logo
Wigs, Vapes, and Elvis Dreams: Welcome to Remy Bond's Vintage Fantasy

Wigs, Vapes, and Elvis Dreams: Welcome to Remy Bond's Vintage Fantasy

Yahoo28-07-2025
The doors of the El Rey Theater in Los Angeles felt like a vortex last Friday: Fans walked in wearing Hawaiian shirts, leis, and tropical flower clip-ins, ready to be transported into the Elvis Presley Blue Hawaii world of Remy Bond. A burlesque dancer opened the show, and for her set, Bond popped out of a giant cake, backed by a pair of dancers (and her sister Olivia) dressed like Fifties diner waitresses.
At one point, Bond sang from inside a martini glass; at another, she marries a fan and shares a kiss with him onstage. Her giant blonde hair bounces over her tiny shoulders as she serenades the crowd with her oldies-inspired sound. In the middle of the fever dream, Bond pulls out a bedazzled vape from her dress, offering a puff to each of her dancers before taking one herself. Bond's music lives in this fuzzy, decade-blending, kitschy utopia. It doesn't feel real — and it isn't supposed to. Since her first single in 2023, Bond has built a cult-like audience around this vintage fantasy, and her sound offers nostalgia and a breath of fresh air at the same time.
More from Rolling Stone
Meet After, the L.A. Duo Making Y2k-Inspired Pop That Feels Like Right Now
Meet Lily Seabird, an Unflinching Songwriter Who'd Make Leonard Cohen Proud
Remy Bond Channels the 'Diamond Sadness' of the Seventies in 'Moviestar' Video
'It's a diamond sadness and a washed-up glittery sound that works for me,' she tells me over a greek salad at a diner, where we meet for lunch. We sit in the back corner of the tiny joint called Cindy's, surrounded mostly by seniors, as Bond goes off on tangents about her adventures making music. Today, there's no wig, but she's wearing a Hawaiian shirt-inspired blouse, and a fake Sailor Jerry tattoo is fading off her arm. The workers here are dressed like Bond's dancers during the show, and Bond can decipher the Sixties songs that are playing in the background. Even as she preps for her first big tour, Bond is already thinking about a new era of music.
'Every shroom trip, we got a new source of inspiration. We wrote 'Movie Star' on shrooms. We were like, 'Oh my gosh, if we take shrooms, we can write so many bangers.' So we would just go into album mode every time we would do it,' she says of a recent trip with her go-to producer Jules Apolinaire.
'Wait, we should do shrooms together. Why not do shrooms right now?'
Despite being early in her career, Bond is already carving a distinct sonic and visual lane for her music, which pairs her old-school inspiration with a sharply Gen Z perspective. She listens to both Kanye West and the Ronettes, although 'Kanye is not the bad bitch he once was,' she says. It's not the real-life Sixties and Seventies that inspire Bond, but the fantasy worlds imagined by Hollywood — it's no surprise that Elvis' campy world is high on the inspo list. 'Elvis' guitar-shaped car is for sale… I should have bought that instead of the Chelsea Hotel sign,' Bond says, confessing: 'I spent all my money on it. I can't even afford furniture.'
That dreamy, retro longing in Bond's music? It probably started at home. Bond's parents often threw dinner parties and played music that she quickly fell in love with: She'd play Cat Stevens, Siouxsie and the Banshees, and the Mamma Mia! Soundtrack on repeat. The Bond sisters (they also have a younger brother) weren't allowed phones until eighth grade, so Remy listened to whatever CDs were lying around. (Supertramp's Breakfast in America comes up more than once in our conversation.)
Her dad, she says, is a cinephile and would play classic movies all the time. She'd also watch shows like Downton Abbey constantly. 'I was Lady Branson for Halloween for three years,' she says. 'I consumed everything my parents were really into. I guess they had good taste.' Oh, and she grew up next door to Sean Ono Lennon. 'My first exposure to nudity was him shooting [something] in the backyard,' says Bond. 'Dude, this guy literally never left this house.'
