15 Best K-Pop Girl Group Songs Of 2022


While I’m as much of a boy group stan as the next girl, it’s undeniable: 2022 was the year for girl groups. Even if you’re a casual K-pop listener you can tell this by your playlists — delivering bops year-round, both beloved veterans like TWICE  and rookies like LE SSERAFIM peaked in their success and creativity when releasing new songs for fans. Think viral choreographies, start-off-with-a-bang debuts and the comeback of beloved concepts when it comes to the best K-pop girl group songs of 2022.

And, as the end of the year nears and strings out speculations of which group will take the Song of the Year (SOTY) award home, the debate is more heated than ever on who will become the successor of notorious tracks like aespa’s “Next Level,” the winner of Korean Music Awards’ SOTY last year, and BTS’ quintessential chart-topper “Butter.” 

The stakes are high, but so is the possibility that a female group could take the prize home — even after boy groups made themselves comfortable in the spot. Boy groups have been the winners of Melon Music Award for Song of The Year for five consecutive years and have been honored with the MAMA Award for Song of the Year since 2019.

Having that in mind, here is a list of 15 contenders that ran 2022 and stood out among the K-pop tracks released this year.

“Attention” by NewJeans

Under the wing of HYBE — the same company that manages K-pop titans BTS — NewJeans entered the industry unannounced, and yet made a big noise with their debut song “Attention.” Part of their self-titled EP, the single tackles R&B and early 2000s groove and counts on minimal instrumentation to give the spotlight to the catchy vocals and verses. With a unique and playful aesthetic, the group was instantaneously popular and placed this single among this year’s most memorable K-pop moments.

“Tomboy” by (G)I-dle

Smash hit “TOMBOY” took the K-pop world by storm since it was released. Recorded for their first studio album I Never Die, the iconic “yeah, I’m a tomboy” fits into a fierce instrumental and electric guitar full of personality. There’s no need to say that the single was catchy — it stayed not only in my mind, but also at the top of the charts, debuting at No. 2 on Gaon’s digital charts.

“Nxde” by (G)I-dle

(G)I-dle completely upped their game in 2022, and that’s why they deserve two songs in the list. There, I said it. 

“Nxde,” unlike “Tomboy,” has its charms based on the single’s bold message and string instrumentals as it was dropped near the end of this year. The cabaret-inspired concept draws on different musical textures to  announce the edgy verses like “now I draw a luxury nude” and the Marilyn Monroe and Bansky-inspired visuals. 

“LOVE DIVE” by IVE

Considered “rookie of the year” by some, Starship Entertainment’s IVE is an undeniable fourth generation success. 

Ever since their debut with “Eleven,” the group has been conquering ears all over the world due to their energetic sound and charismatic performances. And with “Love Dive” — a strong contender for this year’s SOTY — the sextet expands on their atmospheric songs and delivers a true, well, dive into their talents. With different tempos and siren-like vocals, verses like Wonyoung’s “narcissistic, my god I love it” stick around even after the song is gone. 

“Shut Down” by BLACKPINK

While BLACKPINK’s long-awaited comeback brought hits like “Pink Venom” and the Born Pink album to match, “Shut Down” reestablished the group’s place as one of K-pop’s greatest after almost two years of hiatus. 

The powerful single brings groove and the slick announcement of a, well, shut down while highlighting BLACKPINK’s strongest traits: charged musical production and the sweet blend between traditional South Korean instruments and hip-hop influences.

“Feel My Rhythm” by Red Velvet

Leave it to Red Velvet to deliver a stunning performance of both energetic raps and delicate melodies. “Feel My Rhythm,” released as part of the mini-album The ReVe Festival 2022 — Feel My Rhythm, references their more carnaval-esque side, as it’s an energetic synth-pop song. 

Similar to their 2019 hit “Psycho,” the production is atmospheric and matched with a creative concept and dream-like visuals.

“RUN2U” by STAYC

After successes like “ASAP,” “SO BAD,” and “STEREOTYPE,” STAYC has proven that they don’t miss. “RUN2U” is no different: With a heavy synth chorus, this song reaffirms their recognizable pop sound and tells a story of good girls gone bad.

“Talk That Talk” by TWICE

Powerhouse TWICE couldn’t be left out of this year’s list, just like they haven’t been out of the charts for the past seven years. 

With hits in their discography like “FANCY,” “TT,” and “The Feels” (among countless others), the nine-member group released “Talk That Talk” this August. It’s described as a retro pop song that aims to throw it back to the early 2000s. With a Y2K-inspired MV, the track follows TWICE’s tendency to coin addictive lyrics and brings their star power as strong as ever.

“FEARLESS” by LE SSERAFIM

What you looking at indeed. This year, rookie girl group LE SSERAFIM gave netizens much to talk about, sweeping the charts with the single “FEARLESS,” which dropped in the first half of 2022.

Following HYBE’s brand of elaborate productions, the lead single is a funky dance pop track and was part of their highly-anticipated debut. Like their name — which is an anagram for “I’m Fearless,” by the way — this song hints at their strength and their message of (and I quote), “I don’t give a sh*t.”

“Hype Boy” by NewJeans

Yup, another one. 

Part of the same EP as “Attention,” NewJeans’ “Hype Boy” has also been met with praise from fans. Reimagining the 2000s sound, this single stays true to the group’s trademark of intoxicating melodies and a minimalistic yet atmospheric soundscape.

