A giant of popular music


Bacharach performs with the BBC orchestra in 2008 (PA)

Burt Bacharach was one of the most distinguished and successful composers of the last century.

Working most fruitfully with the lyricist Hal David, his addictively intelligent songs embodied unconventional time signatures, shifting chords and a fusion of pop and rock, jazz, and Latin elements. With Bacharach’s adventurous song structures married to David’s words, often bittersweet lyrics as though from a cinematic school of realism, the duo were like the personification of New York’s Brill Building hit factory.

Although not all these songs were with David, Bacharach, who has died aged 94, enjoyed more than 50 UK Top 40 hits, and more than 70 in his native US. A remarkable 38 of these tunes were with the classically trained former gospel singer Dionne Warwick with whom the pair began working in 1962. Several of Bacharach’s compositions were bigger hits in the UK than in America.

The pair first hit the charts in 1957 with “The Story of My Life”, a US No 15 hit for Marty Robbins; covered in the UK by Michael Holliday, the song hit the top of the charts. By the end of that year, they had a further UK No 1, with Perry Como’s “Magic Moments”, entering the top five in the US.

With his silky movie-star good looks and string of beautiful wives, Bacharach seemed almost a Playboy-magazine image of an apparently sophisticated 1960s Manhattan male.

He and Hal David stood at the heart of the cultural paradox of white Jewish men providing hits for several of the era’s top black R’n’B acts. But sometimes they drifted apart: during a lean three-year spell from 1958 to 1961 Bacharach toured Europe and America as musical director for Marlene Dietrich. Whilst with Dietrich, Bacharach became a believer in astrology: Dietrich consulted her astrologer who told her not to fly on a plane that was then forced to make a crash landing.

Working briefly with lyricist Bob Hilliard, Bacharach scored in 1960 for The Drifters with “Please Stay” and Gene McDaniels with “Tower of Strength” (a UK no 1 for Frankie Vaughan); the next year, with Mack David and Luther Dixon, he charted The Shirelles’ “Baby It’s You” – covered by The Beatles on their first album.

Reunited with David later in 1961, Gene Pitney’s “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance”, inspired by the John Ford western, was a US No 4. Over the next two years, they gave Pitney further hits: “True Love Never Runs Smooth” and their first classic, “24 Hours From Tulsa”, David’s lyrics offering almost a film script in themselves.

Following Dionne Warwick’s first hit, in 1962 with “Don’t Make Me Over”, the pair’s next three tunes for her flopped. But the next year’s “Anyone Who Had a Heart” established her as a chart staple. No 8 in the US, it was a UK chart-topper for Cilla Black. Dionne Warwick’s next record “Walk On By” was an even larger US hit.

On ‘The Burt Bacharach Show’ in 1972 (ITV/Shutterstock)

An only child, Bacharach had grown up in a world in which a certain celebrity in the family was taken for granted. Starting off as a men’s fashion buyer for department stores in Kansas City, Newark and New York City, his father Bert Bacharach transferred this skill into becoming men’s fashion editor for Collier’s and Pic magazines; from 1960 until 1978 he wrote “Now See Here”, a nationally syndicated newspaper column; and he was author of a number of books, including Bert Bacharach’s Book For Men and Right Dress: Success Through Better Grooming – clear clues to his son’s suave appearance.

Given classical piano lessons as a child and teenager, Bacharach soon discovered a love of jazz. Especially taken with bebop artists like Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker, he would sneak into Manhattan clubs whilst underage to watch them. “When I was 15,” he said, “some of the guys at school and I formed a band. Ten pieces, with myself at the piano. We played at parties and at the local dances.”

(Alamy)

Studying at multiple universities, Bacharach studied music, including jazz harmony, an important ingredient of his songs. Of all his teachers, he later said, the violinist and composer Darius Milhaud was most significant; a French Jewish émigré to the US, Milhaud had been appreciably influenced by Brazilian music and by jazz he had heard in Harlem in 1922. “Before I went into the service during the Korean War I studied with Milhaud at the Music Academy of the West which was a summer programme,” Bacharach wrote in his 2013 autobiography. “I wrote a ‘Sonatina for Violin, Oboe and Piano’.”

Having hung out with the likes of John Cage in New York, Bacharach was concerned this piece for Milhaud was “too melodic”. “Don’t be afraid of writing something people can remember and whistle. Never be afraid to be melodic,” Milhaud disabused Bacharach’s purist anxiety.

After his national service spell in the army, Bacharach became a professional pianist. “After my army discharge, I played piano in night clubs, including Nino’s Continental, on Fifty-third Street, and the Bayview, on Fire Island.” This led to him becoming an accompanist for such highly successful singers as Vic Damone (whom he had met as a dance-band arranger with the US army in Germany), Steve Lawrence, the Ames Brothers and Paula Stewart; in 1953 he married Paula Stewart, remaining with her for the next 13 years.

Performing in Hollywood in 2005 (Getty)

“I started writing my own orchestrations as a kind of self defense,” he said. “No matter how good the words or the melody of a song, it has got to be showcased properly. And then, you can write a great song, but you need a successful record if you’re going to have a hit. You need that certain magic to happen at a recording session. Much of the feeling of a record – my records – comes from the rhythm section.”

In 1966 Bacharach married actress Angie Dickinson: they were together until 1980. Dickinson was a portal for him into the world of movie scores. That year he wrote the title song for “Alfie”, a No 1 UK hit for Cilla Black and a lesser US success for Dionne Warwick, and the score for “What’s New, Pussycat”, Tom Jones enjoying a Top 5 hit with the title tune. For 1969’s Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid he earned an Oscar and a Grammy for Best Score, as well as a number one hit for B J Thomas for “Raindrops Keep Falling on my Head”.

With Hal David he worked with playwright Neil Simon in 1968 on a musical based on Billy Wilder’s 1960 film The Apartment. Promises, Promises, the result, ran for three years on Broadway, another Grammy winner.

(Getty)

Also in 1966, Bacharach had himself stepped into the recording studio. Hit Maker! Bacharach Plays the Bacharach Hits presented largely instrumental rerecordings of his best-known songs and was a UK hit. Over the next 13 years, he released five more album collections of his own hit songs. The last of these, 1979’s “Woman”, was an ambitious song cycle recorded live in the studio with the Houston Philharmonic Orchestra.

