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- pink diamond
âDua Lipa asked me to do an Apple Music interview for the At Home With series with her, Zane [Lowe] and Jennifer Lopez. Which is, of course, truly a quarantine situation. When am I going to ever be on a FaceTime with J. Lo? Anyway, on the call, J. Lo was telling this story about meeting Barbra Streisand, and Barbra talking to her about diamonds. At that time, J. Lo had just been given that iconic pink diamond by Ben Affleck. I instantly thought, âPink Diamond is a very cute name for a song,â and wrote it down on my phone. I immediately texted Dua afterwards and said, âOh my god, she mentioned the pink diamond!â A few days later, [LA-based R&B artist and producer] Dijon sent me this really hard, aggressive and quite demonic demo called âMakeup Onâ, and I felt the two titles had some kind of connection. I always like pairing really silly, sugary imagery with things that sound quite evil. It then became a song about video chattingâthis idea that youâre wanting to go out and party and be sexy, but youâre stuck at home on video chat. I wanted it as the first track because Iâm into the idea that some people will love it and some people will hate it. I think itâs nice to be antagonistic on track one of an album and really frustrate certain people, but make others really obsessive about what might come next.â
- forever
âIâm really, really lucky that I get to create and be in a space where I can do what I loveâand times like the coronavirus crisis really show you how fortunate you are. They also band people together and encourage us to help those less fortunate. I was incredibly conscious of this throughout the album process. So it was important for me to give back, whether that be through charity initiatives with all the merch or supporting other creatives who are less able to continue with their normal process, or simply trying to make this album as inclusive as possible so that everybody at home, if they wish, could contribute or feel part of it. So, for example, for this songâhaving thousands of people send in personal clips so we could make the video is something that makes me feel incredibly emotional. This is actually one of the very few songs where the idea was conceived pre-quarantine. It came from perhaps my third-ever session with [North Carolina producer and songwriter] BJ Burton. The song is obviously about my relationship, but itâs about the moments before lockdown. It asks, âWhat if we donât make it,â but reinforces that I will always love himâeven if we donât make it.â
- claws
âMy romantic life has had a full rebirth. As soon as I heard the trackâwhich is by [New York artist, songwriter and producer] Dylan BradyâI knew it needed to be this joyous, carefree honeymoon-period song. When youâre just so fascinated and adoring of someone, everything feels like this huge rush of emotionâalmost like youâre in a movie. I think itâs been nice for my boyfriend to see that I can write positive and happy songs about us. Because the majority of the songs in the past have been sad, heartbreaking ones. Itâs also really made him understand my level of work addiction and the stress I can put myself under.â
- 7 years
âThis song is just about our journey as a couple, and the turbulence weâve incurred along the way. Itâs also about how I feel so peaceful to be in this space with him now. Quarantine has been the first time that Iâve tried to remain still, physically and mentally. Itâs a very new feeling for me. This is also the first song that Iâve recorded at home since I was probably 15 years old, living with my parents. So it feels very nostalgic as it takes back to a process I hadnât been through in over a decade.â
- detonate
âSo this was originally a track by [producer and head of record label PC Music] A. G. Cook. A couple of weeks before quarantine happened in the US, A. G. and BJ [Burton] met for the first and only time and worked on this song. It was originally sped up, and they slowed it down. Three or four days after that session, A. G. drove to Montana to be with his girlfriend and her family. So itâs quite interesting that the three of us have been in constant contact over the five weeks we made this album, and theyâve only met once. I wrote the lyrics on a day where I was experiencing a little bit of confusion and frustration about my situation. I maybe wanted some space. Itâs actually quite hard for me to listen to this song because I feel like the rest of the album is so joyous and positive and loving. But it encapsulated how I was feeling, and itâs not uncommon in relationships sometimes.â
- enemy
"A song based around the phrase âKeep your friends close and your enemies closerâ. I kept thinking about how if you can have someone so close to you, does that mean that one day they could become your biggest enemy? Theyâd have the most ammunition. I donât actually think my boyfriend is someone who would turn on me if anything went wrong, but I was playing off that idea a little bit. As the song is quite fantasy-based, I thought that the voice memo was something that grounded the song. I had just got off the phone to my therapistâand therapy is still a very new thing for me. I only started a couple of weeks before quarantine, which feels like it has something to do with fate, perhaps. Iâve been recording myself after each session, and it just felt right to include it as some kind of real moment where you have a moment of self-doubt.â
