Gloria Groove
Rodolfo Magalhães/Billboard Brazil
A warehouse filled with playful allegories in a residential neighborhood of São Paulo is a glorious portal. At the end of a corridor at the back of the building, in a studio room, layers and layers of shine, glamour and boldness reflect on Daniel Garcia’s face, giving way to Gloria Groove. His long hair frames what’s to come. His body will soon don unusual costumes for his drag persona, which seduces with looks that highlight his silhouette.
This time, he opted for dandyism—classic tailoring. The style from the 18th century, originating from the term “dandy,” means something like refinement. It emerged in England, initially among white men, and later was claimed by enslaved Black people as a symbol of power and subversion. The movement was recently revived at the Met Gala 2025, with Doechii, Rihanna, Bad Bunny and Doja Cat attending. It was the inspiration for our man in red with a suit, in the exclusive production for Billboard Brazil.
“It’s an outfit that grants access to places where you might not normally go. So, how can I say that it doesn’t connect with my life? Once I embraced the elegance and exuberance of being who I am. This blend of masculine and feminine appeals to me; I like when everything gets mixed up,” Gloria provokes, setting the tone for the conversation.
His life is a dance between two worlds, where the spotlight diva is supported by a clever mind. Such duality, despite being complex, fuels his creativity to explore new horizons, whether on stage or in his personal life. And more recently, emotionally as well.
“It takes a lot of courage to look at yourself in the mirror. It’s crazy: I, who spend most of my time looking in a mirror, had to find other ways to do the same thing, but in a completely revolutionary way. So I emphasize how important it is for young artists who want to make the entertainment industry their life: we have to know ourselves more and more to handle the countless issues that will appear along the way. And I feel that only now, at 30, do I have the sense that I’m directing my own life,” comments the multi-hyphenate, sharing that he started a therapeutic process in the middle of last year.
His journey of self-awareness opened space for many discoveries, including understanding his own truth: “I’ve been listening to my inner voice much more. What I created from Gloria and what Gloria has now created in me… It’s a voice that’s been getting louder—the voice of my self-perception. Understanding my own issues has been very liberating. It’s something I love because it keeps my creative mind alive, interested, and in constant transformation.
“Feeling the weight of my own creation, of what I can or cannot do, sometimes makes me feel hostage—I think that’s even normal. Because, deep down, we end up seeing ourselves through the eyes of others. And when I realized this limited me, or made me believe I was a hostage to what I thought others thought… I found the biggest cage I built myself. So, I realized my biggest challenge is to keep freeing myself,” he confesses.
This quest for freedom and an authentic narrative has never been easy but has always been part of his path. When Gloria takes the stage, Daniel is the one analyzing everything from outside, “driving a fancy car” that always seems ready to accelerate. And when Daniel goes home, Gloria Groove becomes the button he can’t turn off—it’s the spark that ignites all his creativity, whether reading a sentence in a book and thinking, “Let’s see if this turns into a song.”
The applause comes as part of this entire process: “It’s the response I get from the universe after launching my life, my art, and my style into the world. It’s an indicator, a confirmation that it’s worth continuing to make a difference. Every applause is recognition that pushes me forward.”
Gloria Groove
Rodolfo Magalhães/Billboard Brazil
Behind this playful universe, there’s another facet, often invisible, the one that takes care of what’s most valuable in his life: stability, care, love. “I have Daniel, the man of the house, whom I think people don’t see. It’s Daniel, Pedro’s husband, Lola and Nico’s father [his pets], Gina’s son, who bears all these responsibilities—making sure everyone is well, living well, and that I get quality time with everyone, even with shows and interviews. I believe this is the man behind this great diva who sustains this whole story.”
Ambivalence, which could be a battlefield, actually shows itself as fertile ground for mutual support. “The Diva also supports The Man of the House because she reminds him that, okay, it’s all very beautiful—lots of responsibility, serious things—but I want to give my close, I want to play, live the world a little. Let’s go!”
And for Gloria, it’s precisely the “Daniel CEO” side that shapes the dreams: “He’s the one who materializes — takes what’s in the realm of ideas and transforms it into reality. Success, right? Taking from imagination… and making it happen,” he explains with a laugh.
To understand Gloria, who writes her own life story, you have to go back to the beginning — to the child who looked at the stage as if seeing a destiny, and who learned early on to hone her vocation.
