Lady Gaga's ‘MAYHEM': Song titles, producers and everything we know so far
Last weekend saw the star premiere the music video for '', the LP's third single, during a commercial break at the Grammy Awards to rave reviews from fans who praised the clip's high production values and elaborate choreography which seemed to hark back to the singer's imperial phase circa 2011's Born This Way.
As we hurtle towards the album's 7 March release date, the star is riding a wave of good will having just nabbed a Grammy for her Bruno Mars collaboration 'Die With A Smile', which also recently became the longest running number one on the chart of Gaga's career.
With anticipation for MAYHEM now at a fever pitch, we have done our due dilligence to round up everything we can find on the album to keep you satiated whilst we all await its drop.
As most will know, Gaga officially kicked off the MAYHEM campaign with the release of 'DISEASE' last October. The spooky pop banger was co-produced by Miley Cyrus and Katy Perry producer Cirkut, Andrew Watt, who has recently worked on , and Gaga herself. The trio also co-wrote the song, interestingly with contribution from Michael Polansky, Gaga's financier fiancé.
The single has been followed by 'ABRACADABRA', a balls to the wall classic Gaga romp, produced by the same team. The singer has also confirmed that 'Die With A Smile' will appear on the album.
Whilst Mother Monster has not yet officially unveiled the tracklisting for MAYHEM, has attempted to decode various materials released by the artist to reveal what many now believe to be the final selection for the upcoming album. The song titles below were all featured in an official teaser for the album Gaga released on her social media accounts the same day the singer .
1. DISEASE (3:50)2. ABRACADABRA (3:45)3. GARDEN OF EDEN (4:00)4. PERFECT CELEBRITY (4:39)5. VANISH INTO YOU (4:06)6. KILLAH FT. GESAFFELSTEIN (3:31)7. ZOMBIEBOY (3:35)8. LOVEDRUG (3:14)9. HOW BAD DO U WANT ME (3:59)10. DON'T CALL TONIGHT (3:47)11. SHADOW OF A MAN (3:20)12. THE BEAST (3:56)13. BLADE OF GRASS (4:18)14. DIE WITH A SMILE (WITH BRUNO MARS) (4:12)
Ultimately, however, until Gaga officially unveils the tracklisting we can't know for certain what songs will appear on the album – but the above is more than enough to whet our appetites whilst we eagerly await the next announcement.
Internet sleuths have also deduced that the album appears to have been entirely produced by Gaga and Andrew Watt, with both of them appearing on the credits for every song on the album. Cirkut also receives credit on the majority of songs, whilst French industrial techo producer Gesaffelstein receives either songwriting or production credits on four tracks. All were confirmed to be involved by Gaga when she announced the album's release date.
MAYHEM will mark the first collaboration between Gaga and Gesaffelstein. She spoke about working with him last year saying she 'loved collaborating with all the DJs and Gesaffelstein' in an interview with the Los Angeles Times. 'I loved learning about industrial music and about all the different crevices of electronic music.'
'Die With A Smile' was also co-produced by Gaga and Andrew Watt, with the help of Bruno Mars and D'Mile.
The singer's beau, the aforementioned Michael Polansky, also receives writing credits on a staggering eight tracks – not bad for a financial entrepeneur! The lovers also worked together on Harlequin, the accompanying album to Gaga's last film Joker 2: Folie A Deux, released last year.
The pair also co-wrote 'All I Need Is Time', a new song Gaga recently performed at the FireAid Benefit Concert which does not appear on the MAYHEM tracklisting.
MAYHEM will be released on 7 March.
The post Lady Gaga's 'MAYHEM': Song titles, producers and everything we know so far appeared first on Attitude.
