Tag: Dua Lipa

  • Dua Lipa, Billie Eilish, SZA, and U2 set to steal the spotlight at 2024 Grammy Awards

    Dua Lipa, Billie Eilish, SZA, and U2 set to steal the spotlight at 2024 Grammy Awards

    In hushed tones, the question arises: Could the Grammy Awards finally get it right this year? The notorious ceremony, often criticized for favoring heritage acts over contemporary pop, seems to have taken a populist turn with this year’s nominees.

    R&B sensation SZA leads the pack with an impressive nine nominations, indicating a shift towards more current and mainstream choices. The star-studded performances are set to feature names like Dua Lipa, Billie Eilish, Joni Mitchell, and U2.

    Comedian Trevor Noah returns for the fourth consecutive year as the host, presiding over a staggering 94 categories that encompass diverse genres, from best contemporary Christian album to best audiobook, where Michelle Obama and Meryl Streep find themselves in competition.

    Notable mentions go to Phoebe Bridgers’ indie-rock supergroup Boygenius and pop sensation Victoria Monét, each receiving seven nominations. The field is predominantly female-led, with chart-toppers Taylor Swift, Olivia Rodrigo, Miley Cyrus, Lana Del Rey, and Ice Spice securing multiple nominations. The stage is set for a Grammys edition that may just break the mold.

    How to watch the Grammys

    Begin the evening by brewing a robust pot of coffee because the Grammys are on the horizon. These prestigious awards, presented by the Recording Academy of the United States, honor outstanding achievements in music.

    The “premiere ceremony,” commencing at 20:30 GMT on Sunday (12:30 in Los Angeles), is set to distribute more than 80 awards. This early ceremony is often a hidden gem. Winners in lesser-known categories display genuine excitement, and performances are characterized by a raw musicality, offering a contrast to the grand Hollywood-scale productions featured later in the main show.

    For those eager to catch the action, the entire event can be streamed on the Recording Academy’s YouTube channel and live.grammy.com.

    The main show kicks off at 01:00 on Monday GMT, broadcasting live on CBS in the US and available for streaming on Paramount Plus. If you miss any speeches or performances, fear not – they usually find their way to YouTube the following day.

    2) Will Taylor Swift overtake Ol’ Blue Eyes?

    Taylor Swift holding an armful of Grammy Awards, but losing grip of one which drops to the floor
    Image caption,Taylor Swift already has 12 Grammys – which is more than any human can reasonably hold at once

    If Swift wins album of the year for Midnights, she will become the first ever artist to lift the prestigious trophy four times.

    At the moment, she’s tied with Paul Simon, Stevie Wonder and Frank Sinatra, who each have three wins.

    But the Grammys have typically been less interested in Swift’s pop records than her forays into country and folk.

    Her competition for album of the year is strong. Here’s the full list of nominees:

    • Boygenius – The Record
    • Janelle Monáe – The Age of Pleasure
    • Jon Batiste – World Music Radio
    • Lana Del Rey – Did You Know That There’s a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd
    • Miley Cyrus – Endless Summer Vacation
    • Olivia Rodrigo – Guts
    • SZA – SOS
    • Taylor Swift – Midnights
    • Joni and Tracy could put young stars in the shade
    Joni Mitchell performs in concert during "Joni Jam" honouring her at Gorge Amphitheatre on June 10, 2023
    Image caption,Joni Mitchell will continue her live comeback at the ceremony

    Modern-day superstars Billie Eilish, Dua Lipa, SZA and Olivia Rodrigo will no doubt put on lavish performances of their big hits.

    But the show is likely to be stolen by two other female artists who have largely been out of the public eye in recent years.

    Joni Mitchell is guaranteed a reception worthy of a living legend when she makes her debut Grammys performance at the age of 80.

    And Tracy Chapman is heavily rumoured to be making a very rare public appearance to join country star Luke Combs on her 1988 classic Fast Car, which he took back to the charts last year.

