logo
5 Seconds of Summer's Michael Clifford Launches Solo Career With ‘Cool'

5 Seconds of Summer's Michael Clifford Launches Solo Career With ‘Cool'

Yahoo03-04-2025
Michael Clifford, the lead guitarist of Australian pop-rock outfit 5 Seconds of Summer, has become the latest member of the band to embark on a solo career, with debut single 'Cool' launching his new journey.
The track follows in much the same vein as what fans of 5 Seconds of Summer may have expected from a Clifford solo venture, with 'Cool' capturing the polished rock sound he's become associated with and pairing it with more introspective songwriting.
More from Billboard
The Weeknd's 'Call Out My Name' Video Reaches 1 Billion YouTube Views
Johnny Tillotson, Iconic Country & Pop Singer Behind 'Poetry in Motion,' Dies at 86
Rubi Rose Says She Makes $400K on OnlyFans During a 'Horrible Month'
'This song speaks for itself, and my hope is that when fans hear the lyrics, they'll understand me and hopefully themselves a little better,' Clifford said in a statement. 'I've been deliberating on this music long enough, so I can't wait for everybody to hear it— and 'cool' is just the beginning of what's to come.
'I want this project to make people smile,' he added. 'I'm just out here doing a bunch of sidequests. Now that I'm a dad, everything other than that feels like a sidequest!'
Released via the pop-punk label Hopeless Records, 'Cool' is a taster of Clifford's forthcoming debut album, SIDEQUEST, which will be detailed at length in the near future. The track was co-written by Clifford alongside his bandmate Calum Hood, and features co-production from acclaimed musicians JT Daly and Andrew Goldstein. It also comes accompanied by a Bobby Hanaford-directed music video.
5 Seconds of Summer first formed in Sydney, Australia in 2011 and released their self-titled debut album in 2014. All five of the band's albums have peaked atop the Australia ARIA charts, while only 2020's Calm and 2022's 5SOS5 prevented the same feat on the Billboard 200, with the records reaching a very respectable peak of No. 2.
Members of the six-time ARIA Award-winning group began launching solo careers following the release of Calm, with drummer Ashton Irwin releasing his Superbloom album in 2020, with second album Blood on the Drums arriving in July 2024.
Vocalist and rhythm guitarist Luke Hemmings would follow suit in 2021 with his debut album When Facing the Things We Turn Away From, following it up with the Boy EP in April 2024. Currently, bassist Hood is the only member of the group to have not issued solo material, though he has been active in the fields of songwriting, composition, and production.
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

The 10-year-old sleeper hit that has more plays than any Taylor Swift song
The 10-year-old sleeper hit that has more plays than any Taylor Swift song

