Acoustic | MARINA AND THE DIAMONDS - HomewreckerSubscribe to the MARINA YouTube Channel - https://Marina.lnk.to/subscribe Electra Heart is the girl you run i I'm obviously a huge fan of Marina and I was talking to this guy who liked her first 3 eras. He was telling me how Marina lacks footing as an artist. I was confused, and asked him to said her first album was great, if not a bit eccentric for a debut album and went on to say Electra Heart pissed off a lot of fans but he loved it because it still sounded like Marina despite her singing through a character. And then he went on to say she shifted gears very fast with Froot and didn't lean into the sound but rather went full throttle. He loved Froot but he said she should have played more with the EH era. We were talking and he went to say she doesn't have any footing as an artist like Britney or Madonna because even though they reinvented themselves, they have a signature. He said L+F was trash and her new album was like all past 4 eras combined and uneven. I just found his opinion really disagree. Even though Marina has had a different era and sound for each era her lyrics and voice are her signature. Even though L+F was lyrically boring and regressive, Handmade Heaven had very interesting lyrics, End of the Earth had beautiful poetry words, and a few other songs did, too. Marina's voice is so feel like artists who lack signature and sound are Christina Aguilera because her eras changed so drastically and Demi Lovato. The two do not have any signatures in terms of music because they are all over the place...What do y'all think? Do you think Marina shifted gears too fast between EH and Froot? For me, the gear shifting is from Froot to L+F, if anything. Marina and the Diamonds. Marina Lambrini Diamandis (born 10 October 1985), better known by her stage name Marina and the Diamonds is a Welsh singer-songwriter. She rose to fame after placing second in the BBC Sound of 2010 poll behind Ellie Goulding in the United Kingdom. Her debut album "The Family Jewels" was released in 2010, which contained ABOUT MARINA:Marina Lambrini Diamandis is a singer-songwriter known professionally as Marina And The Diamonds, was born October 10th 1985 (age 30).She was born in Brynmawr, Blaenau Gwent, Wales. She moved to London as a teenager to become a professional singer, despite having little formal musical has described herself as an "indie artist with pop goals" and often analyses components of human behavior in her music. She is additionally recognised for her retro, surreal and cartoonish fashion styles, and has been described as an artist with a cult following, and a gay her childhood, she attended Haberdashers' Monmouth School for Girls, reflecting that "I sort of found my talent there... I was the one who always skived off choir, but I had an incredible music teacher who managed to convince me I could do anything."At the age of 16, she moved to Greece with her father "to connect with my heritage and learn to speak the language" and sang Greek folk songs with her grandmother. Having earned an International Baccalaureate at St. Catherine's British Embassy School in Athens, she returned to Wales two years later. She and her mother then moved to Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire. "Obsessed with becoming a singer, almost as if it was a disease.", she worked for two months at a petrol station im order to earn money to move to not having a musical background, Diamandis was able to create lyrics due to her childhood love of writing. She first began writing music when she was 18 years old; she moved to London to attend dance school but quit two months 2005, she created the stage name "Marina and the Diamonds"; after coming to prominence, "the Diamonds" was established as a reference to her fans, instead of her backing by the example of Daniel Johnston, Diamandis decided to compose her own music and stop going to auditions; she taught herself how to play the piano and recorded music on a keyboard. She self-composed and produced her earlier demos with GarageBand, and independently released her debut extended play Mermaid vs. Sailor through Myspace in FAMILY JEWELS:Diamandis's debut studio album The Family Jewels was released on 15th February 2010; it debuted at number five on the UK Albums Chart with first-week sales of copies, and was eventually certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry. Atlantic Records signed Diamandis to Chop Shop Records in the United States in March 2010. Through the label, she released her third play The American Jewels EP on March 23rd, and layer released The Family Jewels in the Unitedly States on May 25th. The latter project debuted at number 138 on the US Billboard 200 with first-week sales of copies. On Billboard's Top Heatseekers and Top Rock Albums charts, it peaked at numbers 2 and 49 HEART:The final product Electra Heart is a concept album lyrically united by the ideas of "female identity" and "a recent breakup". Diamandis created the titular character "Electra Heart" as a protagonist for the project was released on April 27th 2012, and debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart with first-week sales if copies. It became Diamandis's first chart-topping album in the United Kingdom, although at the time it was additionally distinguished as the lowest-selling number-one record of the 21st