manchester
24 – O2 Academy Brixton, London
26 – Stylus, Leeds
28 – SWG3 Galvanizers, Glasgow
29 – The Academy, Dublin

Tickets go on sale Friday (November 5) and will be available here.

I’m officially playing my first ever US tour starting in January alongside new shows in the UK. Genuinely can’t thank you guys enough, can’t wait to see all your lovely faces. Tickets will be on sale everywhere from 9am on Friday Nov 05 (link in bio) x pic.twitter.com/Eq5gPeujnW

— Griff (@wiffygriffy) November 2, 2021

Last week, Griff finished up her first ever headline tour with a sold out show at London’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire. It came after a year that’s seen the singer release her EP ‘One Foot In Front Of The Other’ as well as pick up the Rising Star award at the 2021 BRITs. She also recently released new single ‘One Night’.

“I have the most creative control so nothing gets released without me feeling 100% happy about it,” Griff told NME earlier this year. “But at the same time you’re attached to a huge machine, so it definitely isn’t at the pace I’d like it to be. I released a lot of music in the last year and sometimes it felt like, ‘am I releasing my best songs and no-one’s listening to them?’”

“With how content is consumed and attention spans are at the moment, you’re always creatively exhausted because you have to release a song every six weeks to keep people’s attention. And even with this seven-song EP, everyone’s now asking when the album campaign starts. I’m like ‘fucking hell’. I haven’t got that many songs in me.”

The post Griff announces UK, US and European headline tours for 2022 appeared first on NME.

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Franz Ferdinand talk new single ‘Billy Goodbye’, their greatest hits and new line-up

Franz Ferdinand have returned with new single ‘Billy Goodbye’, taken from their upcoming ‘best of’ collection ‘Hits To The Head’. Check out the new single below, and our video interview with frontman Alex Kapranos above.

Having teased their return earlier this week, the Scottish indie veterans have stormed back with ‘Billy Goodbye’ – a raucous glam stomper that the band worked on with Stuart Price (Dua Lipa, Madonna, Pet Shop Boys). Driven by the ultra-Franz hook of “don’t forget the best bits“, the track was inspired by celebrating past friendships.

“I was thinking about the idea of friendship and friendships that I’ve had over my life,” Kapranos told NME. “They all affect all of us in different ways. Most friendships bring wonderful things into our lives, but not all of them stay the same throughout our lives. They evolve, they change and sometimes friendships end. Sometimes they end badly, but usually they don’t. Usually friendships just come to a close.

“Naturally you move in a different direction and you do something different. I think of who my best friends were when I was eight-years-old or 14-years-old. They’re not necessarily people who I would be best friends with now, but at that age they meant so much to me, they really defined my life and made me who I was. I guess the song is about being able to look at a friendship and say, ‘Ah hey, it’s over – but damn, wasn’t it good? ‘Don’t forget the best bits’. They were pretty incredible’.”

Speaking about how that theme of reflecting on old relationships shaped the sound of the song, Kapranos said: “As you listen to it, there are bits that sound like it’s in 1973 and then immediately jumping to something that could only be made in 2021, and then jumping back and forth between all of them so there’s a feeling of disorientation in time.

“That’s the way we listen to music nowadays anyway. It’s changed from when I was a kid and you’d buy a seven inch record. That’s just what was available at the time, unless you bought second-hand records. Now everything is available to us instantly. We don’t really think of music belonging to a particular time.”

The idea is explicitly reflected in the high-octane video, inspired by the films of legendary Dadaist Hans Richter.

“The original idea of the video was the friendship ending on the terms of a wake,” said Kapranos. “A lot of the imagery you see comes from traditional imagery of Memento mori – reminders of our mortality that you would see in art: flowers disappearing, time passing and candles literally being snuffed out. It’s always good to be reminded of our mortality.

“When you have a wake, I like the idea of it being more of a celebration of life. The funeral is the time when you mourn, but the wake is the time when you celebrate. You think, ‘Oh, that was a great life and I really appreciate that I shared that life’. The idea was to apply that to a friendship which is over, and to think, ‘Yes, let’s celebrate that friendship and understand what was good about it’ while also acknowledging that it might be over as well.”

Franz Ferdinand return with their new best of, ‘Hits To The Head’. Credit: Press

‘Billy Goodbye’ is the closing song of the band’s upcoming ‘best of’ compilation ‘Hits To The Head’ – due for release in March – which collects singles and fan favourites from Franz’s five albums and another new one in the form of ‘Curious’.

“‘Curious’ is quite a different-sounding song,” Kapranos revealed. “Sonically, it’s more at the silky dance floor end of what the band is about. That one’s about imagining yourself in a situation at the beginning of a romantic relationship, being part of the magical moments and suddenly being overwhelmed by the sense of what’s to come and wondering how you will be when repetition, routine and the everyday is what your relationship becomes.

“Are you still going to love me when the magic has faded?”

On deciding on the tracklist for ‘Hits To The Head’, Kapranos said that it was like “like how you would choose the setlist at a festival”, mixing “bangers” with other moment to create the feel of a “retrospective where you can see the arc of an artist’s development.”

