logo
R&B/Hip-Hop Fresh Picks of the Week: Cynthia Erivo, Lexa Gates, Josh Levi, Sammy Virji & More

R&B/Hip-Hop Fresh Picks of the Week: Cynthia Erivo, Lexa Gates, Josh Levi, Sammy Virji & More

Yahoo11-06-2025

The 2025 BET Awards dominated the weekend with a remarkable — but incredibly long — show that featured standout performances from breakout stars like Leon Thomas and Ravyn Lenae, as well as stirring tributes to Ultimate Icon honorees Mariah Carey, Snoop Dogg, Jamie Foxx and Kirk Franklin.
More from Billboard
Forever No. 1: Sly & the Family Stone's 'Everyday People'
DJ Akademiks Denies Taking Payola From Drake During Kendrick Battle
Raekwon and Ghostface Killah Release Trailer for 'Only Built 4 Cuban Linx' Documentary
Kendrick Lamar was the night's biggest winner, taking home five trophies from 10 nominations, including album of the year for GNX and best male hip-hop artist. The Compton MC surprised everyone by showing up in person to accept his album of the year award, making for one of the ceremony's most thrilling moments. Chris Brown was the only other artist to win multiple awards at the BET Awards' 25th iteration, taking home best male R&B/pop artist and the viewer's choice award for his hit single 'Residuals.'
In addition to the four sprawling Ultimate Icon tributes, BET also opted to split their in memoriam segment into thirds. For the first section, Sinners star Miles Caton joined Grammy winner Lucky Daye and Grammy-nominated crooner Luke James for a soulful Quincy Jones tribute. Shortly after, Andra Day delivered a haunting rendition of 'Killing Me Softly With His Song' to honor the late Roberta Flack. Near the ceremony's close, rising country star Brittney Spencer took to the stage for a show-stopping cover of the late Angie Stone's 'No More Rain (In This Cloud).'
Both performers at Monday night's show (June 9), Lil Wayne and Amerie made headlines for non-awards-related news. Weezy, who recently dropped a remix of 'Banned From NO' with Nicki Minaj, dominated the weekend's music conversation with his new Tha Carter VI album, which was largely met with a tepid reception from fans and critics alike. Amerie also faced a bit of the Internet's wrath thanks to her spotty NPR Tiny Desk '1 Thing' performance, which she quickly came back from via two performances of her signature hit during BET Week.
With Fresh Picks, Billboard aims to highlight some of the best and most interesting new sounds across R&B and hip-hop — from Cynthia Erivo's big solo swing to Sammy Virji and Skepta's eclectic new collaboration. Be sure to check out this week's Fresh Picks in our Spotify playlist below.
Somehow, between racking up Oscar nominations as Elphaba in Wicked, guest-starring in Poker Face and hosting the 2025 Tonys, Cynthia Erivo found the time to craft her lush, 20-track sophomore studio LP, I Forgive You. A remarkably subtle record given her reputation for rafter-rattling belts, I Forgive You reaches a scintillating peak about midway through with the soulful standout 'Play The Woman.'
Co-written by Erivo, Justin Tranter and Will Wells, 'Play the Woman' finds the Emmy, Grammy and Tony-winning powerhouse opting for a more restrained vocal performance as she paints the guitar-inflected soundscape with vivid pictures of queer love and desire. 'I could run these hands of mine down the map of your spine/ Feel how your heat against my fingertips could make the blood in me rush,' she coos, injecting in each phrase with healthy doses of vulnerability and flirtatiousness. — KYLE DENIS
Garage producer Sammy Virji samples Brandy's 'I Wanna Be Down' and Kid Cudi's 'Day & Night' and taps the legendary Skepta to provide a barfest to give us an absolute banger for the summer. Big Smoke's hook is infectious, and his sharp verses show why he's one of the most versatile rappers doing it today. What an absolute banger. — ANGEL DIAZ
