Categories
Pop Daypop

Chlöe Bailey shares versions of ‘Winter Wonderland’ and ‘Merry Christmas Baby’

Chlöe Bailey is ringing in the holiday season with special covers of two favorite holiday classics.

Bailey dropped her renditions of ‘Winter Wonderland’ and ‘Merry Christmas Baby,’ as the artist continues to tease new projects in 2025 (including new music and more!) Says Chlöe: “In recreating a classic, I wanted to make sure I was honoring the original artists but also putting my own personal spin on the tracks. With ‘Merry Christmas Baby’ I kept listening back to Otis Redding’s original so that I could match the soul in his voice …for ‘Winter Wonderland,’ I wanted the musicality to feel classic but also add my harmonies and chopped up samples throughout. I hope fans feel holiday joy and cheer when they hear my Amazon Music Original holiday tracks this year, however it means to them!”

Take a listen to ‘Winter Wonderland’ – HERE.
and ‘Merry Christmas Baby’ – HERE.

Editorial credit: Featureflash Photo Agency / Shutterstock.com

Categories
Pop Daypop

Lady Gaga shares cover of ‘Santa Claus Is Coming to Town’

Lady Gaga dropped a surprise cover of “Santa Claus Is Coming to Town” featuring a soulful rock twist of the holiday classic.  The cover song follows Gag’s recent singles “Die With a Smile” and “Disease.”

Per Billboard, the recording comes alongside Gaga’s appearance on the Apple TV+ special A Carpool Karaoke Christmas with Zane Lowe, where she performed “Santa Claus Is Coming to Town” with the radio host and her band. Gaga joined Lowe alongside fellow guests Chappell Roan and Dua Lipa to perform festive classics, as well as their own hits.

Take a listen to Gaga’s new cover of “Santa Claus Is Coming to Town” – HERE.

Editorial credit: Tinseltown / Shutterstock.com

Categories
Go Country 105

Nashville Notes: Little Big Town's Christmas special + Gabby Barrett's on TalkShopLive

Grand Ole Opry member Jeannie Seely is mourning the loss of her husband, Eugene Ward. He passed away Dec. 13 after recently being diagnosed with cancer. “My heart is broken now, but I am so grateful for the 15 years I had with Gene. I knew he was a good man when I married him, but as I experienced life with him, I learned he was a really great man,” Jeannie shares in a statement. “My love and respect for him grew daily, and it continues as I learn how much he touched the lives of so many people, some who only knew him by the example he set. It is comforting to know that others share that love and respect for him.” Eugene was 92.

Little Big Town's Christmas at the Opry airs Monday at 8 p.m. ET on NBC. The star-studded special will feature performances from Little Big Town, Dan + Shay, Kelsea Ballerini, Sheryl Crow and more.

Carrie Underwood will guest appear on Nate Bargatze's Nashville Christmas. You can catch the holiday special Thursday at 9 p.m. ET on CBS and Paramount+.

Gabby Barrett will be on TalkShopLive on Tuesday to talk all things Christmas and take you behind the scenes of recording her new album, Carols and Candlelight. You can catch her livestream chat beginning at 5 p.m. ET at talkshop.live.

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Categories
Go Country 105

Darius Rucker has a movie he watches 'four times every Christmas'

Is there a movie you have to revisit every year during the festive season?

Darius Rucker has not one but two, and he says they’re his favorite holiday movies of all time.

“There are so many great movies that I can think of just off the top of my head that are great Christmas movies. But it would be a tie between Miracle on 34th Street, which is still just great acting [and a] great movie. I just love it. I love watching it. I watch it probably four times every Christmas and cry at the end every time. And I love Elf,” Darius shares. 

“I just think Elf is one of the absolute great stories and just funniest movies I've ever seen and it just happens to be a Christmas movie,” he says. “It's one of my favorite movies.”

If you need more Christmas albums to listen to this season, you can check out Darius’ 2014 record, Home For The Holidays, wherever you listen to music.

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Categories
Go Country 105

Gold & Platinum for Christmas: Shaboozey, Taylor Swift + more top RIAA 2024 certifications

Shaboozey‘s getting some precious metal for Christmas this year.

The Recording Industry Association of America, which certifies music Gold, Platinum and Diamond, has announced that the genre-bending star had the highest-certified song. “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” was certified for sales of 5 million units. 

