
(L-R) Irving Azoff and Nicole Avant attend the Black Music Action Coalition’s 5th Annual BMAC Gala at The Beverly Hilton on September 18, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California.
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“Five Years of Impact.” That was the celebratory vibe reverberating inside the jam-packed ballroom during the Black Music Action Coalition’s (BMAC) fifth annual gala at Los Angeles’ Beverly Hilton on Thursday evening (Sept. 18). Presented by Live Nation, the dinner/awards ceremony saluted five music industry honorees: John Legend (BMAC Quincy Jones Humanitarian Award), Irving Azoff (BMAC Icon Award), Sherrese Clark of HarbourView Equity Partners (inaugural BMAC Harry Belafonte Change Agent Award), Kai Cenat and Apple/Apple Music (BMAC Social Impact Award) and Primary Wave Music (BMAC 365 Award).
Grammy-nominated country artist Mickey Guyton, who co-hosted the gala alongside multimedia entertainer Kenny Burns, opened the gala with an impactful performance of “Black Like Me.” Then, BMAC CEO/co-founder/president Willie “Prophet” Stiggers set the tone for the evening — celebrating the organization’s accomplishments since its inception five years ago while also emphasizing there’s still more work to be done when it comes to industry diversity, equity and inclusion, social justice and other issues.

(L-R) Irving Azoff and Nicole Avant attend the Black Music Action Coalition’s 5th Annual BMAC Gala at The Beverly Hilton on September 18, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California.
Johnny Nunez/Getty Images
“BMAC is in it for the long haul,” said Stiggers. “We don’t just gather to celebrate; we gather to measure progress, to honor the shoulders we stand on, to recommit ourselves to the fight for equity, justice and opportunity within the music business and beyond. We’re building an infrastructure to make sure that change lasts while still pushing our culture forward. We’ve seen corporations make big promises about justice, equity and inclusion … But today, too many of those same corporations have pulled back. They cut budgets, walked away from partnerships, abandoned the very movement they claimed to champion right when the fight got hard.”
Before the award presentations got underway, Stiggers also noted, “Equity is not charity. It’s smart business. Tonight, as we honor those who have used their platforms to drive real social change, let’s recognize this truth: BMAC is no longer just an organization. We are in fact a movement rooted in accountability and action, an unwavering belief that the future of music must be as just and as free and as powerful as the music itself.”

(L-R) Connie Orlando, EVP, Specials, Music Programming, Music Strategy, and News, BET Networks, Sherrese Clarke and Apollo Theater’s Kamilah Forbes attend the Black Music Action Coalition’s 5th Annual BMAC Gala at The Beverly Hilton on September 18, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California.
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Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds presented the Quincy Jones Humanitarian Award to Legend, drawing audience laughs when he playfully confessed to being jealous of Legend’s EGOT status. Declared Legend from his seat, “You have nothing to be jealous of.”
During his acceptance speech, Legend referenced following in the footsteps of other outspoken humanitarians such as his friend/industry icon Jones and Nina Simone. “Use your voice, use your platform, use your influence to fiercely protect those who are being brave, to shield the truth tellers facing retribution, to make space for more of us because the fight is as urgent as it’s ever been,” he proclaimed to fervent applause and a standing ovation. “Excellence is beautiful, it’s important, but freedom is more important.”

(L-R) Jeff Straughn, Donna Grecco, Lawrence Mestel and CeeLo Green onstage during the Black Music Action Coalition’s 5th Annual BMAC Gala at The Beverly Hilton on September 18, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California.
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Babyface was just one in a cast of surprise award presenters that included Cee Lo Green (to Primary Wave Music), Amina Diop (Cenat, who accepted via video), the Apollo Theater’s Kamilah Forbes and BET’s Connie Orlando (Clarke) and Nicole Avant (Azoff). Prior to receiving his award, Azoff — and the audience — were treated to another surprise when Earth, Wind & Fire’s Phillip Bailey, Ralph Johnson and Verdine hit the stage to perform two of the group’s classics: “Let’s Groove” and “September.” One of the evening’s most inspirational moments focused on a tribute to clemency recipient and criminal justice reform advocate Michelle West.
BMAC’s fifth gala follows in the wake of its recent announcement of a new $500,000 direct relief fund supporting families impacted by the Altadena, Calif., fires. BMAC also plans to expand its advocacy efforts globally, starting with the U.K. and Africa in 2026.

