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THE COACHELLA MUSIC FESTIVAL, not necessarily known for its adorable moments, offered up the pop equivalent of two baby pandas playing when, under the pink arena lights and to the accompaniment of the cheering and frantic uploading of a thousand teenage witnesses, Billie Eilish met her idol, Justin Bieber, for the first time last April.

The scene, touching as it was, begged consideration of its broader culture significance. Here were two pop prodigies, ages 17 and 25, at rather different points in their career arcs. The walls of Eilish’s childhood bedroom were once papered with images of Bieber, and when he enfolded her oversize denim bootleg Louis Vuitton–logoed self in a long embrace, a chasm seemed to yawn underneath their adjacent but distinct generations. Eilish, whose full-length album, When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?, debuted at number one a week before the festival began, is not the first young singer to make hit records out of dark sonic tableaux. But the totality of her effect on the pop landscape—from her whispered anti-anthems to her bloblike anti-fashion to the sense of it’s-really-me relatability she provides to her fans—has made her immediate predecessors seem almost passé.

“This whole time I’ve been getting this one sentence,” Eilish says, “like, I’m a rule-breaker. Or I’m anti-pop, or whatever. I’m flattered that people think that, but it’s like, where, though? What rule did I break? The rule about making classic pop music and dressing like a girly girl? I never said I’m not going to do that. I just didn’t do it.”

 

See full interview here.



Image: The Academy Awards/ABC/GIPHY

WWas Idina Menzel really perplexed by Eminem rising up from the stage at the Academy Awards, or did she just overhear a baffling comment from a person sitting nearby?

Was Billie Eilish actually pulling a face at Kristen Wiig and Maya Rudolph’s comedy routine, or was she just wondering if she remembered to lock her car?

Spare a thought for the A-list attendees at award shows. In exchange for a swag bag and the minuscule chance of winning a career-defining trophy, attendees sit captive in unforgiving formal wear for hours while camera crews roam the aisles, hunting for an errant scowl, gasp, or skeptically raised eyebrow. What they’re seeking is that much-memefied award-show staple known as “the reaction shot.”

Most of us aren’t subject to this level of scrutiny. But the memes of Menzel and Eilish — which arguably went more viral than the actual awards on Oscars night — are a high-profile reminder that our facial expressions are always being watched and judged. They’re also evidence of how often observers fill in the blank of a neutral facial expression with an assumption — and how those assumptions can be tainted by the perceptions and prejudices of the observer.

This is especially true when it comes to women’s facial expressions—as those of us who’ve been told to “smile” by a complete stranger know too well. “Resting Bitch Face” is a catchall term for the unsmiling expression some people wear when they’re not thinking about communicating with their face. (That it includes the gendered expletive “bitch” tells us whose faces we’re policing this way.)

The look is hardly new — think of all those blasé baby Jesuses in medieval triptychs! — but the term exploded onto public consciousness in 2013 with a Funny or Die parody PSA for “bitchy resting face.” The video also talks about the condition’s male counterpart, “asshole face,” but that phrase did not take off in the same way as “resting bitch face” did.



“Bad Guy” led to good news all around for teenage phenom Billie Eilish at the Grammy Awards on Sunday night.

The 18-year-old singer swept all four major honors at the 62nd annual Grammys, winning album, record and song of the year as well as best new artist – the first person to do so since Christopher Cross in 1981 – plus picked up best pop vocal album on a night that honored young talent and the loss of NBA star Kobe Bryant.

“Tonight is for Kobe,” pronounced pop sensation Lizzo as she kicked off the ceremony, one of several tributes to the Los Angeles Laker during the show hosted by Alicia Keys.

Lizzo won solo pop performance for “Truth Hurts,” Tyler, the Creator took best rap album, and country mainstay Tanya Tucker won her first Grammys in her long career. In addition to awards, there were plenty of memorable performances, including emotional turns from Camila Cabello and Demi Lovato.



Billie Eilish‘s international reach was confirmed when she was announced as the winner of the newcomer of the year award at the 2019 European Festival Awards. The event was held Jan. 15 at De Oosterpoort in Groningen, the Netherlands.

Since its inception in 2009, the European Festival Awards has honored festivals and individuals in such areas as health and safety, social awareness, forward thinking and sustainability.

