ReportWire

Tag: Hit Me Hard And Soft

  • Experience Billie Eilish’s HIT ME HARD AND SOFT Tour In 3D! Here’s Everything We Know

    [ad_1]

    We spent all of 2025 following Billie Eilish around on the HIT ME HARD AND SOFT: THE TOUR. Now, we get to relive all our favorite moments from tour on the big screen…in 3D? HIT ME HARD AND SOFT: THE TOUR (LIVE IN 3D) is no longer a hopeful wish from fans, but a real documentary of one of the biggest tours of the year. Here’s everything we know about Billie’s new documentary, including the release date and how you can watch.

    Image Source: Courtesy of Paramount

    The Trailer

    Most importantly, we have a full-length trailer already. Billie announced the new documentary at her last HIT ME HARD AND SOFT: THE TOUR stop in San Francisco a few months ago, and let fans in the crowd get a first look at the trailer. From what we can tell, the documentary (yes, it’s filmed in 3D!) will include live clips from her shows in Manchester along with some behind-the-scenes shots from Billie and her crew on the road and backstage.

    Were you at the shows in Manchester? Will we see you in the documentary?

    The Director(s)!

    Every Billie Eilish fan knows that she directs all of her music videos, which means it’s only fitting that she plays a role in directing this 3D film as well. She’ll be co-directing with iconic director James Cameron. You may know him from some of your favorite movies like Titanic and Avatar. If that gives you any idea of the scale and production of Billie’s new documentary…you’re in for a treat! We are looking forward to seeing how the two creatives collaborate, especially for the exciting 3D moments.

    This might just be the most exciting project Billie has ever been a part of, and we’re so proud of her!

    Image Source: HENRY HWU @HENRYHWU

    The Release Date

    Okay, we’re finally getting to the key details. The release date! Lock it in, honeybees. HIT ME HARD AND SOFT: THE TOUR (LIVE IN 3D) releases on March 20, 2026. Now is the time to start planning with your fellow Billie friends. What will you wear? Will you be traveling to see the documentary? How many tickets will you be buying? Our fangirl theories have been cooking up, and we predict that the film will be available to stream after its release date. Given the fact that Paramount is producing the film, we can only cross our fingers that it’ll be available to stream on Paramount+ sometime next year!

    Although we don’t know any information about how to actually purchase the tickets yet, we hope to know more soon in the following months. In the meantime, get your hands on this special HIT ME HARD AND SOFT gift card, exclusively to see the new film with your friends and family.

    Are you just as excited as we are for HIT ME HARD AND SOFT: THE TOUR (LIVE IN 3D)? Which song from the tour are you most excited to re-live again? Is it ‘Guess’ or ‘WILDFLOWER?’ Let us know down in the comments or by buzzing with us about all things Billie Eilish on TwitterInstagram, or Facebook.

    Searching for more Billie Eilish content? We’ve got you, honeybee!

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT BILLIE EILISH:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | TWITTER | WEBSITE | YOUTUBE

    [ad_2]

    Alana

    Source link

  • Music Rewind 2025: Billie Eilish Proved That She’s ‘THE GREATEST’

    [ad_1]

    Man, she really is the greatest. Billie Eilish proved, yet again, that she’s got everyone wrapped around her finger. 2025 was a monumental year for the singer, and we are so grateful we got to witness it and be a part of it all year long. Even though Eilish didn’t release any new music this year, she traveled the world singing her smash hits, ‘LUNCH,’ ‘WILDFLOWER,’ and ‘BIRDS OF A FEATHER’ to name a few, on the HIT ME HARD AND SOFT tour, released a new perfume, walked home with dozens more awards and nominations for her 2024 album, and managed to make us fall in love with her even more than we were before.

    HIT ME HARD AND SOFT: THE TOUR

    Billie Eilish spent all of 2025 traveling on tour. That also means we honeybees were also on the road with her (we have to admit we attended the tour a total of nine times)! Sorry, not sorry. You can’t just hear ‘THE GREATEST’ live once and never do it again. By the end of HIT ME HARD AND SOFT: THE TOUR, Billie performed 106 shows across the United States, Asia, and Europe, never missing a single night. What an accomplishment! This year also came with some exciting behind-the-scenes footage of the tour. Fans started picking up on the fact that Billie was carrying a small silver camera around with her, both on stage and off stage. Surprise! We’re getting vlogs?! What a special treat it was for us to follow along on Billie’s global travels. Now we get to relive all our favorite 2025 tour moments every day.

    Perfumes, Merchandise, & More!

    Billie is always in her fashion era, but this year seemed to take the cake. From a hat collection with COMPLEX to new perfumes from Eilish Frangrances, 2025 gave us all the gifts. The holiday season is the best season for Billie fans. We get to listen to ‘come out and play,’ shop special mystery merch boxes, and, most importantly, get a whiff of her latest perfume release, Your Turn II. Spoiler alert – it smells absolutely amazing! Go put it on your holiday wish list now. 2025 was filled with exciting merch drops and song anniversaries, including the 10th anniversary of the iconic ‘Ocean Eyes.’ This year, we celebrated all year long!

    What’s Next: 3D Tour Film, BE4, And The GRAMMY’s

    On her last tour stop in San Francisco, CA, Billie briefly mentioned she’s working on a new album with her brother FINNEAS. Do you think we’ll be getting BE4 in 2026? Before then, though, we have to relish in our amazing memories from the tour. Come March 20, 2026, fans get to relive their favorite moments from the tour in 3D. Working directly with James Cameron (aka the director of Avatar and Titanic), HIT ME HARD AND SOFT is hitting the big screen. Just imagine this – the ‘Guess’ remix playing with neon green flashing lasers and Billie dancing onstage right before your eyes, but in 3D. Whoa, this is going to be so cool! We’re already counting down the days.

    Finally, we can end the year with our fingers crossed that ‘WILDFLOWER’ wins Song of the Year at the 2026 GRAMMY Awards. Our girl worked so hard on it, and we know you all love it too. What a way to end a special year for Billie and her fans!

    Did you get to see HIT ME HARD AND SOFT: THE TOUR this year? If you’re a Billie Eilish fan, hit us up on TwitterInstagram, or Facebook to share your favorite tour memories with us. You can also chat with us in the comments below!

    Searching for even more Billie Eilish content? See what we’ve got, honeybee!

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT BILLIE EILISH:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | TWITTER | WEBSITE | YOUTUBE

    [ad_2]

    Alana

    Source link

  • Meet The HIT ME HARD AND SOFT TOUR Openers: Towa Bird, The Marías, and Nat & Alex Wolff!

    Meet The HIT ME HARD AND SOFT TOUR Openers: Towa Bird, The Marías, and Nat & Alex Wolff!

    [ad_1]

    There are less than 30 days until Billie Eilish hits the stage at an arena near you. The big question on every fan’s tongue is who are the openers going to be. On Monday Billie posted to her Instagram story and the world went wild. We finally have our questions answered, and many fans are beyond excited about Billie’s decisions.