century in the country. The album was certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry for exceeding shipments of units, and gold by the Irish Recorded Music Association for surpassing spending one month in New York City, Diamandis announced in February 2013 that she had begun writing material for an upcoming third studio album. The single "Froot" was released on October 10th, her 29th birthday, and announced as the title album was announced to be released on April 3rd 2015 with a new track from the album being announced each month. However, due to an Internet leak, the release was brought forward. Entirely produced by Diamandis and David Kosten, the album was praised for its cohesive sound. Froot debuted at number 8 on the Billboard 200 chart, and is currently her highest charting album in the United States. It also peaked at 10, 6 and 4 in the UK, Canada and Ireland SONGS:Teen IdleOh no!PrimadonnaI Am Not A RobotI'm A RuinLiesNumbFrootMowgli's RoadBubblegum BitchBuy The StarsObsessionsStarring RoleHomewreckerHappyHollywoodImmortalFUN FACTS:1. Marina has synesthesia, where one sensation triggers another usually very different sensation (like tasting colors).In her 2009 blog, she writes that she "experiencedmusic solely through colour, texture and also associates names, people and days of the week with different colors. For example, she sees Monday as red and Tuesday as her blog she writes, "[I] also smell scents that I absolutely know do not exist in the room at that time but not sure if that relates [synesthesia] or something very different."2. For most of 2012, Marina wore a going to a hairdresser to dye her hair platinum blonde, a large portion of her hair broke off."She was blowdrying my hair and said, 'You've got a bit of breakage at the back'. I looked around and a lot has just snapped off at two inches. A week later I had it all cut really short." — via she purchased a wig, painted the roots black to make it look realistic, amd tied it up with a ribbon to create Electra Heart's signature In Marina's sophomore album, Electra Heart, she wanted to tell a story using a ficitional character as well as create a dark bubble gum pop video "Fear and Loathing" where Marina chops off her long brown locks marks the beginning of her transformation and journey as Electra Heart, the alter ego."Electra Heart is the antithesis of everything that I stand for," Marina said. "And the point of introducing her and building a whole concept around her is that she stands for the corrupt side of American ideology, and basically that's the corruption of yourself. My worst fear - that's anyone's worst fear - is losing myself and becoming a vacuous person. And that happens a lot when you're very ambitious." — via her journey as Electra Heart, Marina goes blonde; destroys a couch with a chainsaw; hangs her lover upside down and throws water on him; and performs in a male shower, before finally killing herself as Electra Heart in the appropriately named music video: "Electra Heart." She does so by wiping the heart off her cheek, becoming Marina While she wrote most if the songs on her debut, The Family Jewels, in Electra Heart she had a a 2015 interview, Marina describes her experience writing Electra Heart as an intense and fascinating In her new album, Froot, Marina wanted to move away from the stereotypical pop star image."So when I was promoting [Electra Heart] I realized, OK, this is why I don't like being a pop star because people assume you don't know anything and you don't make your own music," Marina said. "I saw that change as soon as I dyed my hair blond and created music that had a different production style. It was fascinating but it made me think: 'I'm not going to do this again.'" — Marina's trip to Las Vegas inspired the aesthetic behind Electra was surrounded by vintage clothing stores, filled with bubble gum pvc dresses, which she then bought and formed a Marina started four different courses at four different universities - dance, vocal tech, music & culture and music composition - but did not complete quitting both dance and vocal tech school, Marina studied music and culture at the University of East London, completed a year, and got a first (highest mark) before transferring to a musical composition course at Middlesex University, which she left after 3 months."I didn't want to be in university," she said. "I wanted to be in the business learning everything first hand. But at the same time I wasn't good enough in the beginning so I had to do something with my life." — via Her song "Girls" was inspired by her journey to find a suitable record passed on 14 different labels before signing with Atlantic Records because most of them were trying to impose an image for her. Marina said that she often cringes when she looks back on her song "Girls", which has the lyrics "girls they never befriend me / cause I fall asleep when they speak."◊ Marina and the Diamonds - Girls (Lyrics) ◊9. Marina got her first job as a froot picker at got fired after three days in because she went to the part of the field where the fruit was the largest and it was easier to fill her music is amazing and she is a really nice person. She is really hard-working and she didn't stop until she reached her goals and she's a big role model to me. She deserves all te recognition she has and much more. I aspire to be like her.
