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Harry Styles Is ‘Really Open’ With Friends About His Sexuality But Thinks Publicly Labeling It Is ‘Outdated’

There is a brand new Harry Styles interview today, complete with lots of lovely, quirky photos, and insight into the pop star’s latest album, Harry’s House. This feature is right on time since we had lots of Harry content via the last two weekends of him performing at Coachella, and now that the biggest music festival of the year is over, fans need more to go on before the album drops in a few weeks. So, what’s the scoop in this new interview? Well, a recurring subject that seems to come up over and over again — Harry’s sexuality.

Though he’s often engaged in gender bending activity, like wearing dresses and launching a makeup line, and he’s completely, 100% adamant in his support of the queer community, the conversation around how Harry himself identifies has been one that unrelentingly rages online simply because? He’s kept it to himself.

In his new interview, Styles said he finds the idea that he should have to submit his sexuality to the public for consumption as something that’s “outdated” — and frankly, he’s right. “I’ve been really open with it with my friends, but that’s my personal experience; it’s mine,” he said. “The whole point of where we should be heading, which is toward accepting everybody and being more open, is that it doesn’t matter, and it’s about not having to label everything, not having to clarify what boxes you’re checking.”

Read the full interview right here.

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Sydney Sweeney Was Certain Her Character Was Going To Be Killed In ‘Euphoria’ Season 2

There’s a famous story about how Aaron Paul’s Jesse Pinkman was supposed to die during season one of Breaking Bad. But creator Vince Gilligan came to his senses and “it became clear to me that Aaron Paul was an absolute asset to the show. I’d no more kill him off now than cut off one of my pinkies,” he explained in a 2010 interview.

I’m not sure if Euphoria creator Sam Levinson had any intention of killing Cassie, the character played by Sydney Sweeney on the hit HBO series. But she was certain he was going to in the season two premiere. It’s a good thing he didn’t.

“I thought that Sam was killing me. I thought that I was going to get killed,” Sweeney said on Entertainment Weekly‘s “The Awardist” podcast. “And the hanging out the window, actually, was just me hanging out the window. It was just random and very in the moment.” She continued, “When I read it, I thought that Cassie was getting killed off. I was really bummed. But then it turned into this weirdly sensual, dangerous connection between [Cassie and Nate, played by Jacob Elordi]. And it became what it became.”

If Levinson does one day decide to kill Cassie, good luck breaking the news to Sweeney’s grandmother.

(Via People)

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The Heat Will Not Have Kyle Lowry Or Jimmy Butler For Game 5 Against The Hawks

The Miami Heat suffered not just their first loss of the series in Game 3 in Atlanta, but also the loss of Kyle Lowry with a hamstring injury that looms large for the East’s top-seed as they look to move deep in the playoffs. Despite Lowry’s absence, the Heat dominated Game 4 to take a 3-1 series lead back to Miami, led by the continued spectacular play of Jimmy Butler.

There’s an argument to be made that Butler has been the best player in the playoffs so far — although with competition for that title from Giannis Antetokounmpo and Jayson Tatum — as he has been the driving force for the Heat taking a stranglehold on the series. However, Butler is apparently dealing with some knee inflammation and the Heat announced on Tuesday afternoon that they will try to close out the series later that night without his services or Kyle Lowry’s.

That is a considerable absence and one that will make life very difficult for Miami, as they will be without their two veteran creators. Tyler Herro figures to play a more prominent role and maybe being the focal point of the Heat offense can get him going a bit. Max Strus will need to continue his stellar play in support and overall the Heat will have to find ways to create easy opportunities in transition to ease the burden of halfcourt creation without Lowry and Butler.

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Machine Gun Kelly Says He’s Pivoting Back To Rap And Explains Why

A few years ago, Machine Gun Kelly decided to give pop-punk music a try, shying away from the rap that made him famous. On a commercial level, that turned out to be a terrific idea, as MGK’s two rock albums, 2020’s Tickets To My Downfall and last year’s Mainstream Sellout, where his first ones to go No. 1 in the US. He’s apparently not done with rap yet, though, as he’s now saying he wants to get back to making that type of music.

