Music
Magoo, rap partner of Timbaland, has died aged 50 as tributes pour in from R&B stars | Celebrity News | Showbiz & TV

Magoo, best known for his rap collaborations with Timbaland, has died aged only 50 years old.
His death was confirmed on Monday by R&B artist Digital Black on Instagram.
“Man can’t believe this RIH Magoo damn big bro wasn’t ready for this at all #superfriends,” he told his followers.
A cause of death has not yet been confirmed.
Born Melvin Barcliff, the rapper hailing from Norfolk, Virginia is believed to have died on Sunday.
For all the latest on news, politics, sports, and showbiz from the USA, go to Daily Express US.
Tributes have poured in from the R&B community, including a heartbroken message from Ginuwine.
“I don’t even know how to say anything at this point, I have lost 3 friends now within a month to LIFE and it’s due date,” he wrote alongside a picture of Magoo.
“This dude , always pushed me …I will mis you maganooo that’s what we called him …..
“Totally one of the best ever in my eyes always pressing forward I know we didn’t talk alot but the love was and will be always there my brotha , I will see you soon bro we all have our date and I’m expecting the bro hug when I get there.” (sic)
Ginuwine added that life feels “crazy” as he processes the loss of so many friends within a short space of time.
“I hate going through this and losing people we love,” he said.
“Sometimes it makes you feel like you dont wanna feel the pain so you wanna be gone also …pain hurts ..man oh man blessings to the family all of my condolences.”
Fellow artist ORyan Omri Browner wrote: “Damn rest in heaven Mag a nu.”
And Mr Dalvin penned: “He was such a good guy.”
Timbaland & Magoo first started collaborating in 1989 after meeting as teenagers in Norfolk.
They were later part of the group SBI (Surrounded By Idiots), which also included Larry Live and Pharrell Williams.
Music
Top 10 Paul Simon songs ranked – Call Me Al beaten to No. 1 | Music | Entertainment

Paul Simon became a master of many genres throughout his career (Image: Getty)
Few artists have navigated different sides of pop music with as much ability and elegance as Paul Simon.
First rising to fame in the 1960s as one-half of Simon & Garfunkel – arguably the defining duo of American folk rock – Simon began a solo career in 1972 that would cement his legacy as one of music’s most poetic and unpredictable voices.
From his early projects in reggae and Andean instrumentation to the culture-shifting leap into South African music with Graceland, Simon’s solo catalogue is littered with moments of quiet revelation and rhythmic revolution.
In 2016, Rolling Stone asked its readers to vote for the greatest songs from Simon’s solo career. Here, we list the ranking of his hits and deep cuts:
10. Duncan
The humble third single from Simon’s self-titled debut solo album didn’t crack the Top 50, but it’s aged more gracefully than many chart-toppers from the same era.
The song tells the story of Lincoln Duncan, a young man who leaves his home in Nova Scotia and goes through the American northeast. It’s a narrative ballad full of poetry in its themes of travel, struggle and self-discovery.
A tender flute solo, courtesy of Los Incas’ Jorge Milchberg, gives the track its wistful charm, and today, Simon often includes it in his setlists.
9. Hearts and Bones
‘Hearts and Bones’ was written during Simon’s turbulent relationship with Star Wars star Carrie Fisher – they married briefly in 1983 before divorcing a year later.
The lyrics are full of emotional detail, chronicling a road trip taken by the couple (“one and one-half wandering Jews”) and the quiet paiin of a love slipping away. It’s introspective and raw, a rarity even in Simon’s emotionally rich discography.
Originally intended for a Simon & Garfunkel reunion album, Simon ultimately decided to keep the song – and the entire album, for that matter – for himself. Although not a commercial success, the track has become a critical favorite.
8. The Obvious Child
After the global triumph of Graceland, Simon swapped South Africa for Brazil – and made The Rhythm of the Saints steeped in Afro-Brazilian rhythms and spiritual reflection.
Its lead track, ‘The Obvious Child’, pulses with percussion from Olodum, a legendary Salvador-based drumming group whose sound Simon discovered while exploring Brazilian street music. Lyrically, it’s about aging, memory and acceptance, delivered with Simon’s usual lyrical sleight of hand.
While it peaked only at No. 92 in the U.S., the song earned a cult following. It opened Simon’s massive 1991 Central Park concert and even inspired the title of Jenny Slate’s acclaimed 2014 indie film.
7. 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover
Written in the wake of his divorce from Peggy Harper, Simon wrote about heartbreak and pasted it on a groovy sound.
The song’s verses explore emotional confusion, while the chorus offers comic relief in the form of cartoonish breakup advice. It was boosted by Steve Gadd’s now-iconic drum intro and has lyrics inspired from playing rhyming games with his young son, Harper.