    The night’s other performers will include Billy Joel, Travis Scott and Burna Boy.

    A win for SZA is a win for Scotland

    SZA
    Image caption,SZA’s second album SOS was one of 2023’s biggest sellers

    In the US, SZA’s second album SOS topped the charts for 10 weeks and marked the singer’s ascension to the major league.

    Born in Missouri and raised in New Jersey, the singer – real name Solána Imani Rowe – trained in marine biology before launching her music career.

    If her latest album picks up a Grammy, it will also mean a win for a 20-year-old music producer from Scotland.

    Blair Ferguson, who writes under the name BLK Beats, wrote the music for her hit single Snooze in his Glasgow bedroom, and it went on to sell more than two million copies in the US.

    “SZA is just a genius and she’s able to transform any record with the way she comes up with a melody,” he told BBC News. “I don’t think any other artist could have made that track.”

    Who’s a bigger rock star: Mick or Olivia?

    The Rolling Stones and Olivia Rodrigo
    Image caption,The Rolling Stones are nominated for the first time in six years

    The best rock song category is a culture clash for the ages, as Olivia Rodrigo’s punky Ballad Of A Homeschooled Girl faces off against The Rolling Stones’ Angry, a tale of a lovers’ quarrel.

    So who is the face of rock ‘n’ roll in 2024? The Grammys like to reward longevity, but maybe they’ll be swayed by Rodrigo’s rock revivalism, which has helped to ignite the first resurgence in guitar music in over a decade.

    It’s a strong field, with Foo Fighters, and Queens of the Stone Age also in the running. But the real contenders have to be Boygenius.

    Formed by indie songwriters Phoebe Bridgers, Lucy Dacus and Julien Baker, last year they made an era-defining guitar album, stacked with spectral harmonies and poetic lyrics.

    Nominated in all the major categories as well as the rock subgenres, it could be this year’s runaway winner.

    A first for Africa

    Burna Boy
    Image caption,Nigeria’s Burna Boy has become one of the world’s biggest stars

    A new category, best African music performance, reflects the growing prominence of genres like Afrobeats and Amapiano but also “Africa’s profound influence on music history”, according to the Grammys.

    The inaugural nominees – who would previously have slugged it out in the world music category – include Nigerian stars Burna Boy, Asake, Ayra Starr and Davido, alongside breakout South African singer Tyla.

    “Honestly, specifically the Grammys is a huge accolade,” said Tyla, who scored a global hit with Water at the end of 2023.

    Two other new awards have also been introduced for 2024 – best alternative jazz album and best pop dance recording.

    Justice for Miley!

    Miley Cyrus
    Image caption,Miley Cyrus has never won a Grammy

    Despite her storied career, Miley Cyrus is yet to win a Grammy, and had only been nominated twice in the past.

    However this year, the SFKAHM (Singer formerly known as Hannah Montana) has six nominations for her all-grown-up pop album Endless Summer Vacation.

    Lead single Flowers, which was the biggest-selling song in the UK last year and topped the US Billboard charts for eight weeks, is up for record and song of the year, and best pop vocal performance.

    But in a strong year for sad girls singing pop songs, she could leave empty-handed all over again.

    Are the Grammys ghosting country music?

    Morgan Wallen
    Image caption,Morgan Wallen’s album sold more copies than any other last year, but he only has one nomination

    Country had a huge resurgence in the US last year. Streams of the genre rose 20%, and last August the top three positions in the Billboard Hot 100 were occupied by country songs for the first time.

    But none of those artists – Morgan Wallen, Jason Aldean and Luke Bryan – are nominated in the Grammys’ biggest, all-genre categories.

    In fact, no country album has been nominated for album of the year since Kacey Musgraves’ Golden Hour five years ago (which won the award).

    So what’s going on? It seems to be a reaction to the political and racial undertones of the genre’s biggest stars.