“Growing up in the spotlight is crazy. And at the same time, it’s a madness that’s impossible to avoid. Looking at a camera, holding a microphone… For me, these things are so vital, so part of my life. Since I was seven, when I left school and started hanging out at SBT, then at band at age 10, those moments are my routine,” he notes.
Daniel experienced childhood and adolescence in TV environments, from talent shows to participating in Turma do Balão Mágico. He matured his art, lent his voice to characters (one of them is Doki from Nickelodeon) did backing vocals and more. In adulthood, his drag power emerged from the ability to never stop playing, reinventing himself, and being beyond what others expected.
He dreamed big and made his desire come true: “I’d just take my dubbing money, go and build my Gloria Groove collection. And when it was time to tell my mom, it was a very important day. ‘Look, I’m doing this, I really love what I do, and I believe in it,’ I told her.”
Even without fully understanding at the time, she made it clear she trusted. “Daniel is just one of the crowd, but I’m going to do something that will stand out and find its place,” she assured.
“Since that first step, my story has been built with the courage to be who I am. I remember Pedro Luiz [husband], who’s been with me for 10 years, and when I first met him. When I started to get ready, it was months in, and I told him the first time: ‘Look, I do drag, and I want you to know that.’ It was an act of resistance, of affirmation: I knew that was my truth, even if back then it seemed crazy or risky.” Daniel recalls a conversation with Ika Kadosh, a pioneer of the scene whom she calls her drag mother: “Girl, back in the day when I started to get ready, doing drag was social suicide.”
Despite the risks, the young artist followed his impulse to break barriers, guided also by another fundamental reference. “RuPaul talks about becoming the image born from your own imagination — one of the most powerful things I have,” he shares on the importance of the American host, whose show RuPaul’s Drag Race has been and continues to be a catalyst for queer culture.
Gloria emerged as a desire for the masses. And it didn’t take long for him to recognize the power of his own work: “She lives in people’s popular imagination, by the strength of the imagination within my CPF [Brazilian Individual Taxpayer Registry ID]. Definitely, it’s marked in history. Not necessarily for what I’ve done, but for the way people received it.”
At this point, the pen begins: “I don’t remember wanting to write phrases and rhymes before becoming a drag queen. No wonder that O Proceder, my first album, has that vibe, that style. Because the first Gloria, the first place where I understood ‘this is where I will free myself,’ was in rhyme, in rap, in building many bars — 16 bars, 32 bars. I arrived at the studio eager to let it out, right? Nothing better than having rap as my tool to do that…”
Along the way, he recognizes himself in the strength of women who use words to assert themselves and transform their experiences into art, like Ms. Lauryn Hill, Erykah Badu, Nicki Minaj, Karol Conká and Flora Matos.
“Those are female figures who brought rap as a strong and very present tool; they empowered me in that sense because they showed me there was a way to use rap within the aesthetics and stories I was trying to tell. As an effeminate gay guy, it wasn’t normal for me to feel that rap was a place for me,” he confesses.
With this new skill, his artistic persona starts to write the life he wants to live: “When I’m composing, the excitement comes from the feeling of already being in the future, being my best version, and sharing that moment with the world. It’s like fantasizing about the future and trying to capture it in an image.”
The creative process is intuitive, based on attentive listening and observation: “The direction can be a word, a theme, a poem, a sample, a BPM, or a recorded voice note on the phone. I believe that the first spark of a song wanting to be born can start from any of these ‘channels’.”
Gloria Groove
Rodolfo Magalhães/Billboard Brazil
Gloria Groove’s journey is marked by the territory that shaped her and that she calls home. “Lady Leste will always be in my heart because what this album represented for me is that I was finally putting an extremely personal identity into my music. When I managed to build this concept, Lady Leste, telling the true side of everything I can be and want to be — my side of Vila Formosa, of the East Zone, of what I’ll never deny, that leaves its mark on my story — I felt I had found a way to reaffirm my roots. My alter ego has an alter ego. There are many layers, many unfoldings,” she jokes.
Released in 2022 with 13 tracks—including hits like “Vermelho,” “Bonekinha” and “Queda”—Lady Leste is a manifesto that combines pop power and avant-garde. This work marked a turning point in her career, establishing Gloria as a nationally relevant artist—now with the potential to reach the world.
