Britney Spears says she doesn’t do music anymore because of the “awful things” she went through

Britney Spears says she doesn’t do music anymore because of the “awful things” she went through
Britney Spears says she doesn’t do music anymore because of the “awful things” she went through
Gabe Ginsberg/FilmMagic

Britney Spears laid out another lengthy Instagram post Monday addressing why she’s no longer doing music.

The singer said she’s not making or performing new music because of the “awful things” that were done to her.
“So much wasted time to only embarrass me and humiliate me and I guess it seems odd to most now why I don’t even do music anymore,” she wrote.

She added that after what she’s been through, she’s “scared of people and the business.”

“They really hurt me!!!!!!” she said. “Not doing music anymore is my way of saying ‘F*** you’ in a sense when it only actually benefits my family by ignoring my real work.”

Britney also addressed one of her since-deleted posts from last week, in which she listed some of her accomplishments and promised to be her “own cheerleader.” She admitted to having “serious insecurities” and felt she may have come across as an “obnoxious 8 year old” by rattling off her career milestones, but she explained why she did it.

“Honestly my family embarrassed me and hurt me deeply… so tooting my own horn and seeing my past accomplishments reflecting back at me actually helped!!!!” she wrote.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Nonpoint premieres video for “Back in the Game” song off new ’Ruthless’ EP

Nonpoint premieres video for “Back in the Game” song off new ’Ruthless’ EP
Nonpoint premieres video for “Back in the Game” song off new ’Ruthless’ EP
Miikka Skaffari/FilmMagic

Nonpoint has premiered the video “Back in the Game,” a track off the band’s new EP, Ruthless.

The clip, streaming now on YouTube, captures footage from Elias Soriano and company’s recent run of live shows, and showcases the group’s dedicated fanbase.

“This song sums up our view on how we approached independence from the very beginning,” Soriano says. “We will be small but mighty.”

“Like the song says, ‘I may be one man, but I’m a death squad,'” he adds. “We give everything we got with ultimate absolution.”

Ruthless is out now. The five-track collection also includes the previously released single “Ruthless” and a cover of Prince’s “When Doves Cry.”

Nonpoint’s most recent album is 2018’s X.

(Video contains uncensored profanity.) 

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

The Year in Music 2021: Artists we lost

The Year in Music 2021: Artists we lost
The Year in Music 2021: Artists we lost
Jerod Harris/WireImage

In 2021, we saw some of our favorite artists take their final bow.  Here’s a list of artists we lost:

February 8 — Mary Wilson, 76, Supremes singer.

February 18 — Prince Markie Dee, 52, member of pioneering rap group Fat Boys.

March 2 — Bunny Wailer, 73, the last living member of the Bob Marley reggae group The Wailers.

April 9 — DMX, 50, rap icon.

April 17 — Black Rob, 52, former Bad Boy rapper.

April 22 — Shock G, 57, member of alternative hip hop group Digital Underground.

June 18 — Gift of Gab, 50, rapper, Blackalicious.

July 16 — Biz Markie, 57, rapper best known for his hit “Just a Friend.”

August 9 — Chucky Thompson, 53, record producer who worked with Diddy, Faith Evans, Usher and more.

August 29 — Lee “Scratch” Perry, 85, reggae legend who produced tracks for Bob Marley and the Wailers, the Beastie Boys and more.

September 20 — Sarah Dash, 76, member of legendary singing group LaBelle.

September 27 — Andrea “Annie” Martin, 49, known for writing songs for the likes of SWV, Jennifer Hudson and En Vogue.

October 21 — Tommy Debarge, 64, member of the Debarge family and T&B funk band Switch.

November 2 — Ronnie Wilson, 73, oldest Wilson brother, survived by brothers Charlie and Robert, co-founder of The Gap Band.

November 17 — Young Dolph, 36, rapper.

December 8 — Robbie Shakespeare, 68, legendary bassist.

December 16 — Leonard Hubbard, 62, founding member of hip hop band The Roots.

December 18 — Kangol Kid, 55, best known as member of the group UTFO.

