YouTube uploads Sia & Billie Eilish lyric video
- A YouTube channel uploaded a lyric video labeled “Sia & Billie Eilish - Losing You (Sad Emotional Ballad 2026)” on May 21, but no official release was confirmed. - The clearest clue is the upload’s own wording: YouTube metadata says the track is “inspired by Sia and Billie Eilish,” not presented as official artist audio. - As of May 22, Billie Eilish’s official site and major-label pages did not show a matching release from Billie Eilish, Sia or Interscope.
A YouTube upload posted on May 21 is circulating as a possible Sia-Billie Eilish collaboration, but the available public evidence does not show an official release. The video is titled “Sia & Billie Eilish - Losing You (Sad Emotional Ballad 2026),” and it appeared on an independent YouTube channel rather than on a verified artist or label account. The upload’s own visible description language is more cautious than the title. YouTube search snippets describe the song as “inspired by Sia and Billie Eilish,” not as a confirmed single by either artist. ### What exactly was uploaded on May 21? The May 21 upload is a lyric-style YouTube video carrying both artists’ names in the title and framing the song as a “Sad Emotional Ballad 2026.” The publicly visible metadata captured in search results says “Losing You is a cinematic emotional ballad inspired by Sia and Billie Eilish,” followed by a description of heartbreak, memory and emotional distance. That wording matters because it stops short of saying the track was released by Sia, Billie Eilish, or their labels. (youtube.com) The YouTube result also does not show the kind of official release packaging commonly attached to label-backed music videos, such as a verified artist presentation in the snippet or a linked album campaign in the visible text. Based on the surfaced metadata, the clip reads more like a themed or derivative upload than a confirmed catalog addition. That is an inference from the listing language and placement, not a statement from the artists. (youtube.com) ### Why are people questioning whether it is official? The strongest reason is the description text itself. The phrase “inspired by Sia and Billie Eilish” is materially different from “by Sia and Billie Eilish,” and it suggests the uploader is invoking the artists’ styles rather than distributing an announced collaboration. Billie Eilish’s official web presence also did not show a matching release when checked on May 22. (youtube.com) Her official site was promoting “HIT ME HARD AND SOFT: THE TOUR (LIVE IN 3D)” rather than a new song called “Losing You.” ### Did Sia or Billie Eilish list “Losing You” anywhere official? Sia’s currently surfaced official catalog pages did not show a Sia-Billie Eilish track by that name in the material reviewed for this story. (youtube.com) Apple Music’s Sia page listed “Awake Tonight” as her latest release, dated April 10, 2026, and showed other recent singles, but not “Losing You” with Billie Eilish. Interscope’s official site also did not show a visible listing for a Sia-Billie Eilish release titled “Losing You” in the material opened during this check. (billieeilish.com) The page surfaced standard store and catalog items, but no matching release entry. ### What does Billie Eilish’s existing official YouTube footprint look like? Billie Eilish’s official YouTube uploads use conventional release framing. A surfaced example, “bad guy,” includes standard album and listening language in the visible snippet, directing viewers to the official album and other official songs. (music.apple.com) That is the opposite of the “inspired by” wording attached to the “Losing You” upload. ### So what can be said with confidence right now? (interscope.com) As of May 22, the verifiable facts are narrow. A YouTube video titled “Sia & Billie Eilish - Losing You (Sad Emotional Ballad 2026)” was online, and the visible metadata described it as inspired by the two artists. Publicly accessible official pages reviewed for Billie Eilish, Sia and Interscope did not show a matching confirmed release. The next concrete check is whether the song appears on an official artist channel, streaming-service release page, or label announcement. (youtube.com) As of Friday, May 22, those confirmations were not visible in the sources reviewed here. (billieeilish.com) (youtube.com)