“Up!” by Kep1er

Recorded for Kep1er’s first comeback, “Up!” brings out a more sonically mature and laid-back side to the rookies we saw performing “WA DA DA” earlier this year. Combining punk and house music, the title song is energetic, groovy, and deliciously summery. Just as the verse goes, this track will cast a spell on you and ask you to follow them up, up, up. The volume’s going up, alright.

“Generation” by tripleS

Even though it’s part of a pre-debut project, tripleS’ single “Generation” is woven with nostalgia. From its addictive la la las to the groovy guitar and cheery trumpets, the track is reminiscent of the 2016 to 2018 K-pop scene — at least to older listeners like me — and is part of the mini-album Acid Angel from Asia, sung by a subunit of the 24-member group. 

Set to debut in 2023, the group is under the label MODHAUS and has been revealing its members for the past year, with two subunits announced so far.

“Step Back” by GOT the beat

Brought together as a part of the supergroup Got the Beat, familiar (and, well, insanely popular) voices like BoA, Taeyeon, Seulgi, Karina and more sing one of 2022’s most remarkable tracks: “Step Back.”

An experimentation with R&B and hip-hop, the single is built on instrumental variations and, as expected, unique vocals. Although it was met with mixed reviews from critics due to its controversial and stereotypical lyrics, the union of these iconic women in a subunit sure made an impact.

“Ring ma Bell (what a wonderful world)” by Billlie

With “GingaMingaYo (the strange world),” girl group Billlie sure was no stranger to K-pop listeners this year. But despite entering the Gaon chart in the first half of the year, the lead single was not the only time the rookie artists would sneak their way into playlists in 2022. Take “Ring ma Bell (what a wonderful world),” for example.

Even though it’s not their most popular release, this daring song relies on rock n’ roll to present a new side to the fourth generation group, one much bolder and angstier. It also shows how Billlie is still in the process of creating themselves.

“DICE” by NMIXX

One thing is for sure: NMIXX worked hard this year. Since their debut in February, the JYP girl group entered the charts with first single “O.O” and hit the mark with their later release “DICE,” known for its challenging choreography and unique jazz backdrop. Don’t let it fool you, though: Incorporating hip hop and trap into the classical instrument mix, the track is bold, and more musically complex than their energetic debut.



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Aiming For Enrike share live video for 11-minute Empty Airports Parts 1, 2 and 3


Norwegian ambient electro duo Aiming For Enrike have shared a new live video of the whole of their 11-minute Empty Airports Parts 1, 2 and 3, which you can watch below.

It’s the title tack of the duo’s upcoming album, also called Empty Airports, which will be released through Jansen Records on January 20 next year. The new video was recorded at Norway’s Artilleriverkstedet venue.

“Minimalism, which has always been an important part of our expression, is now cultivated to a much greater extent,” says guitarist Simen Følstad Nilsen. “When the rush to fulfil musical expectations is abounded, it gives the music more space to become more hypnotic and mesmerising than before.”

Musically Aiming For Enrike take influence variously from the likes of Nils Frahm, Burial, Jon Hopkins and Sunn O))). Empty Airports‘ title touches on the stopped nature of the COVID world, a sense of the post-apocalyptic, and is a tip of the hat to Brian Eno’s seminal Music for Airports.

Pre-order Empty Airports.





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Ned Rorem obituary | Classical music


If there were a classical composer of the modern era whose music embodied the quiet triumph of intuitive lyricism over systemic dogma, it was Ned Rorem, who has died aged 99. Rorem aligned himself with no compositional school, preferring to write the music that he “wanted to hear” rather than at someone’s else’s diktat, a deeply unfashionable stance to take in the postwar period. Rorem composed music that many others wanted to hear, or to perform, particularly singers.

The bulk of his output comprises more than 500 art songs, of which the 95-minute-long cycle, Evidence of Things Not Seen (1997), for four singers and piano, setting 36 texts by 24 different writers, is not only his magnum opus but a compendium of the expressivity Rorem sought for as a composer. The fourth song, The Rainbow, is a fine example of his innate gift for simple lyricism catching the essence of the text, in this case Wordsworth’s My Heart Leaps Up.

The cycle was hailed in New York magazine as “one of the musically richest, most exquisitely fashioned, most voice-friendly collections of songs … by any American composer.” Rorem’s genius for dramatic characterisation is evident in the 34th song, setting Mark Doty’s poem Faith.

Although stylistically Rorem followed his own star, he followed broadly in the line of older colleagues such as Leonard Bernstein, Aaron Copland and Virgil Thomson, all of whom Rorem met during one extraordinary and formative weekend in 1942, while he was still a student at the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia.

Rorem maintained lifelong friendships (and more) with all three men, becoming Thomson’s copyist in 1944 (being paid in lessons in orchestration), and a student of Copland at the Berkshire Music Center in Tanglewood (1946-47), while Bernstein premiered the best known and most appealing of his five symphonies, the Third (1957-58).

While the bulk of Rorem’s songs were settings for voice with piano, the range of poets he illuminated was breathtakingly wide, and included Edith Sitwell, Demetrios Capetanakis, Theodore Roethke, Shakespeare, Tennyson, Yeats, Whitman, and two contemporary Pulitzer prizewinners (for poetry): Wallace Stevens (a 1972 set accompanied by cello and piano) and James Schuyler.

