Producers Cris Chil, Dimelo Flow, Foreign Teck, Kuinvi and Sky Rompiendo sit down for a game of Never Have I Ever at the 2022 Billboard Music Week.
Month: September 2022
Looking for some motivation to help power you through the start of another work week? We feel you, and with some stellar new pop tunes, we’ve got you covered.
These 10 tracks from artists including Khalid, 5 Seconds of Summer, Shania Twain and JP Saxe will get you energized to take on the week. Pop any of these gems into your personal playlists — or scroll to the end of the post for a custom playlist of all 10.
Khalid, “Satellite”
Khalid has released a slew of singles in the three-plus years since his sophomore album Free Spirit, and his latest, “Satellite,” may be the most impressive of the bunch: built around a shimmering guitar strum and an echoing whistle, the track challenges the R&B-pop star to operate at a different tempo and flaunt his falsetto in new ways, and Khalid passes the test amiably. – Jason Lipshutz
FLO, “Not My Job”
During the same week in which Blackpink scored the first No. 1 album for a girl group in over a decade thanks to a futuristic approach to global pop, London’s FLO dropped a winning track that recalls the beguiling rhythms of turn-of-the-century girl group hits. Kelly Rowland actually stopped by the trio’s studio as they were finishing “Not My Job” — another bit of serendipity, considering how the grow-up-or-get-out anthem sounds like a spiritual sequel to Destiny’s Child’s masterful “Bills, Bills, Bills.” – J. Lipshutz
JP Saxe, “When You Think of Me”
JP Saxe’s musical ideas ring out most clearly within the intimacy of his wordplay — the way in which he uses the phrase “disrespectful oversimplification” in the opening line of new single “When You Think of Me” to describe a reason for a breakup — but the ballad also benefits from the sense of space in the production, with Saxe’s vocal fragility given ample room above the somber keys for maximum emotional effect. – J. Lipshutz
Kito feat. Banks, “Sad Girl Music”
The title “Sad Girl Music” may be a wink toward the alt-R&B style that Banks has thrived in for nearly a decade, but her team-up with Australian producer Kito works due to a surprisingly rapid pace: the murmured hums that open the song eventually give way to brisk, tropical beats, and Banks strikes a keen balance between blurted-out confessions and bright, sing-along-ready commands. – J. Lipshutz
5 Seconds of Summer, “Bad Omens”
As they’ve fully embraced their identity as a synth-fueled power-pop band, 5 Seconds of Summer have made some of the best arena-ready songs of the past three years, and “Bad Omens,” from just-released album 5SOS5, is among them. With gargantuan drums, sky-high harmonies but pockets of quiet grace in its first half, “Bad Omens” showcases the quartet’s ability to aim at the masses without sacrificing any details. – J. Lipshutz
Yaeger, “Can’t Get the Best of Me”
Summer may have just come to an end, but Yaeger’s new single contains the type of sunny guitar lick and bouncing melody to trick you into thinking that beach season has only just begun. “Can’t Get the Best of Me” finds Yaeger shrugging off melodrama (“I’ve been falling for your tears, but now I know what I believe,” she sings) and moving toward a promising future, which hopefully will include a bigger U.S. fan base for the Swedish star. – J. Lipshutz
Saleka, “Echo”
Saleka wrote the breathtaking vocal showcase “Echo” about Greek mythology — specifically an imagined exchange about not being able to speak your truth between the wood nymph Syrinx and the mountain-dwelling Echo — but even if that context doesn’t come across during a casual listen, “Echo” sounds like a breakthrough for Saleka, the daughter of director M. Night Shyamalan who displays excellent control of her range here. – J. Lipshutz
Alvvays, “Belinda Says”
Canadian indie-pop troupe Alvvays took five years to finish their third album, the upcoming Blue Rev, but if the project sounds half as engrossing as the spectacularly sized “Belinda Says,” it will be well worth the extended wait. An homage to Belinda Carlisle that expands its ambitions in its final minute in order to match their subject’s radio appeal, “Belinda Says” captures a reliable band reaching new heights. – J. Lipshutz
Tom the Mail Man, “You’re the One I Like Now”
A genre-blurring creative force from Atlanta, Tom the Mail Man has remained busy in 2022, following his new album Sunset Visionary, Vol. 2 with a string of singles. The latest, “You’re the One I Like Now,” is a coy emo ode to rushing into love (or in this case, “like”) boosted by a punk-pop Wall of Sound on the irresistible chorus. – Joe Lynch
Shania Twain, “Waking Up Dreaming”
Over a jubilant beat you could imagine the cast of The Breakfast Club bopping to, country legend Shania Twain — sounding more Katy Perry than Nashville here — delivers the anthemic “Waking Up Dreaming” about reaching for your wildest goals: “We won’t stop at the ceiling / let’s keep waking up dreaming.” – J. Lynch

Billie Eilish announced on Monday (Sept. 26) that she is ending her world tour with a special livestream on Apple Music.
