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Tag: city girls

  • ONE Musicfest returns at new venue Central Park Oct. 26-27, celebrates 15 years

    ONE Musicfest returns at new venue Central Park Oct. 26-27, celebrates 15 years

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    ONE Musicfest (OMF), presented by Procter and Gamble, in collaboration with Live Nation Urban (LNU), announced its eagerly awaited lineup for its 15th anniversary of music, culture, and celebration.

    The annual two-day festival, founded by Jason “J” Carter, is set for Saturday, Oct. 26, and Sunday, Oct. 27, at Central Park in Atlanta.

    The City Girls perform during One Music Fest at Central Park in Atlanta on Sunday, October 9, 2022. Photo by James Ivory Smith/The Atlanta Voice

    OMF has always catered equally to both R&B and Hip-Hop lovers, and this year is no different.  For those who enjoy soulful tunes, you can expect to sing along to new hits and timeless classics from artists like headliners Jill Scott, Victoria Monét, and Earth, Wind & Fire, with other performances by Dru Hill, Fridayy, Destin Conrad, Fantasia, Jeremih, Gospel singer Koryn Hawthorne and more.

    Rap fans are in for a treat as well, with performances from headliners Cardi B and Gunna, along with performances by Sexyy Red, Glorilla, Nelly, BigXthaPlug, Young Nudy, T.I., Bossman Dlow, Method Man & Redman, and both DJ Mustard and DJ Drama, who will be bringing along a few of their friends. Usher’s longtime DJ, and well-respected Atlanta transplant, DJ Mars, will also curate a set of thrilling performances to keep the crowd moving.

    For the eclectic ears, new wave country artist and recent LVRN Records signee Tanner Adell will likewise grace the stage at OMF, her first Black festival performance. This year’s lineup was selected especially with the fan first in mind, offering everything from a meet-and-greet experience with Method Man to surprise pop-out performances from special guests.

    Nicknamed the greatest homecoming on earth, festivalgoers will enjoy a smooth entry process and a variety of stages showcasing continuous music, the festival is celebrating bigger than ever with exciting new activations, partnerships, and energetic performances. Fans can expect special social media experiences, never-before-featured health, and fitness initiatives, and pop-ups curated by Atlanta creatives.

    For more information, or to purchase tickets, visit https://onemusicfest.com.

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    Isaiah Singleton

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  • Signed, A Girl With A Mutable (a.k.a. Non-) Identity: C,XOXO

    Signed, A Girl With A Mutable (a.k.a. Non-) Identity: C,XOXO

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    Being that the entire crux of the promotion for Camila Cabello’s fourth album, C,XOXO, has been centered on how “authentic” and “personal” the content is (hence, the supposed feeling of it being “personally signed” C,XOXO), it’s no surprise that the album hasn’t lived up to that kind of hype. Especially as such a concept is rather flimsy, and definitely not enough to buttress an album that’s generally lacking in cohesion—except there’s supposed to be a vague “Miami theme.”

    The hyperpop stylings of “I Luv It” featuring Playboi Carti are meant to establish that “305 vibe,” along with its accompanying video that is decidedly “Florida trashy”-chic. But the attempt to let listeners feel as though they’re “entering the world” of “C” is mitigated by how Charli XCX-“inspired” (read: directly imitated) the track is. Even the album’s title has a core element of XCX’s name in it (not to mention Charli’s 2014 album, Sucker, also has her wielding a lollipop on the cover). It could just as well be C(harli),XOXO. And yes, Charli was sure to respond to the release of Cabello’s initial “I Luv It” snippet by lip syncing to the very similar-sounding “I Got It” from 2017’s Pop 2. When the internet called her out for the shade, Charli shruggingly replied, “Comee onnn mess is fun! Nothing matters!” As it didn’t seem to matter to Cabello that one of Charli’s most well-known songs also happens to be called “I Love It.”

