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It was a victorious night for BTS and ARMY. On the heels of winning the song of the summer for “SWIM” at the 2026 American Music Awards, the boy band took home the artist of the year award on Monday night (May 25).

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Busta Rhymes presented the award as the Grammy-nominated group beat out a star-studded group of competitors that included Bad Bunny, Bruno Mars, Harry Styles, Justin Bieber, Kendrick Lamar, Lady Gaga, Morgan Wallen and Sabrina Carpenter to win the fan-voted honors for artist of the year.

After each of the boys finished up an elongated dap-up with Busta, RM took to the mic to celebrate. “ARMYs, we made it once again. Thank you. It’s an honor to have this precious award,” he began. “Once again, after everybody’s done their military service.

RM continued: “Like the legendary Busta Rhymes said, it’s a fan-voted award, so our biggest thanks and gratitude goes to the ARMYs all over the world. You stood by us for the past 13 years — thank you so much.”

J-hope stepped to the mic second in awe of the moment. “Wow. We have been overwhelmed by the reaction to this album,” he said. “Thank you for embracing ARIRANG and every single song on this album that you helped chart. Thank you, for real, we are so grateful.”

Jimin had the last words for the group to close out the celebratory night. “Thank you for passionately following us on tour and showing so much love in every city,” he said.

BTS had a busy AMAs after picking up a win in the new song of the summer category for Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 hit “SWIM,” and the Bangtan Boys also hit the stage for a thrilling performance of single “Hooligan,” which appeared on the group’s Billboard 200-topping 2026 album, ARIRANG.

ARIRANG debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 to earn the reunited crew its seventh chart-topper in March with 641,000 equivalent album units earned, according to Luminate.

The American Music Awards are produced by Dick Clark Productions, which is owned by Penske Media Eldridge, a joint venture between Eldridge Industries and Billboard parent company Penske Media.


Carlos Vives Pours Colombian Pride Into Miami With Tour Al Sol: ‘It Is Important to Be in This City’

Sonny Rollins, the tenor saxophonist whose combination of technical mastery, melodic invention and raw improvisational power made him one of the most consequential figures in jazz history, died Monday (May 25) at his home in Woodstock, New York. He was 95. His death was announced on his official website. Rollins had been living with pulmonary fibrosis.

His passing marks the end of a direct line to jazz’s post-war golden age. Rollins came of age alongside Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Thelonious Monk, Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker — and outlived them all, spending the decades after their deaths as a living link to that era’s creative revolution.

In a career that stretched from his first professional recordings in 1949 through his final public performance in 2012, he released more than 60 albums as a leader and remained an active presence in jazz culture well into his later years.

Born in New York City on Sept. 7, 1930, to parents who had emigrated from the U.S. Virgin Islands, Rollins grew up in Harlem and came to the saxophone in his early teens — first the alto, then the tenor, which he adopted in his mid-teens and never abandoned. By the time he finished high school at Benjamin Franklin, he was already recording. His earliest sessions in 1949 included work alongside singer Babs Gonzalez and pianist Bud Powell, and he was performing with Monk before the age of 20.

The decade that followed established him as one of the instrument’s pre-eminent voices. His 1956 album Saxophone Colossus — recorded for Prestige in a single session — is considered one of the essential documents in all of jazz, and the track “St. Thomas,” a calypso-inflected original, became one of the music’s most enduring standards.

That same year he recorded Tenor Madness, a historic session that placed him alongside Coltrane in direct musical conversation. Way Out West (1957), A Night at the Village Vanguard (1957) and The Freedom Suite (1958) followed in quick succession, each adding new dimensions to his reputation.

In 1959, feeling he had reached a plateau, Rollins stepped away from performing — seeking a place to practice alone, he found one on New York’s Williamsburg Bridge, where he played through the night without fear of disturbing anyone. His 1962 return was marked by the album The Bridge, which announced not just a comeback but an artist who had been quietly, privately working to push further. It was characteristic of the way he approached music throughout his life — restless, unwilling to settle, always in pursuit of something just ahead.

