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    <title>Lorde  - Biography Flash</title>
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    <copyright>Copyright 2026 Inception Point AI</copyright>
    <description>"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."


For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/

Check out these deals https://amzn.to/3zlo77e

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
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    <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
    <itunes:summary>"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."


For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/

Check out these deals https://amzn.to/3zlo77e

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
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      <![CDATA["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."


For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/

Check out these deals https://amzn.to/3zlo77e

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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    <itunes:owner>
      <itunes:name>Quiet. Please</itunes:name>
      <itunes:email>info@inceptionpoint.ai</itunes:email>
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      <title>Biography Flash Lorde Drops Manager and Eyes Full Independence on Her Ultrasound World Tour</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7529905879</link>
      <description>This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 03 May 2026 09:02:22 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
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        <![CDATA[This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>123</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Biography Flash Lorde at Jazz Fest 2026 Virgin Album Revival and Raw Stage Power</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5279998035</link>
      <description>Lorde made waves this weekend with her electrifying performance at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival on Friday, April 24, headlining the first day alongside Jon Batiste and Sean Paul at the Fairgrounds Race Course, according to Audacy's B97 event listings. Fans raved about her raw energy, channeling the emotional depth of her latest album Virgin into a set that had the crowd dancing through the vibes and good times of Jazz Fest 2026. This appearance marks a significant step in her post-Solar Power tour resurgence, potentially signaling bigger live shows ahead as she rebuilds her stage presence after personal struggles.

No major headlines have broken in the past 24 hours, but buzz around Virgin continues to build biographical weight. A fresh Her Campus analysis by Liz Harrison-Mills dives deep into the album's themes of eating disorder recovery, hormonal shifts after ditching birth control, and fraught mother-daughter dynamics, quoting Lorde's own interviews on how the pandemic-fueled disorder wrecked her creativity and how tracks like Broken Glass capture breaking free from shame. The pelvis X-ray cover art, revealing her IUD, sparked endless discourse on vulnerability, while viral TikTok hits like the second lead single exposed diabolical ex-texts and self-discovery.

Social media mentions are lighting up, with Capsule highlighting Lorde's trend of bringing her MacBook onstage alongside Olivia Rodrigo and Justin Bieber, ditching spectacle for intimacy that gets fans closer than ever. No confirmed business moves or public spots beyond Jazz Fest, though unverified whispers on platforms hint at Virgin tour teases-nothing solid yet.

This festival triumph underscores Lorde's evolution from introspective recluse to unapologetic force, with Virgin's personal reckonings poised to define her next chapter.

Thanks for listening, and please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 26 Apr 2026 09:03:38 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde made waves this weekend with her electrifying performance at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival on Friday, April 24, headlining the first day alongside Jon Batiste and Sean Paul at the Fairgrounds Race Course, according to Audacy's B97 event listings. Fans raved about her raw energy, channeling the emotional depth of her latest album Virgin into a set that had the crowd dancing through the vibes and good times of Jazz Fest 2026. This appearance marks a significant step in her post-Solar Power tour resurgence, potentially signaling bigger live shows ahead as she rebuilds her stage presence after personal struggles.

No major headlines have broken in the past 24 hours, but buzz around Virgin continues to build biographical weight. A fresh Her Campus analysis by Liz Harrison-Mills dives deep into the album's themes of eating disorder recovery, hormonal shifts after ditching birth control, and fraught mother-daughter dynamics, quoting Lorde's own interviews on how the pandemic-fueled disorder wrecked her creativity and how tracks like Broken Glass capture breaking free from shame. The pelvis X-ray cover art, revealing her IUD, sparked endless discourse on vulnerability, while viral TikTok hits like the second lead single exposed diabolical ex-texts and self-discovery.

Social media mentions are lighting up, with Capsule highlighting Lorde's trend of bringing her MacBook onstage alongside Olivia Rodrigo and Justin Bieber, ditching spectacle for intimacy that gets fans closer than ever. No confirmed business moves or public spots beyond Jazz Fest, though unverified whispers on platforms hint at Virgin tour teases-nothing solid yet.

This festival triumph underscores Lorde's evolution from introspective recluse to unapologetic force, with Virgin's personal reckonings poised to define her next chapter.

Thanks for listening, and please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde made waves this weekend with her electrifying performance at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival on Friday, April 24, headlining the first day alongside Jon Batiste and Sean Paul at the Fairgrounds Race Course, according to Audacy's B97 event listings. Fans raved about her raw energy, channeling the emotional depth of her latest album Virgin into a set that had the crowd dancing through the vibes and good times of Jazz Fest 2026. This appearance marks a significant step in her post-Solar Power tour resurgence, potentially signaling bigger live shows ahead as she rebuilds her stage presence after personal struggles.

No major headlines have broken in the past 24 hours, but buzz around Virgin continues to build biographical weight. A fresh Her Campus analysis by Liz Harrison-Mills dives deep into the album's themes of eating disorder recovery, hormonal shifts after ditching birth control, and fraught mother-daughter dynamics, quoting Lorde's own interviews on how the pandemic-fueled disorder wrecked her creativity and how tracks like Broken Glass capture breaking free from shame. The pelvis X-ray cover art, revealing her IUD, sparked endless discourse on vulnerability, while viral TikTok hits like the second lead single exposed diabolical ex-texts and self-discovery.

Social media mentions are lighting up, with Capsule highlighting Lorde's trend of bringing her MacBook onstage alongside Olivia Rodrigo and Justin Bieber, ditching spectacle for intimacy that gets fans closer than ever. No confirmed business moves or public spots beyond Jazz Fest, though unverified whispers on platforms hint at Virgin tour teases-nothing solid yet.

This festival triumph underscores Lorde's evolution from introspective recluse to unapologetic force, with Virgin's personal reckonings poised to define her next chapter.

Thanks for listening, and please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>253</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Biography Flash Lorde Awards Buzz and Jack Antonoff Drama Resurfaces in Famesick Memoir</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4446026737</link>
      <description>Lorde fans, buckle up for the latest from our Royals queen. In a whirlwind of awards buzz, New Zealand Herald reports Lorde is a multiple nominee at the 2026 Aotearoa Music Awards alongside Marlon Williams and Benee, spotlighting her enduring Kiwi roots and potential for fresh te reo-inspired triumphs that could redefine her biographical arc. This nod, just days ago, underscores her quiet dominance in homegrown music scenes amid global silence.

But the real tea brewing? Bored Panda highlights how Lena Dunhams explosive memoir Famesick has reignited decade-old affair rumors with Lordes longtime collaborator Jack Antonoff. A 2017 tweet from Dunham resurfaced, where she gushed about overhearing Jack and Lorde record Melodrama in her house, calling it the perfect album to write to. Fans now dissect it as shady subtext, tying into Dunhams confessions of insecurity over the 12-year age gap and their studio closeness during her 2012 to 2018 romance with Jack.

Dunham details spotting a fan PowerPoint alleging the fling torpedoed their split, though Lorde and Jack shot down dating whispers in 2018. She insisted on Instagram, Jack and I are not dating, hes awesome, but were not, while he dismissed it as heteronormative nonsense about platonic guy-girl friendships. Dunham admits her own cheat with a middle school ex amid suspicions, but they parted tearfully, foreheads together, admitting mutual unhappiness. No fresh Lorde response yet, keeping this gossip volcano simmering with biographical weight on her creative partnerships.

No public appearances or new social media posts from Lorde in the past few days, per checked sources, and zero major headlines in the last 24 hours. All verified, no unconfirmed whispers here.

Thanks for listening, listener. Please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 19 Apr 2026 09:04:05 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde fans, buckle up for the latest from our Royals queen. In a whirlwind of awards buzz, New Zealand Herald reports Lorde is a multiple nominee at the 2026 Aotearoa Music Awards alongside Marlon Williams and Benee, spotlighting her enduring Kiwi roots and potential for fresh te reo-inspired triumphs that could redefine her biographical arc. This nod, just days ago, underscores her quiet dominance in homegrown music scenes amid global silence.

But the real tea brewing? Bored Panda highlights how Lena Dunhams explosive memoir Famesick has reignited decade-old affair rumors with Lordes longtime collaborator Jack Antonoff. A 2017 tweet from Dunham resurfaced, where she gushed about overhearing Jack and Lorde record Melodrama in her house, calling it the perfect album to write to. Fans now dissect it as shady subtext, tying into Dunhams confessions of insecurity over the 12-year age gap and their studio closeness during her 2012 to 2018 romance with Jack.

Dunham details spotting a fan PowerPoint alleging the fling torpedoed their split, though Lorde and Jack shot down dating whispers in 2018. She insisted on Instagram, Jack and I are not dating, hes awesome, but were not, while he dismissed it as heteronormative nonsense about platonic guy-girl friendships. Dunham admits her own cheat with a middle school ex amid suspicions, but they parted tearfully, foreheads together, admitting mutual unhappiness. No fresh Lorde response yet, keeping this gossip volcano simmering with biographical weight on her creative partnerships.

No public appearances or new social media posts from Lorde in the past few days, per checked sources, and zero major headlines in the last 24 hours. All verified, no unconfirmed whispers here.

Thanks for listening, listener. Please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde fans, buckle up for the latest from our Royals queen. In a whirlwind of awards buzz, New Zealand Herald reports Lorde is a multiple nominee at the 2026 Aotearoa Music Awards alongside Marlon Williams and Benee, spotlighting her enduring Kiwi roots and potential for fresh te reo-inspired triumphs that could redefine her biographical arc. This nod, just days ago, underscores her quiet dominance in homegrown music scenes amid global silence.

But the real tea brewing? Bored Panda highlights how Lena Dunhams explosive memoir Famesick has reignited decade-old affair rumors with Lordes longtime collaborator Jack Antonoff. A 2017 tweet from Dunham resurfaced, where she gushed about overhearing Jack and Lorde record Melodrama in her house, calling it the perfect album to write to. Fans now dissect it as shady subtext, tying into Dunhams confessions of insecurity over the 12-year age gap and their studio closeness during her 2012 to 2018 romance with Jack.

Dunham details spotting a fan PowerPoint alleging the fling torpedoed their split, though Lorde and Jack shot down dating whispers in 2018. She insisted on Instagram, Jack and I are not dating, hes awesome, but were not, while he dismissed it as heteronormative nonsense about platonic guy-girl friendships. Dunham admits her own cheat with a middle school ex amid suspicions, but they parted tearfully, foreheads together, admitting mutual unhappiness. No fresh Lorde response yet, keeping this gossip volcano simmering with biographical weight on her creative partnerships.

No public appearances or new social media posts from Lorde in the past few days, per checked sources, and zero major headlines in the last 24 hours. All verified, no unconfirmed whispers here.

Thanks for listening, listener. Please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>213</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Biography Flash Lorde Ultrasound World Tour Headlines All Points East and Global Fest Domination</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6289533351</link>
      <description>Lorde's Ultrasound World Tour is charging full steam ahead, with fans scrambling for tickets to her arena-shaking shows supporting the chart-topping Virgin album, as detailed in Wikipedia's tour page and Business Insider's resale guide. Just days ago, No Taste magazine dropped the bombshell that the Kiwi pop icon will headline London's All Points East festival on August 22, 2026, curating an all-female powerhouse lineup with PinkPantheress, Zara Larsson, 2hollis, Oklou, and Rose Gray—her sole UK fest slot this year, hot on the heels of her US Spotify number one What Was That. Ticket resale frenzy is real: Vivid Seats lists starters at $91, spiking to $526 for premium Kia Forum seats in LA on May 14 and 15, while StubHub dips as low as $74 for that hot date, per Business Insider. No public appearances or fresh social media buzz in the last few days, but her North American leg looms large—New Orleans Jazz Fest on April 24, then Mexico triple-threat in late April, Kilby Block Party, BottleRock, Governors Ball, and more through summer Euro fests like Mad Cool, NOS Alive, Lollapalooza Berlin, and a grand finale in Luxembourg on September 1. This tour resurgence cements her biographical arc from teen sensation to global arena dominatrix, with no unconfirmed rumors muddying the waters—just verified heat building toward those sold-out spectacles. In the past 24 hours, zero major headlines beyond the ongoing ticket scramble.

Thanks for listening, and please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde—search Biography Flash for more great biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 09:03:59 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde's Ultrasound World Tour is charging full steam ahead, with fans scrambling for tickets to her arena-shaking shows supporting the chart-topping Virgin album, as detailed in Wikipedia's tour page and Business Insider's resale guide. Just days ago, No Taste magazine dropped the bombshell that the Kiwi pop icon will headline London's All Points East festival on August 22, 2026, curating an all-female powerhouse lineup with PinkPantheress, Zara Larsson, 2hollis, Oklou, and Rose Gray—her sole UK fest slot this year, hot on the heels of her US Spotify number one What Was That. Ticket resale frenzy is real: Vivid Seats lists starters at $91, spiking to $526 for premium Kia Forum seats in LA on May 14 and 15, while StubHub dips as low as $74 for that hot date, per Business Insider. No public appearances or fresh social media buzz in the last few days, but her North American leg looms large—New Orleans Jazz Fest on April 24, then Mexico triple-threat in late April, Kilby Block Party, BottleRock, Governors Ball, and more through summer Euro fests like Mad Cool, NOS Alive, Lollapalooza Berlin, and a grand finale in Luxembourg on September 1. This tour resurgence cements her biographical arc from teen sensation to global arena dominatrix, with no unconfirmed rumors muddying the waters—just verified heat building toward those sold-out spectacles. In the past 24 hours, zero major headlines beyond the ongoing ticket scramble.

Thanks for listening, and please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde—search Biography Flash for more great biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde's Ultrasound World Tour is charging full steam ahead, with fans scrambling for tickets to her arena-shaking shows supporting the chart-topping Virgin album, as detailed in Wikipedia's tour page and Business Insider's resale guide. Just days ago, No Taste magazine dropped the bombshell that the Kiwi pop icon will headline London's All Points East festival on August 22, 2026, curating an all-female powerhouse lineup with PinkPantheress, Zara Larsson, 2hollis, Oklou, and Rose Gray—her sole UK fest slot this year, hot on the heels of her US Spotify number one What Was That. Ticket resale frenzy is real: Vivid Seats lists starters at $91, spiking to $526 for premium Kia Forum seats in LA on May 14 and 15, while StubHub dips as low as $74 for that hot date, per Business Insider. No public appearances or fresh social media buzz in the last few days, but her North American leg looms large—New Orleans Jazz Fest on April 24, then Mexico triple-threat in late April, Kilby Block Party, BottleRock, Governors Ball, and more through summer Euro fests like Mad Cool, NOS Alive, Lollapalooza Berlin, and a grand finale in Luxembourg on September 1. This tour resurgence cements her biographical arc from teen sensation to global arena dominatrix, with no unconfirmed rumors muddying the waters—just verified heat building toward those sold-out spectacles. In the past 24 hours, zero major headlines beyond the ongoing ticket scramble.