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

The 10-year-old sleeper hit that has more plays than any Taylor Swift song

The final song on LA band Lord Huron's second album flew well under the mainstream radar when it was released in 2015. A decade on, it's one of the most unlikely success stories in music. Beyoncé and Dua Lipa may be two of the world's top pop stars, and both put out new albums last year, but their biggest songs of 2024 did not match the popularity of a 10-year-old track by Lord Huron, according to the official Billboard global end-of-year singles chart. And Charli XCX may have ruled Brat summer, but her biggest hit still wasn't as big as The Night We Met by Lord Huron in the UK last year. (The Night We Met was 35th on Billboard's global chart for 2024, above Dua's Houdini at 37 and Beyoncé's Texas Hold 'Em at 41; and it was 60th on the UK Official Chart Company's end-of-year rundown, while Charli's Guess was her biggest hit single at 73.) Meanwhile, the Lord Huron song is in the exclusive club of tracks that have racked up three billion Spotify plays - a club even Taylor Swift isn't in yet. Videos featuring The Night We Met have had another three billion views on TikTok, according to music data tracker Chartmetric. "It's unbelievable," says Lord Huron frontman Ben Schneider of the popularity of his song, which has snowballed in recent years and shows no signs of slowing down. It's not unusual for old songs to become perennial favourites on streaming and social media (see The Killers, Fleetwood Mac and Tom Odell). What is much rarer is for it to happen to a track that was not a hit the first time around. And The Night We Met was nowhere near. The aching ballad closed Lord Huron's second LP of indie folk, Strange Trails, which was well received by the group's loyal fanbase and critics, but only grazed the US album chart. The song was written as "a wistful reflection of a relationship, maybe with a sense of regret of where it's ended up and where it started", Schneider explains. "I remember writing that song and feeling like it was a very concise way to end a record. And I remember my wife saying she thought there was something really special to it. But years went by and it wasn't like it was a hit or anything. "And then things just started to happen with it." The first thing to happen was for it to be used on the soundtrack of Netflix teen drama 13 Reasons Why in 2017. At first, Schneider was unsure whether to let it be on the soundtrack, but his wife told him: "Just do it, put it in the show." The couple were away in France at the time. "We were gone for a few months, and when we came back my manager was like, 'Something's happening with this song'," the singer recalls. "I figured it'd be a quick spike and then fade away, but it's had this weird and pretty unheard of long tail, where rather than falling off into nothing, it fell off and then slowly ramped back up. And it just seems to keep going." Schneider recorded a duet version with Phoebe Bridgers for another 13 Reasons Why scene in 2018. Most of its subsequent lease of life has come from its popularity on TikTok. It has since defied musical gravity by becoming more popular every year. In 2024, it had almost a billion streams on Spotify - 57% more than the previous year, according to Chartmetric. The song's lyrics hark back to the start of a soured relationship: "I had all and then most of you / Some and now none of you / Take me back to the night we met." The song has been used in various TikTok memes, and Cosmopolitan put it top of its playlist of Sad Songs to Blast When You're Feeling Hella Moody. But it can fit a range of emotions and situations - Molly-Mae Hague used it to soundtrack her pregnancy announcement video in 2022. "I think everyone can relate to that sort of story and can insert their own biography into it," Schneider reflects. "It's a vessel that fits a lot of people's personal stories. That's maybe why it's had such a lasting and slow-burning effect on people." The singer says The Night We Met's success came at a good moment in the band's career, "because we had already established ourselves in a lot of ways". "We already had a very devoted fanbase, so we weren't necessarily locked into a one-hit-wonder status by that song. "Even though it far outstrips our other songs in terms of streaming and everything, we have enough going on otherwise to not feel like we're known only for that one singular moment, which is great." There is indeed a lot more to the band than one song. Lord Huron began as a solo project in 2010, before Schneider assembled a full line-up. They have released four albums of yearning, soulful and haunting Americana - with a fifth coming out on Friday. Their albums show Schneider's skill as a storyteller as well as a songwriter, often containing a running thread of a storyline. The new LP is titled The Cosmic Selector Vol 1 - about a 1950s-style jukebox that can transport people to alternate universes, where life has turned out differently after small decisions in the past set them on different paths. "I guess the past few years, as I've been getting a bit older, I've just been thinking about all the ways my own life could have gone, or could still go, or might have been," Schneider explains. "Not with any sense of regret, but more with a sense of wonder at the sheer randomness of it all, and how different things could have been if very little things had gone another way. "So I started thinking about a collection of songs representing that randomness - the lottery that one's lot in life is." But the controls of this magic jukebox are "busted", he says. "Everything's mislabelled. What you think you're selecting might send you a completely different way, and everything's on the menu - sorrow, joy, horror, love - all the ways a life can go." So various characters, including one voiced by actress Kristen Stewart, are put through this dimension-hopping, life-scrambling retro randomiser. Some are based on Schneider himself, others are just made up, he says. Everyone has their own sliding doors moments when life could have turned out differently. For Schneider, there was the time a jazz combo played in an assembly at grade school. "I remember watching the bass player and being like, 'I could be in a band some day', and a lightbulb turned on in my head," he says. "I think there's a myriad of moments like that where I could have chosen one thing and didn't, so it's fascinating to consider that." The moment in France when his wife persuaded him to allow The Night We Met to be used in 13 Reasons Why was another turning point. Schneider hit the jackpot in the lottery of life with that sleeper hit. He now hopes its popularity turns people on to the rest of their music. "I want to keep trying to move forward and making new stuff," he says. "And hopefully something that we make will have the same kind of impact that song has had. "And I think over time, stuff we have already made will, I hope." The 2010s lost classics that became sleeper hits a decade on

Friday Music Guide: New Music From Justin Bieber, Clipse, BLACKPINK & More
Friday Music Guide: New Music From Justin Bieber, Clipse, BLACKPINK & More

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Friday Music Guide: New Music From Justin Bieber, Clipse, BLACKPINK & More

