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Lorde threatened with arrest for having concert without permit, Entertainment News

Lorde threatened with arrest for having concert without permit, Entertainment News

AsiaOnea day ago

Lorde was threatened with arrest by anti-terrorism police.
The 28-year-old singer had planned to film the music video for What Was That? in Washington Square Park in New York, but after posting about it on her Instagram Story, "such a mob showed up that the cops shut it down", and Lorde received a stern warning from officers.
Speaking on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, she said: "We had the anti-terrorism unit being very intense, telling me if I stepped on the premises I would be arrested for riot incitement."
The Royals hitmaker "couldn't show up for many hours" but eventually returned to the park to shoot the video on a tight timeline.
She explained: "I came back later, they said, 'You can go out, you have one shot at it.'
"If people don't maybe know this, we were launching my first song for this album, but we were also shooting the music video, which would come out 24 hours later.
"So, there was an edit that had to be gotten to very quickly.
"A lot of dominoes had to fall right for this to work. The NYPD was definitely a spanner."
Following Lorde's revelation, police confirmed they intervened because she didn't have the right permits to be in the park with her fans.
The New York Police Department (NYPD) told People magazine in a statement: "On Tuesday, April 22, 2025, at approximately 1847 hours in the vicinity of Washington Square Park, in the confines of the 6th Precinct, officers were alerted of an unscheduled event inside of the park.
"A sound and parks permit is required to have a concert in a New York City Park. This individual did not possess either. Organisers of the event were informed they could not perform and they left the location."
Elsewhere during the interview, Lorde hailed MDMA therapy a game-changer when it came to tackling her "horrific" stage fright.
She said: "Some of these things live very deep in the body, and you hold on to it.
"You hold on to a response like stage fright for reasons that no amount of talk therapy or brain use could get at. But when you bypass that and get to the body, something shifts. And that totally happened for me."
After having tried "everything" beforehand, the Royals hitmaker was delighted to get immediate relief from her performance anxiety.
She said: "I was like, oh, it's over. I know it's over."
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Lorde threatened with arrest for having concert without permit, Entertainment News
Lorde threatened with arrest for having concert without permit, Entertainment News

AsiaOne

timea day ago

  • AsiaOne

Lorde threatened with arrest for having concert without permit, Entertainment News

Lorde was threatened with arrest by anti-terrorism police. The 28-year-old singer had planned to film the music video for What Was That? in Washington Square Park in New York, but after posting about it on her Instagram Story, "such a mob showed up that the cops shut it down", and Lorde received a stern warning from officers. Speaking on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, she said: "We had the anti-terrorism unit being very intense, telling me if I stepped on the premises I would be arrested for riot incitement." The Royals hitmaker "couldn't show up for many hours" but eventually returned to the park to shoot the video on a tight timeline. She explained: "I came back later, they said, 'You can go out, you have one shot at it.' "If people don't maybe know this, we were launching my first song for this album, but we were also shooting the music video, which would come out 24 hours later. "So, there was an edit that had to be gotten to very quickly. "A lot of dominoes had to fall right for this to work. The NYPD was definitely a spanner." Following Lorde's revelation, police confirmed they intervened because she didn't have the right permits to be in the park with her fans. The New York Police Department (NYPD) told People magazine in a statement: "On Tuesday, April 22, 2025, at approximately 1847 hours in the vicinity of Washington Square Park, in the confines of the 6th Precinct, officers were alerted of an unscheduled event inside of the park. "A sound and parks permit is required to have a concert in a New York City Park. This individual did not possess either. Organisers of the event were informed they could not perform and they left the location." Elsewhere during the interview, Lorde hailed MDMA therapy a game-changer when it came to tackling her "horrific" stage fright. She said: "Some of these things live very deep in the body, and you hold on to it. "You hold on to a response like stage fright for reasons that no amount of talk therapy or brain use could get at. But when you bypass that and get to the body, something shifts. And that totally happened for me." After having tried "everything" beforehand, the Royals hitmaker was delighted to get immediate relief from her performance anxiety. She said: "I was like, oh, it's over. I know it's over." [[nid:536915]]

Pop singer Lorde overcomes body image issues with new album Virgin
Pop singer Lorde overcomes body image issues with new album Virgin