“!!!!!!!!!!happier than ever, the world tour comes to apple music live this week on september 30th!!!!!!! never been so proud of any show as i have been with this whole tour. was so excited with the idea of filming one & couldn’t be happier for you all to see it and watch together from all over… this friday at 7pm pt on @applemusic!!!” the superstar shared via Instagram.
“This show is such a gift for Billie’s fans around the world who weren’t able to make it out to witness one of the best concerts of 2022 and also the perfect opportunity to revisit the excitement for those who did,” added Apple Music’s Zane Lowe in a separate statement.
Eilish’s concert was filmed during one of her five stops at London’s famed O2 Arena earlier this summer on the world tour’s European leg. Coinciding with the livestream, she’ll also be closing out the trek with one final show at RAC Arena in Perth, Australia.
Ahead of the livestream, the “Billie Bossa Nova” singer also sat down for a one-on-one interview with Lowe, which will premiere on Thursday (Sept. 29) at 10 a.m. PT on Apple Music 1. Other artists who’ve recently taken part in the streaming service’s new Apple Music Live program include Harry Styles, Mary J. Blige, Lil Durk and Luke Combs.
Just last week, Eilish released another pair of live performances of her latest singles “TV” and “The 30th” from the famous Cloud Forest at Gardens By the Bay in Singapore.
Check out Eilish’s announcement of the Happier Than Ever, The World Tour livestream below.

It’s serious injuries for a 12-year-old boy who fell off a parade float in Stockton over the weekend.
It happened Saturday afternoon during the town’s annual Black Walnut Festival Parade. troopers say the boy fell off the right side of the float, and the back of the vehicle ran over him.
The victim was airlifted to a hospital in Springfield.

Two individuals are dead in an officer involved shooting that began as a traffic stop for a suspected drunk driver.
Early Saturday morning, Ozark Police pulled over Timothy W. Shafer (37), and Donna Bailey (23), after suspecting that the driver of the vehicle was impaired. This happened just before 3 a.m. at the intersection of Highway 14 and US 65. The driver did not pull over, and instead fled South on 65. Ozark PD did not pursue, but alerted the Christian County Sheriffs Office of the suspected vehicle.
Christian County deputies located the car just after 3:30 a.m. in Highlandville and attempted to stop the car, but were unsuccessful. This initiated a chase that led back into Ozark. CCSO was able to stop the car near 65 and Highway CC using a tactical driving maneuver.
Ozark and Nixa police had at this point joined CCSO to aid in the incident, after reports show that the driver, Shafer, attempted to run over a deputy. The two suspects did not respond to commands, at which point Shafer leaned out of the driver’s side window and brandished a firearm. Officers and deputies responded by firing their weapons toward the car. Both suspects perished in the incident.
Blackpink continues to make history, this time in the U.K. as Born Pink (via Interscope) bows at No. 1.
With that feat, the K-pop stars — Jennie, Jisoo, Lisa and Rosé — become the first-ever K-pop girl group to score a No. 1 on the Official U.K. Albums Chart.