    It appears this is at least part of the reason she opted to have someone with as strong of a fanbase as Playboi Carti join her for the song—that is, to offset some of the inevitable flak. And yet, as soon as Cabello leaves the safe cushion of having a feature with as much clout as Carti, things take a turn for the even more derivative on “Chanel No. 5,” Cabello’s version of “ultra-personal” lyrics in the spirit of Taylor Swift, but with a more “ratchet edge.” Even the way that Cabello has tried to present the album as “personal” work channels Swift’s usual manner with album announcements. Case in point, her most recent one for The Tortured Poets Department that went:

    The Tortured Poets Department. An anthology of new works that reflect events, opinions and sentiments from a fleeting and fatalistic moment in time—one that was both sensational and sorrowful in equal measure. This period of the author’s life is now over, the chapter closed and boarded up. There is nothing to avenge, no scores to settle once wounds have healed. And upon further reflection, a good number of them turned out to be self-inflicted. This writer is of the firm belief that our tears become holy in the form of ink on a page. Once we have spoken our saddest story, we can be free of it. And then all that’s left behind is the tortured poetry.”

    Cabello attempted a similar tone that ends up coming across more like a parody:

    C,XOXO is pink and blue ski masks, never being without lip gloss, coming alive during blue hour, long nails and eyeliner sharp enough to kill a man [by the way, a lyric from Taylor’s “Vigilante Shit”], crying with your makeup on and texting pics to your friends. It’s bikinis under t-shirts, it’s sticky hair at dinner after the beach, it’s tan lines and white wine with your girls. It’s living it the fuck up. C,XOXO is doing no harm, but TAKING NO SHIT. It has given me confidence and cockiness and wabisabiness in a world where we all need it. This one is for the baddies, for the dreamgirls, for my recovering lovergirls. I love living in the world of C,XOXO. Meet you there soon.”

    The shallowness of the premise is immediately apparent on an album that struggles to find an identity despite insisting that this is the “realest” version of her that fans have ever seen (in truth, that claim is more likely to be believed on 2022’s Familia). And yet, more often than not, she feels the need to hide behind another artist with more personality. This is also true on track three, “Pink XOXO.” The moment Cabello starts to sing, “Please don’t be mistaken, I could think about you all the time,” it’s clear that the “Pink” referred to in the title is none other than PinkPantheress, who does most of the heavy lifting. Even though the song is all of fifty-five seconds (as PinkPantheress recently said, “A song doesn’t need to be long…”). Indeed, it will be the first of a few “filler tracks” on the record—things that are interlude-y but not quite.

    But before the next “filler” moment, there’s another song where Cabello hides behind a more personality-laden artist: “He Knows” featuring Lil Nas X. Among the most playful and “sassy” offerings on C,XOXO, its video is reliant on Lil Nas X to create a somewhat antithetical-to-the-lyrics narrative in which Cabello is being pussy blocked from keeping a certain guy wrapped around her finger because of Lil Nas X’s seductive twink ways.

    Following “He Knows” is the more slow jam-oriented “Twentysomethings” (not to be confused with Pet Shop Boys’ “Twenty-something”). Here, Cabello does show hints of “realness” in that it seems to be yet another ode to her defunct/on-again, off-again relationship with Shawn Mendes, especially when she calls out the height of the man she’s talking about in the lyrics: “It feels like I’m livin’ in limbo/I’m not yours or mine, I’m somewhere in the middle, okay/You’re so tall you just made me feel even more little, babe.” Part of the reason it might not have lasted, Cabello seems to speculate, is that being twenty-something is a confusing time. For the first part of the decade, you just want to fuck around and not really be serious with anyone, while, for the second part, people get the “thirties scaries” and fear that maybe they should have settled down with that one person they were so careless with in the earlier part of their twenties.

    Thus, Cabello sings on the (non-Miami-oriented) chorus, “Twenty-somethings in love, in lust, in confusion/Twenty-somethings, dancin’ while our hearts are bruisin’/Leave Manhattan, cross the bridge over to Brooklyn/When it comes to us, I don’t know what the fuck I’m doin’/Twenty-somethings, should’ve left the party sooner/Twenty-somethings, gotta have a sense of humor when it comes to us/Don’t know what the fuck I’m doin’.” Elsewhere, she laments the emotional immaturity of twenty-something men when she adds, “‘Bout to lose service, I’m in the elevator/‘If you’re down, maybe we could do somethin’ later’/Fuck does that mean?/I need a translator/I don’t get it, straight up.” Even though, to be honest, that sentence is pretty clear. But the point is, one’s twenties are a confusing time—especially romantically. At twenty-seven, Cabello seems to be getting more reflective about a decade that’s coming to an end for her. And, by the same token, clinging to that “last gasp” of youth (in the eyes of our narrow-minded society) as she transitions to the next song, “Dade County Dreaming” featuring JT and Yung Miami (a.k.a. City Girls).