    Meet the three openers for the HIT ME HARD AND SOFT TOUR! 👇

    Towa Bird

    This opener choice really came as no surprise to Billie fans, and we are so grateful that Billie chose Towa to take on the road! She’ll be performing on night one and two in Atlanta, GA, Nashville, TN, Cincinnati, OH, night one and two in St. Paul, MN and night one in Los Angeles, CA. We’re so lucky our shows landed on a few of these dates! We’re looking forward to seeing her shred it on the guitar from the barricade!

    Haven’t heard of Towa Bird? We recommend listening to her latest album, American Hero, to prep for her set. Our favorite songs from the recent album are ‘May Flower’ and ‘Deep Cut.’ We know Towa will probably perform these, so make sure you’re ready and have memorized every lyric!

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT TOWA BIRD:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | THREADS | WEBSITE | YOUTUBE

    The Marías

    This was such an exciting choice! We’ve recently been getting into The Marías more and more each day, and their latest album, Submarine, is a 10/10! If we had to recommend two songs to prep for their set, we would tell you to listen to ‘Run Your Mouth’ and ‘Hamptons.’

    The group will be opening for Billie in Vancouver, BC, nights one and two in Seattle, WA, Portland, OR, nights one and two in San Jose, CA, Glendale, AZ and night two in Los Angeles, CA. We were devastated to see that our shows did not align with these, but we may just have to fly out to Los Angeles to see them…

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT THE MARIAS:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TWITTER | WEBSITE | YOUTUBE

    Nat & Alex Wolff

    This choice should come as no surprise to Billie Eilish stans. Nat and Alex are besties with Billie, so of course has to take them on tour! We grew up watching the musical brother duo on Nickelodeon and seeing them live at our big age in 2024 was not in our bingo cards! We are beyond excited and hope we hear some of our favorite songs like ‘Glue’ and ‘If I’m Gonna Die.’

    The duo will be heading out on tour with Billie in Quebec, QC, nights one and two in Toronto, ON, Baltimore, MD, Philadelphia, PA, Detroit, MI, Newark, NJ, Boston, MA, Pittsburgh, PA, all three nights in New York, NY, nights one and two in Chicago, IL, Kansas City, MO, Omaha, NE, nights one and two in Denver, CO, and night three in Los Angeles, CA.

    Y’all are going to have to tear us from the barricade when they walk onstage!

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT NAT & ALEX WOLFF:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TWITTER | YOUTUBE

    So which of these openers will you be seeing this fall at the HIT ME HARD AND SOFT TOUR? Let us know which one in the comments below or over on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook 🐝

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT BILLIE EILISH:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | TWITTER | WEBSITE | YOUTUBE

    [ad_2]

    ableimann

    Source link

  • We’re Freaking Out Over These HIT ME HARD AND SOFT Live Performances On Songline

    We’re Freaking Out Over These HIT ME HARD AND SOFT Live Performances On Songline

    [ad_1]

    If you thought Billie Eilish couldn’t get any more angelic, you were wrong. After weeks and weeks of fans begging for live performances of their favorite tracks from the singer’s latest album, HIT ME HARD AND SOFT, prayers have been answered. Thanks to Amazon Music, we now have the most perfect performances of album favorites like ‘WILDFLOWER,’ ‘BIRDS OF A FEATHER,’ ‘SKINNY,’ and ‘L’AMOUR DE MA VIE.’ Narrowing down our favorites is just simply impossible, but we’ll do our best…

    Image Source:  Courtesy of The Oriel Co.

    Amazon Music’s Songline

    Going behind the scenes to listen to our favorite artists’ most special songs is one of the most exciting parts of being a fan. Amazon Music’s new digital series, Songline, allows artists to strip down their songs in an intimate setting that really showcases the art. With just a few microphones and instruments, the artists’ voices get to shine through in a new way we’ve never heard before. In this new series, fans also get a chance to learn a bit more about the featured songs through documentary-style dialogue, which fans often don’t get the chance to hear otherwise.

    “Songline offers an opportunity for artist songwriters and their collaborators to showcase their songwriting process, detail their artistic journey, and reveal the stories behind songs typically hidden away in studios; by placing songwriters and their craft at the forefront of culture, fans can learn how their favorite songs and records were made, driving deeper connection with their favorite artists.”

    Tom Winkler, head of publisher, songwriter, and society relations at Amazon Music, stated.

    Billie Eilish and FINNEAS

    To welcome the start of this new music series, Songline’s first guest is none other than Billie Eilish. Her voice needs no introduction or autotune, so she’s the perfect guest to kickstart this new series. Joined by her brother, producer, and co-songwriter, FINNEAS, and Billie (along with a handful of their friends on backup vocals) give the fans what they’ve been pleading for – acoustic sets of fan-favorite HMHAS songs and behind-the-scenes looks at the makings of each of the songs.

    Up first? The devastatingly, hauntingly beautiful ‘WILDFLOWER.’ If we had to narrow the entire album down to just one favorite, this track would come out on top. One of the world’s favorite attributes about Billie Eilish is her vocals, which really shine through on this track. Believe it or not, they shine through even more in the Songline live set.

    Watch it below and thank us later.

    We love how Billie decided to bring in some backup vocalists – they all sound so perfect together! This may just be our new favorite version of ‘WILDFLOWER,’ but hey, who’s complaining?

    If you end up in tears by the end of this performance (don’t worry, we did, too), then you’ll be happy to know Billie performed three other songs in the same style. You can watch her acoustic sets of ‘SKINNY,’ ‘L’AMOUR DE MA VIE,’ and ‘BIRDS OF A FEATHER’ on Amazon Music right now, or if you’re like us, you can re-watch them over and over and over again until we get to hear them live on the HIT ME HARD AND SOFT World Tour later this year.

    Did you love the Songline episodes with Billie? Good news! There are more artists to come! Let us know which artists you’d like to see on the next episodes by dropping a comment or chatting with us on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook 🐝

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT BILLIE EILISH:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | TWITTER | WEBSITE | YOUTUBE

    [ad_2]

    ableimann

    Source link

  • A Panty-Dropping, Project X Affair: Charli XCX and Billie Eilish’s “Guess” Video

    A Panty-Dropping, Project X Affair: Charli XCX and Billie Eilish’s “Guess” Video

    [ad_1]

    When Charli first, er, teased the album artwork for the “Guess” remix featuring Billie Eilish, she dared her fans to, that’s right, guess who it was joining her on the cover for this revamped edition. Despite the retroactive dead giveaway that it was Billie Eilish (you know, the butch, 90s boy aesthetic), perhaps no one, in their wildest fantasies, could have imagined that such an iconic collaboration would come on the heels of Charli working with Lorde on the “Girl, so confusing” remix. And, like Lorde, Eilish has plenty to offer when it comes to contributing a new verse to this track. One that is on-brand for the sex-drenched nature of the song.

    Funnily enough, it seems to have taken a millennial to help Gen Z remember that life doesn’t have to be sexless. It can be raunchy, promiscuous and, yes, even panty-dropping. In short, it can recapture all the key visuals of Project X. And if Charli and Billie comprised the collaboration people had only dreamed about, it would be in keeping with the premise of that movie, with its tagline: “The party you’ve only dreamed about.” This is the effect Charli is going for in the Aidan Zamiri-directed video for “Guess,” which also seems to recreate the garbage-filled aesthetic of the Atacama Desert in Chile, where fast fashion goes to die, creating massive piles within the landfill. It’s a similar pile that Charli and Billie mount toward the middle of the video, only to roll back down it with glee as they meet one another at the bottom in a shot that positions them lying side by side as though they just banged (metaphorically, they kind of have).