His Five Poems of Walt Whitman (1957) juxtapose music of dark drama and exquisite, delicate beauty. He created a substantial body of choral music, too, from single part songs and motets to An American Oratorio for tenor, chorus and orchestra (1983), on a collection of texts by 10 19th-century American writers, including Longfellow, Poe, Twain, Whitman and Melville.

Rorem composed in a wide variety of chamber and orchestra genres, too: of his five symphonies, only the three for full orchestra are numbered, with the Sinfonia for winds and percussion (1957) and the String Symphony (1985), outside the canon; the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra’s recording of this last-named, conducted by Robert Shaw, won a Grammy award in 1989.

In 1976, Rorem was awarded the Pulitzer prize for music, for Air Music (1974), a vibrant orchestral concerto in the form of 10 etudes, part of a sequence of multi-movement instrumental works drawing inspiration from the natural world, which includes the harp suite Sky Music (1976).

Given Rorem’s sense for the dramatic and lyric in music, it was inevitable that he would be drawn to opera. He composed eight in all, of which the much revised Miss Julie (1965, with its final version first staged in Manhattan in 1994), and Our Town (2005), based on Thornton Wilder’s play, are the best known; the latter has entered the repertoire in the US. Rorem was also drawn – eventually – to that most theatrical of instrumental forms, the concerto, with its dramatic opposition of soloist(s) and orchestra. He composed four for piano (1948-91, the last for left hand only) and others for violin (1984), organ (1985), English horn (1992), flute, cello (both 2002), and percussion (Mallet Concerto, 2003).

Ned Rorem at a performance of his work at St Thomas Church, New York, in 2003. Photograph: Hiroyuki Ito/Getty Images

This last was written for Evelyn Glennie on his stipulation that no unpitched instruments were to be featured – “non-pitched percussion is superfluous, even in Beethoven”, he wrote at the time of the premiere, “I am morally against all cymbal crashes, and feel that snares and bongos are strictly ornamental … The four elements of music are melody, harmony, counterpoint and rhythm. Rhythm is the most dispensable.”

His knack for provocative utterances – his orchestral music had featured its fair share of cymbal smashes, after all – often with a self-deprecating aspect, were characteristics of the series of diaries that he published from 1966 to the turn of the millennium.

His candour about the people he knew, his homosexual relationships with many celebrated figures (Bernstein and Thomson, the composer Samuel Barber, Noël Coward, and many others), shocked literary and musical circles in the US, especially his outing of figures whose primary sexual orientation was not publicly known. Rorem was surprised at the reactions, remarking to the New York Times in 1987 that “it never occurred to me anything you say about someone can be the wrong thing to say”.

Rorem was born in Richmond, Indiana, the younger child of Clarence Rufus Rorem, a medical economist of Norwegian stock (the family name was an Americanised form of Rorhjem), and Gladys (nee Miller), a Quaker and peace activist. The family later moved to Chicago and it was here that Rorem’s musical education – and his love of French music – began, with introductions to the music of Debussy and Ravel.

He studied with the organist-composer Leo Sowerby at the American Conservatory in Chicago in 1938, before moving on first to Northwestern University (1940), the Curtis Institute two years later on a scholarship, and the Juilliard School in New York, from where he graduated with a master’s in 1948.

He travelled on to Paris and Morocco the following year, settling in the French capital in 1951 (thanks partly to a Fulbright scholarship) until 1957, when a Guggenheim fellowship facilitated his return to the US. Commissions and high-profile premieres continued unabated from 1959, from Bernstein and Eugene Ormandy, the choreographer Glen Tetley, and many others.

Rorem’s appointment as composer-in-residence at Buffalo University from 1959 to 1961 signalled a patchy engagement with academia. He was professor of composition, then composer-in-residence at Utah University (1965-67) and in 1980 began teaching at the Curtis Institute, where he had been a student four decades before.

In the same year, he became composer-in-residence at the Santa Fe festival, returning several times over the next 10 years. He also appeared as guest lecturer at many institutions, including the University of Miami in 1978, where he met and gave encouragement to the then undergraduate Kenneth Fuchs, who recalled: “He was extremely complimentary [about some settings of William Blake] and encouraged me to move to New York City to pursue my dream of studying composition at the Juilliard School with several of the great American symphonists and avant-gardists who comprised the composition facility at the time”. Fuchs ended up living a block away from Rorem, the start of a friendship that continued until Rorem’s death.

Rorem’s life partner from the late 1960s onwards was the organist James Holmes, who died in 1999. Rorem outlived all of his immediate family.

Ned Rorem, composer and diarist, born 23 October 1923; died 18 November 2022



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Music store to close location of 51 years because of downtown progress


Nov. 20—A music business that has been a fixture in Decatur for half of a century while selling thousands of youngsters their first instruments has become a victim of downtown progress that made the store’s location too valuable for it to afford anymore.

Emiron Music will close its operations on the corner of Second Avenue Northeast and East Moulton Street, and the business’s owners are undecided whether they will try to reopen at another location. Ron Clay, who owns the store with his wife, Emily, said he hasn’t discussed with his building’s new owner a date for vacating the space.

Originally the home of Sandlin Hardware, the 107-year-old building at 101 Second Ave. N.E. has been the home of Emiron and its predecessor music and instrument store for 51 years.