“There’s quite a lot of snobbery about greatest hits,” the frontman told NME. “People always refer to the Alan Partridge joke, ‘Oh yeah, what’s the best Beatles album? ‘The Red Album’ – but I love greatest hits records! You know, again when I was a kid I grew up with greatest hits records. My folks didn’t have a 4,000 LP record collection. They had best-ofs, they had greatest hits, they had ‘Changes’ by Bowie. They didn’t have ‘Low’, they didn’t have ‘Lodger’ – and that was enough for them. They just wanted to hear the best bits, they just wanted to hear the hits. That’s great.

“If that’s all they wanted to hear, if that’s all these needed to hear from those artists then fuck it – you enjoy that! But also, those records were something else. That’s what it was for them, but for me it was an introduction: it was that doorway that I could step through into the world of those artists.”

Franz Ferdinand return with their new best of, ‘Hits To The Head’. Credit: Press

The two new singles from the collection also feature new drummer Audrey Tait, following the departure of founding member Paul Thomson. Hailing Tait as “incredible”, Kapranos explained how she was a natural fit for the band following the sad but inevitable exit of his old friend.

“We spoke with Paul when restrictions were lifted and we could get back into a room together in Glasgow,” he said. “Of course we’d been speaking to each other all throughout lockdown, and I could tell that he had things on his mind. Once we were in that room, it was pretty obvious that he didn’t want to continue.

“He was saying that he loves those ‘best bits’! The feeling of walking on stage, playing to all these fans who love what you do and making music – those bits are incredible, but as any bandmember would tell you, there’s a lot of bullshit in between which he’d had enough of. He didn’t want to go through all that stuff again.”

He continued: “Paul’s my best mate. While I was devastated that I wasn’t going to be playing music with him, his life and his happiness is more important than that, so it made sense.”

Knowing Tait’s reputation as a “brilliant” drummer in the Glasgow area, Kapranos said that they hit it off from their very first rehearsal.

“Like with a conversation, if you play with someone for the first time and it just clicks, then it’s just easy,” he admitted. “It’s how it should be. You can express yourself with no self-consciousness. It just feels good and the band sound great. Of course it’s going to sound different to how it did with Paul because she’s a different personality.

“After finding out what a drummer she was, we’ve also found out what she’s like as a person. She’s a great laugh, funny, smart and great to have around.”

Franz Ferdinand’s Alex Kapranos at Mad Cool 2018. Credit: Derek Bremner for NME

Kapranos also spoke of how the band have been steadily writing more new material with the follow-up to their acclaimed 2018 album ‘Always Ascending‘ on the horizon, after they tour the UK and Europe heavily in 2022.

Asked if ‘Billy Goodbye’ and ‘Curious’ were signposts as to where the band might take their sound next, he replied: “We’ll have to see, won’t we. I listen back to ‘Always Ascending’ and think, ‘That’s not what we’re going to do next’. It’s difficult to say now, but artists don’t really know what their next record is going to be. When it comes out, I’m going to pretend that there was a masterplan all along!”

Franz Ferdinand will release ‘Hits To The Head’ on March 11, 2022, via Domino Records. Check out the tracklist below.

1. ‘Darts Of Pleasure’           
2. ‘Take Me Out’                               
3. ‘The Dark Of The Matinée’      
4. ‘Michael’                                         
5. ‘This Fire’                                        
6. ‘Do You Want To’                         
7. ‘Walk Away’                                  
8. ‘The Fallen’                                    
9. ‘Outsiders’                                    
10. ‘Lucid Dreams’                              
11. ‘Ulysses’                                          
12. ‘No You Girls’                                
13. ‘Right Action’                                
14. ‘Evil Eye’                                          
15. ‘Love Illumination’                       
16. ‘Stand On The Horizon’             
17. ‘Always Ascending’                     
18. ‘Glimpse Of Love’                        
19. ‘Curious’       
20. ‘Billy Goodbye’       

The post Franz Ferdinand talk new single ‘Billy Goodbye’, their greatest hits and new line-up appeared first on NME.

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Spiritualized announce new album ‘Everything Was Beautiful’, share ‘Always Together With You’

Spiritualized have detailed their forthcoming ninth album, ‘Everything Was Beautiful’, sharing the announcement alongside its hazy lead single, ‘Always Together With You’.

READ MORE: ‘I’m Your Man’ and ‘Perfect Miracle’ find Spiritualized filled with naïve, childlike wonder – 28 years since they formed

The new track was inspired by J. Spaceman’s (aka Jason Pierce) experiences in lockdown, with the frontman saying: “I felt like I’d been in training for this my whole life.” It’s a buzzy, psych-tinged affair spanning just under seven minutes, carried by reverberant guitars and ultra-bright vocal harmonies.

Take a look at the official video for ‘Always Together With You’, directed by Spaceman Pierce (albeit comprised of stock footage), below:

A press release reports that ‘Everything Was Beautiful’ came together between 11 different studios, as well as Pierce’s own home, with the bandleader jamming out on a mind-boggling 16 instruments.

“There was so much information on it that the slightest move would unbalance it, but going around in circles is important to me,” he said. “Not like you’re spiraling out of control but you’re going around and around and on each revolution you hold onto the good each time. Sure, you get mistakes as well, but you hold on to some of those too and that’s how you kind of… achieve. Well, you get there.”