    To that end, perhaps Charli has learned her lesson (somewhat) about promoting environment-destroying behavior (hear: any of her songs that serve as love letters to driving) by including a disclaimer at the end of the video that reads, “All unworn garments will be donated to survivors of domestic violence through I Support the Girls.” Of course, all the “garments” in question are lingerie-related, which is a bit of an odd donation to make to victims of domestic abuse, but anyway

    Zamiri, who also photographed Eilish for her Rolling Stone cover earlier this year, opens the video on a close-up of Charli’s sunglasses-covered face (the ultimate symbol of her Brat era) as she asks, “Billie, you there?” The answer to that question is: not just yet. Billie’s big entrance will be made once the party is already well underway. A party that takes place in a more 90s-ified version of the apartment style Charli showed us in the “Baby” video. After the close-up on her face, she introduces herself by cuntily walking across the trash-filled carpet. The timeline of whether the party already happened or is about to happen or she’s simply having another one without cleaning up from the night before isn’t important. What is, however, is the fact that Project X has so obviously remained a tried-and-true inspiration for XCX’s work. It was back in 2020 that she declared, “I think I’ve officially decided that Project X is my favorite movie of all time.” No matter how retrospectively uncomfortable the R. Kelly mention gets. And while others might see the 2012 high school comedy as “nothing special,” it makes sense that XCX would continue to idealize it. After all, she’s a big believer in party alchemy. The “power of the party,” as it were.

    Case in point, back in 2019, when she did an interview for Nowness, Charli said, “I’m very inspired by parties. Lots of emotional things happen at parties, like, maybe you fall in love with someone, or you, like, spend a really amazing night with your friends, or you break up with someone. It’s, like, there’s a lot of emotions that go on at parties…” Hence, her attachment to them as more than something that’s merely “frivolous.” It’s a microcosm, a hotbed of unmitigated feelings (mainly thanks to las drogas). And the primary ones at this “Guess” party are, in two words, “let’s fuck.” The writhing, gyrating and general “every guy, grab a girl” vibe is practically a constant of the narrative.

    In promoting this concept, Charli also proves that, theoretically, the “clean girl aesthetic” is over and that, accordingly, it’s “safe” to promote the messy lifestyle that goes hand in hand with drinking and drugging yet again (not that Charli ever really ceased doing that). Hence, the constant flash to partygoers smoking (actual cigarettes, none of this vape bullshit) and drinking throughout “Guess.”

    Indeed, it can be argued that the last time partying in this manner was so acceptable was, in fact, back in 2012, when Project X was released. It was also the year of Kesha’s sophomore album, Warrior, which continued the “grimy girl” motif of her debut, Animal. Her vehement “party or die” (or “party and die,” depending on the person) mantra endured with a song like “Die Young,” during which Kesha declared, “Let’s make the most of the night like we’re gonna die young/Young hearts, out our minds/Runnin’ till we outta time/Wild childs, lookin’ good/Livin’ hard just like we should/Don’t care who’s watching when we tearing it up (you know)/That magic that we got nobody can touch.” This is the sentiment that permeates the “Guess” video, even if the lyrics themselves are far less wholesome, and much more in keeping with the gratuitously salacious tone of Charli’s other film favorite, Spring Breakers (though Camila Cabello tried her best to co-opt that “mood board” for C,XOXO).

    This includes Eilish’s sexually-charged verse, “Don’t have to guess the color of your underwear/Already know what you’ve got goin’ on down there/It’s that lacy black pair with the little bows/The ones I picked out for you in Tokyo/I saw them when you sat down, they were peekin’ out/I’m gonna tell you right now, they’re all I’m thinkin’ about.” She delivers these lines after literally crashing the party in a bulldozer (it kind of reminds one of the way the party in Weird Science was crashed by the mutant bikers, riding right through the walls/glass doors to get in).

    Charli eventually leaves the party with Billie (perhaps taking the latter up on her offer, “Charli likes boys, but she knows I’d hit it/Charli, call me if you’re with it”), riding on the side of the bulldozer/tractor as she bounces in a similar way to how she did in the video for “360” while pouring a glass of wine. Zamiri then rapidly intercuts scenes between the original party and the two-woman rager that Charli and Billie have continued together outside in the “wilds” of a concrete jungle somewhere in L.A. (for both singers favor that city, like anyone with consummate taste).

    To conclude the even more sexed-up remix, the duo goads, “You wanna guess the address of the party we’re at (you really are not invited)/You wanna guess if we’re serious about this song.” That last line smacks of Justin Timberlake assuring at the end of “Rock Your Body,” “Gonna have you naked by the end of this song.” And sure, while he might be permanently “cancelled,” there’s no denying XCX was influenced by NSYNC, de facto Timberlake, at some point in the late 90s/early 00s.

    As for boasting about the “hoi polloi” not being invited to the party, not only is it typical Brat behavior, it’s also in keeping with the necessary exclusivity of celebrities like XCX and Eilish, who have both dealt with their fair share of creepy civilian behavior. So one supposes that’s why the party of Project X was patently more epic in scope and aftermath—it didn’t discriminate about the guest list.

    [ad_2]

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • In Addition to Spirited Away, Billie Eilish’s “Chihiro” Video Is a Nod to Her When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? Vibe

    In Addition to Spirited Away, Billie Eilish’s “Chihiro” Video Is a Nod to Her When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? Vibe

    [ad_1]

    The visuals from Billie Eilish’s Hit Me Hard and Soft era have thus far been unexpected. Mainly in that, instead of being “on the nose” about the songs she chooses to make videos for, she’s opted to go against the grain in terms of fulfilling expectations. Case in point, with her first single, “Lunch,” the expectation might have been for her to unleash a video that was at least slightly lesbianic. Instead, she went for a so-called 90s-inspired aesthetic against an all-white backdrop (this being a running “motif” in music videos lately, where nothing actually happens). Though the colors do change occasionally. 

    Perhaps what Eilish finds most “90s” about the video is the fisheye lens and her decidedly “hip hop aesthetic” when it comes to her various sartorial choices (though less nuanced types might just call it “dyke chic”). As for any nods to “lunch,” the extent of the “budget” for the video seems to have gone toward the orange slice and cherries she “sensually” places into her mouth for a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it length of time. And yet, for as “simple” as the video might look, it’s apparent that a lot of directorial effort went into it (just as it is the case that, when something is “easy to read,” the writer, too, put a lot of time into making it as such). The same goes for “Chihiro,” but the premise (and execution required to achieve it) is much more complex than “Lunch.” And it, too, isn’t exactly “on the nose” about being directly inspired by Spirited Away (released, incidentally, the same year Eilish was born). Though there are many “nods” to it, especially in terms of treating doors like portals that can lead to unexpected places and outcomes. But perhaps even more than Spirited Away, it’s easy to see the influence of her When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? video era. 