    Voters are cautious about Wallen because of a headline-making incident in 2021, where he was caught on camera using a racial slur.

    With Aldean, the politics were embedded in his song, Try That in a Small Town – a story of vigilante justice that some listeners interpreted as having racial undertones.

    Aldean denied those accusations, but apologised when it transpired he’d filmed the video in front of a Tennessee courthouse that had been the scene of a brutal lynching in 1927.

    While stars like Jason Isbell and Zach Bryan made thoughtful songs that challenged Nashville’s more regressive tendencies, they were also shut out of the big prizes.

    It seems the Academy, with typical caution, has decided to steer clear.

    How new does the best new artist have to be?

    Jelly Roll
    Image caption,Jelly Roll recently won best new artist at the Country Music Association Awards

    A mere 21 years after releasing his first song, Tennessee singer Jelly Roll is up for best new artist.

    The musician, whose real name is Jason DeFord, isn’t a traditional contender for the category, but his recent move from the underground to the mainstream makes him eligible under Grammy guidelines.

    A convicted criminal and former drug dealer, he has served multiple stints in prison and recently testified before the US Congress in support of anti-fentanyl legislation.

    His emotional tales of addiction and redemption finally propelled him into the charts last year after a later-career pivot from rap into country music.

    At 39, he would be the oldest-ever winner of the best new artist trophy – overtaking Sheryl Crow, who was 33 on the night of her victory in 1995.

    But that’s nothing compared to the Latin Grammys, which gave a best new artist trophy to 95-year-old Angela Alvarez in 2022.

  • Dua Lipa faces fresh copyright lawsuit over hit song ‘Levitating’

    Dua Lipa faces fresh copyright lawsuit over hit song ‘Levitating’

    English and Albanian singer and songwriter Dua Lipa is currently facing a multi-million dollar copyright claim over her hit single “Levitating.”

    Musician Bosko Kante has filed a legal action against her, alleging that she used a recording made with his talk box in remixes of the song without obtaining permission.

    As of now, Dua Lipa and her label Warner Music Group have not yet responded to the copyright claims regarding the unauthorized use of the talk box recording in her hit single “Levitating.”

    The song “Levitating” is one of Dua Lipa’s most popular tracks from her 2020 album “Future Nostalgia.”

    The legal dispute centers around the alleged use of the talk box recording in the song, which has led to the multi-million dollar copyright claim against her.

    The legal action, which was filed in Los Angeles on Monday, claims Bosko is entitled to more than $20m (£15.6m).

    It says British-Albanian star Dua Lipa had permission to use the talk box on the original recording but not on any remixes, Reuters reported.

    It alleges the 27-year-old reused the work without permission on further releases, including The Blessed Madonna remix, which featured Madonna and Missy Elliott, another remix featuring DaBaby and a performance by Dua Lipa at the American Music Awards.

    Bosko is yet to comment publicly on his claim, however, Billboard reports his lawyers say he has made “numerous attempts” to resolve the matter, which they call a “blatant infringement” of his copyright.

    Lawyers maintain Bosko has taken legal action because the singer and her label had shown “unwillingness to co-operate or accept responsibility”.

    It is not the first time Dua Lipa, who is currently in the charts with her song Dance the Night Away, has faced copyright claims over Levitating.

    According to Reuters, a court complaint from reggae group Artikal Sound System was dismissed in June – and a separate claim, by songwriters Sandy Linzer and L. Russell Brown, continues.

    In 2021, she was also sued over claims she put a paparazzi photo of herself on Instagram without permission.

  • Eurovision 2023: UK act to be revealed on BBC Radio 2 on Thursday

    Eurovision 2023: UK act to be revealed on BBC Radio 2 on Thursday

    The act representing the United Kingdom at this year’s Eurovision Song Contest will be revealed on BBC Radio 2 on Thursday morning.

    The BBC said an announcement will be made on Zoe Ball’s breakfast programme at 08:30 GMT.

