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Get a first look at The Band Perry on the cover of our latest issue!

Be on the lookout for the cover story on Billboard.com tomorrow, then order the issue at OrderBillboard.com.

Swedish House Mafia’s Billboard Cover Story

Checking in with the reigning dons of the dance scene as they prepare to go their separate ways: http://blbrd.co/14Dvb3N

Phillip Phillips and Jimmy Iovine cover the latest issue of Billboard magazine! Stay tuned for the cover story and click here to subscribe.

Before she was named winner of “The Voice,” Cassadee Pope and her band, Hey Monday, stopped by Billboard’s studio to cover Jason Derulo’s “In My Head.” Watch it here.

Kid Rock covers the latest issue of Billboard magazine! Stay tuned for the cover story and click here to subscribe.

Alicia Keys unveiled the album art for her upcoming “Girl on Fire” album.

The 10 Best ‘Call Me Maybe’ Viral Videos

With Carly Rae Jepsen’s hit at No. 1 on the Hot 100, we’ve rounded up a list of the most entertaining “Call Me Maybe” covers and videos the Internet has to offer. Watch them here.

Usher covers the latest issue of Billboard magazine — available today!

Sneak peak: On Tuesday, Paul McCartney released “Kisses on the Bottom,” his 23rd album since the Beatles disbanded in 1970. Today, he got a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Tomorrow, he covers Billboard. All in a typical week for Sir Paul.

In this week’s cover story, Jon Bon Jovi gets intimate. He talks family, his never-ending world tours (which have grossed nearly $1 billion since the turn of the century), and inspiration.

Apparently Jersey boys stick together: “I came home and said to Richie [Sambora, Bon Jovi guitarist], ‘I want to be Frank Sinatra. I’m going to make movies here, I’m going to make music there, I’m going to run the business here. This is the way it’s going to be,’” Jon recalls. “It’s the Sinatra kind of vision. He got a president elected. He did incredible things for civil rights at the time. He was making movies, music, and he was doing it the way he wanted to do it. Frankie said, ‘I did it my way,’ that beauty of that honest lyric. The people who related to that song found Frankie in themselves. It was an incredibly empowering lyric — it empowered me. That’s what happens when you hit on a lyric that’s honest and true.”