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How Drake Redefined Global Hip-Hop

He started as a kid on a Canadian teen drama. He ended up with more charted songs than anyone in Billboard history. Here’s how Aubrey Drake Graham changed everything.

There are artists who dominate their era. And then there are artists who rewrite the rules entirely. Drake is the second kind.

Born Aubrey Drake Graham on October 24, 1986, in Toronto, Drake is credited with popularizing R&B sensibilities in hip-hop through rap-singing, and journalists have long referred to him as one of the greatest rappers of all time. That reputation wasn’t handed to him. It was built, methodically and relentlessly, over two decades of work that refused to stay inside any one lane.

Here’s how he did it.

He Came From Nowhere — And Then Came From Everywhere

Drake’s big break came in 2009 when he dropped So Far Gone, a mixtape that included the hit single “Best I Ever Had.” The track quickly gained mainstream attention, catching the ear of Lil Wayne, who invited Drake to join his Young Money label. That moment changed everything. He became the first unsigned act from Canada to have his music video played on BET, a small milestone that pointed to something much larger coming.

In 2010, Drake released his debut studio album, Thank Me Later. It debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and featured hits like “Over” and “Find Your Love.” His introspective lyrics, emotional vulnerability, and melodic flow set him apart from other rappers, establishing him as a unique voice in the industry from day one.

He Made Vulnerability a Superpower

This is perhaps Drake’s most lasting contribution to hip-hop. Before him, emotional openness in rap was a liability. After him, it was a blueprint.

Drake brought an emotional and vulnerable style of rapping that was a departure from the genre’s traditional toughness. His music paved the way for artists such as Lil Uzi Vert, Juice WRLD, and Post Malone. Think about how different the sonic landscape of the past decade would look without those three names alone. Every rapper who sings hooks today owes something to what Drake normalized.

He Turned Toronto Into a Global Music Capital

Before Drake, Toronto was not a city that defined global pop culture. After Drake, it was impossible to ignore. He popularized the term “The 6” for his hometown and helped bring entirely new musical styles to a global audience. His success opened doors for other Canadian artists, solidifying Toronto as a major player in the global music scene. The Weeknd, PartyNextDoor, NAV, a whole pipeline of talent followed Drake out of that city. He built the runway.

He Made Genres Irrelevant

Drake didn’t just work within hip-hop. He absorbed everything around it and fed it back to the world. He blends rap, R&B, dancehall, Afrobeat, and UK drill, creating music that crosses borders and defies easy categorization. His collaborations with Wizkid and Kyla on “One Dance” introduced Afrobeat rhythms to mainstream listeners worldwide. His embrace of UK drill and dancehall demonstrated an ongoing drive to innovate and celebrate sounds that mainstream American hip-hop had largely ignored. In 2022, he dropped an entire dance music album with Honestly, Nevermind. Critics scratched their heads. Fans streamed it anyway. That’s the Drake effect.

The Numbers Don’t Lie — They Stagger

No conversation about Drake’s legacy is complete without the statistics, and the statistics are almost absurd. He holds Billboard Hot 100 records for the most top 10 singles, the most top 40 singles, the most charted songs overall, and the most consecutive weeks on the chart. He has 14 Billboard 200 number-one albums, a joint record among male soloists. Billboard named him the Artist of the Decade for the 2010s, the highest-grossing hip-hop touring artist, and the fourth greatest pop star of the 21st century. By 2025, he had surpassed 115 billion total streams on Spotify, a milestone no other artist had reached. He is the only musician in history with more than 300 songs on the Billboard Hot 100.

What It All Means

Drake didn’t just have a great career. He shifted the entire center of gravity of popular music. He proved that a kid from Toronto who had never been through the traditional hip-hop origin story could not only compete with the genre’s giants but outlast them on nearly every measurable level. He made rap more emotional, more global, more genre-fluid, and more commercially dominant than it had ever been before. Whether you love him or not, the music industry of 2026 is shaped in his image. That’s not a small thing. That’s a legacy.