(L-R) Damien Smith, Caron Veazey, Co-Founder, BMAC, Ashaunna Ayars, Naima Cochrane, Shay Lawson and Willie “Prophet” Stiggers, CEO & President, BMAC attend the Black Music Action Coalition’s 5th Annual BMAC Gala at The Beverly Hilton on September 18, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California.
Johnny Nunez/Getty Images
Since BMAC’s inception in June 2020, Stiggers noted the organization has distributed over $4 million in direct economic relief. And through its various initiatives and grant programs, BMAC has worked with more than 5,500 students, mentored more than 500 emerging music artists and industry professionals, and established more than 200 paid internships and job placements.
It’s another “Golden” week for KPop Demon Hunters as the breakout song reaches a whopping 10th week at No. 1 on the U.K. Official Singles Chart dated Nov. 7.
The song, taken from the Netflix smash film, is credited to the animated group HUNTR/X and sung by EJAE, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami. Earlier this week it was reported that Netflix is targeting 2029 as a release date for a highly anticipated sequel to the animated flick.
“Golden” has now appeared at No. 1 on the U.K. Official Singles Chart for 10 non-consecutive weeks, and is the longest-running No. 1 single for an animated act of all time. The Archies’ “Sugar Sugar” ruled on the U.K. Singles Chart for eight weeks back in 1969, while “We Don’t Talk About Bruno” from Disney’s 2022’s Encanto achieved seven weeks.
The song is also closing in on Alex Warren’s “Ordinary”, which has spent a whopping 13 weeks at No. 1 throughout 2025.
Taylor Swift’s “The Fate of Ophelia” is a non-mover and ends the week at No. 2. It has already notched three weeks at the summit to give her longest-running No. 1 single since 2022’s “Anti-Hero”. The LP’s other breakout song, “Opalite”, stays strong at No. 4.
Joining them in the top five is RAYE‘s “Where Is My Husband!” which holds its position at No. 3. Olivia Dean’s “Man I Need” lifts one place to No. 5, and is at the same spot on the Billboard Hot 100 this week, a career best.
As Lily Allen’s West End Girl moves up to No. 2 on the U.K. Albums Chart, the LP’s breakout song “Pussy Palace” heads into the top 10, finishing at No. 8. Two more tracks from the record, “West End Girl” (No. 15) and “Madeline” (No. 16), also achieve new peaks.
This week in dance music: Bunt.’s manager Nick Groff talked about using emerging technology to turn phones back on fans during shows during Billboard’s Live Music Summit in Los Angeles on Monday, Nov. 3.
Diplo reflected on his ex Katy Perry and her new boyfriend, the former prime minister of Canada Justin Trudeau. Demo Lovato’s new dance album It’s Not That Deep bumped Tame Impala’s Deadbeat out of the number one spot on Top Dance/Electronic albums and the co-writer of Deadbeat’s star single “Dracula” Sarah Aarons told us about the production process and the procrastination that brought the song to life.
“It was like, ‘Cool, this mix is due in 45 minutes,'” Aarons recalled of finishing “Dracula.” “When you know you have a deadline, your brain just goes, ‘This is the right thing.’ [Kevin Parker] called me and he went, ‘What about this melody?’ And I was like, ‘Yeah! How did we not do that melody already? It totally fits the song.’ We’d written lyrics so many times, we already had so many lyrics floating around our brains. We had so much of what we knew the song was that it kind of clicked.”
Meanwhile, Fred again.. continued his 10 shows/10 songs/10 weeks run in Dublin (and in fact released three songs this week), we celebrated the 20 year anniversary of Madonna’s disco-laced Confessions On a Dancefloor and Calvin Harris announced a 2026 Las Vegas residency at Wynn Nightlife, the property where the Scottish producer had his first ever Vegas residency back in 2011.
The Avicii Estate and Pophouse released the first of a three-part documentary series about the making of the late artist’s 2015 album Stories and Above & Beyond released their own documentary about the making of their July album Bigger Than All of Us. Plus, Grammy season kicked off with the nominations announced today, with Skrillex, PinkPantheress and Fred again.. leading the dance/electronic fields with two noms each.
Is there more? You bet there’s more. These are the best new dance tracks of the week.
Anuel AA returns to the No. 1 spot on Billboard’s Latin Airplay chart with “Pórtate Bonito,” his first team-up with Blessd. The track flies 9-1 on the Nov. 8-dated list, Anuel’s first champ in over three years.
Released August 21 on Real Hasta La Muerte, “Pórtate Bonito” was initially announced on Anuel’s Instagram account on August 6, alongside news that Blessd would join him on his RHLM 2 tour.
The collab, produced by Ovy on The Drums, surges 9-1 in its seventh week on the chart with the Greatest Gainer weekly honors, after a 32% boost in audience impressions, to 7.6 million, logged during the Oct. 24-30 tracking week, as reported by Luminate.
The new win marks Anuel’s first No. 1 in over three years, since “Ley Seca,” with Jhayco, ruled for one week in February 2022. In sum, he’s placed 11 rulers, here’s a recap of those since “Ella Quiere Beber,” with Romeo Santos, in 2019:
Title, Artist, Peak, Weeks at No. 1
“Ella Quiere Beber,” with Santos, Feb. 2, 2019, one
“Secreto,” with Karol G, May 4, 2019, one
“Baila Baila Baila,” with Ozuna, Daddy Yankee, J Balvin & Farruko, May 11, 2019, one
“Otro Trago,” with Sech, Darell, Nicky Jam, & Ozuna, Aug. 31, 2019, one
“China,” with Daddy Yankee, Karol G, Ozuna & J Balvin, Sept. 21, 2019, two
“Aventura,” with Lunay & Ozuna, Nov. 9, 2019, one
“Keii,” May 2, 2020, one
“Fútbol & Rumba,” with Enrique Iglesias, Aug. 8, 2020, one
“Location,” with Karol G & J Balvin, April 10, 2021, one
“Ley Seca,” with Jhay Cortez, Feb. 5, 2022, one
“Pórtate Bonito”” with Blessd, Nov. 8, 2025, one
Colombian star Blessd adds his third No. 1 on the overall Latin radio ranking. “Medallo,” with Justin Quiles and Lenny Tavarez, and “Si Sabe Ferxxo,” with Feid, each led for one week in 2022 and 2024, respectively.
Beyond its Latin Airplay coronation, “Pórtate Bonito” ascends 3-1 on the Latin Rhythm Airplay chart. Plus, it gains traction on the Hot Latin Rhythm Songs chart, where it narrowly misses the top 10 with an 18-11 leap.
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