After spending the last few years pouring into other artists as a writer, Sabrina Claudio turned the mirror back on herself with her freeing Fall in Love With Her project. 'Detoxing' finds Sabs looking to flush away the toxins of an ex who cut her deep. Guitar strings flood the background as Claudio's potent vocals shine through, compared to the more airy texture displayed on other parts of the LP. She told Forbes that 'Detoxing' invokes feelings of nostalgia tied to Coldplay and Avril Lavigne tracks. — MICHAEL SAPONARA
A silky, heartfelt ode to infatuation and emotional intimacy, Jon Vinyl's 'Dopamine' is drenched in warmth and sensual energy. From the jump, he lays it all out — this is about being captivated not just by physical beauty, but by a connection that feels both grounding and euphoric. With lines like 'She's a masterpiece, I swear I need it all' and 'My dopamine, the fix I'm looking for,' Vinyl positions this love interest as both his muse and medicine. Lyrically, he blends vulnerability with reassurance, promising presence and protection. 'Dopamine' feels like a late-night conversation wrapped in candlelight, where both people are letting their guards down and simply feeling. — CHRISTOPHER CLAXTON
Fresh off his run as an opener on FLO's recently wrapped Access All Areas tour, rising R&B star Josh Levi has unleashed 'Don't Go' from his forthcoming debut studio album, Hydraulic. Built around an interpolation of Destiny's Child's 'No, No, No,' Levi pays tribute to his Houston roots while offering fresh, uptempo R&B across Tone's sleek production. 'Them other n—as can't hold her/ She like her kisses down low, Kelly Rowland/ She got my game controller/ She wanna rewind, never fast-forward,' he sing-raps in the second verse, riffing on DC4's staccato vocal approach and name-checking OG member Kelly Rowland. — K.D.
Produced by Chrissianity, Far Rock and Upstate connect for this unorthodox street single with a hook that pays homage to OJ da Juiceman. Flee Lord, Conway and Eto all deliver stellar verses for this track dedicated to digital scales. Make sure you tare it before weighing up. — A.D.
Billboard's Hip-Hop Rookie of the Month for March jets into her next era with the piano-driven 'Latency.' Gates taps into how people are lusting for love, but don't dive in to save face and risk being embarrassed — even when they think the connection is palpable. The 24-year-old described the intoxicating track as a 'sexy fantasy of a love left on delay,' which was born out of a situation of her being surrounded by rich old men. 'It's a tale as old as time,' she says. Watch Lexa live out the fantasy of a true romance, taking her from NYC to the Hamptons in the visual. — M.S.
'All Wins All Year' is a triumphant anthem designed to fuel confidence and ambition. Teaming up with R&B heavyweight Eric Bellinger, rising stars SYX, Steven G, and Dom Belli trade verses with ease, showcasing a collective hunger for success and a refusal to settle for anything less. The track radiates self-assurance and camaraderie as each artist boasts about their come-ups while uplifting their circle along the way. 'All Wins All Year' is more than a flex: It's a celebration of perseverance, loyalty and the unstoppable momentum that comes when you move with purpose and surround yourself with winners. — C.C.
Best of Billboard
Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1
Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits
H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Benson Boone's Favorite Hobby Proves He's a Thrill Seeker On and Off the Stage
Benson Boone's Favorite Hobby Proves He's a Thrill Seeker On and Off the Stage