He won the Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental Album for This Is What I Do in 2001, the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2004, and the Grammy for Best Jazz Instrumental Solo for “Why Was I Born” — from Without a Song: The 9/11 Concert — in 2006, the same year he swept DownBeat’s readers poll. In 1995, New York City Hall named a day in his honour. In 2017, he donated his personal archives to the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem.

His wife Lucille, his partner of nearly 40 years, died in 2004.

KATSEYE had the most colorful performance at the American Music Awards, hands down, with the girl group singing “Pinky Up” for the crowd in Las Vegas on Monday (May 25).

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Performing at the center of an explosion of colors and choreography, members Daniela, Lara, Megan, Sophia and Yoonchae wowed the crowd in outfits comprised of miniature plushies while a vibrant teddy-bear-esque figure stood tall in the background. “We’re screaming from cloud nine/ No one can touch us if they tried/ Ooh, but it’s a state of mind,” the ladies sang while twisting, turning and twerking on stage at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

Debuting at No. 28 on the Billboard Hot 100, “Pinky Up” arrived in April ahead of KATSEYE’s Wild EP, which will drop in August. The group’s AMAs performance comes as EYEKONs have been adjusting to the absence of Manon, who was not present on stage after going on hiatus in February “to focus on her health and well-being,” according to a statement released at the time.

KATSEYE is up for three AMAs in 2026, earning nods for new artist of the year, best music video for single “Gnarly” and breakthrough pop artist. The members provided just one of many performances at this year’s ceremony, which was kicked off by BTS singing “Hooligan” and also included live showcases from sombr, Karol G, Keith Urban, New Kids on the Block and more.

Next up for KATSEYE — aside from the release of Wild, which will feature five tracks — is a global tour kicking off in September.

The American Music Awards are produced by Dick Clark Productions, which is owned by Penske Media Eldridge, a joint venture between Eldridge Industries and Billboard parent company Penske Media.


Carlos Vives Pours Colombian Pride Into Miami With Tour Al Sol: ‘It Is Important to Be in This City’

Icons recognize icons! At the American Music Awards Monday (May 25), KATSEYE took home the award for new artist of the year, beating out a star-studded lineup of nominees that included Leon Thomas, Olivia Dean, Alex Warren, Ella Langley and sombr. Naturally, the global group shouted out a fellow world-conquering pop group for paving the way for their award-winning moment.

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“We want to give a special shout-out to BTS tonight for inspiring us to represent our culture at a global scale,” said group member Sophia Laforteza after thanking key behind-the-scenes players such as HYBE’s Chairman Bang and Geffen Records CEO John Janick. Each of the five young ladies — Manon Bannerman, who is on hiatus, was not with the group at the ceremony — delivered a bite-sized acceptance speech, with Lara Raj later noting, “We’ve always been on a mission to celebrate diversity and represent our people and our cultures.”

Earlier in the night, the group performed its latest single, “Pinky Up,” which reached No. 28 on the Billboard Hot 100. The high-octane hit, which comes with infectious complementary choreography, previews the group’s forthcoming WILD EP, which is currently slated for an Aug. 14 release. In addition to new artist of the year, KATSEYE picked up nominations for best music video (“Gnarly”) and breakthrough pop artist. They are now the first girl group to win new artist of the year at the American Music Awards since the category was introduced in 2004.

KATSEYE will support its new project with The Wildworld Tour, which will take the group to arenas across Europe and North America. The 31-date trek will kick off on Sept. 1 at Dublin’s 3Arena and conclude on Nov. 28 with the second of two shows at Mexico City’s Palacio de los Deportes.

In the meantime, fans can catch KATSEYE at Governors Ball in New York City (June 5), Hinterland Music Festival in Saint Charles, Iowa (July 30), and Head in the Clouds in Pasadena, Calif. (Aug. 8).

BTS, of course, opened this year’s American Music Awards with a fiery performance of “Hooligan,” before showing up midway through the ceremony to present SZA with the best female R&B artist award and accept the song of the summer honor for “SWIM” before taking artist of the year.

The American Music Awards are produced by Dick Clark Productions, which is owned by Penske Media Eldridge, a joint venture between Eldridge Industries and Billboard parent company Penske Media.