    Following the same selection process as last year, the broadcaster has been working with a management company to pick the act.

    The UK is one of the last competing countries to reveal its song for 2023.

    After years of dismal results, Sam Ryder turned things around for the UK at last year’s competition placing second to Ukraine.

    Tap management, which has worked with Dua Lipa and Ellie Goulding, selected the TikTok star and his song Space Man.

    Normally, the country who wins hosts it the following year but organisers ruled it was too dangerous in Ukraine, following Russia’s invasion, so the BBC was asked to host it instead.

    Earlier this week, tickets for May’s event sold out in 90 minutes, with fans now being warned scammers are targeting their hotel bookings with phishing cyber attacks.Media caption,

    The rundown on the 2023 contest in 50 seconds

    Most of the 37 competing countries have confirmed the song and act they’ll be sending to Liverpool, with a deadline set for 13 March for for the handful left to say publicly their plans.

    There are typically two ways a Eurovision entry is chosen: an internal selection – an act chosen behind-the scenes – or a national selection – a TV show with the winner getting to fly their country’s flag in Liverpool.

    A lot of Eurovision fans follow how each country chooses its act with events like “Super Saturday” scheduled gripping devotees across the continent.

    Rina Sawayama
    Image caption, Rina Sawayama has been teasing fans for weeks on social media

    Rumours Rina Sawayama will be this year’s act have been circulating for weeks (which she seems to have been enjoying on TikTok), as well as names like Mae Muller, Birdy and Mimi Webb.

    However, Webb denied it when she appeared on Radio 2 on Wednesday (but she could be under strict instructions to keep it a secret).

  • Jack Harlow and Dua Lipa are reportedly dating now

    The ever-expanding, reliably readable world of Are Reportedly Dating Now articles bagged another hit this week.

    Indeed, as this article’s headline and carefully spliced images have already made clear, Jack Harlow and Dua Lipa are indeed (reportedly!) involved in a dating capacity now. That’s the word from the tabloid titillators over at Page Six, who reported on Monday night that Lipa, in their words, became “quite smitten” with Harlow after meeting him at a Variety event in Los Angeles last month.

    Following that meeting, the report further alleges, Lipa and Harlow have been engaged in what sources claim is “constant communication.” More recently, Harlow is said to have taken a trip to NYC to see Lipa after her Z100 Jingle Ball commitments this month, followed the next day by the publication’s self-described “spies” having seen Harlow and Lipa doing the whole let’s-arrive-separately thing at a restaurant in the city.

    For good measure, Complex has reached out to reps for Jack Harlow and Dua Lipa for comment on all of this, though it’s unlikely anything will come of that.

    As fans will note, Harlow’s latest album—this year’s Come Home the Kids Miss You—features a track by the name of “Dua Lipa.” Speaking with The Breakfast Club back in May, Harlow revealed he had actually played the track for Lipa prior to its release.

    “I wanted to get her blessing so I FaceTimed her and played it for her because I didn’t want her to be blindsided by that or feel creeped out or anything,” he said at the time.

    Source: Complex.com

  • Dua Lipa: Singer denies she is performing at Qatar World Cup

    Dua Lipa has denied reports she will perform at the Fifa Men’s World Cup opening ceremony in Qatar on Sunday.

    The singer said she will “look forward to visiting Qatar when it has fulfilled all the human rights pledges it made” when it became host.

    Qatar has been criticised for its stance on same-sex relationships, its human rights record and its treatment of migrant workers.

    Other acts including Robbie Williams and BTS’s Jung Kook are set to perform.

    In February 2021, the Guardian said 6,500 migrant workers from India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka had died in Qatar since it won its World Cup bid.

    However, the Qatar government has said the total is misleading, because not all the deaths recorded were of people working on World Cup-related projects.