Before music became her full passion, Remy and her sister Olivia made history as the first sibling duo to compete on MasterChef Junior. Culinary art was like her first love, thanks to her mom. In some adorable YouTube videos from 2018, you can see a tiny Bond strutting around the kitchen in a giant bow, bossing the other kids around. The hair accessories — now it's usually a tropical flower — are part of the vibe today, too.'I still am into cooking. I make macaroons and shit,' she says. 'It was something I was into, but it just didn't mean anything to me.'
She traded the spatula for a microphone once she hit high school. 'I was studying music but wasn't writing it, until I got an Omnichord — that's when I started writing songs,' she says. (You can thank David Bowie for the instrument choice.) 'I was trained classically in Italian, but when I realized I could write my own songs and create the music I wanted to hear, I became fixated.'
Bond started releasing music in 2023 with 'End of the World,' where she posed the paradoxical question, 'Why am I so nostalgic for the now?' — a lyric that still defines much of her music. The next summer, she dropped 'Summer Song,' which introduced her to many of the fans she has today, thanks in part to its virality on TikTok.
'Summer Song,' her breakthrough hit, was born from an impromptu trip to Paris after watching The Virgin Suicides. She and her sister Olivia had just seen the iconic film for the first time when Liv decided to DM Air — the duo behind the film's dreamy soundtrack — to ask if they'd want to collaborate. '[Jean-Benoît Dunckel] actually responded. I totally lied. I was like, 'I'm going to be in Paris next week, let's get a coffee,'' Bond recounts. 'And he was like, 'Sure.' So I flew to Paris for a coffee. I didn't want to seem like a stalker, so I looked at their tour dates… and we made 'Summer Song' there.'
Early listeners of Bond were drawn in by the cinematic quality of her music, with some comparing her sound to that of a young Lana Del Rey. Her use of old-Americana nostalgia has sparked conversations about parallels with Del Rey, including with the visual for 'Summer Song,' which calls to mind 'National Anthem.' But Bond, who first got into Lana during the Covid pandemic, doesn't mind the comparisons. 'People can say what they want. I think it's a compliment,' she says. (She's a fan of Del Rey's unreleased music.)
It's the whimsical energy of the music that really sets her apart. Bond's song 'San Francisco' takes inspiration from the Summer of Love. 'My muse was Jenny from Forrest Gump,' she says. She wrote last year's 'Red, White, and Blue' during what she describes as a time of 'a lot of political tension' around the 2024 election, and shortly after cutting ties with a friend who wanted to vote for RFK 'because of his views on food,' she explains. 'I was worried people would perceive it as an 'I love America' song. I think it is a little bit perceived that way, but it's not.' And 'Star-Shaped Baby,' it's about 'a girl who's shaped by the industry to be a star.' Is that you? 'I don't know,' she says. 'I think I'm a star.'
The artwork for February's 'Simple Girl' features a Stepford Wives-like Bond mowing a lawn, mirroring the irony of the song's opening line: 'I'm a simple girl, I like gardening 'n drugs.' She pulled the lyric from something she overheard at a café in L.A. 'I was like, 'I relate to that.' I have a garden, and I hide my vape in my garden to avoid hitting it,' she says with a laugh. None of Bond's lyrics take things too seriously.
Bond's latest single 'Movie Star' trades the Fifties-Sixties fantasies for Seventies Europop. Remy takes a jab at an unworthy lover withthe silly line: 'You say you love the music / But you vape, you vape, you vape.' 'That line modernizes the song a bit,' Bond explains. 'I didn't want it to be totally a throwback; I wanted it to feel a little kitschy, a little funny.' Then she giggles: 'The bridge is just about the guy I lost my virginity to…' She leans in and whispers his name in my ear. 'It's about some spawn of a Spice Girl,' she clarifies on the record, eyeing my phone recording.
