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Sabrina Claudio wants to evolve. She's starting by letting people in
Sabrina Claudio wants to evolve. She's starting by letting people in

Los Angeles Times

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Los Angeles Times

Sabrina Claudio wants to evolve. She's starting by letting people in

Sabrina Claudio is not the same person she was a year ago — much less eight years ago when she first introduced herself with a shimmering neo-soul EP, titled 'Confidently Lost.' Now, having amassed millions of fans with sultry, golden-hour slow jams and trips down melancholy lane, she's presenting her most earnest songwriting yet in her newest album, 'Fall In Love With Her,' released June 9 on Atlantic Records. 'I think in the past couple years, people in my life that I love have helped me get out of my shell and shown me how important vulnerability is,' she says. 'Now I'm like, you know what? I'm gonna tell y'all everything, how about that?' For her fifth studio LP, Claudio steered her R&B sound into a less-traveled, alternative direction that showcases her deft pen and ethereal vocals in a novel guise. Her longtime producer, Ajay 'Stint' Bhattacharyya, cited shoegaze bands like Cocteau Twins and Slowdive as influences that came up during recording sessions. For Claudio, wading into those uncharted waters became part of a larger shift in her career. Until recently, the Cuban and Puerto Rican singer-songwriter — who in 2023, earned a Grammy Award for Best Traditional R&B Performance as a songwriter on Beyoncé's slick 'Renaissance' cut, 'Plastic Off the Sofa' — preferred to toil in privacy, channeling her expression into songwriting more than social media. But this year, she's inviting the outside world to experience her personality with a new interview series on YouTube titled 'Fall In Love With…' To hear her tell it, she's eager for the effort to help fans and listeners see the person she is behind the music. 'I hope that people can listen to [the album] knowing that, yes, [I'm singing about what] I experienced, but I just pray that they are able to interpret it and relate it to their own life however they possibly can,' she says. Come July, she'll embark on a U.S. tour with rappers Russ and Big Sean; soon after, she'll make her acting debut in a short film directed by filmmaker and best friend Jazmin Garcia-Larracuente, who was inspired by early drafts of songs off 'Fall In Love With Her' to write a script. 'I'm very proud of myself,' Claudio says. 'I think I killed it, and I'm excited for everybody to see it.' In her latest interview with the Times, she speaks of the intimacy required in songwriting with others, the possibility of an all-Spanish EP and her approach to storytelling. This interview has been edited and condensed for length and clarity. After releasing your last album, 2022's 'Based On A Feeling,' you focused on writing for other artists. Is that usually how it goes between albums for you?Typically [after] I finish an album, I always go through the phase [when] I need to take a break because creatively I'm worn out. I wouldn't do anything, which actually only emphasized the lack of motivation to continue and make more music. But this time around, I wanted to remain creative, and the best way to do that was to get in rooms with other creatives to help them get into their world, rather than always having to focus on mine. I thought it was going to be difficult for me, because I'm not a natural collaborator. Before I was very anti-having songwriters in my room. It was a whole ego thing for me … but I loved it so much that I ended up doing it for much longer than I was anticipating. I find so much inspiration being in rooms with artists for other projects. On this album you worked on some of the tracks with a songwriter, Nasri Atweh. I'm curious if there was hesitation to share your own process with someone else?There was a time in my life when I [felt] obligated to have writers in my room. My guard was up. It's not because I don't think that these songwriters were amazing, because they were. Some of my favorite songs I wrote with another person, like 'Problem With You' off [my album] 'Truth Is.' But for some reason, my brain would say if I didn't do it 100 percent, then it's not mine. And that's so not the reality of making art. With Nasri, he's my manager's brother. I met Nasri 10 years ago. I'm glad that it happened when it did. Being the songwriter in the room for other people put things into perspective, because I realized how important collaboration was. Nasri was able to eject things from me that I didn't even know existed. I'm on a different wavelength now. Working with a songwriter is like an intimate therapy session.I'm an extremely private person. I think the past couple years, people in my life have helped me to get out of my shell and have shown me how important vulnerability is. I didn't even want to expose myself, which is why I tend to write from experiences that I technically didn't experience, or from conversations with others, or movies. It was a protective layer. But now I'm like, you know what? I'm gonna tell y'all everything, how about that? [laughs] And it's worked out! You've said that when it comes to songwriting, you usually let yourself be led by the music, then the lyrics. Can you tell me more about 'One Word' and how that track came to be? It's one of the most powerful songs on the album.I wrote that during a heartbreak. I wanted to talk about an experience I had with a person I felt very deeply for, [who] essentially didn't fight for me to stay. But it was the biggest act of love that he could have done for me. I worked with my producer Stint, [who] I work with all the time, and Heavy Mellow. He was heavy on this project, no pun intended. I was venting,; I was really heartbroken. I