December 18 — Drakeo the Ruler, 28, rapper.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Michael Bublé says goodbye to Christmas, hello to new music

Michael Bublé says goodbye to Christmas, hello to new music
Michael Bublé says goodbye to Christmas, hello to new music
Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Michael Bublé may be Mr. Christmas, but this year, he’s fine with saying goodbye to the holiday season, because he’s got something new coming down the pike.

Michael has posted a Claymation video on his socials that shows him walking up to a turntable that’s playing his version of “Jingle Bells,” taking the record off and throwing it away.  He then replaces it with a new record, which we’ll get to hear on January 14, 2022.  From the snippet that plays, it seems to be a song called “I’ll Never Not Love You.”

Michael’s new album is due in 2022 and he’s already said he feels as though it’s the best one he’s ever done.  As previously reported, he’ll celebrate the new album with a limited engagement at Resorts World in Las Vegas that runs from April 27 to May 7.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

“Y’all Means All”: Miranda Lambert releasing inclusive song in new season of ’Queer Eye’

“Y’all Means All”: Miranda Lambert releasing inclusive song in new season of ’Queer Eye’
“Y’all Means All”: Miranda Lambert releasing inclusive song in new season of ’Queer Eye’
ABC

Miranda Lambert is continuing to demonstrate her LGBTQIA+ allyship by contributing a song to the new season of Queer Eye. 

As an end-of-year gift for fans, Miranda has revealed that she’s written and recorded the song “Y’all Means All” for the show’s upcoming seasonset for release on New Years Eve. 

Filmed in the country superstar’s home state of Texas, season six of Queer Eye follows Jonathan Van Ness, Tan France, Karamo Brown, Antoni Porowski and Bobby Berk as they provide fashion and lifestyle makeovers to a person who is transitioning, a honky tonk owner, a group of high school seniors attending prom and more. 

The latest trailer features a clip of Miranda’s inclusivity-themed track, in which she sings, “If your life is like a tornado/All you need is a smoke and a rainbow” before chanting “y’all means all.” 

“Here’s one last surprise for y’all this year! A new song “Y’all Means All” will be out on 12/31 to celebrate the new season of @QueerEye that filmed all in Texas!” the hit singer writes on Twitter.

“OMG We partnered with THE country music queen @mirandalambert for her new song Y’all Means All debuting alongside S6 on 12/31,” the Queer Eye account shares

Earlier this year, Miranda released a video for the remix of “Tequila Does” featuring her brother, Luke, and his husband, Marc. She has also attended Pride parades with the couple. 

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Jared Leto pays tribute to late ‘Dallas Buyers Club’ director Jean-Marc Vallée: “A filmmaking force”

Jared Leto pays tribute to late ‘Dallas Buyers Club’ director Jean-Marc Vallée: “A filmmaking force”
Jared Leto pays tribute to late ‘Dallas Buyers Club’ director Jean-Marc Vallée: “A filmmaking force”
Jesse Grant/Getty Images for Leisure Opportunities

Jared Leto has shared a tribute to his late Dallas Buyers Club director Jean-Marc Vallée.

In a tweet alongside a photo of him alongside Vallée, the Thirty Seconds to Mars frontman wrote, “A filmmaking force and a true artist who changed my life with a beautiful movie called Dallas Buyers Club.”

“Much love to everyone who knew him,” Leto added. “Life is precious.”

The photo shows Leto holding the Golden Globe he won for his role in Dallas Buyers Club. His performance also earned him the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor.

Vallée died unexpectedly over the weekend at age 58, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Along with Dallas Buyers Club, Vallée directed films including Wild and The Young Victoria, as well as the TV series Big Little Lies and Sharp Objects.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Bebe Rexha posts “honest update” about body image

Bebe Rexha posts “honest update” about body image
Bebe Rexha posts “honest update” about body image
Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic

Bebe Rexha is a champion of body positivity, but even she has days where she doesn’t feel her best.

In an emotional TikTok video posted Monday, captioned “Honest update,” the singer admits she’s struggling to feel comfortable in her own body.

“So it is the holidays and I know we’re all supposed to be, like, merry and like, ‘Yay, it’s the holidays,’ which I am … ish,”she says. “I think I am the heaviest I have ever been. I weighed myself just now and I don’t feel comfortable sharing the weight ’cause I feel embarrassed.”