“Congratulations to Blackpink,” comments Martin Talbot, CEO of the Official Charts Company. “Being any kind of chart first is a record which can never be taken away, so for their new album Born Pink to become the first U.K. Official No. 1 by a K-pop girl group is a fantastic achievement – and puts them in the record books forever.”
Born Pink, which also leads the Billboard 200, eclipses the No. 2 U.K. peak for Blackpink’s debut LP from 2020, The Album.
The South Korea outfit breaks records for fun. Since forming in 2016, Blackpink is the most-followed female group on Spotify, and the artist with the most YouTube subscribers.
The first release from Born Pink, “Pink Venom,” was streamed 86.3 million times on YouTube, a result that established three Guinness World Records. It also set a new single-day streaming mark by a female artist on Spotify for 2022. Records seemingly tumble wherever they tread.
In the U.K., Born Pink holds off Autofiction (BMG), the ninth studio effort from Britpop legends Suede. It’s new at No. 2, for the Brett Anderson-led band’s highest chart position since 1999.
Further down the latest list, published Sept. 23, Japanese-British singer and songwriter Rina Sawayama earns a career best with sophomore set Hold The Girl (Dirty Hit), new at No. 3, while Mumford & Sons frontman Marcus Mumford snags his first-ever solo top 5 album with (self-titled) (via Island), new at No. 4. It’s Mumford’s fifth top 5 LP across his recording career.
Some five years after its demo first dropped, David Guetta and Bebe Rexha’s “I’m Good (Blue)” (via Parlophone) is the U.K.’s No. 1 single.
The bouncing electronic music tune, which samples Eiffel 65’s 1999 hit “Blue (Da Ba Dee),” accumulates 5.4 million streams during the latest chart week, the OCC reports, to lift 2-1 on the Official U.K. Singles Chart.
“I’m Good (Blue)” knocks Lewis Capaldi’s “Forget Me” (Vertigo) from top spot, for Guetta’s seventh U.K. leader and first since “Lovers On The Sun” featuring Sam Martin ruled some eight years ago.
Guetta has racked up the hits across his career, with no less than 45 top 40 appearances on the national singles survey, including 28 top 10s. Rexha now has eight top 40s and four top 10 appearances. “I’m Good (Blue)” is her first No. 1.
On the latest chart published Sept. 23, there are new peaks for top 10 singles from James Hype & Miggy Dela Rosa, and Chris Brown, while the highest new entry this week belongs to Anne-Marie and Aitch, as their collaboration “Psycho” (Atlantic) starts at No. 16.
With Born Pink topping the Official U.K. Albums Chart, K-pop foursome Blackpink bag an eighth U.K. top 40 single with “Shut Down” (Interscope), new at No. 24, while lead single “Pink Venom” vaults 47-38.
Born Pink starts hot, as it bows at No. 1 on the national albums survey for Blackpink’s first leader, eclipsing the No. 2 best for the pop superstars’ previous studio LP, The Album, from 2020.
Finally, Pittsburgh singer-songwriter Montell Fish makes his first U.K. top 40 appearance with “Hotel” (Lord’s Child) checking in at No. 27 on the Official U.K. Singles Chart, while London hip-hop star Central Cee scores a seventh Top 40 single in 2022, as “LA Leakers Freestyle” (Central Cee) bounces 42-40.
For Meg Mac, it really was only a matter of time before she was crowned on Australia’s charts.
The Sydney-raised singer and songwriter bows at No. 1 with Matter of Time, her third album and first leader.
That’s one better than the No. 2 best for her 2017 debut full length album Low Blow, which peaked at No. 2. Mac enjoyed a breakthrough with her platinum-certified debut EP from 2014 MegMac, which earned ARIA Award nominations for best female artist and breakthrough artist of the year.
Matter of Time had a turbulent path to the top. Mac’s third album was in the can and ready for release at the beginning of 2020, when the artist had what she now describes as “a bit of a meltdown,” according to her label, EMI. A “creative” meltdown.