was finding comfort in these men that I've known and trying to get their perspective on things. Another song is 'Worse Than Me,' which sounds completely different from the rest of the tracks. It's a little more assertive and seductive, with trip-hop-inspired drums. How did that come to be?Before I discovered the new sound [of] the album, I still was gravitating towards my typical R&B, neo-soul-type vibes. I was just trying to get back in the groove of Sabrina Claudio, quote-unquote, because I was just coming out of writing for everybody else. I was trying to tap back into my own world. And I think I needed one sassy song. [laughs] That's kind of what I'm known for: the sass, the crying, or the sexy. And I just felt like if I didn't have the sexy, I at least needed to have the sassy. This is the first time you've really worked with a more alternative sound — did you find yourself accessing parts of yourself that the traditional R&B sound didn't?Oh, absolutely! I love working with Stint and all of my producers because they have such a wide palette when it comes to music. Genres I never grew up listening to — all these sounds are new. It pulls different things out of me that I wouldn't be able to get if it was my traditional R&B sound. And naturally, I'm always going to do that because that's just how I am, but it was interesting to hear where my R&B and soul brain goes over these more alternative rock/indie vibes. For example, 'Detoxing' — I wrote that song with Nasri, but we didn't have the outro. So I took it to Stint, and he pulled up all these references of bands [like Radiohead], and he was teaching me so much. And then he [said], 'You know what, at the end I want to do something really big and really rock. I want to break it down. But then I want people to be shocked. I want you to belt, and I want you to say something, and I want you to purge, and I want you to take the concept of the song and really just yell it like you're just trying to get rid of something.' I listened back, and I'm even shocked at some of the things that I was able to tap into. I don't belt! [laughs] I didn't even know I could do that! You have the song 'Mi Luz' on the album, which is the first time you've included a Spanish song in an LP. What made you feel this was the right time to finally do that?First of all, I don't understand why I've never added a Spanish record to any of my albums. I listen to a lot of Spanish music in my daily life, a lot of reggaetón. You'd be surprised, my music is so calm and emotional … and then I'm twerking in my car listening to reggaetón. [laughs] So I felt in the sense of wanting to evolve, I feel now's the time. And the process is really interesting, because my brain doesn't actually think in Spanish, especially when it comes to songwriting. Any Spanish record [of mine] you've heard, I've done with Alejandra Alberti, who is also Cuban. She's from Miami, she's a Virgo, so we connected on all those things. I tell her what I want to say, and she just computes it in her brain and she translates it in a way that has taught me. 'Mi Luz' [was] the first time I contributed lyrically in Spanish. And it was always something that I was afraid of doing, because I'm always afraid of sounding dumb. I don't know why, but I have that fear. But I felt very comfortable, very safe with Ale. Would you release an EP of Spanish tracks?I think I would! If I have Ale, I think we could probably knock out an EP very quickly. I'd be down. You said in your recent Genius video that you really want reciprocal love because there's only so much self-love you can give yourself. Is there any difference in your work depending on how your personal life is going, or do you manage to block out the noise?I get very consumed by whatever I'm most passionate about in the moment. When I'm talking to somebody or I'm dating somebody, I do have the tendency to revolve my world around whatever we're building. So when I'm dealing with that, I do find that I put my career second. Because I crave love very badly — which is toxic for me — I'm willing to nurture. I'm pretty confident in my career. It's the one thing I have control over. Everything's amazing, and I get to make music whenever I want. But I don't necessarily have control over the relationship that I'm trying to build, so I get very consumed and I put that first. But I'm hoping that if I get into something else that's much healthier and not destroying our mental health, then I can do both at the same time! I just have to find that person first. You've acknowledged that you're a private artist, but I really like what I've seen so far from your new interview series, 'Fall In Love With…' Can you tell me how the idea of doing that came about?I have to say I was anti-miniseries, but my manager, Alyce, told me in the beginning stages of [making] this album, 'The music, as vulnerable as it is — nobody's going to relate to it or feel the depth of it if they don't know who you are as a human.' She said, 'Nobody knows that you're funny; nobody knows that you're outgoing. You're not this mysterious person that you think you are, and you need to show people that.' So at first, it annoyed me, because I was like, ugh, not me having to do things online. [laughs] I think doing this type of content was uncomfortable for me. I said, 'If you guys want me to do this, I don't want to be doing 20 episodes. I want four episodes, and I want it to be with people I know and I love and I will be comfortable with.' And it turned into 'Fall In Love With…' and I just thought it was special. I love to give credit to the people who have loved me through every stage of my life. And in the midst of it, my fans are able to see who I am as a person and how deeply I love, how loyal I am. And that opened the door to just so many other things. I just became so much more open-minded.