Jackson Parker, associate broker of Parker Real Estate, said River City Development, which includes his father, Jeff Parker, purchased the building from Ottis and Magen Sparks. H.M. Nowlin is the other member of River City Development, according to the Alabama Secretary of State’s Office. The warranty deed showed the purchase was made in September for $600,000. Jeff Parker is Parker Real Estate’s broker.

Jackson Parker said the Emiron owners “are paying less on their lease than market value.” The building built in 1915 also needs extensive renovations, he said.

With the expectation of higher rent for the space, neither Emiron nor River City Development pursued renewing the lease, and signs seeking a new tenant went up last week.

An Anniston native, Ron Clay has been working in the building since 1971 when Forbes Piano Co. owned its store. He was 25 at the time and moved from the Anniston store to Decatur in November of that year to manage the new Forbes store. He met his wife, Emily, a Decatur native, after the move.

Forbes began to downsize in 1996, so Ron Clay and his wife purchased the Decatur store while the manager of the Florence store bought that business.

Clay, 76, acknowledged he has mixed feelings about the change. He said the future of the business “is kind of up in the air. I like the business and my mom always said don’t stop doing something you like. I’m at the point where I could accept retirement, but I want to explore and see if there’s somewhere else we could go.”

At roughly 10,000 square feet per floor, Clay said the three-story building is too big for his business since they only use the main floor. His business sells musical instruments and accessories and music books and provides private lessons.

“With a basement and two floors, it might be a better fit for someone else,” Clay said.

Jackson Parker said the basement ceiling isn’t high enough to use for a business. — Desirable location

Clay said he also understands that this corner of Second Avenue and Moulton Street is commercially attractive, and that’s a big change from some years in the past. He said his store can’t afford the increased rent that would come with a renovated building.

“This used to be a ghost town,” Clay said. “There was a time when, if someone pulled up out front, we knew they were coming to our store. Now they could be going to Mellow Mushroom, Moe’s and the Princess (Theatre Center for the Performing Arts),” Clay said.

The area will become even busier. In the block south of Emiron’s location, a new Fairfield Inn by Marriott, city parking deck and Alabama Center for the Arts dormitory are under construction.

Dede Quarry, president of the Downtown Decatur Merchant and Business Association, said the Emiron location “is highly visible” to potential customers. It’s also a big space that’s attractive to potential business owners.”

Crystal Brown, president and chief executive officer of the Decatur-Morgan County Chamber of Commerce, said she understands upgrades to downtown are changing the area’s dynamics.

“I hate it so bad that Emiron is having to move,” Brown said. “It’s across from the new hotel and parking deck that are under construction. I haven’t spoken to him, but I’m sure that probably plays a lot into what the new owner is contemplating.”

Quarry said the location is in such a visible position that the market lease amount probably falls in a range between $3,500 and $5,000 a month.

“I know of a couple properties on Second Avenue that Gateway (Commercial Brokerage) redid and their properties are $3,000 month,” Quarry said.

Brown said Quarry is accurate on her estimate. She said downtown storefront leases vary widely depending on the age and size of the building, amenities and whether the building was recently renovated.

“There’s an opportunity for the right concept with the hotel right there,” Brown said. “People naturally come downtown, whether they’re going to the Cook Museum (of Natural Science) or the Princess. The corporate traveler will want to stay in the hotel and be in the middle of everything that’s going on in downtown.”

City Director of Development Dane Shaw said it may seem more difficult for longtime businesses to afford leases in downtown because the area is becoming increasingly popular, but there are still plenty of locations available that small, locally owned businesses can afford.

“Second Avenue is a pretty long street,” Shaw said. “There’s still room on Bank Street and the other streets in the downtown area. We want local stores to thrive.”

Brown said she plans to call Clay and see if she can help the city’s only music store find a new location. For example, she said OSCO Interiors closed its Grant Street store this month, making that building available.

“There are a few smaller places I know might be a good fit for them,” Brown said.

Store’s tradition rich

The Emiron/Forbes music store is well known in Decatur because it’s a place where many of the city’s residents bought their first instrument, learned to play and purchased sheet music. Forbes had been in Decatur since the 1930s.

Over the years Emiron got regular visits from Decatur natives Johnny Sandlin Jr. and Johnny D. Wyker III. Sandlin was a recording engineer and record producer who was best known for producing albums by groups such as the Allman Brothers Band and Widespread Panic. Wyker was a musician who once appeared on Dick Clark’s “American Bandstand.”

Elvis Presley’s best friend, Charlie Hodge, would stop by and play guitar at the store when stopping by his hometown of Decatur to see family and friends, Clay said.

Clay said those music industry members looked forward to seeing his wife and employees Jerry Miller and Chester Cox. Both men continue to work at the store.

However, a highlight was always the return of former high school band members who would stop by on their breaks from college.

“They loved my wife and want to give her a hug,” Clay said.

Quarry said her son plays in the Austin High School band and he got his trombone from Emiron.

“Every time he needs a new band book, I end up calling Emiron at the last minute and they’re able to get it for me,” Quarry said.

Emiron’s music business has changed over the years. The store still sells band instruments, but guitars, keyboards, amps and music lessons are now its main business.

Decatur High band director Blake Ferguson said most of his band members don’t use Emiron to purchase their instruments. Their instruments are now serviced by Madison Band and Gadsden Music Co.’s location in Huntsville, he said.

