Famous faces from the worlds of film, TV and music have celebrated Joe Biden’s decision to name California Senator Kamala Harris as his running mate.
24.07.2020 - 08:59 / billboard.com
folklore. One, "Cardigan," is an official music video, while the other 16 are lyric videos for every track on her eighth album.The clip for album opener "The 1" features water rippling over coins in a fountain, each one presumably imprinted with a different person's wish.
The "Betty" lyric video is a slow tracking shot along an empty autumnal sidewalk next to a field, with the lyric very lightly superimposed over the image. The lyric video for "The Last Great American Dynasty" displays waves
.Famous faces from the worlds of film, TV and music have celebrated Joe Biden’s decision to name California Senator Kamala Harris as his running mate.
The Mountain Goats have announced details of their 19th studio album, ‘Getting Into Knives’, set for release later this year.The announcement comes with the release of the LP’s first single, ‘As Many Candles As Possible’, featuring American organist Charles Hodges.Listen to ‘As Many Candles As Possible’ below:According to the band’s Twitter, the 13-track record was recorded in Memphis and March and will be released on October 23 through Merge.‘Getting Into Knives’ follows on from this year’s
Peter White Television Editor“You never see Indians on TV,” said Rutherford Falls co-creator and showrunner Sierra Teller Ornelas. “When you do it’s one guy and he has to transform into a wolf.”The Peacock comedy, which also comes from Ed Helms and Mike Schur is set in a small town in upstate New York and the Native American reservation it borders.
Peter Debruge Chief Film CriticWhile the Hollywood studios continue to keep their tentpoles locked up till most American cinemas reopen, indie distributors are releasing a handful of smaller movies with big stars in supporting roles this week.Can’t wait to see Robert Pattinson in “Tenet”? Well, you can always catch him in the festival-anointed imperialist critique “Waiting for the Barbarians.” While the release date for “Dune” remains in question, Swedish actor Stellan Skarsgård leads the
While we are spending our August locked down, Joe Alwyn and Taylor Swift stepped out to get some fresh air. The couple has been quarantining together in the United States.
Taylor Swift has become the first artist in US chart history to score a Number 1 debut on both the Billboard singles and albums charts this week.
eighth studio album, which she announced roughly 15 hours before its surprise release, also generated more than 500 million streams across various platforms throughout its debut week. Republic Records, Swift’s music label, announced earlier this week that the album sold over 1.3 million copies in its first 24 hours alone.“Folklore”’s performance has already broken records in the United States and worldwide.
Peter Debruge Chief Film CriticIn what’s shaping up to be the strangest weekend yet since the coronavirus outbreak forced American theaters to close, the biggest release is Beyoncé’s visual album, “Black Is King,” a visionary feature-length companion to her 2019 album, in the tradition of “Lemonade.”A number of studio movies — including Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” — had tentatively planted their flag on July 31, only to delay amid the latest spike of infections.
Fans of Taylor Swift were calling out for Lover album track Cruel Summer to get an official single release in 2020's summer months, what with, you know, that apt title. And although the Swifties didn't get that, they got something to more than make up for it - an entire new album.
surprise release of her eighth studio album, folklore. The record was a secret to everyone except Taylor (seriously, her label didn’t even know about it) and immediately reached number one on the US iTunes chart.
Taylor Swift tells the story of "The Last Great American Dynasty" in her Folklore track about one of the wealthiest women in America, Rebekah West Harkness.
Taylor Swift is on course to claim her fifth Number 1 on the Official UK Albums Chart with Folklore.
CMU’s Andy Malt and Chris Cooke review key events in music and the music business from the last week, including Taylor Swift’s surprise new album and latest legal win, plus Spotify’s new deal with Universal and TikTok’s litigation-avoiding agreement with the US National Music Publishers Association.SECTION TIMES01: Taylor Swift new album (00:03:44)02: Taylor Swift lawsuit (00:10:34)03: Spotify’s Universal deal (00:17:33)04: TikTok’s NMPA deal (00:22:31)SUBSCRIBE TO SETLISTListen to Setlist and
Bon Iver's gruff voice accusing "I can see you standing, honey, with his arms around your body" on track four of Taylor Swift's new album, Folklore, is startling.Just as the whole record came as a surprise this week, his deep, raw vocals are a welcome jolt, juxtaposed against Swift's airy "I had a marvelous time ruining everything" admission fading out from the set's previous track, "The Last Great American Dynasty."So how did Bon Iver (real name Justin Vernon) find his way onto Folklore?The