    Opening with a moody intro thanks to production from Jasper Harris and El Guincho (known mostly for his work with FKA Twigs and Rosalía—and, yes, he produced Charli’s “Everything is romantic” for the Brat album), “Dade County Dreaming” is meant to be something like an homage to Miami. Thus, the frequent name-checking of Dade County-specific places like Opa-Locka (where Yung Miami is from), Collins Avenue and Biscayne. And yet, Cabello and City Girls don’t exactly convey a very evocative “sense of place” to anyone who hasn’t been to Miami. At times, it seems even Cabello herself hasn’t been there, instead continuing to rely on her Spring Breakers mood board with lyrics like, “Girl loves the feelin’/Life in her eyes, everything’s fleeting/I can’t feel the ceilin’/Orange skies, I’m never leavin’.” Unless, of course, it’s to New York or L.A. to tend to other party opportunities.

    Cabello continues to work with controversial people (Yung Miami has the stain of a Diddy “romance” on her now) by including a bullshit interlude called “Koshi XOXO.” On it, Jewish (that’s the controversial part, these days) rapper BLP Kosher, who hails from Boca Raton, delivers a cornball “love letter” to Cabello and her music by saying, “I was going through like, kinda like a heartbreak, and I, also, uh, my dog that was, like, there for me and stuff, like, he had passed away, and I was listening to Camila, her music got me through it, I’ve been out, the first music, like, album that I actually, like, shed tears to music while it was playing, like, ’cause the song, like, that was, like, uh, Camila, the Camila album, so, like, it’s an honor to just be here and be able to just like, you know, speak on that shit for real. C,XOXO. Water.” Ah, truly the picture of eloquence.

    But Cabello’s controversial picks for collaborations don’t stop, continuing with “Hot Uptown” featuring Drake, recently made a fool out of by Kendrick Lamar on a quartet of diss tracks (“Euphoria,” “6:16 in LA,” “Meet the Grahams” and “Not Like Us”). Nonetheless, Cabello lets him have free rein with a fake Jamaican-esque accent as he opens the song with, “Nike mi shoe maker/Benz a mi car maker/Tiffany mi ring maker/Let me grip on your money maker/Grip on your money maker/Hotline, ah gon’ bling later/Trust me, we ah link later, ayy.” But they link sooner rather than later as there’s another Drake feature immediately after called “Uuugly.” Except that it’s not really a feature, so much as a full-on guest track from Drake, with Cabello occasionally remembering to lightly mimic some of the words he’s saying. And so, once again, Cabello appears as though she’s “phoning it in” for a large portion of the album, disappearing into the background despite insisting this is “her” we’re hearing for the first time.

    Remembering to get on the mic again for “Dream-Girls,” Cabello incorporates a series of women’s names in the chorus, “It was Keisha, it was Sonia, it was Tanya, it was Monique/It was Niecy, it was Keke.” And yes, this sounds a lot like Drake on “In My Feelings” also calling out a series of women’s names, which starts with, not so coincidentally, “Kiki, do you love me?” Cabello’s reliance on the lyrics and stylings of other artists often cross the boundary between mere homage and outright lack of originality. This also being manifest when she then references Megan Thee Stallion with the line, “Body-ody-ody-ody ‘cause she work out.”

    As though remembering that Miami was half a theme for the record, Cabello incorporates another interlude called “305tilidie,” designed to remind listeners that this is a “girly girl” record with Spring Breakers-style friendship and looques as she incorporates the “surreal” girl talk sequence, “Here we are, strollin’ down the streets of Miami. Ayy. Brown top, little skirt. I barely have any time to do my makeup, let’s just not even look. I’m gonna put sunglasses on. Okay, mwah. It’s so fucking dark. That’s it, we have to hold hands. We go to Nikki Beach, we might not make it. This is like a candy store. And then the g-g-girls, yeah. You know what they say, that’s why he knows. It’s so pretty, I’m obsessed. Malibu Bar—no, Miami Barbie. Ooh, rainy. Did you get that right?” The answer to that question with regard to C,XOXO itself is generally a no. Though, to be fair, there are moments of, let’s say, acceptability, including “B.O.A.T.,” which “obviously” stands for “Best of All Time.”

