The Knocks – Ride Or Die (feat. Foster the People) – Single

The Knocks – Ride Or Die (feat. Foster the People) – Single
Singer The Knocks
Album Ride Or Die (feat. Foster the People) – Single
Single Ride Or Die (feat. Foster the People)
Date 9 Mar 2018
Tracklist 1 Song
Duration 4 Minutes
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℗ 2018 Big Beat Records Inc. for the United States and WEA International Inc. for the world outside of the United States. A Warner Music Group Company

Kelly Clarkson & Hoda Kotb – I’ve Loved You Since Forever – Single

Kelly Clarkson & Hoda Kotb – I’ve Loved You Since Forever – Single
Singer Kelly Clarkson & Hoda Kotb
Album I’ve Loved You Since Forever – Single
Single I’ve Loved You Since Forever
Date 8 Mar 2018
Tracklist 1 Song
Duration 1:20 Minute
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℗ 2018 Atlantic Records

Kelly Clarkson
About Kelly Clarkson
The winner of Fox TV’s first American Idol competition during the summer of 2002, Kelly Clarkson went from an anonymous talent to a nationally known singer in a matter of months, performing for an audience of millions. One of the show’s most naturally gifted singers, the affable Texan then went on to enjoy a successful pop career, with only Carrie Underwood rivaling her as American Idol’s most commercial export.
Clarkson was born in Fort Worth and raised in Burleson, Texas, and her vocal talents were discovered in seventh grade, when a music teacher heard her voice and urged Clarkson to join the school choir. After high school, she opted to skip college and went to Hollywood to make her name; she appeared as an extra on an episode of Sabrina, the Teenage Witch, but no other opportunities materialized. Upon returning to Burleson, Clarkson worked at a movie theater, promoted Red Bull energy drinks, and ultimately worked as a cocktail waitress at a comedy club before entering the American Idol contest.
One of 10,000 aspiring singers, Clarkson distinguished herself not only with her big, surprisingly mature voice, but also with her down-to-earth charm and sense of humor; at one of her auditions, she switched places with judge Randy Jackson, who did an impromptu version of R. Kelly’s “I Believe I Can Fly.” Over the course of the 13-week show, her consistently strong performances of songs like “Respect,” “Natural Woman,” “Stuff Like That There,” and “Without You” earned Clarkson enough audience votes to claim one of the contest’s two finalist positions. After singing “A Moment Like This” and “Before Your Love,” both of which were written for the show, Clarkson won the American Idol contest with 58 percent of the audience’s votes. In addition to the show’s prize of one million dollars and a recording contract with RCA, Clarkson secured a deal with Creative Artists Agency and several bookings, including the national American Idol tour and a performance of the national anthem at the September 11 commemoration at Washington, D.C.’s Lincoln Memorial.
Despite her newfound fame, Clarkson opted to remain in Texas rather than move to New York or Los Angeles. Her first single, “A Moment Like This,” was released just two weeks after she won the contest and quickly earned platinum sales. Clarkson’s debut full-length, Thankful, was released in spring of 2003, just in time to coincide with the second season of American Idol (and right before the American Idol movie, From Justin to Kelly). Breakaway followed in late 2004 and was a huge success, selling over five million copies (making it the third best-selling album of 2005) and spawning the hit singles “Because of You,” “Behind These Hazel Eyes,” and the enormously popular “Since U Been Gone.” That song and Breakaway earned Grammys for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance and Best Pop Vocal Album, respectively, at the 48th Annual Grammy Awards in early 2006. Clarkson continued her busy touring schedule into the summer and announced plans for her third album.
Clarkson released My December, the studio follow-up to Breakaway, in 2007. Notable as Clarkson’s first foray into songwriting, My December featured a darker, more rock-oriented edge than its predecessor and even featured a guest appearance by punk icon and bassist Mike Watt. However, label exec Clive Davis openly disapproved of the album’s direction, claiming that it lacked the commercial appeal of Breakaway. A public feud ensued, and Clarkson was dealt another blow when poor ticket sales resulted in the cancellation of her upcoming tour. The leadoff single “Never Again” nevertheless became a Top Ten pop hit, and My December climbed its way to platinum status by the year’s end.
Clarkson returned to the top of the charts in
early 2009, when the sugary single “My Life Would Suck Without You” set a record for the largest leap to number one. Composed by songwriting vets Max Martin, Lukasz Gottwald, and Claude Kelly, the song also set the stage for her fourth album, All I Ever Wanted, whose pop-minded material was mostly produced by OneRepublic’s Ryan Tedder. While touring in support of All I Ever Wanted, Clarkson announced that she had begun work on material for her follow-up. Eventually, she collaborated with a handful of writers and producers, including Claude Kelly and Howard Benson, as well as Jason Halbert, Rodney Jerkins, and others. In 2011, Clarkson released the resulting album, Stronger. Her fifth studio effort, the album featured the single “Mr. Know It All.” A Greatest Hits package followed in 2012, and Clarkson’s first holiday album, Wrapped in Red, was released in October of 2013. As well as the usual selection of festive favorites, it included a number of newly written songs, including several co-penned by Clarkson herself.
Clarkson spent much of 2014 recording her next LP with producer Greg Kurstin. The first single, “Heartbeat Song,” appeared in January 2015 and, a few months later, Piece by Piece debuted atop the Billboard 200. This marked her third number one album and first since 2009. It included songs penned by Sia Furler and Kara DioGuardi, as well as a feature for John Legend on “Run Run Run.” Nearly a year later, after a heartfelt performance during the final season of American Idol, title track “Piece by Piece” shot into the Billboard Top Ten and went on to garner a Grammy nomination for Best Pop Solo Performance. Following the unexpected success of the single, Clarkson joined Missy Elliot, Janelle Monáe, Kelly Rowland, Lea Michele, and Zendaya on the song “This Is for My Girls,” which was part of First Lady Michelle Obama’s third-world education campaign called “Let Girls Learn.” Months later, Clarkson announced that she had signed with Atlantic. In June 2016, she also unveiled kellyclarksonlive.com, which distributed live recordings of fan-requested cover songs performed during her Piece by Piece tour, including Radiohead’s “Creep” and Coldplay’s “Fix You.” By the year’s end, she’d contributed to the Hamilton Mixtape (“It’s Quiet Uptown”) and the soundtrack to The Shack, the latter of which, a duet with Aloe Blacc called “Love Goes On,” was released as a single in February 2017. In September of that year, Clarkson released “Love So Soft,” the lead single from her forthcoming eighth studio album, Meaning of Life, which was expected in October.
By Heather Phares