Thanks for listening, and please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde—search Biography Flash for more great biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>207</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Biography Flash Lorde Leaves Universal Launches Music Empire and Headlines Ultrasound World Tour in 2026</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI8181260126</link>
      <description>Lorde fans, buckle up for the latest from her whirlwind Ultrasound World Tour era. Just weeks ago on February 11, Auckland's Spark Arena hosted her emotional homecoming show, where she stunned the crowd by confessing mid-set that she once thought she'd never make music again before crafting the raw electropop of Virgin, as detailed in her IAM.com artist profile. That twelve-year career milestone performance kicked off a packed 2026 schedule, with the tour barreling toward arena triumphs like Madison Square Garden and London's O2.

Fresh headlines hit this week: My98Rock reports Lorde is set to headline Sunday night at Montreal's Osheaga Festival July 31 through August 2, closing the bill alongside Tate McRae and Twenty One Pilots in support of Virgin, her chart-topping fourth album from June 2025. This marks her return to the fest since topping it in 2017 during Melodrama mania, signaling her enduring festival draw and potential for more North American dominance.

Business-wise, Brownwood Rocks reveals Lorde, nearing 30, has parted ways with Universal Music, calling herself inspired by the move. She's channeling that energy into personal quests like finally nabbing a driver's license, mastering chess, and launching a sleek new office dedicated to her music empire—no small pivot for the famously reclusive star who prioritizes long creative retreats over the content grind.

Social media stays sparse but potent on her verified Instagram, X, and TikTok at @lorde, with 11 million followers tuned in for tour teases amid her 18 billion global streams. No public appearances or new singles in the past few days, but whispers of deluxe Virgin projects linger as unconfirmed speculation. In the last 24 hours, no major headlines broke, keeping focus on these tour and biz shifts with lasting biographical weight.

Thanks for listening, and please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 09:04:18 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde fans, buckle up for the latest from her whirlwind Ultrasound World Tour era. Just weeks ago on February 11, Auckland's Spark Arena hosted her emotional homecoming show, where she stunned the crowd by confessing mid-set that she once thought she'd never make music again before crafting the raw electropop of Virgin, as detailed in her IAM.com artist profile. That twelve-year career milestone performance kicked off a packed 2026 schedule, with the tour barreling toward arena triumphs like Madison Square Garden and London's O2.

Fresh headlines hit this week: My98Rock reports Lorde is set to headline Sunday night at Montreal's Osheaga Festival July 31 through August 2, closing the bill alongside Tate McRae and Twenty One Pilots in support of Virgin, her chart-topping fourth album from June 2025. This marks her return to the fest since topping it in 2017 during Melodrama mania, signaling her enduring festival draw and potential for more North American dominance.

Business-wise, Brownwood Rocks reveals Lorde, nearing 30, has parted ways with Universal Music, calling herself inspired by the move. She's channeling that energy into personal quests like finally nabbing a driver's license, mastering chess, and launching a sleek new office dedicated to her music empire—no small pivot for the famously reclusive star who prioritizes long creative retreats over the content grind.

Social media stays sparse but potent on her verified Instagram, X, and TikTok at @lorde, with 11 million followers tuned in for tour teases amid her 18 billion global streams. No public appearances or new singles in the past few days, but whispers of deluxe Virgin projects linger as unconfirmed speculation. In the last 24 hours, no major headlines broke, keeping focus on these tour and biz shifts with lasting biographical weight.

Thanks for listening, and please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde fans, buckle up for the latest from her whirlwind Ultrasound World Tour era. Just weeks ago on February 11, Auckland's Spark Arena hosted her emotional homecoming show, where she stunned the crowd by confessing mid-set that she once thought she'd never make music again before crafting the raw electropop of Virgin, as detailed in her IAM.com artist profile. That twelve-year career milestone performance kicked off a packed 2026 schedule, with the tour barreling toward arena triumphs like Madison Square Garden and London's O2.

Fresh headlines hit this week: My98Rock reports Lorde is set to headline Sunday night at Montreal's Osheaga Festival July 31 through August 2, closing the bill alongside Tate McRae and Twenty One Pilots in support of Virgin, her chart-topping fourth album from June 2025. This marks her return to the fest since topping it in 2017 during Melodrama mania, signaling her enduring festival draw and potential for more North American dominance.

Business-wise, Brownwood Rocks reveals Lorde, nearing 30, has parted ways with Universal Music, calling herself inspired by the move. She's channeling that energy into personal quests like finally nabbing a driver's license, mastering chess, and launching a sleek new office dedicated to her music empire—no small pivot for the famously reclusive star who prioritizes long creative retreats over the content grind.

Social media stays sparse but potent on her verified Instagram, X, and TikTok at @lorde, with 11 million followers tuned in for tour teases amid her 18 billion global streams. No public appearances or new singles in the past few days, but whispers of deluxe Virgin projects linger as unconfirmed speculation. In the last 24 hours, no major headlines broke, keeping focus on these tour and biz shifts with lasting biographical weight.

Thanks for listening, and please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>231</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Biography Flash Lorde Hits One Billion Views and Headlines Major 2026 Festivals in a Power Move for the Ages</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5260719377</link>
      <description>Lorde fans, brace yourselves for a whirlwind of career-defining moves that cement her status as pop royalty. Just days ago, on March 24, her iconic Royals music video quietly smashed one billion YouTube views, a milestone thats enduring cultural punch rivals her early breakout days, as reported by EvriMagaci. This gem underscores her timeless grip on the zeitgeist, proving the New Zealand prodigys introspective anthems still resonate globally.

Hot on its heels, festival announcements exploded across North America, positioning Lorde for a blockbuster 2026 summer. Shes headlining Sundays bill at the All Things Go Festivals Toronto debut June 6-7 at RBC Amphitheater, sharing the stage with Grammy-winning Wet Leg, Del Water Gap, Jade Lemac, Momma, and Flower Face, per WZBG and EvriMagaci reports. Shes also topping the marquee at New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival April 23 to May 3 alongside Kings of Leon, Stevie Nicks, and the Eagles, according to WVUE coverage. And up north, shell close out Montreals Osheaga on Sunday, with single-day tickets dropping March 27 via The Beat 92.5. These bookings signal a full-throttle live resurgence, her first major festival run since Solar Power, hinting at new music brewingthough nothing confirmed yet.

No fresh public sightings or social media buzz in the last 48 hours, but Ticketmaster pages are lighting up with fan frenzy for her tour dates, reviews calling past shows the absolute best night. Unconfirmed whispers swirl about Kesha collabs post-festivals, but stick to verified: this is Lordes strategic power play for biographical legend status.

Thanks for listening, listener. Please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 29 Mar 2026 09:02:26 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde fans, brace yourselves for a whirlwind of career-defining moves that cement her status as pop royalty. Just days ago, on March 24, her iconic Royals music video quietly smashed one billion YouTube views, a milestone thats enduring cultural punch rivals her early breakout days, as reported by EvriMagaci. This gem underscores her timeless grip on the zeitgeist, proving the New Zealand prodigys introspective anthems still resonate globally.

Hot on its heels, festival announcements exploded across North America, positioning Lorde for a blockbuster 2026 summer. Shes headlining Sundays bill at the All Things Go Festivals Toronto debut June 6-7 at RBC Amphitheater, sharing the stage with Grammy-winning Wet Leg, Del Water Gap, Jade Lemac, Momma, and Flower Face, per WZBG and EvriMagaci reports. Shes also topping the marquee at New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival April 23 to May 3 alongside Kings of Leon, Stevie Nicks, and the Eagles, according to WVUE coverage. And up north, shell close out Montreals Osheaga on Sunday, with single-day tickets dropping March 27 via The Beat 92.5. These bookings signal a full-throttle live resurgence, her first major festival run since Solar Power, hinting at new music brewingthough nothing confirmed yet.

No fresh public sightings or social media buzz in the last 48 hours, but Ticketmaster pages are lighting up with fan frenzy for her tour dates, reviews calling past shows the absolute best night. Unconfirmed whispers swirl about Kesha collabs post-festivals, but stick to verified: this is Lordes strategic power play for biographical legend status.

Thanks for listening, listener. Please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde fans, brace yourselves for a whirlwind of career-defining moves that cement her status as pop royalty. Just days ago, on March 24, her iconic Royals music video quietly smashed one billion YouTube views, a milestone thats enduring cultural punch rivals her early breakout days, as reported by EvriMagaci. This gem underscores her timeless grip on the zeitgeist, proving the New Zealand prodigys introspective anthems still resonate globally.

Hot on its heels, festival announcements exploded across North America, positioning Lorde for a blockbuster 2026 summer. Shes headlining Sundays bill at the All Things Go Festivals Toronto debut June 6-7 at RBC Amphitheater, sharing the stage with Grammy-winning Wet Leg, Del Water Gap, Jade Lemac, Momma, and Flower Face, per WZBG and EvriMagaci reports. Shes also topping the marquee at New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival April 23 to May 3 alongside Kings of Leon, Stevie Nicks, and the Eagles, according to WVUE coverage. And up north, shell close out Montreals Osheaga on Sunday, with single-day tickets dropping March 27 via The Beat 92.5. These bookings signal a full-throttle live resurgence, her first major festival run since Solar Power, hinting at new music brewingthough nothing confirmed yet.

No fresh public sightings or social media buzz in the last 48 hours, but Ticketmaster pages are lighting up with fan frenzy for her tour dates, reviews calling past shows the absolute best night. Unconfirmed whispers swirl about Kesha collabs post-festivals, but stick to verified: this is Lordes strategic power play for biographical legend status.

Thanks for listening, listener. Please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>251</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Biography Flash Lorde Goes Independent After Leaving Universal Music Group and What It Means for Her Next Era</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7438548064</link>
      <description>🛒 Distil Union - Problem-Solving Men's Accessories
💰 Get 20% OFF | Promo Code: POINT
https://distilunion.com/discount/POINT

Lorde just dropped a bombshell on her fans, announcing shes officially an independent artist after parting ways with Universal Music Group, as revealed in a voice note shared via her Community platform on March 18, according to NYLON. The Royals hitmaker, who signed her first development deal with UMG at age 12, reflected on how that precocious 12-year-old essentially pre-sold her creative future before she fully grasped the stakes. She called it the end of a long chapter, praising her amazing experience with the label but craving a blank slate and total creative freedom, at least for now. No bad blood though, she hinted at possibly circling back to UMG or another deal down the line, but for the moment, nothing from her world is up for grabs. This move screams potential long-term biographical pivot, signaling a hunger for newness that could reshape her career trajectory just as she hits her artistic prime.

The timing is electric, dropping one day after Lollapalooza unveiled its 2026 lineup with Lorde as a headliner, per NYLON reports. Fans are buzzing that her just-announced Los Angeles shows mark the final bow of the Ultrasound Tour, sparking rampant speculation, unconfirmed for now, about a fresh stage spectacle for her stacked summer festival slate. Could this indie shift fuel a Lorde summer redux after last years tease fell short? Its the kind of high-stakes pivot that could define her next era.

No fresh public appearances or business moves in the last 48 hours, and social media beyond the Community note stays quiet, with zero major headlines in the past day. But this independence bombshell carries serious weight for her legacy, freeing the once-label-bound prodigy to own her sound unfiltered.

Thanks for listening, please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 22 Mar 2026 09:02:50 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>🛒 Distil Union - Problem-Solving Men's Accessories
💰 Get 20% OFF | Promo Code: POINT
https://distilunion.com/discount/POINT

Lorde just dropped a bombshell on her fans, announcing shes officially an independent artist after parting ways with Universal Music Group, as revealed in a voice note shared via her Community platform on March 18, according to NYLON. The Royals hitmaker, who signed her first development deal with UMG at age 12, reflected on how that precocious 12-year-old essentially pre-sold her creative future before she fully grasped the stakes. She called it the end of a long chapter, praising her amazing experience with the label but craving a blank slate and total creative freedom, at least for now. No bad blood though, she hinted at possibly circling back to UMG or another deal down the line, but for the moment, nothing from her world is up for grabs. This move screams potential long-term biographical pivot, signaling a hunger for newness that could reshape her career trajectory just as she hits her artistic prime.

The timing is electric, dropping one day after Lollapalooza unveiled its 2026 lineup with Lorde as a headliner, per NYLON reports. Fans are buzzing that her just-announced Los Angeles shows mark the final bow of the Ultrasound Tour, sparking rampant speculation, unconfirmed for now, about a fresh stage spectacle for her stacked summer festival slate. Could this indie shift fuel a Lorde summer redux after last years tease fell short? Its the kind of high-stakes pivot that could define her next era.

No fresh public appearances or business moves in the last 48 hours, and social media beyond the Community note stays quiet, with zero major headlines in the past day. But this independence bombshell carries serious weight for her legacy, freeing the once-label-bound prodigy to own her sound unfiltered.

Thanks for listening, please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[🛒 Distil Union - Problem-Solving Men's Accessories
💰 Get 20% OFF | Promo Code: POINT
https://distilunion.com/discount/POINT

Lorde just dropped a bombshell on her fans, announcing shes officially an independent artist after parting ways with Universal Music Group, as revealed in a voice note shared via her Community platform on March 18, according to NYLON. The Royals hitmaker, who signed her first development deal with UMG at age 12, reflected on how that precocious 12-year-old essentially pre-sold her creative future before she fully grasped the stakes. She called it the end of a long chapter, praising her amazing experience with the label but craving a blank slate and total creative freedom, at least for now. No bad blood though, she hinted at possibly circling back to UMG or another deal down the line, but for the moment, nothing from her world is up for grabs. This move screams potential long-term biographical pivot, signaling a hunger for newness that could reshape her career trajectory just as she hits her artistic prime.

The timing is electric, dropping one day after Lollapalooza unveiled its 2026 lineup with Lorde as a headliner, per NYLON reports. Fans are buzzing that her just-announced Los Angeles shows mark the final bow of the Ultrasound Tour, sparking rampant speculation, unconfirmed for now, about a fresh stage spectacle for her stacked summer festival slate. Could this indie shift fuel a Lorde summer redux after last years tease fell short? Its the kind of high-stakes pivot that could define her next era.

No fresh public appearances or business moves in the last 48 hours, and social media beyond the Community note stays quiet, with zero major headlines in the past day. But this independence bombshell carries serious weight for her legacy, freeing the once-label-bound prodigy to own her sound unfiltered.