Official Audio | MARINA AND THE DIAMONDS - Savages Subscribe to the MARINA YouTube Channel - https://Marina.lnk.to/subscribe “FROOT is a symbol for something
The latest album, “FROOT,” from Marina and the Diamonds. (Photo: Marina and the Diamonds.)Welsh singer-songwriter Marina Diamandis, Marina and the Diamonds, is bringing her killer style to the Governors Ball stage this weekend. Her third album, “FROOT,” debuted Top 10 on Billboard last month and is becoming an international hit (check out her awesome video below if you haven’t already). Yahoo Beauty got the scoop on her album, how she preps and unwinds on tour, and her makeup tricks and Beauty: Have you always had such a strong sense of style and identity?Marina Diamandis: Yes, when I was about 14, I started shopping for things myself and also making alternations and trying to make clothes. My style has definitely become better as I’ve gotten older. I accessorize way less and I don’t try to do three looks in one go. My beauty look now is ‘50s eyeliner with eyeliner in the waterline, and then a big red lip—that’s my you have a go-to red lipstick?I do, I found it here its actually in Sephora’s Matte Cream Lip Stain ($13). It really doesn’t come off, which as a singer that’s the only one I’ve found that was completely fail-safeFor liner do you use liquid or a pencil?Yep, liquid. I really like how Alexa Chung’s Eyeko liner goes on, so that’s been my favorite but Bobbi Brown gel liner ($25) is quite nice as performing at Governors Ball. How does your makeup vary on stage versus a photo shoot or a music video? When performing, I try and do a lot less in terms of coverage, because of sweat—you don’t want to cake your skin in makeup. With photography and video shoots you have to have a really good coverage. It’s not a major difference, but I think with video shoots it is more of an opportunity to experiment with something new that might not look great in real life. In the last video we did this bright day-glow coral pink eyeliner and it looked amazing in the video but in real life it’s not so you have any secret weapons to prevent sweating on stage? I don’t know if you can avoid sweating, but Make Up For Ever has a waterproof foundation called Face & Body ($40) that’s really about a must-have product on the road?I like Simple makeup wipes ($5). When I get on the plane I take everything off and then put argan oil on my which products do you keep with you at all times?I always have Laura Mercier nude lip liner ($23) for whenI want a more natural look and then add a little lip balm for definition. And Bobbi Brown Face Touch Up Stick ($28)—it’s like full coverage right where you need it. Concealer and a other beauty secrets?I use coconut oil for everything. I know it is everywhere right now, but since 2012 I started using it in cooking and then I started using it on my face and hair. And I was like, ‘Sh*t this is a miracle! It is like a magic cream!’ And now it is everywhere, but it really is amazing. Definitely my Boots has come to the US at Walgreens and Duane Reade. Did you go to Boots all the time growing up? Yes, it was in my tiny town in South Wells. So it really tickles me see the Boots logo in America because I grew up with it. Boots No. 7 is love going into the Boots stores whenever I am in London. Do you?Yeah I always am on the hunt thinking, “What do they have that we don’t have?”That’s how I am the CVS as soon as I get into town I’ll go, even if its your favorite drugstore find in the States?I used to get so many false eyelashes, but now I am not doing that so it would probably be nail varnish—you