In a new Audacy Music interview (as Rap-Up points out), Kelly said of what’s next for him:

“I’m going to make a rap album for myself, for no other reason, no point to prove, no chip on my shoulder. If I keep doing things to prove things to people, I’m going to one: drive myself crazy, and two: not make a good product. I made Tickets and Mainstream Sellout because I wanted to make them. I need to now also make people miss that sound. […] I’m going to do this tour and I’m gonna step into where I left Hotel Diablo and expand on my storytelling as a rapper and find a new innovative sound for the hip-hop Machine Gun Kelly. That’s where my excitement is and where me as a music archaeologist wants to explore.”

While pop-punk has brought Kelly his biggest commercial success, he wasn’t exactly slouching in his early rap days: All of his albums were top-5 on the charts, save for 2017’s Bloom, which peaked at a respectable No. 8. Bloom, however, yielded Kelly’s biggest hit song, as the Camila Cabello collaboration “Bad Things” peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it his only top-5 (or even top-10) single.

Watch the interview above.

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Cass McCombs Is Joined By Danielle Haim On The Eulogistic ‘We Belong To Heaven’

While Cass McCombs’ last album release was 2019’s Tip Of The Sphere, he’s been busy tapping into the spirit of collaboration ever since. His late-2020 track “Dont (Just) Vote” was a successful political rallying cry ahead of the presidential election, featuring Angel Olsen, Bob Weir, and even political philospher Noam Chomsky. Most recently, the indie folkie played a psychedelic guitar on “Happy Accident,” the gorgeous lead single to Tomberlin’s upcoming album. Now, he has tapped Danielle Haim and others for the new single, “We Belong To Heaven.”

With Haim on drums and backing vocals, McCombs sings, plays piano, percussion, and guitar on an upbeat homage to a fallen friend. “Music was all we needed, yeah, you’ve got to give it away to keep it. You surrendered undefeated, now you belong to Heaven,” McCombs sings.

The track was produced by the venerable Ariel Rechstshaid, who has produced a slew of McCombs’ albums, as well as been a part of the core Haim production team. “We Belong To Heaven” also features Frank Ocean collaborator Buddy Ross on the Hammond organ, additional vocals from The Chapin Sisters, bassist Shahzad Ismaily, and Frank LoCastro on keys

Listen to “We Belong To Heaven” above and check out Cass McCombs’ upcoming California and festival tour dates below.

05/21 – Guadalajara, MX @ Corona Capital Festival Guadalajara
06/14 – Santa Ana, CA @ Constellation Room
06/15 – San Diego, CA @ Casbah
06/17 – Los Angeles, CA @ Lodge Room
06/18 – San Francisco, CA @ The Chapel
0619 – Cayucos, CA @ Schooner’s

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Rolling Loud Is Going To Toronto With Dave, Future, And Wizkid Headlining

Rolling Loud, the traveling rap festival with roots in Miami and branches in Los Angeles, New York, and Portugal, has set its sights on Toronto. The Great White North’s upcoming iteration of Rolling Loud is booked for the weekend of September 9-11 at Ontario Place with headliners Dave, Future, and Wizkid. This marks the first time the festival will be headlined by mostly international artists (not including its Portugal events, where technically all the Americans were the imports), with Dave representing the UK (y’know, England) and Wizkid bringing Nigerian flair.

Further down the bill, fans will recognize some familiar names, including Rolling Loud mainstays like A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie, Central Cee, Lil Uzi Vert, Migos, Nav, Rae Sremmurd, Roddy Ricch, Ski Mask The Slump God, and $NOT, while the new international outlook includes upstarts like AJ Tracey, Baka Not Nice, Haviah Mighty, Pressa, Rema, and Smiley.

Tickets for the festival go on sale this Friday, April 29, with the presale beginning Wednesday, April 27, with American Express cardholders getting their own presale on Thursday. For more info, you can check out the official Rolling Loud website: RollingLoud.com/toronto

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Tobi Lou, ‘Parrish Blue,’ And The Power Of Limitless Imagination

It’s really rare that you meet a rapper’s mom before you meet the rapper himself. But that’s what happened for me with Tobi Lou, the effervescent Chicago rapper who is building an audience by being something like the antithesis of what rappers have always been. Okay, so technically, it was his girlfriend’s mom, but the point stands: The way I met Tobi is as counterintuitive as his approach to hip-hop – and if anything, his approach to music is even more successful.

To invest in Tobi Lou fanship is to embrace a thousand little quirky artifacts of the quasi fantasy world he’s building for himself. For instance, in 2018, Tobi was joined by St. Louis rapper Smino in his video for “Troop,” a dreamy ode to the cartoons of Tobi’s youth. The video features cameos from characters like the Rugrats and Kanye West’s Takashi Murakami-designed Dropout Bear mascot, spotlighting the colorful oeuvre he’s built over the past few years.

