Tyra Banks is one of the many stars who stepped out this past weekend for producer Jennifer Klein‘s annual Day of Indulgence party!
02.08.2022 - 20:35 / glamour.com
everything, however, which 's legions of fans were more than happy to point out. This content can also be viewed on the site it from.Less than seven hours after the original tweet, Warren tweeted again, walking back her original comment. “Ok, I meant no disrespect to [Beyoncé], who I've worked with and admire.
I'm sorry for the misunderstanding.” According to , Warren wrote Beyoncé's “I Was Here" in 2011. She also told that “every collaborator who worked on this record should be celebrated.” However, the artist's tepid I'm sorry you feel that way apology may have been too little too late for the Hive. This content can also be viewed on the site it from.Warren had already spent a lot of time in the comments section defending her original position.
Responding to one person who asked why she didn't understand how samples work, Warren , “Cos I don't use them.” And when singer-songwriter The-Dream took the time to give the older artist some historical perspective—Black artists, he wrote, started using samples because they couldn't “afford certain things starting out” and turned them into an art form—Warren coldly, “No need to be mean about it.”Maybe it's time for Diane Warren to listen and learn—as Beyoncé herself just did by an ableist slur from one of her songs. By Ariana Yaptangco By Hanna LustigBy Kathleen WalshBy Suzannah WeissMore from GlamourSee More Stories© 2022 Condé Nast. All rights reserved.
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.Tyra Banks is one of the many stars who stepped out this past weekend for producer Jennifer Klein‘s annual Day of Indulgence party!
The Perfect Storm star Diane Lane paid tribute today to its director Wolfgang Petersen, who died Friday at 81.
Midterm elections are in full swing, and twice-impeached former President Donald Trump has been vocal in them, endorsing candidates and his 2020 election lies about voter fraud. Many have dubbed it Trump’s “revenge tour” as he gears up to announce another run for president in 2024.
“Break My Soul.”However, the 40-year-old entertainer teased her fans with a “Cliquebait” video on Thursday evening.The song is off of her newest album, “Renaissance” and a full video has yet to be revealed.The teaser was released on her YouTube channel and features a silver outfit-clad Beyoncé on top of a horse, reminiscent of her new record cover. Wind gleefully blows the “Crazy in Love ” crooner’s hair as she sits on the sparkling pony.In another shot, a fire burns next to a metallic horse with Beyoncé nowhere to be seen.The title of her seventh studio album then comes on screen for the rest of the four-minute song.Since the release of the Texas native’s album last month, a series of issues have surrounded the debut.Queen Bey used the “ableist” slur “sp – – z” on her new “Renaissance” track “Heated.”“Sp – – zin’ on that ass, sp – – z on that ass/ Fan me quick, girl, I need my glass,” the lyric says.
Beyoncé fans are praising Sheila Watko, a reporter for NBC10 in Philadelphia, after she incorporated numerous references to the singer’s notable discography on-air during a traffic report earlier this week. While reporting about local roadways on Tuesday, Watko effortlessly delivered mentions of the tracks “Partition”, “Break My Soul” and more.
Gear up, readers we’ve got a crazy one for you…
Seth Meyers returned to studio on Wednesday night after recovering from a second bout of COVID-19 – or as he joked, the virus’ “Season 2 pick-up” – and, beyond his return, he celebrated Kansas’ big win on abortion rights. Of course, Meyers also celebrated how angry it probably made Justice Brett Kavanaugh.On Tuesday night, voters in Kansas overwhelmingly rejected the idea of removing a woman’s right to an abortion from the state constitution, showing up in record highs and voting against a measure that would do just that.
A nod to Kelis's "Milkshake" has been removed from Beyoncé's Renaissance track "Energy" after a complaint from the artist. Kelis claimed that she received no warning that her 2003 song would be interpolated into the new song, leaving her feeling "disrespected." She went on to add that, as she is not credited as a writer or producer on her own song, she stood to gain no financial benefit from the use of the track but that her Neptunes collaborators Pharrell Williams and Chad Hugo would.
Daily Lowdown podcast from HELLO! Today, we're discussing Taylor Swift working on album number ten and Demi Lovator opening up about their pronouns. MORE: The Daily Lowdown: Drake devastates fans with last-minute show cancellationNot only that, Paris Hilton reveals she's listening to Britney's new song and has called it "iconic".
would need 24 songwriters, facing stinging backlash from the Beyhive for what was seen by many as a racially insensitive inquiry. Warren, a songwriting legend who has worked with Beyonce before, surely knew better.This isn't meant as shade, I'm just curiousBut the rest of us may not.
Beyoncé's highly anticipated seventh studio album, , has finally dropped and it's been met with critical acclaim, hilarious memes and controversy! The latest involves songwriter Diane Warren and some seemingly shady tweets.On Monday, Warren took to Twitter, writing an apparent jab at the songwriting credits on Beyoncé’s «Alien Superstar.»«How can there be 24 writers on a song?” she wrote with a rolling-eyes emoji. Warren claimed that her question wasn't meant to be shady, though she added in a since-deleted reply, „That's 23 more than on mine.“ features plenty of sampling and interpolation; »Alien Superstar" samples Foremost Poets' «Moonraker,» Right Said Fred's «I'm Too Sexy,» «Do It Your Way» by Mood II Swing, which itself sampled «Black Theater Speech» by Barbara Ann Teer, which also makes an appearance in the song. Thus, «Alien Superstar»s 24 credits. This isn't meant as shade, I'm just curiousAlthough Warren later commented that the samples in the music likely contributed to the numerous credited writers, members of Beyoncé's protective BeyHive took offense to the veteran songwriter's comments.
Zack Sharf Oscar-nominated songwriting legend Diane Warren made an enemy out of Beyoncé’s legions of fans after questioning why one of the singer’s new songs off her “Renaissance” album has over 20 credited writers. Warren did not mention Beyoncé in her initial tweets but wrote: “How can there be 24 writers on a song?…This isn’t meant as shade, I’m just curious.”Beyoncé’s fans assumed Warren was calling out “Alien Superstar,” the third track on “Renaissance” that boasts well over 20 credited songwriters. As Warren later pointed out, one reason the song has so many writers credited is because of the samples and interpolations it features.The Dream, who has worked with Beyoncé in the past and collaborated with her once again on “Renaissance,” called out Warren for her comment.
tweeted, adding an eye-roll emoji.The songwriter followed up her original tweet saying, “This isn’t meant as shade, I’m just curious.”“Ok, it’s prob samples that add up the amount of writers,” Warren, who has written songs for artists from Cher to Celine Dion, continued.While Warren, 65, didn’t specify Beyoncé, 40, or her album by name, the Beyhive was quick to respond.Singer-songwriter The Dream was the first celeb to call Warren out.“You mean how’s does our (Black) culture have so many writers, well it started because we couldn’t afford certain things starting out, so we started sampling and it became an Artform, a major part of the Black Culture (hip hop) in America. Had that era not happen who knows.
Diane Warren has apologised after making controversial comments about the numbers of co-writers on Beyoncé‘s new album, ‘Renaissance’.On Monday (August 1), Warren tweeted, “How can there be 24 writers on a song?” alongside an eye-roll emoji. The tweet was likely referring to ‘Alien Superstar’, a song on ‘Renaissance’ which credits two dozen songwriters.Those include the likes of Honey Dijon, Jay-Z, Lucky Daye, Labrinth and 070 Shake, but many of the credits are also due to sampling and interpolation of other artists’ songs.
Earlier this morning, Hollywood hitmaker Diane Warren asked what seemed a simple question on Twitter: “How can there be 24 writers on one song?”