During the early 1970s, the Bacharach and David songwriting partnership ended. Their musical version of the Frank Capra movie Lost Horizon led to a knot of lawsuits, with each suing the other, and Warwick suing both of them for failing to provide her with new material. Bacharach worked with other lyricists, but it was not until 1981 that he returned to the top of the charts with “Arthur’s Theme (The Best That You Can Do)” by Christopher Cross. The song was taken from the film Arthur, which Bacharach also scored. It brought him a third Oscar; also it united him with lyricist Carol Bayer Sager – he married her the next year, and they adopted a son, Christopher, in 1986.

The composer with Marlene Dietrich (left) in 1964 (Getty)

Professionally the pair were also strong together: as well as Sager’s own “Stronger Than Before”, there were other hits: Roberta Flack’s “Making Love”, Dionne Warwick’s “That’s What Friends Are For” as well as Warwick with Jeffrey Osborne’s “Love Power”, and Patty Labelle and Michael McDonald’s “On My Own”.

In 1991, however, Bacharach and Sager divorced. Two years later, he married Jane Hansen, a ski instructor 32 years his junior with whom he had two sons.

In the mid-1990s “easy listening”, a supposedly kitsch form into which Bacharach’s music had been logged since the underground album movement of the late 1960s, was turned on its head. No longer considered a guilty pleasure, it became recognised as a valid art form, a feature of chill-out rooms at raves. Oasis’s Noel Gallagher, the era’s biggest group, spoke reverently of Bacharach’s work, joining him onstage at London’s Royal Festival Hall on “This Guy’s In Love With You”; and there were similar tributes from REM, White Stripes, John Zorn and others. There was even a Bacharach cameo role in Mike Myers’ 1997 film Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery.

Two years before Bacharach had joined up with Elvis Costello to write the song “God Give Me Strength for Grace of my Heart”. It was included on 1998’s Painted From Memory, an album containing a further 11 Bacharach-Costello songs, with equal cover credits. The pair undertook a small tour and in 1999 won a Grammy for the album’s “I Still Have That Other Girl”. The previous year the duo had collaborated on “I’ll Never Fall in Love Again” and made a joint cameo appearance in the Austin Powers sequel The Spy Who Shagged Me.

Bacharach’s star once again was in the ascendancy. There were tribute concerts to him in London and New York.

In 2007, however, tragedy struck him: his daughter Nikki, born to his marriage with Angie Dickinson and suffering from Asperger’s syndrome, took her own life.

Recovered, Bacharach continued to tour globally, though on a smaller scale. In 2013, at the age of 85, he set out on the You Gotta Be Kidding Tour – so called “because that is the only possible response to doing 13 concerts at this time of my life”.

He continued to tour past his 90th birthday, performing to crowds in the US, UK and Europe in 2018 and 2019.

Burt Freeman Bacharach, composer, born 12 May 1928, died 8 February 2023

BRIT awards: Harry Styles triumphs with most wins


LONDON, Feb 11 (Reuters) – Harry Styles was the big winner at the BRIT awards, Britain’s pop music honours, on Saturday, winning all four categories he had been nominated in, a week after his triumph at the Grammys.

Styles took home the coveted album of the year for “Harry’s House”, song of the year for his synth pop hit “As It Was”, best pop/R&B act and artist of the year, one of two gender-neutral categories introduced last year after BRIT awards organisers got rid of female and male distinctions.

The contenders for that prize were all men, which had irked many in the industry and on social media.

“I’m really, really grateful for this and I’m very aware of my privilege up here tonight,” Styles said in his acceptance speech, dedicating the artist of the year award to a list of female singers.

Styles, who rose to fame on talent show “The X Factor” as a member of boy band One Direction, last week won two Grammy awards, including album of the year.

Latest Updates

View 2 more stories

“This night has been really special to me … Thank you so much for the welcome home,” Styles said on Saturday after his final win, for best album.

“I’m so, so proud to be a British artist out there in the world. I’m so proud to be here tonight celebrating British artists and British music.”

A statement on the BRIT Awards’ website said the gender-neutral categories had been introduced so artists were judged “solely on the quality and popularity of their work, rather than on who they are, or how they choose to identify.”

But it added that organisers “acknowledge and share in the disappointment” of no women making the list. “A key factor is that, unfortunately, there were relatively few commercially successful releases by women in 2022 compared to those by men.”

“Of the 71 eligible artists on the longlist, only 12 (17%) are women. We recognise this points to wider issues around the representation of women in music that must also be addressed.”

Singer Rina Sawayama welcomed the change to gender-neutral categories but said the list of nominees should be longer.

“If you have more nominees then you’re going to see a cross section of what has happened throughout the year and who has made an impact,” she told Reuters on the red carpet.

Indie rockers Wet Leg won group of the year and best new artist. Music star Beyonce was named international artist of the year and her hit “Break My Soul” won international song of the year.

For a factbox of winners, click read more

Reporting by Marie-Louise Gumuchian in London; Additional reporting by Hanna Rantala in London; Editing by Ben Dangerfield, Matthew Lewis and Daniel Wallis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Did The Black Eyed Peas Really Sell Out, Using Fergie To Break Into Pop Music?


While The Black Eyed Peas is an icon in the music industry now, it wasn’t always like that. When Fergie joined the group in 2002, its popularity skyrocketed. The Black Eyed Peas was on everybody’s lips in the 2000s with popular songs like Where Is The Love?, I Gotta Feeling, and My Humps. Due to a significant increase in popularity over the years, it seemed that Fergie was there to stay.

From hip-hop, The Black Eyed Peas transitioned to pop music. This move meant gaining more international fame. However, Fergie quietly left The Black Eyed Peas in 2017 before the band’s seventh album was released. Due to this move, fans were not that impressed with the album.

Fergie Catapulted The Black Eyed Peas Into Pop Music






© Provided by TheThings
Fergie looking shocked during What’s Up TV interview

Like many other bands, fans have their favorites. The Black Eyed Peas was successful even before Fergie joined them. However, when she became their lead singer, The Black Eyed Peas became one of the best-selling bands ever.

As a result of the group’s success, will.i.am is worth around $70 million.

The album ‘Elephunk’ released in 2003 immediately transformed The Black Eyed Peas from a successful band to being famous internationally. Since Fergie just joined the group before this album was released, she surely contributed significantly to the album’s success.

Yet the Black Eyed Peas formed like many other bands. Two friends, in this case, will.i.am (William Adams) and apl.de.ap (Allan Pineda Lindo) wanted to take the world by surprise with their music and dance moves.

They experimented with hip-hop and rap in the 90s, but that period is not the one that boosted their careers. When Kim Hill joined the group in 1998 as its vocalist, The Black Eyed Peas was still not as successful as it is today.