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Los Angeles Times
6 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
All 43 of Billy Joel's Hot 100 hits, ranked from worst to best
If a musician's legacy can be judged by which of his peers are willing to show up and sing his praises in a documentary about him, consider Billy Joel's in good standing: Among the A-listers in HBO's new two-part 'And So It Goes' are Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen, Garth Brooks, Pink, Sting, Jackson Browne and Nas. Directed by Susan Lacy and Jessica Levin, the doc goes over Joel's life and career at a moment when he's received just about every award a pop musician can receive, including the Gershwin Prize for Popular Song, the Kennedy Center Honors, induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame and five Grammy Awards on 23 nominations. Less happily, it also comes as Joel has been forced from the concert stage after being diagnosed this year with a brain disorder called normal pressure hydrocephalus. Yet the 76-year-old singer and songwriter remains a much-talked-about pop-culture fixture, not least on TikTok, where his oldie 'Zanzibar' never seems far from cropping up on one's scroll. Ahead of Friday's premiere of the HBO documentary's second installment, I've ranked all 43 of Joel's singles that have charted on Billboard's Hot 100, starting with the worst and ending with the best. (Due to Joel's choices and/or Billboard's methodology, that means that some of his best-known tunes aren't here: 'Scenes From an Italian Restaurant,' for instance, and 'New York State of Mind.') Feel free as you read to open a bottle of white, a bottle of red — or, perhaps, a bottle of rosé instead. In the middle of the night … I'm still haunted by this mawkish pileup of gospel signifiers. This widely interpreted ballad about a lover's steadfast devotion only works when it's sung extremely well (as in the case of Adele) or when it's sung extremely terribly (as with Bob Dylan, who wrote it). Joel's take lands somewhere in between, which means he just sounds like somebody's drunk uncle. For decades after 1993's 'River of Dreams' — still his most recent pop album — Joel insisted he'd run out of things to say as a songwriter. 'You need inspiration to create good new music,' he told me in 2023, 'and if you don't have it, don't bother.' Inexplicably, he found a spark in an unfinished tune presented to him by a younger musician named Freddy Wexler; together, the two completed this would-be OneRepublic song, which Joel premiered live at the Grammy Awards last year. 'Turn the Lights Back On' spent a single week on the Hot 100 before dropping off the chart — the shortest stay of any of Joel's hits. No surprise that a guy long characterized as a mere imitation artist would nail Elvis Presley's vocal delivery in a cover recorded for the soundtrack of 'Honeymoon in Vegas.' Turgid midtempo rock with a lyric that defines soul rather pitifully as 'knowing what someone is feeling.' Features backing vocals by the sex-you-uppers of Color Me Badd. Six months after 'Piano Man' put him on the map, Joel was already straining against the brutal market economics of pop stardom: 'If I go cold, I won't get sold / I'll get put in the back in the discount rack, like another can of beans.' Yet his kvetching about the creative constraints of the pop song are pretty rich coming from a master of the form. Perhaps his most strained vocal performance. In the watery pantheon of rock songs about boats, this maudlin fisherman's lament ranks well behind 'Sailing' and 'Southern Cross' (to say nothing of 'Proud Mary' and 'Sloop John B'). The right idea; the wrong execution. From the weirdly stacked soundtrack of 'Ruthless People,' which also featured Mick Jagger, Bruce Springsteen and Luther Vandross. Very stiff singing atop a very funky groove. Are those steel drums I hear? 'It's almost like a dying man singing to his child,' Joel told his biographer Fred Schruers, which may or may not have been the approach his then-9-year-old daughter Alexa was hoping her dad would take. Still, the elegant harmonic movement demonstrates his lifelong devotion to classical music; seven years later, he'd make his debut as a composer with the solo-piano 'Fantasies & Delusions.' Among those who've sung 'Lullabye' since Joel introduced it: Celine Dion, Rufus Wainwright — and John Stamos. One surely gratifying endorsement for this banjo-driven country shuffle: In 1999, Dolly Parton cut a version of 'Travelin' Prayer' to open the first volume in her acclaimed trilogy of bluegrass albums. Having split with producer Phil Ramone after 1986's 'The Bridge' LP, Joel hired Mick Jones of Foreigner to oversee his next album, 'Storm Front,' which opened with this delightfully trashy ode to a woman with little interest in mink coats or satin sheets. (Call it 'Downtown Girl.') Jones' production, with its stabbing synths and boxy drums, echoes the steroidal rock of Robert Palmer's 'Addicted to Love.' Wrote Robert Christgau of Joel in the Village Voice: 'Even in arena mode he's a force of nature and bad taste.' An OK song ranked this high only because