“I just feel disgusting, you know, like in my own body,” she adds, tearing up.

Bebe explains that’s the reason why she hasn’t posted much to social media over the past year. She acknowledged that she’s struggling with how to help herself and love herself, sparking a ton of supportive and understanding comments from fans.

Back in June, Bebe posted a viral TikTok video of herself in lingerie, asking viewers to “normalize” weighing 165 pounds. And earlier this month, she posted a video in front of the Christmas tree wearing a red bra and captioning it “Who said curvy girls can’t wear lingerie?”

@beberexha

Honest update.

♬ original sound – BebeRexha

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

The Year in Music 2021: The Go-Go’s, Tina Turner, Carole King among the new Rock Hall inductees

The Year in Music 2021: The Go-Go’s, Tina Turner, Carole King among the new Rock Hall inductees
The Year in Music 2021: The Go-Go’s, Tina Turner, Carole King among the new Rock Hall inductees
Courtesy of Rock & Roll Hall of Fame

After the in-person ceremony was replaced by a virtual special in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction gala returned this year in full force with a star-studded event held October 30 at Cleveland’s Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse.

The honorees in the Performers category this year were The Go-Go’s, Tina Turner, Carole King, Todd Rundgren, Foo Fighters and JAY-Z. The other inductees included Musical Excellence Award recipients LL Cool J, late Ozzy Osbourne guitarist Randy Rhoads and the late Billy Preston; and Early Influence Award honorees Kraftwerk, late blues great Charley Patton and late soul/jazz poet Gil Scott-Heron; and music executive and entrepreneur Clarence Avant, who received the Ahmet Ertegun Award.

Here are some of the evening’s many highlights:

Drew Barrymore inducted The Go-Go’s, who became the first all-female band who played their own instruments to be welcomed into the Hall. The actress paid homage to the cover of the group’s debut album, Beauty and the Beat, by wrapping her hair in a bath towel and applying face cream, emulating the album’s cover image. “Beauty and the Beat blew the doors of my life off,” she told the crowd.

While the group accepting their honor, bassist Kathy Valentine said now that The Go-Go’s had been inducted, they’d be “advocating for the inclusion of more women.” The band then rocked the crowd with “Vacation,” “Our Lips Are Sealed” and “We Got the Beat.”

–Turner and King became the second and third women to become two-time Rock Hall inductees, following Stevie Nicks in 2019. Tina was first inducted in 1991 as one half of Ike & Tina Turner. Welcoming her as a solo performer was actress Angela Bassett, star of the Turner biopic What’s Love Got to Do with It. Tina didn’t attend the event, instead sending a pre-recorded thank-you video.

Performers paying tribute to Turner included country stars Mickey Guyton and Keith Urban, Oscar-winning R&B artist H.E.R. and pop superstar Christina Aguilera.

King, who’d been inducted as a songwriter in 1990, was ushered into the Rock Hall this time by Taylor Swift. Swift also performed in honor of King, as did Jennifer Hudson and King herself, who led the crowd in a singalong of “You’ve Got a Friend.”

During her acceptance speech, Carole acknowledged that even though she’s been told “that today’s female singers and songwriters stand on my shoulders,” we shouldn’t forget that “they also stand on the shoulders of the first woman to be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame…Miss Aretha Franklin!”

–Rundgren, who’d said for many years that if inducted, he wouldn’t attend, pointedly booked a concert in Cincinnati on the night of the ceremony. He was virtually inducted by Patti Smith. A tribute video included commentary from  Daryl Hall and The BanglesSusanna Hoffs.

Paul McCartney inducted Foo Fighters, and compared frontman Dave Grohl‘s post-Nirvana career to his own time in Wings, noting, “We had a great time with our groups, but eventually tragedy happened and my group broke up. Same happened with Dave. His group broke up under tragic circumstances. So the question is, what do you do now?”

Macca continued, “In my case, I said, ‘Well, I’ll make an album where I play all the instruments myself.’ So I did that. Dave’s group broke up…what’s he do? He makes an album where he plays all the instruments himself. Do you think this guy’s stalking me?”