Prior to this, the pop star had been building her career with hits that blended influences from R&B, rap, pop and Brazilian music. Her debut album, O Proceder (2017), showcased her versatility. Later, the EP Affair (2020) solidified her romantic side with more introspective compositions like “A Tua Voz” and “Suplicar.”
In 2024, she shifted gears again with Serenata da GG, a pagode label—featuring a live album released in two volumes, with repertoire designed to melt hearts.
“My art challenges me before it challenges others. I don’t do anything that doesn’t make me step out of my comfort zone. I like to play with the new,” she summarizes. Serenata da GG is a love letter to her own story — loud, harmonious, full of groove, and heart.
Who is Gloria Groove—and how many layers are there between her and Daniel?
“Too many to count!” she laughs when asked, but quickly dives deeper, and what emerges isn’t just a number but a consciousness: that each layer is translucent, untransferable, and revealing.
“Together, all are fractals of my soul,” she reveals. The fact is, there’s still much to discover about where Gloria came from. “I don’t limit my possibilities at all. I’m dying to act again, to produce music for others… Gloria was one of the dreams I took out of my little folder, and she ended up becoming my whole life. Then I looked inside and asked myself: what else is stored here?”
What drives Daniel—and consequently Gloria—is the pursuit of more honesty. Believe it or not, the emotion they both want to learn to perform better is audacity.
“To take off the filters, press that F button. Be more honest with myself, with what I feel, with what I want. Because it’s when I talk about myself like that that I create a mirror — and I hold it for you to look at yourself too.”
The “living art installation,” as she once described herself in an interview on the program Provoca with Marcelo Tas, has reached the level of being one of the most listened-to drag queens in the world, according to Spotify data.
But this rise came with a price. For a long time, she accepted packed schedules, exhausting marathons of commitments, in a constant attempt to prove herself.
“I think the biggest mistake I’ve learned from is my difficulty in saying no. I learned that saying ‘yes’ was a ‘yes’ for me,” she reflects.
Especially being who she is: “We have to prove ourselves, do three times better than a straight artist to guarantee space… to explain that that space is worthy….”
Maybe that’s why, during LGBTQIAP+ Pride Month this year, the pride carries a different weight, a different warmth.
“It’s feeling different,” she reflects. “It’s revolutionary to feel proud of absolutely everything I’ve chosen to do. Of my lifestyle, of how I want to be seen in the world, and of the person I am becoming every day. It’s about embracing all parts of myself, without shame or fear, and celebrating that authenticity — that’s the real power of pride.”
However, the revolution doesn’t only happen on stage. It also resides in silence, in the breaks, in Daniel’s everyday life—breathing between one project and another.
“For a long time, I thought I only deserved to be seen if I was doing something spectacular. But today I understand: living while waiting for the extraordinary kept me away from what’s most powerful—the ordinary. The ordinary is Dani, in loose underwear, sandals, this way of living I now seek in places where I can have that tranquility. It’s creative leisure, the time to process, reconnect,” he reflects.
In this reconnection, spirituality has become a shield and talisman: “Before going on stage, I say a prayer, talk to my essence, to my deepest self. I ask to enter without fear, shame, or inhibitions. And to truly enjoy it. When that happens, everything flows.”
And so it flows, like an eternal playful being who still promises great flights: “The world can expect from Gloria Groove a great adventure within the music industry. I haven’t stopped playing with dolls yet. When I was a kid, it was super controversial to play with dolls because, at the time, people said it was a girl’s toy. And today I play on a big scale, in front of the whole world. That’s what makes people follow my wave. So I want to play more with dolls. I just need a little more time…”
Pause, then a plea: “Mom, let me play a little more?”
It’s hard to say no. Even harder not to accept the invitation—because, deep down, it seems like the game is only just beginning.
Gloria Groove
Rodolfo Magalhães/Billboard Brazil
Tim Dillon will not be traveling to the Riyadh Comedy Festival next month. The California comedian and host of The Tim Dillon Show podcast says he was fired from the Oct. 8 Saudi Arabia festival for comments he made about the country on Joe Rogan‘s podcast.
Besides losing a $375,000 payday (an amount Dillon confirmed to Rogan), he also lost a nearby warm-up gig in Dubai two nights before his Riyadh appearance after mixing up the Arab emirate with Abu Dhabi (the rival cities are both part of the United Arab Emirates).