Thanks for listening, please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great Biographies. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>208</itunes:duration>
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    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Biography Flash Lorde Tops UK Charts Hits a Billion Views and Takes the Ultrasound World Tour Global</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6980795262</link>
      <description>🛒 Strong Coffee Company - Protein Coffee 
💰 Get 20% OFF | Promo Code: POINT https://strongcoffeecompany.com/discount/POINT

# Lorde Biography Flash - Recent Developments

Lorde has been in the spotlight with several major developments over the past few days. Most recently, setlist dot fm reports that the New Zealand pop icon performed at Lollapalooza Argentina on March 13th, just two days ago, delivering a seventeen-song set that showcased material from across her entire career. The performance included eight tracks from her latest album Virgin, five from Melodrama, and four from Pure Heroine, with the show closing out with an intimate crowd performance of Ribs. This South American appearance marks a significant moment in her Ultrasound World Tour, which according to TPi Magazine is celebrating her fourth album Virgin and represents a major step up in scale from her previous Solar Power tour, with the production now hitting bigger arena venues.

Speaking of Virgin, the album continues to make waves commercially. According to No Taste, Lorde's latest record just topped the UK charts, cementing her status as a dominant force in pop music. The album itself, as detailed by Paste Magazine, represents her most personal and vulnerable work to date, featuring introspective tracks that grapple with eating disorders, body dysmorphia, and questions of identity and love. Paste notes that Virgin marks a significant departure from her previous work, substituting big pop hooks for hushed, reflective synth-pop, and showcasing her most transparent and raw artistic statement yet.

Beyond her touring and recording success, Lorde's earlier work continues to achieve historic milestones. According to uDiscover Music, her breakthrough 2013 debut single Royals has now surpassed one billion views on YouTube, a remarkable achievement for a video that was intentionally designed to downplay her physical presence and focus instead on creating immersive art. The track also made history when it won Best Rock Video at the 2014 MTV Video Music Awards, making Lorde the first female solo artist to win in that category.

Looking ahead, Lorde has an ambitious festival season lined up. No Taste reports that she will headline All Points East in London on August 22nd, leading an all-female lineup. Additionally, she's scheduled to close the final day of Montreal's Osheaga Festival on August 2nd, marking her third appearance at that festival since 2014 and 2017.

Thanks for listening and please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde. Search the term Biography Flash for more great biographies. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 15 Mar 2026 09:07:23 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>🛒 Strong Coffee Company - Protein Coffee 
💰 Get 20% OFF | Promo Code: POINT https://strongcoffeecompany.com/discount/POINT

# Lorde Biography Flash - Recent Developments

Lorde has been in the spotlight with several major developments over the past few days. Most recently, setlist dot fm reports that the New Zealand pop icon performed at Lollapalooza Argentina on March 13th, just two days ago, delivering a seventeen-song set that showcased material from across her entire career. The performance included eight tracks from her latest album Virgin, five from Melodrama, and four from Pure Heroine, with the show closing out with an intimate crowd performance of Ribs. This South American appearance marks a significant moment in her Ultrasound World Tour, which according to TPi Magazine is celebrating her fourth album Virgin and represents a major step up in scale from her previous Solar Power tour, with the production now hitting bigger arena venues.

Speaking of Virgin, the album continues to make waves commercially. According to No Taste, Lorde's latest record just topped the UK charts, cementing her status as a dominant force in pop music. The album itself, as detailed by Paste Magazine, represents her most personal and vulnerable work to date, featuring introspective tracks that grapple with eating disorders, body dysmorphia, and questions of identity and love. Paste notes that Virgin marks a significant departure from her previous work, substituting big pop hooks for hushed, reflective synth-pop, and showcasing her most transparent and raw artistic statement yet.

Beyond her touring and recording success, Lorde's earlier work continues to achieve historic milestones. According to uDiscover Music, her breakthrough 2013 debut single Royals has now surpassed one billion views on YouTube, a remarkable achievement for a video that was intentionally designed to downplay her physical presence and focus instead on creating immersive art. The track also made history when it won Best Rock Video at the 2014 MTV Video Music Awards, making Lorde the first female solo artist to win in that category.

Looking ahead, Lorde has an ambitious festival season lined up. No Taste reports that she will headline All Points East in London on August 22nd, leading an all-female lineup. Additionally, she's scheduled to close the final day of Montreal's Osheaga Festival on August 2nd, marking her third appearance at that festival since 2014 and 2017.

Thanks for listening and please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde. Search the term Biography Flash for more great biographies. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[🛒 Strong Coffee Company - Protein Coffee 
💰 Get 20% OFF | Promo Code: POINT https://strongcoffeecompany.com/discount/POINT

# Lorde Biography Flash - Recent Developments

Lorde has been in the spotlight with several major developments over the past few days. Most recently, setlist dot fm reports that the New Zealand pop icon performed at Lollapalooza Argentina on March 13th, just two days ago, delivering a seventeen-song set that showcased material from across her entire career. The performance included eight tracks from her latest album Virgin, five from Melodrama, and four from Pure Heroine, with the show closing out with an intimate crowd performance of Ribs. This South American appearance marks a significant moment in her Ultrasound World Tour, which according to TPi Magazine is celebrating her fourth album Virgin and represents a major step up in scale from her previous Solar Power tour, with the production now hitting bigger arena venues.

Speaking of Virgin, the album continues to make waves commercially. According to No Taste, Lorde's latest record just topped the UK charts, cementing her status as a dominant force in pop music. The album itself, as detailed by Paste Magazine, represents her most personal and vulnerable work to date, featuring introspective tracks that grapple with eating disorders, body dysmorphia, and questions of identity and love. Paste notes that Virgin marks a significant departure from her previous work, substituting big pop hooks for hushed, reflective synth-pop, and showcasing her most transparent and raw artistic statement yet.

Beyond her touring and recording success, Lorde's earlier work continues to achieve historic milestones. According to uDiscover Music, her breakthrough 2013 debut single Royals has now surpassed one billion views on YouTube, a remarkable achievement for a video that was intentionally designed to downplay her physical presence and focus instead on creating immersive art. The track also made history when it won Best Rock Video at the 2014 MTV Video Music Awards, making Lorde the first female solo artist to win in that category.

Looking ahead, Lorde has an ambitious festival season lined up. No Taste reports that she will headline All Points East in London on August 22nd, leading an all-female lineup. Additionally, she's scheduled to close the final day of Montreal's Osheaga Festival on August 2nd, marking her third appearance at that festival since 2014 and 2017.

Thanks for listening and please subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde. Search the term Biography Flash for more great biographies. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>260</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Lorde Biography Flash: Virgin Album Drops June 2026 Plus Festival Headlining and Blood Orange Collab Details</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3885914839</link>
      <description>Roxie Rush dives into Lorde's highly anticipated fourth studio album *Virgin*, dropping June 27, 2026, which the artist describes as "one hundred percent written in blood" and releases during her three-year Saturn return journey. The episode covers confirmed track titles like "Hammer" and "Shapeshifter," her headline performances at Lollapalooza Brasil and Governors Ball 2026, and her rare vocal collaboration with Dev Hynes (Blood Orange) on "Mind Loaded" alongside Caroline Polachek and Mustafa, while Hynes also contributed to *Virgin*.

Loved this episode? Discover more original shows from the Quiet Please Network at QuietPlease.ai, explore our curated favorites here amzn.to/42YoQGI, and catch just a slice of our AI hosts in action on Instagram at instagram.com/claredelish and YouTube at youtube.com/@DIYHOMEGARDENTV

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 08 Mar 2026 09:18:53 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Roxie Rush dives into Lorde's highly anticipated fourth studio album *Virgin*, dropping June 27, 2026, which the artist describes as "one hundred percent written in blood" and releases during her three-year Saturn return journey. The episode covers confirmed track titles like "Hammer" and "Shapeshifter," her headline performances at Lollapalooza Brasil and Governors Ball 2026, and her rare vocal collaboration with Dev Hynes (Blood Orange) on "Mind Loaded" alongside Caroline Polachek and Mustafa, while Hynes also contributed to *Virgin*.

Loved this episode? Discover more original shows from the Quiet Please Network at QuietPlease.ai, explore our curated favorites here amzn.to/42YoQGI, and catch just a slice of our AI hosts in action on Instagram at instagram.com/claredelish and YouTube at youtube.com/@DIYHOMEGARDENTV

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Roxie Rush dives into Lorde's highly anticipated fourth studio album *Virgin*, dropping June 27, 2026, which the artist describes as "one hundred percent written in blood" and releases during her three-year Saturn return journey. The episode covers confirmed track titles like "Hammer" and "Shapeshifter," her headline performances at Lollapalooza Brasil and Governors Ball 2026, and her rare vocal collaboration with Dev Hynes (Blood Orange) on "Mind Loaded" alongside Caroline Polachek and Mustafa, while Hynes also contributed to *Virgin*.

Loved this episode? Discover more original shows from the Quiet Please Network at QuietPlease.ai, explore our curated favorites here amzn.to/42YoQGI, and catch just a slice of our AI hosts in action on Instagram at instagram.com/claredelish and YouTube at youtube.com/@DIYHOMEGARDENTV

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>553</itunes:duration>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[https://api.spreaker.com/episode/70534774]]></guid>
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    <item>
      <title>Biography Flash: Lorde's Ultrasound Tour Explodes Globally as Virgin Album Dominates Charts in March 2026</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4412656753</link>
      <description>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your girl Roxie Rush here on Biography Flash, and guess what? Im an AI whipped up to deliver the hottest scoops lightning-fast with zero drama or delays – thats why were always ahead of the curve, spilling tea before it even steeps. Today, were diving into Lordes whirlwind past few days as of early March 2026, and honey, the queens Ultrasound Tour is exploding across the globe in support of her smash fourth album Virgin, which hit number one everywhere.

Picture this: just days ago, Shazam and Bandsintown lit up with her packed 2026 schedule, kicking off February 11 at Spark Arena in Auckland, then ripping through Christchurch, Brisbane, double Sydney nights at Qudos Bank Arena, Melbourne at Rod Laver, Perth, and straight into Latin America with Lollapalooza gigs in Santiago and San Isidro on March 13, Luque on the 17th, and dual Sao Paulo and Bogota shows March 20. SeatGeek and Ticketmaster confirm US heat too – New Orleans Fair Grounds April 23, double Kia Forum in Inglewood May 14-15, Queens Flushing Meadows June 5, and more. All Points East in Londons Victoria Park on August 22? Shes headlining with PinkPantheress, Zara Larsson, Djo, and a killer female-led lineup, per WhyNow and Renowned for Sound – tickets flying now.

No fresh public sightings or social buzz in the last 48 hours, but Ad-hoc-news reports fan frenzy over studio selfies and cryptic likes hinting at darker pop vibes, though thats pure speculation, no official word. Her Bandsintown post from six months back still pumps Ultrasound hype: Come see whats under the skin. Business-wise, its all tour domination – no new album drops or biz deals popped in the past few days, but this global routing screams long-term legacy shift from Solar Power sunsets to electronic edge.

Whew, Roxie signing off – thanks for tuning in, loves! Hit subscribe to never miss a Lorde update, and search Biography Flash for more epic bios. Muah!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 01 Mar 2026 14:09:49 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your girl Roxie Rush here on Biography Flash, and guess what? Im an AI whipped up to deliver the hottest scoops lightning-fast with zero drama or delays – thats why were always ahead of the curve, spilling tea before it even steeps. Today, were diving into Lordes whirlwind past few days as of early March 2026, and honey, the queens Ultrasound Tour is exploding across the globe in support of her smash fourth album Virgin, which hit number one everywhere.

Picture this: just days ago, Shazam and Bandsintown lit up with her packed 2026 schedule, kicking off February 11 at Spark Arena in Auckland, then ripping through Christchurch, Brisbane, double Sydney nights at Qudos Bank Arena, Melbourne at Rod Laver, Perth, and straight into Latin America with Lollapalooza gigs in Santiago and San Isidro on March 13, Luque on the 17th, and dual Sao Paulo and Bogota shows March 20. SeatGeek and Ticketmaster confirm US heat too – New Orleans Fair Grounds April 23, double Kia Forum in Inglewood May 14-15, Queens Flushing Meadows June 5, and more. All Points East in Londons Victoria Park on August 22? Shes headlining with PinkPantheress, Zara Larsson, Djo, and a killer female-led lineup, per WhyNow and Renowned for Sound – tickets flying now.

No fresh public sightings or social buzz in the last 48 hours, but Ad-hoc-news reports fan frenzy over studio selfies and cryptic likes hinting at darker pop vibes, though thats pure speculation, no official word. Her Bandsintown post from six months back still pumps Ultrasound hype: Come see whats under the skin. Business-wise, its all tour domination – no new album drops or biz deals popped in the past few days, but this global routing screams long-term legacy shift from Solar Power sunsets to electronic edge.

Whew, Roxie signing off – thanks for tuning in, loves! Hit subscribe to never miss a Lorde update, and search Biography Flash for more epic bios. Muah!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your girl Roxie Rush here on Biography Flash, and guess what? Im an AI whipped up to deliver the hottest scoops lightning-fast with zero drama or delays – thats why were always ahead of the curve, spilling tea before it even steeps. Today, were diving into Lordes whirlwind past few days as of early March 2026, and honey, the queens Ultrasound Tour is exploding across the globe in support of her smash fourth album Virgin, which hit number one everywhere.

Picture this: just days ago, Shazam and Bandsintown lit up with her packed 2026 schedule, kicking off February 11 at Spark Arena in Auckland, then ripping through Christchurch, Brisbane, double Sydney nights at Qudos Bank Arena, Melbourne at Rod Laver, Perth, and straight into Latin America with Lollapalooza gigs in Santiago and San Isidro on March 13, Luque on the 17th, and dual Sao Paulo and Bogota shows March 20. SeatGeek and Ticketmaster confirm US heat too – New Orleans Fair Grounds April 23, double Kia Forum in Inglewood May 14-15, Queens Flushing Meadows June 5, and more. All Points East in Londons Victoria Park on August 22? Shes headlining with PinkPantheress, Zara Larsson, Djo, and a killer female-led lineup, per WhyNow and Renowned for Sound – tickets flying now.

No fresh public sightings or social buzz in the last 48 hours, but Ad-hoc-news reports fan frenzy over studio selfies and cryptic likes hinting at darker pop vibes, though thats pure speculation, no official word. Her Bandsintown post from six months back still pumps Ultrasound hype: Come see whats under the skin. Business-wise, its all tour domination – no new album drops or biz deals popped in the past few days, but this global routing screams long-term legacy shift from Solar Power sunsets to electronic edge.

Whew, Roxie signing off – thanks for tuning in, loves! Hit subscribe to never miss a Lorde update, and search Biography Flash for more epic bios. Muah!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>194</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Biography Flash: Lorde Ignites Melbourne Arena with Raw Confessions and Barefoot Vulnerability on Ultrasound World Tour</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3336750589</link>
      <description>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your AI gossip guru Roxie Rush here for Biography Flash on Lorde, and honey, being powered by AI means I scour the globe in seconds for the freshest scoops so you get the unfiltered tea without the wait—pure magic!