Tobi expanded that saturated fantasyland through singles such as the Adventure Time-inspired TikTok favorite “Buff Baby” and with projects like 2019’s Live On Ice. With each new release, a fervent fan base also grew around Tobi’s equally vibrant personality. Both kicked into overdrive with the recent release of his album Non-Perishable in March, which is part of a three-project suite that grew out of his original plan for a project called Parrish Blue. If his previous projects expanded the canon, Non-Perishable turned it on its head, drawing it into the realm of hyperreal live-action marked by the same cartoonish zany energy.

It also stretched the boundaries of his content, allowing him to delve more into the inner workings of his mind beyond candy-coated hooks and saccharine sing-alongs. “I think Live On Ice was a big show and tell,” he says via a mid-afternoon Zoom call to discuss Non-Perishable and its upcoming related projects. “Parrish Blue is an overwhelming defiant sadness like a really gigantic whole. It’s a lot of devastation and it’s just a lot of emotions and it’s really heavy. And then making Parrish Blue, I realized through the help of my sister that I need to just stop trying to fit all my toys into one box. And then I separated them for the first time. And now I had like three boxes of 10 to 12 tracks.”

Those three boxes are Non-Perishable, April Showers, which is set to release later this week, and Parrish Blue, each describing a different stage of the process of rebuilding and healing from the soul-shattering wounds of the past few years. “The second project, that’s just chaos at its height,” he explains. “That’s the heat of the battle. And then Parrish Blue is like the aftereffect of the battle, just the feeling of sorrow, the feeling of loss and just dealing with that. And the piece of it, knowing this is who I am and not being afraid to be that. And I think Non-Perishable just offered me the chance to get energy off and break out of this sad box that I kind of put myself into while making Parrish Blue.”

In true Tobi Lou fashion, his route into making music professionally was also roundabout and unconventional. Born in Nigeria and raised in Chicago, he originally pursued a career in baseball, even making it to the minor leagues before suffering a career-ending injury. From then on, he focused everything on making and releasing music independently – an arrangement that takes the same sort of commitment, energy, time, and money, but is every bit as rewarding.

Being independent affords him a level of control and freedom that is often out of reach for his contemporaries on major labels. For one thing, he’s shot 11 videos for Non-Perishable and released eight so far, all with the assistance of his longtime collaborator Glassface, who has been a critical component of the Tobi Lou experience so far. If Tobi’s striking visual presentation is the hook, Glassface is probably as integral to his success as anyone, designing Tobi’s cover art and shooting his videos, as well as contributing musically behind the scenes.

“There is beauty in independence,” Tobi says of his situation. “There’s definitely more for freedom, but at the end of the day, it’s a business. Everything’s a business. Whether you’re independent, or you’re with a major label, everything’s a business. You just get more authority over your art, as an independent…. I don’t really feel like anyone’s holding me back. If I’m not dropping, it’s because I don’t want to drop.”

Of course, competing in such a crowded marketplace without the assistance of a massive corporate machine means risking getting overshadowed and lost in the near-constant rush of new music. Fortunately for him, his natural personality and sense of humor provide the best tools to solve this potential problem. Days after the release of Non-Perishable, he joked that he would remove the album from DSPs after a week and that listeners should download it to ensure they wouldn’t lose access. Fans took that as a challenge, running up the album’s sales until it reached Apple Music’s number-one spot.

“I didn’t mean to hold the album hostage,” he laughs. “I think I woke up the day after it dropped and I was like, ‘You know what? I’m going to say they got seven days.’ Because first-week [sales] matters so much to us, for artists – that’s what we’re judged by. I’m always trolling. And I didn’t really think much of it past that, until the day it started unfolding, and people were getting worried like, ‘Wait, is he serious?’ And I was just like, ‘Wait a minute. I’m actually causing a little disturbance here. People are getting worried.’ And what if things operated like that? We got to see the power of this fan base, and I think we could do some really crazy things down the line.”

For now, he hopes he doesn’t need to hold his albums hostage in the future, but he sees the value in seeking new outlets and avenues and approaches to promoting his art. For instance, outside of music, he’s spent the past year designing his own sneakers and is already working on a second pair. He’s excited to launch them because of all the artists who sell various merch like hoodies, shirts, bags, and so on, he may very well be the first to put out his own shoes independently.