Logic – Bobby Tarantino II

Logic – Bobby Tarantino II
Singer Logic
Album Bobby Tarantino II
Single Bobby Tarantino II – Album
Date 9 Mar 2018
Tracklist 13 Songs
Duration 43 Minutes
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℗ 2018 Def Jam Recordings, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

Logic
About Logic
An imaginative and stylistically dynamic rap artist who emerged during the early 2010s, Logic launched his career through uploads and independent mixtapes prior to reaching the mainstream with a Def Jam record deal. Born Sir Robert Bryson Hall II in Gaithersburg, Maryland, the rapper, singer, songwriter, and producer dropped a mixtape as Psychological in 2009, then shortened his name. After the 2010 release of Young, Broke, & Infamous, Logic joined the independent label Visionary Music Group. A one-tape-per-year schedule continued with a trilogy of Young Sinatra releases, a period during which he toured internationally without label support and was selected for XXL magazine’s Freshman Class of 2013. Additionally, Logic and Visionary Music Group worked out a contract with Def Jam.
Logic released his major-label debut album, Under Pressure, in October 2014. Executive produced by No I.D., it didn’t need any guest appearances to enter the Billboard 200 chart at number four, and was eventually certified gold by the RIAA. The Incredible True Story, an ambitious concept album based 100 years in the future, arrived in November 2015 and peaked at number three on the Billboard 200. The following year, Logic embarked on the Endless Summer Tour with G-Eazy, YG, and Yo Gotti. During the first week of dates, Logic released Bobby Tarantino, a commercial mixtape that debuted at number 16 and later peaked at number 12 despite no advance notice. It featured “Flexicution,” the rapper’s first Billboard Hot 100 single as a lead artist. Around the same time, the Suicide Squad soundtrack’s “Sucker for Pain,” featuring Logic among the likes of Lil Wayne and Wiz Khalifa, became a global smash. 
In early 2017, shortly after his second album went gold, Logic issued the first tracks from his third proper album, Everybody, which arrived that May. A diverse cast of guests including Alessia Cara, Chuck D, and Neil deGrasse Tyson supported Logic on a set that explored issues dividing and unifying humanity. It debuted at number one. A trio of new singles arrived in the early part of 2018, beginning with “44 More” and “Overnight” and followed by the Marshmello collaboration “Everyday.”
By David Jeffries & Neil Z. Yeung, Rovi

