Thứ Năm, 1 tháng 1, 2015
What does the letter K have in common with my cousins
They are ok by themselves, but they get pretty racist when there are three of them together
24 Breakout Stars In Music In 2014
The year’s best new singers, songwriters and producers. In no particular order.
Sam Smith
By the time Sam Smith stood on stage at Saturday Night Live in March, he already had you hooked. You may not have recognized his face then or known his name, but you'd certainly heard his angelic voice anchoring Disclosure's dance hit "Latch." Now, he's obviously a giant star, and his haunting, gospel-tinged breakup lament "Stay With Me" is one of the undisputed biggest hits of the year. It was first played on Zane Lowe's BBC on radio show on March 25, and it hasn't been done with our ears since. We're not complaining.
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Ed Sheeran
Ed Sheeran bolstered his songwriting career with credits on songs for One Direction and Taylor Swift, but he made a triumphant return to his primary gig with his latest chart-topping album X. Sheeran went beyond his voice and his guitar on X, flirting with Justin Timberlake-styled pop 'n B on lead single "Sing" and rapping on "Don't." What’s next for Ed Sheeran in 2015? He’ll continue his X tour, which will take him to Europe, Oceania, Asia and the Americas. Not bad for a guy who came to LA in 2010 with no Hollywood connections.
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DJ Mustard
The 24-year-old super producer's signature sound grew from a hip-hop subgenre ("ratchet") to radio ubiquity via hits including but not limited to Tinashe's "2 On," Big Sean's "I Don't Fuck With You," and Fergie's "L.A. Love (La La)." But the real sign that DJ Mustard was the producer to beat in 2014? Even the hits he didn't produce (Iggy Azalea's "Fancy," Migos' "Fight Night") bore his unmistakable influence.
David J. Bertozzi / BuzzFeed.
Meghan Trainor
It seems inconceivable now but Meghan Trainor and writing partner Kevin Kadish spent months trying to shop around her summer smash “All About That Bass” to no avail. Trainor was working as a songwriter in Nashville at the time and hadn’t considered cutting the song herself. All that changed when legendary record exec L.A. Reid heard the song, he knew immediately that “Bass” would be hit and Trainor a star. The doo wop-inspired ode to booty ultimately spent eight weeks at #1 in the U.S. and topped the charts in an astounding 58 countries. While the prospect of being a one-hit wonder loomed large, Trainor’s cheery follow-up single “Lips Are Movin” is climbing up the charts and the genre-bending singer-songwriter is poised for genuine pop stardom.
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