Billboard's Friday Music Guide serves as a handy guide to this Friday's most essential releases — the key music that everyone will be talking about today, and that will be dominating playlists this weekend and beyond. This week, Justin Bieber returns with an unexpected new album and an unexpected new sound, Clipse reunites for a triumphant set of new bangers, Deftones re-emerge as potent as ever and much more. Check out all of this week's picks below. More from Billboard 'KPop Demon Hunters' Slays Its Way to No. 1 on ARIA Albums Chart Saweetie Announces New Track 'Boffum' Ahead of Australian Tour BLACKPINK Return With High-Energy Anthem 'JUMP': Stream It Now Justin Bieber, It's about as surprising as surprise drops get — Justin Bieber, one of the 10 greatest pop stars of the 21st century, returning from a four-year absence with a 21-track new set on about 10 hours' notice. And within a couple tracks of Swag, it's pretty clear this is Bieber as we've never really heard him before — stripped of most of his usual big pop trappings, with a much more organic-sounding, alt-R&B-focused sound aided by recognizable sonic architects like Dijon, and new primary artistic partner Carter Lang supporting his tender ballads of love and devotion. Fans hoping for an album full of 'Sorry's (or even 'Peaches'es) may be disappointed, but Beliebers who never stopped returning to the eerie confessionals of Journals or the hushed intimacy of Changes will undoubtedly be elated. Clipse, The first album for legendary rap duo Clipse in over 15 years, Let God Sort Em Out sees Pusha T and Malice reunited and locked in like the time off was just a long battery recharge. The first two tracks alone show the kind of purpose and focus few rap albums can manage across 10 times that long: opener 'The Birds Don't Sing' finds the brother duo paying heart-rending tribute to a late parent each, while explosive second cut 'Chains & Whips' invites the biggest rapper in the world along to take aim at their collective foes — including one obvious common enemy between at least two of them. It helps immensely, of course, that this reunion also includes another crucial member of the extended family: regular producer and occasional hook-singer Pharrell, whose beats invoke the grimy urgency of his '00s work for the duo without ever sounding like he's just playing the hits. BLACKPINK, 'Jump' After the solo bows of all four of its members over the past year — and with heightened global excitement around K-pop girl groups in general, thanks to the runaway success of Netflix's KPop Demon Hunters and its HUNTR/X protagonists — the time couldn't be much better for a BLACKPINK comeback. And luckily, the quartet has the song to do it with: 'JUMP' eschews the slowers, dubsteppier drops that have characterized most of BLACKPINK's biggest singles for a more frenetic, hardstyle-indebted synth breakdown and quaking beat that feels as exciting as anything the group has ever released. 'Are you not entertained?' LISA asks on the second verse, no doubt rhetorically. Deftones, 'My Mind Is a Mountain' 'We've been waiting here, patiently/ Locked in this state, clocking our time,' Deftones frontman Chino Moreno howls on the band's new single. Indeed, 'My Mind Is a Mountain' comes five years after the band's most recent album, 2020's Ohms, and sees the quintet immediately returning to its strengths: simultaneously lush and punishing guitar grooves over crashing-wave drums, with Moreno's anguished sensuality tying it all together. The millions of new fans the band has picked up over a half-decade of seemingly perpetual TikTok virality should be thrilled with their first taste of new Deftones. GIVĒON, Following his return to the Billboard Hot 100 this year with both the Teddy Swims collab 'Are You Even Real' and his own solo 'Twenties,' R&B hitmaker GIVĒON returns this week with the new album Beloved — his first 2022 debut Give or Take. The sound of Beloved is more classic '70s soul than modern R&B — check out the Al Green horns on 'Rather Be' of the Stylistics electric sitar of 'Twenties' and 'Numb' — but kept fresh by the distinctiveness of GIVĒON's voice, sonorous, soaring and forever exquisitely pained. Tyla, 'Is It' The new single from the South African global pop star slithers around a winding beat, with an earworm chorus of Tyla asking 'Is it wrong/ That I wanna get right with you?' and a requisite breakdown section that you can already tell is going to make for some highlight moments during live performances. 'We outside. We're catching party vibes,' Tyla told Billboard in June, and 'Is It' is strong evidence that those vibes have already been caught. 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

Tyla Releases New Single ‘Is It'
Tyla Releases New Single ‘Is It'

Forbes

time3 hours ago

  • Forbes

Tyla Releases New Single ‘Is It'

Tyla Grammy-winning singer Tyla is ready to party after the release of her self-titled debut album last year. The South African songstress has been teasing her next project in recent months and giving fans a peek at her musical direction with the single 'Bliss' in May. Now, just as the summer is heating up and fans are eager to get moving, the 'Water' singer is helping them cool off with the new single 'Is It.' 'Is it the f**ks that I don't give? / Is it the men that I don't miss? / Is this song why we get along? / Or am I coming on a little strong?' she sings on the track. 'Is it the way this dress unzips? / Is it the girls that I came with? / 'Cause the more that you tell me 'Don't' / It's the more that you turn me on.' Tyla has been wasting little time since her debut as she puts in work on her sophomore LP. 'Every day I can be in the studio, I'm there. I'm working on the new project currently. I'm super excited because even though I love my debut album, I feel like a totally different person. Everything that has happened forced me to grow very fast,' she told Nylon of her progress. 'I'm also the type of person that gets bored very easily. So I'm excited to see this new version of me and hear what it sounds like and just have fun with it — just bring back fun in music.' Though it might feel like a quick turnaround from her Tyla album last April, the 'Push 2 Start" singer explained to Billboard that a lot has happened since she made her stateside breakthrough in 2023. 'I've changed a lot in a short amount of time because I was kind of forced to with how fast I had to adapt to everything,' she said. 'I don't think it's going to be the same energy [as Tyla]It's all in service of continuing to elevate her career as an up-and-coming star. 'I really want to be the best artist that I can be," she told Nylon. "When you have a lot of pressure, it makes you feel like you need to live up to what people expect. A year from now, I want to be making whatever I want to make, doing whatever I want to do — regardless of the pressures. That's where I want to see myself next year.'

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