it so strongly evokes a perfect one (in this case, 'Wedding Bell Blues' by the 5th Dimension). Consider that this jittery New Wave rocker about the pros and cons of phone sex arrived on an album ('Glass Houses') that also featured 'I Don't Want to Be Alone' and 'Sleeping With the Television On.' Imagine if he'd had Tinder. Possibly the purest distillation of Joel's romantic pessimism — 'Some love is just a lie of the soul / A constant battle for the ultimate state of control' — with the twist that he's assuring a lover that everything that always happens won't happen to them. (It happened to them.) A slow-rolling R&B ditty where the object of the dude's affection isn't a woman but a piano (except it's actually Ray Charles, who shows up to duet with his eager admirer). One of two new tracks added as consumer bait to Joel's 23-times-platinum 'Greatest Hits — Volume I & Volume II,' this deeply spooked synth-rock joint might be the strangest entry on this list: horny-frustrated lyrics, no real melody, just straight burnt-to-a-crisp Willy Loman vibes for 5½ meandering minutes. It's great! (It's also, as of this writing, the second-least-streamed of these 43 tracks on Spotify, with fewer than 2 million plays.) The peppiest single Joel ever made might get even closer to Motown's classic Holland-Dozier-Holland sound than Phil Collins did a year earlier in his punctilious remake of the Supremes' 'You Can't Hurry Love.' Yet 'Tell Her About It' has no fan in its creator, who said in Schruers' biography that the song is 'a little too bubblegum' — one reason Joel appears not to have played it in concert since the early 1990s. For this nearly a cappella doo-wop number, Joel sang every vocal part himself when a group he and Ramone had brought into the studio couldn't stay in tune. Four years after 'The Longest Time' charted, Bobby McFerrin topped the Hot 100 with the instrument-less 'Don't Worry, Be Happy'; three years after that, Boyz II Men got to No. 2 with the a cappella 'It's So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday.' Billy at his breeziest. With half a dozen Top 30 singles, including this homage to the Drifters, 'An Innocent Man' became Joel's fourth consecutive LP to be nominated for album of the year at the Grammys. (He lost, reasonably, to 'Thriller.') The title track is a showcase of vocal flexibility as he moves nimbly from a croon to a belt to a falsetto. Rooted, as he told Schruers, in 'the realization that Elle Macpherson and I were not meant for the ages,' this tense and brooding song is Joel's finest contribution to the soulful-white-guy rock of the mid-1980s; it belongs up there with Don Henley's 'The Boys of Summer' and Steve Winwood's 'Higher Love,' thanks in no small part to a spidery guitar solo by David Brown (who died last year). When Joel played 'This Is the Time' at New York's Shea Stadium just before the Mets' home was demolished in 2008, he brought out John Mayer to do the solo — an experience you can bet Mayer channeled as he cut 2021's soulful-white-guy 'Sob Rock.' Picture Huey Lewis doing Natalie Cole's 'This Will Be.' A decade after he released the studio version, Joel charted with a concert recording of the lead single from his 1971 debut — the LP notoriously mastered at the wrong speed so that his voice sounded higher and squeakier than it really was. Here, onstage at the Paradise club in Boston, his singing has a courtly charm that makes 'She's Got a Way' feel like Joel's version of Paul McCartney's 'Maybe I'm Amazed.' Joel's most Dylanesque lyric, meanwhile, comes across as his version of 'Just Like a Woman.' An unsparing ballad about how nobody tells the truth anymore, 'Honesty' earned a song of the year nod at the Grammys but lost to the Doobie Brothers' 'What a Fool Believes,' which is narrated by a guy who can't accept the truth he's being told. Covered later — and quite convincingly — by Beyoncé. Written as Joel returned to New York following his early-'70s sojourn in Los Angeles, this Ronettes-inspired confection first appeared on the 'Turnstiles' LP in 1976. But 'Say Goodbye to Hollywood' didn't blow up until five years later, when he put a slightly rowdier live rendition on 1981's 'Songs in the Attic' LP — by which time Ronnie Spector herself had taken a crack at the song with help from Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band. A febrile Cold War freak-out with a hideous, Cronenberg-lite music video. Joel told Schruers he could envision his survivors playing this very pretty ballad at his funeral, which is certainly one place for a song about the inevitability of pain. Was 'Glass Houses' truly Joel's punk album? Take it from no less an authority than the Chipmunks, who performed the LP's driving opener on 1980's 'Chipmunk Punk.' To my ears, 'You May Be Right' sits at the precise midpoint between the Beatles and the Rolling Stones — a testament to Joel's absorptive powers and his stylistic aim. 