The vape talk suddenly reminds Bond of something. She pauses, checks her phone, and looks at me: 'I actually ordered a vape here. Do you mind if I use your ID?' she asks. 'I don't have my fake.' Yeah, I'm down! (I pull out my wallet.) 'Fuck. It said the delivery guy was here 20 minutes ago,' she says. 'It's not good for my lungs, anyway. I just like the flavor.'
Mid-interview, a call comes in from 'Cheese,' the nickname for Bond's sister Olivia. 'She's editing the 'Moviestar' video as we speak,' Bond tells me, before answering one of her sisters' questions about the visual over the phone. (A close-up of some bedazzled vapes open the video meant to be set in the Seventies. 'No one let us film the vape on set. So we rehired a film crew to just get a shot of us twinkling our vapes,' she says.)
Olivia is an integral part of Remy Bond, The Artist. During the tour, Olivia acts as a co-star. For 'Moviestar,' which Olivia wrote on and sings on, she grabs a mic and duets with Remy, frolicking with her onstage. During 'San Francisco,' she appears in a peace sign-shaped dress inspired by what Marina Abramović wore at Glastonbury last year. Olivia also directs and stars in most of Bond's videos — and when Bond's opener dropped out at a recent show, she filled in, performing some of Remy's unreleased songs.
'We just keep each other in check,' says Bond. 'We are the same person, but also completely opposites. She has a really good perspective on things. I don't. I'm better with melodies because I'm not as quick at putting things into words. She's better with words, but not as sonic.'
'Same with our faces,' she adds. 'The top half of her eyes are better than mine, and my mouth is better than hers. So if we combined ourselves, we'd be perfect.'
After the Bonds wrap her tour this month, they'll be going full-throttle on Remy's debut album. Bond says she's headed to Austria with Jules Apolinaire, her and Suki Waterhouse's go-to producer, to make more songs for the album. Expect more ABBA, more Seventies sparkle, more Europop flair. She's actually deep in 'research' mode. On a recent trip to Sweden — which included a shroom-fueled escape from the music of a modern male pop singer she won't name ('I don't want to diss anyone, but I was literally in hell,' she says) — she somehow ended up on a date with one of Björn Ulvaeus' grandkids. 'We just went for a walk. He didn't really speak any English,' she says with a giggle. 'In LA, I couldn't do that. But when I'm in Sweden, I'm free of all social norms, so I can be weird.' Also, she's single, and into English guys. 'I don't really date LA guys. They're all gay to me,' she says.
After finishing her salad, I give Bond a ride to the studio — with a quick vape stop on the way, of course. She comes out holding a pink, strawberry mango-flavored one she's had before. She takes a few puffs before we get to the studio, where Apolinaire matches Bond's endearingly chaotic energy, greeting us in fuzzy red-and-pink-heart pajamas at the door.
'Today's a very special day,' he says in his French accent. 'Therefore, Rem-ee close your eyes.' The producer goes into another room to pull out a massive, Dolly Punkton, if you will, wig covered in plastic: 'Happy two years of friendship and music.' (Today marks two years since their first session.)
Bond lets out a squeal as she opens her eyes: 'Where did you even get this?' asks Bond, plopping the head of hair on her head. 'It's so Agnetha.' The wig fits perfectly.
'That's the most Abba I've ever seen you,' responds Apolinaire. She's yet to use the wig onstage, but it won't take long before she does. She later sends me a photo of her gift to Apolinaire: a tin of caviar and a Bluey plushie.
Weeks later, Bond sends me a text, with an amendment for this story: 'Can u include in ur article that my wig got checked for drugs at TSA?' she wrote. '#formative moment. Hairspray's a drug.'
In Remy Bond's world, it really is.
PRODUCTION CREDITS:
Styling by OMID ANTHONY DIBAEI. Styling Assistant MICAELLA LANDERS.
Best of Rolling Stone
Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs
The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs
All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Taylor Swift Announced as Special Guest on Travis Kelce's ‘New Heights' Podcast After Teasers
Taylor Swift Announced as Special Guest on Travis Kelce's ‘New Heights' Podcast After Teasers