After two years, Kim Hill eventually made the decision to step down in 2000.

RELATED: Everything We Know About Fergie’s Son, Axl Jack Duhamel

The Black Eyed Peas was not internationally famous until Fergie joined the group in 2002. Her appearance, attitude, and remarkable vocals finally gave a boost to The Black Eyed Peas’ popularity.

Shortly after Fergie joined and also due to the transition to pop music, the group accomplished high record sales.

Fergie Left The Black Eyed Peas To Focus On Motherhood

When news of Fergie leaving the band was released, no one understood why. As fans became more upset with the decision, they wanted to know the real reason why she left after 15 years.

During an interview, will.i.am explained that Fergie left The Black Eyed Peas to focus on being a mom to her son, Axl.

Born in 2013, Axl was around 5 years old when his mother left The Black Eyed Peas.

Even if the time of diapers and first steps was long gone, Fergie’s busy schedule as a lead singer in the group meant that she didn’t have the time to be fully focused on each step of being a mom.

RELATED: Is Fergie Still Making Music? Everything She’s Been Up To Since Leaving The Black Eyed Peas

Leaving The Black Eyed Peas gave her more time with her son, as well as more time to work on independent projects. Fergie has certainly been busy over the years with making new music, fashion, and receiving awards.

Also, she focused on building her wine brand, Ferguson Crest, located in Santa Ynez Valley, California.

The Black Eyed Peas Replaced Fergie Shortly After She Left

A few years after Fergie said goodbye to being their lead singer, The Black Eyed Peas members filled her spot with J Rey Soul. As a finalist in ‘The Voice Philippines’ in 2013, Jessica Reynoso (J Rey Soul) was part of the Team apl.de.ap.

The Black Eyed Peas noticed her during that time.

She officially became the lead singer when she contributed to the album ‘Translation’. While Fergie was quick to promote the band’s new album on her Instagram, many fans were not impressed with this recent change.

As someone new was seen performing the original Fergie parts, fans quickly went to Twitter to express their disapproval of J Rey Soul’s performance.

Fergie Remained Friends With The Black Eyed Peas Members

After spending about 15 years working, and being successful together, Fergie and The Black Eyed Peas couldn’t have lost contact.

Fergie left the band amicably for personal purposes, not because of an internal conflict between the members. She just needed more time to focus on motherhood.






© Provided by TheThings
Fergie and The Black Eyed Peas on the stage

During an interview, will.i.am created confusion when he was asked why Fergie left the group. He quickly answered that he didn’t know the reasons. At that moment, Fergie was reportedly not part of The Black Eyed Peas WhatsApp group.

As time has passed and fans have become more interested in the subject, there was a need for an official statement. This came in 2020 when Fergie mentioned that they all “try to keep in touch”, especially for important dates in their lives.

RELATED: What Really Ended Fergie And Josh Duhamel’s 13-Year Marriage

However, Fergie leaving The Black Eyed Peas mattered more to their fans rather than to them. Both Fergie and The Black Eyed Peas continue to have successful projects. While the band releases music every few months, Fergie is successful on her own.

Still, each contributed to the fame of the other. Fergie’s career received a boost when joining The Black Eyed Peas, while the band successfully integrated its name into the pop music industry.

Harry Styles, Playboi Carti, Dua Lipa, Doja Cat – Rolling Stone


Harry Styles has been the subject of countless headlines in the wake of the 2023 Grammys — and for all the stories thinking over his unexpected win for Album of the Year, there have been nearly as many celebrating the rainbow, sequinned, harlequin-style onesie that he wore on the red carpet. “Best dressed,” they rave. “King of jumpsuits!” 

It’s a far cry from the more mixed reception that Playboi Carti received when he took the stage at Kanye West’s Donda 2 event a year ago. It wasn’t Carti’s unhinged performance of “Off the Grid,” or his appearance alongside an already-scandal plagued Ye, that sent shockwaves through his fandom: It was his bold new look, which included a face full of gothic-clown makeup, marrying the metal tradition of corpse paint with the Joker’s demonic, up-turned smile. “Carti has officially taken it 2 steps too far,” one Twitter user wrote. “Seriously…what in the insane clown posse was Carti doing man?” asked another. 

While it was likely both artists’ intention to stand out from the crowd, in fact both Harry and Carti were jumping on the bandwagon of a growing trend: A staggering amount of pop stars are “down with the clown” lately, and they’re part of a much larger, clown-crazed phenomenon. 

To the great dismay of coulrophobics, clowns have become increasingly inescapable figures in popular culture within the past five years. The “Great Clown Panic” of 2016 was followed by a slew of big-budget productions starring scary clowns, jesters, and harlequins, including Suicide Squad, American Horror Story: Cult, It, and Joker. On TikTok, #Clowncore content now has more than 435 million views, and it’s helped spawn a number of more mainstream trends, filters, and beauty tutorials. Clown-like patterns and silhouettes have also materialized in the fashion world, influencing recent collections by designers like the neo-Victorian Batsheva Hay, the award-winning and rainbow-loving Christopher John Rogers, the punk-inspired troublemaker Matty Bovan, and the Scottish club kid Charles Jeffrey. Clowns have even permeated our everyday vernacular and correspondence. “Clown” has become a more popular insult, thanks in part to President Biden, and clownery has entered the online vernacular through emojis and memes (the putting on clown make-up template is a verifiable classic). 

In music, clowncore has reached peak visibility. Styles and Carti are two of pop’s most committed clowns: Styles starred as a clown in a spoof music video created for The Late Show with James Corden last spring, and made headlines all the way back in 2021 for wearing a Pierrot costume at Madison Square Garden. Carti set social media ablaze with a series of since-deleted Instagram posts of him in various iterations of clown makeup, which he also wore to the Balenciaga fashion show last July. But these two jokers are far from alone.

Last year, Dua Lipa, Future, and the 1975 all used clown makeup in music videos for songs about the absurdity of love. Future appears as a heartbroken clown in the video for his melodramatic, confessional track, “Love You Better,” with a toned-down clown look that signals his culpability in allowing the woman he loves to get away. Dua Lipa rides both a mechanical bull and the wave of her own bewilderment in the video for “Love Again,” where she and her backup dancers are dressed as rodeo clowns, highlighting the known precarity of falling in love. The 1975’s video for “I’m in Love with You” also features a cast full of clowns that includes guest vocalist Phoebe Bridgers. In the Buster Keaton-inspired clip, a clown-faced Matthew Healy pursues a love interest, but is ultimately shocked and disappointed once she removes her clown makeup and reveals her true self. Words written on the set’s brick walls form a hidden message: “Everyone is disappointing once you get to know them.” The video’s reveal speaks to the nonsensical — yet almost universal — experience of desiring someone that is ultimately wrong for you. Whether you’ve felt clowned around by a person you care about, or feel like a clown for caring about them at all, matters of the heart all too often make us act a fool.  