“I mixed them up — apparently this is a big deal over there. This is a real problem,” he said on a recent episode of his podcast. “This is not a malicious slander. It’s a mistake.”
The Riyadh Comedy Festival — which mostly takes place at the Bakr Al-Sheddi Theatre and ANB Arena from Sept. 25 to Oct. 9, features a number of top tier comedians including Dave Chappelle, Bill Burr, Gabriel Iglesias, Aziz Ansari, Kevin Hart, Jeff Ross, Chris Distefano, Tom Segura, Jo Koy, Sam Morril, Hannibal Buress, Andrew Schultz, Sebastian Maniscalco, Whitney Cummings, Jimmy Carr, Louis CK, Pete Davidson, Russell Peters and Chris Tucker.
“Supposedly, MBS is a fan of mine,” Dillon said two weeks ago on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast, referring to Saudi head of state Mohammed Bin Salman.
Dillon was reportedly fired from the festival for claiming that Saudi Arabia relies on slave labor — a controversial take on the country’s foreign laborers laws that some groups, including Human Rights Watch, have criticized as “slavery-like.” Legally, slavery was abolished in the Kingdom in the 1960s.
Dillon said the slavery jokes were a misunderstanding with his Saudi hosts, saying on his podcast, “I was defending them for having slaves. I literally said, ‘Slaves are hard workers and for the most part agreeable.’ But they didn’t like that.”
“You can literally support somebody too much,” he added. “In life, this happens. Too many compliments; too much support — and then they turn on you.”
He clarified his comments further, noting, “If i was a slave — not that I want to be one, but if I was and I built this really nice thing, I might say to my slave children, ‘Daddy built that,'” concluding, “Apparently this got to the people in Saudi Arabia and they were unhappy about it.”
The Riyadh Comedy Festival opens Sept. 25 with performances by Burr, Maz Jobrani and Andrew Santino and Bobby Lee from the Bad Friends podcast. More here.
Wilson Phillips, Kenny Loggins, David Pack of Ambrosia and more are set to perform at a charity concert celebrating the music of Brian Wilson and The Beach Boys on Saturday, Sept. 27 at the Granada Theatre in Santa Barbara.
Wilson Phillips features two of Wilson’s daughters, Carnie and Wendy Wilson, as well as Chynna Phillips, the daughter of John and Michelle Phillips. The concert will also feature Brian Wilson’s grandchildren, so it will spotlight three generations of the Wilson family.
The concert, dubbed An All-Star Tribute to the Music of Brian Wilson & Songs of The Beach Boys, will feature the Folk Orchestra of Santa Barbara. Other guest performers are expected to include The Honeys; former members of The Beach Boys and the Brian Wilson Band; and keyboardist Don Randi (The Wrecking Crew); with appearances by Rosemary Butler (Jackson Browne), Ken Stacey (Elton John), Hunter Hawkins (Kenny Loggins), Carly Smithson (American Idol), Alisan Porter (The Voice) and poet Stephen J. Kalinich. These acts will be backed by The Tribe Band, who will perform an array of Beach Boys favorites.
The show begins at 7:30 p.m. Here’s a link for tickets. VIP packages are also available.
Proceeds will be donated to Adam’s Angels, a local group of volunteers, and the Surfrider Foundation of Santa Barbara, dedicated to the protection and enjoyment of the world’s oceans and beaches.
Brian Wilson died on June 11 at age 82. He was the third member of the fabled group to pass, following brothers Dennis in 1983 at age 39 and Carl in 1998 at age 51.
THE BIG STORY: If you needed another clear sign that artificial intelligence is seeping into every aspect of American cultural life, here’s one: An AI artist just signed a record deal, the hallowed milestone of success for any emerging musician.
As first reported by Billboard last week, Xania Monet — the avatar of a woman named Telisha Jones who writes her own lyrics but uses Suno to create the music — inked a record contract worth millions. The deal has quickly become the talk of the industry, including from stars who have spoken out, including Kehlani, who said: “I don’t respect it.”
But…what exactly is a label buying here? It remains unclear the extent to which you can secure intellectual property rights to AI-generated songs, raising hurdles for monetizing them. And platforms like Suno are still facing trillion-dollar infringement lawsuits that essentially claim the technology itself is illegal. For more, go read our full story.