‘Everything Was Beautiful’ will be released on February 25 via Bella Union. It comes as the follow-up to Spiritualized’s 2018 album ‘And Nothing Hurt’, which ended a six-year hiatus for the Rugby sextet.

Following the album’s release, Spiritualized will embark on a 27-date world tour spanning Europe, North America and the UK. Full details for the run, as well as tickets, can be found on the band’s website.

Check out the cover art and tracklisting for ‘Everything Was Beautiful’ below:

1. Always Together With You
2. Best Thing You Never Had (The D Song)
3. Let It Bleed (For Iggy)
4. Crazy
5. The Mainline Song
6. The A Song (Laid In Your Arms)
7. I’m Coming Home Again

Spiritualized announced earlier this year that they planned to reissue their first four albums on vinyl. 1992’s ‘Lazer Guided Melodies’ kicked the effort off in April, followed in June with 1995’s ‘Pure Phase’, then in September with 1997’s seminal ‘Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space’, and finally last month with 2001’s ‘Let It Come Down’.

The post Spiritualized announce new album ‘Everything Was Beautiful’, share ‘Always Together With You’ appeared first on NME.

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The “Toasty” Nike Dunk Low Next Nature To Release For Adults And Kids

With autumn underway, the Swoosh has been releasing some cold weather-appropriate footwear over the last month. Up next?: The Nike Dunk Low Next Nature “Toasty.”

Part of the North American company’s “Move to Zero” initiative, the newly-surfaced pair comprises of at least 20% recycled materials. Shades of blue take over all of the modified-for-the-cold upper, with quilted nylon bases donning a lighter tone. The suede that appears across the Nike Dunk’s overlays indulges in a much more vibrant proposition, as does the fur inner-lining and branding at the spine. Sock-liners also boast a non-standard fur, propelling the sneaker as a perfect option for the impending winter. Underfoot, the speckling on the sole unit suggests its made from upcycled materials, furthering the Swoosh’s sustainability efforts.

Enjoy official images of the pair here below, and anticipate adult and Grade School sizes to launch via Nike SNKRS soon.

For more from NIKE, Inc., check out all upcoming Jordan releases.

Where to Buy

Make sure to follow @kicksfinder for live tweets during the release date.

Nike Dunk Low Toasty
Release Date: 2021
Color: N/A

Mens: $110
Style Code: DD3358-400
Grade School: N/A
Style Code: DC9561-400

After MarketAvailable Now

Images: Nike

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Travis Scott x Nike Air Max 1 “Cactus Jack” SNKRS Pass Anticipated At Astroweek In Houston

Hot off the heels of an energetic Rolling Loud performance, Travis Scott is ready to kick off Astroweek. And if everything is to proceed on schedule, something big will be going down today and tomorrow courtesy of Cactus Jack x Nike.

Upon announcement, the sneaker community was in a frenzy as multiple SNKRS Pass releases were said to be going down throughout the week-long event. That claim seems to be holding true as two colorways of the Travis Scott x Nike Air Max 1 were loaded onto the app’s backend this morning. If you’re fortunate enough to attend “Space Village,” you can expect a chance at both the “Saturn Gold” and “Baroque Brown” pairs, both of which feature earth tones, an ACG-inspired lacing system, and the artist’s signature backwards Swoosh.

If you won’t be attending Astroweek, don’t worry. The “Travis Scott Air Max 1 Saturn Gold” and “Travis Scott Air Max 1 Baroque Brown” will see a wider release alongside PS and TD sizes December 16th.

Where to Buy

Make sure to follow @kicksfinder for live tweets during the release date.

Travis Scott x Nike Air Max 1
Release Date: 2021
Color: Baroque Brown/Lemon Drop/Wheat/Chile Red

Mens: $160
Style Code: DO9392-200

Where to Buy

Make sure to follow @kicksfinder for live tweets during the release date.

Travis Scott x Nike Air Max 1 “Wheat”
Release Date: 2021
Color: N/A

Mens: $160
Style Code: DO9392-700

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Adele Spends 12th Week at No. 1 on Artist 100 Chart, Thanks to ‘Easy on Me’

Adele tallies a 12th total week at No. 1 on the Billboard Artist 100 chart (dated Nov. 6), holding as the top musical act in the U.S. thanks to her latest hit song, “Easy on Me.”

The ballad logs a second week at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 with 61.5 million radio audience impressions, 31.8 million U.S. streams and 23,100 downloads sold in the week ending Oct. 28, according to MRC Data. The lead single from her alum 30, due Nov. 19, became her fifth leader a week ago, and her first since “Hello” in 2015-16.

With her 12th week atop the Artist 100, Adele ties Billie Eilish and Ed Sheeran for the eighth-most weeks spent at No. 1, dating to the chart’s launch in 2014. Taylor Swift has led for a record 49 weeks, followed by Drake (36), The Weeknd (22), BTS (20), Ariana Grande (15), Post Malone and Justin Bieber (14 apiece).

Drake rises 3-2 on the Artist 100, powered by his latest LP, Certified Lover Boy. The set spends a fifth week at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with 74,000 equivalent album units, becoming his third album to spend at least that many weeks on top, after 2016’s Views (13 weeks) and 2018’s Scorpion (five).