'You can speak your mind but not on my time' probably isn't the sickest burn in Joel's catalog. But enlisting Peter Cetera to trill sweetly behind him as he sneers is A+ record-making. Mr. New York's signature song documents the six months he spent entertaining the patrons — the real estate novelist, Davy in the Navy, the old man sipping tonic and gin — of L.A.'s long-shuttered Executive Room near the corner of Wilshire Boulevard and Western Avenue. (His handsome pay, as he told me in 2017: 'I got tips and made union scale.') Joel's first single to chart on the Hot 100, 'Piano Man' can be hard to hear today as a work of detailed storytelling; that's what half a century of sloppy sing-alongs will do to a narrative. But then, of course, Joel has no one to blame for that but himself. Tell me you're not a wimp without telling me you're not a wimp. 'I'm probably the most proud of that album as a sonic work of art,' Joel says in the HBO doc of 'The Nylon Curtain,' on which he and Ramone deployed the whoosh and crunch of a steel mill to juice the beat of this Rust Belt threnody. Yet 'Allentown' also poses a pretty sophisticated critique of the social and political forces converging on a generation of Americans promised prosperity only to find a flag thrown in their face. With its head on fire and its eyes too bloody to see, 'Big Shot' imagines a morning-after quarrel between Mick and Bianca Jagger, Joel told Howard Stern, amid the excesses of what he described with disgust in Schruers' book as the 'coked-out, disco-drenched New York club scene' of the Studio 54 era. 'I shouldn't put it down, because I don't really know much about it,' he added. OK, Bill. Joel's most-streamed song on Spotify (with more than 1.2 billion plays) is an ouroboros of simpler-times nostalgia: a pitch-perfect Four Seasons rip that looks back at the early '60s from the early '80s — then became the longed-for totem at the heart of Olivia Rodrigo's 'Deja Vu.' 'It's the only song where I wrote the words first,' Joel said in 2017, 'which it sounds like, because the music sucks.' Demonstrably untrue — those timbales! Even if he were right, though, the rapid-fire historical roll call of 'We Didn't Start the Fire' deserves our respect as a crucial artifact of a pre-internet America. Your Wikipedia could never. The guy's asking for a lot: do this, don't do that; amuse me but not too much; listen to what I say instead of what I do (although sometimes I'll forget to say it too). But then there's that gently insistent groove and that pillowy electric piano. And that singing! Showy but intimate, talky yet supple, it's murmuring assurances to rebut the very doubts he's raising. Joel's first No. 1 offered him early proof that sometimes haters win. Think about the way Joel starts this song: 'Come out, Virginia, don't let me wait / You Catholic girls start much too late / But sooner or later it comes down to fate / I might as well be the one.' Two opposing worldviews colliding in four little lines against music trembling with the shared sense of anticipation that unites both the narrator and Virginia. Pop gets no richer. What other Billy Joel song could top a list of Billy Joel songs? 'Movin' Out' wants us to believe that success is for suckers, which is somehow a credo he's continued to sell — and we've continued to buy — through his ascent to the uppermost reaches of pop culture. These days Joel isn't Anthony or Mama Leone or even Mr. Cacciatore — he's the big shot who owns the medical center, not to mention whatever else is available on Sullivan Street. Yet his glorious bridge-and-tunnel music — proud, wounded, defensive, ambitious — keeps asking: Is this all I get for my money?
Yahoo
16 hours ago
- Yahoo
Wax lyrical: Taylor Swift gets lucky 13 Madame Tussauds statues
US pop megastar Taylor Swift will be honoured with 13 waxworks of her at Madame Tussauds venues around the globe, the museum said on Wednesday. In honour of Swift's lucky number, 13 of the waxwork museum's 22 branches will each receive a statue of the "Love Story" and "Blank Space" singer, in what it called the "most ambitious project" of its 250-year history. The statues were inspired by some of the 35-year-old songwriting sensation's looks from her record-shattering "Eras Tour" from 2023 to 2024. With 149 shows across the world over nearly two years, the tour raked in $2 billion, making it the most lucrative in music history to date. More than 40 artists worked for more than a year on the statues of Swift, one of the most acclaimed artists of her generation with 14 Grammy Awards. "This is the most ambitious project in Madame Tussauds' 250-year history, which only feels right to reflect the stratospheric status of Taylor Swift," said Danielle Cullen, the museum's senior figure stylist. UK-based Swifties are well served, with one waxwork slated for London and another for the northern seaside resort town of Blackpool. Another 10 will find a permanent home at the branches of Madame Tussauds in Amsterdam, Berlin, Budapest, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Las Vegas, Nashville, New York, Orlando and Sydney. The thirteenth statue, which will travel around the remaining museums, will begin its worldwide walkabout with a residency at Madame Tussauds Shanghai. adm/sbk/rlp


New York Post
16 hours ago
- New York Post
Fleetwood Mac's Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham tease long-lost debut album