Straits Times

time2 days ago

  • Straits Times

Pop singer Lorde overcomes body image issues with new album Virgin

Virgin is the fourth album from the singer and her first since 2021's Solar Power. PHOTO: THISTLE BROWN SINGAPORE – In her new album Virgin, released on June 27, New Zealand pop singer Lorde has finally come to terms after grappling with body image and gender issues. The single Man Of The Year, for example, was inspired by her experience at the 2023 GQ Men of the Year party , where she felt out of place as she was wearing a dress while in a room full of men. The songs on Virgin are meant to encourage listeners to liberate themselves and feel free in their bodies, the 28-year-old singer-songwriter says in a Zoom conference with Asian media. 'I really came into my own power making this album. I, in the past, have struggled with that, with feeling powerful, with feeling fully in my body,' says the singer, whose real name is Ella Yelich O'Connor. 'It was my intention with this one to make something that felt like it could carry the full weight of my inner world and my ambition and my history.' While songs in the new album such as Man Of The Year are inspired by specific events that happened to her in recent times, other tunes such as lead single What Was That, Favourite Daughter and If She Could See Me Now have been influenced by a collection of different memories. 'With my songs, sometimes, it's sort of a composite of moments. Sometimes, it's one very specific sort of hour or minute or day that I'm trying to capture,' she replies to a question from The Straits Times about real-life experiences that led to the new compositions. The songs in Virgin reflect the different phases of her life. 'As a teen, I was brave, but I was shy and I was sort of always hiding. 'I realised my lyrics used to be a little bit more mysterious or metaphorical, but I feel like I've just come into myself a bit more. I'm a little bit less shy, although it is still hard for me sometimes, being out there, and I have to fight the urge to be cloaked in mystery, but I'm getting braver all the time.' The new songs also harken back to the period in 2023, when she was 'struggling with body image and eating issues', and 2024, when she was feeling 'a lot of promise and excitement and zest for life'. 'It felt like I was on this mission to really believe in myself and to create an environment, to build a house that I could live in for many more years.' Sonically, she describes Virgin as a rhythm-driven album, but unlike her previous songs, the layers of singing are kept to a bare minimum. 'I feel like there are always vocal harmonies in my work, but on this album, they're much simpler. I tried to just do very simple harmonies because I wanted it to be very plain, very simple and only do what was needed.' Virgin is the fourth album from the singer and her first since 2021's Solar Power. Born and raised in Auckland, she is best known globally for Royals, her debut single released in 2013. She was only 16 when the hit song was released and was the youngest solo artiste to achieve a US Billboard No. 1 in more than 25 years. Royals also went on to win Song of the Year and Best Pop Solo Performance at the 2014 Grammys. The success of Royals has also been credited for paving the way for other female alternative-pop acts such as American singers Billie Eilish and Clairo. In 2024, British singer Charli XCX revealed that Girl, So Confusing, a song from her critically acclaimed album Brat, was inspired by Lorde. The duo then collaborated on a remix of the song released two weeks after the original. 'I never could have predicted that Charli and I would collaborate in the way that we did on the remix of her song, but it has become one of my favourite songs that I've ever been a part of.' Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Why a 'Lorde Summer' is already influencing what we wear
Why a 'Lorde Summer' is already influencing what we wear

Vogue Singapore

time23-05-2025

  • Vogue Singapore

Why a 'Lorde Summer' is already influencing what we wear

'What—was— that !' If you're anything like us, you simply cannot get Lorde's new banger 'What Was That' out of your head. Her song of the summer (is it too early to declare that?) is building up major hype for her forthcoming album, Virgin , out on June 27th—her first full-length record in four years. Sure, summer 2024 may have been Charli XCX's Brat Summer, but fans are officially declaring 2025 a Lorde Summer—and a sartorial vibe shift is already afoot. It all traces back to Lorde's new music video for the track, which was released back in April. In the new clip, the singer parades around New York city on a bike wearing a very normcore outfit: A crisp white dress shirt, baggy jeans punctuated with a carabiner and keys, and taped-up clunky shoes. At the end of the video, she unbuttons the mensy top to reveal a shiny black patent bra top, as she dances and performs for her crowd of fans assembled in Washington Square Park. We can't stop thinking about her outfit. It's rather basic—bland, even. And yet, it feels fresh, and also reflects exactly where fashion is headed.  Take a look at the recent spring 2025 runways. That normcore Lorde look—a simple dress shirt, loose-legged jeans—was all over the high-fashion catwalks. At Balenciaga, a striped polo was paired with baggy jeans (Lorde even wore this exact look recently); At Tommy Hilfiger, an extra-long dress shirt was also paired over slouchy denim, while Casablanca showed a printed bra top with its swishy jeans. If summer 2024 was all about sexy and raunchy dressing (very Brat!), 2025 seems to be much more sober in aesthetic—a deliberately plain and classic mood. It is both rigid (dress shirt), yet undone (baggy jean)—a combination of finance bros meets Lower East Side creatives. Balenciaga spring 2025. Isidore Montag Tommy Hilfiger spring 2025. Courtesy of Tommy Hilfiger Casablanca spring 2025. Daniele Oberrauch Bottega Veneta spring 2025. For Lorde, the new look mirrors where she is creatively and artistically. In a recent interview, the singer said she is 'in the middle gender-wise,' adding, 'I'm a woman except for the days when I'm a man.' Her 'What Was That' outfit reflects this intentionally: It blurs the lines of masculine and feminine, and plays up a more androgynous feel. Of course, one could also look at the political and culture landscape of the moment to inform such a choice of fashion, too. With many human rights under threat with our current administration—including LGBTQ+ rights and resources for trans youth—a more nondescript and label-free uniform can act as a form of protection, or even a form of rebellion. In other words: Maybe it's not just about wearing a dress shirt and jeans, but about resisting something bigger—a form of armor. A Lorde-esque street style look. Getty A Lorde-esque street style look. Getty Lorde Summer may just be kicking off, but we have already seen the nondescript uniform appear on plenty of street style stars during Fashion Month. (The combo is also everywhere in New York City; I saw four iterations of the look on my commute this morning alone.) And when Lorde kicks off her tour in September, we are calling it now: One can expect plenty of Lorde Outfit cameos there, too. The good news is, the outfit is easy to replicate, should you be a fan of the movement. Get a classic button-up (or steal one from your partner), and throw on your baggiest pair of jeans. Voila! (But don't forget the carabiner adorned with keys and charms.) This article was originally published on

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