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Benson Boone's Favorite Hobby Proves He's a Thrill Seeker On and Off the Stage

"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Here's what you'll learn when you read this article: 'Beautiful Things' singer Benson Boone has a new album out called American Heart. The 22-year-old Grammy nominee didn't discover his singing talent until his junior year of high school. When he's not making music, Boone spends his time cliff jumping and enjoying a sober lifestyle. If his platinum-certified debut album from 2024 is any indication, Benson Boone is about to crash the charts again. His new album, American Heart, released Friday. The 22-year-old musician has previously said the 10-track record is heavily influenced by Bruce Springsteen and Americana music. He's out to prove there's much more to his artistry than the ubiquitous hit 'Beautiful Things.' The No. 2 single propelled Boone to superstardom and helped him earn a 2025 Grammy nomination for Best New Artist. 'I think I'm getting to the point where I just want people to know that there's more than just that song,' he told Rolling Stone in March. 'I think I'm a little past that point. But of course I still love the song. I'm still proud of it. And I'll be performing it for a while, so I hope that feeling sticks around.' It remains to be seen if any American Heart singles—such as 'Mystical Magical', which features interpolations from the late singer and actor Olivia Newton-John—will reach the same heights. However, Boone is undoubtedly one of the biggest names in music following his recent meteoric rise. Here are a few things you might not know about Boone's rapid success. Perhaps not surprising given his on-stage theatrics (see his front flip off a piano at the Grammys), Boone first showed promise as an athlete. Boone, the middle of five siblings who was born in June 2002, performed aerial stunts from a very young age. 'When he was probably 3 years old, we just could never stop from having him do backflips off the couch or flips wherever he could,' his father, Nate, recalled. Boone later competed as a diver at Monroe High School in Washington. He was pretty good, too, earning a sixth-place finish at the 2020 state championships. However, Boone's musical talent was an unexpected discovery. According to the Everett Daily Herald, he was a junior when a friend asked him to play piano and sing for a battle of the bands competition. Turns out his voice was made for the stage. As a senior, he played main character Buddy in a school production of Elf: The Musical. Boone graduated in 2020 and attended college for one semester but dropped out to focus on his new passion. Like many other aspiring music stars, Boone tried out for the reality TV competition American Idol. His Season 19 audition impressed judges Lionel Richie, Luke Bryan, and Katy Perry. 'I see American Idol, and I see you, and I see you winning American Idol if you want to,' Perry told him. While Boone, then only 18, was clearly an early favorite, we'll never know the true accuracy of Perry's vision. Not wanting to be forever associated with the show, Boone bet on himself and dropped out after reaching the top 24. In a recent interview, Boone revealed he spoke to Perry earlier this year about his decision to walk away. 'She was like really happy for me, also really worried about me. I think she understands that when you're starting to go through all this, there's just a lot of hate coming your way, a lot of people that want things from you,' he told The Scott Mills Breakfast Show. 'So, she was more just checking in on me. She was like, 'Leaving that show was like the best thing you ever did.'' Boone built a large following by posting clips of his music on TikTok, where he now has more than 8.9 million followers. Although you might say his biggest 'believer' is Dan Reynolds, frontman for the Grammy-winning rock band Imagine Dragons. Reynolds, 37, reached out to Boone via Instagram after his exit from American Idol and offered to work with him. 'I had never written any of my own music, so I flew out to Vegas for like three days to work with him,' Boone recalled. 'At the end of that, he said he really liked working with me and he really liked my personality, and so I literally packed up and moved to Vegas the next day. It was crazy! But yeah, he, like, has been my mentor through all of this.' The star vocalist went a step further—Reynolds helped Boone earn a record deal with his label Night Street Records in 2021. 'We sign artists so rarely at Night Street—it was one of those moments where you know you have no choice,' Reynolds told Billboard. The emerging artist's first single with label was 'Ghost Town.' Boone's ascent continued from there, with 'Beautiful Things' becoming a global sensation in 2024. The song reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 1 on the Adult Contemporary chart, setting a record with its 55-week climb to the top spot. Even sweeter, the hit song helped him land one of his biggest gigs yet as an opener on Taylor Swift's Eras Tour this past June. The thrill of performing for thousands of screaming fans still isn't enough for Boone. In his down time, the singer enjoys the extreme sport of cliff jumping. Although he's normally diving into bodies of water, he isn't too picky about his leaping locales. Large buildings will also suffice, as when Boone jumped from the Sky Tower in Auckland, New Zealand, in 2022—a plunge of 629 feet! Don't worry; he was tethered the entire time and completely safe. 'Maybe a part of me has a death wish, and I just don't know that part of me yet, because I don't want to die,' he told iHeartRadio in 2022. 'I really like Earth.' In addition to satisfying his need for an adrenaline rush, the activity helps Boone prepare for the stage, which he says provides a similar yet 'elevated' feeling. 'It's like a challenge to me, like how big can I make this song, how good can I hit, like how high can I go on this note?' he said. Raised in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Boone was instructed to abstain from substances including drugs and alcohol. Although he has distanced himself from the faith, Boone said this March he still maintains a sober lifestyle as a personal choice. Listen to American Heart on Amazon Music, Apple Music, or Spotify 'I have such an addictive personality,' Boone told Rolling Stone. 'I feel like if I started, I would do it so much that my health would just decline, and I wouldn't enjoy touring as much.' Boone was also taught to avoid hot drinks, according to Mormon tenets, but admitted to trying coffee on outings with his girlfriend, TikTok influencer Maggie Thurmon. He isn't a fan and compared the taste to 'burnt wood.' Ouch. If you needed any more proof of Boone's massive appeal, look at the blink-and-miss-it ticket sales for his 2025 North American tour. The string of 34 shows—which begin August 22 in Saint Paul, Minnesota, and run through November—sold out in only 9 seconds (!) earlier this year. So, it looks like you're limited to the resale market if you want to see him live. Boone is currently prepping for the tour by following a consistent workout regimen, eating healthier, and undergoing vocal training. 'I'm gonna work on my voice and make sure I'm singing healthy, and I feel like I'm gonna be, like, physically very ready for this tour,' he told MTV. You Might Also Like Nicole Richie's Surprising Adoption Story The Story of Gypsy Rose Blanchard and Her Mother Queen Camilla's Life in Photos