Doja Cat teamed up with Taco Bell to create a bizarre, clown-themed Superbowl commercial, soundtracked by her cover of “Celebrity Skin” (she later revealed in an Instagram live that the clown part was Taco Bell’s idea). Gerard Way and Yung Lean both inexplicably donned clown makeup at select stops on their tours last year. 2022 also proved eventful for two frequently clown-faced artists in more underground circles: Horrorcore artist Dana Dentata, who toured with Korn and Evanescence and performed at the annual Gathering of the Juggalos, and California art-rock band the Garden, who released a new album, Horseshit on Route 66, in September. On the cover of the record, the Garden are sporting their signature jester-inspired face paint, which they have worn off and on since their formation in 2010. 

Trending

Proto-clown stage makeup in rock goes back to the late 1960s and early 1970s, when artists like Arthur Brown and Alice Cooper found that a little greasepaint went a long way. What’s new is the utilization of clown-inspired looks from so many musicians, across genres, simultaneously. The author, academic, and former circus clown David Carlyon describes musicians’ use of clown makeup as a tool for transgression. “Visually, [musicians] want to make a strong impact by highlighting facial features,” he says. “Emotionally, they want to send a message that this performance will not be normal.” As artists face increasing pressure to command attention on oversaturated feeds and manufacture viral moments, the use of head-turning clown makeup may be a matter of pragmatism in the digital era. A face full of black, white, and red paint is the beauty world’s equivalent of an exclamation mark — and by drawing on the strong reactions that clowns elicit, artists are able to express their own emotions in hyperbole. 

Still, the presence of all these clowns in the musical zeitgeist cannot be explained by algorithmic attention-seeking alone. In the same era that led to widespread romantic notions of “villain eras” and “goblin modes,” the popularity of clowns in music may be an extension of our decision to embrace depravity. Feeling like a fool in love is a tale as old as time, but a global pandemic, war, economic disaster, and a climate catastrophe have made clowns out of all of us. Musicians may simply be holding up a mirror to an anarchic world, or acknowledging the humor of our own insignificance. When faced with the absurdity of so many converging crises, life itself can feel like a joke. And when resolve is wearing thin and hope feels futile, sometimes the only thing left to do is laugh.



Burt Bacharach, prolific composer of pop hits, dies at 94







© Anonymous/AP
Burt Bacharach in 1965 with his then-wife, actress Angie Dickinson.

Burt Bacharach, a colossally successful pop composer — with more than 70 Top-40 hits — who provided the cocktail party playlist for the swinging ’60s and early ’70s with songs including “I Say a Little Prayer,” “Alfie,” “Do You Know the Way to San Jose,” “Close to You,” “Promises, Promises” and the Oscar-winning “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head,” died Feb. 8 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 94.

His publicist, Tina Brausam, confirmed the death but did not provide a specific cause.

Often teaming with lyricist Hal David, Mr. Bacharach wrote a succession of hits performed by musical torchbearers of the shag carpet era — Aretha Franklin, Tom Jones, Dusty Springfield, Herb Alpert, Sergio Mendes, the Carpenters, the 5th Dimension and especially singer Dionne Warwick.

Mr. Bacharach’s music ebbed and flowed from vogue, but his canon of songs brought him his industry’s highest honors. Much of his most enduring work featured majestic harmonies with abrupt key changes and ornate time signatures drawn from his grounding in classical music and his fervor for bebop jazz. Frank Sinatra once quipped that Mr. Bacharach “writes in hat sizes. Seven and three-fourths.”

Yet the songs remained accessible — “maybe not too sophisticated,” the composer once told the London Daily Telegraph, “but sophisticated enough to have some durability. And not too sophisticated to have you just hear it by some piano-player in a bar.”

More than 1,000 artists have recorded his music, a record placing him squarely in the Great American Songbook tradition alongside Cole Porter, Irving Berlin and the Gershwins.






© AP/AP
Mr. Bacharach accepts the Oscar for Best Original Score for “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” in 1970.

“His harmonic sophistication goes far beyond what record labels or audiences demanded in the 1960s and 1970s,” said Ted Gioia, author of “Love Songs: The Hidden History.” “He had higher standards than almost any of his peers on AM radio. It was a kind of hippie veneer imposed on solidly crafted melodies and rhythms from another era. There was a paradox here, but Bacharach made it work — in fact, he turned it into art.”

“What the World Needs Now Is Love” and “This Guy’s in Love With You” sent the listener floating down a martini river, a gentle current of violins dappled with muted trumpets, where the only occasional brine was a lyric by David.

“What do you get when you fall in love? You only get lies and pain and sorrow,” Warwick sang playfully over an up-tempo rhythm in “I’ll Never Fall in Love Again,” the 1969 hit that summited Billboard’s Easy Listening chart. When he and David wrote the song, Mr. Bacharach was in the hospital — a setting that inspired the cheeky line, “What do you get when you kiss a guy? You get enough germs to catch pneumonia.”

“I always tried to create songs that were like mini movies,” Mr. Bacharach once said. One of his finest examples was “One Less Bell to Answer,” a massive hit for the 5th Dimension in 1970 in which the singer appears blasé about “one less egg to fry” and “one less man to pick up after” but ultimately reveals her pain — “all I do is cry.”

Mr. Bacharach hit a pop culture peak with “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” a rakish 1969 western starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford as bank robbers on the run. It was one of Mr. Bacharach’s few film scores and won him Oscars for both the score and the instant hit “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head.”

B.J. Thomas sang David’s colloquial poetry (“cryin’s not for me / ’cause I’m never gonna stop the rain by complaining”) over idly strummed ukulele and guitar. The song accompanied Newman’s carefree bike ride with Katharine Ross on his handlebars, an iconic snapshot of Mr. Bacharach’s heyday and good-times ethos.

B.J. Thomas, who sang ‘Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head,’ dies at 78

The hits kept coming. “What’s New Pussycat?,” “Walk on By,” “Don’t Go Breaking My Heart,” “A House Is Not a Home” all entered the cultural bloodstream — as did “(There’s) Always Something There to Remind Me,” which received a Top 10 new wave cover by Naked Eyes in 1983.