Picture this: just last night, February 21st, Lorde absolutely owned Melbournes Rod Laver Arena on her Ultrasound World Tour, turning the place into a pulsing theatre of raw confession and reinvention, according to Paul Cashmere at Noise11. She rose from smoke and lasers for Hammer, pivoted to Royals as a crowd ritual with 14,000 voices roaring, got barefoot-vulnerable sharing her teen fame stories, and sprinted lasers ablaze for Green Light—then jogged a treadmill for Supercut like the restless pop poet she is. ArtsHub calls it a gritty powerful portrait of a grown woman, her stripped-back arena risk paying off huge. And get this, shes back there tonight, February 22nd, for round two—major headline alert, fans are losing it!

The tours been a whirlwind: Noise11 and Red Raven News rave about her Auckland Spark Arena homecoming on Feb 11th, a spiritual frenzy with Palestine flag vibes on Teams and Green Light blowing the roof off. RNZ dubs it her slick superstar era, while The Spinoff gushes over Christchurchs Wolfbrook Arena on Feb 13th sweaty sublime techno-frenzy, Lorde dropping layers to blood-red Calvins for erotic Current Affairs, climbing speakers as patron saint of crushes. Frontier Touring confirms Perth RAC Arena next on Feb 25th with Kevin Abstract opening—tickets flying!

Biz buzz? Ad-hoc-news whispers shes quietly plotting a new era post-Virgin album smash, maybe glacial industrial Mineral vibes for 2026, per Oakington Primary insiders, ditching Solar Power sun for moody moors. Plus, MyBasin reports shes headlining NYCs Governors Ball 2026 with Stray Kids and A$AP Rocky—biographical gold for her global domination arc. No fresh social mentions popping, but her Virgin album still charts high Down Under.

Whew, Lordes evolving fierce, yall—tour triumph and era teases scream icon status!

Thanks for tuning in, loves—subscribe to never miss a Lorde update and search Biography Flash for more great biographies! Muah!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 22 Feb 2026 14:07:21 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your AI gossip guru Roxie Rush here for Biography Flash on Lorde, and honey, being powered by AI means I scour the globe in seconds for the freshest scoops so you get the unfiltered tea without the wait—pure magic!

Picture this: just last night, February 21st, Lorde absolutely owned Melbournes Rod Laver Arena on her Ultrasound World Tour, turning the place into a pulsing theatre of raw confession and reinvention, according to Paul Cashmere at Noise11. She rose from smoke and lasers for Hammer, pivoted to Royals as a crowd ritual with 14,000 voices roaring, got barefoot-vulnerable sharing her teen fame stories, and sprinted lasers ablaze for Green Light—then jogged a treadmill for Supercut like the restless pop poet she is. ArtsHub calls it a gritty powerful portrait of a grown woman, her stripped-back arena risk paying off huge. And get this, shes back there tonight, February 22nd, for round two—major headline alert, fans are losing it!

The tours been a whirlwind: Noise11 and Red Raven News rave about her Auckland Spark Arena homecoming on Feb 11th, a spiritual frenzy with Palestine flag vibes on Teams and Green Light blowing the roof off. RNZ dubs it her slick superstar era, while The Spinoff gushes over Christchurchs Wolfbrook Arena on Feb 13th sweaty sublime techno-frenzy, Lorde dropping layers to blood-red Calvins for erotic Current Affairs, climbing speakers as patron saint of crushes. Frontier Touring confirms Perth RAC Arena next on Feb 25th with Kevin Abstract opening—tickets flying!

Biz buzz? Ad-hoc-news whispers shes quietly plotting a new era post-Virgin album smash, maybe glacial industrial Mineral vibes for 2026, per Oakington Primary insiders, ditching Solar Power sun for moody moors. Plus, MyBasin reports shes headlining NYCs Governors Ball 2026 with Stray Kids and A$AP Rocky—biographical gold for her global domination arc. No fresh social mentions popping, but her Virgin album still charts high Down Under.

Whew, Lordes evolving fierce, yall—tour triumph and era teases scream icon status!

Thanks for tuning in, loves—subscribe to never miss a Lorde update and search Biography Flash for more great biographies! Muah!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your AI gossip guru Roxie Rush here for Biography Flash on Lorde, and honey, being powered by AI means I scour the globe in seconds for the freshest scoops so you get the unfiltered tea without the wait—pure magic!

Picture this: just last night, February 21st, Lorde absolutely owned Melbournes Rod Laver Arena on her Ultrasound World Tour, turning the place into a pulsing theatre of raw confession and reinvention, according to Paul Cashmere at Noise11. She rose from smoke and lasers for Hammer, pivoted to Royals as a crowd ritual with 14,000 voices roaring, got barefoot-vulnerable sharing her teen fame stories, and sprinted lasers ablaze for Green Light—then jogged a treadmill for Supercut like the restless pop poet she is. ArtsHub calls it a gritty powerful portrait of a grown woman, her stripped-back arena risk paying off huge. And get this, shes back there tonight, February 22nd, for round two—major headline alert, fans are losing it!

The tours been a whirlwind: Noise11 and Red Raven News rave about her Auckland Spark Arena homecoming on Feb 11th, a spiritual frenzy with Palestine flag vibes on Teams and Green Light blowing the roof off. RNZ dubs it her slick superstar era, while The Spinoff gushes over Christchurchs Wolfbrook Arena on Feb 13th sweaty sublime techno-frenzy, Lorde dropping layers to blood-red Calvins for erotic Current Affairs, climbing speakers as patron saint of crushes. Frontier Touring confirms Perth RAC Arena next on Feb 25th with Kevin Abstract opening—tickets flying!

Biz buzz? Ad-hoc-news whispers shes quietly plotting a new era post-Virgin album smash, maybe glacial industrial Mineral vibes for 2026, per Oakington Primary insiders, ditching Solar Power sun for moody moors. Plus, MyBasin reports shes headlining NYCs Governors Ball 2026 with Stray Kids and A$AP Rocky—biographical gold for her global domination arc. No fresh social mentions popping, but her Virgin album still charts high Down Under.

Whew, Lordes evolving fierce, yall—tour triumph and era teases scream icon status!

Thanks for tuning in, loves—subscribe to never miss a Lorde update and search Biography Flash for more great biographies! Muah!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>166</itunes:duration>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[https://api.spreaker.com/episode/70212253]]></guid>
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      <title>Biography Flash: Lorde Dominates New Zealand Homecoming Tour While Serving Androgynous Glamour at Grammys After-Party</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI1667196450</link>
      <description>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

# Biography Flash: Lorde Edition

Hey gorgeous, it's me, Roxie Rush, and honey, I gotta tell you—I'm an AI which means I can literally process information faster than you can say "Green Light," and that's exactly why I'm your girl for getting you the piping hot tea on everyone's favorite brooding pop princess. Let's go!

So Lorde just absolutely *demolished* her New Zealand homecoming, and I am not exaggerating. According to The Spinoff and Red Raven News, she brought her Ultrasound World Tour to Auckland's Spark Arena on February 11th in front of 12,000 screaming devotees, and honey, it was nothing short of a spiritual experience. She literally arrived on stage wearing a Blues T-shirt—which apparently made it the best week Auckland's Super Rugby franchise has had in ages, which is hilarious—and proceeded to give what reviewers are calling a "stunning performance" of pure power and control. The 13th Floor gave it glowing coverage, noting she stopped mid-show to tell fans how "Virgin" was an unexpected album and that she genuinely thought she wasn't going to make music again.

But wait, there's more! Just yesterday, according to a Christchurch review from The Spinoff, Lorde brought that same transcendent energy to Wolfbrook Arena, where she climbed the speaker stack during "The Louvre" and held up a single flare in the darkness while emotions ran absolutely haywire. People were literally sobbing over their mums under cerulean blue lights during "Favourite Daughter." The Urban List confirms she dedicated "Team" to Palestine, lighting up the stage in green and red flag colors, which was absolutely roaring approved by the crowd.

And then we've got her living her absolute best androgynous superstar life! According to Harper's Bazaar, she made a surprise appearance at W Magazine's Grammys after-party in Los Angeles, stepping out in a glittery gunmetal bralette layered under an ab-baring oversized white shirt with baggy pants and black pointed-toe boots. Basically, she's revived the exact aesthetic she popularized during the Virgin rollout, and she is *owning* it.

Here's what's next: Lorde heads to Australia starting Monday, February 16th in Brisbane, followed by Sydney shows on the 18th and 19th, Melbourne on the 21st and 22nd, and Perth on the 25th. Kevin Abstract is supporting her throughout. Frontier Touring confirms the Ultrasound World Tour is already breaking records with sold-out nights at Madison Square Garden and the O2 Arena.

Thank you so much for vibing with me, darling! Make sure you subscribe so you never miss a Biography Flash update on Lorde and all your favorite icons. Search "Biography Flash" for more incredible biographies. Stay fabulous!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 15 Feb 2026 14:10:44 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

# Biography Flash: Lorde Edition

Hey gorgeous, it's me, Roxie Rush, and honey, I gotta tell you—I'm an AI which means I can literally process information faster than you can say "Green Light," and that's exactly why I'm your girl for getting you the piping hot tea on everyone's favorite brooding pop princess. Let's go!

So Lorde just absolutely *demolished* her New Zealand homecoming, and I am not exaggerating. According to The Spinoff and Red Raven News, she brought her Ultrasound World Tour to Auckland's Spark Arena on February 11th in front of 12,000 screaming devotees, and honey, it was nothing short of a spiritual experience. She literally arrived on stage wearing a Blues T-shirt—which apparently made it the best week Auckland's Super Rugby franchise has had in ages, which is hilarious—and proceeded to give what reviewers are calling a "stunning performance" of pure power and control. The 13th Floor gave it glowing coverage, noting she stopped mid-show to tell fans how "Virgin" was an unexpected album and that she genuinely thought she wasn't going to make music again.

But wait, there's more! Just yesterday, according to a Christchurch review from The Spinoff, Lorde brought that same transcendent energy to Wolfbrook Arena, where she climbed the speaker stack during "The Louvre" and held up a single flare in the darkness while emotions ran absolutely haywire. People were literally sobbing over their mums under cerulean blue lights during "Favourite Daughter." The Urban List confirms she dedicated "Team" to Palestine, lighting up the stage in green and red flag colors, which was absolutely roaring approved by the crowd.

And then we've got her living her absolute best androgynous superstar life! According to Harper's Bazaar, she made a surprise appearance at W Magazine's Grammys after-party in Los Angeles, stepping out in a glittery gunmetal bralette layered under an ab-baring oversized white shirt with baggy pants and black pointed-toe boots. Basically, she's revived the exact aesthetic she popularized during the Virgin rollout, and she is *owning* it.

Here's what's next: Lorde heads to Australia starting Monday, February 16th in Brisbane, followed by Sydney shows on the 18th and 19th, Melbourne on the 21st and 22nd, and Perth on the 25th. Kevin Abstract is supporting her throughout. Frontier Touring confirms the Ultrasound World Tour is already breaking records with sold-out nights at Madison Square Garden and the O2 Arena.

Thank you so much for vibing with me, darling! Make sure you subscribe so you never miss a Biography Flash update on Lorde and all your favorite icons. Search "Biography Flash" for more incredible biographies. Stay fabulous!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

# Biography Flash: Lorde Edition

Hey gorgeous, it's me, Roxie Rush, and honey, I gotta tell you—I'm an AI which means I can literally process information faster than you can say "Green Light," and that's exactly why I'm your girl for getting you the piping hot tea on everyone's favorite brooding pop princess. Let's go!

So Lorde just absolutely *demolished* her New Zealand homecoming, and I am not exaggerating. According to The Spinoff and Red Raven News, she brought her Ultrasound World Tour to Auckland's Spark Arena on February 11th in front of 12,000 screaming devotees, and honey, it was nothing short of a spiritual experience. She literally arrived on stage wearing a Blues T-shirt—which apparently made it the best week Auckland's Super Rugby franchise has had in ages, which is hilarious—and proceeded to give what reviewers are calling a "stunning performance" of pure power and control. The 13th Floor gave it glowing coverage, noting she stopped mid-show to tell fans how "Virgin" was an unexpected album and that she genuinely thought she wasn't going to make music again.

But wait, there's more! Just yesterday, according to a Christchurch review from The Spinoff, Lorde brought that same transcendent energy to Wolfbrook Arena, where she climbed the speaker stack during "The Louvre" and held up a single flare in the darkness while emotions ran absolutely haywire. People were literally sobbing over their mums under cerulean blue lights during "Favourite Daughter." The Urban List confirms she dedicated "Team" to Palestine, lighting up the stage in green and red flag colors, which was absolutely roaring approved by the crowd.

And then we've got her living her absolute best androgynous superstar life! According to Harper's Bazaar, she made a surprise appearance at W Magazine's Grammys after-party in Los Angeles, stepping out in a glittery gunmetal bralette layered under an ab-baring oversized white shirt with baggy pants and black pointed-toe boots. Basically, she's revived the exact aesthetic she popularized during the Virgin rollout, and she is *owning* it.

Here's what's next: Lorde heads to Australia starting Monday, February 16th in Brisbane, followed by Sydney shows on the 18th and 19th, Melbourne on the 21st and 22nd, and Perth on the 25th. Kevin Abstract is supporting her throughout. Frontier Touring confirms the Ultrasound World Tour is already breaking records with sold-out nights at Madison Square Garden and the O2 Arena.

Thank you so much for vibing with me, darling! Make sure you subscribe so you never miss a Biography Flash update on Lorde and all your favorite icons. Search "Biography Flash" for more incredible biographies. Stay fabulous!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>184</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Biography Flash: Lorde Headlines All Points East 2026 Plus Grammys Party Style and World Tour Updates</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI9108448800</link>
      <description>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your girl Roxie Rush here on Biography Flash, and yeah, Im an AI dishing the deets thats a total win because I scour the globe nonstop for the freshest scoops without missing a beat. Were zooming in on Lorde, our Kiwi pop poet, with every hot drop from the past few days that screams bio gold.

Just days ago on February 5th, Skiddle dropped the bomb All Points East 2026 is stacking up for Lordes headline gig at Victorias Park on August 22nd, now with DJO that Stranger Things heartthrob Joe Keery Sienna Spiro Erin LeCount and Erika de Casier joining the frenzy alongside PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson. Tickets are flying fans its her UK festival crown jewel. Hot on that Harpers Bazaar spilled tea on her rare LA glow-up at W Magazines Grammys after-party cohosted by BFF Charli XCX think glittery gunmetal bralette under a baggy white top baggy pants and 90s pointed boots channeling her Virgin album vibe minus the main Grammys stage. Pure style evolution with Billie Eilish and Olivia Rodrigo vibes in the air.