Olivia Rodrigo rises 7-3 on the Artist 100 as her LP Sour stands at No. 5 on the Billboard 200 (38,000 units) and its former No. 1 single “Good 4 U” holds steady in the top 10 of the Hot 100 at No. 8. Ed Sheeran rises 6-4 thanks to his singles “Bad Habits” and “Shivers,” which place at Nos. 5 and 7 on the Hot 100, respectively. Sheeran is likely to see gains on next week’s Artist 100, thanks to the Oct. 29 release of his new album =.

Rounding out the Artist 100’s top five, The Weeknd jumps 10-5 thanks to his new single with Swedish House Mafia, “Moth to a Flame,” which debuts at No. 27 on the Hot 100, the chart’s highest debut of the week. He’s also aided by four additional singles on the Hot 100: “You Right,” with Doja Cat, at No. 16; “Save Your Tears,” at No. 17; and “Take My Breath,” at No. 32.

Plus, two acts reach the Artist 100’s top 10 for the first time, led by Elton John, who surges 57-7 as his new album The Lockdown Sessions starts at No. 10 on the Billboard 200 (29,000 units). The set includes his Dua Lipa collaboration “Cold Heart (Pnau Remix),” which jumps 21-15 on the Hot 100.

Plus, SEVENTEEN re-enters the Artist 100 at No. 10 (after the act previously peaked at, fittingly, No. 17). The group’s new release SEVENTEEN 9th Mini Album: Attacca debuts at No. 13 on the Billboard 200 (27,000 units).

The Artist 100 measures artist activity across key metrics of music consumption, blending album and track sales, radio airplay, streaming and social media fan interaction to provide a weekly multi-dimensional ranking of artist popularity.

For all chart news, you can follow @billboard and @billboardcharts on both Twitter and Instagram.

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Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame Inducts 10 New Members

“A singer is nothing without a song,” said Country Music Hall of Fame member Emmylou Harris on Monday evening (Nov. 1) during a celebration at Nashville’s Music City Center.

Nashville’s songwriting and music publishing community would heartily agree, as they congregated to celebrate one of the highest honors a Nashville tunesmith can receive — induction into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.

As last year’s induction ceremony was postponed, the 50th and 51st classes of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame were inducted together, with 10 top songwriters and artist-writers going into the hall. Guiding this year’s festivities was Sarah Cates, board chair of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame Foundation, as well as Mark Ford, executive director of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.

The Class of 2020 included Kent Blazy and Brett James in the songwriter category, Spooner Oldham in the veteran songwriter category, Steve Earle in the songwriter/artist category and Bobbie Gentry in the veteran songwriter/artist category.

The Class of 2021 included Rhett Akins and Buddy Cannon in the songwriter category, John Scott Sherrill in the veteran songwriter category, Toby Keith in the songwriter/artist category and Amy Grant in the veteran songwriter/artist category.

To say that the stars showed up at this event would be an understatement: The evening’s performers featured several members of the Country Music Hall of Fame, including Bill Anderson, Garth Brooks, Ronnie Dunn, Vince Gill, and Harris. And those were just a few of the superstars on hand to pay homage to the writers and artist-writers who have left an indelible mark on country music.

The first honoree of the evening was Gentry, writer and singer of hits like the classic 1967 story song “Ode to Billie Joe,” a Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 hit that was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999. As expected, the long-elusive Gentry was not in attendance, though Gretchen Peters accepted on her behalf. Trisha Yearwood, whose deep respect for and reliance on top-shelf songwriters has led to her having the record for the most Grammy nominations in the best country album category (with eight), honored Gentry with a rendition of “Billie Joe.” The performance got off to a rocky start due to microphone issues, though they were quickly resolved — and, ever the professional, Yearwood turned in a stunning, soulful performance of the song.

John Anderson feted John Scott Sherrill by performing the 1982 No. 1 hit “Wild and Blue,” which marked the first chart-topping song for both Sherrill and Anderson. Sherrill’s hits also include “The Church on Cumberland Road,” “Nothing But The Wheel,” “Would You Go With Me,” and more.

Thomas Rhett honored his father Rhett Akins with a rendition of “That Ain’t My Truck,” a song Akins had a hit with as an artist in 1995. Akins went on to become one of country music’s most prolific songwriters, penning hits including, “I Don’t Want This Night To End,” “Honey Bee,” “Boys ‘Round Here,” “Dirt on My Boots,” and more. He was named BMI’s Country Songwriter of the Year in 2011 and 2014, and was named the 2017 ACM Songwriter of the Year, followed by the 2019 ACM Songwriter of the Decade. Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member Byron Hill presented Akins with the honor.

“I want to say how proud I am of ya,” Rhett told his father. “This is the most incredible achievement of all time. I feel like you wake up every day and you wonder if you’re gonna write another hit, and here you are, sitting here with millions of hit songs and an even better person — such an amazing dad and you taught me more than anything that I could have ever dreamed of.”

Akins thanked several people have helped build his career, including his fellow “Peach Pickers,” Dallas Davidson and Ben Hayslip. He also offered advice to the next generation of rising songwriters and artists.

“If there are any young kids who want to get in the music business or maybe have been in it a while and you’ve been stuck in a rut, I can tell you, I know that rut,” Akins said. “I’ve been in that rut, I’ve been under that rut. I’m here for one reason — I love country music too much to quit when the chips are down.”