Mr. Bacharach shared an Oscar for his theme song for “Arthur” (1981) with lyricist Carole Bayer Sager, his future wife, and singer Christopher Cross. Mr. Bacharach and Sager also wrote “That’s What Friends Are For” for the 1982 film “Night Shift,” a number that became an anthem of the AIDS-awareness movement.

Mr. Bacharach’s musical reputation faded before a renaissance in the 1990s that was sparked by praise from unexpected sources such as the band Oasis, which included a photo of the composer on the cover of its 1994 debut album “Definitely Maybe.”

The jazz pianist McCoy Tyner recorded an entire album of Mr. Bacharach’s music in 1997. The next year, Mr. Bacharach shared with Elvis Costello a Grammy for best pop vocal collaboration for the song “I Still Have That Other Girl”; Costello had previously partnered with Mr. Bacharach on the ballad “God Give Me Strength,” used in the 1996 film “Grace of My Heart.”

The composer was cool again — even if some of his newfound appreciation was laced with irony. He played along, making a winking cameo in the Mike Myers spy spoof “Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery” (1997), playing the piano and singing “What the World Needs Now Is Love” atop a double-decker bus.

When President Barack Obama awarded Mr. Bacharach and David the Library of Congress’s Gershwin Prize for Popular Song in 2012 — the year David died — Myers gave an arch rendition of “What’s New Pussycat?” in a blue sequined jumpsuit.






© Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images
Mr. Bacharach performs during the Glastonbury Festival of Music and Performing Arts in Somerset, England in 2015.

Classical to jazz

Burt Freeman Bacharach was born in Kansas City, Mo., on May 12, 1928, and grew up in New York City. His father wrote a syndicated newspaper column about men’s grooming. His mother was an amateur songwriter and piano teacher and directed his classical musical studies.

He was in his teens when he heard trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie and saxophonist Charlie Parker wafting over the airwaves. It was “like somebody opened a window,” he told the BBC. He forged an ID card and started frequenting bebop clubs on 52nd Street, a main artery of Manhattan jazz clubs.

After a stint in the Army, he resumed his classes at the Mannes School of Music and the New School for Social Research in New York, where he was mentored by French composer Darius Milhaud.

He also began working as an accompanist to singer Vic Damone, who fired him for allegedly upstaging him by flirting with women in the audience; to singer Paula Stewart (whom he married despite her mother’s advice that he was “really not marriage material”); and to Marlene Dietrich, the German-born Hollywood entertainer who was 30 years his senior and doted on him in a distinctly unmotherly way.

He met David in 1956 when both were working in the Brill Building, New York’s famed songwriting factory. They joined forces after a misfire by the composer and David’s older brother, Mack — a goofy title song for the 1958 B-movie “The Blob” starring Steve McQueen.

The first few Hal David-Burt Bacharach collaborations included “Magic Moments” and “The Story of My Life,” smash hits for singers Perry Como and Marty Robbins, respectively, in 1957.

Mr. Bacharach described meeting songwriter and producer Jerry Leiber, a Brill Building stalwart, as a seminal moment in his growth as a tunesmith. Like Leiber (and his partner Mike Stoller), Mr. Bacharach found an outlet for greater emotional scope when writing for R&B entertainers. He provided Jerry Butler with “Make It Easy On Yourself” and “Baby It’s You” for the Shirelles.

“You start working with non-White singers and it’s a different tone, there’s a soulful thing about it,” he told the Daily Telegraph. “And that influences what I’m composing and the way I’m working.”

The composer compared his relationship with David to an unlikely marriage — with Mr. Bacharach the cosmopolitan sybarite to his partner’s committed family man. A serial romancer, Mr. Bacharach was married four times — including once to the glamorous actress Angie Dickinson.

The composer’s dark good looks and taste in clothes put him in a vaunted social orbit. He was “the only songwriter who didn’t look like a dentist,” lyricist Sammy Cahn once observed.

His aggressive pursuit of celebrity — including the hiring of a publicist, as well as appearances in a vermouth commercial and on TV specials — reportedly gnawed at David. With playwright Neil Simon, they helped create the musical “Promises, Promises,” which ran on Broadway from 1968 to 1972.

Neil Simon, Broadway’s long-reigning king of comedy, dies at 91





© Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
Mr. Bacharach reacts to applause after receiving the 2012 Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song from President Barack Obama.

The songwriters split bitterly the next year after working on “Lost Horizon,” a musical remake of the Frank Capra-directed classic about Shangri-La. The duo reportedly clashed over the division of anticipated profits, but the movie was a legendary commercial fiasco.

Around the same time, Mr. Bacharach became mired in a legal dispute over an album he was producing for Warwick, rupturing that relationship as well.

His 2013 memoir “Anyone Who Had a Heart,” a title borrowed from one of his hits, revealed his shortcomings as a husband and father. An admittedly “selfish” man much of his life, he invited his ex-wives — Stewart, Dickinson and Sager — to contribute to provide their perspective.

In 1993, he wed Jane Hansen, a former ski instructor. In addition to his wife, survivors include their two children, Oliver and Raleigh; and a son from Sager, Cristopher. A daughter from his second marriage, Nikki, died by suicide in 2007.

Mr. Bacharach, who received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008, expressed the deepest parts of himself in his music, which he continued to perform through recent years. Even as his voice thinned, he felt impelled to connect with an audience, to be plugged into life.

“I’m not a good New Year’s Eve act, you know what I mean?” he told the Daily Telegraph. “It’s about being able to have contact playing this kind of music. The pain that people go through — or the boredom, or the broken relationships, or the illnesses — music can be a powerful antidote sometimes. And you don’t get to see that just sitting in a room writing by yourself.”

BTS agency HYBE seeks to take over K-pop rival SM Entertainment


SEOUL: South Korean entertainment company HYBE said on Friday (Feb 10)  it will buy shares worth 423 billion won (US$335 million) in rival SM Entertainment, seeking management rights to strengthen its position in the K-pop industry.

The move will make HYBE the largest shareholder of SM Entertainment as it takes over a 14.8 per cent share in its rival purchased from an 18.4 per cent stake held by the previous largest shareholder and SM founder, Lee Soo-man, it said in a statement.

“HYBE fully agrees with former Chief Producer Lee’s strategic initiatives including metaverse, a multi-label system, and the sustainable vision campaign,” said HYBE Chairman Bang Si-Hyuk.