Carlos Vives Pours Colombian Pride Into Miami With Tour Al Sol: ‘It Is Important to Be in This City’

Miami’s Kaseya Center filled up with sombrero vueltiaos and Colombian flags to receive Carlos Vives’ Tour Al Sol on Saturday night (May 23). 

At 9 p.m. sharp, three large screens — including a round one in the center that represented a sun (hence the tour’s name) — lit up the sold-out arena: “We all need the sun to be happy,” Vives’ voice recited in an intro video.

In the conceptual two-hour show, the Colombian star took spectators on a journey through the solar system all the way to infinity, but “in my homeland, the sun hits incredibly hard,” he continued in the clip before he got on stage. 

Flaunting a black denim jacket and jeans, and his bouncy, signature dirty blond curls, Vives kicked off the concert with “Volví a Nacer,” followed by “La Bicicleta” and “Canción Bonita.” 

“How are you, Miami? The city of all,” he said. “For me, it is important to be in this city. Music took me around the world — not to become more famous, but to show my family what lay beyond Colombia. I have been singing for many years, and one learns who it is they sing for: my country, my land, my people, my region.”

Throughout the night, Vives, who was joined by 11 musicians, also serenaded fans with his vallenato and cumbia classics, including “La Gota Fria,” “El Cantor de Fonseca,” “Carito,” “Pa’ Mate,” “Cuando Nos Volvamos a Encontrar,” “Fruta Fresca” and “Robarte un Beso.”

Among his notable surprise guests were Niña Pastori for a performance of “Sombra Perdida”; Sergio George for “Si yo volviera a nacer”; Grupo Niche for the salsa-cumbia version of “La Tierra del Olvido”; and Fonseca for “Quiero verte sonreir.” 

 “Each show of Tour al Sol will be a concert from sunrise to sunset — a journey through the emotions of music that moves with the sun,” Vives previously told Billboard Español. “In short, Tour al Sol is a concert with the sun of La Provincia.”

The Tour Al Sol, which kicked off April 16 in Toronto, will wrap June 5 at the Coliseo de Puerto Rico José Miguel Agrelot in San Juan.


Carlos Vives Pours Colombian Pride Into Miami With Tour Al Sol: ‘It Is Important to Be in This City’

Ludacris caught up with Chelley Bissainthe & Billboard’s Tetris Kelly on the red carpet at the American Music Awards 2026.

Nikki Glaser caught up with Chelley Bissainthe & Billboard’s Tetris Kelly on the red carpet at the American Music Awards 2026.

The 2026 American Music Awards have arrived, airing Memorial Day (May 25) from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

Taylor Swift — the top winner in the history of the American Music Awards, with 40 trophies — leads the nominations for the 2026 AMAs with eight nods. Morgan Wallen, Olivia Dean, Sabrina Carpenter and sombr are runners-up with seven nods. Alex Warren and Lady Gaga each received six nods.

With eight nods, Swift is likely to pull even further ahead of the pack for most AMA wins. Michael Jackson is currently in second place with 24 wins, followed by Alabama with 23 and Whitney Houston with 21.

Justin Bieber, who has four nominations this year, is also in position to move up the all-time AMA leaderboard. He has won 18 awards. If he wins just one award this year, he’ll tie Kenny Rogers for the second-most wins among male artists. (MJ leads among men.)

Dean and sombr are competing in three categories — new artist of the year, song of the year, and breakthrough album of the year. The two fast-rising stars competed for best new artist at this year’s Grammys, with Dean winning. Other first-time AMA nominees include Warren, BigXthaPlug, KATSEYE, Leon Thomas, PinkPantheress, RAYE, Role Model, Sienna Spiro and Tate McRae.

Queen Latifah is returning to host the 52nd AMAs, having co-hosted the show in 1995 with Tom Jones and Lorrie Morgan.

But who will emerge the night’s biggest winner? Follow along with Billboard all night below.

Sombr caught up with Chelley Bissainthe & Billboard’s Tetris Kelly on the red carpet at the American Music Awards 2026.

EJAE caught up with Chelley Bissainthe & Billboard’s Tetris Kelly on the red carpet at the American Music Awards 2026.