“Emiron is good for something that might be needed quickly,” Ferguson said. “They sell quality instruments, but they don’t service them like they once did.”

Ferguson said Emiron has better quality instruments than those that students purchase online.

“The student ends up having all kind of problems (from an online purchase),” Ferguson said.

Clay said online sales have hurt his music business just as they’ve hurt other locally owned retail businesses.

While students don’t buy band instruments from Emiron as much anymore, Ferguson said his band members are familiar with the store. Having a music store like Emiron in Decatur is good for music in the city because it creates an interest for the young student in music, he said.

“The young musicians can look around and put their hands on the instruments or hear the older people play guitar,” Ferguson said.

— bayne.hughes@decaturdaily.com or 256-340-2432. Twitter @DD_BayneHughes.



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10 Years Ago, Miranda Lambert Wanted Her Own Perfume; Now She Has 2


Country music star Miranda Lambert has notched numerous achievements over the past two decades. From releasing nine studio albums to earning more ACM Awards than any other artist, she has plenty to be proud of. However, one accomplishment Lambert’s fans might know about is her fragrance line with her brand, Idyllwind. Find out more about Miranda Lambert’s perfumes and why the singer wanted to launch a fragrance. 

Miranda Lambert wanted a perfume line for years

Miranda Lambert attends the 53rd Academy of Country Music Awards in Las Vegas | Jeff Kravitz/ACMA2018/FilmMagic for ACM

After placing third on the USA Network competition show Nashville Star in 2003, Miranda Lambert signed with Epic Records. Shortly after, her single “Me and Charlie Talking” became a hit upon its summer 2004 release. Lambert quickly followed the single with her first major-label debut, Kerosene

After nearly a decade of touring the globe and rising to the top of the charts, Lambert revealed she still had more goals on her bucket list. One was to release her own perfume. When Lambert spoke with Taste of Country in 2011, Taylor Swift, Tim McGraw, and Faith Hill had recently released fragrances. After seeing her fellow country stars dropping perfume lines, Lambert’s desire to have a fragrance grew. 

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When Taste of Country asked Lambert what her perfume would smell like, she said, “I’m not sure — probably not too sweet.” She revealed her favorite scents at the time were Dolce & Gabbana Light Blue and Michael Kors.

A decade after revealing her dreams, Miranda Lambert finally released her first perfume.

Miranda Lambert now has 2 fragrances 

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The country star launched her clothing and boot company, Idyllwind, in September 2018. Three years later, Miranda Lambert realized her dreams when she debuted her fragrance Idyllwind Eau de Parfum in October 2021. 

And last month, the “Geraldene” singer released her second fragrance through Idyllwind. It’s called Velvet Rodeo Eau de Parfum, inspired by her recent hit single “Actin’ Up,” off her ninth studio album, Palomino. In the song, Lambert sings, “I want a sunset ride, a velvet rodeo, a Colorado high, a California glow. I want to see the desert from a painted palomino. Senorita need to have a little fun. I’m actin’ up.”

So, what do Miranda Lambert’s perfumes smell like? Idyllwind Eau de Parfum features notes of Georgia’s sweet peach blossoms, Southern magnolias, golden sandalwood, citrus, and jasmine petals. And Velvet Rodeo Eau de Parfum has notes of “rich jasmine, spicy violet iris, and vanilla suede.” Fans can find the two scents at Boot Barn stores and Idyllwild.com, Country Now reports. 

Idyllwind reflects the country star’s passion for fashion

In addition to her two perfumes with Idyllwind, Miranda Lambert has created a successful fashion line. The music star partnered with Boot Barn in 2018 to launch Idyllwind, selling apparel, footwear, and accessories. 

Asked what made her want to launch Idyllwind, Lambert told Footwear News: “I always loved the way clothes can express the women underneath — how it makes them feel and move. I wanted to create a brand of products that made women feel badass while doing ordinary or extraordinary things.” 

Lambert describes her collection as “a vintage vibe with a fashion edge. We wanted to build something comfortable with great quality — clothes and boots you can wear on the road, hanging out, and a few showstoppers for going out too.”

Now that Miranda Lambert has released two perfumes in consecutive years, fans will have to stay tuned to find out if the singer three-peats with a third scent in October 2023. 

RELATED: Miranda Lambert’s Fall Fashion Is Literal Fire



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NTR30: Anirudh Ravichander teams up with Jr NTR; Begins music discussion with Koratala Siva


Post the success of SS Rajamouli’s period action drama RRR, Jr NTR will soon commence work for director Koratala Siva’s NTR30. Now as the pre-production work for the film is underway in full swing, the makers have roped in music composer Anirudh Ravichander to render the tunes for the untitled drama. The music director has even commenced discussions with the filmmaker Koratala Siva for the same. Sharing a sneak peek of one of the discussions, the makers wrote on Twitter, “The music of #NTR30 begins. Director #KoratalaSiva and anirudh in discussion to bring out a blockbuster album.”

They further dropped a picture of filmmaker Koratala Siva and Anirudh discussing the release of the blockbuster album. While Rathnavelu is the head of the cinematography department of the movie, Sabu Cyril is the Production Designer. Additionally, Sreekar Prasad is responsible for the film’s editing. Billed as an action entertainer, NTR30 is being presented by Nandamuri Kalyanram’s banner NTR Arts and produced by Hari Krishna K and Mikkilineni Sudhakar.