    Being that Eilish remarked on how this album is all about getting back to the girl she “used to be” in 2019, the year When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? was released, it makes sense that she would also return to the surreal, dream-like visuals that punctuated WWAFAWDWG? videos such as “when the party’s over,” “bury a friend,” “xanny” and “all the good girls go to hell.” Indeed, there are shades of “bury a friend” in “Chihiro” thanks to the eerie hallway scenes. For a large bulk of the video is just Eilish running through hallways filled with doors, some of which she closes on her way to opening the one she thinks will lead to her lover (played by Nat Wolff). Regardless of how toxic he is. Considering the song is named in honor of Spirited Away’s main character, it’s only right that the themes from that film should also be explored by Eilish in the video. Not least of which is the idea that constantly trying to “tap into” some realm in which there exists a version of your relationship that might not result in heartbreak can be quite exhausting, emotionally and physically. 

    When Eilish passes by all the open doors she closes (in a scene that mimics the one in Spirited Away where all the doors open in front of Chihiro after the Yubaba-looking knocker calls her a “plain little girl”), she finally reaches a main one that she hesitates in front of. Opening it only a crack, a strong wind blows through her hair, indicating some sinister, spectral world just beyond. At the same time, this image is also “the stuff that dreams are made of” (or, as Shakespeare actually phrased it, “We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep”). As so many of Eilish’s videos are, particularly the WWAFAWDWG? ones.

    It was at this time that Eilish explained of the album’s inspiration, “Sleep and not sleep has been a very big part of my life.” And while that might sound as though it has all the profundity of Ariana Grande saying, “‘breathin’ is about, uh, breathing,” the divide between the two realms—sleep and not sleep—has, to be sure, proven a significant source of visual inspiration in Eilish’s work. She emphasized that by mentioning in 2019, “All my dreams are lucid and so I can kind of control them and, like, I know that I’m dreaming… Sometimes I’ll have dreams where the thing that was in my dream will happen the next day.” Being so in touch with this alternate dimension, as it were, Eilish has long been given plenty of material to work with, further explaining in the same interview with Zane Lowe, “And so, not like the whole [WWAFAWDWG?] album is literally me saying, ‘I dreamed that…’—it’s not like that, it’s the feeling.” A feeling that viewers are also exposed to in “Chihiro” as she tries to catch up to Wolff only to see him get further and further away from her (literally and figuratively). 

    When she seemingly does manage to corner him in a room, it’s only for a brief instant. As soon as the camera angle changes though, he’s vanished. Now alone in the room, Eilish sings the tailored-to-such-a-scenario lyrics, “Saw you turn around, but it wasn’t your face/Said, ‘I need to be alone now, I’m takin’ a break’/How come when I rеturned, you were gonе away?” This, of course, also applies to what happened to Chihiro when she returned to her parents only to find they’d been transformed into swine.

    Eilish then leaves the room and continues down the same hallway, where, once again, she can see Wolff just ahead of her. He stops long enough—pacing a bit—for Eilish to catch up once more, whereupon they proceed to get into a very intense (even physically) fight. As they push and shove each other, the music crescendos while Eilish sings the rueful bridge, “I don’t, I don’t know why I called/I don’t know you at all/I don’t know you.” While these lyrics apply to a situation in which one believes the person they love (or loved) might actually be there for them, it also applies to Chihiro’s situation in Spirited Away on several levels. For a start, her own parents don’t know her anymore, getting turned into pigs after gorging on “ghost food” that wasn’t for them. And then, upon getting trapped in the spirit world, the one person willing to help her, Haku (whose real name is Kohaku and who used to be a river—it’s all very Japanese lore), says he knows her yet the two have never actually met before.

    In the midst of her and Wolff’s fighting, Eilish decides to run in the other direction from him, as though finally realizing that the dynamic of this relationship is never going to change. That it is doomed to repeat the same cycle of toxicity. Once she determines to “opt out,” only then does Wolff seem interested in “keeping” her, chasing her all the way back down the hall until she reaches another door that leads them outside. 

    As viewers are introduced to this new setting, the camerawork becomes fraught, shaky, unreliable. At last it regains its composure, so to speak, finding its way to the Outdoor Billie, now dressed in a different ensemble (pants and a sweater). She then sings, “And that’s when you found me/I was waitin’ in the garden/Contemplatin’, beg your pardon/But there’s a part of me that recognizes you/Do you feel it too?” She starts to walk along the road continuing to sing, only to have her peace interrupted anew by Wolff, who appears out of the corner of the frame like the ominous presence that he is. Seeing him as she turns around, Eilish starts to bolt like Laura Palmer being pursued by Bob. He chases after her, gaining ground far more quickly than Eilish did when she was chasing him inside the building.

    Catching up to her, Wolff tackles Eilish to the ground, in a scene so tense that, for a moment, it looks like it might veer in the direction of rape. Instead, Eilish manages to get on top of him as intercut scenes of her drowning (or floating in blackness, as it were—no doubt taken from footage she got while shooting her album cover) heighten the violence and magnitude of the “scuffle.”

    As their altercation gets more and more violent, it finally crests to the point where the two pass the hate portion of their relationship and go back to the love part of it…waiting until the next time the cycle will repeat. And, even if Eilish manages to suppress the memories of the pain caused by her lover once she finally does break the cycle for good, it is as Zeniba in Spirited Away says, “Everything that happens stays inside of you, even if you can’t remember it.” As for the “Chihiro” video, it, too, will stay inside many viewers for quite some time. Just as Spirited Away has stayed inside of Eilish to the point where she would create an entire song and visual centered on the essence of the “feeling” of the movie (indeed, her knack for doing that with movies in general is likely why she’s already won two Academy Awards for writing songs tailored to a certain film). Though, let’s just say that Chirhiro and Haku had a much sweeter relationship.

    [ad_2]

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • A Fully Honest Review Of Billie Eilish’s “Hit Me Hard And Soft” Album

    A Fully Honest Review Of Billie Eilish’s “Hit Me Hard And Soft” Album

    [ad_1]

    On Wednesday, May 15, thousands flocked to Barclay’s Center in the heart of Brooklyn, New York. It wasn’t for the Brooklyn Nets or even the Islanders…but perhaps an even more special event: to be among the first people to hear Billie Eilish’s new album, HIT ME HARD AND SOFT.


    As I took my seat, I could feel the crowd growing more agitated with anticipation. Questions swirled around me:
    Where was she? What’s the album going to sound like? I wonder if there will be songs about Jesse Rutherford…And then the lights go dark.

    When Billie Eilish enters a room, she commands it. The crowd leapt to their feet in hysteria as she stood on the floor of the arena. Billie (alongside her brother and co-producer, Finneas, who acted as a cameraman for the night) kept the message of the night simple: it was a night to immerse yourself in her album front to back for the first time ever.

    And for 45 minutes, we danced with Billie, we cried, and we heard one of the best albums of the year.
    HIT ME HARD AND SOFT is a production masterclass by two young juggernauts in the industry. You can hear the maturity in lyricism, in vocal strength and range, and sheer production quality.

    From start to finish,
    HIT ME HARD AND SOFT does everything the title promises. Whether it’s a sexy, synthy song like “THE DINER” or a powerful balled like “THE GREATEST”, Eilish delivers her best work yet (and even teases that there’s more to come.) The album is like a good book, you never want it to end even though you can’t stop reading.

