advertisement
FYI

Billboard: Tate McRae’s ‘Greedy’ Is an Artistic Turning Point

The Calgary pop singer talks to Billboard about her "validating" new hit, showcasing her dance talent, and upcoming plans.

Billboard: Tate McRae’s ‘Greedy’ Is an Artistic Turning Point

By External Source

The pop singer talks to Billboard about her "validating" new hit, showcasing her dance talent, and upcoming plans.


Tate McRae got an inkling that her latest single would be huge the night before it was released.

The 20-year-old pop singer began teasing snippets of Greedy on TikTok in August, prior to the single arriving in full on Sept. 15. McRae was in the middle of a North American headlining tour in mid-September and decided to unveil Greedy at her Sept. 14 show at The Fillmore in Philadelphia.

“We put it into the setlist, and in rehearsals, I was just so nervous and terrified because it was such a different sound for me,” McRae tells Billboard. “And the second we premiered it in Philly, the crowd reaction was crazy.” McRae was especially blown away that the crowd knew most of the lyrics to “Greedy,” even though she had only been posting teasers of the track. “It was just very, very validating,” she says.

advertisement

McRae has enjoyed crossover hits before Greedy: The Calgary native scored a top 20 Billboard Hot 100 hit in 2020 with You Broke Me First, while singles like She’s All I Wanna Be and the Regard/Troye Sivan collaboration You also made their presence felt at top 40 radio. Yet Greedy is something different, a propulsive self-empowerment anthem built around a firecracker of a pop hook that finds McRae dipping in and out of a falsetto while exuding unshakeable confidence. – Continue reading Jason Lipshutz’s feature interview here.

advertisement
Sabrina Carpenter
Bryce Anderson
Sabrina Carpenter
Pride

Sabrina Carpenter, Ariana Grande, Dua Lipa & More Sign Open Letter for LGBTQ+ Suicide Prevention

The stars are calling on the White House and Congress to protect federal funding for the cause.

To kick off Pride Month this year, Sabrina Carpenter, Ariana Grande, Dua Lipa and several more stars have added their names to an open letter advocating to keep federal funding in place for LGBTQ+ suicide prevention measures.

As unveiled by The Trevor Project on Monday (June 2), the letter comes in direct response to a leaked United States Department of Health and Human Services budget that showed the Donald Trump administration’s plans to eliminate funding for the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline’s LGBTQ+-related services, which actively supports young people in the LGBTQ+ community considering suicide. Despite it providing help to more than 1.2 million estimated callers since its launch in 2022, the proposal would have the crisis line’s funding slashed entirely after going into effect on Oct. 1.

keep readingShow less
advertisement