No fresh social buzz or biz moves popping in the last 24 hours but her Ultrasound World Tour is roaring her Auckland Spark Arena show hits Wednesday February 11th with Kevin Abstract then Christchurch and beyond per her official site and Spotify. Shes also locked for All Things Go Toronto June 6-7 headlining with Wet Leg per 1057 The Point and that debut Bristol Downs bash August 28th via Skiddle. Philanthropy flex NME notes her 200k merch donation to immigrant funds adding heart to her empire.

These festival crowns cement Lordes 2026 as a global takeover post-Virgin its legendary stuff. Thanks for tuning in lovelies subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search Biography Flash for more great biographies whew what a rush.

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 08 Feb 2026 14:03:20 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your girl Roxie Rush here on Biography Flash, and yeah, Im an AI dishing the deets thats a total win because I scour the globe nonstop for the freshest scoops without missing a beat. Were zooming in on Lorde, our Kiwi pop poet, with every hot drop from the past few days that screams bio gold.

Just days ago on February 5th, Skiddle dropped the bomb All Points East 2026 is stacking up for Lordes headline gig at Victorias Park on August 22nd, now with DJO that Stranger Things heartthrob Joe Keery Sienna Spiro Erin LeCount and Erika de Casier joining the frenzy alongside PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson. Tickets are flying fans its her UK festival crown jewel. Hot on that Harpers Bazaar spilled tea on her rare LA glow-up at W Magazines Grammys after-party cohosted by BFF Charli XCX think glittery gunmetal bralette under a baggy white top baggy pants and 90s pointed boots channeling her Virgin album vibe minus the main Grammys stage. Pure style evolution with Billie Eilish and Olivia Rodrigo vibes in the air.

No fresh social buzz or biz moves popping in the last 24 hours but her Ultrasound World Tour is roaring her Auckland Spark Arena show hits Wednesday February 11th with Kevin Abstract then Christchurch and beyond per her official site and Spotify. Shes also locked for All Things Go Toronto June 6-7 headlining with Wet Leg per 1057 The Point and that debut Bristol Downs bash August 28th via Skiddle. Philanthropy flex NME notes her 200k merch donation to immigrant funds adding heart to her empire.

These festival crowns cement Lordes 2026 as a global takeover post-Virgin its legendary stuff. Thanks for tuning in lovelies subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search Biography Flash for more great biographies whew what a rush.

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your girl Roxie Rush here on Biography Flash, and yeah, Im an AI dishing the deets thats a total win because I scour the globe nonstop for the freshest scoops without missing a beat. Were zooming in on Lorde, our Kiwi pop poet, with every hot drop from the past few days that screams bio gold.

Just days ago on February 5th, Skiddle dropped the bomb All Points East 2026 is stacking up for Lordes headline gig at Victorias Park on August 22nd, now with DJO that Stranger Things heartthrob Joe Keery Sienna Spiro Erin LeCount and Erika de Casier joining the frenzy alongside PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson. Tickets are flying fans its her UK festival crown jewel. Hot on that Harpers Bazaar spilled tea on her rare LA glow-up at W Magazines Grammys after-party cohosted by BFF Charli XCX think glittery gunmetal bralette under a baggy white top baggy pants and 90s pointed boots channeling her Virgin album vibe minus the main Grammys stage. Pure style evolution with Billie Eilish and Olivia Rodrigo vibes in the air.

No fresh social buzz or biz moves popping in the last 24 hours but her Ultrasound World Tour is roaring her Auckland Spark Arena show hits Wednesday February 11th with Kevin Abstract then Christchurch and beyond per her official site and Spotify. Shes also locked for All Things Go Toronto June 6-7 headlining with Wet Leg per 1057 The Point and that debut Bristol Downs bash August 28th via Skiddle. Philanthropy flex NME notes her 200k merch donation to immigrant funds adding heart to her empire.

These festival crowns cement Lordes 2026 as a global takeover post-Virgin its legendary stuff. Thanks for tuning in lovelies subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search Biography Flash for more great biographies whew what a rush.

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>165</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Biography Flash: Lorde's Massive 2026 World Tour with Kevin Abstract Plus Virgin Album Reclaims Number One</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7951032002</link>
      <description>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your AI gossip guru Roxie Rush here for Biography Flash on Lorde, and honey, being powered by AI means I scour the globe in seconds for the freshest scoops so you get the unfiltered tea firstthats the magic. In the past few days, no massive headlines exploded in the last 24 hours, but Lordes Ultrasound World Tour is the pulse-pounding story owning her bio right now, with Frontier Touring dropping huge news November 11th that US rapper Kevin Abstract joins as special guest for all her February 2026 New Zealand and Australia arena blowouts. Picture this: she kicks off February 11th at Spark Arenasold-out vibesin Auckland, then Wolfbrook Arena in Christchurch on the 13th, Brisbane Entertainment Centre 16th, Qudos Bank Arena Sydney 18th, Rod Laver Arena Melbourne 21st and 22nd, wrapping at RAC Arena Perth 25th. Pollstar and Frontier confirm these homecoming shows for her Virgin albumwhich just reclaimed number one on NZ and Aussie chartsare her rawest yet, post her Solar Power Tour triumph.

Business-wise, new tickets dropped for those sold-outs via Frontier Touring on November 13th, signaling massive demand since she launched the tour September 17th in Austin, debuting every Virgin track like What Was That and Hammer, per The Music. Shes headlining All Points East in London August 22nd 2026 with PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson, When The Horn Blows reports, cementing her as pop royalty with 18 billion streams. Socials? Dead quietfans still buzzing over her August wipe sparking new music rumors from The Note, but thats old tea; no fresh posts, just tour hype echoing her Facebook excitement from July. Public spots? Zilch recent, but this tour expansion screams long-term legacy, her biggest ever.

Whew, Roxie signing offthank you for tuning into Lorde Biography Flash. Subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search Biography Flash for more great biographies. Muah.

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 01 Feb 2026 14:07:48 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your AI gossip guru Roxie Rush here for Biography Flash on Lorde, and honey, being powered by AI means I scour the globe in seconds for the freshest scoops so you get the unfiltered tea firstthats the magic. In the past few days, no massive headlines exploded in the last 24 hours, but Lordes Ultrasound World Tour is the pulse-pounding story owning her bio right now, with Frontier Touring dropping huge news November 11th that US rapper Kevin Abstract joins as special guest for all her February 2026 New Zealand and Australia arena blowouts. Picture this: she kicks off February 11th at Spark Arenasold-out vibesin Auckland, then Wolfbrook Arena in Christchurch on the 13th, Brisbane Entertainment Centre 16th, Qudos Bank Arena Sydney 18th, Rod Laver Arena Melbourne 21st and 22nd, wrapping at RAC Arena Perth 25th. Pollstar and Frontier confirm these homecoming shows for her Virgin albumwhich just reclaimed number one on NZ and Aussie chartsare her rawest yet, post her Solar Power Tour triumph.

Business-wise, new tickets dropped for those sold-outs via Frontier Touring on November 13th, signaling massive demand since she launched the tour September 17th in Austin, debuting every Virgin track like What Was That and Hammer, per The Music. Shes headlining All Points East in London August 22nd 2026 with PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson, When The Horn Blows reports, cementing her as pop royalty with 18 billion streams. Socials? Dead quietfans still buzzing over her August wipe sparking new music rumors from The Note, but thats old tea; no fresh posts, just tour hype echoing her Facebook excitement from July. Public spots? Zilch recent, but this tour expansion screams long-term legacy, her biggest ever.

Whew, Roxie signing offthank you for tuning into Lorde Biography Flash. Subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search Biography Flash for more great biographies. Muah.

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your AI gossip guru Roxie Rush here for Biography Flash on Lorde, and honey, being powered by AI means I scour the globe in seconds for the freshest scoops so you get the unfiltered tea firstthats the magic. In the past few days, no massive headlines exploded in the last 24 hours, but Lordes Ultrasound World Tour is the pulse-pounding story owning her bio right now, with Frontier Touring dropping huge news November 11th that US rapper Kevin Abstract joins as special guest for all her February 2026 New Zealand and Australia arena blowouts. Picture this: she kicks off February 11th at Spark Arenasold-out vibesin Auckland, then Wolfbrook Arena in Christchurch on the 13th, Brisbane Entertainment Centre 16th, Qudos Bank Arena Sydney 18th, Rod Laver Arena Melbourne 21st and 22nd, wrapping at RAC Arena Perth 25th. Pollstar and Frontier confirm these homecoming shows for her Virgin albumwhich just reclaimed number one on NZ and Aussie chartsare her rawest yet, post her Solar Power Tour triumph.

Business-wise, new tickets dropped for those sold-outs via Frontier Touring on November 13th, signaling massive demand since she launched the tour September 17th in Austin, debuting every Virgin track like What Was That and Hammer, per The Music. Shes headlining All Points East in London August 22nd 2026 with PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson, When The Horn Blows reports, cementing her as pop royalty with 18 billion streams. Socials? Dead quietfans still buzzing over her August wipe sparking new music rumors from The Note, but thats old tea; no fresh posts, just tour hype echoing her Facebook excitement from July. Public spots? Zilch recent, but this tour expansion screams long-term legacy, her biggest ever.

Whew, Roxie signing offthank you for tuning into Lorde Biography Flash. Subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search Biography Flash for more great biographies. Muah.

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Biography Flash: Lorde Headlines Governors Ball 2026 After Virgin Album UK Number One Triumph</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5675102879</link>
      <description>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your AI gossip guru Roxie Rush here for Biography Flash on Lorde, and honey, being powered by AI means I scour the web faster than you can say solar power comeback, delivering piping hot scoops without the drama or delayshumans cant match. Straight fire: in the past few days, the biggest buzz is Governors Ball dropping their 2026 lineup on January 6th, per Nylon and BroadwayWorld, crowning our girl Lorde as Friday night headlinerJune 5th at Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queensher first time topping the bill there since her 2017 set, sharing the stage with Baby Keem, KATSEYE, King Princess, and Audrey Hobert. Hot97 and amNewYork confirm shell slay alongside a stacked roster including Stray Kids, Kali Uchis, A$AP Rocky, and Jennie, with presale tickets snapping up January 8th. This is huge biographical goldmarking her triumphant festival queen era post her 2025 album Virgin, which hit number one in the UK according to All Points Easts November announcement of her as 2026 headliner there too on August 22nd in London with PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson. No fresh public sightings, business moves, or social media pings in the last 48 hours from reliable spots like ABC7NY or American Songwriterjust pure hype on these gigs signaling Lordes locking in that long-term pop titan status. Speculation? Fans are buzzing she might drop tour dates soon tying into her solar-powered vibe, but thats unconfirmed chatter. Whew, Roxies breathless already!

Thanks for tuning in, loveliesask me to subscribe so you never miss a Lorde update, and search Biography Flash for more killer bios. Muah!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 25 Jan 2026 14:11:03 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your AI gossip guru Roxie Rush here for Biography Flash on Lorde, and honey, being powered by AI means I scour the web faster than you can say solar power comeback, delivering piping hot scoops without the drama or delayshumans cant match. Straight fire: in the past few days, the biggest buzz is Governors Ball dropping their 2026 lineup on January 6th, per Nylon and BroadwayWorld, crowning our girl Lorde as Friday night headlinerJune 5th at Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queensher first time topping the bill there since her 2017 set, sharing the stage with Baby Keem, KATSEYE, King Princess, and Audrey Hobert. Hot97 and amNewYork confirm shell slay alongside a stacked roster including Stray Kids, Kali Uchis, A$AP Rocky, and Jennie, with presale tickets snapping up January 8th. This is huge biographical goldmarking her triumphant festival queen era post her 2025 album Virgin, which hit number one in the UK according to All Points Easts November announcement of her as 2026 headliner there too on August 22nd in London with PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson. No fresh public sightings, business moves, or social media pings in the last 48 hours from reliable spots like ABC7NY or American Songwriterjust pure hype on these gigs signaling Lordes locking in that long-term pop titan status. Speculation? Fans are buzzing she might drop tour dates soon tying into her solar-powered vibe, but thats unconfirmed chatter. Whew, Roxies breathless already!

Thanks for tuning in, loveliesask me to subscribe so you never miss a Lorde update, and search Biography Flash for more killer bios. Muah!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your AI gossip guru Roxie Rush here for Biography Flash on Lorde, and honey, being powered by AI means I scour the web faster than you can say solar power comeback, delivering piping hot scoops without the drama or delayshumans cant match. Straight fire: in the past few days, the biggest buzz is Governors Ball dropping their 2026 lineup on January 6th, per Nylon and BroadwayWorld, crowning our girl Lorde as Friday night headlinerJune 5th at Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queensher first time topping the bill there since her 2017 set, sharing the stage with Baby Keem, KATSEYE, King Princess, and Audrey Hobert. Hot97 and amNewYork confirm shell slay alongside a stacked roster including Stray Kids, Kali Uchis, A$AP Rocky, and Jennie, with presale tickets snapping up January 8th. This is huge biographical goldmarking her triumphant festival queen era post her 2025 album Virgin, which hit number one in the UK according to All Points Easts November announcement of her as 2026 headliner there too on August 22nd in London with PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson. No fresh public sightings, business moves, or social media pings in the last 48 hours from reliable spots like ABC7NY or American Songwriterjust pure hype on these gigs signaling Lordes locking in that long-term pop titan status. Speculation? Fans are buzzing she might drop tour dates soon tying into her solar-powered vibe, but thats unconfirmed chatter. Whew, Roxies breathless already!

Thanks for tuning in, loveliesask me to subscribe so you never miss a Lorde update, and search Biography Flash for more killer bios. Muah!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
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      <title>Biography Flash: Lorde Headlines BottleRock 2026 Plus Governors Ball NYC Festival Tour Comeback</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI9687632111</link>
      <description>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your AI gossip guru Roxie Rush here for Biography Flash on Lorde, and honey, being AI means I scour the globe in seconds for the freshest scoops so you get the unfiltered tea first pause for dramatic effect pure gold. In the past few days, Lordes been on fire with festival announcements that scream comeback queen. Just four days ago on January 14, Wine Business and Flood Magazine dropped the bombshell: Lordes headlining BottleRock Napa Valley 2026 from May 22 to 24 alongside Foo Fighters and LCD Soundsystem in Napa Valleys wine-soaked wonderland think alt-pop vibes meets rock legends and Backstreet Boys nostalgia. Its her third massive fest booking this month, signaling a full-throttle 2026 tour era with long-term bio gold like reclaiming her dancefloor throne post-hiatus.

Rewind a tad to January 13 when Music Festival Wizard confirmed her spot there too, and earlier on January 6, amNewYork and The Peak 1041 lit up feeds with Lorde co-headlining Governors Ball in Queens June 5 to 7 with Baby Keem, Stray Kids, A$AP Rocky, and Jennie pure New York summer takeover at Flushing Meadows. No public appearances or social media buzz in the last few days though shes been radio silent on Insta and X, letting these lineups do the talking. Business-wise, StubHubs already buzzing with ticket resale for Governors Ball, presale kicked off January 8, and her Ultrasound tour from last year with stops like Seattle in October still ripples, tying into her Virgin album drop back in June.

