...But not for the reasons you’d think. “The days of staying up until 4 a.m. are gone,” says Norah Jones, now with two kids, a new album and Trump anxiety.
I’VE HAD A LOT OF LATE NIGHTS WITH ME and my husband just dancing and cooking,” says Norah Jones. It’s the end of August, and the 37-year-old singer is tucked into a banquette in the back room of Brooklyn’s Bar Tabac when she drops this bit of domestic intel. Specifically, she’s describing the inspiration for the “Carry On” video — her first for new album Day Breaks (Blue Note, Oct. 7) — which features an older couple dancing around a kitchen table as Jones plays the piano off to the side. “I write songs on my kitchen piano,” she says, adding that her 2-and-a-half-year-old son’s favorite hobby is running laps around the room’s Island counter before bedtime.
It’s a rare glimpse into the life of one of music’s most private stars, which — by any account besides her own — has completely transformed since her last studio album, 2012’s pop-flavored (and Danger Mouse-produced) Little Broken Hearts. First there were the side projects — 2013’s Foreverly with Green Day’s Bill ie Joe Armstrong and 2014’s No Fools, No Fun with her alt-country band Puss N Boots. Then came the collaborations with everyone from Willie Nelson and Keith Richards to Seth MacFarlane and half-sister Anoushka Shankar. Her famous (and famously distant) father, Ravi Shankar, died in 2012, just before Jones started her own family. Today, she’s married with two children, the aforementioned son and a 6-month-old daughter.
Denne historien er fra October 8, 2016-utgaven av Billboard.
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Denne historien er fra October 8, 2016-utgaven av Billboard.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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The Three Amigos
A rowdy trio raised together in North Atlanta, Migos cut a singularly now path to pop stardom: STEP 1 Launch a dance craze. STEP 2 Score a No. 1 with the help of a meme. STEP 3 Spend Grammy night partying with superfans Chance the Rapper and Chris Brown — as Billboard tags along. “I try not to be cocky,” says Takeoff, “but hey, we the shit, man”
California's Hero Of Cannabis Legalization
Lieutenant governor Gavin Newsom has rock star friends, his own clubs and a progressive agenda that got his state’s landmark Proposition 64 legislation passed — and the music industry rallying behind him
The Green Album
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Simon Cowell, the Svengali's Second Act
From 1D to Fifth Harmony, the TV and music mogul owns pop culture. Now 56, he’s going in front of the camera again as he heads to America’s Got Talent, talks Harry Styles solo, plays with his 2-year-old son and reveals a certain sentimentality about American Idol: ‘I like to torture myself’
Twenty One Pilots on Their Musical Bromance and Fleeting Fame
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Gone Girl
Camila Cabello Kicked Off Her Solo Career and Her Band Sisters in Fifth Harmony Unexpectedly Denounced Her for It. Now She’s Got a Top Five Single, a Much-anticipated Album Coming and Zero Second Thoughts: “you Have to Honor That Inner Voice”
The Rise And Fall And Rise Of Nicky Jam
Born in the USA, catapulted to teen fame in Puerto Rico and practically washed up by his 20s, Nicky Jam went to Medellín, Colombia — a city haunted by its drug kingpin past — to find sobriety, love and greater-than-ever success. Billboard spends 48 hours with the reggaetón superstar in his adopted home as he prepares for his wedding — and, oh yeah, scores a No. 1 Latin album
Fifth Harmony: Pretty Little Fighters
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Jennifer Nettles: A Star Goes Back To Her Roots
Four years after Sugarland’s split, Jennifer Nettles is supporting Hillary and advocating for female artists (bro country be damned): “It’s in my blood”
Life's Been Good To Niall (So Far)
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