Which sums up his whole approach, really. “I like the fact that people are starting to think in that language,” he says. “It’s really cool to start thinking, yo don’t wait for Nike, you are Nike. We can be Adidas. We can be all these things, and we can just start somewhere. So it’s been cool to see.” The only limit is imagination, and as Tobi’s work so far has shown, his imagination is limitless.

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Filmmaker Dexter Fletcher On ‘The Offer,’ The Unbelievable Story Of ‘The Godfather’

Dexter Fletcher, seemingly, has become the go-to filmmaker for projects about real people, who are famous, and in a lot of cases are very much still alive. Even though not credited as director of Bohemian Rhapsody, it’s well-documented that he stepped in when Bryan Singer, let’s say, stopped directing the movie. Then, of course, he was the director of the Elton John biopic, Rocket Man. And now he’s here to tell the story of the making of The Godfather, as executive producer and director of a few episodes, with The Offer. (Which will stream on Paramount+ starting April 28th.)

The Offer tells the story from producer Al Ruddy’s point of view. Played by Miles Teller (who stepped in after Armie Hammer … departed) Ruddy would go on to produce movies like the two Cannonball Run movies, then eventually win another Oscar for Million Dollar Baby. But after leaving network television (he helped create Hogan’s Heroes), his first real claim to fame was producing The Godfather. And in getting The Godfather made, he had to cut deals with basically everyone, including the actual mob who, at first, didn’t want the movie made at all, then decided they were fine with it, but wanted their cut. And then there’s Paramount, and dealing with an erratic studio head Robert Evans (Matthew Goode, who is excellent as Evans) who is supportive, but also going through a divorce and sometimes goes missing. If the stuff we see in The Offer is even half true, it’s a miracle The Godfather even exists today. As Fletcher explains ahead…

I feel over the last few years, you’ve become the go-to person for projects about famous people, who many are still alive, and you have to navigate everything that comes with that.

Yeah, I suppose so. I mean, I suppose the first time I kind of came across it, it was with Eddie the Eagle.

Even that. Yes, good point.

And I spent the time talking to the person who the film was about, who is still alive.

But there’s a different level of fame with the last three.

Yes, exactly. But nevertheless, he is still a real person. What’s interesting about that, is the script was written in a very jokey way on that, and then I met the man and he came to the meeting and he had his two young daughters with him who obviously idolized him. And what was interesting was learning and understanding that these people are real. And although that sounds like a trite thing to say, it’s also very important that you find a way of handling that subject matter in a way that, even as sometimes you are telling a story and things are heightened and it could be comedic or tragic, or triumphant, or whatever, there’s a certain responsibility that you have towards this person and the people who love them. It sounds like a heavy-handed thing, but it is important.

And that makes complete sense, but I keep thinking if, say, Al Pacino is not happy about The Offer, he can afford better lawyers than anyone involved with Eddie the Eagle, and that’s what I would be concerned about.

Yes, yes. I mean, I tried not to get into those chopping balls.

But like I said, you seem to navigate it well…

I mean, I think it’s about just a certain level of respect that you afford people and you’ve got to think about why you’re telling that story. Are you telling that story in order to hurt them and vilify them? Or are you trying to elevate their achievements, and them, and what they’ve done and simply sort of tell that story about people that you respect? And I think as long as you just stay true to that, and not overly reverential, because that, again, can also have the same effect. They’re real people.

Well, that’s interesting because, other than literal killers, you humanize every character. Even Barry Lapidus, the Colin Hanks character, who butts heads with Al Ruddy and Robert Evans the whole time, by the end you show he’s just trying to do his job, too.

Yeah, exactly. And look, there are people in that corporate machine who run those studios and are there as a necessary evil, if that’s what you want to take them as. Without the creatives, there’s that question about, how does the machine run on both sides? It’s not straight forward, it’s not cut and dry, there are people like Barry who need to, or are equally a part of, an important part of that machine and mechanism. And equally as well, you think about Giovanni Ribisi as Joe Colombo.

Right…

He was a decidedly shady, dark character. Now, we are looking at a certain aspect and part of his life where that was sometimes put into play…

Joe Colombo’s a good example. Did you worry about making him too likable? By the end, he feels like, “Yeah, this guy doesn’t seem too bad.” And you’re right, he’s probably done some things that aren’t good.