The night concluded with McCartney and Foo Fighters jamming on the Beatles classic “Get Back.”

Ringo Starr appeared via pre-recorded video to induct Preston, who famously played and recorded with The Beatles during the making of Let It Be.

–JAY-Z was inducted by Dave Chappelle; Rhoads by Rage Against the Machine‘s Tom Morello; Kraftwerk by Pharrell Williams; LL Cool J by Dr. Dre; Scott-Heron by Common; Patton by Gary Clark Jr.; and Avant by Lionel Richie.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

The Year in Country 2021: After 26 number ones, Jason Aldean still has “a lot left in the tank”

The Year in Country 2021: After 26 number ones, Jason Aldean still has “a lot left in the tank”
The Year in Country 2021: After 26 number ones, Jason Aldean still has “a lot left in the tank”
ABC

2021 found Jason Aldean celebrating his 26th chart-topping hit, with his multi-week #1 duet with Carrie Underwood“If I Didn’t Love You.”

The Georgia native’s the first to admit he’s come a long way since he put out his first single, “Hicktown,” more than fifteen years ago. 

“Man, it’s been so wild,” Jason tells ABC Audio. “Honestly, you know, I remember coming out in 2005 and the first single came out and just not knowing, like, I didn’t know if I was gonna be around for one record, two records, five records, I didn’t know.”

“You know, it’s just like, man, [I] just kind of took it one day at a time,” he continues. “And you know, it just all of a sudden, everything kind of took off for us. And you know, you turn around and you’re this many years into it and that many number ones.”

“If I Didn’t Love You” is the lead single from Jason’s Macon album — and he warns he’s not even close to being done.

“It’s been crazy. When I really sit down and think about it, and how things have gone and how everything had to kind of line up the right way for me to have the career I’ve had, it’s been pretty amazing,” he says. “And you know, it’s been a wild ride at times, but it’s been a lot of fun.”

“And I don’t know,” he adds, “I hope it doesn’t end any time soon, because I feel like I’ve got a lot left in the tank.”  

The second half of Jason’s double Macon album — titled Georgia — is set to arrive April 22, taking its name from his hometown.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

The Year in Music 2021: Britney Spears breaks free

The Year in Music 2021: Britney Spears breaks free
The Year in Music 2021: Britney Spears breaks free
Kevin Winter/Getty Images

2021 was a big year for Britney Spears. She finally won her freedom from the 13-year conservatorship that had controlled nearly every aspect of her life. Here’s how Britney’s year unfolded:

— The fight for Britney’s freedom really ramped up in February, following the release of the New York Times’ unauthorized documentary, Framing Britney Spears, which shined a light on how the singer was unfairly treated by the media, as well as by her own family. Britney wasn’t exactly a fan of the doc, but it prompted an outpouring of support and even a long overdue apology from her ex, Justin Timberlake.

— In June, Britney spoke out for the first time publicly about her conservatorship, delivering explosive comments during a court hearing in which she asked for her father, Jamie Spears, to be removed as her conservator. She detailed a long list of grievances against her family, as well as some disturbing claims about the abuse she said she’d endured, telling the judge she believes everyone involved in the conservatorship “should be in jail.”

— Jamie Spears was suspended as the conservator of Britney’s estate in September, shortly before the New York Times dropped a follow-up documentary, Controlling Britney Spears, which included allegations that Jamie bugged Britney’s room and would secretly monitor her emails, phone calls and private conversations.

— Also in September, Britney got engaged to longtime boyfriend Sam Asghari.

— The conservatorship itself was finally terminated in November, “in its entirety, effective immediately.” Judge Brenda Penny delivered the ruling in an LA courtroom as #FreeBritney supporters cheered outside.

— After the court decision, Britney delivered a message to fans, telling them, “I honestly think you guys saved my life in a way. One hundred percent.” She’s since become more outspoken on social media, giving fans glimpses of her truth and hinting she may one day reveal the full story of what she went through.

— On December 2, Britney celebrated her 40th birthday as a free woman.

 

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.