Shania Twain set to release new album and tour in 2023

Queen of Me will be country star’s 6th full-length original album

From this moment on, Shania Twain fans have something to look forward to.

The Canadian country superstar will drop a new album in February, before embarking on a tour in April.

Queen of Me will be her sixth full-length original album, and her first since 2017’s Now.

The Queen of Me Tour will begin in Spokane, Wash., and includes stops across Canada.

It’s been a big year for Twain.

Twain recently wrapped up a Las Vegas residency and dropped a new single, Waking Up Dreaming.

Rihanna returns to music with first solo single in 6 years

Pop star honours late actor Chadwick Boseman on Black Panther sequel soundtrack

Please don’t stop the music, fans pleaded — and Rihanna listened.

The Barbados-born singer and mogul made a much-anticipated musical comeback this week, releasing her first solo single in six years: the song Lift Me Up for Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, an upcoming sequel to the 2018 superhero blockbuster. 

An instrumental version of the song is also available on streaming platforms.

Rihanna is one of the best-selling female musical artists of all time, but she went on a years-long, unofficial hiatus from music to focus on her Fenty Beauty cosmetics company.

The new song — pairing the pop star’s vocals with a delicate piano arrangement and a plucky Spanish guitar —  is a tribute to late actor Chadwick Boseman, according to a press release from Universal Music Canada.
Boseman, who played Black Panther in the original film, died of colon cancer in 2020. The track was written by Rihanna, Nigerian singer-songwriter Tems, Wakanda Forever composer Ludwig Göransson and Black Panther director Ryan Coogler. 

On Friday, the singer released a music video on social media to mark the song’s release. She teased the video on her social media channels.
But that’s not all: Riri recorded a second song titled Born Again that is featured during the film’s credits, according to pop culture site Vulture.

In the years since turning to her business ventures, Rihanna made several guest appearances on hits like DJ Khaled’s Wild Thoughts, Calvin Harris’ This Is What You Came For and Drake’s Too Good. But fans haven’t heard a lick of new original music since her 2016 album, ANTI.

Gap, Adidas sever partnerships with Kanye West over antisemitic remarks

Apparel chain Gap Inc. said on Tuesday it was taking immediate steps to remove products from its Yeezy Gap line created in partnership with Kanye West and has shut down YeezyGap.com following the rapper’s antisemitic comments.

This comes shortly after Adidas ended its partnership with Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West, over his offensive and antisemitic remarks, the latest company to cut ties with Ye and a decision that the German sportswear company said would hit its bottom line.

“Adidas does not tolerate antisemitism and any other sort of hate speech,” the company said in a statement on Tuesday. “Ye’s recent comments and actions have been unacceptable, hateful and dangerous, and they violate the company’s values of diversity and inclusion, mutual respect and fairness.”

The company faced pressure to cut ties with Ye, with celebrities and others on social media urging Adidas to act. It said at the beginning of the month that it was placing its lucrative sneaker deal with the rapper under review.


Latest firm to cut connections


Adidas said Tuesday that it conducted a “thorough review” and would immediately stop production of its line of Yeezy products and stop payments to Ye and his companies. The sportswear company said it was expected to take a hit of up to 250 million euros ($338.5 million Cdn) to its net income this year from the move.

The move by Adidas, whose CEO, Kasper Rorsted, is stepping down next year, comes after Ye was suspended from Twitter and Instagram this month over antisemitic posts that the social networks said violated their policies.

He recently suggested slavery was a choice and called the COVID-19 vaccine the “mark of the beast,” among other comments. He was also criticized for wearing a “White Lives Matter” T-shirt to his Yeezy collection show in Paris.

Why are streaming platforms keeping Kanye when other companies cut ties?

Rapper’s song catalogue remains accessible despite business pushback against antisemitic remarks


Several weeks after a raft of antisemitic comments which finally pushed companies from Balenciaga, to Vogue, to Gap and TJ Maxx to sever ties, one area of Ye’s empire still remains relatively untouched.

Formerly known as Kanye West, the rapper and producer Ye built his name as a cultural firebrand from a music career that spawned four multi-platinum albums and 11 Grammys before it began to be overshadowed by onstage rants, controversy, and eventually antisemitic and other offensive remarks.
But through it all, his music remained accessible on major streaming platforms, as brands and social media platforms were pressured to remove him.

While it might seem counterintuitive for him to remain unpunished on what is effectively his central business, it’s unlikely we’ll see the same kind of pushback and distancing on streaming sites as with other arenas. 

“It doesn’t surprise me because they are fundamentally different kinds of businesses,” explained Serona Elton, a professor who studies the music industry at the University of Miami. “The nature of the business and contractual relationship with Ye is quite different in these different sectors.”
While platforms like Instagram, Facebook and — most notably — Twitter have been embroiled in a debate over how, and whether, to exclude certain voices, music streaming has remained largely exempt.

And the few times streaming services have taken steps toward removing an artist from their platform, such as Spotify did following R&B singer R. Kelly’s conviction for sex crimes against children, they were later walked back. 

In regards to Ye, Spotify CEO Daniel Ek recently told Reuters they would take a similar stance. While calling his antisemitic messages “just awful comments,” Ek said they would not take the rapper’s songs off their platform, or wade into the field of content moderation beyond the lyrics of artists’ songs.

“It’s really just his music, and his music doesn’t violate our policy,” he said, adding that “it’s up to his label if they want to take action or not.”

That sentiment is why Ye is more likely to be forced out of public brand deals and social media platforms than spaces designed to share his productions, Elton said. 

“There are other examples of musical artists having done things that are considered morally reprehensible, and in at least a couple of cases, criminal,” she said, emphasizing the damaging gravity of Ye’s recent statements. “And the art still exists, and people can choose to consume it or not — depending on how much they feel the association between the artist and the art should influence them.”

Jerry Lee Lewis, flamboyant and controversial rock and roll pioneer, dead at 87

Jerry Lee Lewis, the hard-living, hard-playing pianist and singer whose offstage exploits often grabbed as much attention as his electrifying performances and genre-spanning recording career, has died. He was 87.

The last survivor of a generation of groundbreaking performers that included Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry and Little Richard, Lewis died at home in Memphis, Tenn., representative Zach Farnum said in a release.

Lewis had suffered a minor stroke in 2019 but frequently performed live shows until then. More recently, he was unable to attend his Country Music Hall of Fame induction due to illness.

Lewis’s legacy was largely established on the mostly raucous sides cut over a three-year period at Sun Records in Memphis: Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On, Great Balls of Fire, Breathless and High School Confidential.

A serendipitous session there of future music legends on Dec. 4, 1956 would also loom large — with the songs recorded by the so-called Million Dollar Quartet of Lewis, Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash and Carl Perkins sold and repackaged in the ensuing decades.

Lewis’s appeal to baby boomer kids entranced by the new genre called rock ‘n’ roll was boosted by manic performances on The Steve Allen Show and in the motion picture High School Confidential. Lewis’s hair flipped and flopped as he pounded the keys, yipped and yodelled, kicked the piano bench aside and played standing up or even with his feet.
“The Killer” — Lewis’s nickname stemming from a colloquial childhood greeting — was inducted into the inaugural 1986 class of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and received a Grammy lifetime achievement award.

Not a prolific songwriter, Lewis received credit for putting his definitive stamp on songs that originated across genres — R&B, country, gospel, he loved it all.