Hannah Harper: The American Idol Winner You Need to Know Right Now

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Hannah Harper embarked on her musical journey at just 9 years old. Growing up in Southeast Missouri, she was part of a family steeped in the rich traditions of bluegrass gospel music, with the legacy of Bob Lewis and The Bob Lewis Family as her foundation. This musical heritage, passed down through generations, set the stage for Hannah’s early exposure to music.

Traveling with her family, The Harper Family, honed her musical talents and developed a profound passion for songwriting and music ministry. Taking a position as worship leader at a small church in Missouri brought a new chapter in her life — it’s where she met her husband, Devon. They married in 2018 and soon began building a family. Now a mom of three little boys, Hannah and Devon live a quaint life in a little white house in the woods, balancing family, faith, and music.

Last night, Hannah Harper was crowned the winner of American Idol Season 24. If you haven’t been following along, you’re about to want to catch up fast — because this woman’s story is one of the most compelling we’ve seen come out of that show in years.

Here are five things you need to know.

1. She’s from Willow Springs, Missouri, and bluegrass gospel is in her blood.

Hannah Harper, 25, grew up in Southeast Missouri in a family rooted in the traditions of bluegrass gospel music. Her musical foundation traces back to the legacy of Bob Lewis and The Bob Lewis Family. Before she ever stepped in front of an Idol camera, she was already performing as part of the Harper Collective — a family band featuring her parents Katrina and Gaylon, her brothers Dillon and Dalton, and Dalton’s wife Makeena. That group won the SPBGMA International Band Contest back in 2010 and recorded two albums on Pisgah Ridge and Crossroads Records. This is not a newcomer to music. This is someone who has been doing the work for a very long time.

2. She made history — and it matters.

Hannah Harper is the first female country artist to win American Idol since Carrie Underwood took home the title back in 2005. That’s 21 years. Think about that for a moment. And the fact that Underwood herself was sitting at the judges’ table when Harper walked through the door? That’s a full-circle moment that couldn’t have been scripted better.

3. Her audition song “String Cheese” broke the internet — and broke Carrie Underwood.

When Harper performed her original song “String Cheese” — written about her personal experience with postpartum depression — Underwood was moved to tears. The song, which she released on May 11, 2025, was inspired by a moment with her youngest son when she was struggling on the couch, deep in a difficult stretch, and he kept asking her to open his string cheese. That small, ordinary moment became a spiritual turning point for her. Her audition video has since hit over one million views on YouTube. Mothers flooded the comments. That kind of connection doesn’t come from talent alone — it comes from truth.

4. She’s a stay-at-home mom of three boys who married a fishing addict.

Before Idol, Hannah Harper’s full-time job was motherhood. She and her husband Devon Mendenhall — married in April 2018 — have three sons, the youngest of whom was just one year old when she auditioned in the fall of 2025. Devon held things together at home while Hannah pursued this dream, and she has spoken about him throughout the season with deep gratitude. She told USA TODAY after her win: “All the sacrifices have been made to make this happen. Had it not been for my husband… that poor man has sacrificed his entire life.” Devon, for his part, describes himself in his Instagram bio simply as a “fishing addict.” Love it.

5. She is already on the road — and her 2026 tour dates are stacked.

Don’t sleep on seeing this woman live. Hannah Harper has a full slate of shows already booked across the country this summer and fall, including a set at Dollywood on September 30th, a run at the Walhalla Performing Arts Center on October 9th and 10th, and a co-headlining date with Mo Pitney in Pelham, Tennessee on September 27th. Earlier in the summer she’ll hit the Ozark Folk Center State Park in Mountain View, Arkansas (June 5), Rudy Fest 2026 in Morehead, Kentucky (June 25), and the Backbone Bluegrass Festival in Strawberry Point, Iowa (July 24). There’s even a date at Kosair Live in Louisville on July 18th on a bill that includes Dan + Shay, Bailey Zimmerman, and Gabby Barrett. The momentum is real. Get your tickets.