In Pics: Iggy Pop returns to Dublin after 17 years at In The Meadows
In Pics: Iggy Pop returns to Dublin after 17 years at In The Meadows

Extra.ie​

time11-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Extra.ie​

In Pics: Iggy Pop returns to Dublin after 17 years at In The Meadows

In The Meadows returned to the grounds of the Irish Museum of Modern Art over the weekend. It was the second edition of the one-day festival. The event was headlined by Iggy Pop. Iggy Pop performing at In The Meadows. Pic: GMCD It was the punk icon's first Dublin performance in 17 years. Joining Iggy were the likes of Slowdive, The Scratch and Gilla Band. There were also notable performances from Sprints, Warmduscher and Lambrini Girls. Rachel Goswell of Slowdive performing at In The Meadows. Pic: GMCD

Slowdive at In the Meadows review: Forget Oasis, this sonic supernova is the perfect 1990s comeback
Slowdive at In the Meadows review: Forget Oasis, this sonic supernova is the perfect 1990s comeback

Irish Times

time08-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Times

Slowdive at In the Meadows review: Forget Oasis, this sonic supernova is the perfect 1990s comeback

Slowdive In the Meadows, Royal Hospital Kilmainham, Dublin ★★★★★ Band reunions are in the headlines again ahead of this summer's return of Oasis – coming to a stadium near you at a premium price. But the Gallagher brothers will be doing well to have a comeback one-fifth as glorious as that of Slowdive , the early 1990s alternative pop underdogs whose reunion several years ago has seen them break out of their chrysalis and spread their wings gloriously. That victory lap ticks off its latest milestone at the In The Meadows festival in Dublin, where their headlining slot on the tented second stage is a wondrous serving of balmy space-pop. Back in the 1990s, the band – from the Thames Valley outside London – were derided by the then-mighty rock press for their lack of rock'n'roll swagger and all-round sense of artful dreaminess. Their unassuming, psychedelic music saw them lumped alongside Dublin's My Bloody Valentine as pioneers of a sound called 'shoegaze' – sniffed at in the moment yet hugely influential over the decades. Slowdive performed at the In The Meadows festival, at the Royal Hospital, Kilmainham, Dublin, at the weekend. Photograph: Dara Mac Dónaill/The Irish Times First time around, the band never played in Ireland. They are now making up for lost time. In The Meadows is the third Irish show in under two years. Amidst the occasional rain shower and gathering twilight, it is a palate-clearing panacea, beginning with sonic supernova Shanty from their 2023 album, Everything Is Alive. READ MORE [ Iggy Pop at In the Meadows review: Old-school rock has rarely felt so timeless and incendiary Opens in new window ] [ Gilla Band at In the Meadows review: Musical Marmite from Ireland's own Velvet Underground Opens in new window ] Slowdive are a five-piece, but the focus is on singers Rachel Goswell (later seen up on the grass slope grooving to festival headliner Iggy Pop) and Neil Halstead. Their voices have a mutually complementary, hazy quality and are well paired with the vast weather fronts of guitar, particularly on 1990s tracks such as Catch the Breeze and Souvlaki Space Station. Accompanied by a gently blistering light show, their set is beautifully overwhelming. Surreal, too, if you were that one audience member up front trying to get lost in the band's haunting soundscapes whilst also following, in real-time, the Cork-Limerick penalty shoot-out in the Munster Hurling Final. They finish with the gorgeous assault of Golden Hair – originally by lost Pink Floyd frontman Syd Barrett and accompanied by a video projection of his scowling, puzzled face. But there is another surprise as the music rises to an ear-splitting sob and the face of Carry On star Sid James fills the screen – a glint of humour mixed with the emotion-melting spectacle.

10 other arts and music festivals to check out this summer
10 other arts and music festivals to check out this summer