Just one recording survive the cull — the title track, written by Mac and co-writer Sam De Jong (Jacob Banks, Muse, Maisie Peters).
With her newly minted crown, Mac shouldn’t lose any sleep over her decision.
“It’s so exciting to see an incredible local artist like Meg Mac take out No. 1,” comments ARIA CEO Annabelle Herd, “particularly in a week as hotly contested as this one, it’s a real triumph. Congratulations to Meg and her team from everyone at ARIA. Two Australian No. 1 debuts in a row is serious reason to celebrate.”
That hotly-contested week saw Mac reach the finish line ahead of a pair of K-pop heavyweights in Blackpink’s Born Pink, new at No. 2, and NCT 127’s 2 Baddies – The Fourth Album, the NCT sub-unit’s latest effort, which arrives at No. 3.
Blackpink, which has an Australian connection through bandmate Rosé, also makes a splash on the ARIA Singles Chart with “Shut Down,” at No. 5, for the highest debut of the week. Also, the first release from the album, former No. 1 “Pink Venom,” rebounds into the top 20 at No. 18.
At the crest of the national singles survey for a second consecutive cycle is David Guetta and Bebe Rexha’s “I’m Good (Blue).” Fueled by TikTok, “I’m Good” leads an unchanged top 3, ahead of Nicki Minaj’s “Super Freaky Girl” and OneRepublic’s “I Ain’t Worried,” respectively.

Rihanna is headlining the 2023 Super Bowl Halftime Show, and last year’s headliner, Dr. Dre, has some words of wisdom for her.
Dre spoke with Ebro Darden on Apple Music 1 on Sunday (Sept. 25), soon after Rihanna’s news was announced. Apple Music was recently named the official sponsor of the annual event.
“Oh, my god,” said Dre, who took the Super Bowl stage last year. “Let me tell you something, man. I actually just got the news that Rihanna’s going to do it, and I’m a super fan of Rihanna. I can’t wait to see what she’s going to do. “
“I just like her and what she does, and her get down, and how she approaches her artistry and the whole nine. It’s fantastic. She has the opportunity to really blow us away. I know we set the bar extremely high,” he added.
His advice to the next Super Bowl Halftime star?
“Put the right people around you, and have fun,” said Dre. “That’s basically what it is, making sure you have the right creative people around you. She might want to look into some of the people that we used to do our show.”
The rapper admitted that his own epic performance at the 2022 Super Bowl Halftime Show — where he was joined by Eminem, Snoop Dogg, Mary J. Blige and Kendrick Lamar, plus surprise guests 50 Cent and Anderson .Paak — made him “extremely nervous.”
“I don’t know if I’ve ever been that nervous before,” he said. “Not only that, I don’t know if I’ve ever looked more forward to a Monday morning. So it’s the preparation and making sure you have the right people around you. All of these people came through for me, and everybody was extremely enthusiastic about the show. We had a good time, although it’s a lot of things and a lot of people you have to depend on. You’re talking about at least 3,000 people that you have to depend on to get this show right for 13 minutes. So it is an extreme amount of pressure, but it’s fun at the same time. When it’s done, it’s like goosebumps, bro. I got goosebumps, especially from the reaction that we got from the show, and especially being able to do the show with all of my friends.”
Super Bowl LVII will take place on Feb. 12, 2023 at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona.
This year’s telecast will be produced by DPS, executive produced by Roc Nation and Jesse Collins and directed by Hamish Hamilton. Roc Nation will also serve as strategic entertainment advisors for the live performance.

The Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame (CSHF) honored David Foster, Bryan Adams, Jim Vallance, Alanis Morissette and francophone legend Daniel Lavoie Saturday night (Sept. 24) at a gala ceremony at Toronto’s Massey Hall that highlighted their incredible hit-stacked careers, influence and legacy.
Hosted by platinum-selling Quebec singer-songwriter Marie-Mai, the three-and-a-half-hour show included tribute performances by such artists as Corey Hart, Nickelback’s Chad Kroeger and Ryan Peake, Alessia Cara, JP Saxe, Charlotte Cardin, Jessie Reyez, Serena Ryder and Chicago’s Neil Donell, backed by a house band.