“You have to have that to stick around in this business,” he continued. “You have to love country music like George Strait loves Dean Dillon, like Garth Brooks loves ‘The Dance’ and Alan Jackson loves the ‘Chattahoochee,” and Johnny loves June. If you love it that much, you just might get a phone call from Mark Ford one day saying that you are the newest member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.”

Next up was Brett James, who quit medical school to pursue a career as a country artist, and ultimately found success as a songwriter — penning hits of the late ’00s and early ’10s like Carrie Underwood’s “Jesus, Take The Wheel” and “Something in the Water,” Chris Young’s “The Man I Want to Be,” Dierks Bentley’s “I Hold On,” Kenny Chesney’s “Out Last Night,” Rascal Flatts’ “Summer Nights,” and more. Underwood was joined by James’ “Jesus” co-writers Hillary Lindsey and Gordie Sampson to perform the breakthrough ballad, which earned a Grammy in 2006 for best country song. Fellow Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member Rivers Rutherford presented James with the honor.

“I want to thank the songwriting community and all my fellow songwriters,” James said. “This award especially belongs to you.” He also offered a special thank you to all of the artists who have recorded his songs, but especially to Underwood and Chesney “for sharing your talents and being so good to me for so many years.”

Spooner Oldham, already a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, added another accolade with his induction into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Oldham’s early career work included time as part of the Muscle Shoals rhythm section, performing on soul classics like Percy Sledge’s “When a Man Loves a Woman” and James and Bobby Purify’s “I’m Your Puppet,” while also penning hits including Sledge’s “A Woman Left Lonely.” Jason Isbell performed “Puppet,” which was a No. 6 Hot 100 hit for the Purify cousins in 1966.

Up next was inductee Buddy Cannon, who was feted by Chesney, performing the Cannon-penned Vern Gosdin hit “Set ‘Em Up Joe.” Cannon is known for his production work with artists like Chesney and Willie Nelson, but as a songwriter, Cannon earned the 2007 ACM song and single of the year for “Give It Away,” recorded by George Strait. He also penned the Mel Tillis classic “I Believe in You,” and other Gosdin hits including “Dream of Me” and “I’m Still Crazy,” as well as George Strait’s “I’ve Come to Expect It From You” and Billy Ray Cyrus’s “She’s Not Cryin’ Anymore.” Bill Anderson presented Cannon with the honor.

“I am so grateful to be in this class going into the Songwriters Hall of Fame with these wonderful writers and so many friends,” Cannon said. “I’m just thankful to be in the presence of every one of you.”

“I’m here to honor my friend Buddy Cannon,” Chesney said. “Buddy, as a lot of you know, has been my record producer for a lot of years. Buddy is more than a producer, he’s been a brother in this business. He’s been my family. Buddy, I’m very happy for you… you’ve taught me so much about the business, about song sense and a lot about making records.”

Amy Grant helped launch the Contemporary Christian Music genre, and earned the genre’s first platinum-selling album with her 1982 set Age to Age. Her fellow musician and husband Gill feted Grant with a rendition of Grant’s “Breath of Heaven.” Though instrumental sound issues threatened the performance, guitar ace Gill made the best of the situation, turning in one of the evening’s most captivating performances. With just a guitar and his voice, Gill silenced the industry crowd with his rendition of the song, earning a standing ovation.

“The best thing is just being part of the family, the music community in Nashville,” Grant said, later adding, “As a songwriter-artist, I just want to say to all the songwriters in the crowd who don’t have a chance to be on the stage, especially post-COVID, the country is so tenderized and I get to see every night just how music is so healing and brings people together… it’s such a gift to be part of this circle and the greater circle of all of the songwriters here. I hope the best songs are ahead.”

Harris honored inductee Earle with a rendition of his song “Pilgrim,” while Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame board member and host of “The Songwriters” public television show Ken Paulson presented Earle with his honor.

After sharing some of his musical journey of coming to Nashville and collaborating with artists such as Guy Clark, Earle shared how much this induction meant to him in the middle of an otherwise very tough time. “When I got the phone call, I got it in the midst of what was a bad year for everybody — but I had just lost my firstborn son, who did what we all do here and was pretty d–n good at it,” he said, referring to the passing of his son and fellow singer-songwriter Justin Townes Earle last year. “Probably the only good thing that happened during that time was that I got a call saying that I was going to receive this, so I thank you very much.”

Over the course of his three-decade career, Toby Keith has notched 20 No. 1 hits on Billboard’s Country Songs chart, the great majority of which he wrote or co-wrote.

“This is very important to me, because the only thing I ever wanted to do is be a songwriter,” Keith told the audience, sharing that his mom was a singer and his grandmother ran a bar, providing the “perfect storm” for Keith to hone his music skills. “I wanted to play guitar real bad and I learned how to play real bad,” he quipped of his early days learning music. “Like Roger Miller said, when Chet [Atkins] was playing up here [gesturing closer to the body of a guitar] you’re playing in the dusty part… all the money is in this end of the neck.’ So while my buddies were all doing Van Halen and Glen Campbell, I was down here trying to be Merle and Willie and Harlan.”