    • How does Qatar treat foreign workers?
    • ‘A desert World Cup and a dust-storm of controversy’
    • Awarding Qatar the World Cup a mistake – Blatter
    • Denmark make Qatar World Cup kit protest

    Lipa posted an Instagram story on Sunday, which read: “There is currently a lot of speculation that I will be performing at the opening ceremony of the World Cup in Qatar.

    “I will not be performing and nor have I ever been involved in any negotiation to perform.

    “I will be cheering England on from afar… One love, Dua.”

     

    Lipa, born in London to Kosovar-Albanian parents, is not the first major name to make a point of not playing in Qatar.

    Sir Rod Stewart recently revealed he turned down the opportunity.

    “I was actually offered a lot of money, over $1m, to play there 15 months ago. I turned it down. It’s not right to go,” he told the Sunday Times.

    “And the Iranians [football team] should be out [of the World Cup] too for supplying arms”, he added, in reference to Iran’s supply of explosive drones to Russia, which Iran has denied.

    Russia was suspended from all competitions by Fifa and Uefa in February, after the country’s invasion of Ukraine.

    US pop group Black Eyed Peas and Colombian singer J Balvin, however, are set to perform at events in Qatar during the tournament.

    Joe Lycett holds onto £10,000 in cash
    Image caption,Joe Lycett holds on to £10,000 in cash

    Comedian Joe Lycett, meanwhile, has issued an ultimatum to Qatar World Cup ambassador David Beckham.

    Lycett has promised to donate £10,000 of his own money to charity, if Beckham ends his reported multimillion-pound deal with Qatar.

    Homosexuality is illegal in the country, where same-sex relationships can be punishable by the death sentence.

    If the former footballer refuses, then Lycett has threatened to shred the £10,000 – just before the World Cup opening ceremony.

    Lycett says Beckham’s “status as a gay icon” will also be shredded if he doesn’t end his relationship with Qatar.

    The BBC has contacted David Beckham for comment, and his management responded: “We aren’t commenting at this time.”

    David Beckham
    Image caption,David Beckham represented England at three World Cups as a player

    Beckham has been urged to speak out on the criminalisation of same-sex relations in Qatar.

    Speaking to the BBC last year, a source close to the star said: “Of course David wanted to ensure that he was informed about the facts and any concerns that he might have for his gay friends, football supporters and fans.

    “Some of the laws and beliefs in the region differ to his own but the Qataris have always said that everyone will be safe and welcome at the World Cup in 2022 and he believes that commitment is sincere and has seen evidence of proactive engagement with the international LBGTQ community by the World Cup organisers.”

    Qatar World Cup ambassador Khalid Salman made headlines last week after it emerged he had referred to homosexuality as “damage in the mind”.

    Human Rights Watch called the former Qatar international’s comments “harmful and unacceptable”.

    Rasha Younes, LGBT rights senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, said: “The failure of the Qatari government to counter this false information has a significant impact on the lives of LGBT residents of Qatar, ranging from fuelling discrimination and violence against them to justifying subjecting them to state-sponsored conversion practices.”

    Organisers have said no-one coming to watch the tournament will be discriminated against.

    ‘Not a very good defence’

    Beckham’s former England and Manchester United teammate Gary Neville recently appeared as a guest presenter of Have I Got News For You, and was quizzed by team captain Ian Hislop over his decision to travel to Qatar to commentate on the World Cup.

    “My view always has been that you either highlight the issues and challenges in these countries and speak about them, or you don’t say anything and you stay back home and don’t go,” said Neville “I’ve always said we should challenge them.”

    To which Hislop replied: “There’s another option – you stay at home and highlight the abuses.

    “You don’t have to go and take the Qataris’ money. I’m not trying to be tiresome, but it is just not a very good defence.”

  • Dua Lipa says she’s not performing at World Cup, says Qatar should fulfill ‘Human Rights Pledges’

    Dua Lipa took to Instagram to address recent speculation that she will be performing at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar later this month.