have really bright, amazing colors so I always get are your beauty icons? Are they British or American?They’re a mix! Elizabeth Taylor, Sophia Loren, and my mom. I suppose in the modern world, I really like Angelina Jolie. She is undeniably beautiful. For musicians, I always loved Gwen Stefani, Madonna, and Shirley Manson from Garbage. She always looked really is the sixth track on Marina and the Diamonds’ album, †(Photo: Marina and the Diamonds)How is your new album different from your previous work?The last record was very contemporary—fun pop, and electronic. This one is a lot more live, with more guitars on it. It is a quite shift in direction!What are you listening to right now? I really love, Shamir’s song called “On the There’s a duo called Broods, one of my friends Tove Lo, who I am sure you’ve heard would you love to perform with?I love Röyksopp. And Shirley Manson because she’s so awesome, and she’s such a nice do you do to unwind after concerts and festivals and need to decompress?I haven’t got it quite figured out yet. Doing meditation or just sitting still for 20 minutes and focusing on breathing exercises—it’s very similar to singing. And also going on a bike ride. Disconnected from my phone and the out Marina and the Diamonds “FROOT” below:Disclaimer: Bobbi Brown is the editor in chief of Yahoo to Style a Flower CrownHow the Flower Crown Became the It-Accessory of CoachellaMarina and The Diamonds’ Weekend Playlist 1920x1080 Free Marina And The Diamonds Wallpaper, Marina And The Diamonds Wallpaper Download">. Get Wallpaper. 46 Wallpapers. Check out this fantastic collection of Marina And The Diamonds wallpapers, with 38 Marina And The Diamonds background images for your desktop, phone or tablet.
Walijska wokalistka Marina And The Diamonds, która zaśpiewała przed koncertem Coldplay na Stadionie Narodowym we wrześniu, ponownie odwiedzi Polskę. Piosenkarka wystąpi 30 stycznia 2013 r. w warszawskiej Stodole (datę koncertu zmieniono na 16 kwietnia) Marina And The Diamonds zagra pełen biletowany koncert, podczas którego wykona utwory ze swoich dwóch dotychczasowych płyt - "Family Jewels" i "Electra Heart". Energia i urok wokalistki w połączeniu z jej specyficznym poczuciem humoru i oczywiście przebojową muzyką zapowiadają moc wrażeń. Słuchacze, którzy mieli możliwość zobaczenia artystki w akcji podczas jej krótkiego występu przed koncertem grupy Coldplay, bawili się znakomicie przy jej piosenkach, o czym świadczą amatorskie nagrania zamieszczone w internecie. Koncert Mariny And The Diamonds zapowiada się jako jedno z ciekawszych wydarzeń koncertowych w 2013 roku. Film Marina Lambrini Diamandis, ukrywająca się pod pseudonimem Marina And The Diamonds, zadebiutowała w lutym 2010 r. albumem "Family Jewels". Płyta wylansowała dwa spore przeboje - "Hollywood" i "I Am Not A Robot". Estetyka utworów wokalistki oraz sposób interpretacji przyniósł jej porównania do takich artystek, jak Regina Spektor czy Shakira. Sama zainteresowana wśród swoich inspiracji wymienia Madonnę, Britney Spears, Garbage i Kate Bush. Drugi album wokalistki zatytułowany "Electra Heart" przyniósł zmianę repertuaru - pojawiły się akcenty typowo klubowe oraz więcej brzmień syntetycznych. Płytę zapowiadały single "Radioactive" oraz "Fear And Loathing", które zdobyły uznanie krytyków i słuchaczy. Najnowszy singiel Mariny And The Diamonds "How To Be A Heartbreaker" ukazał się w atmosferze sensacji - wytwórnia płytowa próbowała zablokować premierę teledysku do piosenki twierdząc, że gwiazda wygląda w nim zbyt niekorzystnie. Marina będzie obchodziła swoje 27 urodziny 10 października.