Hannah Harper’s win last night wasn’t a surprise to anyone who had been paying attention. It was the inevitable conclusion of a season that gave a stay-at-home mom from Missouri the stage she always deserved. Remember the name.

How to Use YouTube to Build Your Music Career

YouTube is the world’s largest music discovery platform. With over 2.7 billion active users in 2026 and 60 percent of listeners finding new artists there first, it is the one platform every independent artist needs to take seriously.

And the good news is that growing on YouTube as a musician is more achievable than most people think. You just need to know how to approach it. Here is a step-by-step guide.

1. Claim your Official Artist Channel

Your Official Artist Channel is your home base on YouTube. It consolidates all your music, including uploads from distributors, into one professional profile. It signals to listeners and to YouTube’s algorithm that you are a serious artist. To get one, you need to distribute your music through a partner like DistroKid, TuneCore, or CD Baby and meet YouTube’s basic eligibility requirements.

Once your channel is live, treat it like a storefront. Add a high-quality banner, a clear profile photo, a well-written About section, and links to all your social platforms. First impressions on YouTube carry real weight, and a polished channel makes new visitors far more likely to stay and explore.

2. Build a content strategy across three pillars

The fastest-growing musician channels in 2026 follow a three-pillar content approach. Think of it this way:

  • Discovery content (40% of your uploads): YouTube Shorts, covers of popular songs, trend-based clips, and anything designed to reach new listeners who have never heard of you.
  • Engagement content (40%): Behind-the-scenes footage, songwriting sessions, studio breakdowns, gear tours, and day-in-the-life vlogs that build genuine connection with people already following you.
  • Conversion content (20%): Full music videos, official audio releases, and live performances that turn curious viewers into committed fans who follow you everywhere else.

Artists who combine Shorts with long-form content consistently see 20 to 35 percent higher cross-platform engagement than artists who only upload music videos.

3. Use YouTube Shorts as a discovery engine

Shorts are the single most powerful discovery tool on YouTube right now. A strong 10 to 20 second clip from a song, a studio moment, or a live performance can introduce you to thousands of new listeners overnight. Think of every Short as a trailer for the full experience of your music.

The strategy that works best is using Shorts to test hooks before a full release. Put the most compelling moment of a new song into a Short, watch how audiences respond, and use that data to inform how you promote the full track. YouTube’s algorithm is actively pushing Shorts to new audiences, and monetization on Shorts is now available for artists who qualify through the Partner Program.

As of January 2026, YouTube withdrew its streaming data from all Billboard US and global charts. That means YouTube streams now matter entirely on their own terms, which makes building a genuine YouTube audience more important than ever for artists who want to track real impact.

4. Master your metadata and SEO

YouTube is a search engine as much as a video platform. The way you title, describe, and tag your videos determines whether new listeners ever find them. Here is what works in 2026:

  • Titles: Always include your song name, your artist name, and the version type (official video, live session, acoustic, etc.). Keep it clear and specific.
  • Descriptions: Write a genuine description of the video, include your most important links at the top, and add a standardized block of credits and social links at the bottom of every upload.
  • Tags: Connect your music to related artists, genres, and moods. Use a mix of broad and specific terms to help the algorithm understand who should be watching your videos.
  • Thumbnails: Create custom thumbnails using Canva or Adobe Express. Thumbnails are often the deciding factor between a click and a scroll-past.

5. Use Premieres to build event energy around releases

YouTube Premieres let you schedule a video to go live at a specific time, with a countdown and a live chat that opens before the video starts. Fans gather in the chat lobby, build excitement together, and you can join the conversation in real time. For major releases, Premieres turn a simple upload into a genuine event. They drive watch time in the first 24 hours, which YouTube’s algorithm weighs heavily when deciding how widely to recommend a video.