Check out the picture below:

During an exclusive interview with Pinkvilla, the Acharya actor was quoted saying about the project, “It is high on an emotional note and very powerful script…very strong character set in a very very new, never seen backdrop.” For the unaware, the actor and director duo have earlier worked together in the 2016 action entertainer, Janatha Garage.

NTR31

After finishing work on NTR30, Jr NTR will start shooting for KGF director Prashanth Neel’s film, temporarily named NTR31. The first look poster of the film features the RRR actor in an intense avatar. Sharing the first look on Twitter, director Prashanth Neel Tweeted, “The only soil that is worth remembering is the one soaked in blood! His soil…. His reign…. But definitely not his blood….(sic)” Bankrolled by Jr NTR himself in association with Mythri Movie Makers, the movie marks the first association of the actor with the filmmaker.

Also Read: 5 years of SS Rajamouli, Jr NTR, Ram Charan’s iconic pic: Check out when the RRR trio posed together



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The music industry is going green. Will it make a difference?


The music industry makes strong efforts to reduce its carbon footprint, yet the industry’s greenhouse gas emissions have increased with the transition from CDs to streaming, according to music researcher Kyle Devine at the University of Oslo, Norway.

By Mari Lilleslåtten

Records made from sugar and climate certificates are just some of the music industry’s efforts to improve on sustainability. “They mean well, but have limited opportunities to create change,” says music researcher at UiO.

If you go to a music festival in 2022, there is a good chance that you will be served organic food, that there are parking facilities for bicycles, or that the artists have signed an agreement to travel in a climate-friendly manner.

Disposable beer glasses are a thing of the past, and artists can give some of their profits from record sales to good climate causes. It is all part of a greater climate accounting effort.

“There is widespread willingness to create climate-friendly solutions in the music industry,” says Kyle Devine, Professor of Musicology at the University of Oslo.

In 2019, Devine published his book Decomposed: The Political Ecology of Music, where he discusses the environmental impact of music—especially the recording industry. He experienced strong interest from music production communities and the international media, and the book led to offers of advisory positions in key green initiatives. But it also led him to start asking new questions about music and climate.

“The music industry is one industry among many, where climate is now high on the agenda. It can be seen as a microcosm for society at large. Therefore, what goes on there is also relevant to other fields.”

A greener alternative to vinyl records

One of the points Devine made in his book was that the music industry’s greenhouse gas emissions have increased with the transition from CDs to streaming. In many interviews about the research, he has been asked whether that means people can go ahead and buy vinyl records and CDs with a good climate conscience.

“It is a question of scale. For example, if you buy a vinyl record and listen to it over and over again, it may have a lower footprint than if you stream music non-stop,” he says.

“No matter how you listen to music, it will always have a climate footprint – but the format is an important factor in determining the extent of it.”

Devine began to toy with the idea of a more sustainable alternative to traditional vinyl. Many people had already explored this idea, and the researcher came into contact with a British company called Evolution Music.

“Over the past several years, Evolution Music has developed an LP made of bioplastics, from renewable raw materials.”

In September, they released their first sustainable twelve-inch single, featuring the A-side song ‘Future if Future’ by none other than R.E.M. frontman Michael Stipe. 500 copies of the single were made, all of which were quickly snapped up by fans.

It doesn’t solve all problems

Devine was invited to sit on an advisory board for Evolution Music. This meant he could contribute his professional views and collect data for his ongoing research.

“The research ethics aspects involved in the role of both advisor and researcher are discussed in the book I am working on,” he emphasises.

The bioplastic in the music records is made of sugar. Currently, it delivers 90-95 percent of the quality of a regular vinyl record, but the goal is a record of equally good quality.

“The advantage is that it is more environmentally friendly than plastic, which is made from oil. It will also meet an urgent need in the music industry.”

There are currently long queues to get vinyl records pressed. The combination of big stars like Taylor Swift, Dua Lipa and Beyoncé releasing their records on vinyl, and the ongoing vinyl shortage, means that the bioplastic alternative is emerging as a very attractive option for the industry.

However, that doesn’t mean that Devine thinks a greener LP will solve all problems.

“Sugar also has a problematic history, which I know the company is fully aware of. If this were to be scaled up, they might have to think about raw material production in a different way.”

Fundraising for climate projects

Whereas greener products provide music lovers with an alternative when buying music, foundations and campaigns are a way to funnel some of the revenue back to the environment.

“One example is Earth/Percent. They encourage musicians and music organisations to give them a percentage of their income,” Devine says.

Earth/Percent was founded by Brian Eno, the 74-year-old musician who, after his time in Roxy Music, became best known as a pioneer of ambient music.

“The idea is that the money will go to actors who work specifically to stop climate change. Among other things, they have collaborated with Music Declares Emergency, which focuses on political influence through artists and music organisations under the slogan ‘no music on a dead planet’.”

Earth/Percent has also invited the professor to sit on their scientific advisory board, and they collaborate with the aforementioned Evolution Music. There are a number of similar initiatives. In the UK, a unified music industry started Julie’s Bicycle, which receives donations from companies such as Universal Music and Warner Music Group.

Climate certificates and labelling green alternatives

Norway’s Øyafestivalen has previously been honoured with awards such as the International Greener Festival Award and AGF Circular Festival Award. Itis one of several festivals that puts great effort into climate labelling themselves.