Cue 'Silver Springs.' Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham are officially reuniting — sort of — after sparking reunion rumors on social media. The musicians have revealed that their 1973 album 'Buckingham Nicks' is getting reissued for the digital age. 11 The album cover for 'Buckingham Nicks.' AP The record will be re-released for the first time in the US since the early 1980s. On Wednesday, Nicks, 77, and Buckingham, 75, released a joint Instagram video of a billboard advertising the album on Sunset Strip in Los Angeles, Calif. 11 Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham at the 1998 Grammy Awards. WireImage 'Buckingham Nicks is available for pre-order now, out September 19th. ✨ 'Crying In The Night' is yours now. Listen at the link in bio,' they captioned the post. Fans flipped out over the news, considering Nicks and Buckingham had been at odds in recent years. 'Finally!!! I LOVE Long Distance Winner!!! This is awesome news!!' one person wrote. 11 Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham, Christine McVie, John McVie and Mick Fleetwood of Fleetwood Mac. Michael Ochs Archives 'YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAS! PRAISE THE MUSIC GODS,' a second added. Last week, Nicks and Buckingham posted coordinated Instagram posts that sent social media users into a frenzy. The pair began following each other on the app before Nicks posted a handwritten lyric from 'Frozen Love,' a love song off of 'Buckingham Nicks.' 11 Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham perform at The Staples Center on July 3, 2013. Getty Images The image read, 'And if you go forward …' Shortly after, Buckingham completed the lyric with his own handwritten message that read, 'I'll meet you there.' The duo first met as high school students near Palo Alto, Calif., in the 1960s. Buckingham was in his rock band Fritz, and asked Nicks to join as their lead singer. 11 Mick Fleetwood, Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham of Fleetwood Mac perform. Getty Images After leaving the group, they launched their own band, Buckingham Nicks. Their album flopped, however, and they were dropped from their contract at Polydor Records. Soon after, they moved to Los Angeles. 11 Stevie Nicks (L) and Lindsey Buckingham of music group Fleetwood Mac accept the MusiCares Person of the Year award onstage in 2018. Getty Images for NARAS In 1974, Nicks and Buckingham were invited to join Fleetwood Mac but split romantically while recording the band's 1977 album, 'Rumours.' Both exes remained in Fleetwood Mac until Buckingham was fired following a behind-the-scenes altercation in 2018. Buckingham and Nicks weren't the only ones in the band with relationship woes. Around the same time as their late '70s breakup, Fleetwood Mac's John McVie and Christine McVie ended their marriage. 11 Fleetwood Mac in Brussels, Belgium in 1980. Getty Images Nicks went on to write 'Dreams,' while Buckingham penned 'Go Your Own Way' on the group's 'Rumours' album. Over the years, the former bandmates have thrown jabs at one another. In 1997, Nicks told Rolling Stone that she 'resented' the lyrics that Buckingham wrote in 'Go Your Own Way,' with lines insinuating the singer was 'packing up, shacking up' with different men after their breakup. 11 Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks at NBC Studios on April 18, 2003. Getty Images 'He knew it wasn't true. It was just an angry thing that he said. Every time those words would come onstage, I wanted to go over and kill him,' explained the vocalist. 'He knew it, so he really pushed my buttons through that. It was like, 'I'll make you suffer for leaving me.'' By 2018, things came to a head when Fleetwood Mac was honored at that year's MusiCares benefit gala. An argument ensued, ending with Buckingham being fired from the band. 11 Stevie Nicks in 1981. Chris Walter He was replaced by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers guitarist Mike Campbell, as well as Neil Finn. Buckingham and Nicks allegedly didn't talk again until the celebration of life for McVie. The keyboardist died in 2022 at age 79. 'The only time I've spoken to Lindsey was there, for about three minutes,' the Grammy winner told Rolling Stone in 2024. 'I dealt with Lindsey for as long as I could. You could not say that I did not give him more than 300 million chances.' 11 Fleetwood Mac performs. ullstein bild via Getty Images 11 Stevie Nicks at Casa Cipriani in 2024. Getty Images for The Michael J. Fox Foundation In March, Buckingham reunited with another Fleetwood Mac member, Mick Fleetwood. The guitarist sat in on studio sessions with the band's namesake drummer, 78, who is working on a new solo album. Swedish producer Carl Falk spoke about the mini reunion on Threads. 'Slightly unreal moment to sit with Lindsey Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood to play Lindsey the album we have been working on,' he wrote. 'And to see his genuine happiness for Mick to finally do his own album and offering to play guitar and to sing on it. Can't wait to finish this one.'