HYBE is the agency that manages K-pop mega band BTS. SM is home to other popular K-pop acts including NCT and Aespa.

HYBE has also tendered an offer on Friday for SM shares held by minority shareholders, seeking to buy up to 25 per cent of the rival agency with the intention of acquiring management rights.

The South Korean pop music industry was dominated for years by three major companies – SM, JYP and YG Entertainment – until the K-pop boy band BTS rose to international fame, making HYBE bigger than the other three.

But all seven BTS members are expected to begin their military service over the next couple of years, starting with Jin, the group’s oldest member who joined the military in December. The septet is set to return in full only in 2025.

With the group on hiatus, SM Entertainment’s extensive portfolio will prove commercially beneficial for HYBE, said music critic Kim Do Heon.

“HYBE became a behemoth but its weakness was not having legacy. SM is a company that existed throughout K-pop’s history and will bring heritage to HYBE,” Kim said.

HYBE and SM Entertainment shares were up 6 per cent and 16 per cent, respectively, as of 11.05am (0205 GMT).

Earlier this week, South Korean tech firm Kakao Corp said it would acquire a 9.05 per cent stake in SM Entertainment to pursue joint projects including global K-pop auditions.

Burt Bacharach, Legendary Pop Composer, Dies at 94







© Provided by Variety


Songwriter, composer, producer and arranger Burt Bacharach, a dominant force in American popular music for half a century, died of natural causes in Los Angeles on Wednesday. He was 94.

Bacharach’s publicist Tina Brausam revealed the news on Thursday.

As a tunesmith, the nonpareil melodist Bacharach found fame in every medium.

His songs — many of them written with lyricist Hal David — became chart-topping successes, particularly in the hands of vocalist Dionne Warwick. Among ’60s songwriting duos, only Lennon-McCartney rivaled Bacharach-David in terms of commercial and artistic achievement. Bacharach collected six Grammys as a writer, arranger and performer from 1967-2005.

His music was ubiquitous on screens both big and small in the ’60s and ’70s, and he was recognized by the Academy Awards and Golden Globes for his work on “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” (1969) and “Arthur” (1981). He collected a 1971 Emmy for a TV recital of his work.

On Broadway, the 1968 Bacharach-David tuner “Promises, Promises” rolled up 1,281 performances and garnered a Tony nomination as best musical.

Bacharach’s first notable gig in showbiz was as singer Vic Damone’s accompanist after Bacharach’s discharge from the Army in 1952; he went on to play behind the Ames Brothers, Imogene Coca, Polly Bergen, Georgia Gibbs and Steve Lawrence. He also backed singer Paula Stewart, to whom he was married from 1953-58.

In 1957, Eddie Wolpin of Famous Music partnered Bacharach with David. Laboring in the pubbery’s Brill Building song mill, the pair scored a No. 4 hit with Perry Como’s “Magic Moments”; less memorably, Bacharach reached No. 33 with the Five Blobs’ horror movie theme “The Blob.”

Bacharach worked as Marlene Dietrich’s musical director from 1958-61 and found time to craft hits like the Shirelles’ “Baby It’s You” (No. 8, 1961), Chuck Jackson’s “Any Day Now” (No. 23, 1962) and — with David — Gene Pitney’s “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance” and “Only Love Can Break a Heart,” No. 4 and No. 2, respectively, in 1962.

That same year, Bacharach and David began their fruitful writing and production collaboration with former backup singer Warwick, whom the composer had met at a Drifters session. Her first single with the cleffers, “Don’t Make Me Over” — with lyrics inspired by a heated remark by the vocalist, who had accused the writers of lying to her — launched a fabled series of hits that mated Warwick’s silken voice with Bacharach’s subtly shifting melodies and David’s poignant lyrics.

Their top-10 collaborations of the ’60s included “Anyone Who Had a Heart,” “Walk on By,” “I Say a Little Prayer,” “Message to Michael,” “Do You Know the Way to San Jose,” “This Girl’s in Love With You” (previously a gender-swapped No. 1 hit for Herb Alpert) and “I’ll Never Fall in Love Again.” Warwick also interpreted Bacharach and David’s theme song for the 1968 Michael Caine vehicle “Alfie.”

The writers were ubiquitous on the charts and onscreen during the ’60s. Their top 40 hits included Jackie DeShannon’s “What the World Needs Now,” the 5th Dimension’s “One Less Bell to Answer” and Bobby Vinton’s “Blue on Blue.”

A move into film, enabled by actress Angie Dickinson, to whom Bacharach was married from 1966-80, led to soundtrack work that spawned several pop smashes. The 1965 farce “What’s New Pussycat” included Tom Jones’ title track, Manfred Mann’s “My Little Red Book” and Warwick’s “Here I Am.” Dusty Springfield’s sultry “The Look of Love” was featured in 1967’s James Bond spoof “Casino Royale.” Most memorably, B.J. Thomas’ breezy “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ on My Head,” from George Roy Hill’s serio-comic Western “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” reached No. 1; Bacharach received Oscars for best original song and score.

A film supplied the plot for Bacharach and David’s hit first stage venture: Billy Wilder’s darkly comedic “The Apartment” became “Promises, Promises,” which opened on Broadway in December 1968 to strong reviews. “Mr. Bacharach gives the musical its slinky, fur-coated feel of modernity,” wrote Clive Barnes in the New York Times. The show, which collected a best score Grammy in 1969, was revived on Broadway in 2010, with the addition of a couple of previous Bacharach-David hits.

The songwriters’ storied partnership dissolved acrimoniously after their misbegotten 1973 film musical adaptation of Frank Capra’s 1937 feature “Lost Horizon.” In the wake of that flop, Bacharach and David sued each other; Dionne Warwick launched a suit of her own against the team. For a time, Bacharach retreated to TV work and solo recording projects.

His writing career returned to commercial form after he partnered with lyricist Carole Bayer Sager, to whom he was married from 1981-92. Their “Arthur’s Theme,” written with singer Christopher Cross and Peter Allen for the ’81 Dudley Moore comedy “Arthur,” vaulted to No. 1 and collected an original song Oscar. In 1985, the couple’s “That’s What Friends Are For,” originally written for the feature “Night Shift,” renewed Bacharach’s association with Warwick; her all-star single version was No. 1 nationally for four weeks, and the composition received a Grammy as song of the year.