They are not alone in doing this.

“Many take courses and certificates to increase knowledge about carbon footprints, and to show the outside world that their festival or concert stage has climate consciousness.”

As part of his fieldwork, Devine has participated in such courses through Climate EQ in the UK.

“You learn about carbon footprints, perhaps increase your awareness – and not least get a certificate for completing the course.”

Anthems of the Anthropocene

Kyle Devine has followed the music industry for many years, and sees that new and industry-specific ways of addressing the climate crisis emerged after the year 2000. Although there is a high level of awareness, he believes it is still unclear what music has to do with climate change.

“You can look at the technical, the administrative or the cultural side of things. Measures like more sustainable products, lower emissions in connection with concerts and festivals, and climate certificates, belong to the technical and administrative side of things.”

On the cultural side, Devine takes a closer look at how it is possible to think about the influence of music on environmental thought and action.

“This is a tendency that goes back at least to the 1970s. One might think that music can raise awareness about climate change. That if the music says something that changes one listener, that one listener can change the world.”

An example of this tendency is the many playlists that music websites or individuals create. The newspaper the Guardian, for example, has Joni Mitchell’s Big Yellow Taxi at the top of its list of the best songs about climate change (guardian.co.uk), while ANOHNI and Weather Station are among the artists listed by Pitchfork when compiling music that tackles the climate crisis (spotify.com).

“Although such lists certainly have a function, this understanding is very centred on the individual. Music as such will have a limited impact on the complex that constitutes the climate issue,” Devine emphasises.

‘Greenwashing’ is too simple a criticism

When commercial actors wear green colours or promote sustainable solutions, accusations of greenwashing are never far away.

“Such accusations are justified when large companies deliberately use the term sustainability to trick us into buying something that strictly speaking is not climate friendly,” says Devine.

But when someone develops alternative solutions, whether it be plant-based records, edible festival serving plates, or greener concert venues, the professor thinks the picture is more complicated.

“It is too easy to point a finger at something that doesn’t solve all the world’s problems and call it greenwashing. There may be good intentions behind it, and many people are doing the best they can.”

The researcher emphasises that the market, as it functions today, lays down a framework that leaves individual actors with little room to manoeuvre.

“Placing demands on an organiser or an artist to do things in a way that won’t allow them to make a living is too much to ask,” he says.

Climate is not the culprit in the climate crisis

In working on his analyses of the music industry’s climate adaptation, Kyle Devine still feels he has to carefully evaluate such efforts. In the book he is currently working on, Recomposed: Music Climate Crisis Change, the goal is to provide constructive criticism.

“If fighting the climate crisis is the answer, then we may need to look at the question the industry has asked itself in the first place.”

He suggests that the actors who fight against music’s carbon footprint should also focus on the structures that have caused the climate crisis.

“The basic foundations for the crisis can be found in the economic arrangement, i.e. capitalism, and the social architecture, i.e. class society. If we are to work purposefully against the climate crisis, these are the arenas where changes must also take place,” Devine concludes.



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Newly unearthed footage of John Farnham immortalises classic era of Australian pop TV


A long-lost clip of John Farnham appearing on Happening ’72 – one of the last shows from Australia’s first wave of pop music television – has been restored by the National Film and Sound Archive (NFSA), immortalising what had long been seen as a forgotten moment in Australian music history.

The black-and-white footage was made viewable by the NFSA earlier this week, almost exactly 50 years after it aired on the 0-10 Network (now known as Channel 10) on November 11, 1972. Happening ran for three seasons between 1970 and 1972 – each titled for its corresponding year – and was consistently successful, even winning a Logie (in the category ‘For Their Contribution To The Australian Teenager On TV’) in 1971. 

The show was cancelled in 1972 due to mounting pressure from industry bodies – namely, the Musicians’ Union and Actors’ Equity – who called for a ban on artists miming their performances during TV appearances. Bands rarely performed live in the early years of pop TV (due in large part to cost), and instead singers would lip-sync while their records were dubbed over the footage; this is indeed the case with Farnham’s appearance on Happening ’72.

The newly unearthed clip comes from the very end of the show’s very last episode, where Farnham mimes his cover of the Motown classic ‘For Once In My Life’ (pulled from his 1971 album ‘Johnny’). During the segment, a pair of the show’s production crew dance through the shot with a coffin labelled ‘HAPPENED 72’.  

The footage was submitted by singer Jeff Phillips, who alongside a young Molly Meldrum, appeared frequently as a host on Happening. Phillips himself also “performed” for the final episode of Happening ’72, miming to his song ‘Wrong Or Right’. The footage (which spans the entire episode) was recovered from a two-inch reel that Phillips had stored in his Melbourne home.

It’s explained the reel had been run down by decades of wear from travel and storage, and was thought to be damaged by mould. Phillips had long since forgotten what was on the reel, but took it to Simon Smith – the Melbourne-based curator of the NFSA – to be recovered nonetheless. Smith, with the aide of his team of technicians, was able to have the mould cleaned off the tape, and the footage was almost entirely unscathed. 

Restored and scanned digitally, it marks the first time that footage from Happening has ever been viewed in high-definition (however it should be noted that the NFSA’s online stream of it maxes out at 540p). The original reel is now being held at the NFSA’s headquarters in Canberra.