Deborah Cox — the 2022 inductee into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame — kicked off the ceremony with a showstopping rendition of Whitney Houston’s “I Have Nothing,” written by Foster (and Linda Thompson) for The Bodyguard soundtrack.
“It was a song that inspired me to write ‘Where Do We Go From Here’ that landed my own recording deal and got me signed,” she said from the stage. “So had it not been for you and your incredible music, I would not be standing here tonight.”
Her words epitomized an evening filled with praise for the inductees from other songwriters, most of them younger, writing and building on their own catalogue of hits. Serena Ryder — who performed a spot-on version of “You Oughta Know” — told Morrisette her songs allowed her to “speak from a place of authenticity and truth.”
Foster was the first inductee of the night, “once known as the guy who drove Ronnie Hawkins’ tour bus,” Marie-Mae reminded us, who went on to pen hits for Celine Dion, Josh Groban, Chicago, Earth, Wind & Fire and many more, and earn 16 Grammys. Fellow inductee Bryan Adams did the honors (Foster would later reciprocate), calling him “a superb creative legend in the Canadian music industry” with “as much talent as anyone has ever existed here.”
“He’s a musician, producer, performer, artist, label head and songwriter — and publisher too probably. Thank goodness he can’t sing; he’d be a f—in’ nightmare,” Adams’ quipped.
“Nevertheless, his talents are limitless. He’s somebody we all admire and appreciate for his contributions to the music world and philanthropy. I mean, he’s brilliant — and he’d be the first person to tell you himself. Here he is: David Foster.”
Foster, who, true, is not the most humble when it comes to his skills, rightly so, but does have a sense of humor, used his acceptance speech time to say thank you to some instrumental people to his career, co-writers, managers, arrangers, label execs — and to Canada.
“That’s one of the great things about this country, this incredible community of artists and performers. We support each other. We raise each other up, and to be recognized here, in such exceptional company, is a great honor,” he said, later adding, “To come home and be recognized for songwriting, it’s really the highest praise a musician can hope for.”
Foster then launched into a quick story about his fear of elevators (“Fosterophobia,” he called it) in a tangent; one wasn’t sure where it was going. “A friend and great Canadian said, ‘You know why you don’t go in elevators? Because you’re afraid you’ll hear your own music in there,’” he said to roars from the mostly industry crowd. “I get it. It’s not Alanis. It’s not Bryan. It’s wallpaper music. It’s middle of the road. The kind of songs you play for your grandmother. I say ‘popular,’ but you can say whatever you want. It’s the music I hear and it’s the music that comes through my hands when I sit and play at the piano. I didn’t choose my sound; my sound chose me.
“And for the record,” he added. “I do love all kinds of music: Drake, Bieber, The Weeknd, Bublé — they’re all killin’ it — and they’re all uniquely” — he paused, his arms stretched out wide, as if conducting — and the audience yelled back “Canadian” along with him.
Morissette was next. Marie-Mae said she “has redefined the role and image of a female pop star,” while Jessie Reyez, who performed “Ironic,” lauded, “You contribute so f—in’ much to Canadian heritage and Canadian musicianship and making me feel at home in my imperfections.”
But the person CSHF brought in to induct Morrissette is actually American, 19-year-old pop singer Olivia Rodrigo, not even born when Jagged Little Pill came out in 1995. The pair met last year for a Rolling Stone cover shoot. Rodrigo told the room she was 13 when she first heard that classic release. “My life was completely changed. Alanis’ songwriting was unlike anything I’d ever heard before and I haven’t heard anything quite like it since. And that voice — fierce and tender and sometimes funny and playful. I became hooked for life.”
“Alanis captured the anger, the grief and the love of the human experience better than anyone. Her songs unite people and empower people and help them heal. Alanis, you’re a trailblazer and you’ve inspired an entire generation of uncompromising, radically honest songwriting. But even more than your long list of musical achievements, I look up to your character and your kindness most of all,” she said.