Bacharach’s career was relatively becalmed until the mid-’90s. He briefly collaborated again with David on the song “Sunny Weather Love,” for a 1993 Warwick album. However, he received greater attention for work with another writing partner: “God Give Me Strength,” an emotion-wracked ballad penned with admirer Elvis Costello for “Grace of My Heart,” Allison Anders’ 1995 feature about ’60s cleffers, led to the full-blown 1998 collaboration “Painted From Memory.” A track from the album won a Grammy.

During the ’90s and ’00s, Bacharach appeared in front of the camera as well: He did cameos in Mike Myers’ 1997 spy takeoff “Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery” and its two sequels. The latter films included covers of Bacharach-David’s “I’ll Never Fall in Love Again” (by Costello and Bacharach) and “Alfie” (as “Austin,” by the Bangles’ Susannah Hoffs, wife of director Jay Roach).

Bacharach was born in Forest Hills, N.Y. His father was a nationally known authority on menswear, his mother a painter and singer. He attended the same high school as Mike Stoller of the Leiber and Stoller songwriting team.

A pianist from an early age, Bacharach studied music at several institutions, including New York’s Mannes School of Music, where he was instructed by composers Henry Cowell and Darius Milhaud. His influences ranged from the impressionism of Ravel and Debussy to the energy and harmonic invention of bebop.

In 1972, Bacharach and David were inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame. They received the Recording Academy’s Trustees Award for their contributions as writers in 1997 and became the first songwriting team to be honored with the Library of Congress’ George & Ira Gershwin Prize for Popular Song in 2011.

In 1998, Rhino Records issued a three-CD compendium of Bacharach’s work, “The Look of Love.” A like-titled revue comprising Bacharach-David songs had a short-lived Broadway run in 2003.

Bacharach released a duo album with the Isley Brothers’ Ronald Isley in 2003, and in 2005 he issued “At This Time,” his first solo album in 26 years (and a best pop instrumental album Grammy winner). He continued to make concert appearances internationally.

His theatrical work continued late in his life and career: “New York Animals,” with music by Bacharach and book by Steven Sater, opened Off Broadway at the New Ohio Theater in 2015.

He is survived by his wife Jane and three children.

For more stories like this, follow us on MSN by clicking the button at the top of this page.

Click here to read the full article.

Pop star Anne-Marie spotted filming new music video at Adventure Island in Southend


Essex-born pop star Anne-Marie has returned to her home county to film the music video for her new single ‘SAD B!TCH’. The 31-year-old Essex born and raised musician headed to Southend for the production.

Anne-Marie, who was born in East Tilbury, filmed the video for her new hit single entirely at popular seafront attraction Adventure Island in Southend. In the new video, she walks around the deserted destination, including rides on Rage and the Flying Jumbos.



On February 3, Adventure Island shared the music video from YouTube and said: “Have you seen us in Anne-Marie’s new video yet?” Philip Miller MBE, the owner of Adventure Island, said the Essex star was “a very welcomed guest”.

READ MORE: Missing aristocrat’s mum ‘open letter’ plea as couple disappeared with newborn baby

Anne-Marie tweeted: “We found an abandoned unused theme park and jumped the gates and turned on all the rides!!! Jk, it was shut for January so just hired it out but just believe the first thing I said – it’s way more fun.”

The music video, which was released on February 3, has received more than 850,000 views on YouTube. It is not the first time celebrities have come to Adventure Island in Essex to take part in filming activities.

In October 2019 popular YouTube group The Sidemen paid a visit to play hide and seek. Their video was watched more than 18 million times. Cast members from Eastenders and Celebs Go Dating have also previously been spotted filming at the tourist attraction.

NCT Dream have sleepover in ‘Best Friend Ever’ music video







© Provided by UPI News
NCT Dream released its debut Japanese single album and a music video for the song “Best Friend Ever.” Screenshot via SMTown/YouTube

Feb. 8 (UPI) — South Korean boy band NCT Dream is back with new music.

The K-pop group, a subunit of the boy band NCT, released its debut Japanese single album, Best Friend Ever, and a music video for its song of the same name.

The “Best Friend Ever” video shows the members of NCT Dream have a sleepover, where they have a pillow fight and lounge in matching robes.

Best Friend Ever also features the Japanese version of NCT Dream’s hit single “Glitch Mode.”

NCT Dream consists of NCT’s Mark, Renjun, Jeno, Haechan, Jaemin, Chenle and Jisung. The group’s most recent Korean release, the EP Candy, was released in December.

As a full group, NCT has 23 members and also features the subunits NCT U, NCT 127 and WayV.

NCT 127 recently completed its second world tour, which drew more than 700,000 fans during its run.

 

Read More

How the Super Bowl Halftime Show Became a Pop Music Arms Race



Photos: Beyoncé (courtesy of artist), Lady Gaga/Bruno Mars (Andres Otero/Everett Collection), Rihanna (Apple Music)

On February 12, sports fans around the globe will crowd around their TV screens to see if the Kansas City Chiefs or the Philadelphia Eagles will claim the Super Bowl LVII trophy as champions of the National Football League. Pop music fans, though, will be waiting for Rihanna to take the stage for the halftime show, which, over the last decade, has generated enough buzz to rival the Big Game itself. From the moment that Rihanna was announced as this year’s halftime entertainment, her fans began doing what they do best: clamoring for a new Rihanna album. The chatter became so prevalent that it was the theme of the promo Fox released a few weeks ago:

This is just the latest bit of proof that the Super Bowl halftime show has become one of the most significant events of the year in pop music. In the last 10 years, these pop extravaganzas situated in the middle of football’s biggest night have turned into an arms race. How did we get here, and what does that mean for Rihanna this Sunday?

A look back at the early days of the Super Bowl halftime show

Early on, the Super Bowl halftime show was mostly made up of marching bands and cheerleaders: Up with People was featured in five Super Bowl halftime shows between 1971 and 1976. Somehow, the event managed to stay alive, and in the 1990s, organizers dipped a toe into pop performances with New Kids on the Block and Gloria Estefan. But few besides Michael Jackson at the Rose Bowl in 1993 delivered on the spectacle. With the widest possible audience to program for, the Super Bowl halftime show hopped around different genres: country, classic rock, Motown-style R&B. Younger viewers were targeted only sporadically, with a few MTV-produced shows in the late ’90s and early aughts. The last of those was the most notorious, of course. The 2004 halftime show featured pop acts Kid Rock, P. Diddy, Jessica Simpson, and Nelly, but the part everybody remembers is when Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake duetted on Timberlake’s “Rock Your Body” and committed the wardrobe malfunction that rocked a nation.