Dunn tributed Keith with a rendition of Keith’s 1993 breakthrough hit “Should’ve Been a Cowboy,” which became the most-played song of the ‘90s on country radio.  Nashville Songwriters Hall of Famer Mac McAnally presented Keith with his honor.

“I’m real proud that Ronnie did that song — because back in those days when you came to town, 200 artists would come to town every year,” Keith said. “‘Should’ve Been a Cowboy’ opened doors for me and gave me a foundation to learn and grow.”

Rounding out this year’s inductees was Kent Blazy, known for penning hits including Garth Brooks’s “Ain’t Goin’ Down ‘Til The Sun Comes Up,” “She’s Gonna Make It,” and “Somewhere Other Than The Night,” as well as Diamond Rio’s “That’s What I Get For Lovin’ You” and Chris Young’s “Getting’ You Home (The Black Dress Song).” Brooks took the stage to celebrate his longtime collaborator Blazy with another of their sterling collabs, “If Tomorrow Never Comes.”

Blazy addressed the crowd, asking, “How does it get any better than this? We’re all here together, finally. I’m standing here as living proof of the magic in the miracles of Music City, where truly anything is possible… I joke with young artists and songwriters that we have to be crazy to think that we can come here and compete with the ones that have come before us, yet we come anyway.”

He also recalled the time when, being emotionally crushed by the music industry, he almost left Nashville when he got an offer to run a music store in Kentucky. “When my late wife Sharon came in from work, I couldn’t wait to tell her the news. She looked at me and said, ‘I didn’t move here for you to move back home.’ It stuck with me.” A few months after that, he got a fateful call from Bob Doyle to meet a newcomer singer-songwriter who was selling boots in Nashville at the time. Blazy recalled how on Feb. 1, 1988, Blazy wrote for the first time with that newcomer — Garth Brooks — penning “If Tomorrow Never Comes.” The song was not only their first co-write, but it became Brooks’s first No. 1 Country Songs hit, and was named NSAI’s song of the year in 1989.

“I worship Kent Blazy, I love Kent Blazy,” Brooks raved. “His contribution to songwriting is something we can all learn from. He gives every songwriter, no matter if their first day in town or 50 years in town — he gives them his home. He gives them his love and friendship. I camped out on Kent Blazy’s couch forever. He took me in like a brother, and I’ve seen him do it to a lot of people, and he continues to do it.”

According to Brooks, Blazy’s top contribution to his life was not a hit song, but an introduction that would change Brooks’s life. “When I think about the contributions Kent Blazy made to my career… you can talk about ‘Ain’t Goin’ Down ’til The Sun Comes Up,’ ‘Beer Run,’ and all these things — but the greatest thing Kent Blazy gave me was insisting on introducing me to a young lady from Georgia, whom he thought we kind of sang alike. And she ended up being the love of my life,” he said, referring of course to his wife and fellow artist Trisha Yearwood.

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Hailey Bieber Opens Up About Supporting Justin’s Mental Health

Justin and Hailey Bieber continue to be devoted to each other in their marriage. Speaking on In Good Faith With Chelsea & Judah Smith on Monday (Nov. 1), the couple discussed standing by each other through tough times, which saw Hailey talking about her determination to support Justin while he was struggling with his mental health.

“I had experienced so many things in my life,” Justin shared on the podcast. “So many milestones and traveled the world and seen everywhere in the world. And I just got to a place where I was lonely, and I just didn’t want to do it all alone. I realized there was some serious healing I needed to go through in order to get to a place where I could be in a healthy, serious relationship because I had a lot of trauma and scars. So I just committed to working on those things and getting healthy.”

Though Hailey accepted Justin amongst his personal struggles, there was still work he needed to do for himself. “Even when we got married, there was still a lot of damage and hurt that I still needed to work through, but you’ve seen my heart through it all,” he added.

Hailey then chimed in and said that she never had any intention of leaving Justin to deal with his mental health and trauma on his own. “I was in it. I made a decision,” she said. “I know for a fact that I’ve loved this person for a very long time and now would not be the time to give up on him. I just wouldn’t do that to him. Imagine abandoning somebody in the middle of the worst time of their life, potentially. I’m not that type of a person. So I was going to stick it out no matter what the outcome was going to be.”

Justin and Hailey tied the knot in 2018, but before then, the couple discussed their major life decisions. “We always had so many conversations about, ‘What were our goals? Where did we want to end up at a certain age?’” Hailey added. “We always talked about wanting to be married and be young, and have a young family, and have kids young.”

Babies appear to be on the brain for the Biebers — in his Amazon Prime documentary, Justin Bieber: Our World, which premiered in October, Justin said he ideally wanted a bundle of joy by the end of the year. “My intention for 2021 is to continue to set goals and have fun while doing them,” he said. “Make sure I put my family first. And, hopefully, we squish out a little nugget.” Hailey didn’t oppose the idea, but Justin made sure to let his wife know the timing of it is in her hands: “It’s up to you, babe,” he added.

The singer recently sang about the impact Hailey has had on him on Justice (The Complete Edition) in a track titled “Hailey.” Justin sings “Had a dream, I was high/ Holdin’ on to the sky/ But I heard your voice and stopped myself from fallin”‘ on the first verse. The original version of Justice charted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart.