    To fully do this album justice, it’s only right that we delve into each and every song a little deeper. Here’s my review of Billie’s third album:

    SKINNY



    Addressing the public’s scathing view, Eilish is no stranger to strangers making comments about her body. Skinny is soft, easing you into the album with grace. The song unfolds into a chorus of violins, which actually play the tune of “THE GREATEST.” Production genius, yet again.

    LUNCH

    The viral song you all have heard by now is just as electric in its entirety. Eilish’s sexuality has been a longterm topic of conversation, and she
    definitely gives us something to talk about with “LUNCH.” With lyrics like “I could eat that girl for lunch” and “Tastes like she might be the one”, matched with an upbeat bass heavy rhythm, the lead single for the album will certainly be a summer favorite.

    CHIHIRO

    “CHIHIRO” is classic Eilish. With a building 70’s-esque synth that crescendos at the very end, this song will transport you into a different realm. It’s larger than life, and my hat’s off to Finneas for being the one producer in the music industry who doesn’t let me down.

    BIRDS OF A FEATHER

    After hearing “BIRDS OF A FEATHER”, I was impressed with how sonically different it was for Billie’s usual. She threw away the whispering and belts out the chorus of “I’ll love you til the day that I die.” It makes you want to run through a field of lilacs on a sunny spring day. It embodies happiness, love, and youthful joy.

    WILDFLOWER

    Again, another stylistic shift that pays off in Eilish’s favor. “WILDFLOWER”
    could be about Jesse Rutherford’s ex, Devon Lee Carlson, who happened to be friends with Billie before Rutherford and Eilish started dating. Carlson is the owner of Wildflower Cases, so the title may be a direct reference to Billie’s old friend.

    “WILDFLOWER” itself is a hauntingly beautiful apology filled with guilt and depth. It’s the breakup track we were all waiting for once the news broke.

    THE GREATEST

    One of Billie’s best songs in her discography. Her prolific career spans genres and styles, but “THE GREATEST” is a timeless power ballad. In the song, Billie sings about giving her all for someone who only wanted her when it was convenient for them. With intensely emotional bridges, breathtaking vocal runs, and that amazing violin backtrack…Eilish created a
    damn good song with “THE GREATEST.”

    L’AMOUR DE MA VIE

    Fun, playful, different, “L’AMOUR DE MA VIE” is like listening to Tame Impala and Charli XCX on steroids. Very different from your average Billie Eilish song, this song can be remixed any which way and be an instant club hit.

    THE DINER

    Now this is the Billie we all came for. Confident, sexy, and her classic style. It’s one of the most perfectly produced songs on the album. “THE DINER” gives off an eerie vibe that is intoxicating.

    BITTERSUITE

    “BITTERSUITE” was a slow burn for me. Light and playful at first, the song turns whimsical and enchanting all at once. It’s something I couldn’t get out of my head. And it’s the perfect lead-in for “BLUE.”

    BLUE

    What a way to end an album. Not only is the song lyrically fascinating and has the same mid-song stylistic shift as Lana Del Rey’s “A&W.” But what’s most exciting is that Billie utters “But when can I hear the next one?” Implying a second album is not far behind.

    An early contender for Album of the Year, HIT ME HARD AND SOFT is somehow Billie Eilish’s best work to date. She’s not stagnant, she’s not fading into the background…in fact, she’s solidified herself as one of the most talented singer-songwriter-producers in the industry right now. HMHAS is a work of art, a compilation of Billie’s heart and soul in only ten songs.

    Popdust’s Rating: ⚡⚡⚡⚡⚡

    [ad_2]

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • “2019 Me”: Billie Eilish’s Hit Me Hard and Soft Shares Deliberate DNA With When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?

    “2019 Me”: Billie Eilish’s Hit Me Hard and Soft Shares Deliberate DNA With When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?

    [ad_1]

    In the almost three full years since Billie Eilish released her sophomore album, Happier Than Ever, the world has only gotten a little more blurry, to put it euphemistically. Or maybe, the truth is, it’s fallen into sharper focus for being what it is: the type of place that makes someone like Eilish and the generation she’s part of an anxiety-ridden ball of nerves. Someone who spent a formative part of her last year as a teenager in lockdown. But it’s not only the pandemic that gave Gen Z its warped sense of time. There are many contributing factors, though, chiefly, being affixed to a screen for so much of one’s day. It’s hard to “make memories” that way—at least ones that will prove to be lasting in a way that marks, therefore differentiates time. 

    Among the screen’s many hazards, in fact, is that it causes all of time to kind of run together, with one day not really varying from the next. The only way to tell what’s different, really, is that one is looking at “new content.” The relativity (or lack thereof) of time to Gen Z seems worth bringing up in regard to Eilish’s third album, Hit Me Hard and Soft—mainly because she’s already talking about wanting to get back to “2019 me.” In other words, the girl who brought us When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? As though that person, that “era” was from so long ago. By the same token, there are many ways in which 2019 was a lifetime ago, not least of which is because it was the last year before Miss Rona took over and altered many people’s psychological framework for good. It seems that 2020 and beyond has caused some kind of chasm in the space-time continuum, wherein everything feels absurdly accelerated—life-altering world events now seeming to happen every few weeks as opposed to every few years.

    So perhaps it’s no wonder that Eilish’s concept of time is much different from, say, a baby boomer’s. For example, Madonna didn’t want to return to her nineteen-year-old self/image until, what do you know, 2019. With Madame X, she decided it was time to return to that version of herself, the version that set the tone for who she would be for the rest of her career: the queen of reinvention. That’s why Martha Graham gave her the nickname “Madame X.” Per Madonna’s account, Graham told her, “I’m going to give you a new name: Madame X. Every day, you come to school and I don’t recognize you. Every day, you change your identity. You’re a mystery to me.”

    Being a mystery was, at one point, Eilish’s key goal in life. It was part of what kept her so isolated and afraid to make herself known or open up to new people/potential friends (like Zoe Kravitz, for example). As Eilish put it in her latest Rolling Stone interview, “I used to be so obsessed with this mysteriousness, and I think that’s one hundred percent why I didn’t make any friends, because I didn’t want anyone to know me, because I wanted everyone to think of me as this mysterious, cool person. I loved the idea of people feeling that way, but then I thought, ‘Oh, here I am sitting alone in my room, loving the feeling that everybody thinks I’m really cool, but I’m not actually getting anything out of that. I’m not enjoying anything in my life at all.’” Besides, it’s obvious that her legions of fans will continue to think she’s “cool” no matter what she does—even when she cosplays as a goy toy pinup. That Happier Than Ever-aligned shoot for British Vogue retroactively coming across as Eilish’s last grand attempt at “playing it straight.” Of appealing to a cliched “male fantasy” (to use a phrase that serves as the final track’s title on Happier Than Ever). But it seems Eilish knows better now, has decided that the only fantasy she wants to fulfill are those of the sapphic variety (which itself is still a straight male fantasy). 