February 20, 2020 at 7:42 pm. It may sound trite to begin with some version of "time flies," but it's difficult to avoid the sentiment this time of year— The Family Jewels turned ten years old on February 15th. The debut studio album of Marina, then performing under the name Marina and the Diamonds, ushered in a wave of emotional lyrics
The lyrics to “Enjoy Your Life,” off Marina Diamandis’ new album, Love & Fear, could serve as the soundtrack to your soul from here on out — at least, they should.“Sit back and enjoy your problems / You don’t always have to solve them,” she cheers. “Cuz your worst days, they are over / So, enjoy your life / Yea, you might as well accept it / Don’t you waste your time regretting. Yea, your worst days — they are over / So, enjoy your life.”It’s exactly the type of infectious, carefree chorus you’d expect from any other pop star. But when sung by Marina, who’s back from a hiatus with a tweaked stage name (no longer “Marina and the Diamonds,” simply Marina), it feels like a release — like finding joy in life’s in-between moments or coming to terms with the inevitability of by Leeor the day of her release of single “Orange Trees,” a sugary-sweet summer anthem, the Greek-Welsh musician is in a great mood as she looks back. But a few years ago, almost a decade and three albums into her career, Marina says, she stopped growing.“I didn’t feel the same about music anymore or why I was motivated to be an artist,” explains Diamandis, who retreated after the 2016 tour for her Froot album. “The way I processed that was, Well, maybe I don’t want to have a job in public life anymore. I just remember thinking I don’t want my face to be on anything. I don’t like anyone looking at me — just a complete rejection of that, so I thought, Well, maybe I shouldn’t do this anymore.”For the record, however, she doesn’t categorize her return as a comeback at all: “I don’t really care. I’m just like, Hello. This is my new music. In my mind I quit, but in reality, I just wasn’t doing music at that time.” (That hiatus did include college classes in psychology — more on that later.)Photographed by Leeor before Marina took her breather, her single (off Froot), “Happy,” depicted a reclusive celebrity, alone and in search of happiness but unsure where to find it. It was a darker, yet somehow still colorful, turn for a woman who once sang about how to be the heartbreaker (not the other way around).When Diamandis arrived with her debut LP The Family Jewels in 2010, she charmed the hearts of young women and gay men searching for lighter fare than other British singers of that era (Adele, Amy Winehouse, Duffy, etc.). Her story is less rags-to-riches than it is a butterfly getting its wings: Her obsession with becoming a singer wasn’t enough to keep her from dropping out of music school, but it gave her the nerve to create her own music — teaching herself how to play the keyboard and recording her demos on GarageBand. Ultimately, her grassroots approach and her embracing of MySpace would see her land 14 record label offers. She rejected all but also set Marina apart from the get-go: her innate understanding of the digital revolution of both streaming music and social media. Her sound, an orchestral combination of sticky lyrics and sweet melodies, came about at a time when the internet had begun influencing teenagers, and when tools like GarageBand became accessible to everyone. An imperfect, unpolished pop genius, Marina harnessed a gut sense for meaningful, personal lyrics and tempered it with radio-friendly sounds. By then, pop stars weren’t just dissecting love within their songs; they could rewrite the very notion of love, changing the way you looked at it, her confident arrival: Diamandis regularly communicated with her cult fanbase during a time when most artists hadn’t yet embraced platforms like Twitter and Tumblr. (Instagram was still years away.) “I took that tool... to talk to people online and project my personality that way,” she by Leeor the Diamonds, for the uninitiated, aren’t actually real, and have nothing to do with cubic zirconias, either. In 2010, Diamandis described them as a conceptual security blanket (and a play on her surname) rather than an actual backing band: “I saw a simple group made up of many people who had the same hearts. A space for people with similar ideals who couldn’t fit into life's pre-made mold. I was terribly awkward for a long time! I really craved to be part of one thing because I never felt too connected to anybody and now I feel I have that all around me.”After The Family Jewels, Marina’s sound and execution quickly matured, and she was eager to present a more twisted vision of female pop stardom. And so, 2012’s Electra Heart was born. Diamandis again gave fans what they wanted (shake it off to “Primadonna,” “Bubblegum Bitch,” and ”Power & Control” to see what we mean).But nothing about album number three, Froot, hinted that Marina was on the verge of quitting music altogether. The LP contained just as many requisite pop puns, and struck a perfect balance of inspiring and somber lyrics. But, again, it