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New Singer, Seventh Top 10 Hit: Bad Wolves Share What’s Next

“[When] you’re going great, [a] lineup change after record two is the last thing anybody wants,” Bad Wolves drummer and co-producer John Boecklin tells Billboard via Zoom from the Cayman Islands in October. “And we had a major one, but here we are. This is working, and we’re happy and we’re closer than we’ve ever been as a band. We couldn’t ask for more.”

There’s no question that, after releasing their third album, Dear Monsters, on Oct. 29 through Better Noise Music, Bad Wolves are still going strong. With new frontman Daniel “DL” Laskiewicz, formerly of The Acacia Strain, in place, the heavy-rocking Los Angeles quintet’s latest single, “Lifeline,” reached No. 6 on the Mainstream Rock Airplay chart dated Oct. 30 — their seventh top 10 entry dating back to Bad Wolves’ platinum cover of The Cranberries’ 1994 hit “Zombie.” That stoked even greater anticipation for Dear Monsters, as well as for the beginning of a new phase of the band’s career after it settled an acrimonious split with original vocalist Tommy Vext.

As Billboard reported on Oct. 28, Vext and Bad Wolves; their manager, Allen Kovac; and the label Kovac founded, Better Noise Music, have settled lawsuits that were filed against each other. In a joint press release, the parties announced, “Bad Wolves and its co-founder, John Boecklin, alongside their label, Better Noise Music; manager, 10th Street Entertainment; and publisher, 5-19, have collectively resolved their disputes with Tommy Vext. Bad Wolves will continue to record music under Better Noise and tour with its current lineup. Tommy is free to express his musical creativity either independently or with another label.

“A partnership can sometimes lead to divorce,” the statement continues. “Artists have creative differences and argue over songs, credits and much more; however, if both sides believe in their own talents, they find a path to go their separate ways. This is a settlement with no winners and no losers; it’s beneficial to everyone in order to move on and bury the hatchet. This is a new beginning and a bright future for all those concerned. We’re all excited to get back to what’s important, and that’s the music. Bad Wolves and Tommy wish each other the best going forward and ask that their fans respect this decision.”

Nevertheless, it’s fair to say that vexing — or Vexting — circumstances made it challenging for Bad Wolves to reach this point.

Vext, formerly of Divine Heresy and Westfield Massacre, had announced on Jan. 8 that he was leaving the band to launch a solo career. The group followed with an official statement the next day, promising that it planned “to continue making music” and release a new album this year. The group also countered Vext’s claims that he was ousted because of his support for former President Donald Trump and other political viewpoints, stating, “We would prefer to not look back on the past and instead focus on this new chapter and … let the music speak for itself.”

Vext subsequently sued Kovac during the summer, accusing him of unscrupulous business practices, racial discrimination (Vext is Black) and censoring his political statements. In a July statement, Kovac called the allegations “categorically false” and maintained that Vext “has dragged us into a ridiculous, unfounded narrative that falsely paints him as a victim.” Better Noise countered in August by suing Vext for copyright infringement, breach of contract and unjust enrichment.

Meanwhile, Bad Wolves were hard at work with Laskiewicz, putting together Dear Monsters. The new frontman had already worked with the band by co-writing music for 2019 sophomore album N.A.T.I.O.N., and having taken time off from the road to start a family, he was more than open to (and a little surprised by) the overtures from Bad Wolves, which came first from guitarist Doc Coyle.

“I was kind of shocked, honestly,” the Massachusetts-based Laskiewicz says. “I was more excited than anything because I was a fan of the band before any of this, and I’m friends with the guys anyway. So it was a rare kind of opportunity and something I had to at least entertain.”

Boecklin, who was with DevilDriver before co-founding Bad Wolves in 2016, says that Laskiewicz impressed him and his bandmates — Coyle, guitarist Chris Cain and bassist Kyle Konkiel — with his work on N.A.T.I.O.N. “Not only did he do a great job writing … but his voice sounds like it would really fit the band, and I always kept it in the back of my head,” the drummer recalls.

After Vext departed, Laskiewicz was the first person Boecklin thought of to be the new frontman. “He’s a producer and a guitar player, too,” says Boecklin. “What he brings to the table is production value, guitar playing [and] riff writing, and on top of that, he’s a great singer who can write melodies — rather quickly, too. It was really fun making a record with DL and just having him in the fold.”

Those attributes are evident throughout Dear Monsters. The 12-track set — recorded mostly at Sparrow Sound in Glendale, Calif., and co-produced by Boecklin and Josh Gilbert — is arguably Bad Wolves’ most diverse and far-reaching album to date. It’s filled with hard-rocking crunch (“Lifeline,” “On the Case,” “House of Cards”) and rich melodicism (“Wildfire,” album closer “In the Middle”), while the intricate dynamic shifts of “Comatose” and “Sacred Kiss” offer aural amusement park rides for listeners.

“We believe in the power, passion and talent of this band,” says Kovac, who is also CEO of Better Noise Music, Bad Wolves’ home since their 2018 debut, Disobey. “It appears that the listeners and rock music community agree with us [because] ‘Lifeline’ is the band’s fastest-rising song ever. Our global marketing team is prepared to continue the artist development of Bad Wolves on a worldwide scale.”