    “I will not be performing and nor have I ever been involved in any negotiations to perform. I will be cheering England on from afar,” she wrote. “I look forward to visiting Qatar when it has fulfilled all the human rights pledges it made when it won the right to host the World Cup.”

    Lipa’s stance is no surprise considering the host country’s checkered record when it comes to gay rights, as well as the way it treated the workers that build many of the stadiums that will host games.

    The Guardian reported in Feb. 2021 that more than 6,500 migrant workers from Bangladesh,  India, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka have died in Qatar since it was awarded the 2022 World Cup, presumably while working on projects related to the tournament. Also in Qatar, sexual relations between two males comes with a possible seven-year prison sentence, and according to sharia law, “homosexuality is punishable by death.”

    Another report indicates England fans could face the death penalty if they’re caught smuggling in possession of drugs in Al Bayt Stadium.

    Meanwhile, The Athletic reported that there are very real concerns that females who attend the World Cup could face punishment if they were to report instances of sexual assault.

    Source: Complex.com

  • How Dua Lipa released an album from lockdown

    Four weeks ago, Dua Lipa flew back to London after playing Sydney’s Mardi Gras to discover her flat had flooded.

    The singer-songwriter rented an Airbnb while the repairs were carried out. Now, she and her boyfriend are stuck there for the duration of the lockdown.

    “I’m really enjoying it,” she tells the BBC over the phone. “I’m doing stuff that I don’t normally get the chance to do, just sleeping in and reading a book and catching up on TV shows.”

    Sleeping in wasn’t supposed be on the agenda this month.

    Dua’s second album, Future Nostalgia, was primed for release at the start of April, and her diary for the rest of 2020 was packed – with a world tour, a Glastonbury slot and an appearance on Saturday Night Live all scheduled for the coming weeks.

    But while artists like Lady Gaga, Sam Smith and Haim have delayed their albums due to the coronavirus, Dua chose to bring hers forward, giving it to fans a week earlier than planned.

    It wasn’t an easy decision. The star was in tears as she announced the news in a YouTube livestream, not least because the album had leaked online (a situation she later described as “a pain in the arse”).

    Ultimately, she thinks it was better to set the record free instead of worrying about the “perfect” release strategy.

    “I made this album to get away from any pressures and anxieties and opinions from the outside world,” she says.

    “Yes, it was made to be listened out in the clubs and at festivals – but at the same time, I wanted to give people some happiness during this time, where they don’t have to think about what’s going on and just shut off and dance.

    “Maybe it had to just come out now, rather than later.”

    Future Nostalgia is currently heading to number one in the UK and the top five in the US. It’s also one of the highest-rated albums of 2020 so far, with an average score of 88 on Metacritic.

    As the title suggests, it sounds like a throwback record from the year 2050 – its laser-gun pop melodies fused with squelchy funk basslines and disco grooves.

    Dua dreamt up the concept in late 2018 as she walked around the strip in Las Vegas.

    “I’d already started working on the record and I knew I wanted it to reflect my childhood influences, but I hadn’t quite figured out what direction I wanted to go,” she recalls.

    “I had my headphones in and was out walking to clear my head, when I was like, ‘Oh, I know, Future Nostalgia could work.’

    “At first I worried it was too on the nose, too literal, but by the time I’d gone back to my hotel, I’d solidified it in my head.

    “I messaged my manager and said, ‘I’ve got my album title, I’m going to start working backwards from there.’”

    The first song to capture the essence of that idea was Levitating, a euphoric roller-skating jam that clocks in at 103bpm, the same sweet spot as the Bee Gees’ Night Fever.

    “It was the song that helped shape the record,” says Dua, who got “so excited” in the studio that the recording session became an impromptu party.

    “We ate so many doughnuts that we were literally levitating because we were so high on sugar,” she told fans in a Q&A session last week.

    ‘People see you as manufactured’ Unlike her self-titled debut album, she has a writing credit on every song. As a result, you get a clearer picture of the star’s personality – smart, strong-willed, passionate and really, really committed to dancing.