Shaboozey also set the record for the fastest certification of a single. It went Gold, signifying 500,000 units sold, just 31 days after its release and then grew from there.

Some of the artists who earned their very first RIAA certifications this year included Tucker Wetmore for “Wine Into Whiskey”Dasha for “Austin”; and The War And Treaty for their Zach Bryan collab “Hey Driver.”

“When I first wrote these songs, I didn’t know it would be changing my life this much. And I truly have the fans to thank,” Tucker shares in a release. “Thank you so much for changing my life every single day! It’s such an honor. Here’s to hopefully many more.”

“Having a song go Platinum this year is insane . so keep streaming ‘Austin!'” adds Dasha.

Taylor Swift received the highest certification level for 2024: Her album The Tortured Poets Department was certified six-times Platinum for sales of 6 million units.




Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Categories
Go Country 105

Jelly Roll reveals 'new goal' on weight loss journey after dropping 120 pounds

Jelly Roll is revealing his newest goal on his health journey.

A month after sharing that he was “down, like, 120” pounds on The Pat McAfee Show, the “I Am Not Okay” singer announced that he has his sights set on showcasing his body transformation on a magazine cover – and set a timeline of when he wants it to happen.

“I wanna be on the cover of Men’s Health by March of 2026,” he said on the Dec. 15 episode of wife Bunnie XO‘s Dumb Blonde podcast. “That’s my new goal. I want to have one of the biggest transformations.”

“Let’s go!” Bunnie responded, saying her husband’s revelation made her “so giddy.”

“I can already visualize it,” she added.

Elsewhere in the podcast, Jelly revealed why he has been so open about his health journey with fans.

“I did this publicly for a reason. I want to be honest about my struggles with it with people,” he shared. “I wore it for so long. I think that people that become as big as I became, when they lose the weight, they’re kind of ashamed.”

“They’re so ashamed that they go hide and lose the weight, and then they come back out and they don’t really know how to interact with the world looking different or feeling different,” Jelly said.

“I wanted to lose it in front of everybody,” he continued. “I wanted to talk about it.”

On the music front, Jelly’s current single, “Liar,” is in the top 15 and ascending the country charts. You can find it on his latest album, Beautifully Broken, out now.

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Categories
Go Country 105

Chris Janson's not a fan of 'The Christmas Song': Here's why

If you love “The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire),” you’d be bummed to know that Chris Janson‘s picked it as his least favorite holiday track.

When asked by CMT in a recent video interview, Chris noted that it’s “a hard one to say,” before naming the ol’ “Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire.”

“I just think it’s weird. It sounds weird,” Chris shares. “I don’t like chestnuts. I think it’s bizarre.”

“To me, it’s always just been like, ‘God, can we skip it? This is so boring,'” the “Buy Me a Boat” singer adds.

But when asked to pick his favorite, Chris swiftly names Alabama‘s “Christmas in Dixie,” which he rerecorded with the group’s Randy Owen and Teddy Gentry.

“Even if I hadn’t sang it, [‘Christmas in Dixie’ is] still my favorite,” Chris says.

You can find Chris and Alabama’s “Christmas in Dixie” on digital platforms now.

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Categories
Go Country 105

Jelly Roll, Brad Paisley + more featured on Kane Brown's 'The High Road': See the full track list

Kane Brown has unveiled the track list for his forthcoming new album, The High Road.

The 18-track record will feature collabs with Jelly Roll (“Haunted”), Brad Paisley (“Things We Quit”), Kane’s wife, Katelyn Brown (“Body Talk”, “Do Us Apart”), R&B singer Khalid (“Rescue”) and Marshmello on the #1 hit “Miles on It.”

In a recent interview with ABC Audio, Kane said “Haunted,” which he’s teased on TikTok, is about how “you can have all the money in the world and you [still] can’t escape depression.”

You’ll also find the earlier released “Fiddle in the Band” and Kane’s current single, “Backseat Driver,” on his new album.

The High Road arrives Jan. 24. 

Kane’s The High Road Tour kicks off March 13 in San Diego, California. For tickets and a full list of dates, visit kanebrownmusic.com.