Maluma – El Préstamo – Single

Maluma – El Préstamo – Single
Singer Maluma
Album El Préstamo – Single
Single El Préstamo
Date Mar 9, 2018
Tracklist 1 Song
Duration 3 Minutes
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Maluma
About Maluma
Maluma is the pseudonym for Juan Luis Londoño Arias, a Colombian reggaeton singer known for a sweet tenor voice and streetwise yet romantic delivery. He gained his initial fame as a teenager. He originally pursued football as a vocation, and was gifted enough to attract the notice of the media in his native Medellin. He sang merely for pleasure. Given the rise of the internet, YouTube, and television singing competitions, however, he was swayed toward music. In 2011, at the age of 17, Maluma cut his first single, “Farandulera,” independently. Due to its internet popularity and emergent radio airplay, the song gained the attention of Sony Music. The following year, Maluma released Magia, his debut album. Several of its singles — “Obsesión,” “Loco,” and “Miss Independent” — received consistent airplay and hit the charts in Colombia and Latin America. His next single, “La Temperatura,” entered the North American charts and earned him a Latin Grammy nomination in 2013. Maluma became a star in urban Latin music. In 2014, he was the featured vocalist on Elvis Crespo’s hit “Ole Brazil,” recorded for the World Cup tournament. Maluma returned in early 2015. His first release was PB DB. The Mixtape, a compilation of hits with two new singles, “Me Gustas Tanto” and “Climax.” These tracks charted and set the stage for a brand new album, Pretty Boy Dirty Boy, which appeared in the fall. The recording was produced by Walter Kolm. In 2016, Maluma released a collaborative track with fellow Colombian star Shakira, “Chantage,” and the video became massively popular, racking up over one billion views online within the space of five months. In 2017, Maluma was named “Artist of the Year” at the Premios Lo Nuestro, a Latin music awards show presented by Spanish-language television network Univision. That same year, Maluma announced he was working on his next album, which would feature material in English as well as Spanish.
By Thom Jurek

Abraham Mateo, Yandel & Jennifer Lopez – Se Acabó el Amor (Urban Version) – Single

Abraham Mateo, Yandel & Jennifer Lopez – Se Acabó el Amor (Urban Version) – Single
Singer Abraham Mateo, Yandel & Jennifer Lopez
Album Se Acabó el Amor (Urban Version) – Single
Single Se Acabó el Amor (Urban Version)
Date 9 Mar 2018
Tracklist 1 Song
Duration 3:50 Minutes
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℗ 2018 Sony Music Entertainment España, S.L.

Abraham Mateo
About Abraham Mateo
Spain’s Abraham Mateo is an exuberant singer and actor known for his soulful, dance-oriented pop. Born in 1998 in San Fernando, Cádiz, Spain, Mateo grew up in a musical family and first began singing around age three. Initially instructed by his mother, he eventually began taking formal vocal lessons and also learned piano, flute and guitar. In 2008, he made his television debut starring as a regular on the children’s program Manuda Noche. Around age ten he signed a recording contract with EMI Music Spain and released a debut self-titled album in 2009. Also during this period he acted in several TV movies including Días Sin Luz and Raphael.
Four years later, he returned with his sophomore album, AM, on Sony. The album showcased his growth as a performer and found him incorporating more electronic and dance elements into his sound. A breakthrough, the album featured several popular singles including “Señorita,” which peaked at number three. A third studio album, Who I Am, followed in 2014 and also performed well, debuting at number one in Mexico and Spain, and reaching platinum certification status.
A year later, Mateo delivered his fourth full-length album, Are You Ready? Included on the album were the singles “When You Love Somebody,” “Mi Vecina,” and “Mueve,” featuring Lali. In 2017, he paired with Farruko and Christian Daniel on the single “Loco Enamorado.”
By Matt Collar

Kylie Minogue – Stop Me from Falling – Pre-Single

Kylie Minogue – Stop Me from Falling – Pre-Single
Singer Kylie Minogue
Album Golden
Single Stop Me from Falling
Date 6 Apr 2018
Tracklist 16 Songs
Duration 5 Minutes
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℗ 2018 Kylie Minogue/Darenote Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited

Kylie Minogue
About Kylie Minogue
On the one hand, in the pop music arena, worldbeaters such as Kylie Minogue are few and far between. Singers and performers of her stature and popularity rarely maintain their power for as long as she has. Her streaks of number one singles in both Australia and the U.K. are nearly insurmountable. And yet, on the other hand, her inability to really crack open the American pop market over the course of her career is a story that is heard all too often from groups hailing from nations as pop powerful as Australia and the U.K. Eventually, with the hugely successful “Can’t Get You Out of My Head,” Kylie would rattle the American pop psyche, reminding the rather insular scene that the bubbly girl who had first made waves with the 1987 cover of “The Loco-Motion” had developed into a stylish, experienced, and able pop performer with a clear agenda — both musically and visually — and the chops to match. To focus on Minogue’s American problem would only be looking at a small fraction of the larger story.
Born in Melbourne, Australia on May 28, 1968, Kylie began acting in television dramas at the age of 12. Although the small roles brought her a fair bit of exposure, it was her 1986 debut on the insanely popular soap Neighbours that catapulted her to stardom. In Australia, Minogue’s role as the tomboy Charlene won her a number of awards, but in Britain, the exploits of that character and her love interest — played by the actor Jason Donovan — attracted record numbers of television viewers, and made the Aussie drama one of the most watched shows in the U.K. Understanding Minogue’s megastar potential, as well as her ability to vamp and sing, Mushroom Records signed her to a contract in 1987. Her success was immediate, as her debut single, “The Loco-Motion” (a cover of the 1962 Little Eva hit) rocketed to number one.
With Australia firmly behind her move to pop music, Kylie headed to England and partnered with the production team of Stock, Aitken & Waterman. The first track that the group released with Kylie, “I Should Be So Lucky,” would dominate the Australian charts, as well as a number of charts in Europe. Her pop status was further consolidated with her debut album, 1988’s Kylie. While she was blazing a trail across the globe, her success in America at first seemed possible. MTV was showing “The Loco-Motion” with regularity, and it even hit the number three spot on the Billboard chart, while “I Should Be So Lucky” managed to make a few waves as well. But it was not to be, as the American market seemed to balk, not releasing anything after her second album until 2001. As the ’80s drew to a close, Minogue’s stature worldwide only grew. Her duet with Jason Donovan, “Especially for You,” sold over a million copies in 1989, even while being critically panned. A second full-length, Enjoy Yourself, was also released that year, along with a handful of singles that managed to further dominate charts in both hemispheres. In the midst of this pop success, Minogue also managed to appear in her first feature film, The Delinquents.
Many things would change for her in the frenetic decade of the ’90s. She began to trade in her cutesy, bubblegum pop image for a more mature one, and in turn, a more sexual one. Her relationship with the late frontman of INXS, Michael Hutchence, and her shedding of the near-virginal façade that dominated her first two albums, began to have an effect, not only on how the press and her fans treated her, but in the evolution of her music. Released in 1990, Rhythm of Love, its worldwide hit single, “Better the Devil You Know,” and its follow-up, “Shocked,” took her out of the stifling world of teen pop and brought her into the more adult world of dance music and nightclubs. Her career was not without its ebbs, however. As she began to flex a bit more creative muscle, her relationship with Stock, Aitken & Waterman began to grow tiresome. Their sound had dominated for a number of years on both sides of the
Atlantic (America seemed to take more to their other star, Rick Astley), but the scene was beginning to move on, and Kylie’s fourth and final album with Mushroom and the production team, Let’s Get to It, would sell disappointingly. Freed from the yoke of both a production team and a mainstream pop label, Minogue began a long trend of collaborating with up-and-coming and hot producers and songwriters, which not only allowed her to roll with cultural trends and stay current in an extremely fussy and fickle genre, but allowed her to branch out into new areas of performance unheard of by most pop singers of her style.
Now signed to the dance label Deconstruction, Minogue released a much more mature and stylish dance-pop record in 1994’s Kylie Minogue. The reviews were not all positive, but the desire to show growth and maturity was evident in spades. The singles “Confide in Me” and “Put Yourself in My Place” were slicker, more stylish, and less hooky than anything she had previously recorded. While the record sold well and Kylie made more movie appearances (1994’s Street Fighter and 1996’s Bio-Dome), the next couple of years were fairly quiet except for the hit single (and seemingly unlikely collaboration) with Nick Cave entitled “Where the Wild Roses Grow.” A dark ballad (with a video based on the Millais painting Ophelia) about a murder — the duet featured Cave as the murderer singing his point of view, and Minogue as the victim singing hers — the single was widely successful in Australia and the U.K, earning Kylie a new set of fans and a new sense of respect for the diminutive Minogue from more arty quarters.