didn’t propel Marina into the mainstream. “Do you really want me to write a feminist anthem?” she asks on “Can’t Pin Me Down.” “All these contradictions pouring out of me / Just another girl in the 21st century. I am never gonna give you anything you expect.” Four years post-Froot, Love & Fear (part one, Love, dropped the final week of March, and part two, Fear, arrives at the end of April) isn’t a total departure from her signature sound of electronic rock-pop. But it’s a bit sparser, and certainly lacks the angst of previous by Leeor and in person, Diamandis isn’t afraid to go deep. She’s a Libra, and concedes that she takes on the emotions of others. On Love & Fear’s “Emotional Machine,” for instance, she sings, “I’m a machine, an emotional being / Since I was a teen / Cut my feelings off clean”. And she holds her own in conversations about politics. In a recent interview with Channel 4, Diamandis cried as she discussed the state of American politics (“It’s anti-human”). Her response ballad on Love & Fear is aptly titled “To Be Human”: “I like to think about how we all look from afar / People driving fancy cars look like Beetles to the stars / The missiles and the bombs sound like symphonies gone wrong / And if there is a God, they'll know why it's so hard.”“One thing that has really changed in my world perspective in the past three years is this feeling that we are all the same. That might just be a personal feeling or it might be something that has been triggered by our politics and the fact that we aren’t united, that we’re actually more divided than ever,” she says. “That hurts me like it hurts people who are on the receiving end of discrimination. It feels completely wrong, the way that the world has been moving in the past two years.”Photographed by Leeor Diamandis sounds more introspective than your average pop vixen, it’s because she is. In fact, during her break from music, she took classes at the University of London, studying Psychology and Understanding Human Personality. When explaining why Love & Fear is 16 tracks, instead of the industry-average of 12 (and why it’s split into eight and eight), she cites Swedish psychologist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross: “She states that everything that we do stems from love or fear. So, love and fear are the two primary human emotions that all of our other emotions come out of,” she explains. “I thought that was a beautiful, universal way of painting a picture of the human experience. It was a really easy way to look at the songs and say, This comes from a feeling of joy or love and This definitely comes from a place of fear.”Another recent shift for Marina, sans the Diamonds: She’s established greater boundaries on her social media channels. “People are given access to artists, thinkers, people in public who they like, and you have to be smart about how much you decide to take in,” she says. “I don’t think it’s natural to know millions of people’s opinions of you. I don’t think that’s a useful thing for an artist. I’ve been able to manage that much more in recent years.”Like her sound, Diamandis’ new image is spare and stripped down. She has evolved from her colorful music festival stylings (the heart-shaped mole and the Spice Girls-esque stage wardrobe) to a more mature vision. “In my [new] album shots, I’m wearing Levi jeans and some spotty top. But that’s cool. That’s where I was at when I was shooting it,” reflects Marina, who cites vintage Cindy Crawford as a key inspiration for her new aesthetic. But Diamandis is a lyricist — she’s not distracted by fashion, despite how much her previous discography and visuals may say otherwise. “I’m a big fan of being able to select clothes that say something about where you’re at. And that can just be a black top and trousers. It doesn’t have to be fashion.” It makes sense, then, that the cover art for Love & Fear features just one fashion credit: an best part about talking to an artist ahead of their latest project — and in this case, their reemergence — is that there’s often not an ounce of melancholy in their voice. It’s proof of the reparative power of music. As Diamandis talks about Love & Fear, nothing gets her going as much as feedback on the songs. Even for diehard fans, it’s easy to forget just how far she’s come and what it took to get there. Because Diamandis should not have been a singer. She was not discovered, via YouTube or on the subway, nor has she ever competed on a television singing competition. She burst onto the music scene whether it was ready for her or not. It’s what makes the evolution of her lyrics, her sound, and her look, an entirely relatable, human experience.“I really, deeply believed that I should be doing this and that I should be a singer. I had a very strong, innate instinct,” she insists. “That’s the only way I can explain it. Because on paper, it seemed mad — someone who didn’t sing in public, had never written a song would be choosing this career path when, really, I should have been going to university and doing something more academic. But it’s why I kept trying.”