It became Simon’s most commercially successful single – hitting the top of Billboard’s Hot 100 charts.
6. Late in the Evening
A well-known gem, ‘Late in the Evening’ came from the soundtrack of One-Trick Pony, the 1980 film Paul Simon wrote and starred in – but did not reach much commercial success.
The song is autobiographical, tracking Simon’s early love for music and his formative years of late-night gigs and smoky rooms. It’s funky, driven by Latin-influenced horns and percussion, and became a Top 10 hit in 1980.
5. Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes
By 1986, Simon’s last few records hadn’t been loved by audiences, and Simon & Garfunkel had been through a failed reunion. So he went to Johannesburg and made Graceland.
‘Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes’ debuted on Saturday Night Live, featuring Simon and South African vocal group Ladysmith Black Mambazo. The harmonies stood out among other tracks on American radio, and the song’s story of a rich girl who “makes the sign of a teaspoon” proved to be moving.
While not a major chart hit, it became a cultural icon, both celebrated and criticized for its complicated political context.
4. Still Crazy After All These Years
The title track from Simon’s Grammy-winning 1975 album is both melancholic and mature. Against a gentle melody, the lyrics tell the story of a man staring middle age in the face and wondering what it all means.
Simon’s performance of the song on Saturday Night Live – while wearing a turkey costume, no less – became a legendary moment in the show’s early history. He even reprised it at the show’s 40th anniversary.
3. You Can Call Me Al
‘You Can Call Me Al’ is effortlessly joyful and has a strange origin story. The title came from a party where French composer Pierre Boulez accidentally called Simon “Al” and his then-wife Peggy “Betty.” The inside joke turned into a surreal set of lyrics about identity, existential angst and spiritual searching – to a bouncy pop beat.
The track features a famous penny whistle solo, a bass run played backward, and a video with Chevy Chase that became a MTV and VH1 favourite.
It only reached No. 23 in the U.S. on its initial release but became a much bigger hit globally – and a concert essential ever since.
2. Graceland
Originally a placeholder title intended to be swapped out, ‘Graceland’ was written in the shadow of Simon’s split from Carrie Fisher – a journey through emotional wreckage in search of healing.
The title track of his most celebrated album, it’s a blend of American rock, South African mbaqanga and confessional songwriting. It’s also full of pop, poetry and political awareness.
Whether he actually took his son Harper on the trip or not, as the lyrics suggest, is still debated since 1986.
1. Kodachrome
“When I think back on all the crap I learned in high school, it’s a wonder I can think at all” is how ‘Kodachrome’ starts, and it sets the tone for the entire track.
Released as the lead single from There Goes Rhymin’ Simon, it hit No. 2 on the U.S. charts and solidified Simon’s solo superstardom. The song, named after a brand of colour film, is a bittersweet look at memory and how photographs – like songs – can both preserve and distort the past.
Simon retired it from his live shows after 2012, but fans have nonetheless crowned it his best song of all time.
Music
Taylor Swift’s favourite music ranked including track that was her ‘theme song’ | Celebrity News | Showbiz & TV

While Taylor Swift’s tracks probably feature on many people’s lists of ‘favourite music,’ have you ever wondered what the Pop Titan herself likes to listen to in the car, at the gym, or running errands? The 35-year-old has often spoken about the songs she loves by other artists, offering fans a glimpse into the music that has inspired her. Over the years, she has shared numerous songs by musicians that have inspired her, comforted her, or simply resonated with her on a personal level, even curating a Spotify playlist titled “Songs Taylor Loves.”
Taylor has always been a champion of female artists and has gone out of her way to support and encourage her fellow musicians. The Shake It Off singer has praised Lana Del Rey in the past, calling her “one of the best musical artists ever” and also referring to her as her favourite lyricist. She has also shown admiration for Def Leppard, The National, beabadoobee, Phoebe Bridgers/boygenius, and HAIM.
1. “You Wanted It” – MoZella
Maureen Anne McDonald, 43, better known as Mozella, is not only an established singer but a lauded songwriter having co-wrote Miley Cyrus’ 2013 single “Wrecking Ball”. Swift discovered this song during a personal moment, stating, “I first heard it in an airport bathroom when I was going through a situation with a guy—I’d thought he was in, but he was just chasing me for the sake of the chase. This song sounds like she can empathise.”
2. “A Little Opera Goes a Long Way” – Sky Sailing
Acoustic, indie pop album An Airplane Carried Me to Bed by Sky Sailing is wildly different from Adam Young’s usual electronic tracks. Reflecting on her early days living alone, Swift said this track was her “theme song for the first few days of living solo,” resonating with its lyrics about embracing solitude.