Eilish’s debut album, When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?, has reached No. 1 in several European countries — the U.K., Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Sweden — as well as in the U.S. (on the Billboard 200), Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

Lucy Dickins, who heads WME’s U.K. music division, took agent of the year. Her client roster includes such international stars as Adele and Mumford & Sons.

Here’s a complete list of winners.

Newcomer of the year
Presented by: Eurosonic Noorderslag
Billie Eilish (U.S.)

Lifetime achievement award
holger hübner & Thomas Jensen

Line-up of the year
Glastonbury (U.K.)

Best major festival
Open’er Festival (Poland)

Best medium-sized festival
Presented by: Universe
Electric Castle (Romania)

Best small festival
Jazz in the Park (Romania)

Best indoor festival
Presented by: eps
Reeperbahn Festival (Germany)

Best new festival
No Sleep Festival (Serbia)

Agent of the year
Presented by: IQ Magazine
Lucy Dickins (WME)

Promoter of the year
Wepromote (Switzerland)

Award for excellence & passion
Codruta Vulcu (Romania)

Brand activation award
Presented by: EMAC
Open’er Festival (Poland) & Netflix – Stranger Things

Take a stand award
Presented by: Take A Stand
Das Fest (Germany)

Health & safety innovation award
Presented by: YES Group
Balaton Sound (Hungary)

Green operations award
Presented by: GO Group
Openair St.Gallen (Switzerland)



The Firefly Music Festival lineup is out, with a roster of headliners that includes Billie Eilish, Rage Against the Machine, Halsey, Khalid, Blink-182 and Maggie Rogers. The music and camping festival is going back to four days, after trimming a day last year, and will run from June 18 – 21 at the Woodlands in Dover, Delaware.

Nearly 80 artists will play across six stages at the sprawling, 600-acre site, with additional sets from Cage the Elephant, Illenium, Diplo, Run the Jewels, Chvrches, David Lee Roth, Rainbow Kitten Surprise and Kali Uchis. Small-print highlights include Neon Trees, Noah Cyrus, Big Boi, Mallrat, The Glorious Sons and JJ Wilde, among others.

The AEG-owned festival invested $1 million into camping and infrastructure ahead of last year’s event, which featured sets by Panic! At the Disco, Travis Scott and Post Malone.

Eager attendees can visit the festival’s website to learn more about early access to tickets, which go on sale to the general public on Monday Feb. 3 at 10 a.m. ET. A presale begins Friday, Jan. 31. Four-day general admission tickets start at $299.

Firefly 2020 Lineup (in alphabetical order)

  • Absofacto
  • Anna Lunoe
  • Avi Kaplan
  • Badflower
  • Big Boi
  • Big Wild
  • Billie Eilish
  • Blackbear
  • Blink-182
  • Boys Noize
  • Bryce Vine
  • Cage the Elephant
  • Cash Cash
  • Cat Dealers
  • Choir! Choir! Choir!
  • CHVRCHES
  • Clozee
  • Cold War Kids
  • Conan Gray
  • Cray
  • Cub Sport
  • David Lee Roth
  • Dayglow
  • Devon Gilfillian
  • Diplo
  • Dominic Fike
  • Don Toliver
  • Eliza & The Delusionals
  • Gashi
  • Grandson
  • Grouplove
  • Haiku Hands
  • Halsey
  • Hugel
  • Illenium
  • Illiterate Light
  • JJ Wilde
  • K.Flay
  • Kali Uchis
  • Khalid
  • Leif Vollebekk
  • Leikeli47
  • Lil Dicky
  • Lil Tecca
  • Loud Luxury
  • Lucii
  • Maggie Rogers
  • Mallrat
  • Matt Maeson
  • Meute
  • Michigander
  • Missio
  • Neon Trees
  • NGHTMRE
  • Noah Cyrus
  • Noga Erez
  • Omar Apollo
  • Petit Biscuit
  • Rage Against the Machine
  • Rainbow Kitten Surprise
  • RDGLDGRN
  • RL Grime
  • Run the Jewels
  • Space Jesus
  • Sub Urban
  • Sudan Archives
  • The Band Camino
  • The Districts
  • The Glorious Sons
  • The Regrettes
  • The Struts
  • The Unlikely Candidates
  • Tove Lo
  • Trevor Daniel
  • Turnover
  • Whipped Cream
  • White Reaper
  • 99 Neighbors

 





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