Post-“Nipplegate,” the halftime show makes safe bets on classic rockers

Much has already been made of “Nipplegate” – including news reports and docuseries — but in terms of how it affected the evolution of the Super Bowl halftime show, it ushered in an era of incredibly safe, dad-targeted rock acts (with one quite notable exception). Over the next several years, the halftime show was headlined by Paul McCartney, The Rolling Stones, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Bruce Springsteen and the E-Street Band, and The Who, and if any of those guys even had nipples, you’d never know it from watching them perform. The exception to this string of low-risk classic rock was when Prince performed in the middle of a Miami downpour in 2007, an iconic — and, yes, oftentimes sexually suggestive — performance that was widely acclaimed and probably went a long way towards calming down FCC-wary executives going forward. At the time, The Smoking Gun reported a scant 150 complaints to the FCC (over 93 million people watched that year’s Super Bowl), and some of those were about a Snickers ad that featured two men kissing.

Madonna sets a new standard

The next watershed halftime show moment occurred in 2012, when Madonna was tapped to perform at halftime for Super Bowl XLVI in Indianapolis. Up until this point, even when the Super Bowl veered towards pop, the producers made sure to present a wide swath of acts that might appeal to as broad an audience as possible — and in particular, straight men. NSYNC and Britney Spears were offset by Aerosmith. No Doubt was tempered by Shania Twain and Sting. Handing the entire halftime show to Madonna was a tacit change of direction, counterprogramming the halftime show with an act that unabashedly courted women and gay men.

And Madonna did nothing to butch up her act. Dancers dressed as Roman centurions carried her en masse on a winged throne as she kicked off the show with “Vogue.” And while M.I.A. kicked up some controversy with a middle-finger gesture during her and Nicki Minaj’s guest appearance during “Give Me All Your Luvin” (M.I.A. and the NFL sparred in court for two years over breach of contract, before coming to a confidential settlement), the Madonna halftime show’s true legacy was kicking off a decade of escalating pop dominance.

Beyoncé followed Madonna just one year later with a performance in the New Orleans Superdome that was so spectacular, it was followed by a stadium power outage that suspended play in the second half for 34 minutes. In an impressive flex of her star wattage, Beyoncé’s only guest collaborators were Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams in a Destiny’s Child reunion that only served to underline how far she’s come since her early days. The performance was the most Tweeted-about event to date and stands as one of Beyoncé’s standout live concert performances.

After Madonna and Beyoncé delivered back-to-back pop-diva spectaculars, the standard had now been set. All subsequent performances had to at least strive to meet that level of, if not star power, than at least spectacle. Bruno Mars brought his “hardest working man in show business” act to the Big Game in 2014, followed by a Katy Perry show in 2015 that included Missy Elliott and Lenny Kravitz, and stands as the most-watched television performance in history. Of course, what everybody really remembers is the Left Shark phenomenon, where one of two dancing shark mascots was noticeably out of sync with the performance, setting the internet ablaze.

The sky-high expectations of this new era of Super Bowl halftime shows were never better exemplified than when Coldplay was announced as the halftime act for Super Bowl 50. Fairly or not, the English rock act had become synonymous with milquetoast, vanilla, so-10-years-ago music by much of the young, vocal, very online pop fandom. Coldplay as the successor to Madonna, Beyoncé, and Left Shark felt all kinds of wrong (and macho football fans weren’t exactly happy about it either). When it was subsequently announced that Bruno Mars (who was already signed on as “curator” of the halftime show) and Beyoncé would join Coldplay’s performance, it seemed obvious who would overshadow whom. And indeed, Beyoncé’s eye-popping, Republican-infuriating performance of “Formation” completely stole the show.

Lady Gaga performed at halftime in 2017 — the 80 For Brady Super Bowl, to put it in context — getting the pop-diva vibe back on track and providing fodder for her in-the-works Netflix documentary Five Foot Two (Jennifer Lopez would later make the Super Bowl halftime show the focal point of her Netflix documentary).

Today’s halftime show arms race

The 2018 halftime show wasn’t received as warmly, with the return of Justin Timberlake. The people — and Janet Jackson fans, in particular — hadn’t forgotten, and Timberlake caught a wave of bad press, as he does every time Nipplegate comes back into the cultural conversation. Timberlake actually invited Jackson to perform alongside him, though she declined, and his subsequent performance with the Tennessee Kids was received as tepidly as his Man of the Woods album was that same year.

The reaction to the Coldplay announcement in 2016 was more or less repeated when Maroon 5 was announced as the headliner for 2019. That year, several artists declined to perform in solidarity with Colin Kaepernick, the former 49ers quarterback who was blackballed from the league for his “take the knee” protests against police shootings of unarmed Black Americans. A Change.org petition called on Maroon 5 to drop out, but the show went on.

2020 saw the return of pop excess to the halftime show, with a Jennifer Lopez-Shakira double bill that was tremendously energetic and served as a tribute to the performers’ Puerto Rican and Colombian heritage, respectively. The Weeknd performed gamely during the 2021 socially-distanced halftime show, and last year diverged a bit from pop icons to deliver a masters-of-hip-hop extravaganza featuring Snoop Dogg, Dr. Dre, Eminem, Mary J. Blige, and Kendrick Lamar.

And now: Rihanna. There’s no obvious reason why she would debut her first new non-soundtrack music since releasing Anti at the 2016 Super Bowl. Her Oscar-nominated ballad “Lift Me Up,” from the Black Panther: Wakanda Forever soundtrack, is enough of a peg on which to hang a halftime performance of greatest hits. But that’s the current state of the Super Bowl halftime show arms race. Rihanna isn’t just reckoning with her own legacy of pop hits with this performance. She’s up against a Cecil B. DeMille-styled “Vogue” performance, a Destiny’s Child reunion, and an off-script shark mascot that was watched by the biggest audience in TV history. She’s up against a rendition of “Formation” so anthemic that it broke half of America’s politicians. Even if every subsequent Super Bowl halftime performance doesn’t outpace all of those, that’s the mountaintop they’re all reaching for now. Even without new music, there’s every chance Rihanna can deliver something that can be mentioned in that same breath. But she’ll be in rarefied air if she does.

Joe Reid is the senior writer at Primetimer and co-host of the This Had Oscar Buzz podcast. His work has appeared in Decider, NPR, HuffPost, The Atlantic, Slate, Polygon, Vanity Fair, Vulture, The A.V. Club and more.