A singer/songwriter with an exploratory spirit and a flair for the dramatic, Marina Diamandis is one of modern pop’s most vibrant personalities—and her songs more than match her larger-than-life image. Born in Brynmawr, Wales, in 1985, Diamandis gave herself the stage name “Marina and The Diamonds” in her twenties, writing songs that This article is an update to the review of just the Love part of the album. Marina releases first part of upcoming double album Love + Fear Marina (formerly known as Marina and the Diamonds) announced her comeback at the start of the year and launched her single ‘Handmade Heaven’ with the promise of a double album dropping later this year. We learned that the record is titled Love + Fear and was supposed to be released entirely on the 26th of April. On the 4th of April however, the Welsh-Greek pop artist surprised everyone by sharing the first half, simply titled Love, already. On social media she explained how she created the two parts as seperate albums and wants to give her fans the chance to experience them as such. We now have the full album together and it is her first work since 2015’s LP Froot. A Bit of Pop Music reviews the new album track by track! 01. Handmade Heaven ‘Handmade Heaven’ was chosen as the first single of the project. The uplifting light electronic midtempo pop track is quintessentially Marina with her signature vocals moving from deep tones to soaring high notes. The chorus has a beautiful melody that sonically represents the ‘handmade heaven’ she is singing about. In my humble opinion it was not the strongest track to lead the project with, but a worthy addition to her discography either way. 02. Superstar On second single ‘Superstar’ Marina moved to more basic, radiofriendly pop with a predictable instrumental drop as a post-chorus. Having said that, she makes the genre of the ‘tropical bop’ her own with her unique vocals and strong melodies. The production is on point and lyrically it is a proper love song. Not one of Marina’s strongest or unique tracks, but it has its place on this record! 03. Orange Trees If you want to fault Marina for releasing more basic pop tunes this time around, ‘Orange Trees’ is the one to complain about, but I simply can’t because it is so damn infectious! This breezy, guitar-driven tune brings summer straight through your speakers and I can’t help but smile every time I hear the chorus kick in with the ‘flowers in my hair’ lyric. This will be such a good soundtrack to summer and the fact that she wrote it about the Greek island where her family is from, gives it some extra nostalgic quality. 04. Baby (feat. Clean Bandit & Luis Fonsi) Marina’s Clean Bandit collaboration ‘Baby’ arrived at the end of last year and lead into the release of the band’s album What Is Love?. Clean Bandit weren’t able to lift Marina’s chart curse as the summer bop did not make it past the 15th position in the UK charts. At first I thought this tune would be more of a Clean Bandit track which happened to have Marina’s vocals, but the track does actually make sense in the context of Love. 05. Enjoy Your Life ‘Enjoy Your Life’ was teased on Marina’s Instagram last year. This bouncy synth pop anthem is one of the most uplifting and carefree tracks she has ever put her name to. There are some clear 80s influences in the flawless production by OZGO and Oscar Holter. Lyrically Marina urges her listeners to not worry about everything in life and to sometimes just embrace the problems you are facing and to enjoy your life either way. What a bop! 06. True ‘True’ was produced by OZGO and co-written by Marina, Noonie Bao, OZGO and Oscar Holter. The upbeat electronic pop banger starts out promising, with suspenseful verses, but the chorus could have used a bit more bite. From the middle-eight on, the production picks up slightly and the last chorus therefore hits a little harder, but in terms of melodies, this is certainly not Marina’s strongest moment. 