Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
NME ranked "Love Me" at number 5 on their year-end list; Emily Barker commended the lyrics, wordplay and themes, while noting the song mines "Fame"-era David Bowie, Talking Heads and INXS. [36] Andy Gill of The Independent said "Love Me" is the 1975's "gauche take on Talking Heads' preppy funk-pop". [17]
"The 1975" is the opening song on the 1975's fourth album, Notes on a Conditional Form. [8] Healy initially said that the band were choosing between three songs to release on 31 May 2019 as the lead single of the album. [25] However, "The 1975" was the first song to be released, on 24 July 2019, and the lead single "People" debuted on 22 August.
A vertically-oriented music video for "TooTimeTooTimeTooTime" debuted via Spotify on 15 August 2018. [23] [39] On 29 August, the fullscreen version was released on the band's YouTube page. [40] The video opens with individual fans calmly lip synching the song's lyrics against a colour-changing backdrop. [40]
Getty Images (2) As if Taylor Swift fans needed more to theorize about, her new album might include a few callbacks to Matty Healy‘s band, The 1975. Swift, 34, dropped The Tortured Poets ...
On the opening night of the 1975's concert at the O2 Arena in December 2016, Healy introduced "Loving Someone" with a speech decrying the "regressive ideals" of Brexit and US presidential elections for stifling "young progressive voices", saying: "If we are the liberals, if we are the left, if we are the young, the black, the Muslim, the gay ...
A music video directed by Bedroom was released on 6 February 2020. An homage to 1990s-era videos, it depicts various couples kissing in interconnected bedrooms while the 1975 performs at a house party. A second music video, shot in a black and white panoramic style, was released on 6 May 2020.
The song was later certified silver in the United Kingdom by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI). An accompanying music video, directed by Diane Martel, was released on 31 May 2018. The visual–which Healy said was inspired by Lady Gaga and self-reflection–features the band performing the song in a mirrored room.
Right-on-red spread across the country in the 1970s in response to the Arab oil embargo against the United States and oil rationing. States introduced it as a gas-savings measure: The theory was ...