    Before Eilish has her big coming out moment (you know, apart from the forced one she had on the Variety red carpet), she “reintroduces” herself with Hit Me Hard and Soft’s opening track, “Skinny.” As it’s been pointed out, “Skinny” clearly shares the same DNA as Eilish’s sleeper hit of 2023, “What Was I Made For?” Indeed, “Skinny” was conceived before “What Was I Made For?,” serving as a launching pad for the latter. On it, Eilish laments the continued weight (pun intended) that society places on people’s bodies—more specifically, whether or not people’s bodies are “thin enough” (call it her more genuine take on Beyoncé’s “Pretty Hurts”).

    Thus, Eilish melancholically sings, “People say I look happy/Just because I got skinny/But the old me is still me and maybe the real me/And I think she’s pretty.” So it is that Eilish establishes this motif of “getting back to herself,” the girl we recognized circa 2019. Eilish correspondingly noted, “This whole process has felt like I’m coming back to the girl that I was. I’ve been grieving her. I’ve been looking for her in everything, and it’s almost like she got drowned by the world and the media. I don’t remember when she went away.”

    And, speaking of drowning, that is precisely the image Eilish goes for as her cover art for Hit Me Hard and Soft (stylized in all caps on certain streaming platforms…like her first album). Considering her fear of water as a child, shooting the underwater photos was a cathartic process in many ways (and yes, water imagery appears frequently in Eilish’s work, which is somewhat surprising considering she’s a fire sign). As for the title, no, it’s not meant to usurp the millennial phrase coined by Britney, “Hit me, baby, one more time,” but rather, it was a happy accident. Per Rolling Stone, “She mistakenly thought the name of a synth in Logic Pro was called ‘Hit Me Hard and Soft.’ ‘I thought it was such a perfect encapsulation of what this album does,” she explains. ‘It’s an impossible request: You can’t be hit hard and soft. You can’t do anything hard and soft at the same time. I’m a pretty extremist person, and I really like when things are really intense physically, but I also love when things are very tender and sweet. I want two things at once. So I thought that was a really good way to describe me, and I love that it’s not possible.’” Unless, of course, the hardness and softness is delivered alternatingly—as it is throughout the record. 

    As such, for those who might have gotten too comfortable with the slow-tempo, ethereal sound of “Skinny,” Finneas phrases it best when he says, “If you’re remembering ‘What Was I Made For?’ and then you hear [it], you go, ‘Oh, okay. I understand this world.’ Then the drums come in [on “Lunch”], and it really is the kill-the-main-character-type beat. It’s like Drew Barrymore being in the first five minutes of Scream and then they kill her. You’re like, ‘They can’t kill Drew. Oh, my God, they killed Drew!’” But they do kill “Skinny” gently, with the song transitioning into “Lunch” via string arrangements that are filled with nods to “Born to Die.” Not a coincidence, surely, as Eilish never understates Lana Del Rey’s influence on her own work. This much was further solidified when the two joined forces onstage during the first weekend of Del Rey’s headlining Coachella performance. As they wrapped up a duet of “Ocean Eyes” and “Video Games” (each singer’s first single, respectively), Del Rey announced, “Voice of a generation right here.” And that generation, “ladies” and “gentlemen,” is queer as fuck. 

    Going back to the 2019 era Eilish wants to capture, it was on When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? that Eilish’s sentiment was “wish you were gay.” That wish came true for herself rather than the boy who didn’t return her affections back then. And yes, “Lunch” is sure to become a go-to at lesbian bars and clubs the world over, with Eilish leaning (her face) into vagina readily (or, as John Bender once said to Claire Standish when she asked, “Where’s your lunch?,” “You’re wearin’ it”). And, finally, on her own terms. Like Chappell Roan with The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess, this creation was what got her in touch with her queerness. Eilish recounted of writing it, “That song was actually part of what helped me become who I am, to be real. I wrote some of it before even doing anything with a girl, and then wrote the rest after. I’ve been in love with girls for my whole life, but I just didn’t understand—until, last year, I realized I wanted my face in a vagina.” It’s that hunger that manifests literally and figuratively on “Lunch.” Thus, the eating metaphors abound with phrases like, “Tastes like she might be the one,” “It’s a craving, not a crush” and “Somebody write down the recipe.”

    Elsewhere, Eilish proves that “consent is sexy” to her generation, managing to slip in a nod to permission with the lyrics, “Clothes on the counter for you, try ‘em on/If I’m allowed, I’ll help you take ‘em off.” She also offers, “You need a seat? I’ll volunteer.” Flexing her financial prowess, Eilish is sure to showcase her masc/zaddy tendencies with the assurance, “I could buy her so much stuff.” While “Lunch” is a triumph in terms of Eilish “owning” who she is, there’s still that bittersweet realization that she never really wanted to “get into all that,” remarking, “I was never planning on talking about my sexuality ever, in a million years. It’s really frustrating to me that it came up.” And yet, she turned the “Variety outing” into a positive with the themes explored on this album. Indeed, it seems very pointed that the cover art should feature Eilish in front of an open door, ready to emerge from the one she’s been hiding behind. 

    Apropos of that visual, Eilish chants, “Open up the door, can you open up the door?” on “Chihiro” (the title being a reference to Spirited Away, one of the films that have majorly influenced Eilish). As Finneas delivers another uptempo backbeat, Eilish explores the theme of turning to a stranger for comfort. Especially one who seems so familiar. That much is apparent in the Spirited Away-inspired lyrics, “But there’s a part of me that recognizes you/Do you feel it too?” and “I don’t, I don’t know why I called/I don’t know you at all/I don’t know you/Not at all.” The haunting quality of the track is matched only by its bizarre danceability. Of the sort that continues on “Birds of a Feather.” 

    And not only is “Birds of a Feather” quite danceable despite its macabre language (e.g., “I want you to stay/‘Til I’m in the grave/‘Til I rot away, dead and buried/‘Til I’m in the casket you carry”—what does one expect from the girl who wrote “Everybody Dies”?), it also happens to showcase Eilish at her most Taylor Swift. That is, in terms of wielding a common phrase and making it her own (with Swift, there are many, from “bad blood” to “familiarity breeds contempt”). And yet, it doesn’t take long for the Lana influence to take over with the mention of the color “blue.” A shade that Del Rey wields more than any other in her music. In Eilish’s hands, blue is used to say, “And if I’m turnin’ blue, please don’t save me/Nothin’ left to lose without my baby.” It won’t be the last time blue is invoked on Hit Me Hard and Soft, and it reveals just how much Eilish, synesthete extraordinaire, has embraced it as her color, admitting, “Dude, what’s so interesting to me is that blue has always been my least-favorite color. Which is so stupid because my hair was blue for years. But I didn’t mean for it to be—that was an accident… But over the last couple of years, I’ve just been like, ‘Wait, blue is so who I am at my core.’” After all, blue is the warmest color, n’est-ce pas?

    She is, additionally, LDR at her core. Continuing the homage both overt and subtle (“hard and soft,” if you will) with “Wildflower,” a title that feels like another unwitting Lana reference (whose 2021 album, Blue Banisters, features a song called “Wildflower Wildfire”), as does “The Greatest,” the same title as a signature track from Del Rey’s Norman Fucking Rockwell. With “Wildflower,” the tempo slows down again and Eilish opens with another common phrase: “Things fall apart.” The song then details a haunting love triangle that thematically reminds one of Eilish’s own version of Olivia Rodrigo’s “Obsessed.” For Eilish can’t stop obsessing over the girl who used to be with the one she’s currently with, pronouncing, “But I see her in the back of my mind all the time/Like a fever, like I’m burning alive, like a sign.”