But I think as you discover as that goes along, that is a relationship that’s a dance with the devil, it really is. And as the scenes develops, it’s very clear that’s a huge part of why Al got himself into this very dark place with these people who operate in a very dark way. And that seemingly on the surface, it is all sort of sweetness and light, but actually it costs Al a lot, and that deal with the devil plays itself out. And although Colombo met the end that he did, a very violent end, it didn’t mean that Al was out of that world or out of the gravity of that.

Did you hear anyone that was involved in the making of The Godfather? Did you hear from any of them that had any concerns? Did James Caan call you and be like, “Hey man, I want to know what you’re doing”?

No, is the straightforward answer. I know Al Pacino from a long time ago, we worked together as father and son in a movie over 30 years ago [in Revolution].

Right.

And so, I took the liberty of calling him and sitting down with him and I thought, if I’m going to start anywhere with finding out if there are issues, I suppose Al would be a good place to start.

That seems smart.

Yeah. They’re smart, they’re generous, and I think they understand that we are telling a story. And we’re not there to vilify them or kind of try and make villains out of anybody. It’s based on facts, but of course it’s a TV series, it is a streaming series, and it has 10 hours to run and it needs to be entertainment as well as informative. So, these guys, they’re smart and they get it. I personally didn’t get any phone calls from James Caan that scared the life out of me.

If James Caan called me and wasn’t happy, that sounds terrifying.

Exactly, exactly. Fortunately, that didn’t happen. I know Miles spoke to James. I think they know each other personally anyway. And I think, look, there’s an incredible amount of pride. I know if it was the other way around, that’s the way I tried to look and think about it: 50 years from now, someone is making a 10-part mini-series about the making of Eddie the Eagle, for example, or Rocket Man. Then I’d be flattered and it would be fine.

Let’s say it’s Rocket Man and they’re digging into the nitty-gritty of every little argument that happened, you wouldn’t feel like there are a couple things you wouldn’t want to share?

I personally know I wouldn’t.

Okay.

I kind of find it fine. I understand your point, but I think they don’t have anything to hide. All they have is an incredible seminal movie. And these things are never born of ease. It’s not like everyone skips around and it’s all wonderful. I’ve yet to work on a film where everything goes perfectly every day and there’s not one sort of clash, or argument, or ringing of hands. It’s just the nature of it.

Speaking of not going perfectly, I’m curious from your perspective from a production standpoint, The Offer had a high-profile casting change right at the beginning of this. The lead character had to be recast.

Well, I mean that happened before or I was involved. But I understand your point and, look, even along the road of production, stuff happens and it does mirror a lot of what those guys went through. And there may be casting choices that I wanted that studio didn’t and vice versa. You still get into all of those dramas that are very real because there’s a lot of people who have vested interest in it, creatively, financially. There are all sorts of angles that people are coming from.

I think in 40 years they could do a mini-series about this mini-series.

Well, that would really be a mess, wouldn’t it?

You’ve got a pandemic right in the middle of it. A lot happened.

It did. But we were very fortunate that we weathered that and planned, and we didn’t really get derailed by the pandemic. And there was a lot of really good fortunate stuff. And it’s seemly what can be really difficult, but cast changes or whatever, actually, we think and we feel that it all turned out really well and it’s a great homage to Ruddy, and the film, and Coppola, and Pacino, and Brando, and all those people involved. So, makes me proud of that.

You’re making a series about Paramount, produced by Paramount. Are you ever worried about hearing from the high ups at Paramount going, “We’d rather that information not come out”? That seems like an interesting dynamic you have to work with.

It is. It is. But look, Robert Evans is well documented…

Right, a lot of that information is out there.

Yeah. And I don’t think we were ever going to go some of the places that Evans even went himself with his own confessions, in The Kid Stays in the Picture, for example. The great thing about it is, it’s half a century ago and there’s enough distance and time for these stories and these moments to become legends. And so, once something becomes a legend, it gets into the public psyche and it’s this kind of retold story after many, many times. And we get to kind of play around and tell our version of the legend. And so there’s something really kind of exciting and powerful about that.

What part of this story were you even like, “There’s no way that happened”? And then you looked into it and you’re like, “Oh, wow. That actually happened.”

Well, the horse’s head story is incredible. In fact, it is a real horse’s head, and how they came about they came about it, and how they got it. It plays out in one of the latter episodes.