“If they had a Hall of Fame for being the most incredible human being with the biggest heart, I’m 100 percent positive you’d be inducted into that one as well,” Rodrigo added.
Morrissette, whose speech ran 12 minutes, top and tailed it with a story of wanting to be a writer when she was just six years old. In between, she said, “I don’t want to be too precious about what it is to be a songwriter because there is an element of songwriting that is really non-precious and very stream consciousness.” She says her kids run around the house singing to her, instead of talking. (“I do hit record sometimes.”)
“The songwriting process for me is just so hyper present. It’s like a receptivity muscle that has to be cultivated because I hate writing, by the way; it’s the worst. So when I sit down to write, it’s that sort of daunting, torturous excitement, giddiness, and it’s incumbent upon me to just stop and listen and then hear it, heed it, write it, share it,” Morrissette explained. “So when I write it, it’s for me, but when I share it, it’s yours. It’s everyone else’s to interpret as they will.” As an example, she recalled, bemused, of one lady who told her she loved “that song about being in love with your lesbian teacher,” and it was not her place to correct her.
She said she feels that writers and songwriters “mark a feeling that’s really intangible and hard to describe” and that she feels like “a distiller.” She credited Jagged Little Pill collaborator Glen Ballard and the late Tim Thorney for making her feel safe enough to express herself.
She ended her speech by actually reciting the lyric to the first song she wrote (and recorded) at age 6, called “Lungs.” “If that’s not the birth of a legend, I don’t know what is,” she said with a laugh.
After a 15-minute intermission, Manitoba-born francophone artist Daniel Lavoie was feted. His career spans 50 years and 24 albums, and he has written songs for Celine Dion and Nana Mouskouri, among others. His new album is No. 1 in Quebec this week. Fellow Hall of Famer Jim Corcoran inducted his friend, saying 1984’s hit “Ils s’aiment” “alone places Daniel Lavoie high in the tower of song, and that’s why he’s being honored here tonight.” He added that in the late ;90s, in France, “by popular demand” the single “was proclaimed the song of the century.”
“Now Daniel, I don’t want to rain on your parade, but you know more than anybody in this hall that the French are inclined to exaggerate,” Corcoran joked, adding, “On every one of his albums, there are profoundly poetic lyrics and beautifully inspired moments.”
Lavoie did his first acceptance speech in French, and then English. “I did go through 50 some years of songwriting and I realized something I hadn’t realized before — most of us who practice this craft with a good amount of passion, well most of us know how to write a good song. You give us a good subject and a couple of days and maybe a glass of wine or a joint, and we will write a good song. None of us — maybe David Foster excepted — none of us knows how to write a great song. The great songs are decided by you — the public.”
“You decide which of our good songs become great songs, and great songs are important because the great songs are the ones that pull us out of poverty and get us to meet celebrity and get us to make speeches like this at great soirees.”
Capping the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame inductions was the masterful pop songwriting team of Adams and Vallance, honored together, but inducted separately, since they both have distinct and thriving solo careers.
The two met in 1978 at a musical instrument shop in Vancouver; Adams was 18. They worked seven days a week, 12-hour days in Vallance’s basement studio. And yet it took eight years to get their first No. 1 hit, and then their success was meteoric, particularly with 1984’s Reckless which was six singles deep, including “Run to You,” “Summer of ‘69” and “Heaven.” Still working together, they penned the score for Pretty Woman: The Musical, which debuted on Broadway in 2018, and they have three songs together on Adams’ 15th and latest studio album, So Happy It Hurts.
Vallance has also written songs for Ozzy Osbourne, Aerosmith, Joan Jett, Heart, Glass Tiger, Anne Murray and the Go-Gos. Adams has 20 Juno Awards, five Golden Globe nominations and three Academy Award nominations.
