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Lorde - Audio Biography

Lorde - Audio Biography

By: Quiet. Please
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"Discover the captivating life story of Lorde, the renowned New Zealand singer-songwriter, in the "Lorde Audio Biography" podcast. Delve into the inspiring journey of this Grammy-winning artist, from her humble beginnings to the pinnacle of her success. Immerse yourself in Lorde's creative process, personal struggles, and the profound impact she has had on the music industry. Expertly narrated with in-depth interviews and exclusive insights, this podcast offers a unique and insightful exploration of the artist behind the iconic hits. Whether you're a devoted fan or simply curious about the life of this remarkable talent, the "Lorde Audio Biography" is a must-listen that will leave you with a newfound appreciation for the woman behind the music."


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Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Lorde's Triumphant Return: Virgin Album Drops, Ultrasound Tour Unveiled
    Aug 16 2025
    Lorde BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

    Lorde is everywhere right now. This past week, she officially launched the era for her highly anticipated fourth album Virgin, which dropped June 27 and already has critics and fans dissecting lyrics and influences. Lorde herself characterized the album as “100 percent written in blood,” sharing on BBC Radio 1 how Charli XCX’s Brat and her work remixing Girl So Confusing jolted her creative process and pushed her to further define her own sound for Virgin. Key collaborators on the album include Dan Nigro, Blood Orange, Fabiana Palladino, Jim-E Stack, Andrew Aged, and Buddy Ross, underlining just how much the New Zealand-born star is leaning into a new set of sonic explorers, as reported by Variety and Northern Transmissions.

    Adding to the excitement, Lorde this week announced the Ultrasound International Tour, a major world trek kicking off September 17 at Austin's Moody Center and hitting iconic venues like Madison Square Garden in New York and the O2 Arena in London before wrapping up in Stockholm in December. The tour includes support from Blood Orange, the Japanese House, Nilüfer Yanya, Chanel Beads, Empress Of, Jim-E Stack, and Oklou on select dates. Her team confirmed tickets go on sale May 16, with a pre-sale starting May 14, and demand is expected to be fierce, according to XS Rock and AOL.

    Lorde’s promo campaign has been as theatrical as her music. In late April, she hosted a fan event in New York’s Washington Square Park to premiere the first single, What Was That, and shot part of the video there. This week, Office Magazine spotlights the release of her newest music video, which has Lorde channeling three versions of herself—her childhood, her lover, and the wise gardener—melding past and present with self-reflection that longtime fans will appreciate.

    Social media is buzzing. Multiple stories from the fan account lordestars on August 14 and lorde.season on August 15 tease the Ultrasound stage design, visuals, and first looks at the tour merch. These Instagram teasers have fans speculating about a bold, conceptual production, but details remain under wraps until official rehearsals begin. That speculation aside, what’s confirmed is that Lorde herself started posting cryptic clips and messages on her official accounts in the last few days, fueling the viral anticipation.

    Major headlines this week include Lorde Returns With Ultrasound World Tour, The Secrets Behind Lorde’s Virgin, and Fans React to Lorde’s Dramatic Stage Makeover. While there are rumors of possible surprise guests at certain tour stops, none of these have been confirmed by her label.

    All eyes are on Lorde this month, with the scale of her return and the creative risks she is taking likely to shape her legacy for years to come.

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    3 mins
  • Lorde's Chaotic Grace: New Single, Album Buzz, and Global Tour Resurgence
    Aug 13 2025
    Lorde BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

    It has been an incendiary few days in the world of Lorde. Tuesday saw the launch of her first new single in nearly four years, titled What Was That, a collaboration with Grammy honoree Dan Nigro and JimE Stack. According to Variety, the rollout was classic Lorde, equal parts mystery and mayhem—she teased a pop-up performance in New York’s Washington Square Park via group text and social media, but the crowd swelled so fast that local rangers and police shut the event down. Lorde responded in real time on Instagram, apologizing and marveling at the turnout. Even so, she later appeared at the park, playing the song and thanking fans who refused to disperse. The music video, already trending, features Lorde roaming New York by bicycle, nodding both to spontaneity and her recent public anonymity.