07. To Be Human In comparison to most of the tracks on Love, ‘To Be Human’ is definitely more classic Marina (and the Diamonds). The midtempo pop track, produced by frequent Lorde collaborator Joel Little, is guided by a piano melody while drums kick in during the first chorus. Marina describes a whole lot of places in the verses in her signature, sometimes quite literal, writing style, stating that she has travelled all over the world but still wonders what the meaning is of being human. The delicate ad libs she does over the last chorus form one of her finest vocal moments ever! 08. End of the Earth ‘End of the Earth’, co-written with Jospeh Janiak and James Flannigan and produced by Flannigan, is the most ominous sounding track of the Love side, but at the same time has a loving message. “I’ll give my love, I don’t care if it hurts, ’cause I’ll love you ’till the end of the earth”, she sings over thunderous drums and deep synths. The climax in the last minute is a spectacular way to end this side of the double album, as it is the most adventurous moment production wise. 09. Believe In Love The Fear side starts out with ‘Believe In Love’, a midtempo tune with punchy beats in the verses that sound inspired by the productions on Taylor Swift’s Reputation. The chorus however, has a more laidback vibe and soaring melodies on which Marina’s characteristic vocals are given room to shine. In the lyrics, Marina tries to convince herself to believe in love again and give the person that entered her life a chance. It is a lyrically more hopeful start of this side of the album than expected! 10. Life Is Strange The Joel Little produced ‘Life Is Strange’ was chosen as the track that received a push on the New Music Friday playlists on Spotify. It is a logical choice as the song is one of the more instant tunes of the second lot. The string sample that runs throughout tune is very catchy and the same goes for the vocal melodies at the end of the chorus. In the lyrics, Marina seems to realize that she is not the only one who does not know what to do with her life and that we simply have to accept that we don’t know what is coming as life is strange. Preach it sister! 11. You ‘You’ is one of the more uptempo cuts of the Fear side of the album. The production is simple and straightforward, while the composition is extremely poppy. The repetition of Marina’s high pitched ‘you’ is infectious without getting on the nerves easily. Marina admits in the lyrics that she is just as flawed as the person who is breaking her down. We love an honest bop! 12. Karma On ‘Karma’, Marina shows her anger about influential men both in the music and movie industry falling off their pedestals for abusing their power. Marina watches as karma catches up with them over a seemingly carefree tune with a summer vibe going on. There even seems to be some Greek laika influences in the rhythm and instrumentation of the post-chorus parts. It is easily one of the catchiest and strongest tunes of the whole album! 13. Emotional Machine ‘Emotional Machine’ was one of the first songs that Marina presented of this era. She performed it live for the first time last year. The track is co-written with Caleb and Georgia Nott from New Zealand electro pop duo Broods. Georgia provides backing vocals as well. The result is a smooth light electro pop production with a hypnotic, yet slightly repetitive chorus. 14. Too Afraid Midtempo pop tune ‘Too Afraid’ is easy to forget on first listen and nothing about it really stands out on first listen, but once you get the know the lyrics a little better, you find out they actually tell an honest story about Marina’s life. She explained how the song is about struggling to make actual changes and the challenges of city life. She even said how the track has helped her to make the necessary changes to find happiness so we totally see why ‘Too Afraid’ is special to her! 15. No More Suckers ‘No More Suckers’ is directed at the people in Marina’s life that try to take advantage of her. They don’t contribute anything to her life, but just eat her food and mess up her towels! Together with Alex Hope and James Flannigan she wrote a sassy little tune about it with an effortlessly catchy chorus. A read has never sounded so breezy before! We love it when our pop stars deliver important life advise over hooks for days. 16. Soft To Be Strong Marina closes the album delicately with the gorgeous ballad ‘Soft To Be Strong’. It is a cute love song that talks about how a relationship grows stronger when you actually dare to show your soft and vulnerable side to the person you want to be with. A beautiful thought, packed in an impeccable melody that closes Marina’s accomplished fourth studio album. On Love + Fear, Marina shows herself to be more mature and carefree than ever before, which causes her tunes to be generally slightly more basic and at the same time contemporary sounding. Although this might not be the best work of her career, the melodies are still very much on point on most of the songs and the productions are lush! While she delivers the bops in the first half, the more mature and deep lyrics follow in the second. A well balanced record that sure was worth the wait! . 19 365 295 346 498 487 88 191

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