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Taylor Swift Announced as Special Guest on Travis Kelce's ‘New Heights' Podcast After Teasers

Taylor Swift isn't letting August slip away without a little surprise. The musician will appear on the New Heights podcast hosted by her boyfriend, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, and his brother Jason Kelce on Wednesday, Aug. 13. The brothers shared the announcement on Instagram Monday evening, with a clip of the pop superstar admiring Travis' sweater and remarking, 'It's such a nice color on you.' The Chiefs player quips, 'It's the color of your eyes, sweetie. It's why we match so well.' The brief video ends with Swift exclaiming, 'We're about to do a f-king podcast!' More from Rolling Stone 13 Taylor Swift Books to Buy Before You Can Get Your Hands on 'The Life of a Showgirl' Swifties Uncover Years' Worth of Easter Eggs After 'The Life of a Showgirl' Reveal Travis Kelce Says Dating Taylor Swift Still Feels Normal: 'We're Just Two People That Are in Love' Swifties kicked into investigation mode on Monday morning when New Heights first began teasing the special guest appearance. When the Kelce brothers shared the thumbnail promoting their next podcast episode, in which Jason is wearing Swift merch, fans noticed that the orange background of the image was distinct. Usually, their preview images place the blacked-out silhouette of their guest against a yellow backdrop. This orange, coincidentally, called back to the same color highlighted in a new 12-slide post from Taylor Nation, an official branch of Swift's marketing team. 'Thinking about when she said 'See you next era… ,'' Taylor Nation captioned the carousel of images from the Eras Tour. Swifties also noticed that the New Heights thumbnail matched the silhouette of Swift from her Variety 'Directors on Directors' appearance, which notably premiered on Dec. 12, 2022, and supported her work on the Grammy Award-winning All Too Well: The Short Film (released on Nov. 12, 2021). With this announcement arriving on Aug. 12, 2025, who can fault Swifties for believing it could have even the slightest thing to do with the next full-length LP — which will be, as you have probably inferred, album number 12 — from Swift? They haven't had much to dissect since the Eras Tour concluded, apart from the handwritten letter the musician shared earlier this year when she revealed that she had become the proud owner of her entire catalog of music. She extended the word 'this' in the first paragraph of the note. Want to guess how many times the letter 'i' was written? (Hint: More than 11, less than 13.) Best of Rolling Stone Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked Solve the daily Crossword

Sabrina Carpenter Is Understandably ‘Freaking Out' About Her Feature on Taylor Swift's Album
Sabrina Carpenter Is Understandably ‘Freaking Out' About Her Feature on Taylor Swift's Album

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Sabrina Carpenter Is Understandably ‘Freaking Out' About Her Feature on Taylor Swift's Album

Sabrina Carpenter keeps on making her dreams come true. The singer was just revealed as the sole feature on Taylor Swift's newly announced album, The Life of a Showgirl. Of course, she's totally freaking about it. 'I know someone who's freaking out and it's me,' Carpenter wrote in her Instagram story sharing the news. More from Rolling Stone Taylor Swift Was Also Obsessed With Bad Bunny's Acting in 'Happy Gilmore 2' Taylor Swift Made 'The Life of a Showgirl' While on the Eras Tour: 'I Was Physically Exhausted' Taylor Swift Reunites With Max Martin, Shellback for 'The Life of a Showgirl': 'Catching Lightning in a Bottle' A feature on Swift's 12th album would be a big deal for anyone, but it's especially momentous for Carpenter, who has idolized the superstar for years. 'I hold her to such a different echelon,' she told Rolling Stone last year. 'I could never compare my life, my career, my trajectory to anything close to what she's done,' she added. Back in 2009, around when Carpenter first started uploading YouTube covers of popular songs, she delivered a passionate rendition of Swift's 'Picture to Burn.' In 2023, Carpenter brought her manifestation to life when she opened for Swift on the pop star's triumphant Eras Tour. 'I've been just as obsessed with her as everyone has,' Carpenter said at the time. 'It's so weird when you're hanging out as two young women as opposed to thinking about when she goes onstage and is that person and when I go onstage.' The two singers joined forces on the Eras Tour stage once more in the fall of 2024 when Carpenter came out in New Orleans for the surprise songs set. They played a lovely mash-up of Carpenter's smash hit 'Espresso' along with Swift's 'Is It Over Now?' and another Short 'n Sweet track, 'Please Please Please.' After the performance, Swift sang Carpenter's praises. 'She's as real as they come and I'm so thankful she did that for us,' she wrote on Instagram about the surprise performance. The feature marks the first musical collaboration between Swift and Carpenter and comes at the perfect time for the young singer. Carpenter will release her seventh studio album, Man's Best Friend, on Aug. 29. Best of Rolling Stone Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked Solve the daily Crossword

