Welcome to our weekly rundown of the best new music — featuring big new singles, key tracks from our favorite albums, and more. This week, Normani cuts right to the chase with the first single from her highly anticipated debut album, Myke Towers and Bad Bunny link up, and Anitta brings the funk on a super-charged dance hit. Plus, new music from Cash Cobain and Ice Spice, Tems, St. Vincent, and more.
Normani feat. Gunna, “1:59” (YouTube)
Myke Towers feat. Bad Bunny, “Adivino” (YouTube)
Anitta, “Grip” (YouTube)
Cash Cobain, Bay Swag...
Normani feat. Gunna, “1:59” (YouTube)
Myke Towers feat. Bad Bunny, “Adivino” (YouTube)
Anitta, “Grip” (YouTube)
Cash Cobain, Bay Swag...
- 4/26/2024
- by Rolling Stone
- Rollingstone.com
After a four-year hiatus, Tyler, the Creator’s celebrated Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival is returning to Los Angeles, and the lineup is stacked. Joining Tyler at this year’s festival are The Hillbillies (aka Kendrick Lamar and Baby Keem), Sza, and Clipse. It all goes down on November 11th and 12th at Dodger Stadium. Read more details below, and grab your tickets here.
Other notable acts playing the festival include Turnstile, Earl Sweatshirt, Ice Spice, Lil Yachty, Kali Uchis, Fuerza Regida, Rex Orange County, Dominic Fike, Kevin Abstract, beabadoobee, PinkPantheress, Badbadnotgood, Toro y Moi, Willow, Maxo Kream, Paris Texas, and Balming Tiger, as well as Odd Future members Syd, Domo Genesis, Mike G, and Left Brain.
Tickets for the festival are listed on its website as sold out, but that doesn’t mean that you can’t get them. Read our guide on how to get tickets for more details,...
Other notable acts playing the festival include Turnstile, Earl Sweatshirt, Ice Spice, Lil Yachty, Kali Uchis, Fuerza Regida, Rex Orange County, Dominic Fike, Kevin Abstract, beabadoobee, PinkPantheress, Badbadnotgood, Toro y Moi, Willow, Maxo Kream, Paris Texas, and Balming Tiger, as well as Odd Future members Syd, Domo Genesis, Mike G, and Left Brain.
Tickets for the festival are listed on its website as sold out, but that doesn’t mean that you can’t get them. Read our guide on how to get tickets for more details,...
- 8/18/2023
- by Jo Vito
- Consequence - Music
03 Greedo is back home. After his return from a Texas county jail in January, the L.A. rapper released Halfway There, a 33-track odyssey replete with Greedo’s melodic flourishes. He followed it up by performing at South by Southwest in Austin and, in June, a two-night stint at the Novo in Los Angeles — a venue that marked a kind of homecoming. “The show was turnt up. Both sold out. A lot of rappers popped out for me,” Greedo explains. “The city hasn’t seen that for a while.” While in prison,...
- 7/5/2023
- by Jayson Buford
- Rollingstone.com
Joy Oladokun recently started re-watching Nashville, the soapy TV series centered on country music dreams and drama that helped usher in a wave of big change in the Tennessee capital. She had been thinking about her own place in Nashville — mainly, if she should stay as the state becomes increasingly hostile to marginalized people — and feeling depressed about the way the town’s music industry fosters Olympic levels of jealousy for anyone who catches a break.
“The way it’s depicted on that show is honestly kind of perfect — this Southern,...
“The way it’s depicted on that show is honestly kind of perfect — this Southern,...
- 4/28/2023
- by Jon Freeman
- Rollingstone.com
Joy Oladokun wants her music to be a real portrait of life. On Friday, with the release of her soft single “Changes,” the songstress revealed that she will be releasing her project Proof of Life on April 28.
On the new single, backed by breezy guitars, Oladokun sings candidly about “keeping with the changes” of life and how challenging it can be to do so.
“This album is evidence of how I live,” Oladokun said in a press release of her record. “I hope these are helpful anthems. I started making...
On the new single, backed by breezy guitars, Oladokun sings candidly about “keeping with the changes” of life and how challenging it can be to do so.
“This album is evidence of how I live,” Oladokun said in a press release of her record. “I hope these are helpful anthems. I started making...
- 2/17/2023
- by Tomás Mier
- Rollingstone.com
Freddie Gibbs took the stage to promote his new album oul old eparately on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon on Monday.
The Gary, Indiana rapper cruised through “Blackest in the Room” while accompanied by house band, the Roots. He was soon joined by Anderson .Paak on “Feel No Pain,” which features .Paak and Raekwon on the track. The performance was simple yet powerful, with Gibbs commanding the mic with his soulful flow and lyrics chronicling his past.
oul old eparately marked Gibbs’ major label album debut in 2022. The rapper...
The Gary, Indiana rapper cruised through “Blackest in the Room” while accompanied by house band, the Roots. He was soon joined by Anderson .Paak on “Feel No Pain,” which features .Paak and Raekwon on the track. The performance was simple yet powerful, with Gibbs commanding the mic with his soulful flow and lyrics chronicling his past.
oul old eparately marked Gibbs’ major label album debut in 2022. The rapper...