Her eagerness to expand on this collaboration led to the work that would make up her 1997 album, Impossible Princess. While the lead single, the more rock-tinged “Some Kind of Bliss,” was the result of working with James Dean Bradfield and Sean Moore of Manic Street Preachers, the rest of the album (for the most part) consisted of further collaborations (David Seaman, for instance) and efforts to expand on the dance-pop that was Kylie’s bread and butter. The album, soon retitled Kylie Minogue in England due to the death of Princess Diana, was successful, but her attempt at developing her sound met firm resistance critically, with many radio stations and journalists writing her off, figuring her career had run its course. Obviously, this was not to be, as Kylie toured the world for the album, selling out stadiums (as usual) and appearing in a number of specialty concerts over the next two years.
In 1999, having been dropped from Deconstruction but signing to Parlophone, Minogue shed the indie influences that guided Impossible Princess and set about creating dance-pop that was more disco than anything in her catalog. The resulting album, Light Years, and its lead single, “Spinning Around,” were huge successes, bringing her critical acclaim for returning to what many considered her calling (big pop and dance numbers) and winning herself a new generation of fans, then currently worked up by the renaissance of pure dance-pop that was the order of the day at the onset of the 21st century.
Her place in pop music history would be consolidated in 2001, and she would be reintroduced to America after more than a decade as well. That year’s album, Fever, and its massively successful (and aptly titled) single, “Can’t Get You Out of My Head,” were the first to be released in the U.S. since Enjoy Yourself, and the single managed to chart stateside at number three. Even the Grammys began to recognize Minogue, as the first of many nominations (eventually she would win for “Come into My World” in 2002) finally happened that year. While her next album, 2003’s Body Language, was not as big a seller as Fever, it was another successful attempt at broadening her sound (with electro and hip-hop for instance) and winning more fans. A greatest-hits package (her second), 2004’s Ultimate Kylie, acted as a catalyst for her worldwide Showgirl tour, but that was to be set aside as a diagnosis of breast cancer sidelined her.
In 2005, she underwent successful surgery and follow-up chemotherapy. Eventually making a full recovery, Minogue started back slowly, but would eventually finish her Showgirl tour, and in 2007 she released her tenth album, X. While some were put off by her lack of introspection on the record, it was well received and sold well enough to convince Kylie that 2009 was the time to undertake her first tour of the United States. Although limited to a few dates and select cities, the North American jaunt was a rousing success, and an Internet-exclusive album of the New York show was made available at the end of that year. As X was making waves in 2008, Kylie was also honored by Queen Elizabeth with an OBE (Order of the British Empire) for her services to music. Kylie released her 11th full-length, Aphrodite (a set executive produced by Stuart Price), in 2010. That same year she guested on songs by Hurts (“Devotion”) and Taio Cruz (“Higher”), and released a holiday EP titled A Kylie Christmas.
In 2012, she celebrated her 25th year in the music biz with a greatest-hits collection (The Best of Kylie Minogue), a new single (“Timebomb”), an exhaustive singles collection (K25), and an album of her hits reimagined for a small band and orchestra (The Abbey Road Sessions). She also found time to restart her acting career, with an appearance in Jack & Diane and a leading role in the acclaimed Holy Motors. Not one to take a rest, Kylie spent a busy 2013 appearing on Laura Pausini’s single “Limpido,” signing with Jay-Z’s Roc Nation management firm, and recording a new album. In early 2014, she began appearing as a coach on the U.K. version of The Voice. Her 12th album, Kiss Me Once, which featured songwriting and production from the likes of Pharrell, Sia, and MNDR, was released in early spring of 2014. Soon after, she hit the road on an ambitious concert tour that took her from Istanbul to Madrid to Perth, with many stops along the way. The tour was documented on the 2015 CD/DVD Kiss Me Once Live at the SSE Hydro. She kept up her breakneck pace that year, appearing on Giorgio Moroder’s single “Right Here, Right Now” and hitting the top of the dance charts with a spot on Nervo’s “The Other Boys.” She had roles in the ABC Family show Young & Hungry and the film San Andreas, released an EP with producer Fernando Garibay titled Kylie + Garibay and finally, in November, ended the year with her first full holiday album, Kylie Christmas. In the summer of 2016, Kylie returned with a contribution to the Absolutely Fabulous movie, the theme song “This Wheel’s on Fire.”
After signing with BMG, Kylie returned in 2018 with her 14th album, the Nashville-influenced Golden, which included the country-tinged single “Dancing.” 
By Chris True