Vallance was inducted by Lawrence Gowan, a solo artist and frontman for Styx. They wrote two songs together. Gowan recalls suggesting they could writing something “on the fringes and a little esoteric.” But Gowan recalls Vallance “refreshingly, bluntly said, ‘Um, well, I’m interested in the top 10.” Added Gowan, “Jim has lived and triumphed by that credo all his life” and “never once have I ever heard him sing his own praises.”
Vallance kept his speech relatively short. He said he knew he wanted to be a songwriter after seeing The Beatles in 1964 on Ed Sullivan. “60 years later I feel blessed to say music is the only job I’ve ever had. I didn’t do it it alone. I’ve had the good fortune to collaborate with and learn from some amazing artists, producers and songwriters. They taught me to dig deep, work hard and set the bar high.” But meeting Adams “changed everything,” he says. “18 years old, talented and tenacious. The only direction he acknowledged was up and I was ready to go on that ride with him.”
Adams, whose video tribute included lovely words from is “When You’re Gone” featured singer Melanie C (“you put so much confidence in me that that helped me go forward and have my own solo career”), was likewise inducted by Foster, who called him “the groover from Vancouver,” although born in Kingston. “You know how you can tell an icon from a pop star? You can recognize him by just their silhouette,” Foster said.
“These soulful ballads, and rock songs about heartache, longing and yearning for simpler times struck a chord with the public and would come to define the Adams-Vallance sound,” he said, noting that “sound reached zenith” on the milestone album, Reckless, “every song a perfectly crafted gem.” “I know for Bryan, success means waking up and getting to do it all again, write a song, record a song and hit the road again.” He’s currently on tour behind So Happy It Hurts.
Adams, who did get more “I love yous” yelled from the balcony than the other inductees, save maybe Corey Hart, congratulated all the other recipients, and praised the tribute musicians and house band. He watched all the performances, tapping his foot and often giving a standing ovation.
“The best advice I ever got as a songwriter came from a guitarist I was working with when I was at teenager,” Adams said. “This was when I was playing clubs and this was when I was about 16. It seemed to me the best way to get out of the shitty clubs and into the better shitty clubs was to have original music, so I said to him, ‘Man, we should write our music.’ And he looked at me and he said, ‘Yeah! — You do it!” he recounted to laughter.
“I want to acknowledge that songwriting for me has always been a team effort. So thanks to all my collaborators, Mutt Lange and Elliott Kennedy and Gretchen Peters. And the thing that makes me most happy about tonight about receiving this award is seeing my great friend Jim Vallance be properly honored. Seriously, I met Jim, as you heard, at a music shop in Vancouver not long after the advice I’d been given, and I still don’t understand why Jim thought it would be a good idea to work with me because I hadn’t done anything. I was just 18 and I couldn’t even afford bus fair to his house; I had to borrow it off him. But Jim’s instincts were right because the first day we got together to write songs, we wrote songs.”
He then told a true story about Vallance’s roommate’s cat marking its territory at the rented house by pissing on their instruments in the basement studio. “The cat was either very territorial or he just hated music because he only pissed where we worked. Each day would start with us searching out what instrument had [been] pissed on, followed by writing songs,” he said with a laugh, making wiping gestures with his hand, then putting it up to his nose to smell — by far the best story of the night.
Adams got a record deal some years later. “The rest of the story is kind of a big catalogue of songs, which some of you may have heard,” he says. “And as my late father would say to me, when something went right, ‘Hats off.’ So in this case, hats off, Jim — and thanks for the bus fare.” He then invited Vallance to join him onstage and finished his speech by thanking his mom (she in the video for the title track to his new album) and longtime manager Bruce Allen.
The evening ended with a special surprise performance of “Tears Are Not Enough,” the 1985 charity single for famine relief, co-written by Vallance, Adams, Foster (and Rachel Paiement). Almost all of the performers from throughout the evening — plus another 2022 inductee, Murray McLauchlan (inducted at Mariposa Folk Festival) — joined some of the performers from the original recording, including Dan Hill, Jane Siberry, and Andy Kim. Foster played piano, and Adams stayed in his seat to take it all in.