Speaking to ABC News, Phillips said he was “thrilled” to see the footage restored: “We were all a real team, artists, bands, everyone, we were all in the same business and we all wanted to go somewhere.”

“It’s a really important find because there’s not a huge amount of pop music television from the early ‘70s,” Smith added. “To find a little bit of pop gold from the end of this influential show is fantastic.”

Over the years, other footage from Happening has been made available to view online thanks to the efforts of home archivists. The YouTube channels nzoz1971 and nzoz1972, for example, have contributed at least six clips from the series (although some have been wiped out due to copyright claims).

Meanwhile, Farnham is recovering from the surgery he underwent earlier this year to remove a cancerous growth from his mouth. The last update came in October, when his sons said in an interview that Farnham is in good spirits and keeping stable. 





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Musical Prayers | CRB



Religious music has existed almost as long as the history of mankind. In every era, from every corner of the world, pieces celebrating and honoring Gods and Goddesses have been found. They are countless.

It’s a much smaller pool of pieces when we narrow the search to “Prayers” that weren’t based on a previously existing spoken prayer, or a psalm or other words from a sacred text. With an eye toward the Thanksgiving holiday, here are a few of my favorite musical prayers created by composers.

In my mother’s line-up of nightly lullabies was Engelbert Humperdinck’s “Evening Prayer” (Abendsegen) from his 1892 children’s opera Hansel and Gretel, based on the Grimm’s fairy tale. She sang in English, instead of the original German, so we could understand there were 14 angels who would watch over and protect me and my siblings, as we slept.

When at night I go to sleep,
Fourteen angels watch do keep,
Two my head are guarding,
Two my feet are guiding;
Two upon my right hand,
Two upon my left hand.
Two who warmly cover,
Two who o’er me hover,
Two to whom ’tis given
To guide my steps to heaven.

Here’s a beautiful version from the Metropolitan Opera, featuring soprano Aleksandra Kurzak as Gretel and mezzo-soprano Kate Lindsey as Hansel, the siblings lost in the woods.

Gounod’s opera Faust features a prayer sung by the soldier Valentin as he prepares to go off to war. Valentin asks God to protect his beloved sister Marguerite. The late, magnificent baritone Dmitri Hvorostovsky here makes his prayer-plea from the stage of the Royal Opera in London.

There are actually other prayer moments in Faust, but the prayer of the rough soldier got to my heart the very first time I saw the opera.

Another of my favorite musical prayers is from my favorite of Beethoven’s symphonies, his Sixth, the “Pastoral.” Known as a great lover of the outdoors, but not a fan of nicknames and subtitles for his music, it was significant that he gave the five movements subtitles that honored nature, including the final movement, “Shepherd’s Song: Cheerful and Thankful Feelings After the Storm.” He wants you to imagine the shepherd, grateful that his flock was unharmed by the storm that passed in the previous movement. Here’s Paavo Järvi conducting the German Chamber Philharmonic, Bremen.

Beethoven wrote a Latin phrase over the notes for this final movement: Gratias agimus tibi – We give Thee thanks.

Another piece by Beethoven comes to mind when I think of prayer. In 1835 Beethoven began writing his String Quartet No. 15 in A Minor, Op. 132. It was shortly after that he suffered from a stomach ailment from which he thought he was going to die. When he recovered, he finished writing the piece with an additional movement. Again, it’s significant that he gave a title to the third movement, “Heiliger Dankgesang eines Genesenen an die Gottheit, in der Lydischen Tonart,” or “Song of Thanksgiving to the Deity from a convalescent, in the Lydian mode.” It was important to him to express a prayer of thanks to God for giving him another chance at life. Here is the Praetorious Quartett.

To me, the third movement is both a voice of gratefulness and grace. Beethoven has allowed us to peer into his heart and overhear his prayer of thanks.

Happy Thanksgiving!

CODA:  One of the poems that I had to memorize (and then recite in a high school English class), was e.e. cummings’s “i thank You God for most this amazing.” I have always tried to live a life of gratitude, and this poem has come up in my mind more times than I could count. I found a recording of the poet himself reading his poem, and then Eric Whitacre’s hymn using that poem of thanksgiving for the lyrics.

e.e. cummings:

Eric Whitacre and the Eric Whitacre singers:





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Hear commercial-free Country music all weekend on the free Audacy app







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Good news, Audacy Country fans! We’ve got all your favorite music coming to you, commercial-free, via the Audacy app this weekend.

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From Maren Morris to Luke Combs, Morgan Wallen and Kelsea Ballerini — you can hear all the music you love alongside your favorite Audacy Country hosts, ad-free, from November 18 to November 20.

Elevate your weekend by tuning into one of the 17 participating Audacy Country stations via the free Audacy app between 5PM local time on November 18 and 11:50PM on November 20 to catch the ad-free wave!

Not only will the playlist be fueled by the biggest Country songs from ’90s stars, CMA Award winners and GRAMMY nominees, but you’ll also be joined by your favorite Audacy Country hosts who will deliver the hits one after another without wasting any time.

Participating stations include US101, 94.1 The Wolf, US99, WBEE, 100.7 The Wolf, 103.7 KSON, WYCD, 107.7 & 104.7 The Wolf, 99.5 The Wolf, 100.3 The Bull, Froggy 101, Y108, KISS Country, BIG 98.5 and WHLL 98.1.

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