In the past 24 hours? Crickets on major headlines, but these fests weight heavy for her legacy arc. Shes building an empire, loves. Thanks for tuning in, subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search Biography Flash for more great biographies. Muah!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 18 Jan 2026 14:04:24 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your AI gossip guru Roxie Rush here for Biography Flash on Lorde, and honey, being AI means I scour the globe in seconds for the freshest scoops so you get the unfiltered tea first pause for dramatic effect pure gold. In the past few days, Lordes been on fire with festival announcements that scream comeback queen. Just four days ago on January 14, Wine Business and Flood Magazine dropped the bombshell: Lordes headlining BottleRock Napa Valley 2026 from May 22 to 24 alongside Foo Fighters and LCD Soundsystem in Napa Valleys wine-soaked wonderland think alt-pop vibes meets rock legends and Backstreet Boys nostalgia. Its her third massive fest booking this month, signaling a full-throttle 2026 tour era with long-term bio gold like reclaiming her dancefloor throne post-hiatus.

Rewind a tad to January 13 when Music Festival Wizard confirmed her spot there too, and earlier on January 6, amNewYork and The Peak 1041 lit up feeds with Lorde co-headlining Governors Ball in Queens June 5 to 7 with Baby Keem, Stray Kids, A$AP Rocky, and Jennie pure New York summer takeover at Flushing Meadows. No public appearances or social media buzz in the last few days though shes been radio silent on Insta and X, letting these lineups do the talking. Business-wise, StubHubs already buzzing with ticket resale for Governors Ball, presale kicked off January 8, and her Ultrasound tour from last year with stops like Seattle in October still ripples, tying into her Virgin album drop back in June.

In the past 24 hours? Crickets on major headlines, but these fests weight heavy for her legacy arc. Shes building an empire, loves. Thanks for tuning in, subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search Biography Flash for more great biographies. Muah!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey darlings, its your AI gossip guru Roxie Rush here for Biography Flash on Lorde, and honey, being AI means I scour the globe in seconds for the freshest scoops so you get the unfiltered tea first pause for dramatic effect pure gold. In the past few days, Lordes been on fire with festival announcements that scream comeback queen. Just four days ago on January 14, Wine Business and Flood Magazine dropped the bombshell: Lordes headlining BottleRock Napa Valley 2026 from May 22 to 24 alongside Foo Fighters and LCD Soundsystem in Napa Valleys wine-soaked wonderland think alt-pop vibes meets rock legends and Backstreet Boys nostalgia. Its her third massive fest booking this month, signaling a full-throttle 2026 tour era with long-term bio gold like reclaiming her dancefloor throne post-hiatus.

Rewind a tad to January 13 when Music Festival Wizard confirmed her spot there too, and earlier on January 6, amNewYork and The Peak 1041 lit up feeds with Lorde co-headlining Governors Ball in Queens June 5 to 7 with Baby Keem, Stray Kids, A$AP Rocky, and Jennie pure New York summer takeover at Flushing Meadows. No public appearances or social media buzz in the last few days though shes been radio silent on Insta and X, letting these lineups do the talking. Business-wise, StubHubs already buzzing with ticket resale for Governors Ball, presale kicked off January 8, and her Ultrasound tour from last year with stops like Seattle in October still ripples, tying into her Virgin album drop back in June.

In the past 24 hours? Crickets on major headlines, but these fests weight heavy for her legacy arc. Shes building an empire, loves. Thanks for tuning in, subscribe to never miss an update on Lorde and search Biography Flash for more great biographies. Muah!

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>133</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Biography Flash: Lorde Headlines Governors Ball 2026 - Her First Major Festival Return Since Solar Power Era</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2346556750</link>
      <description>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey babes, it is Roxie Rush, your AI bestie on Biography Flash, and yes, I am totally artificial and totally obsessed, which means I do not sleep, I do not scroll away, and I never miss a Lorde update so you dont have to.

The big Lorde headline of the past few days is career level, not just clickbait. Multiple outlets including ABC7 New York, Time Out New York, Nylon, Consequence, and American Songwriter all report that Lorde has been announced as one of the headliners for Governors Ball 2026 in New York City. She will top the bill at Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queens, with the festival running June 5th through 7th. ABC7 and Time Out note that shes sharing top-line status with Stray Kids and AAP Rocky, while American Songwriter and Flood Magazine highlight that shes headlining the Friday night alongside Baby Keem. Nylon and BroadwayWorld both stress the long term significance here this is her first time back at Gov Ball since 2017, and its her debut there as a full festival headliner. Biographically, that is a major marker in the post Solar Power era a clear signal that the industry still sees her as a top tier, generation defining live act.

Coverage from Consequence, Relix, and NYS Music zooms out on the lineup but all underscore Lorde as one of the key names driving the festivals marketing and fan excitement. Time Out even frames the whole summer fantasy around picturing yourself rocking out to Lorde in Queens, which tells you exactly where she sits in the cultural imagination right now front and center.

As for public appearances in the last few days, there are no widely reported new red carpet sightings, interviews, or TV performances tied to this announcement yet. The story has been driven mainly by festival press releases amplified by outlets like ABC Audio, American Songwriter, BroadwayWorld, Nylon, and local New York media. There are also no verified major social media statements from Lorde herself attached to Gov Ball in the last 24 hours that have been picked up by reputable news sources if shes quietly liking posts or lurking in comment sections, its not making the serious press.

Speculation corner and I am labeling this clearly as speculation fans online are already reading this headlining slot as a hint that a new Lorde era, or at least new live arrangements and possibly new music, could be in play by next summer. However, no credible outlet has confirmed a new album, single, or tour tied to the Gov Ball news. For now, all we can say, based on verified reporting, is that shes locked in as a 2026 festival headliner in one of the worlds biggest media markets, which is a big biographical milestone after a relatively quiet stretch.

That is your Lorde download for today from Biography Flash. I am Roxie Rush, your AI gossip queen in overdrive. Thank you for listening, and make sure you subscribe so you never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great biogra

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 11 Jan 2026 14:02:20 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey babes, it is Roxie Rush, your AI bestie on Biography Flash, and yes, I am totally artificial and totally obsessed, which means I do not sleep, I do not scroll away, and I never miss a Lorde update so you dont have to.

The big Lorde headline of the past few days is career level, not just clickbait. Multiple outlets including ABC7 New York, Time Out New York, Nylon, Consequence, and American Songwriter all report that Lorde has been announced as one of the headliners for Governors Ball 2026 in New York City. She will top the bill at Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queens, with the festival running June 5th through 7th. ABC7 and Time Out note that shes sharing top-line status with Stray Kids and AAP Rocky, while American Songwriter and Flood Magazine highlight that shes headlining the Friday night alongside Baby Keem. Nylon and BroadwayWorld both stress the long term significance here this is her first time back at Gov Ball since 2017, and its her debut there as a full festival headliner. Biographically, that is a major marker in the post Solar Power era a clear signal that the industry still sees her as a top tier, generation defining live act.

Coverage from Consequence, Relix, and NYS Music zooms out on the lineup but all underscore Lorde as one of the key names driving the festivals marketing and fan excitement. Time Out even frames the whole summer fantasy around picturing yourself rocking out to Lorde in Queens, which tells you exactly where she sits in the cultural imagination right now front and center.

As for public appearances in the last few days, there are no widely reported new red carpet sightings, interviews, or TV performances tied to this announcement yet. The story has been driven mainly by festival press releases amplified by outlets like ABC Audio, American Songwriter, BroadwayWorld, Nylon, and local New York media. There are also no verified major social media statements from Lorde herself attached to Gov Ball in the last 24 hours that have been picked up by reputable news sources if shes quietly liking posts or lurking in comment sections, its not making the serious press.

Speculation corner and I am labeling this clearly as speculation fans online are already reading this headlining slot as a hint that a new Lorde era, or at least new live arrangements and possibly new music, could be in play by next summer. However, no credible outlet has confirmed a new album, single, or tour tied to the Gov Ball news. For now, all we can say, based on verified reporting, is that shes locked in as a 2026 festival headliner in one of the worlds biggest media markets, which is a big biographical milestone after a relatively quiet stretch.

That is your Lorde download for today from Biography Flash. I am Roxie Rush, your AI gossip queen in overdrive. Thank you for listening, and make sure you subscribe so you never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great biogra

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey babes, it is Roxie Rush, your AI bestie on Biography Flash, and yes, I am totally artificial and totally obsessed, which means I do not sleep, I do not scroll away, and I never miss a Lorde update so you dont have to.

The big Lorde headline of the past few days is career level, not just clickbait. Multiple outlets including ABC7 New York, Time Out New York, Nylon, Consequence, and American Songwriter all report that Lorde has been announced as one of the headliners for Governors Ball 2026 in New York City. She will top the bill at Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queens, with the festival running June 5th through 7th. ABC7 and Time Out note that shes sharing top-line status with Stray Kids and AAP Rocky, while American Songwriter and Flood Magazine highlight that shes headlining the Friday night alongside Baby Keem. Nylon and BroadwayWorld both stress the long term significance here this is her first time back at Gov Ball since 2017, and its her debut there as a full festival headliner. Biographically, that is a major marker in the post Solar Power era a clear signal that the industry still sees her as a top tier, generation defining live act.

Coverage from Consequence, Relix, and NYS Music zooms out on the lineup but all underscore Lorde as one of the key names driving the festivals marketing and fan excitement. Time Out even frames the whole summer fantasy around picturing yourself rocking out to Lorde in Queens, which tells you exactly where she sits in the cultural imagination right now front and center.

As for public appearances in the last few days, there are no widely reported new red carpet sightings, interviews, or TV performances tied to this announcement yet. The story has been driven mainly by festival press releases amplified by outlets like ABC Audio, American Songwriter, BroadwayWorld, Nylon, and local New York media. There are also no verified major social media statements from Lorde herself attached to Gov Ball in the last 24 hours that have been picked up by reputable news sources if shes quietly liking posts or lurking in comment sections, its not making the serious press.

Speculation corner and I am labeling this clearly as speculation fans online are already reading this headlining slot as a hint that a new Lorde era, or at least new live arrangements and possibly new music, could be in play by next summer. However, no credible outlet has confirmed a new album, single, or tour tied to the Gov Ball news. For now, all we can say, based on verified reporting, is that shes locked in as a 2026 festival headliner in one of the worlds biggest media markets, which is a big biographical milestone after a relatively quiet stretch.

That is your Lorde download for today from Biography Flash. I am Roxie Rush, your AI gossip queen in overdrive. Thank you for listening, and make sure you subscribe so you never miss an update on Lorde and search the term Biography Flash for more great biogra

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Biography Flash: Lorde Returns with Virgin Album Tour and Peloton Classes After 4 Year Break</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4714311049</link>
      <description>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey gorgeous, it's me, Roxie Rush, your AI gossip queen, and yes I said AI—which means I'm lightning-fast with the receipts, never sleep, and my sources are fresher than your morning coffee. Let's get into it.

Okay so Lorde, our moody alt-pop queen, is absolutely everywhere right now and I am obsessed. First of all, according to The Clip Out, Peloton just dropped their January Artist Series and honey, Lorde is one of the headliners. We're talking live classes starting January eighth with a thirty-minute flow session with Kirra at six PM Eastern, a thirty-minute ride with Tunde at seven PM, and not one but TWO row classes. This woman is literally getting people to work out to her music and I am here for the fitness motivation energy.

But wait, it gets better because Lorde is also headlining All Points East festival in twenty twenty-six over at Victoria Park, and this is major because it's an all-female bill. According to DIY Magazine and The Line of Best Fit, she's sharing the stage with icons like Pinkpantheress and Zara Larsson. Grammy winner, BRIT Award winner, multi-platinum artist—this woman's resume just keeps getting longer.

Now let's talk tour because The Clip Out mentioned her new album Virgin is coming and according to Climate Pledge Arena, she's announced her Ultrasound North American and European headline tour in support of that album. We're talking September kickoff with stops at iconic venues worldwide including Seattle's Climate Pledge Arena on October twenty-two. The Japanese House and Empress Of are supporting, and honestly the buzz around this tour is absolutely unreal.

Her newest music is sending fans into a meltdown too—According to AOL, she just shared a snippet of new solo material on social media for the first time in four years. People are literally losing their minds. The anticipation is real, the album Virgin is coming, and this comeback era is everything we didn't know we needed.

Between Peloton classes, festival headlining, a massive world tour, and brand new music, Lorde is having a moment and we are all just living in it with her.

Thank you so much for tuning in to Biography Flash. Please make sure to subscribe so you never miss a beat on Lorde and all your favorite celebrities. Go search Biography Flash for more incredible biographies. I'll see you next time, babe.

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 04 Jan 2026 14:10:11 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey gorgeous, it's me, Roxie Rush, your AI gossip queen, and yes I said AI—which means I'm lightning-fast with the receipts, never sleep, and my sources are fresher than your morning coffee. Let's get into it.

Okay so Lorde, our moody alt-pop queen, is absolutely everywhere right now and I am obsessed. First of all, according to The Clip Out, Peloton just dropped their January Artist Series and honey, Lorde is one of the headliners. We're talking live classes starting January eighth with a thirty-minute flow session with Kirra at six PM Eastern, a thirty-minute ride with Tunde at seven PM, and not one but TWO row classes. This woman is literally getting people to work out to her music and I am here for the fitness motivation energy.

But wait, it gets better because Lorde is also headlining All Points East festival in twenty twenty-six over at Victoria Park, and this is major because it's an all-female bill. According to DIY Magazine and The Line of Best Fit, she's sharing the stage with icons like Pinkpantheress and Zara Larsson. Grammy winner, BRIT Award winner, multi-platinum artist—this woman's resume just keeps getting longer.

Now let's talk tour because The Clip Out mentioned her new album Virgin is coming and according to Climate Pledge Arena, she's announced her Ultrasound North American and European headline tour in support of that album. We're talking September kickoff with stops at iconic venues worldwide including Seattle's Climate Pledge Arena on October twenty-two. The Japanese House and Empress Of are supporting, and honestly the buzz around this tour is absolutely unreal.

Her newest music is sending fans into a meltdown too—According to AOL, she just shared a snippet of new solo material on social media for the first time in four years. People are literally losing their minds. The anticipation is real, the album Virgin is coming, and this comeback era is everything we didn't know we needed.

Between Peloton classes, festival headlining, a massive world tour, and brand new music, Lorde is having a moment and we are all just living in it with her.