6. Go live regularly

Live streams are one of the most effective ways to build a loyal community on YouTube. You can perform songs, answer fan questions, take listeners behind the scenes of a recording session, or simply hang out and talk about music. Live content generates Super Chat revenue, builds real-time connection, and signals to YouTube that your channel is active and engaging. Even a 30-minute casual stream once a month makes a meaningful difference in channel growth and audience retention.

YouTube now integrates live event listings through Bandsintown directly on your channel. Keep your tour dates updated so that listeners discovering you on YouTube can immediately find out where you are playing next.

7. Study your analytics and act on them

YouTube Studio gives you detailed data on watch time, audience retention, click-through rates, geographic breakdown, and which videos are driving new subscribers. Review your analytics every week. Find out which videos hold attention the longest and build more content in that direction. If a Short is pulling in listeners from a specific country or city, that is a market to prioritize in your promotion and touring plans. The artists who grow fastest on YouTube are the ones who treat their data as a creative tool, not just a report card.

8. Turn on every monetization option available to you

YouTube offers multiple revenue streams for artists in 2026: ad revenue on long-form videos and Shorts, Super Thanks on uploads, Super Chat during live streams, and Channel Memberships that give fans access to exclusive perks. If you distribute through TuneCore, DistroKid, Symphonic, or similar services, you are likely already eligible for most of these. Make sure Content ID is set up correctly so that any use of your music across YouTube generates royalties back to you, including user videos that feature your songs in the background.

9. Collaborate to accelerate growth

YouTube now lets you add up to five creators as collaborators on a single video, with the upload appearing on all of your channels simultaneously. For musicians, this is a powerful tool. A collaboration with another artist in a related genre introduces both of you to each other’s audiences instantly, and the combined watch time and engagement tells the algorithm that something worth promoting is happening.

10. Post consistently and stay patient

Consistency is the most important factor in YouTube growth, and it is the one most artists underestimate. Building a publishing schedule and sticking to it, whether that is one Short per week and one long-form video per month, signals to YouTube that your channel is worth recommending. Growth on YouTube is often slow at first and then accelerates sharply once the algorithm begins to understand your audience. The artists who break through are the ones who keep showing up.

You do not need expensive equipment to start. Many of the fastest-growing musician channels in 2026 are built entirely on smartphone footage. What matters is consistency, authenticity, and a genuine connection with your audience. Start with what you have and improve as you grow.

Joan Jett and the Blackhearts Return to the UK for First Headline Dates in Over 15 Years

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Joan Jett and the Blackhearts are heading back to the UK this summer for their first headline dates there in more than 15 years, with stops in Glasgow, Leeds, and Manchester anchoring a run that stretches across 2 continents and opens at BottleRock Napa Valley on May 23.

The tour carries added weight. It’s Jett’s first since the death of Thommy Price, who drummed for the Blackhearts for nearly 30 years between 1986 and 2016, appearing on 8 of their albums. He was 68 when he died.

The BottleRock opener puts Jett on a bill alongside Foo Fighters, Kool and the Gang, Men at Work, and Bush before she heads to Europe for Sweden Rock Festival on June 5 and a stop in Tilloloy, France. In between, she plays the America250PA Commonwealth Concert Series in Hershey, Pennsylvania on June 13. The UK headline run follows in July.