3. “Until You” – Dave Barnes
Rockstar Dave Barnes gets a special mention in Taylor’s favourite tracks list and was even included in her “Happily Ever” playlist. The star said she selected this song to represent the theme of love, showcasing her appreciation for heartfelt lyrics.
4. “Rain” – Patty Griffin
Known for her stripped-down songwriting style in the folk music genre, 63-year-old Patty Griffin once feared she had lost her voice forever after getting sick. Adding Rain to her “Happily Ever” playlist, Taylor said this song reflects her admiration for evocative songwriting that captures complex emotions.
5. “Easy Silence” – The Chicks
Swift has expressed her fondness for this track, noting its inclusion in her love-themed playlist and her connection to The Chicks as musical influences.
6. “Naked as We Came” – Iron & Wine
Discussing this song, Swift mentioned, “When I listen to ‘Naked as We Came,’ by Iron & Wine, I hang on every word and dissect every metaphor; I’m completely absorbed.”
7. “Anti-Hero” – Taylor Swift
While not by another artist, Swift has cited “Anti-Hero” as one of her personal favourites among her own work, stating, “I really don’t think I’ve delved this far into my insecurities in this detail before.”
Music
Billy Idol – ‘I gave up drugs and was repaid in love’ | Music | Entertainment

Few stars embraced rock ‘n’ roll’s life-threatening extremities as enthusiastically as Billy Idol. But the Middlesex-born rocker tells me he has found something to replace hard drugs and alcohol in his life – his grandchildren. “I have two granddaughters and two grandsons, all under six,” Billy beams. “Watching them so young, so excited to be alive, it makes you feel reborn. Love of your family, my daughter, and sons, maybe that’s what it’s all about. I’ve given up drugs and been paid back with love.”
Billy, 69, continues, “Grandkids accept you for how you are. They’ve seen granddad on stage but they don’t know your backstory.” And what a story it is. William Broad found a degree of fame with his punk band, Generation X, before achieving solo superstardom in the 80s when he conquered America with hits like Eyes Without A Face, Rebel Yell, and White Wedding. These MTV-friendly new wave rock anthems, combined with Billy’s striking image – spiky peroxide hair, snarling curled lip, and biker leathers – made him a pin-up for a generation hungry for rebels. “I’ve been very lucky,” he says. “If punk hadn’t happened, would I have become a professional musician? Possibly not. It opened a door. Watching the Sex Pistols, guys like us, our age, getting better every week and writing gigantic anthems for our generation – Pretty Vacant, Anarchy In The UK – it was so exciting. I saw the door open and I walked through.”
Billy has been making a biographical documentary since 2019 but filming was interrupted by Covid. “The delays helped,” he says. “It’s not bad to live with something and gradually improve it. I’d been going to places like the Roxy in Neal Street, Covent Garden where Generation X started, and I thought why not sing about these different aspects of your life?” Billy told his late parents he was leaving university to form a punk band when he was 20. “I frightened them to death, these people I loved. My dad didn’t know what punk was. He had a little business and was upset that I didn’t want to follow in his footsteps. But I could never have done a 9-5 job. It would have been a nightmare. I wanted to do something I loved.”
Bill and Joan Broad’s worst fears were almost realised in 1990 when Billy – still high from a night in the recording studio – ran a Los Angeles stop sign on his Harley Davidson motorbike and collided with a car. The horrific accident left his right leg “a bloody mangled stump”. Surgeons at Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre took seven hours to save it, inserting a steel rod between his ankle and his knee. But the outcome could have been far worse – he hadn’t been wearing a crash helmet when he hit the concrete. Confined to bed for six months, Billy, then a heroin addict, realised his lifestyle would destroy him. “I knew I had to change, you can’t stay like that for ever. Bad things were starting to happen. Like that accident. I knew I had to put it in my rear-view mirror. You had to get away from that or it was going to kill you, or put you in prison, or leave you brain dead.”
Billy’s rip-roaring new album, Dream Into It, covers his life story in nine songs, from incredible highs to reckless lows. He waxes lyrical about the energy and excitement of the early London punk scene, based around the Roxy, formerly cheesy gay club Shaggarama’s. “It was ground zero for punk, a tiny place, the capacity was 250 but we had about 1000 in on the night we supported The Clash and The Heartbreakers.” On the album’s second track, 77, Billy and Avril Lavigne sing about the promise of those early punk years, along with the brooding, ever-present prospect of violence. “The 70s weren’t so different from today in America,” he reflects. “People were very divided and polarised. In England we had youth cults fighting one another. Punks fighting skinheads and Teddy Boys… I was thinking about a girlfriend I had, Wendy May, who looked incredible in a bin-liner – we looked like two vampires out at night. One Saturday we were at Charing Cross tube station and a bunch of Teds came through the ticket barrier. Me and the other guys legged it, but Wendy stayed behind and fought the one Teddy girl – and beat her up.