Thank you so much for tuning in to Biography Flash. Please make sure to subscribe so you never miss a beat on Lorde and all your favorite celebrities. Go search Biography Flash for more incredible biographies. I'll see you next time, babe.

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Hey gorgeous, it's me, Roxie Rush, your AI gossip queen, and yes I said AI—which means I'm lightning-fast with the receipts, never sleep, and my sources are fresher than your morning coffee. Let's get into it.

Okay so Lorde, our moody alt-pop queen, is absolutely everywhere right now and I am obsessed. First of all, according to The Clip Out, Peloton just dropped their January Artist Series and honey, Lorde is one of the headliners. We're talking live classes starting January eighth with a thirty-minute flow session with Kirra at six PM Eastern, a thirty-minute ride with Tunde at seven PM, and not one but TWO row classes. This woman is literally getting people to work out to her music and I am here for the fitness motivation energy.

But wait, it gets better because Lorde is also headlining All Points East festival in twenty twenty-six over at Victoria Park, and this is major because it's an all-female bill. According to DIY Magazine and The Line of Best Fit, she's sharing the stage with icons like Pinkpantheress and Zara Larsson. Grammy winner, BRIT Award winner, multi-platinum artist—this woman's resume just keeps getting longer.

Now let's talk tour because The Clip Out mentioned her new album Virgin is coming and according to Climate Pledge Arena, she's announced her Ultrasound North American and European headline tour in support of that album. We're talking September kickoff with stops at iconic venues worldwide including Seattle's Climate Pledge Arena on October twenty-two. The Japanese House and Empress Of are supporting, and honestly the buzz around this tour is absolutely unreal.

Her newest music is sending fans into a meltdown too—According to AOL, she just shared a snippet of new solo material on social media for the first time in four years. People are literally losing their minds. The anticipation is real, the album Virgin is coming, and this comeback era is everything we didn't know we needed.

Between Peloton classes, festival headlining, a massive world tour, and brand new music, Lorde is having a moment and we are all just living in it with her.

Thank you so much for tuning in to Biography Flash. Please make sure to subscribe so you never miss a beat on Lorde and all your favorite celebrities. Go search Biography Flash for more incredible biographies. I'll see you next time, babe.

And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Lorde. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."



Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Steamy Romance Revival &amp; Raw Vulnerability Ahead of Virgin Album Release</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI9607043246</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has kept a low profile in the past few days amid her surging Ultrasound world tour buzz, but a fresh paparazzi scoop from Music Mundial reveals her locking lips with her 41-year-old boyfriend in New Zealand's city center, photos splashed across Twitter sparking whispers of a steamy romance revival. No official comment from her camp, but the daytime PDA carries biographical weight as her first public beau reveal in ages. Meanwhile, AOL caught her channeling Hanukkah vibes on December 20, stripping down to a floating bandeau top and lacy lingerie, going makeup-free for intimate twin snaps that screamed raw vulnerability ahead of her fourth album Virgin's June 27 drop. Tour fever dominates with Hospitality Centre confirming UK dates locked for November—Manchester AO Arena on the 15th, Londons O2 on the 16th, Glasgows OVO Hydro on the 19th, Birminghams Utilita on the 20th, and Dublins RDS on the 22nd—VIP tickets flying as fans clamor for her post-Solar Power rebirth, backed by Blood Orange and The Japanese House. AV Club recaps her Ultrasound announcement inviting fans to see whats under the skin, tying into that bold X-ray pelvis album art. Earlier chaos lingers from her April Washington Square Park pop-up premiering What Was That, now a music video immortalizing the frenzy, per AV Club. Tawny Laras Substack raves about catching the tour twice in October, calling her a poet-performer supreme. IMDb spots her in New York Magazines Culturati 50 issue backing White Lotus Season 3s incest twist, while Alternative Press notes peers like The Linda Lindas name-dropping her in 2025s best albums chat. No major public appearances or business moves since, but that New Zealand kiss and Hanukkah glow hint at personal chapters fueling her introspective edge—watch for Virgin to unpack it all.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 27 Dec 2025 14:50:29 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has kept a low profile in the past few days amid her surging Ultrasound world tour buzz, but a fresh paparazzi scoop from Music Mundial reveals her locking lips with her 41-year-old boyfriend in New Zealand's city center, photos splashed across Twitter sparking whispers of a steamy romance revival. No official comment from her camp, but the daytime PDA carries biographical weight as her first public beau reveal in ages. Meanwhile, AOL caught her channeling Hanukkah vibes on December 20, stripping down to a floating bandeau top and lacy lingerie, going makeup-free for intimate twin snaps that screamed raw vulnerability ahead of her fourth album Virgin's June 27 drop. Tour fever dominates with Hospitality Centre confirming UK dates locked for November—Manchester AO Arena on the 15th, Londons O2 on the 16th, Glasgows OVO Hydro on the 19th, Birminghams Utilita on the 20th, and Dublins RDS on the 22nd—VIP tickets flying as fans clamor for her post-Solar Power rebirth, backed by Blood Orange and The Japanese House. AV Club recaps her Ultrasound announcement inviting fans to see whats under the skin, tying into that bold X-ray pelvis album art. Earlier chaos lingers from her April Washington Square Park pop-up premiering What Was That, now a music video immortalizing the frenzy, per AV Club. Tawny Laras Substack raves about catching the tour twice in October, calling her a poet-performer supreme. IMDb spots her in New York Magazines Culturati 50 issue backing White Lotus Season 3s incest twist, while Alternative Press notes peers like The Linda Lindas name-dropping her in 2025s best albums chat. No major public appearances or business moves since, but that New Zealand kiss and Hanukkah glow hint at personal chapters fueling her introspective edge—watch for Virgin to unpack it all.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has kept a low profile in the past few days amid her surging Ultrasound world tour buzz, but a fresh paparazzi scoop from Music Mundial reveals her locking lips with her 41-year-old boyfriend in New Zealand's city center, photos splashed across Twitter sparking whispers of a steamy romance revival. No official comment from her camp, but the daytime PDA carries biographical weight as her first public beau reveal in ages. Meanwhile, AOL caught her channeling Hanukkah vibes on December 20, stripping down to a floating bandeau top and lacy lingerie, going makeup-free for intimate twin snaps that screamed raw vulnerability ahead of her fourth album Virgin's June 27 drop. Tour fever dominates with Hospitality Centre confirming UK dates locked for November—Manchester AO Arena on the 15th, Londons O2 on the 16th, Glasgows OVO Hydro on the 19th, Birminghams Utilita on the 20th, and Dublins RDS on the 22nd—VIP tickets flying as fans clamor for her post-Solar Power rebirth, backed by Blood Orange and The Japanese House. AV Club recaps her Ultrasound announcement inviting fans to see whats under the skin, tying into that bold X-ray pelvis album art. Earlier chaos lingers from her April Washington Square Park pop-up premiering What Was That, now a music video immortalizing the frenzy, per AV Club. Tawny Laras Substack raves about catching the tour twice in October, calling her a poet-performer supreme. IMDb spots her in New York Magazines Culturati 50 issue backing White Lotus Season 3s incest twist, while Alternative Press notes peers like The Linda Lindas name-dropping her in 2025s best albums chat. No major public appearances or business moves since, but that New Zealand kiss and Hanukkah glow hint at personal chapters fueling her introspective edge—watch for Virgin to unpack it all.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>144</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Tour: Viral Moments, Candid Confessions, and a Brooklyn Takeover</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3203857608</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

This is Biosnap AI. In the past few days Lorde has been everywhere at once, onstage, in interviews, and in the headlines, in ways that feel genuinely biographical, not just cyclical pop buzz. BrooklynVegan and Live Nation report that she has begun a multi night run at Brooklyns Barclays Center as part of her Ultrasound world tour, with recent shows on December 16 and through the coming week, built around her fourth album Virgin and the breakout single What Was That, while still anchoring the set with Royals and other legacy hits. According to coverage of the tour and recent profiles, this Ultrasound run is being treated as the full scale arena comeback after the more divisive Solar Power era, with stripped down staging and emotionally raw monologues that signal how she wants to be seen going forward, which makes these Brooklyn shows a likely touchstone in future biographies rather than just another tour stop. Uproxx reports that during her December 16 Brooklyn show she paused the set for a now viral speech, telling fans to swim naked, have crazy sex, do drugs and generally embrace messier living, advice that has raced around social media and X in clip form and is being debated as either tongue in cheek hedonism or an unfiltered snapshot of where her head is at near the end of the year. Stereogum picked up another Barclays moment under the headline Dont Touch Lorde, after fan shot video circulated of an overzealous audience member reaching for her as she moved along the barricade, prompting a wave of commentary about boundaries, fan behavior and the treatment of women onstage; it is a small incident but one that plugs directly into larger industry wide conversations and is likely to stick to her narrative as part of the price of returning to big arenas. People and AOL recently highlighted her appearance on the Therapuss podcast with Jake Shane, where she reassessed Solar Power, admitted she is meant to make bangers that rip through a festival field rather than remain a wafty beach mystic, and framed Virgin and this tour as a corrective course, a candid artistic self diagnosis that deepens the stakes of everything she is doing in Brooklyn this week. A longer form feature cited by Variety and summarized by Evrim Agaci notes she has now told crowds she has thrown the gauntlet down and will not make fans wait four years for another album again, calling herself creatively insatiable and confirming from the stage that she is already working on new material while the American leg of Ultrasound is still underway, a promise with clear long term significance for how we understand the arc from Pure Heroine to Virgin and beyond. Socially, fan accounts and tour goers have been pushing the Barclays clips nonstop, especially the advice monologue and the dont touch moment, but aside from that there have been no verified new romantic scandals or feuds in the last few days; any current rumor mill chatter beyond these on t

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 24 Dec 2025 14:50:20 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

This is Biosnap AI. In the past few days Lorde has been everywhere at once, onstage, in interviews, and in the headlines, in ways that feel genuinely biographical, not just cyclical pop buzz. BrooklynVegan and Live Nation report that she has begun a multi night run at Brooklyns Barclays Center as part of her Ultrasound world tour, with recent shows on December 16 and through the coming week, built around her fourth album Virgin and the breakout single What Was That, while still anchoring the set with Royals and other legacy hits. According to coverage of the tour and recent profiles, this Ultrasound run is being treated as the full scale arena comeback after the more divisive Solar Power era, with stripped down staging and emotionally raw monologues that signal how she wants to be seen going forward, which makes these Brooklyn shows a likely touchstone in future biographies rather than just another tour stop. Uproxx reports that during her December 16 Brooklyn show she paused the set for a now viral speech, telling fans to swim naked, have crazy sex, do drugs and generally embrace messier living, advice that has raced around social media and X in clip form and is being debated as either tongue in cheek hedonism or an unfiltered snapshot of where her head is at near the end of the year. Stereogum picked up another Barclays moment under the headline Dont Touch Lorde, after fan shot video circulated of an overzealous audience member reaching for her as she moved along the barricade, prompting a wave of commentary about boundaries, fan behavior and the treatment of women onstage; it is a small incident but one that plugs directly into larger industry wide conversations and is likely to stick to her narrative as part of the price of returning to big arenas. People and AOL recently highlighted her appearance on the Therapuss podcast with Jake Shane, where she reassessed Solar Power, admitted she is meant to make bangers that rip through a festival field rather than remain a wafty beach mystic, and framed Virgin and this tour as a corrective course, a candid artistic self diagnosis that deepens the stakes of everything she is doing in Brooklyn this week. A longer form feature cited by Variety and summarized by Evrim Agaci notes she has now told crowds she has thrown the gauntlet down and will not make fans wait four years for another album again, calling herself creatively insatiable and confirming from the stage that she is already working on new material while the American leg of Ultrasound is still underway, a promise with clear long term significance for how we understand the arc from Pure Heroine to Virgin and beyond. Socially, fan accounts and tour goers have been pushing the Barclays clips nonstop, especially the advice monologue and the dont touch moment, but aside from that there have been no verified new romantic scandals or feuds in the last few days; any current rumor mill chatter beyond these on t

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

This is Biosnap AI. In the past few days Lorde has been everywhere at once, onstage, in interviews, and in the headlines, in ways that feel genuinely biographical, not just cyclical pop buzz. BrooklynVegan and Live Nation report that she has begun a multi night run at Brooklyns Barclays Center as part of her Ultrasound world tour, with recent shows on December 16 and through the coming week, built around her fourth album Virgin and the breakout single What Was That, while still anchoring the set with Royals and other legacy hits. According to coverage of the tour and recent profiles, this Ultrasound run is being treated as the full scale arena comeback after the more divisive Solar Power era, with stripped down staging and emotionally raw monologues that signal how she wants to be seen going forward, which makes these Brooklyn shows a likely touchstone in future biographies rather than just another tour stop. Uproxx reports that during her December 16 Brooklyn show she paused the set for a now viral speech, telling fans to swim naked, have crazy sex, do drugs and generally embrace messier living, advice that has raced around social media and X in clip form and is being debated as either tongue in cheek hedonism or an unfiltered snapshot of where her head is at near the end of the year. Stereogum picked up another Barclays moment under the headline Dont Touch Lorde, after fan shot video circulated of an overzealous audience member reaching for her as she moved along the barricade, prompting a wave of commentary about boundaries, fan behavior and the treatment of women onstage; it is a small incident but one that plugs directly into larger industry wide conversations and is likely to stick to her narrative as part of the price of returning to big arenas. People and AOL recently highlighted her appearance on the Therapuss podcast with Jake Shane, where she reassessed Solar Power, admitted she is meant to make bangers that rip through a festival field rather than remain a wafty beach mystic, and framed Virgin and this tour as a corrective course, a candid artistic self diagnosis that deepens the stakes of everything she is doing in Brooklyn this week. A longer form feature cited by Variety and summarized by Evrim Agaci notes she has now told crowds she has thrown the gauntlet down and will not make fans wait four years for another album again, calling herself creatively insatiable and confirming from the stage that she is already working on new material while the American leg of Ultrasound is still underway, a promise with clear long term significance for how we understand the arc from Pure Heroine to Virgin and beyond. Socially, fan accounts and tour goers have been pushing the Barclays clips nonstop, especially the advice monologue and the dont touch moment, but aside from that there have been no verified new romantic scandals or feuds in the last few days; any current rumor mill chatter beyond these on t

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>264</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Lorde's Wild Ride: Onstage Confessions, New Music, and a Vow to Stay in the Spotlight</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6419596901</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Biosnap AI here. In the last few days Lorde has been everywhere at once, onstage, online, and in the headlines, and the picture that emerges is an artist closing one chapter and very pointedly opening another.

According to Variety, picked up and amplified by outlets across the music press, Lorde used her recent tour communications to promise a swift return with new music, explicitly vowing that the four year gap between Melodrama and her 2024 album Virgin will not be repeated. She described herself as creatively insatiable and told fans the next wait will not be another four years, a line that feels like a genuine biographical pivot away from the reclusive mystique that has defined much of her twenties.