You’re reading The Legal Beat, a weekly newsletter about music law from Billboard Pro, offering you a one-stop cheat sheet of big new cases, important rulings and all the fun stuff in between. To get the newsletter in your inbox every Tuesday, go subscribe here.
BLIGE CASE TOSSED – A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit against Universal Music Group claiming Mary J. Blige’s enduring 1992 hit “Real Love” infringed the oft-sampled 1973 funk song “Impeach the President” by the Honey Drippers, which has been used by Run-DMC, Dr. Dre, Doja Cat and many others over the years. The judge said the two songs were so different that nobody would hear the earlier song: “The songs do not sound the same.”
DIDDY SENTENCING – Attorneys for Sean “Diddy” Combs urged a federal judge to sentence him to just 14 months in prison on his prostitution convictions, asking him to reject the kind of “draconian” punishment sought by prosecutors. Because the star has already served 13 months in jail since he was arrested, that sentence would see him released almost immediately: “It is time for Mr. Combs to go home.”
LETTERS OF SUPPORT – To help make that argument, Diddy’s lawyers filed dozens of letters from supporters, pleading with the judge to show lenience toward the rapper when he sentences him next month. They came from Diddy’s mother and kids, from ex-girlfriend Yung Miami and from an executive at hip-hop label Quality Control Music — among many others.
SUNO SUIT 2.0 – Separate from the Xania Monet situation, the major record labels filed an amended version of their copyright lawsuit against the AI music firm, adding new allegations that the company illegally “stream-ripped” songs from YouTube to train its models. That’s a hugely important new claim: In a separate such lawsuit against Anthropic, a federal judge ruled this summer that AI training itself is likely a legal “fair use” but that using pirated works to do it could lead to many billions in potential damages.
FTC, YEAH YOU KNOW ME – The Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuit against Live Nation and Ticketmaster accusing the concert giants of advertising misleading ticket prices and allowing scalpers to buy up tickets and resell them at inflated prices. The case came months after the agency sued a ticket broker that allegedly used thousands of fake Ticketmaster accounts to buy and resell tickets to Taylor Swift concerts and other events — and two years after Live Nation was hit with a sweeping monopoly lawsuit by the U.S. Department of Justice.
HYPE VID SETTLEMENT – Mike Tyson settled a lawsuit claiming he illegally used the Jay-Z, DMX and Ja Rule song “Murdergram” in an Instagram video promoting his boxing match against Jake Paul. The case was filed by Ty Fyffe, a producer and co-writer of the 1998 track who claimed that Tyson had willfully infringed his copyrights by using the song in a training video ahead of his much-hyped fight with Paul.
LOSE YOUR … CASE? – Meta urged a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit from Eight Mile Style, a music publisher that owns hundreds of Eminem songs, which claims the social media giant made “Lose Yourself” and other iconic tracks available to billions of users. In the motion, Facebook’s lawyers argued the case was “remarkably short on specifics” about actual infringing material: “Fanciful estimates are not a substitute for well-pleaded facts,” the company wrote.
NEVER MEANT TO CAUSE YOU ANY PAIN – The Prince estate asked a judge to dismiss a lawsuit by the late singer’s Purple Rain co-star Apollonia (Patty Kotero) that claims the estate is trying to “steal” her name, arguing it has no intention of forcing her to change her name — and has repeatedly told her as much. The filing did say, however, that Apollonia secured her own trademarks during “the chaotic period following Prince’s death.”
SEX TAPE LEAK CASE – Colombian pop star Beéle was hit with a lawsuit alleging invasion of privacy and sexual cyberharassment from ex-girlfriend Isabella Ladera, claiming he is responsible for leaking their sex tape. Beéle’s reps have denied that he was the source of the leak and said the singer is “also a victim,” but Ladera’s lawsuit placed the blame squarely on him: “Only two people had the videos, and Ladera had already erased them almost a year and a half before.”
MEGAN THEE PLAINTIFF – Lawyers for Megan Thee Stallion argued in court filings that the social media personality DJ Akademiks must reveal whether Tory Lanez sent him a confidential DNA testing report during the singer’s criminal case. The filings came amid discovery in a defamation case against Milagro Gramz, a gossip blogger and ardent online defender of Lanez.
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