Current:Home > StocksBillie Eilish embraces sex, love and heartbreak with candor on new album. Here's the best song. -FinanceAcademy
Billie Eilish embraces sex, love and heartbreak with candor on new album. Here's the best song.
View
Date:2025-04-19 03:42:09
Billie Eilish is in love.
Or maybe it’s just lust.
And by the closing song on her new album, “Hit Me Hard and Soft” (★★★ out of four) out Friday, Eilish is “Blue,” calling back to the nine tracks that precede it and questioning all of the feelings she unloads with bracing, stomach-roiling candor.
The third studio release from the princess of dark pop – a nine-time Grammy winner and recently minted Oscars victor – comes three years after “Happier Than Ever” and a lifetime for Eilish, 22, as she continues to navigate young adulthood while embracing her recently disclosed sexuality.
All of the 10 tracks on this refreshingly economical album are written by Eilish and her brother/producer Finneas O’Connell. But it’s also her first release to feature outside musicians: Andrew Marshall on drums and the Attacca Quartet on strings, whose work is laced throughout but featured prominently on “Skinny.”
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
Eilish is still the mistress of ethereal backdrops paired with breathy vocals, which she carried to tremendous commercial success with her “Barbie” soundtrack standout, the award-magnet heartbreaker “What Was I Made For?”
She and Finneas continue to mine her penchant for quirkiness (“La Amour De Ma Vie” – translation, “the love of my life” - which rolls along sadly before kicking into a dance floor rave) and dreamy introspection (“Wildflower” and “The Greatest,” on which her simple declaration “I loved you and I still do” shudders with piercing sadness).
Billie Eilish sings about sex, friendship and love
Eilish notes in the release for “Hit Me …” that she specifically didn’t release a single before the album drop because she wants this new music to be experienced as “a family of songs.”
She’s shared the intoxicating anthem “Lunch” at listening parties this week, an obvious hint it will be the first single once the album arrives. But the throbbing tune might be a bit too ribald for radio with lyrics such as, “I could eat that girl for lunch/she dances on my tongue/tastes like she might be the one.”
Eilish teases over a propulsive beat as unrelenting as her hormones and slays with a lyric tailored for a T-shirt at the merch stands at her fall tour: “It’s a craving, not a crush.”
But before she gets there, the first words we hear from her on opening track “Skinny” are, “fell in love for the first time/with a friend it’s a good sign.” Eilish’s salvo lays the groundwork for the album’s female-centric journey through friendship, love, sex and anguish and she traverses it all with lyrical grace.
Another album review:Shakira has a searing song with Cardi B and it's the best one on her new album
‘Birds of a Feather’ is the best song on Billie Eilish’s new album
While moody pop is Eilish’s signature, her musical growth bursts through on “Birds of a Feather.” The glistening melody, the insinuating bass line that adheres to the soaring chorus, the flecks of soul in the DNA of the song all mesh to form a bop that feels like love.
While it’s a classic take on the “I’ll love you until I die” trope, Eilish’s hopeless devotion somehow makes death - “’Til I’m in the casket you carry” – sound sweet.
In the second verse, she is desperate to bestow a compliment (“I want you to see how you look to me”) as her upper range flutters. The layered vocals at song’s end are buoyant, but also so airy they might mask the most poignant verse: “I knew you in another life/You had that same look in your eyes/I love you, don’t act so surprised.”
It's a testimony to adoration with a hint of the macabre - Eilish specialties bundled in a perfect package.
veryGood! (5)
Related
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Tesla recalls 1.85 million vehicles over hood latch issue that could increase risk of crash
- Civil Rights Movement Freedom Riders urge younger activists to get out the vote
- Ex-clients of Social Security fraudster Eric Conn won’t owe back payments to government
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- A union for Amazon warehouse workers elects a new leader in wake of Teamsters affiliation
- With the funeral behind them, family of the firefighter killed at the Trump rally begins grieving
- Interest rate cut coming soon, but Fed likely won't tell you exactly when this week
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Georgia’s largest school district won’t teach Black studies course without state approval
Ranking
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- Jack Flaherty trade gives Dodgers another starter amid rotation turmoil
- The best 3-row SUVs with captain's seats that command comfort
- Haunting Secrets About The Blair Witch Project: Hungry Actors, Nauseous Audiences & Those Rocks
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Inmate advocates describe suffocating heat in Texas prisons as they plea for air conditioning
- Haunting Secrets About The Blair Witch Project: Hungry Actors, Nauseous Audiences & Those Rocks
- Kathie Lee Gifford Hospitalized With Fractured Pelvis
Recommendation
Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
2024 Olympics: Team USA Wins Gold at Women’s Gymnastics Final
Haunting Secrets About The Blair Witch Project: Hungry Actors, Nauseous Audiences & Those Rocks
MLB trade deadline live updates: Jack Flaherty to Dodgers, latest news
Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
French police investigating abuse targeting Olympic opening ceremony DJ over ‘Last Supper’ tableau
'Crying for their parents': More than 900 children died at Indian boarding schools, U.S. report finds
Serbia spoils Olympic debut for Jimmer Fredette, men's 3x3 basketball team