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Yahoo
29-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Everything We Know About Lorde's Upcoming Album ‘Virgin'
Lorde Summer is upon us: the pop star's fourth album Virgin will be out on June 27. It's been four years since her last album, Solar Power, and the 28-year-old artist's output between albums tends to be pretty minimal. Fans have been anxiously anticipating what her new era will bring, especially after her lead single 'What Was That' teased a bigger, bolder sound than her third LP. Lorde divulged details of her new album in her Rolling Stone cover story, her first in-depth conversation about the new album. Here's what we know so far about Virgin: More from Rolling Stone The Everyday Items That Inspired Lorde's New Album, From 5 Gum to Apple Headphones Lorde Was Surprised When 'Ribs' Returned to the Charts: 'It's Crazy That It Works on People Still' Lorde's Ultrasound Tour 2025: How to Get Tickets Online Before They're Gone Lorde had been working with Jack Antonoff for her last two albums, but it was time for her to shake things up. She had reached out to Stack, who has worked with Bon Iver and Danielle Haim, around the time she was set to begin her Solar Power tour. They recorded a song in 2022, but she wasn't totally sure what the album was going to be until they reunited towards the end of 2023, as her tour and festival dates wrapped up. They hunkered down in NYC for most of 2024 to write the music on Virgin. Lorde was nervous about revealing too much of the album and is nervous for how people will respond. She teased how the lyrics will make her not seem as 'good' as she has been conditioned to act. 'There's going to be a lot of people who don't think I'm a good girl anymore, a good woman. It's over,' she said. 'It will be over for a lot of people, and then for some people, I will have arrived. I'll be where they always hoped I'd be.' Over the past four years, Lorde has been in the midst of a life upheaval. An eating disorder and breakup had slammed her into 'rock bottom' as she put it, but the journey to re-centering herself was vastly helped by MDMA therapy sessions she had begun before her Solar Power tour to get over her crippling stage fright. Two years' worth of sessions helped Lorde re-discover her body; as she found clarity, she began to redefine her gender as well, which she describes as 'expansive.' (On the album's opening track, she sings 'Some days I'm a woman/Some days I'm a man.') 'I think coming more into my body, I came into an understanding of the grotesque nature of it and the glory and all these things,' she said. The lyrics on Virgin reflect that. 'It's right on the edge of gross. I often really tried to hit this kind of gnarliness or grossness. 'You tasted my underwear.' I've never heard that in a song, you know? It felt like the right way to tell this whole chapter.' For Virgin, Lorde and Stack emphasized the percussive elements above all else. She wants the production to work on the body before the brain. That means that she tried to keep the language as simple and plain as possible. 'This is going to sound crazy, but I said to myself, 'We get it. You're smart. You don't need to telegraph it,'' she explained. 'Whereas in the past, I'm really trying to craft these lyrics. This time I was like, 'No, be smart enough to let it be really basic. Be plain with language and see what happens.'' Lorde and co-director Terrence O'Connor shot the 'What Was That' video on iPhone. It was an intentionally raw way of capturing the visuals, reflective of the nature of Virgin. She said the color of the album is 'clear,' amplifying its transparency. The cover is an X-ray of her pelvis, showing off the zipper on her jeans and her IUD. 'There's as little between me and the brand as possible,' she explained. The video and more tiny details like the font used in the booklet for physical releases are meant to evoke a 'school project' touch. Fans immediately recognized some Melodrama touches to 'What Was That,' but the old Lorde song that ended up blowing was from her first album instead. 'Ribs' hit the Hot 100 and has helped Lorde recognize some connections between her teenage self and the woman she's become. 'I'm now seeing that Virgin has this connection to Pure Heroine, and to this young, brave part of myself. I'm seeing that all these albums have connective tissue,' she said. 'Having 'Ribs' bubble up next to songs I've written when I was 28. I can't wait to see what continues to bubble up when more of this album is out. What are the connections going to be?' Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time
Yahoo
29-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Lorde Celebrates ‘Man of the Year' in New Video
Lorde continues teasing her fourth album, Virgin, with second single 'Man of the Year.' The track follows her April release 'What Was That.' Like the entirety of Virgin, Lorde worked on the song with producer Jim-E Stack. The track also features Dev Hynes on cello. On the mid-tempo single, Lorde reflects on her 'recent ego-death,' singing about how we're meeting her at a very strange time in her life. The accompanying music video features the singer-songwriter alone in a room in a white tee and jeans. As the song progresses, she peels off her shirt and duct-tapes her breasts before she sings, 'Now I'm broken open/Let's hear it for the man of the year.' More from Rolling Stone Everything We Know About Lorde's Upcoming Album 'Virgin' Benson Boone Delivers a Tender Tribute With 'Momma Song' The Everyday Items That Inspired Lorde's New Album, From 5 Gum to Apple Headphones In her Rolling Stone cover story, Lorde revealed that the song was an integral part of her understanding the fluidity of her own gender identity. She recalled sitting on the floor of her apartment, trying to visualize a version of herself 'that was fully representative of how [her] gender felt in that moment.' She landed on an image of herself wearing men's jeans, duct tape on her chest, and a gold chain. 'I went to the cupboard, and I got the tape out, and I did it to myself,' she said. 'I have this picture staring at myself. I was blond [at the time]. It scared me what I saw. I didn't understand it. But I felt something bursting out of me. It was crazy. It was something jagged. There was this violence to it.' The song was also written shortly after Lorde chose to stop taking birth control for the first time since she was a teenager. It led to her ovulating for the first time in years, an experience she likened to the 'best drug' she's ever done. 'I felt like stopping taking my birth control, I had cut some sort of cord between myself and this regulated femininity,' she said. 'It sounds crazy, but I felt that all of a sudden, I was off the map of femininity. And I totally believed that that allowed things to open up.' Lorde described herself as 'in the middle gender-wise.' She still uses she/her pronouns and identifies as a cis woman. Virgin is set to release on June 27, four years after her last album, Solar Power. Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time