RTÉ News​

time17-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • RTÉ News​

10 other arts and music festivals to check out this summer

Whisper it - lest you provoke the weather gods - but with this prolonged period of glorious sunshine we've been having, it's the perfect time to start planning your summer festival schedule. Amidst the big players - the Longitudes and the All Together Nows, the Electric Picnics and the Galway International Arts Festivals - there are plenty of other lesser-known music and arts gems to be appreciated across the coming months. So whether you're not into milling around with tens of thousands of punters or you're simply looking for something a little off the beaten track, here are ten other music and arts festivals to check out. 1. Festival of Writing and Ideas | June 6th - 8th | Borris, Co. Carlow This brilliant festival does exactly what it says on the tin: it gathers together an array of brilliant minds, thinkers, speakers, writers and idea-generators at the picturesque Borris House in County Carlow for an annual shindig. This year's programme includes authors John Banville, Paul Murray, Maggie Armstrong and Sinéad Gleeson, musicians Colin Greenwood and Conor O'Brien, actors Fiona Shaw, Kristin Scott Thomas, Rupert Everett and Eileen Walsh, and many more. 2. Open Ear Festival | May 29th - June 1st | Cork Keep both your ears and your minds open for this gem. Not only is the line-up a stellar showing of some of the most interesting irish acts around - from the Choice-nominated Róis to renowned violinist Caoimhín Ó Ragallaigh and experimental psych-rock artist Elaine Malone - but the novelty of travelling to it by ferry adds to its unique nature. It takes place on Sherkin Island off the coast of Cork, with camping and glamping available on site. 3. In the Meadows | June 7th | Dublin Any opportunity to see the Godfather of Punk, Iggy Pop, is always worth taking. When you add in an array of superb bands - both Irish and international - across a day-long event, it's doubly so. The punk legend will headline and has also curated the bill for the second In the Meadows festival at the Royal Hospital, Kilmainham, which includes Gilla Band, Slowdive, Sprints, Lambrini Girls, Muireann Bradley and more. 4. Carlow Arts Festival | June 4th - 8th The organisers of this long-running event have pulled together an impressive programme for 2025, with a nicely-balanced mix of music, theatre, visual arts, spoken word, comedy, workshops and more. Highlights include multi-hyphenate artist SexyTadhg, Emman Idama's comedy show No Blacks, No Dogs, No Irish, music by Ye Vagabonds and the community-led Carnival of Collective Joy; who wouldn't want to see such a spectacle? 5. When Next We Meet | June 7th - 8th | Clonmel, Co. Tipperary If a celebration of some of the finest independent acts on the Irish music scene sounds like your kind of thing, this intimate festival is well worth checking out. Now in its fourth year, the 2025 programme takes place at the Raheen House Hotel in Clonmel and will see Villagers, Pillow Queens, Paddy Hanna, Morgana and more entertain the masses. With a capacity for only 800 people max per night, there'll be no shoving required to get to the front at this comparatively cosy gathering. 6. Forest Fest Music & Arts Festival | July 25th - 27th | Emo, Co. Laois For one weekend a year, the village of Emo, Co. Laois plays host to some of the big-hitters from the music world over the last twenty years. With a bias towards indie and rock, this year's excellent line-up includes Manic Street Preachers, Franz Ferdinand, Teenage Fanclub, Travis, The Dandy Warhols and more. If you're an old school raver, however, Orbital will provide the goods, while there's also an Ibiza Rewind stage, a Forest Fleadh area, a family area and much more. 7. Body & Soul: A Wake | August 16th - 18th | Exact location TBC, but Co. Meath After 14 editions, the Body & Soul festival sadly came to an end in 2023 - but that's not quite where the story ends. Although details are scant, it's worth keeping an eye on what this 'wake' might entail. Described as a 'final send-off' for the beloved festival, organisers have stressed that it's "not a festival" - but there is a (loose) dress code and there will no doubt be entertainment at this "intimate gathering rooted in the energy of an Irish Wake". More info will be revealed to those attending closer to the time. 8. West Cork Literary Festival | July 11th - 18th | Bantry, Co. Cork What an outstanding programme awaits in Banty, West Cork this summer - as if you need an excuse to visit such a stunning corner of Ireland. Big hitters like Richard E. Grant, Sarah Moss, Alan Hollinghurst, Neil Jordan and local boy Graham Norton will rub shoulders with various luminaries (Eimear McBride, Claire Kilroy) and newcomers of the Irish literary scene, including Ferdia Lennon, Seán Ronayne, Louise Hegarty and more - with plenty of free events, talks, workshops and even a festival swim in the mix, too. Undoubtedly one of the best literary line-ups of the year. 9. Another Love Story | August 23rd - 24th | Killyon, Co. Meath This festival, which launched in 2014, has established itself as one of the smallest-but-most-perfectly-formed festivals on the Irish circuit, always curating a beautifully well-rounded programme that will appeal to music lovers of all tastes. This year's event includes sets by Spanish DJ/producer John Talabot, singer-songwriter Fionn Regan, Dublin rapper Curtisy, folk duo Dug and more. 10. Night and Day | June 27th - 29th | Boyle, Co. Roscommon It's not just music that's the draw for this festival in Lough Key Forest Park in Co. Roscommon, although there's plenty of interest on that front (from KT Tunstall to Paul Brady, and The Wailers to José González). There's also a family zone and accompanying programme to keep the tiddlers happy, with workshops, dancing, circus skills, lego and more, alongside a wellness area to provide some tranquility away from the hustle and bustle.

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