    As the lone true ballad of the record, it’s laden with piano instrumentation and soft electronic flourishes produced by Daniel Aged, Jasper Harris and El Guincho. Once again, it appears as though Cabello can only be “herself” when Shawn Mendes is the muse, as this is yet another overt exploration of why things went wrong between them (hint: it was mostly his fault). Ergo, she belts out, “Lyin’ in bed/Replayin’ the shit you said/Ever regret all the messin’ with my head?/‘Cause I’ve been thinkin’/You’d never give me peace of mind, so I had to give it to myself [or, as Selena Gomez once put it, “I needed to lose you to love me”]/You never think it’s the right time until I’m good with someone else/You’d probably have me for a lifetime if you didn’t need some help.”

    In many regards this particular track is something of a companion piece to Familia’s “Everyone At This Party” (also number twelve on that album), a regretful rumination about a particular failed relationship. Granted, “Everyone At This Party” has a “sweeter” bent than the more accusatory “B.O.A.T.,” with Cabello offering a sad-angry tone when she sings, “I wish, I wish you’d say, ‘You werе right/That I want you when you’re not mine/And just whеn I think I know how to live without you, I forget why I try/You were the best of all time.’”

    In another verse, Cabello makes peace with the idea that trying to get back together again will only have the same disastrous result, accepting, “Texts I won’t send, we both know how that shit ends/Tryin’ again, too jealous to just be friends/‘Cause now I’m thinking/You never ask me who I’m giving all of my body to now/You never ask me ’bout these nights, baby/I pray that you find out/You couldn’t give me your heart, boy, go and eat your heart out.” That last line being something that’s supposedly very “C,XOXO” in that it could easily be envisioned as a handwritten sentence in some journal entry or Dear John letter.

    After “B.O.A.T.,” Cabello takes things to a mid-tempo pace with “Pretty When I Cry,” and all at once seems to home in on a cohesive theme just as the album is coming to a close. That theme being, needless to say, heartbreak. And sure, “Pretty When I Cry” is a good title to convey such an emotion—even if it’s no secret that Lana Del Rey has the monopoly on that phrase, what with it being one of the signature tracks not just of 2014’s Ultraviolence, but of her entire career. Olivia Rodrigo at least had the “decency” to only use it as a lyric on “all-american bitch” rather than naming a song that on Guts. But hey, Del Rey ostensibly gave her “sealed with a kiss” approval of Cabello’s C,XOXO era by inviting the latter to join her onstage for an awkward performance of “I Luv It” during her second weekend of headlining Coachella back in April. Even so, it’s impossible not to think of Del Rey (regardless of the song’s faster tempo) when Cabello chants, “At least I’m pretty when I cry/Pity you don’t want me/Pretty in this light/Glitter fallin’ off me [also, that’s Kesha’s thing]/Pink and blue, diamond eyes [Lana loves mentioning colors and diamonds, too]/Look at what you lost to me/I’m still pretty when I cry/Pretty when I cry.”

    As if that weren’t uninventive enough, Cabello sees fit to conclude the album with “June Gloom.” Not just a title that Allie X employed on 2020’s Cape God, but also a song that cops Ariana Grande’s record theme from earlier this year: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (with Grande’s album shortened simply to Eternal Sunshine). That’s right, Cabello actually dares to sing, “I might as well say, ‘Meet me in Montauk’/Cold beach, you walk” as she once again taunts Mendes throughout the coda. This includes her deliberately “eat your heart out” chorus, “Does she get this wet for you, baby?/Talk to you in poems and songs, huh, baby?” This, too, is a Lana Del Rey line—for she’s the one who demanded, “Talk to me in poems and songs” on 2021’s “Let Me Love You Like A Woman.” Cabello then continues, “Little kiss make your head go hazy?/Is it really love if it’s not this crazy?/Does she move like this for you, darlin’?/Toyin’ with me now, you know when I want it/I don’t lie, you’re the best, iconic/I know that I haven’t, but I hope you top it.” Meaning she hopes Mendes manages to top her/their relationship/the hot sex they presumably have (or had).

