Love is in the air this Valentine’s Day.
Whether you’re looking to spend it with a special someone, or want to celebrate love with some great tunes, Et has you covered.
Here are our recommendations for the best romantic songs from 2023 to add to your playlist this year.
1. Pink – Trustfall
This upbeat track from Pink features an action-packed music video with the star hitting the road at sunset on a motorcycle. The lyrics talk about two lovers who learn to trust each other as they take on the world.
2. Daniel Caesar – Do You Like Me?
Caeser’s funky love song features an artistic one-shot video of a couple arguing across their house with multilingual subtitles.
Read More: 12 New Holiday Songs To Get Your Jingle On
3. Tiesto – 10:35 (feat. Tate McRae)
This collaboration between DJ Tiesto and Tate McRae is an upbeat club track with some stylish choreography as...
Whether you’re looking to spend it with a special someone, or want to celebrate love with some great tunes, Et has you covered.
Here are our recommendations for the best romantic songs from 2023 to add to your playlist this year.
1. Pink – Trustfall
This upbeat track from Pink features an action-packed music video with the star hitting the road at sunset on a motorcycle. The lyrics talk about two lovers who learn to trust each other as they take on the world.
2. Daniel Caesar – Do You Like Me?
Caeser’s funky love song features an artistic one-shot video of a couple arguing across their house with multilingual subtitles.
Read More: 12 New Holiday Songs To Get Your Jingle On
3. Tiesto – 10:35 (feat. Tate McRae)
This collaboration between DJ Tiesto and Tate McRae is an upbeat club track with some stylish choreography as...
- 2/14/2023
- by Anita Tai
- ET Canada
Sam Smith says their collab with Ed Sheeran was a long time in the works.
The artist’s new album Gloria is filled with star-studded names like Canadian Jessie Reyez and Kim Petras, but the track “Who We Love” with Sheeran took work to come together.
“It was beautiful. We’ve been friends for a long time and we’ve always wanted to work on a piece of music together. And this happened just so naturally,” said Smith on the team-up.
Read More: Sam Smith On Harassment After Changing Pronouns: ‘Someone Spat At Me In The Street’
“I love the record so much and he is such a dear special person to me, and to share something like this – it’s the end of the album and everything feels so perfect about it. I love it,” they added.
Of course, the “Unholy” singer had equal praise for their other collaborators,...
The artist’s new album Gloria is filled with star-studded names like Canadian Jessie Reyez and Kim Petras, but the track “Who We Love” with Sheeran took work to come together.
“It was beautiful. We’ve been friends for a long time and we’ve always wanted to work on a piece of music together. And this happened just so naturally,” said Smith on the team-up.
Read More: Sam Smith On Harassment After Changing Pronouns: ‘Someone Spat At Me In The Street’
“I love the record so much and he is such a dear special person to me, and to share something like this – it’s the end of the album and everything feels so perfect about it. I love it,” they added.
Of course, the “Unholy” singer had equal praise for their other collaborators,...
- 1/27/2023
- by Anita Tai
- ET Canada
“You like them crazy do you? I’m crazy through and through...” croons Sam Smith on their fourth album, Gloria. Smith seems too sweet to live up to the boast. You could safely take every song on this easygoing record home to meet the parents. Even on “I’m Not Here to Make Friends”, a track about searching for a lover in the darkness of a club, you can still imagine Smith at said club volunteering to be the designated driver for their mates.
This warmly conversational quality is nicely expressed on opener “Love Me More”, in which Smith asks listeners: “Have you ever felt like being somebody else?” They admit that the identity that “used to burn” now feels increasingly comfortable. Set to an affable, Nineties R&b beat, the song sees the mainstream pioneer of non-binary life holding out a companionable hand to anyone struggling to accept themselves.
This warmly conversational quality is nicely expressed on opener “Love Me More”, in which Smith asks listeners: “Have you ever felt like being somebody else?” They admit that the identity that “used to burn” now feels increasingly comfortable. Set to an affable, Nineties R&b beat, the song sees the mainstream pioneer of non-binary life holding out a companionable hand to anyone struggling to accept themselves.
- 1/27/2023
- by Helen Brown
- The Independent - Music
Since breaking through a decade ago with their impassioned vocal on Disclosure’s churning club smash “Latch,” Sam Smith has been one of pop’s premier torch singers. Their ability to express yearning, whether by using their gasped upper register or their voice’s smoothed-out lower reaches, lends itself naturally to ballads, or glumly kinetic songs like the 2019 Normani collaboration “Dancing With a Stranger.”
Smith, a charismatic performer and skilled interpreter of lyrics, has often seemed a bit boxed in by the sad-singer ideal. In 2022, they exploded any expectations that...
Smith, a charismatic performer and skilled interpreter of lyrics, has often seemed a bit boxed in by the sad-singer ideal. In 2022, they exploded any expectations that...
- 1/24/2023
- by Maura Johnston
- Rollingstone.com
A strong line-up of new films by Irish filmmakers is being showcased at this week’s Galway Film Fleadh.
Long regarded as a festival that introduces emerging Irish talent, Galway Film Fleadh’s line-up this year is notable for the breadth of new names and stories.
Local and international demand for storytelling is also fuelling a growth in indigenous filmmaking in the Irish language and a number of new films are screening at the Fleadh which this week is running online from July 20-25.
Seán Breathnach’s Foscadh (Shelter), Damian McCann’s Doineann and Tomás Seoighe’s The Queen v...
Long regarded as a festival that introduces emerging Irish talent, Galway Film Fleadh’s line-up this year is notable for the breadth of new names and stories.
Local and international demand for storytelling is also fuelling a growth in indigenous filmmaking in the Irish language and a number of new films are screening at the Fleadh which this week is running online from July 20-25.
Seán Breathnach’s Foscadh (Shelter), Damian McCann’s Doineann and Tomás Seoighe’s The Queen v...
- 7/23/2021
- by Esther McCarthy
- ScreenDaily
The hybrid festival will showcase 11 world premieres.
Seán Breathnach’s Irish-language drama Foscadh, Ross Killeen’s music documentary Love Yourself Today and Graham Cantwell’s coming-of-age drama Who We Love are among several new Irish films making their world premiere at the hybrid Galway Film Fleadh which is running from July 20th to 25th.
The Fleadh will showcase 45 features, 11 of which are world premieres. The main physical venue will be an outdoor cinema in the city’s historic centre this year and many of the titles will also screen online along with the programme of industry events and filmmaker discussions.
Seán Breathnach’s Irish-language drama Foscadh, Ross Killeen’s music documentary Love Yourself Today and Graham Cantwell’s coming-of-age drama Who We Love are among several new Irish films making their world premiere at the hybrid Galway Film Fleadh which is running from July 20th to 25th.
The Fleadh will showcase 45 features, 11 of which are world premieres. The main physical venue will be an outdoor cinema in the city’s historic centre this year and many of the titles will also screen online along with the programme of industry events and filmmaker discussions.
- 7/8/2021
- by Esther McCarthy
- ScreenDaily
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