    The predilection for comparison to another person’s ex that shines through once more in the lyrics, “I’d never ask who was better/‘Cause she couldn’t be/More different from me/Happy and free in leather.” That is to say, Eilish is much more comfortable in free-flowing, cotton-based fabrics. At the three-minute-thirty-eight-second mark, it seems as though the song is ending, but, in a trend that mirrors “Happier Than Ever” (and that will come back again on “L’amour de Ma Vie”), the song reanimates with a different tincture as Eilish sings (in the tone of what comes across as a specter), “You say no one knows you so well/But every time you touch me, I just wonder how she felt/Valentine’s Day, cryin’ in the hotel/I know you didn’t mean to hurt me, so I kept it to myself.” 

    The morose aura persists on “The Greatest,” with Eilish rueing the day she grew attached to someone so emotionally distant. Hence, she provides a chorus dripping in sarcasm and self-loathing when she says, “Man, am I the greatest (greatest)/My congratulations (congratulations)/All my love and patience/All my admiration (admiration)/All the times I waited (waited)/For you to want me naked (naked)/I made it all look painless/Man, am I the greatest.” At around the three-minute-ten-second mark, Finneas helps change the nature of the song as Eilish belts out a power ballad-y interpretation of: “The greatest, the greatest, the greatest/I loved you and I still do/Just wanted passion from you/Just wanted what I gave you/I wanted and waited.” Her voice goes quiet again as she delivers an outro version of the chorus that goes, “Man, am I the greatest/God, I hate it/All my love and patience/Unappreciated/You said your heart was jaded/You couldn’t even break it/I shouldn’t have to say it/You could’ve been the greatest.” Which is exactly what Lana Del Rey once told Azealia Banks in the midst of a Twitter feud in 2018 (specifically, “u coulda been the greatest female rapper alive but u blew it”).  

    Eilish switches vocal tack on “L’Amour de Ma Vie” to more closely echo Madison Beer’s vibe, commencing the “Spinnin”-esque number with a sultry tone that assures, “I wish you the best for the rest of your life/Felt sorry for you when I looked in your eyes/But I need to confess, I told you a lie/I said you/You were the love of my life.” Needless to say, Eilish only offered that up as a consolation to the person she ended things with, not realizing they would somehow manage to hurt her more with their behavior after she tried to show them kindness. Thus, she states it the refrain, “It isn’t askin’ for a lot for an apology/For making me feel like it’d kill you if I tried to leave/You said you’d never fall in love again because of me/Then you moved on immediately.” 

    At the three-minute-thirteen-second mark, Eilish and Finneas “Happier Than Ever” it up again by bifurcating the song into two parts. Accordingly, Eilish’s vocal pitch changes as she again points out, “It isn’t askin’ a lot for an apology/For makin’ me feel like it’d kill you if I tried to leave/You said you’d never fall in love again because of me.” And here her voice becomes even more high-pitched as she repeats, “Then you moved on” as a heartbeat-like drum enters the fray and the tempo picks up, changing the sound entirely into an 80s-inspired ditty as Eilish chirps, “Ooh/You wanted to keep it/Like somethin’ you found/‘Til you didn’t need it/But you should’ve seen it/The way it went down/Wouldn’t believe it/Wanna know what I told her/With her hand on my shoulder?/You were so mediocre/And we’re so glad it’s over now.” Things get decidedly Grimes-y during the outro, with Eilish shrugging, “It’s such a pity/We’re both so pretty.”

    On the song that follows, “The Diner” (which one could argue is a sort of companion piece to “Lunch”), Finneas jars us yet again with the abrupt sonic shift into music that is decidedly carnival-like. Indeed, “The Diner” is among the most When We All Fall Asleep-type songs on the record. On the ostensible “necessity” of revisiting “the past” (even if one as fresh as 2019) for this album, Finneas commented, “When Billie talks about the era of When We All Fall Asleep, it was this theatricality and this darkness. What’s the thing that no one is as good at as Billie is? This album was an exploration of what we do best.” And that exploration is all too palpable on “The Diner.” In the Billie voice we recognize from such songs as “bury a friend,” she croons, “Don’t be afraid of me/I’m what you need/I saw you on the screens/I know we’re meant to be/You’re starrin’ in my dreams.” Ah yes, the dream (/nightmare) motif that Eilish became known for is back and better than ever, with the singer revisiting some terrifying, stalker-y themes (as present on Happier Than Ever’s “NDA”)—this time from the perspective of an actual stalker. And who would know better about that ilk than Eilish? (Even though this song is meant to be in the spirit of the fictional “dark little stories” Billie and Finneas are known for coming up with à la “Bellyache.”)

    So it is that she delivers such “Stan”-esque lines as, “I’ll go back to the diner/I’ll write another letter (I’ll write another letter)/I hope you’ll read it this time/You better.” The evocation of this “old-timey” sort of communication (including “I memorized your number/Now I call you when I please”—with Gen Z having no concept of that being the norm “back in the day”) not only speaks to the unique form of “devotion” this stalker has, but also Eilish’s own “old soul” stylings (much like, again, Lana Del Rey)…even though she once egregiously misinterpreted the meaning of “Picture to Burn.” These “old soul” inclinations are further emphasized by the fact that she and Finneas were intent on making an “album-ass album” (ah, such California parlances). Something you could actually enjoy listening to from beginning to end. This being a task that is decidedly against everything her generation represents.

    Finneas touches on that in the same Rolling Stone article, commenting, “We’re not even at ‘song’ anymore. We’re at the line from the second verse that blew up on TikTok. We’re mostly watching content in vertical that was made an hour ago—some person telling you their thoughts about something from an hour ago.” But both Eilish and Finneas come across as staunchly against adhering to that “method.” And this is precisely why Eilish refused to release any singles from the album, explaining, “I really don’t like when things are out of context. This album is like a family: I don’t want one little kid to be in the middle of the room alone.”

    And yes, it would be kind of weird for a song like “Bittersuite” to be in the middle of the proverbial room alone. Already announcing itself with an “Express Yourself” meets The Weeknd on After Hours or Dawn FM type of opening, this particular song has perhaps the most otherworldly quality of all. In addition to mimicking something that could be found on When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?, Eilish conjures easy comparisons to the second song on Happier Than Ever, “I Didn’t Change My Number,” singing in the same intonation during the verse, “I’ve been havin’ dreams/You were in the foyer/I was on my knees/Outside of my body/Watchin’ from above/I see the way you want me/I wanna be the one.” The themes of feeling disconnected/dissociated are on full blast here, with Eilish further ruminating on her inability to fall in love with someone “no matter how bad I want to.”

    That revelation seems to be the direct cause of slowing everything down around the one-minute-thirty-second mark as yet another song on the album splits into two parts, with “Bittersuite” becoming as carnival-like as “The Diner” when Eilish starts to sing the chorus, “I don’t need to breathe when you look at me, all I see is green/And I think that we’re in between everything/I’ve seen/In my dream, have it once a week, can’t land on my feet/Can’t sleep, have you underneath all of my beliefs/Keep it briеf/I’ll wait in the suite/Keep me off my feet.” 