    For her sake, though, it’s best if she doesn’t top it, because Mendes seems to remain the only source of “good songwriting material” for Cabello. That much is cemented on the often patchy and disjointed (when it’s not about Mendes) C,XOXO.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Yung Miami Opens Up About Her Current Relationship With JT & Why They Decided To Focus On Their Solo Music Careers

    Yung Miami Opens Up About Her Current Relationship With JT & Why They Decided To Focus On Their Solo Music Careers

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    Yung Miami is getting candid about her and JT‘s relationship, solo careers, and her recent decision to set boundaries with fans.

    RELATED: She Ate? Here’s What Folks On Social Media Think About Yung Miami’s New Single ‘CFWM’

    Yung Miami Opens Up About Her & JT’s Decision To Focus On Their Solo Careers

    On Monday, June 3, Complex published an exclusive interview with Yung Miami. According to the outlet, their conversation with the rapper occurred weeks before May 13.

    During the conversation, Miami explained that she’s recently been inspired by the haters. Additionally, she explained that the naysayers made her want to hop in the studio to spit some solo bars.

    “I had to really get back in my bag. People had just been talking to me crazy… So just going through s**t really motivated me to get in the studio and make music,” she said.

    Furthermore, the rapper shared what inspired her to want to release an entire solo project. She explained that her and JT’s last City Girls project, ‘RAW,’ released in October 2023, “didn’t do too well,” and they were just in “two different spaces.”

    “I think when the City Girls album [RAW] just dropped, and it didn’t do too well, and we was just trying to do our press run. The whole rollout of the album was just so bad because we was just in two different spaces,” she said. “We older now, and she [JT] was doing her own thing. She on the West Coast, I’m in Miami. I’m doing my own thing. And I felt like naturally, when she doing her own thing, it just worked for her. And when I’m doing my own thing, it worked for me. But when we get together as a group, it just wasn’t connecting. It just wasn’t working no more.”

    Yung Miami explained that she and JT were both at the point where they decided to pursue their own solo projects.

    The Rapper Speaks On Setting Boundaries With Fans

    As the interview continued, Miami explained that she feels the only way to be successful is to “block out the noise.”

    “I feel like we in a trolling era, so you got to block out the noise,” she explained. “…So it’s just like you got to keep going and you got to just learn how to block out the noise. That’s the only way you’re going to be successful…”

    The 30-year-old explained that she used to be so “open” with fans, and it used to be “fun” to show her natural personality. However, now she’s decided to put a “boundary” up due to “negative reactions.”

    “I feel like I used to be so open. I would go on Instagram Live and just talk. I’m not doing it no more. I do it, but it is not fun no more. People are just overly invested,” she explained. “It used to be fun. This is how I came in, going live, being who I am. But now I could say anything and this s**t so serious or it’s so negative or it’s so bad. So that’s that boundary that I had to put up. I’m not going Live, and I’m just going to talk less; less is more. I’m not doing a lot of things I used to do.”

    Ultimately, Miami explained that she hates that her decision impacts fans who genuinely support her. However, being open on social media is just no longer “fun mentally.”

    Yung Miami and JT Recently Made Headlines

    As The Shade Room previously reported, Yung Miami and JT left fans questioning their friendship status earlier this year. At the time, Miami accused JT of sneak dissing her “for weeks” in her recently released songs.

    In response, JT accused Miami of “playing dumb” and added that her fellow City Girl rapper enjoyed seeing social media users drag her. However, Miami disagreed.

    Although the pair’s spat on the internet went viral, they eventually made up in a private conversation and declared their love for one another online, per The Shade Room.

    However, it wouldn’t be long before the pair sparked chatter on the internet again. Later that month, they each promoted their solo, rather than joint, releases, per The Shade Room. While speaking with Complex, Miami touched on her and JT’s viral spat before letting it be known where their relationship will forever stand.

    “I think it’s sisterhood. That’s my friend, of course, but that’s more like family to me,” Miami explained. “I’ve been knowing JT my whole damn life, so that’s not our first argument. It probably won’t be our last argument. This time, it went to the Internet. It was a lot of emotions. We got people pulling us left and right, and it just was some s**t that we just talked about behind closed doors, like, ‘Girl, I love you, and let’s keep pushing.’ It ain’t never that deep where it’ll go farther than that.”