For Laskiewicz, joining Bad Wolves lets him show off some heretofore unexplored clean singing. “I never had an opportunity in any project I worked on to sing like this,” he explains. “My strong point is melody and feeling out the dynamics of a song, so we really wanted to make a point of creating these big hooks with soaring choruses and stuff. At the end of the day, we wanted to put an emphasis on the clean singing, while still getting into the heavier, more metal songs.”

Boecklin opines that is in keeping with Bad Wolves’ general approach, which he doesn’t feel has wavered much during the past five years. “The mission statement for Dear Monsters was to continue the overlapping of rock and metal while consistently using soaring choruses and real riffs,” he says. “We have riffs that are really, really heavy and intricate, and we’re really proud we’re able to be on the radio, too. So we’re kind of diving into both worlds without the record sounding like it’s polarizing itself.”

Laskiewicz says he was well aware that coming into the band as a new singer is “a scary time,” but adds, “At the same time, it’s exciting. They get to kind of see what they can do with the band they haven’t done yet and kind of stretch their legs a little bit.”

Boecklin and Laskiewicz agree that Dear Monsters’ most dramatic departure is “Springfield Summer,” whose downright pop verses and bridges build into anthemic, melodic choruses within a structure that screams crossover hit. Laskiewicz describes it as “sort of the ninth-inning song,” written after Better Noise felt the record was missing something. Charged to write a song that Bad Wolves hadn’t done before, Boecklin sent Laskiewicz an idea that had been around for years, and the two created a demo they both “fell in love with,” as did the label.

“It was really quick, just a verse,” says Boecklin, “and they were like, ‘This is incredible! Let’s get you in the studio now and do this.’ To me, it’s my favorite song on the record.”

“At the end of the day,” elaborates Laskiewicz, “we made a conscious effort to maintain what Bad Wolves is at its core — detuned guitars, very heavy, very melodic — but at the same time, we really wanted to make an effort to build upon that and make sure this album was a step in the right direction, especially with a new vocalist.”

Buoyed by the success of “Lifeline,” Bad Wolves are charting out a near future that includes more singles and videos, as well as a North American support tour slated for the first half of 2022. Boecklin says Europe and Australia are on the group’s radar, too, despite uncertainties about overseas touring.

“It’s all a big question mark,” he notes, “so we definitely want to launch this in the States, and then after that, when the world’s ready to have us, we’ll be everywhere. We’re all just excited to get [Dear Monsters] out.”

Additional reporting by Colin Stutz.

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BTS’ ‘Butter’ Hits No. 1 on Weekly Hot Trending Songs Chart, Powered by Twitter

BTS succeeds itself at No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot Trending Songs chart, powered by Twitter, as “Butter” supplants the group’s “Permission to Dance” in the second iteration of the weekly chart, dated Nov. 6.

“Butter,” released on HYBE/BigHit Music/Columbia, jumps 7-1 with 2.7 million Twitter mentions in the tracking week, which ran from Friday, Oct. 22 to Thursday, Oct. 28.

The song’s surge in conversation can be attributed in large part to the Oct. 28 announcement that it’s nominated for favorite pop song at the American Music Awards (airing Nov. 21 on ABC). It’s up against Doja Cat’s “Kiss Me More,” featuring SZA; Dua Lipa’s “Levitating”; Olivia Rodrigo’s “Drivers License”; and The Weeknd and Ariana Grande’s “Save Your Tears” remix.

Much like “Permission to Dance,” “Butter” already has a successful history on Billboard’s charts. “Butter” spent 10 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it the longest reigning hit this year so far. It also spent two weeks at No. 1 on the Global 200 and five atop Global Excl. U.S. (“Dance” also topped all three tallies).

Billboard’s Hot Trending Songs charts, powered by Twitter and sponsored by Remy Martin, track global music-related trends and conversations in real-time across Twitter, viewable over either the last 24 hours or past seven days. A weekly, 20-position version of the chart, covering activity from Friday to Thursday of each week, posts alongside Billboard’s other weekly charts on Billboard.com each Tuesday. The charts highlight buzz around new releases, award shows, festival moments, music nostalgia and more. Hot Trending Songs is unique in that it tracks what songs people are talking about, not necessarily what they’re listening to.

SEVENTEEN’s “Rock With You” debuts at No. 2 on the weekly Hot Trending Songs chart with 2.6 million Twitter mentions. The song is from the group’s new EP SEVENTEEN 9th Mini Album: Attacca, which debuts at No. 1 on World Albums and No. 13 on the Billboard 200 with 27,000 equivalent album units, according to MRC Data.

Among other entries on the weekly Hot Trending Songs chart, musician/actor Mew Suppasit’s “Spaceman” debuts at No. 7 (423,000 mentions) and Harry Styles’ “Falling” begins at No. 11. The latter, from Styles’ 2019 sophomore LP Fine Line, drew new buzz after BTS’ Jungkook released a solo cover on YouTube Oct. 28.

BTS places five songs on the latest Hot Trending Songs chart, the most among all acts: “Butter,” “Permission to Dance” (No. 3), “My Universe,” with Coldplay (No. 9), “Dynamite” (No. 10) and “Boy With Luv,” featuring Halsey (new at No. 15).

Keep visiting Billboard.com to check out the constantly evolving rankings, and check back Tuesdays for each weekly seven-day chart.

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