Showing posts with label Ed Sheeran. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ed Sheeran. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

K-pop playback: BTS collaborations


Earlier this week, South Korean boy band BTS dropped the track list for their upcoming album, “Map of the Soul: 7.”


The first 5 of the 20 tracks in the album come from the past record, “Map of the Soul: Persona,” while the rest are new songs, including the recent single “Black Swan” and title track “On.”

The septet will release two versions of “On” – a BTS-only song and one featuring Australian singer Sia, which will be available only on the album’s digital version.

The team-up with the “Chandelier” hitmaker, which the band reportedly organized, is the latest in a string of high-profile collaborations since 2017, the year BTS made history as the first Korean group to win an award at the Billboard Music Awards.

In anticipation of “Map of the Soul: 7” and the song with Sia, which are both slated for release on Friday, here’s a look-back at some of BTS’ work with other artists:

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Friday, October 11, 2019

Gingers Unite: Ed Sheeran and Prince Harry promote mental health


LONDON (Reuters) - The doorbell rings to the tune of the British national anthem “God Save the Queen”, and Prince Harry opens the door to find Ed Sheeran on the threshold. Both men have red hair and beards.

“It’s like looking in the mirror,” the prince quips before ushering the pop star inside.

This is the opening scene of a video released on Thursday in which Queen Elizabeth’s grandson and the Grammy-winning musician join forces to campaign on an issue both care about deeply.

The clip, posted on Harry’s Instagram page, shows the pair sitting at a table talking about their joint passion, but after a short while it becomes clear there is a misunderstanding.

“This for me is a subject and a conversation that is just not talked about enough. I think people all over the world are really suffering,” Harry says.

Sheeran responds that he has been trying to write a song about the issue to help raise awareness. He then adds: “People just don’t understand what it’s like for people like us.”

Looking confused, Harry asks: “What?” So Sheeran elaborates: “You know, the jokes and snide comments, I just feel like it’s time that we stood up and said, you know, we’re not going to take this any more. We are ginger and we’re going to fight.”

Apparently embarrassed, Harry says: “OK. Slightly awkward,” before going on to explain that he was not talking about discrimination against people with red hair, but rather about World Mental Health Day.

Hastily deleting the words “GINGERS UNITE” from a document on his laptop, Sheeran quickly gets on-message and the video closes with the pair urging people to reach out to anyone who may be suffering from mental health problems.

Harry, sixth-in-line to the British throne, has long campaigned on the issue. On Thursday, he was in Nottingham, central England, visiting community projects aimed at preventing mental health problems and violence among young people.

Harry and his wife Meghan, whose official titles are the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, have increasingly used the Internet to engage directly with the public. Both have launched legal action against British media outlets over coverage they deem intrusive and inaccurate.

Reporting by Estelle Shirbon; editing by Stephen Addison

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Friday, February 23, 2018

Ed Sheeran searches for new lines in movie 'Songwriter'


BERLIN - British singer Ed Sheeran said on Friday that the hardest part of songwriting was coming up with lines that had never been written before as a new documentary detailing his creative process premiered at Berlin's international film festival.

The movie "Songwriter" was directed by Sheeran's cousin, Murray Cummings, and follows the Grammy winner as he travels around the United States and England writing songs on his laptop, jamming in a garden and recording in the studio.

The intimate portrait of Sheeran, who was the most-streamed artist on music service Spotify globally in 2017, includes footage of him belting out songs while crossing the Atlantic on the Queen Mary 2, returning to high school to see his music teacher and talking to his father about his songs.

"I think the most difficult thing to do with writing a song is finding a phrase that you haven't heard before because there's always a song that's going to be like: 'I love you baby like crazy, I miss you maybe'," Sheeran told a news conference.

He said he had learned not to push himself if he was struggling to write and did not believe writer's block existed.

"What I do when I can't write a song is I just put the guitar down and go and do something else for about a couple of weeks and then come back and then I'll be able to write a song," the 27-year-old said.

"So the way that my mind is now is, I will be able to write songs forever - they probably will start being about pretty mundane things because my life is getting more and more calm."

Sheeran said he liked the documentary because it showed a song being written from start to finish, rather than just an album being recorded.

"I like that Murray found a niche that hasn't really been done before. It's quite difficult to find something that hasn't been done in a music movie," Sheeran said.

Sheeran, who said he planned to make a film next year in which he would play something other than himself, listed "Goodfellas", "Cool Runnings" and "Love Actually" as his favorite movies.

Cummings told Reuters the documentary would give fans an insight into Sheeran off-stage.

"When he's on his own he's kind of very like relaxed and chilled and stuff. So I think they're going to see that's what he's like because this film just kind of shows what I see every day," Cummings said.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Saturday, January 20, 2018

'Our cats are chuffed': Ed Sheeran announces engagement


Ed Sheeran is engaged.