Joan Jett’s 2026 Tour Dates:

5/23 – Napa, CA @ BottleRock Napa Valley 2026

6/5 – Solvesborg, Sweden @ Sweden Rock Festival 2026

6/13 – Hershey, PA @ America250PA Commonwealth Concert Series

6/28 – Tilloloy, France @ Retro c Trop

7/2 – Glasgow, UK @ O2 Academy Glasgow

7/4 – Manchester, UK @ Manchester Academy

7/5 – Leeds, UK @ O2 Academy Leeds

Eminem’s Rare ‘Infinite’ LP Shatters Records at Goldin’s Music Memorabilia Auction

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Goldin’s Music Memorabilia Auction closed May 6 with a string of record-breaking results anchored by a copy of Eminem’s 1996 debut ‘Infinite’, one of only 250 signed copies released by WEB Entertainment, which sold for $104,920, the highest price ever paid publicly for any Eminem item. A sealed CD of ‘The Slim Shady LP’ from 1999 added a second record, fetching $19,993 as the highest price ever paid for any Eminem compact disc.

The hip-hop category produced another all-time high with a sealed copy of The Notorious B.I.G.’s ‘Ready to Die’, graded at a perfect AMG Mint 10 and featuring the original “If You Don’t Know, Now You Know” hype sticker, selling for $27,313, the highest price ever paid publicly for any CD.

Kurt Cobain items drove strong rock results. A self-released Nirvana ‘Bleach’ demo tape from the 1980s, with “Nirvana” handwritten by Cobain, sold for $19,520. A handwritten concert setlist from June 15, 1991, accompanied by a ticket stub, realized $17,690. A custom black fedora worn by Michael Jackson in a Pepsi commercial circa 1987-88 rounded out the top results, selling for $28,670.

Murray and the Movers Go Darker and More Cinematic With New Single “Dirty Laundry”

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“Dirty Laundry” doesn’t announce itself loudly. The new single from Murray and the Movers settles in slowly, a slow-burning blues-rock cut built on mood, tension, and deliberate restraint, with Lizzie Mack’s voice moving between raw intimacy and controlled power while Murray Cook’s minimal guitar work holds the whole thing in careful suspension.

The track leans into shadow and suggestion rather than declaration, letting atmosphere do the work. It’s cinematic in the truest sense, blues, country, garage rock, and classic soul filtered through a distinctly filmic sensibility that makes it an obvious candidate for film and TV placement.

A second version, “Squeaky Clean,” arrives May 22, pushing the same song into sharp-edged rockabilly territory. Where “Dirty Laundry” simmers, “Squeaky Clean” accelerates, and together the 2 versions offer a deliberately contrasting pair that shows the full range of what Murray and the Movers can do with a single piece of material.

Following the releases, Mack and Cook head to Spain in summer 2026 for a run of intimate duo shows, bringing their stripped-back chemistry to close, atmospheric rooms from Madrid to Barcelona.

Video: NOFUN! Brought Raw Indie Rock Energy to Glasgow’s TRNSMT Festival in 2025

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On July 11, 2025, NOFUN! took the stage at Glasgow Green on the opening day of TRNSMT Festival, sharing a bill with headliners 50 Cent, Biffy Clyro, and Snow Patrol, and delivered a raw, energetic indie rock set that held its own against one of the UK’s most prominent festival lineups.

Gracie Abrams Announces Third Album ‘Daughter from Hell’ With Lead Single “Hit the Wall” This Thursday

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Gracie Abrams has announced ‘Daughter from Hell’, her third studio album, arriving July 17 via Interscope Records. Written and produced alongside longtime collaborator Aaron Dessner, the album follows ‘The Secret of Us’ and marks a deliberate new direction. Lead single “Hit the Wall” drops this Thursday at 5 pm PST / 8 pm EST, with pre-order available now.

Speaking with Vogue at the 2026 MET Gala, Abrams described the single with the kind of directness that defines her best work. “It’s the introduction to this new chapter, and I feel grateful and relieved that this is the introduction,” she said. “It feels embodied and that feels good. I’m excited for it to belong to everyone else.”

‘The Secret of Us’, released in June 2024, established Abrams at a new commercial level. The album debuted at number 2 on the Billboard 200 and reached number 1 in the UK, Australia, and the Netherlands. “Close to You” marked her first solo Billboard Hot 100 debut, while deluxe track “That’s So True” climbed to number 6 on the chart and entered Spotify’s Billions Club with over 1.5 billion streams. The album also produced “us.” featuring Taylor Swift, which earned Abrams a GRAMMY nomination for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance.

