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Blondshell's Sharp, Secret-Sharing ‘If You Asked for a Picture'
Blondshell's Sharp, Secret-Sharing ‘If You Asked for a Picture'

Yahoo

time02-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Blondshell's Sharp, Secret-Sharing ‘If You Asked for a Picture'

For her second album as Blondshell, L.A. singer-songwriter Sabrina Teitelbaum is figuring out how much of her life story she wants to tell the world — how much she needs to tell — and how much to hide away for herself. On her acclaimed 2023 self-titled debut, she was really letting it all hang out, in searing confessional indie-rock. But on If You Asked For a Picture, Teitelbaum's more ambivalent, more questioning, reckoning with her painful past, from childhood misery to dysfunctional young-adult romance. These are the songs of an artist who wants to figure out who she is by singing about it. Teitelbaum takes her album title from the Mary Oliver poem 'Dogfish,' with the key line, 'I wanted the past to go away, I wanted to leave it, like another country.' That's her approach in these songs — she sorts through her secrets and memories, wondering how much of her damage to take with her into the future and how much to leave behind. As she laments in 'What's Fair,' 'I didn't grow up/And it spilled over/Now I'm left open/When I'm in love.' More from Rolling Stone How Blondshell Tapped Into an Even Deeper Feeling for Her Second LP Being in Your Twenties Can Be a Mindf-ck. Blondshell Wrote a Song About it Blondshell Showcases Rolling Stones-Inspired Single 'T&A' on 'Kimmel' She sets the tone with 'T&A,' as she finds herself stuck with yet another worthless man-boy lover, recalling, 'I said if you stop drinking maybe I could find you attractive/Maybe I could let you have it/And it happened.' She can't even tell her sister she's still with this guy — 'she knows about that fight, remember?' — but she can't let go of him either. She winds up asking herself, over and over, 'Letting him in, why don't the good ones love me?' The album flows in a mellow folk-rock groove, close to the Cranberries or Sheryl Crow or (for you really deep Nineties pop connoisseurs) early Duncan Shiek. She combines her moody-blue guitar and spiky lyrics — shimmeringly pretty on the surface, but with a bite. With producer Yves Rothman, she piles on the vocal overdubs, inspired by her love for the Beach Boys. She digs deep into adolescent identity crises in 'Event of a Fire,' singing candidly about body image and social anxiety, with piercing lines like 'Part of me still sits at home in a panic over 15 pounds.' In tough family songs like 'What's Fair' and '23's a Baby,' she goes into mother/daughter tension with anger that cuts both ways; she takes her share of the blame, admitting, 'I said something when I was ten that I take back.' Like her debut, If You Asked For a Picture has a rogue's gallery of disposable menfolk — when Teitelbaum sings 'You're a thumbtack in my side,' that's the closest she gets to an upbeat love song. The standout tunes come when she gets nasty, as in 'Toy,' with its New Order-style guitar hook, where she compares the relationship to a Wendy's (she doesn't mean it as a compliment), and the slow-burning 'Man,' where she admits, 'I needed the world from just one man.' That Mary Oliver poem has the lines, 'If you asked for a picture I would have to draw a smile/Under the perfectly round eyes and above the chin/Which was rough/As a thousand sharpened nails.' That sums up the album — Teitelbaum might be willing to show the world a smile, but there's no mistaking the sharp edges behind it. Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

Malcolm Todd Recreates ‘The Notebook' for the Instagram Age in ‘Chest Pains' Video
Malcolm Todd Recreates ‘The Notebook' for the Instagram Age in ‘Chest Pains' Video

Yahoo

time01-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Malcolm Todd Recreates ‘The Notebook' for the Instagram Age in ‘Chest Pains' Video

Malcolm Todd channels Ryan Gosling's rain-soaked Noah Calhoun in his The Notebook-inspired 'Chest Pains (I Love)' music video. Directed by Aidan Cullen, the clip recreates the romance and drama of the classic film for Gen Z — instead of Noah sending Allie 365 letters, he's shooting off Instagram DMs every day. Todd's love story unfolds across the video to the sound of his viral hit. 'My chest is hurting, my feet can't fall out of bed/I don't know where to go, so I'll lay here instead/With my symptoms, symptoms of sorrow and dread,' he sings. 'They all said it would fade, but again and again/I love, I love/I love, I love, I love/I love, I love, I love.' More from Rolling Stone Malcolm Todd Steps Into the Pop Arena With Knockout Debut Gwyneth Paltrow Wasn't Going to Be 'Shaken Down' by 'Ridiculous' Ski Trip Lawsuit Blondshell's Sharp, Secret-Sharing 'If You Asked For a Picture' 'Chest Pains (I Love)' appears on the musician's debut album Malcolm Todd, released earlier this year. 'Despite painting himself as this willfully tattered and worn punching bag, Todd demonstrates, more than anything else, a true spirit of resilience,' Rolling Stone wrote in a review of the record. 'It's an essential trait for a pop star to have.' 'It's about that bittersweet feeling of losing someone who still lingers in your heart,' Todd shared in a statement about 'Chest Pains (I Love).' 'I wanted the production to mirror that — smooth yet piercing, like love itself.' The song has been used in over 1.5 million videos on TikTok. Todd recently appeared in Doja Cat and Jack Harlow's 'Just Us' music video after recruiting Harlow and influencer Harry Daniels to appear in his 'Bleed' video with Omar Apollo. The 'Chest Pains (I Love)' video release coincides with the kick-off of Todd's headlining Wholesome Rockstar Tour, beginning in Dallas and extending through June 18 with a final show in Los Angeles. Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

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