The British singer and songwriter shared the happy news with his fans on Instagram Saturday night (Manila time), posting a sweet photo of him kissing his girlfriend, Cherry Seaborn.

"Got myself a fiancé just before new year. We are very happy and in love," he wrote as the caption, before joking: "And our cats are chuffed as well."

Sheeran and Seaborn began dating in 2015, although several reports have pointed out that they first met when they were still in school.

Sheeran, best known for "Shape of You," "Perfect," and many more hits, is set to perform in Manila April 8.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Ed Sheeran rules Spotify in 2017


NEW YORK -- English singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran dominated Spotify in 2017, with his latest album "Divide" played 3.1 billion times worldwide, the leading streaming service said Tuesday.

The ginger-haired pop guitarist was streamed more than any other artist in the year so far -- not a surprise, considering his song "Shape of You," the fourth track on "Divide," reigns as Spotify's most streamed song ever.

Despite Sheeran's triumph, the Swedish-based streaming service said the larger trends of 2017 included hip-hop, with streams growing 74 percent over an already large base in 2016.

Hip-hop star Drake came in second on Spotify in 2017 and rapper Kendrick Lamar was fourth, with R&B singer The Weeknd, a protege of Drake, placing third.

Latin music also saw major gains, with streams more than doubling on the back of viral Spanish-language hits -- most notably the worldwide sensation "Despacito."

Rihanna was the most streamed woman on Spotify for the third year in a row, despite her lack of major releases in 2017.

Sheeran, 26, has seized on the rapid growth of streaming during his rise to pop fame.

His success on Spotify, however, did not help him at the Grammys, with Sheeran shut out of major categories announced last week -- a surprise to many watchers of the music industry's top prizes.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Stars to record new Band Aid single against Ebola


One Direction, Ed Sheeran and a host of other stars are to raise money to fight Ebola with a 30th anniversary version of the Band Aid charity single "Do They Know It's Christmas?" Bob Geldof announced on Monday.

It will the fourth incarnation of the song, which became one of the world's biggest-selling singles ever after its release in 1984 to raise funds for famine relief in Ethiopia.

Ebola "is a particularly pernicious illness because it renders humans untouchable and that is sickening," Geldof said at a London press conference with Midge Ure, who co-organised the first Band Aid with the Irish singer.

"Mothers can't comfort their children in their dying hours. Lovers can't cradle each other. Wives can't hold their husbands' hands. People are chased down the streets because of it -- and it could come our way," Geldof said.

The rocker-turned-activist said he had been spurred into action not out of nostalgia but by a call from the United Nations three weeks ago, concerned about not having the necessary funds to combat the epidemic.

The Ebola outbreak in west Africa has claimed almost 5,000 lives, according to the World Health Organization -- almost all in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone -- while the number of infected cases registered worldwide has soared to more than 13,000.

Other artists already signed up for the single include U2 frontman Bono -- who sang on the original recording -- Coldplay's Chris Martin, Bastille, Elbow, Ellie Goulding, Emeli Sande, Foals, Paloma Faith, Queen drummer Roger Taylor, Sinead O'Connor and Underworld.

Band Aid were also reported to be in talks with British superstar Adele.

The vocals will be recorded on Saturday at Sarm Studios in west London, just as on the original recording.

The sleeve artwork will be done by British artist Tracey Emin and the single will be available for download on November 17, with physical copies three weeks later.

The track will cost 99 pence ($1.60) to download or £4 ($6.35) to buy as a physical record.

Fundraising was underway on Tuesday with fundraising site Prizeo offering fans a chance to win a "day in the studio" as the single is recorded, in exchange for donations between $5 and $50,000.

Geldof slams China, UAE efforts

Geldof said he thought the British government would agree to drop the tax on sales, and called on people to buy it rather than watching it for free on the Internet.

Ure, the frontman of Ultravox, said: "It's a record none of us want to make and I wish it wasn't necessary."

The lyrics have been tweaked to reflect lush, economically developing west Africa in 2014 rather than the barren Ethiopia depicted 30 years ago.

Geldof also said there would be French, German and US versions featuring artists from those countries.

However, there will not be a giant "Live Aid" concert, because there was no "political logic" to doing one, he said.

Separately however, One Direction announced a charity performance in aid of the BBC's Children in Need appeal on Friday.

Geldof slammed certain countries for not doing enough to contribute to the level of Britain, France and the United States.

The Dubliner said the United Arab Emirates' small donation to Ebola was a "disgrace," swore over China's contribution and said Australia "isn't doing great."

"If these countries claim global leadership, then they must accept the responsibility of those things," the 63-year-old said.

The original 1984 version, which featured the likes of Phil Collins, George Michael and Sting, was re-recorded with new artists in 1989, and again in 2004 for Sudan's troubled Darfur region.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com