I saw that one. So the actual mob was involved in helping them get that?

Exactly.

I knew it was a real horse’s head, but I didn’t know how they got it, specifically. That’s wild.

Yeah. It is. It’s a really cool scene. It wasn’t in one of the episodes I directed, but obviously, exec producer, I was there. And I was like, wow, I had no idea. But there’s all sorts of things, like the rat in Robert Evans’s bedroom in the hotel.

So that really happened?

Yeah. How this all mirrors what was going on. But even Ruddy’s friendship with Colombo as well. And he speaks about it now, to this day, and he’s like, “That was one of the real close friends. It was a scary friendship.”

I bet.

So there’s a lot of really good stuff in it that comes literally from the horse’s mouth.

That’s a good pun.

Yeah, from the horse’s mouth. So, that’s the beauty of it. And we are telling a story, but I think we tell it with great care and affection. And yeah, it’s got that edge in it as well that the film has. That’s what that gives us.

‘The Offer’ will be available to stream on Paramount+ beginning April 28. You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter.

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Megan Thee Stallion Fires Back At Criticism Of Her Gayle King Interview About The Alleged Tory Lanez Shooting

In a recent interview with CBS’s Gayle King, Megan Thee Stallion spoke about the 2020 incident where Tory Lanez allegedly shot at her feet, and revealed photos of the wounds to the back of her feet (up against her Achilles tendon). CBS also showed copies of a medical report that indicated that Meg still has bullet fragments in her feet. Considering how toxic internet culture, social media, and hip-hop pundits can be towards female artists — many of which still don’t believe that Meg was shot at all — the “Plan B” rapper went on the CBS Mornings show to tell her side of the story and hopefully quell any doubts.

“I was really scared ’cause I had never been shot at before,” an emotional Meg said as she detailed fearing for her life and of those around her at the time. However, even this appearance isn’t enough to convince some people that Meg has been wronged. A Twitter user replied to the @CBSMornings account and @theestallion, saying, “crazy how meg gets to speak on whomever platform or song about the situation but tory or he goes to jail being its still an open investigation.”

The user referenced how Lanez has been tight-lipped about the “open investigation.” Meg was clearly was irked by someone questioning her very reasonable agency here, and in a now deleted quote-tweet, she clapped back at the keyboard commando, saying: “So a man can shoot me, chop up horse legs in music videos to taunt me, pay blogs to spread false information from what’s happening in court, record studio albums and make diss tracks… but when I talk to gayle king that’s the last straw… F*CK YALL.”

There’s definitely a double-standard for male and female artists, especially in hip-hop, and this is further proof of it. Just last week, Bhad Bhabie shed some light on the petty social media culture that has rendered her one-dimensional, despite her resume speaking otherwise. And even Megan — who is undoubtedly on the top of the hip-hop world right now — isn’t immune to these mechanisms.

Megan Thee Stallion is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Kendrick Lamar-Signed Tanna Leone Drops The ‘Death N’ Taxes’ Video To Announce His Debut Album

Last year, Kendrick Lamar and Dave Free’s new media company, PgLang, found instant success with its first artist, Baby Keem. Keem’s debut album, The Melodic Blue, debuted at No. 5 on the Billboard 200, while the rapper himself garnered a Best Rap Performance Grammy Award alongside his cousin Kendrick for the album’s single “Family Ties.” This past weekend, they capped Keem’s successful rookie season with a performance at Coachella, where Kendrick joined the younger rapper onstage to perform their Grammy-winning hit.

Now, the LA-based label/production studio will aim to repeat its first success with its next artist, Tanna Leone, who made his PgLang debut last month on “With The Villains” and “Lucky.” This week, he announced the release date for his own debut album, Sleepy Soldier, which is due Friday, April 29. To accompany the announcement, he dropped the video for his latest single, “Death N’ Taxes,” which sees him standing stoically in front of scenes from a chaotic life. From schoolyard fights to funerals, Tanna reviews the moments that have left the biggest impacts on him, subtly revealing who he is by depicting what he’s been through.

Meanwhile, his formerly released singles “With The Villians” and “Lucky” won’t be among Sleepy Soldier‘s 14 tracks when it drops this Friday, but with a tracklist that doesn’t reveal any of the features, it’ll be worth checking out to see if there are any surprises. In the meantime, check out the video for “Death N’ Taxes” above.