“Of course, we had shows where people were throwing pint glasses at us too. That was part of it. We were trying to find our way, and the audiences were victims of that.”
It was a far cry from the future that the Broads had in mind for their eldest child. Billy was born in Stanmore to his English salesman father and his Cork-born Irish mother. They emigrated to New York state when he was two, returning four years later with his baby sister Jane. The family lived in Sussex before finally settling in Bromley, southeast London, in 1971. Young Broad was bright but found school dull. When a teacher wrote ‘Billy is idle’ in one of his work books, it proved inspirational. He attended Ravensbourne grammar school and then Orpington College before beginning a course in English and Philosophy in September 1975, just weeks before the Sex Pistols played their first gig. Punk’s anarchic lure proved irresistible to Billy and his pals in the Bromley Contingent who followed the Pistols – including Susan Ballion and Steven Bailey, aka Siouxsie Sioux and Steve Severin of the future Siouxsie & The Banshees. Billy and bassist Tony James briefly joined Chelsea but soon quit to form Generation X with Derwood Andrews on guitar and John Towe on drums, playing their first gig in December 1976. His stage name, Idol, was a play on his schoolteacher’s comment. The rock press dubbed him ‘Iggy Bowie’. “Fair enough,” he says. “I was an amalgam of my heroes.” Few denied his onstage charisma.
Chrysalis signed Gen X in July 1977. Their biggest hit, 1979’s King Rocker, peaked at No.11. “It was fantastic fun – when we were all going in the same direction,” he says. “It was only when we started not to go in the same direction that I started to think about a solo career.”
Billy took a gamble and relocated to New York where Kiss’s manager Bill Aucoin landed him a solo deal and put him in touch with guitarist Steve Stevens, his collaborator to this day. “I could never have imagined I’d have that sort of success in America. It was incredible.” Idol’s popularity is enduring. Seven of his albums have each had more than a billion streams on Spotify. As Billy’s platinum hits erupted, so did his hell-raising. In his autobiography, Dancing With Myself, he recalls being strapped to a hospital bed, medically sedated and escorted to Bangkok airport by four armed soldiers, after running up thousands in damages in Thailand. “I did smash up hotels and I probably hurt myself but I always remained a believer in the rock’n’roll revolution I was part of,” he says. Punk, for Billy was a direct descendent of his childhood favourites – Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly, Little Richard, and Gene Vincent, rock’n’rollers who passed the baton to The Beatles, The Stones, The Who and then the Sex Pistols. He sang with Steve Jones and Paul Cook, plus Gen X’s Tony James in the 2018 punk supergroup Generation Sex. “It’s fantastic that Jonesy, Cookie and Glen Matlock are still playing,” says Billy. “It’s a shame Johnny’s not with them. That would be the ultimate. But they love playing with Frank Carter. They sound terrific and it’s great that Jonesy’s enjoying himself.”
His new album is partly for his grandchildren – “to tell them my story, directly”. As well as Lavigne, his guests include Joan Jett, a friend since 1978 and who is opening for him on the US leg of his tour, and Alison Mosshart, all adding a powerful female perspectives to the album’s narrative. Billy, who relaxes by listening to the old roots reggae he couldn’t afford to buy in the 70s, still loves touring and mixing new songs with old classics. “I’m really excited about coming to England and playing Wembley,” he says. “I get to see my sister, and old friends I haven’t seen for a while.” Idol says his only ambition is to make more albums. “I went to see Elton John, he walked over his albums and they were never ending. There must have been fifty or sixty of them. So I have loads more to do to catch up. I like the albums I’ve made. Rebel Yell was the super breakthrough album. That really established me in America.”
He was recently nominated for the Rock’n’Roll Hall of Fame, but ever humble says, “They should induct the New York Dolls before me”. He goes on, “I enjoyed Ozzy Osbourne’s solo induction last year – I ran into Roger Daltrey in the lift, met Dua Lipa, and then bumped into Dr Dre and Method Man who said, ‘How old is Billy Idol? 103?’.” Billy laughs. “That was a fun night.” His set for England will be one hour forty. “I can’t wait to play these new songs – I deliberately haven’t played them live yet so they’ll sound fresh. We’ll be playing them for the first time, and we’re going to kick off with Still Dancing because that says it all.”
*Billy headlines Wembley Arena on June 24 and plays the Forever Now Festival at Milton Keynes on June 22. His new album, Dream Into It, is out now.
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