    “With my first record, I was lucky to get songs like New Rules and Be The One that I didn’t write, but which were also massive parts of my career,” she says. “But I also felt like I had a lot of proving to do.

    “For a pop artist, people can see you as manufactured, and that you just get a writing credit for turning up. But, for the songs I did write, I was in those sessions and they are my personal experiences. And that’s something I wanted to get across in every interview I did.”

    This time, Dua says she didn’t go in with an attitude that she’d reject other people’s songs. It just turned out that she was “very inspired and knew exactly what I wanted to say”.

    That’s clearest on the two songs that bookend the album. Both look at different aspects of feminism, with the agenda-setting title track declaring: “I know you ain’t used to a female alpha.”

    “I’m not suggesting that’s what I am,” she says. “But when you sing that song, you want to feel stronger and more empowered.”

    Closing the album is the more reflective Boys Will Be Boys, which voices the everyday fears women face but men rarely have to think about – from being ignored and treated as inferior to the threat of violence.

    One striking line about “putting your keys between?your?knuckles” was borne of real-life experience.

    “I remember walking home, especially in the winter time, when I was getting off my bus and just trying to get to my flat, which was a three minute walk from the bus stop, and just being petrified of boys on bikes cat-calling around the estate,” recalls the singer.

    She included that line to speak directly to her female fans “so they feel seen and feel heard and know that we all go through the same things”.

    Stepping up The song is the fulfilment of everything Dua has been saying about feminism since New Rules catapulted her to global fame three years ago.

    She’s spoken out about abortion rights, criticised the treatment of women in Saudi Arabia, and presented a “five-point plan for the music industry to evolve” at the Cambridge Union.

    Even at the Grammys, where she won best new artist in 2019, she used her time at the podium to criticise former Recording Academy president Neil Portnow, who said women needed to “step up” if they wanted fairer representation at award shows.

    “I get a lot of backlash for speaking out, but these are things I’m passionate about – and that’s that,” she says. A lot of other pop stars would bite their tongue or shy away from such confrontation.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Dua Lipa: Critics rate Future Nostalgia as the best album of 2020 so far

    The future starts now for self-isolating Dua Lipa fans, after the star put out her new album a week early.

    Future Nostalgia, which features writing contributions from Tove Lo and Madonna’s producer Stuart Price, was brought forward after it leaked online.

    Early reviews have been glowing, with critics calling the record “viscerally brilliant” and “pop perfection”.

    With perhaps the best review headline of the year, The Independent called Future Nostalgia, “pure sonic spandex”.

    “Dua Lipa delivers hard truths to a soundtrack that’s ridiculously leotard and leg warmers – and there isn’t a duff track on the whole record,” wrote Helen Brown, awarding five stars.

    The NME gave the same top score, calling the album “powerful pop perfection from a star unafraid to speak her mind”.

    “The artist’s stunning second record tackles sex, inequality and empowerment. And all with a little disco shimmy,” reported Rhian Daly.

    The Guardian described the British-Kosovan singer as “a true pop visionary”, awarding four stars and applauding Dua for not taking “the easy path” of making an album full of star-studded collaborations.

    “Britain’s biggest female star tightens her grip on the crown with a viscerally brilliant second album,” declared Laura Snapes.

    ‘Conflicted’ The star’s second album is the follow-up to her Brit Award-winning, self-titled debut.

    It was due for release next week, but Dua announced it was being brought forward in a tearful Instagram live, after it leaked in full last weekend.

    But she admitted to having mixed feelings about releasing new music during the coronavirus pandemic.

    “I’ve been a little bit conflicted about whether it’s the right thing to do during this time because lots of people are suffering,” she said.

    “I’m not sure if I’m even doing the right thing,” she continued, “but I think the thing we need the most at the moment is music, and we need joy and we need to be trying to see the light.