    RELATED: City Girls Era Over? Social Media Reacts As Yung Miami And JT Continue To Hype Their Solo Music

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    Jadriena Solomon

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  • The Top 10 Most Provocative Music Videos of All Time

    The Top 10 Most Provocative Music Videos of All Time

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    A while ago, we ranked the hottest music videos of all time. But a lot has happened since this article was last published, and we need to recognize a few more steamy music videos that had our jaws on the floor. We’ve added five more MV’s to the ranking because they deserved recognition.

    5. Iggy Azalea “Work”

    Iggy Azalea was the moment in 2013. This “Work” music video proves it.

    4. Ariana Grande “7 rings”

    She sees it, she likes it, she wants it, she got it. Ariana Grande is going for the money with this music video.

    3. City Girls “Twerk ft. Cardi B”


    Cardi B and City Girls teach us how to twerk…need I say more?

    2. Nicki Minaj “Barbie Tingz”


    One of Nicki’s wittiest songs, “Barbie Tingz” details all the relationships she’s had with different rappers throughout her career. Exposing men is one of Nicki’s finest moments, and this music video is about as steamy as it gets.

    1. Cardi B. & Megan Thee Stallion “WAP”


    You had to know it was coming. One of the most hyper-sexual songs in recent history from two of the biggest female rappers in the world. The music video with a cameo from Kylie Jenner is our steamiest music video of all time.

    The music video is a very specific art form that many appreciate, but few really take the time to explore.

    While you may have a quick answer to the question of the hottest music video you’ve ever seen, we doubt you could rank the hottest of all time. From Beyonce to Prince, we’ve made a definitive ranking of the ten steamiest music videos ever made.

    10. Beyonce “Partition”

    Beyoncé – Partition (Explicit Video)youtu.be

    Beyonce is the queen of the sparkly leotard. Her iconic love seat pose has given life to countless memes, and for good reason. This video is undeniably one of her hottest.

    9. Selena Gomez “Hands to Myself”

    Selena Gomez – Hands To Myself (Official Music Video)youtu.be

    First of all, Selena Gomez+bangs is pretty fire. Second of all, Selena Gomez+bangs+lingerie+steamy bathtub shots= 🔥🔥🔥🔥

    8. Usher “Trading Places”

    Usher – Trading Placeswww.youtube.com

    Usher doing anything is undeniably hot. We would watch the man tie his shoe laces and give him a standing ovation afterwards. In this video, we not only get steamy bedroom shots and plenty of oiled muscle, but also weird indoor-human-fish-tank moments that we’re admittedly pretty into.

    7. D’Angelo “Untitled (How does it feel)”

    D’Angelo – Untitled (How Does It Feel)youtu.be

    Honestly, it’s just D’angelo standing there shirtless singing his heart out. What more could you want?

    6. Nicki Minaj “Anaconda”

    Nicki Minaj – Anacondawww.youtube.com

    This iconic video features Minaj in lycra pants and other various form fitting outfits twerking etc. She also makes smoothies. It’s hard to look away.

    5. Rihanna “S&M”

    Rihanna – S&Mwww.youtube.com

    This whole list could be Rihanna music videos and we’d stand by it. Out of all of Ri-Ri’s steamy videos, this is perhaps the most enticingly chaotic. Bonus: Rihanna has magnificent red hair in this clip.

    4. Prince “Kiss”

    Prince – Kiss (Official Music Video)www.youtube.com

    Prince was the king of pushing boundaries, and this video was no exception. MTV loosened their standards specifically for this 1986 hit, and we’re so glad they did. Prince in a crop top? Yes please.

    3. Beyonce “Drunk in Love”

    Beyoncé – Drunk in Love (Explicit) ft. JAY Zyoutu.be

    Yes, Beyonce made the list twice, but we just couldn’t help ourselves. While Beyonce looks as amazing as always in this video, what really puts it over the top is the way she undresses Jay-Z with her eyes. *Melts*

    2. Chris Isaak “Wicked Game”

    Wicked Game – Single Edit – Official Music Videoyoutu.be

    This video is decidedly NSFW. Widely agreed upon across the internet to be one of the hottest videos of all time, “Wicked Game” will leave you speechless.

