Austria Belgium Brazil Canada Denmark Finland France Germany Hungary Iceland Ireland Italy Luxembourg The Netherlands Norway Poland Spain Sweden Switzerland UK USA
Austria Belgium Brazil Canada Denmark Finland France Germany Hungary Iceland Ireland Italy Luxembourg The Netherlands Norway Poland Spain Sweden Switzerland UK USA
Austria Belgium Brazil Canada Denmark Finland France Germany Hungary Iceland Ireland Italy Luxembourg The Netherlands Norway Poland Spain Sweden Switzerland UK USA
Austria Belgium Brazil Canada Denmark Finland France Germany Hungary Iceland Ireland Italy Luxembourg The Netherlands Norway Poland Spain Sweden Switzerland UK USA
Austria Belgium Brazil Canada Denmark Finland France Germany Hungary Iceland Ireland Italy Luxembourg The Netherlands Norway Poland Spain Sweden Switzerland UK USA
Austria Belgium Brazil Canada Denmark Finland France Germany Hungary Iceland Ireland Italy Luxembourg The Netherlands Norway Poland Spain Sweden Switzerland UK USA
Austria Belgium Brazil Canada Denmark Finland France Germany Hungary Iceland Ireland Italy Luxembourg The Netherlands Norway Poland Spain Sweden Switzerland UK USA
Pop music has freed itself from everything that once defined it: genre boundaries, market expectations, and “radio-friendly” structures. Today, pop is not the language of perfection but of courage.
The century’s biggest and most lucrative pop tours take the spotlight: Pink’s colorful carnival, Harry Styles’s generational pop cult, and Coldplay’s futuristic universe.
The stages of 21st-century pop music have grown to unprecedented sizes: stadium-filling crowds, billion-dollar revenues, and shows that entertain while making history.
The “Tension Tour,” which began in February, is not just a showcase of her latest album but a celebration of her entire career, from 1980s pop hits to fresh dance anthems.
One year ago, on June 7, Charli XCX released her album BRAT—a musical project that not only hit its mark but evolved into a defining cultural event of its era.
2024 was undeniably a monumental year for women in pop music. Out of the eight nominees in the categories for Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Album of the Year, six are dominated by female artists.