Her debut album ‘Good Riddance’ (2023) earned a Best New Artist nomination at the 66th Annual GRAMMY Awards and sold out its headline tour in under an hour. She subsequently joined Taylor Swift as opening act on select dates of the Eras Tour, then spent 2024 and 2025 on back-to-back world tours behind ‘The Secret of Us’, including her first solo North American arena run.

Beyond music, Abrams recently became a house ambassador for Chanel and makes her acting debut in the upcoming A24 film Please, directed by Halina Reijn.

Video: Ariana Grande’s Historic 2019 Coachella Headline Set Is Streaming Now

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Ariana Grande’s 2019 Coachella headline set, the one that made her the youngest artist to ever top the festival’s main stage, is streaming now at OnlyLiveConcert.com. The performance moved through hits from ‘Sweetener’ and ‘thank u, next’ alongside a surprise appearance from Justin Bieber for a live duet of “Sorry,” his first performance in 2 years, all backed by a full orchestra and production that matched the scale of the moment.

Brad Paisley Launches Never-Ending ‘Tacklebox’ Project and Announces the Brad Paisley Live Tour

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Brad Paisley has a new project, a new tour, and a television appearance all landing in the same week. The Grammy-winning country superstar has launched ‘Tacklebox’, an ongoing release series drawing from decades of unreleased material alongside newly written songs rooted in the sounds of 90s country. The first track, “Fallin’,” is out now across all digital platforms.

Paisley describes ‘Tacklebox’ as open-ended by design. “I see this project as never-ending,” he says. “It’s almost like the fans have a direct link to my Dropbox or to a playlist that never ends.” The material spans songs written as far back as the 90s alongside new tracks inspired by the sounds of Alan Jackson, Brooks and Dunn, Alabama, George Strait, and Garth Brooks. Recording took place at The Castle in Franklin, TN, the same studio where several of his earliest albums were made. Additional music from ‘Tacklebox’ drops this week.

Tonight, Paisley performs “I’m Gonna Miss Her” with American Idol contestant Lucas Leon during the live finale on ABC at 8 pm, streaming on Disney+ and available the next day on Hulu. Paisley wrote the song in 1995 during his senior year at Belmont University. It became his third number 1 single in 2002, part of a career total now sitting at 25 number 1 songs. Last week, Belmont University presented Honorary Doctorates to both Paisley and his wife Kimberly Williams-Paisley in recognition of their philanthropic work in Nashville.

The Brad Paisley Live Tour launches August 27 in Bridgeport, Connecticut, wrapping around previously announced dates and festival appearances, and following his European shows in June. Jake Worthington opens select dates, with additional special guests to be announced. Promoted by Live Nation, presales begin tomorrow, Tuesday May 12, with VIP options available.

Brad Paisley Live 2026 Tour Dates:

Aug 27 – Bridgeport, CT @ Hartford Healthcare Amphitheater

Aug 28 – Boston, MA @ MGM Music Hall at Fenway

Aug 29 – Bangor, ME @ Maine Savings Amphitheater

Sep 2 – Fargo, ND @ Scheels Arena

Sep 4 – Milwaukee, WI @ BMO Pavilion

Sep 17 – Estero, FL @ Hertz Arena

Sep 18 – Ft. Lauderdale, FL @ FTL War Memorial Auditorium

Sep 19 – St. Augustine, FL @ St. Augustine Amphitheatre

Sep 25 – West Springfield, MA @ The Big E

Sep 26 – Richmond, VA @ Allianz Amphitheater at Riverfront

Oct 8 – Houston, TX @ The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion

Oct 9 – Corpus Christi, TX @ Hilliard Center Arena

Oct 10 – Ennis, TX @ Stars of Texas Music Festival