Taylor Swift Reunites With Max Martin, Shellback for ‘The Life of a Showgirl': ‘Catching Lightning in a Bottle'
Taylor Swift Reunites With Max Martin, Shellback for ‘The Life of a Showgirl': ‘Catching Lightning in a Bottle'

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Taylor Swift Reunites With Max Martin, Shellback for ‘The Life of a Showgirl': ‘Catching Lightning in a Bottle'

Taylor Swift is set to bring more glitter pen songs on The Life of a Showgirl. The superstar shared that Max Martin and Shellback are back as the sole producers, along with Swift, for her 12th studio album. Swift revealed the news on Wednesday night during her episode of the New Heights podcast. On the show, the singer called Martin her 'mentor' before describing their work together. 'The three of us have made some of my favorite songs that I've ever done before,' she said, referring to some of Swift's biggest hits such as '22,' 'Shake It Off,' and 'Blank Space.' 'They're just geniuses in different avenues, in different ways,' Swift said of the producer duo. More from Rolling Stone Taylor Swift Unveils 'The Life of a Showgirl' Cover, Sabrina Carpenter Feature Taylor Swift Makes Highly-Anticipated Appearance on Travis Kelce's 'New Heights' Podcast The Kelce Brothers Frame Taylor Swift's Success in Sports Terms in Podcast Preview 'We've never actually made an album before where it's just the three of us,' she continued, before confirming: 'There's no other collaborators. It's just the three of us making a focused album.' For Swift's last five albums, the musician teamed up with Jack Antonoff and Aaron Dessner, whom she also tapped for work on her Taylor's Version re-recording project. She touched on the intervening years where she worked on surprise album folklore and evermore, calling those projects 'esoteric.' 'I was just kind of exploring and trying to challenge myself as a writer,' she said of that time. The time apart proved to be just what Swift, Martin, and Shellback needed. 'By the time we came back together, I feel like we had so much more dexterity to what we do,' she said, adding,'It felt like all three of us in the room were carrying the same weight as creators.' The singer praised the creative experience and noted that the record contains, 'the best ideas we've ever had.' The musician shared that the production work for The Life of a Showgirl occurred on The Eras Tour while she was in Sweden. 'When I was on tour in Stockholm, I had Max Martin come out to the show, and I was talking to him, and I was like, 'I just feel like we could knock it out of the park if we went back in.' Swift's main focus of the album was how it connected to her career-spanning tour. 'I essentially said to him, 'I want to be as proud of it as an album as I am of The Eras Tour, and for the same reasons,' she said. 'And he was like, 'Do you understand what kind of pressure that is?'' For Swift's credit, she sure does. 'I know the pressure I'm putting on this record by saying that, but I don't care because I love it that much,' she said, before going on to describe the 'effervescent' energy of The Life of a Showgirl. 'It just comes from the most infectiously joyful, wild, dramatic place I was in in my life.' Best of Rolling Stone Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store