Cardi B Is Back ‘Outside' With A New Single
Cardi B Is Back ‘Outside' With A New Single

Forbes

time7 hours ago

  • Forbes

Cardi B Is Back ‘Outside' With A New Single

Cardi B In the wake of her split from estranged husband Offset, hit-making rapper Cardi B is ready to show she's 'Outside' for the summer. The Bronx-bred MC is back with her first solo single of 2025 and is setting the stage for her long-awaited sophomore album. 'Outside" is believed to be a direct shot at Offset as Cardi prepares to return to music in full force. She announced earlier this month that she turned in her second album to Atlantic Records, more than seven years after the release of her Grammy-winning debut Invasion of Privacy. 'I'm finally feeling ready,' she said during a recent Instagram Live. 'Y'all waited long enough. It's 'go' time.' 'When I tell you these n***as ain't sh**t, please believe me / They gon' f**k on anything, these n***as way too easy / Good-for-nothing, low-down dirty dogs, I'm convinced / Next time you see your mama, tell her how she raised a b***h,' she raps on the track. Though a large chunk of time has passed since her last LP, Cardi's dominance in hip-hop hasn't faded. She notched back-to-back number-one singles on the Billboard Hot 100 chart with 'WAP' in 2020 and 'Up' in 2021 and other top-10 hits with last year's 'Enough (Miami)' and her 2022 GloRilla collab 'Tomorrow 2.' Cardi teased the forthcoming album in a Billboard interview in April and promised something unlike anything currently in the zeitgeist. "I almost want to say the name because that's what it'll be about," she said. "I feel like my album is messy. She's a messy queen." "I feel like it's unexpected and I feel like it's something that's not really out right now," she continued. "It's gonna be things that people do expect me and a lot of things people don't expect from me." The rollercoaster of her life over the past year – from filing for divorce a second time last July and having her third child in September to her new relationship with New England Patriots player Stefon Diggs this spring – has played a key role in the upcoming project. "It's a lot of lover girl things, too, on my album. I've been heartbroken and then I'm loving again, and then I'm exploring again," she added, though she noted there'll be music to 'fight' to as well.

R. Kelly claims prison officials plotted to kill him. Judge denies his release

time11 hours ago

R. Kelly claims prison officials plotted to kill him. Judge denies his release

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -- A judge has denied singer R. Kelly 's request to be freed from prison, saying she lacks jurisdiction to consider the convicted sex offender's allegations that federal prison officials plotted to murder him. U.S. District Judge Martha M. Pacold canceled Friday's scheduled arguments in Chicago, and instead issued a five-page ruling denying his emergency request to serve his time on home detention during a temporary furlough. Born Robert Sylvester Kelly, the 58-year-old Grammy-winning R&B singer is serving sentences at a prison in Butner, North Carolina, for child sex crimes and racketeering. Pacold noted that federal courts have only limited power in such cases, and one by one she examined and rejected various ways Kelly's request could be considered. 'Jurisdictional limitations must be respected even where, as here, a litigant claims that the circumstances are extraordinary,' Pacold wrote. "Kelly has not identified (nor is the court aware of) any statute or rule that authorizes the court to exercise jurisdiction. Thus, the court cannot award relief in this case.' Kelly claimed in a series of filings this month that prison officials solicited white supremacist leaders to kill him, to halt the disclosure of information damaging to prison officials. Kelly's attorney says he was then moved to solitary confinement and purposely given an overdose of medication, which required hospitalization and surgery for blood clots. Pacold noted that Kelly offers no evidence to back up his claims. Government lawyers suggested Kelly had spun a 'fanciful conspiracy.' Known for such hits as 'I Believe I Can Fly,' Kelly was found guilty in Chicago in 2022 of three charges of producing child sexual abuse images and three charges of enticement of minors for sex. In New York in 2021, he was found guilty of racketeering and sex trafficking. He is serving most of his 20-year Chicago sentence and 30-year New York sentence simultaneously. His appeals have been unsuccessful, including to the U.S. Supreme Court. Kelly has also sought President Donald Trump's help.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store