- i finally understand
âThis one includes the line âMy therapist said I hate myself real bad.â Sheâs getting a lot of shout-outs on this album, isnât she? I like that this song feels very different from anything Iâve ever explored. Iâd always wanted to work with Palmistry [South London producer and artist Benjy Keating]âwe have loads of mutual friends and collaboratorsâand I was so excited when my manager got an email from his team with some beats for me. This is a true quarantine collaboration in the sense that weâve still never met and it purely came into being from him responding to things Iâd posted online about this album.â
c2.0 âA. G. sent me this beat at the end of last year called âClick 2.0ââwhich was an updated version of my song âClickâ from the Charli album. He had put it together for a performance he was doing with [US artist and former Chairlift member] Caroline Polachek. I heard the performance online and loved it, and found myself listening to it on repeat whileâand Iâm sorry, I know this is so cheesyâdriving around Indonesia watching all these colours and trees and rainbows go by. It just felt euphoric and beautiful. Towards the end of this recording process, I wanted to do a few more songs and A. G. reminded me of this track. The original âClickâ features Tommy Cash and Kim Petras and is a very braggy song about our community of artists. Itâs talking about how weâre the s**t, basically. But through this, itâs been transformed into this celebratory song about friendship and missing the people that you hang out with the most and the world that existed before.â
party 4 u
âThis is the oldest song on the album. For myself and A. G., this song has so much life and storyâwe had played it live in Tokyo and somehow it got out and became this fan favourite. Every time we get together to make an album or a mixtape, itâs always considered, but it had never felt right before now. As small and silly as it sounds, itâs the time to give something back. Lyrically, it also makes some sense now as itâs about throwing a party for someone who doesnât comeâthe yearning to see someone but theyâre not there. The song has literally grownâwe recorded the first part in maybe 2017, there are crowd samples now in the song from the end of my Brixton Academy show in 2019 and now there are recordings of me at home during this period. Itâs gone on a journey. It kept on being requested and requested, which made me hesitant to put it out because I like the mythology around certain songs. Itâs fun. It gives these songs more lifeâmaybe even more than if Iâd actually released them officially. It continues to build this non-existent hype, which is quite funny and also definitely part of my narrative as an artist. Iâve suffered a lot of leaks and hacks, so I like playing with that narrative a little bit.â
- anthems
âWell, this song is just about wanting to get f**ked up, essentially. I had a moment one night during lockdown where I was like, âI just want to go out.â I mean, it feels so stupid and dumb to say, and itâs obviously not a priority in the world, but sometimes I just feel like I want to go out, blow off some steam, get f**ked up, do a lot of bad things and wake up feeling terrible. This song is about missing those nights. When I first heard the trackâwhich was produced by Dylan and [London producer] Danny L Harleâit immediately made me want to watch [2012 film] Project X, as that movie is the closest Iâm going to feel to having the night that I want to have. So I wrote the song, and co-wrote the second verse with my fans on Instagramâwhich was very cool and actually quite a quick experience. After finishing it, I really felt like it definitely belongs on the Project X soundtrack. I think it captures the hectic energy of a once-in-a-lifetime night out that youâll never forget.â
- visions âI feel like anything that sounds like it should close an album probably shouldnât. So initially we were talking about âparty 4 uâ being the final track, but it felt too traditional with the crowd noises at the endâlike an emotional goodbye. So itâs way more fun to me to slam that in the middle of the album and have the rave moment at the end. But in some ways, it feels a little traditional, too, because this is the message I want to leave you with. The song feels like this big lucid dream: Itâs about seeing visions of my boyfriend and I together, and it being right and final. But then it spirals off into this very weird world that feels euphoric, but also intense and unknown. And I think thatâs a quite a nice note to end this particular album on. The whole situation weâve found ourselves in is unknown. I personally donât know what Iâm going to do next, but I know this final statement feels right for who I am and the direction Iâm going in.â
source: https://music.apple.com/nz/album/how-im-feeling-now/1513162098
> [New York artist, songwriter and producer] Dylan Brady
Dylan Brady is from St. Louis and is based in LA
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She's not a f*g hag she's just marketed herself into the straight female "gay icon" niche