- 1/24/2023
- by Charisma Madarang
- Rollingstone.com
Last week, Rolling Stone on Twitch made its music festival debut at Lollapalooza 2022. Streaming live from Grant Park, hosts Jon Weigell and Charlie Cooper met up with a number of artists, including guests both old and new, for a behind-the-scenes look at one of the summer’s best lineups.
Here are some of the best moments from our coverage.
Charlie and Remi Wolf discuss fashion and Chicago’s worst sandwiches
Maxo Kream reveals to Jon his secret to “endurance” (Spoiler: it’s Adderall)
Sam Fender teaches Charlie the best Georgie...
Here are some of the best moments from our coverage.
Charlie and Remi Wolf discuss fashion and Chicago’s worst sandwiches
Maxo Kream reveals to Jon his secret to “endurance” (Spoiler: it’s Adderall)
Sam Fender teaches Charlie the best Georgie...
- 8/1/2022
- by Christopher Cruz
- Rollingstone.com
Hailee Steinfeld is back with her first music in two years — and she’s getting a co-sign from no other than Anderson .Paak. On Friday, the “Most Girls” singer released her new single “Coast,” a vibey, electric guitar-backed pop earworm.
“This song is deeply personal to me and was influenced by my California roots and the music I grew up listening to with my family,” Steinfeld tells Rolling Stone.
On the beachy song, she sings, “You the wave upon my ocean/pounding rhythm and motion/it’s full moon kinda...
“This song is deeply personal to me and was influenced by my California roots and the music I grew up listening to with my family,” Steinfeld tells Rolling Stone.
On the beachy song, she sings, “You the wave upon my ocean/pounding rhythm and motion/it’s full moon kinda...
- 7/29/2022
- by Tomás Mier
- Rollingstone.com
As far as trappers-turned-rappers go, Maxo Kream is doing quite well for himself; in fact, this former Crip is one of the best working rappers in the game. His admirable Weight of the World, released in October, had mournful lines about his brother Madu’s death and a sense of aching nostalgia. Maxo’s voice is fitting for a Houston product, but his flow stays on beat with impressive gusto, like a roller coaster almost (but not quite) jumping the track. “Football Heads,” his new song, with Griselda bagman Benny the Butcher,...
- 7/27/2022
- by Jayson Buford
- Rollingstone.com
Since its inception in 1987, SXSW has grown to include film, interactive media, TV, comedy, and even political experiences. But the festival has always mainly been about the music, man. Music lovers and industry professionals flock to Austin each year to witness performances from up-and-coming acts and established, even legendary, artists. After two years away, the hunger for live music is more ravenous than ever.
SXSW’s music lineup isn’t limited by genre, region, or popularity. Over 2,000 performers from 60+ countries are represented at the festival, spread out through Austin everywhere from intimate spaces to massive stages. Navigating the festival and its plethora of options can be a little intimidating, so we put together a guide of some can’t-miss artists to help steer you in the right direction. From local favorites to international sensations, hip-hop groups to lo-fi troubadours, here are just a handful of acts you should make an effort to see in Austin.
SXSW’s music lineup isn’t limited by genre, region, or popularity. Over 2,000 performers from 60+ countries are represented at the festival, spread out through Austin everywhere from intimate spaces to massive stages. Navigating the festival and its plethora of options can be a little intimidating, so we put together a guide of some can’t-miss artists to help steer you in the right direction. From local favorites to international sensations, hip-hop groups to lo-fi troubadours, here are just a handful of acts you should make an effort to see in Austin.
- 3/18/2022
- by Nick Harley
- Den of Geek
Things in life tend to come full circle, which is the best way to understand the pairing of Tyler, the Creator and Maxo Kream on the latter’s new single, “Big Persona.” Both rappers, now in their early thirties, set off distinct movements in the cities in which they reside. Tyler’s band of Odd Future hooligans forged a path for a wholly reimagined rap industry from their home of L.A., and Maxo gave rise to a resurgent scene in Houston driven by youth culture. Their career trajectories, however,...
- 9/7/2021
- by Jeff Ihaza
- Rollingstone.com
Houston rapper Maxo Kream has enlisted Tyler, the Creator for a new song, “Big Persona.”
The track easily lives up to its name, with a beat filled with brass fanfare and bars to match, like Maxo’s opening lines, “Maxo Biggie Poppa, who you know that do it better?/I’m the trap Barack Obama, Betty Crocker, used to pedal.”
“Big Persona” also arrives with a music video, in which Tyler and Maxo get to put a Rolls Royce to good use — burning tires and doing donuts in an empty parking lot.
The track easily lives up to its name, with a beat filled with brass fanfare and bars to match, like Maxo’s opening lines, “Maxo Biggie Poppa, who you know that do it better?/I’m the trap Barack Obama, Betty Crocker, used to pedal.”
“Big Persona” also arrives with a music video, in which Tyler and Maxo get to put a Rolls Royce to good use — burning tires and doing donuts in an empty parking lot.
- 9/7/2021
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
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