    Aside from singles, Lorde’s new album Virgin officially arrives June 27 via Republic Records. Her publicity on this has been direct and introspective, opening up just days ago on Jake Shane’s Therapuss podcast about feeling distant from the pop spotlight after the pressure cooker of Melodrama. She confessed to being “overwhelmed,” contemplating a step away from global attention, even picturing an alternative life on a quiet New Zealand farm. Ultimately, she came to terms with her need to craft hits that resonate at festivals—contrasting her chilled previous album, Solar Power, with the energetic direction of Virgin.

    Virgin is already drawing buzz for how Lorde processes personal evolution throughout her twenties, with tracks like Girl So Confusing, a collaboration with Charli XCX, showing her reconciling public misunderstandings and old feuds. The two performed the song live at Coachella’s opening weekend and New York’s Madison Square Garden, both appearances instantly sparking headline coverage.

    The commercial front is equally busy. Tickets for her Ultrasound Tour go live May 16, with presales starting May 14. The tour, lorded over by Lorde herself, runs from September through December across North America and Europe. Major venues like United Center in Chicago, Madison Square Garden in New York, O2 Arena in London, and arenas from Paris to Berlin are locked in, cementing Lorde’s status as a global draw. Social chatter is relentless, whether it’s fans imagining minimalist staging on Instagram or tributes in New York’s club scene.

    As for style, Lorde turned heads courtside in a striped Balenciaga polo at Outside Lands in San Francisco just days ago, driving coverage in AOL and fashion media. Overall, Lorde is having a bona fide resurgence—a new single, a candid public persona, blockbuster tour, and a preview of an album that could reshape her trajectory well beyond 2025. Speculation about Blood Orange’s Dev Hynes producing tracks for Virgin continues, but is as yet unconfirmed. The headlines agree: This is Lorde’s moment, and she’s navigating it with chaotic grace.

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    3 mins
  • Lorde's Daring Return: Unveiling Virgin, Ultrasound Tour, and a Bold New Era
    Aug 9 2025
    Lorde BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

    The past week has been a whirlwind for Lorde, who has fully stepped back into the cultural spotlight with a vigor that even her most patient fans might not have expected. The biggest headline is her highly anticipated fourth album, Virgin, finally seeing the light of day with a June 27 release. This opus marks both a personal and artistic evolution, deeply influenced by Lorde’s four years away from the public eye as she navigated mental health challenges, recovery from an eating disorder, and a searching, sometimes ambivalent journey with her gender identity. In interviews, like her striking conversation with Chappell Roan published in Rolling Stone, Lorde revealed she still identifies as a cis woman with she or her pronouns, yet situates herself “in the middle gender-wise,” resisting any neat binaries and weaving this honesty into her newest lyrics, notably on tracks like Hammer and Broken Glass.

    Musically, Virgin is audacious and revealing, both thematically and sonically. The first single, What Was That, dropped April 24 and gave fans their first taste of the album’s raw spirit, but the real shockwave came just days ago when she released the second single, Man of the Year, paired with a visually intimate music video. Lorde herself calls it “the song I’m proudest of on Virgin” and the video’s spareness underscores her drive for artistic transparency. According to her label, the album strikes a daring balance between maximalist production and her trademark lyric intimacy, a throughline actively dissected in reviews like the one published August 4 in Lanthorn, which singles out her evolution both as a woman and an artist not content to return to the status quo.

    Business-wise, Lorde electrified music newsrooms by announcing the Ultrasound World Tour, a globe-spanning arena run kicking off September 17 in Austin. Tour stops in New York, Chicago, Toronto, LA, and across Europe cement Lorde’s status among arena headliners, and support acts like Blood Orange, The Japanese House, and Empress Of make this tour a pop aficionado’s dream. Posts on her site and socials are teasing the show’s bold x-ray-inspired aesthetic, echoing both the Virgin album art and her open, vulnerable new persona.

    Social media is ablaze with fan theories and stage design speculation, with Instagram accounts like lordestars buzzing about a minimalist look for the tour. Ticket giveaways are dominating radio stations and web contests, adding to the sense that Lorde is not only back—she’s entering her boldest era yet, inviting us all to see what’s under the skin.

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    3 mins
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