Here’s the full track list for The High Road:
“I Am”
“Fiddle in the Band”
“Backseat Driver”
“Miles on It” (with Marshmello)
“Says I Can”
“3”
“Rescue” (with Khalid)
“Haunted” (with Jelly Roll)
“Start a Fire”
“Body Talk” (with Katelyn Brown)
“Gorgeous”
“Beside Me”
“I Can Feel It”
“Things We Quit” (with Brad Paisley)
“Back Around”
“Stay”
“Do Us Apart” (with Katelyn Brown)
“When You Forget”




Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Categories
News Daypop

ABC News to pay $15 million in settlement of President-elect Trump’s defamation lawsuit

ABC News will pay $15 million in settlement of President-elect Donald Trump defamation suit against the network and news anchor George Stephanopoulos. The network will contribute $15 million to  Trump’s presidential foundation and museum to settle the lawsuit, according to documents filed in U.S. District Court on Saturday. The settlement, dated Friday, was signed by both Trump and Stephanopoulos.

In the lawsuit, Trump claimed that ABC News anchor Stephanopoulos’ statements were “false, intentional, malicious and designed to cause harm.” Trump accused ABC News and Stephanopoulos of acting “with actual malice or with a reckless disregard for the truth,” after Stephanopoulos said that Trump had been “found liable for rape” in a March 10 interview with Republican Rep. Nancy Mace of South Carolina, with the filing stating that Stephanopoulos “knows that these statements are patently and demonstrably false.”

According to the settlement, the defendants — identified as ABC, ABC News and Stephanopoulos — will also pay $1 million to Trump’s counsel, and add an “editor’s note” at the bottom of the March 10 online article that accompanied the interview which states: “ABC News and George Stephanopoulos regret statements regarding President Donald J. Trump made during an interview by George Stephanopoulos with Rep. Nancy Mace on ABC’s This Week on March 10, 2024.”

An ABC News spokesperson told CNN: “We are pleased that the parties have reached an agreement to dismiss the lawsuit on the terms in the court filing.”

Editorial credit: Ralf Liebhold / Shutterstock.com

Categories
News Daypop

Homeland Security Sec’y addresses aerial drones causing concern among East Coast residents

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said the federal government is taking action to address the aerial drones that have prompted concern among residents in the NY/NJ area. There have been numerous reports of drone activity along the East Coast since November.

Runways at Stewart International Airport in New York were shut down for an hour on Friday after the FAA reported drone sightings in the area with NY Gov. Kathy Hochul calling on Congress to pass the Counter-UAS Authority Security, Safety, and Reauthorization Act, which would strengthen the FAA’s drone oversight and give states more power to investigate the sightings.

Mayorkas said Sunday on ABC News “This Week with George Stephanopoulos: “There’s no question that people are seeing drones. I want to assure the American public that we in the federal government have deployed additional resources, personnel, technology to assist the New Jersey State Police in addressing the drone sightings … Some of those drone sightings are, in fact, drones. Some are manned aircraft that are commonly mistaken for drones. But there’s no question that drones are being sighted.”

Mayorkas said the U.S. knows of no foreign involvement and that it remains “vigilant” in investigating the drone sightings.  He cited the change of a Federal Aviation Administration rule in 2023 that allows drones to fly at night as to why there might be an uptick in sightings, and called on Congress to expand local and state authority to help address the issue:  “I want to assure the American public that we are on it. It is critical, as we all have said for a number of years, that we need from Congress additional authorities to address the drone situation. Our authorities currently are limited and they are set to expire. We need them extended and expanded. We want state and local authorities to also have the ability to counter growing activity under federal supervision.”

Mayorkas later added: “With respect to the ability to incapacitate those drones, we are limited in our authorities. We have certain agencies within the Department of Homeland Security that can do that and outside our department, but we need those authorities expanded as well. It is our job to be vigilant in the federal government, with our state and local partners on behalf of the American public, and we can assure their safety by reason of that vigilance. We deploy personnel, technology, and, if there is any reason for concern, if we identify any foreign involvement or criminal activity, we will communicate with the American public accordingly. Right now, we are not aware of any. If we become aware of any, we will communicate accordingly and take appropriate action.”

In a subsequent interview with Stephanopoulos, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said that he and his wife saw drones above his home in New Jersey just two days ago: “I can’t tell you the number of people that have come up to me concerned about it. To say this is not unusual activity, it’s just wrong .. When people see this kind of activity, it’s a newish technology to most people, and they’re worried about it and concerned. It’s a lack of communication from the government at the federal and state level that’s at fault here.”

Editorial credit: Philip Yabut / Shutterstock.com