    “I hope it makes you smile and I hope it makes you dance and I hope I make you proud.”

    On the eve of release, she issued another statement, saying: “I have never felt more myself in making this album.

    “And I’m grateful to some incredible people that held my hand through it – allowed me to believe, gave me confidence to dig deeper and create something fun, cohesive and reminiscent of my childhood influences.”

    One of those influences was evidently INXS’s Michael Hutchence – as the 24-year-old British-Kosovan star sampled the Australian band’s Need You Tonight on new single Break My Heart.

    The accompanying new video sees her hit the dancefloor, reach for the skies, and go deep under the covers, as she wonders, “Am I falling in love with the one that could break my heart?”

    As well as winning multiple Brit Awards in recent years, Dua also bagged best new artists at last year’s Grammys; so her new album was eagerly anticipated in the States, too.

    Pitchfork liked the sound of her musical memories from discos yet to come, comparing her to one of pop’s biggest names.

    “The ascendant singer’s star-making second album is a collection of sophisticated, hard-bodied pop-funk that gives way to slick, Kylie Minogue-inspired disco,” wrote Anna Gaca.

    Finally, Rolling Stone magazine declared that “the self-isolation dance party soundtrack is here”.

    “Future Nostalgia is a breathtakingly fun, cohesive and ambitious attempt to find a place for disco in 2020.,” wrote Brittany Spanos.

    “Incredibly, Lipa is successful: The upbeat album that she decided to release a week earlier than planned is the perfect balm for a stressful time.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Dua Lipa moves album release forward after it leaks online

    Dua Lipa has announced she is bringing the release date of her new album forward after it leaked online.

    Future Nostalgia will come out a week early, on Friday 27 March, said the star in a tearful Instagram live.

    But the Brit award-winner said she had mixed feelings about releasing new music during the coronavirus outbreak.

    “I’ve been a little bit conflicted about whether it’s the right thing to do during this time because lots of people are suffering,” she said.

    “I’m not sure if I’m even doing the right thing,” she continued, “but I think the thing we need the most at the moment is music, and we need joy and we need to be trying to see the light.

    “I hope it makes you smile and I hope it makes you dance and I hope I make you proud.”

    The star also announced the postponement of her world tour amid the coronavirus pandemic.

    “I tried to hold out for as long as possible but I can see that, at the moment, things aren’t changing and for the safety of everyone around us, we really need to be careful and cautious,” said the star.

    She added that new dates for the UK and European legs of the tour would be published on Tuesday, and all tickets would be honoured for the new dates.

    Speaking from her home in London, the star frequently wiped away tears and apologised for getting emotional.

    “I’ve been welling up a little bit, just a lot over the past couple of weeks, just with the uncertainty and everything,” she explained.

    Future Nostalgia is the follow-up to Lipa’s self-titled debut album, which earned her two Brit Awards and the Grammy for best new artist.

    One of 2020’s most highly-anticipated pop albums, it leaked in full over the weekend. It is not known whether this prompted the decision to move the release date forward, although it seems likely, given the potential impact of a pirated version on streams and sales.

    Lipa also announced that the album’s third single Break My Heart – which samples INXS’s Need You Tonight – would premiere on Wednesday with a new video.

    Government criticised After announcing the news, she spent half an hour answering questions from fans on everything from her Netflix recommendations (she went for the crime drama Ozark) to whether she has any pets (yes, two baby goats called Funky and Bam Bam).

    But she also implored fans to stay indoors and help slow the spread of coronavirus, noting that her co-writer Andrew Watt had diagnosed positive for the disease.

    She urged people to “go on his social media and read a little bit about how scary this is,” so they won’t be complacent about falling ill.

    “You might think you’re young and you won’t be so affected by the virus [but] I know a lot of young people that do have it and have struggled with it,” said the 24-year-old.

    “I don’t think we should be so small-minded. It really does affect you and we really just need to look after each other.”

    Source: bbc.com