    In another surreal portion of the track, Eilish relishes becoming self-referential as she languidly utters, “We can be discrete…/L’amour de ma vie/Love so bittersweet, mm/Open up the door for me, for me.” The “discrete” line refers to “The Diner,” while “L’amour de ma vie” is a direct mention of a previous song title. What’s more, “love so bittersweet” alludes to “Bittersuite” itself and “open up the door for me” is a nod to “Chihiro.” Clearly, Eilish is feeling secure enough in her songwriting prowess to allow herself to be this meta. 

    Taking us on a few more meandering sonic journeys before ending, “Bittersuite” finally gives way to “Blue,” which has decided “Get Free” by LDR characteristics. This extends, most obviously, to Eilish paralleling the verse, “I wanna move/Out of the black (out of the black)/Into the blue (into the blue)” with “I try to live in black and white, but I’m so blue.” She then repeats phrases from previous songs on the album again, including, “Birds of a feather,” “mon amour,” “open up the door,” “I’m still overseas” and “a bird in a cage.” She even wields a phrase that Madonna took ownership of in 1986, singing, “True blue, true blue/I’m true blue.” Finneas splits the track again at around the one-minute-fifty-five-second mark, giving the second half its own separate personality as Eilish quavers, ​“You were born bluer than a butterfly/Beautiful and so deprived of oxygen/Colder than your father’s eyes/He never learned to sympathize with anyone.”

    At certain points, it sounds like Eilish is trying to drum up sympathy for a nepo baby when she subsequently intones, “You were born reachin’ for your mother’s hands/Victim of your father’s plans to rule the world/Too afraid to step outside/Paranoid and petrified of what you’ve heard.” Her soft, ethereal tone then switches to something slightly more sinister—“demonic” even—when she sings, “But they could say the same ’bout me/I sleep ’bout three hours each night/Means only twenty-one a week now, now/And I could say the same ’bout you/Born blameless, grew up famous too/Just a baby born blue now, now.” Who knows? Maybe this is her empathy song written with her beloved idol, Justin Bieber, in mind. 

    Whatever the case, “Blue” tops anything on When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? with regard to creating an alternate realm that mirrors Eilish’s rich, often morbid world. And if that was the primary objective of her debut, Hit Me Hard and Soft does it one better, with Eilish achieving the goal she set out to with this record: returning to “2019 me”—with an even spookier 2024 twist.

    [ad_2]

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • Billie Eilish Is Serving Something Spicy for ‘Lunch’

    Billie Eilish Is Serving Something Spicy for ‘Lunch’

    [ad_1]

    Photo: Karwai Tang/WireImage

    Hope you saved room for “Lunch.” Billie Eilish fed fans tonight, dropping her third album Hit Me Hard and Soft in full, without any advanced singles. The album is a buffet of shifting sounds that deserves to be consumed altogether, but second track “Lunch” is a meal by itself. The opening double-entendre should be enough to pull you in: “I could eat that girl for lunch,” Eilish coolly declares, in front of a groovy, ‘80s-ish bassline. Yeah, those comments about, uh, self-love were just the beginning. On “Lunch,” Eilish is serving up a spicy queer anthem.

    Eilish, who opened up about being queer last year, goes on to fully detail an encounter with a woman in the song. Get ready for the e-sleuths to be all over who “Claire” is. (Coincidentally, she has become friends with Clairo recently.) Eilish previously told Rolling Stone that she wrote part of “Lunch” before ever being with another woman, but oh, does it get steamy. “I’ll run a shower for you like you want,” Eilish sings, grinning. “Clothes on the counter for you to try ‘em on / If I’m allowed, I’ll help you take ‘em off.”

    Eilish explained to Rolling Stone that writing “Lunch” “was actually part of what helped me to become who I am” as she was realizing her sexuality. “Last year, I realized I want my face in a vagina,” she added. Yeah, that comes through on “Lunch”: “You need a seat? I’ll volunteer,” Eilish sings to her interest at one point. Yeah, she’s not just hungry — she’s thirsty.

    “Lunch” is sexy, queer, and straight-up fun. (Just wait for the Nine Inch Nails-esque synth-bass breakdown at the end!) Are you not fed?

    [ad_2]

    Justin Curto

    Source link

  • Billie Eilish Unveils ‘Hit Me Hard And Soft’ Tracklist – 247 News Around The World

    Billie Eilish Unveils ‘Hit Me Hard And Soft’ Tracklist – 247 News Around The World

    [ad_1]

    • The album “Hit Me Hard and Soft” features 10 tracks without any collaborative features.
    • It is set to release on May 17, 2024.
    • Billie Eilish has chosen not to release any singles from the album in advance.
    • The album title suggests a mix of hard and soft emotions, blending genres and defying trends.

    Billie Eilish, the acclaimed singer-songwriter, has officially unveiled the tracklist for her highly anticipated third studio album, “Hit Me Hard And Soft,” which is set to release on May 17, 2024, via Darkroom/Interscope Records. This album marks a significant milestone in Eilish’s career, following the success of her previous projects. The tracklist for “Hit Me Hard And Soft” consists of 10 songs, with no features listed, aligning with the trend of her previous albums where she has not featured any collaborators.

    Billie Eilish Unveils ‘Hit Me Hard And Soft’ Tracklist

    The album’s tracklist is as follows:

    1. “Skinny”
    2. “Lunch”
    3. “Chihiro”
    4. “Birds Of A Feather”
    5. “Wildflower”
    6. “The Greatest”
    7. “L’Amour De Ma Vie”
    8. “The Diner”
    9. “Bittersuite”
    10. “Blue”

    This tracklist showcases Eilish’s unique blend of alternative and pop music, with each song promising to offer a distinctive listening experience. The album’s production is credited to her brother, Finneas, who has been a significant figure in her music career, serving as her co-writer and producer.

    Eilish has been teasing fans with snippets of the album, including a preview of “Lunch” and “L’Amour De Ma Vie” at Coachella and revealing that she had filmed a video for “Lunch”. This approach, coupled with her decision not to release any singles in advance, has generated excitement among fans who are eager to experience the album in its entirety.

    The album’s release comes after a period of anticipation, with Eilish’s fans eagerly awaiting the release of her new music. The tracklist, with its mix of familiar and intriguing titles, promises to offer a fresh perspective on Eilish’s musical journey, further cementing her status as a leading figure in contemporary music.

    Billie Eilish Unveils 'Hit Me Hard And Soft' Tracklist
    Billie Eilish Unveils ‘Hit Me Hard And Soft’ Tracklist

    In addition to the album’s release, Eilish has made the entire album available for pre-order in various formats, including vinyl, CD, and cassette, all made from 100% recyclable materials. This commitment to sustainability reflects Eilish’s broader environmental consciousness and her dedication to creating a positive impact through her music.

    As fans eagerly await the release of “Hit Me Hard And Soft,” the tracklist serves as a tantalizing glimpse into the album’s musical landscape, promising a collection of songs that will captivate Eilish’s audience and showcase her continued evolution as an artist.

    Don’t Miss | Charlie Sheen’s Daughter Sami Unveils Unexpected Style at Coachella

    [ad_2]

    247 News Around The World

    Source link