    1. Britney Spears “Toxic”

    Britney Spears – Toxic (Official Music Video)www.youtube.com

    This video tops our list because it just doesn’t get more iconic than this. Say what you want about Britney, but she
    always delivered in the music video department.

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    Jai Phillips

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  • Your Weekend Playlist: New Music Released Today

    Your Weekend Playlist: New Music Released Today

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    What I love about Fridays isn’t that I get to log off work early (well, maybe a little) or that I have an excuse to attend happy hour…it’s that I’m guaranteed new music. And now that we are fully in June, artists are churning out albums and singles to get us through the summer months. This week, especially, is a hot spot for new bangers for your playlists.


    We have releases like “TUYA” by ROSALÍA, “Who Told You (feat. Drake)” by J His, “VULGAR (with Madonna)” by Sam Smith and Madonna, and “WHAT THE HELL ARE WE DYING FOR?” by Shawn Mendes, who wrote the track in 24 hours after New York City was covered in smoke from the Canadian wildfires. But that’s not all, not even close.

    EDM extraordinaire Chris Lake came out with his remix of “In The Yuma (feat. AATIG) (Four Tet Remix)”, which is sure to be a club banger. City Girls released “Piñata”, and Youngboy Never Broke Again dropped the first single from his new album, “Realize (feat. Lil Dump, Rojay MLP, NBA Big B)”.

    Since this week was filled with new music, here are a few of my picks to put on your weekend playlist:

    1. Noah Kahan – ​Stick Season (We’ll All Be Here Forever)

    Rapidly rising indie folk artist Noah Kahan has been stealing the hearts of listeners. It’s not hard to love his music, which feels like the perfect blend of The Lumineers, Mumford & Sons, and Hozier. His new album, Stick Season (We’ll All Be Here Forever), contains 21 songs that are purely Noah. The Vermont-born singer has a raw way of storytelling, with country-inspired backing from symphonies of banjos and string instruments. It’s worth the listen from top to bottom.

    2. Niall Horan – The Show

    In his first album since 2020, Niall Horan releases The Show…and wow, does this feel like the moment Horan skyrockets into superstardom alongside former band member, Harry Styles. Dare I say it’s his best? Throughout 10 songs, Niall takes you through a journey of love and positivity, it’s an album that you can already imagine bringing fans of all walks of life together. It’s a body of work that Horan has been working on for years, and it’s a special album that should be rewarded.

    3. Carter Rubin – “last time” 

    Carter Rubin may only be 17, but his voice already has a timeless quality that is beautifully exhibited in his new single, “last time.” It’s an honest track that captures how it feels to fall in love at such a young age, and perfectly shows off Carter’s strong vocal abilities that will make him a star. With qualities of a go-to summer anthem, “last time” is Carter Rubin’s submission for your Song Of The Summer.

    4. Will Linley – “Tough (The Girls Song)” 

    Fans love Will Linley because he can create a track that fully encompasses what it’s like to as a member of Gen Z, perfectly summing up how we’re all feeling constantly. The musical embodiment of “I do my own stunts,” Linley is a singer, songwriter, and can play multiple instruments…fully showcasing his impeccable talent at all times. With “Tough (The Girls Song)”, we are given an 80’s vibe that never gets old and a fun single about a long-distance relationship ending.

    5. Arctic Lake – “My Weakness” 

    Arctic Lake, the duo compiled of Emma Foster and Paul Holliman, are gearing up to release their new EP, How Do You Make It Look So Easy, with their new single, “My Weakness.” It’s traditional Arctic Lake, an open-hearted single about how, when you’re in love, it can be your greatest strength and weakness. Alongside the single, the duo dropped a video racing us down a neon-lit highway jamming along to the song.

    6. Baby Queen – “Dream Girl” 

    Proclaimed London’s biggest “anti-pop” star, Baby Queen is here with “Dream Girl”…a pop-punk fusion talking about these two polar opposite sides of her meeting as one. It’s a song about how Baby Queen fell in love with a woman who was already in a relationship with a man, and wanting something you can’t have. It’s punchy, fun, and exciting, which is the perfect ending to this New Music Friday roundup!

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    Jai Phillips

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