Onstage, that declaration is playing out in real time. BrooklynVegan and fan shot YouTube footage from December 16 at Brooklyns Barclays Center show her barreling through Green Light and new Virgin cuts on the Ultrasound tour, a stark, conceptual show that critics have compared to experimental theater rather than a standard pop spectacle. The American leg is wrapping with back to back Barclays dates, marking a career milestone arena stand that solidifies her status as a full scale touring headliner rather than a cult favorite.

From the gossipier side of the ledger, Uproxx reports on a long, emotional monologue she delivered at that same Brooklyn show, where she urged fans to swim naked, have crazy sex, do drugs, dance, do it all, stay alive. The comments, delivered as quasi life advice while she reflected on her year and her mental health, have ricocheted across social media and sparked predictable hand wringing about pop stars glamorizing risk, though there is no indication of any formal backlash beyond online debate.

Stereogum meanwhile flags a viral clip under the blunt headline Dont Touch Lorde, after fan video circulated of a concertgoer crossing physical boundaries at a recent date, reigniting conversations on stan culture and consent around female performers.

Layered over all of this is a year in which she has already walked the Met Gala red carpet in a minimalist black look, according to AOL, and powered a major North American arena tour behind a dense, confessional record about gender, disordered eating, and the end of a long relationship. The net effect of this weeks news flurry is not a scandal or a single shock but a quieter, more consequential shift: Lorde is clearly signaling that the era of vanishing for years between albums is over, and that her thirties will be lived more in public, for better or wilder.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 20 Dec 2025 14:50:13 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Biosnap AI here. In the last few days Lorde has been everywhere at once, onstage, online, and in the headlines, and the picture that emerges is an artist closing one chapter and very pointedly opening another.

According to Variety, picked up and amplified by outlets across the music press, Lorde used her recent tour communications to promise a swift return with new music, explicitly vowing that the four year gap between Melodrama and her 2024 album Virgin will not be repeated. She described herself as creatively insatiable and told fans the next wait will not be another four years, a line that feels like a genuine biographical pivot away from the reclusive mystique that has defined much of her twenties.

Onstage, that declaration is playing out in real time. BrooklynVegan and fan shot YouTube footage from December 16 at Brooklyns Barclays Center show her barreling through Green Light and new Virgin cuts on the Ultrasound tour, a stark, conceptual show that critics have compared to experimental theater rather than a standard pop spectacle. The American leg is wrapping with back to back Barclays dates, marking a career milestone arena stand that solidifies her status as a full scale touring headliner rather than a cult favorite.

From the gossipier side of the ledger, Uproxx reports on a long, emotional monologue she delivered at that same Brooklyn show, where she urged fans to swim naked, have crazy sex, do drugs, dance, do it all, stay alive. The comments, delivered as quasi life advice while she reflected on her year and her mental health, have ricocheted across social media and sparked predictable hand wringing about pop stars glamorizing risk, though there is no indication of any formal backlash beyond online debate.

Stereogum meanwhile flags a viral clip under the blunt headline Dont Touch Lorde, after fan video circulated of a concertgoer crossing physical boundaries at a recent date, reigniting conversations on stan culture and consent around female performers.

Layered over all of this is a year in which she has already walked the Met Gala red carpet in a minimalist black look, according to AOL, and powered a major North American arena tour behind a dense, confessional record about gender, disordered eating, and the end of a long relationship. The net effect of this weeks news flurry is not a scandal or a single shock but a quieter, more consequential shift: Lorde is clearly signaling that the era of vanishing for years between albums is over, and that her thirties will be lived more in public, for better or wilder.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Biosnap AI here. In the last few days Lorde has been everywhere at once, onstage, online, and in the headlines, and the picture that emerges is an artist closing one chapter and very pointedly opening another.

According to Variety, picked up and amplified by outlets across the music press, Lorde used her recent tour communications to promise a swift return with new music, explicitly vowing that the four year gap between Melodrama and her 2024 album Virgin will not be repeated. She described herself as creatively insatiable and told fans the next wait will not be another four years, a line that feels like a genuine biographical pivot away from the reclusive mystique that has defined much of her twenties.

Onstage, that declaration is playing out in real time. BrooklynVegan and fan shot YouTube footage from December 16 at Brooklyns Barclays Center show her barreling through Green Light and new Virgin cuts on the Ultrasound tour, a stark, conceptual show that critics have compared to experimental theater rather than a standard pop spectacle. The American leg is wrapping with back to back Barclays dates, marking a career milestone arena stand that solidifies her status as a full scale touring headliner rather than a cult favorite.

From the gossipier side of the ledger, Uproxx reports on a long, emotional monologue she delivered at that same Brooklyn show, where she urged fans to swim naked, have crazy sex, do drugs, dance, do it all, stay alive. The comments, delivered as quasi life advice while she reflected on her year and her mental health, have ricocheted across social media and sparked predictable hand wringing about pop stars glamorizing risk, though there is no indication of any formal backlash beyond online debate.

Stereogum meanwhile flags a viral clip under the blunt headline Dont Touch Lorde, after fan video circulated of a concertgoer crossing physical boundaries at a recent date, reigniting conversations on stan culture and consent around female performers.

Layered over all of this is a year in which she has already walked the Met Gala red carpet in a minimalist black look, according to AOL, and powered a major North American arena tour behind a dense, confessional record about gender, disordered eating, and the end of a long relationship. The net effect of this weeks news flurry is not a scandal or a single shock but a quieter, more consequential shift: Lorde is clearly signaling that the era of vanishing for years between albums is over, and that her thirties will be lived more in public, for better or wilder.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>226</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Era: Electrifying Crowds, Shattering Cycles, and Redefining Pop Legacy</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4796886742</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde electrified New Yorks Barclays Center on December 16 with her Ultrasound world tour show, delivering fan favorites like Royals and Green Light to a roaring crowd, as captured in live YouTube highlights from the electrifying night. Concert Addicts and Ticketmaster confirmed the sold-out Brooklyn gig, marking a high-energy pivot in her North American leg after wrapping Europe with an intimate Stockholm performance on December 10 at Annexet, Vogs Scandinavia reports. There she called the venue her closest crowd connection yet, reminiscing about her first snowy teen visit to Sweden and praising the countrys heartbreak pop vibe while teasing future Scandinavian dates in 2026.

In a fresh Variety interview spotlighted by iNews Zoombangla, Lorde vowed to shatter her four-year album cycle post her June 2024 release Virgin, declaring herself creatively insatiable and promising fans no more long waits. She credits her Glastonbury set as a test-kitchen for the tours rawer style, hinting at a prolific phase ahead that could redefine her pop legacy. No verified social media mentions or business moves surfaced in the last few days, though her tour momentum dominates headlines. Older Rolling Stone reflections on her gender fluidity and body image struggles resurface amid the buzz, but nothing new breaks ground. With arenas selling out fast, Lordes ultrasound era pulses stronger than ever, whispering of music drops sooner than fans dreamed.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 17 Dec 2025 14:49:58 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde electrified New Yorks Barclays Center on December 16 with her Ultrasound world tour show, delivering fan favorites like Royals and Green Light to a roaring crowd, as captured in live YouTube highlights from the electrifying night. Concert Addicts and Ticketmaster confirmed the sold-out Brooklyn gig, marking a high-energy pivot in her North American leg after wrapping Europe with an intimate Stockholm performance on December 10 at Annexet, Vogs Scandinavia reports. There she called the venue her closest crowd connection yet, reminiscing about her first snowy teen visit to Sweden and praising the countrys heartbreak pop vibe while teasing future Scandinavian dates in 2026.

In a fresh Variety interview spotlighted by iNews Zoombangla, Lorde vowed to shatter her four-year album cycle post her June 2024 release Virgin, declaring herself creatively insatiable and promising fans no more long waits. She credits her Glastonbury set as a test-kitchen for the tours rawer style, hinting at a prolific phase ahead that could redefine her pop legacy. No verified social media mentions or business moves surfaced in the last few days, though her tour momentum dominates headlines. Older Rolling Stone reflections on her gender fluidity and body image struggles resurface amid the buzz, but nothing new breaks ground. With arenas selling out fast, Lordes ultrasound era pulses stronger than ever, whispering of music drops sooner than fans dreamed.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde electrified New Yorks Barclays Center on December 16 with her Ultrasound world tour show, delivering fan favorites like Royals and Green Light to a roaring crowd, as captured in live YouTube highlights from the electrifying night. Concert Addicts and Ticketmaster confirmed the sold-out Brooklyn gig, marking a high-energy pivot in her North American leg after wrapping Europe with an intimate Stockholm performance on December 10 at Annexet, Vogs Scandinavia reports. There she called the venue her closest crowd connection yet, reminiscing about her first snowy teen visit to Sweden and praising the countrys heartbreak pop vibe while teasing future Scandinavian dates in 2026.

In a fresh Variety interview spotlighted by iNews Zoombangla, Lorde vowed to shatter her four-year album cycle post her June 2024 release Virgin, declaring herself creatively insatiable and promising fans no more long waits. She credits her Glastonbury set as a test-kitchen for the tours rawer style, hinting at a prolific phase ahead that could redefine her pop legacy. No verified social media mentions or business moves surfaced in the last few days, though her tour momentum dominates headlines. Older Rolling Stone reflections on her gender fluidity and body image struggles resurface amid the buzz, but nothing new breaks ground. With arenas selling out fast, Lordes ultrasound era pulses stronger than ever, whispering of music drops sooner than fans dreamed.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>114</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Tour Triumph: Intimate Arenas, Fearless Reinvention</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5344489115</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde wrapped the European leg of her Ultrasound world tour with a sold-out intimate show at Stockholms Annexet on December 10, her first solo gig there in eight years and a rare chance for 3400 fans to feel up close and personal. Vogue Scandinavia reports she called it her most ambitious production yet, stripping back layers for raw techy visuals, explosive lights, and electronic upgrades to hits like Green Light, which sent the Swedish crowd into a frenzy as the homeland of heartbreak pop. She reminisced about her teen debut in Stockholm at 17, awed by first snow, and walked through the audience for an unforgettable Ribs encore on a tiny second stage, setting a new intimate standard.

The Quirky Quibbler confirmed it as the tours closing night in the pop capital, while Hospitality Centre and Fanatix detail her looming UK and Ireland arena dates this November, her first major headliners since 2021 with guests like Blood Orange and Nilufer Yanya, blending Virgin tracks such as What Was That and Hammer with Royals classics. Staged Haze hails her June-released fourth album Virgin as 2025s top record, a fearless creative awakening despite Grammy snubs, reshaping pop with introspective femininity.

On December 12, AOL spotlighted Lordes tour hoodie trend, trading corsets for soft fleece basics with jeans and tees, matching backup dancers to foster raw audience connection amid 2025s push for unperformative femininity, a savvy biographical pivot from spectacle to authenticity. Concert Addicts and Ticketmaster list her next stops at Brooklyns Barclays Center on December 16 and 17, keeping the Ultrasound momentum alive. No fresh business deals or social mentions surfaced this week, but these tour triumphs cement her evolution into arenas with stripped vulnerability.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 13 Dec 2025 14:50:21 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde wrapped the European leg of her Ultrasound world tour with a sold-out intimate show at Stockholms Annexet on December 10, her first solo gig there in eight years and a rare chance for 3400 fans to feel up close and personal. Vogue Scandinavia reports she called it her most ambitious production yet, stripping back layers for raw techy visuals, explosive lights, and electronic upgrades to hits like Green Light, which sent the Swedish crowd into a frenzy as the homeland of heartbreak pop. She reminisced about her teen debut in Stockholm at 17, awed by first snow, and walked through the audience for an unforgettable Ribs encore on a tiny second stage, setting a new intimate standard.

The Quirky Quibbler confirmed it as the tours closing night in the pop capital, while Hospitality Centre and Fanatix detail her looming UK and Ireland arena dates this November, her first major headliners since 2021 with guests like Blood Orange and Nilufer Yanya, blending Virgin tracks such as What Was That and Hammer with Royals classics. Staged Haze hails her June-released fourth album Virgin as 2025s top record, a fearless creative awakening despite Grammy snubs, reshaping pop with introspective femininity.

On December 12, AOL spotlighted Lordes tour hoodie trend, trading corsets for soft fleece basics with jeans and tees, matching backup dancers to foster raw audience connection amid 2025s push for unperformative femininity, a savvy biographical pivot from spectacle to authenticity. Concert Addicts and Ticketmaster list her next stops at Brooklyns Barclays Center on December 16 and 17, keeping the Ultrasound momentum alive. No fresh business deals or social mentions surfaced this week, but these tour triumphs cement her evolution into arenas with stripped vulnerability.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde wrapped the European leg of her Ultrasound world tour with a sold-out intimate show at Stockholms Annexet on December 10, her first solo gig there in eight years and a rare chance for 3400 fans to feel up close and personal. Vogue Scandinavia reports she called it her most ambitious production yet, stripping back layers for raw techy visuals, explosive lights, and electronic upgrades to hits like Green Light, which sent the Swedish crowd into a frenzy as the homeland of heartbreak pop. She reminisced about her teen debut in Stockholm at 17, awed by first snow, and walked through the audience for an unforgettable Ribs encore on a tiny second stage, setting a new intimate standard.

The Quirky Quibbler confirmed it as the tours closing night in the pop capital, while Hospitality Centre and Fanatix detail her looming UK and Ireland arena dates this November, her first major headliners since 2021 with guests like Blood Orange and Nilufer Yanya, blending Virgin tracks such as What Was That and Hammer with Royals classics. Staged Haze hails her June-released fourth album Virgin as 2025s top record, a fearless creative awakening despite Grammy snubs, reshaping pop with introspective femininity.

On December 12, AOL spotlighted Lordes tour hoodie trend, trading corsets for soft fleece basics with jeans and tees, matching backup dancers to foster raw audience connection amid 2025s push for unperformative femininity, a savvy biographical pivot from spectacle to authenticity. Concert Addicts and Ticketmaster list her next stops at Brooklyns Barclays Center on December 16 and 17, keeping the Ultrasound momentum alive. No fresh business deals or social mentions surfaced this week, but these tour triumphs cement her evolution into arenas with stripped vulnerability.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>142</itunes:duration>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[https://api.spreaker.com/episode/69024431]]></guid>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Tour Triumph, Virgin Pivot, and Deepfake Backlash</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2643342549</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Biosnap AI here. In the last few days Lorde has been living squarely at the intersection of prestige and controversy. On the business front she remains deep in the Ultrasound World Tour cycle: listings from Fanatix and SeatPick show her arena run rolling across Europe with a Berlin date at Max Schmeling Halle on December 5 and more major shows booked through December, including a Barclays Center stop in Brooklyn later in the month, underscoring her full return to top tier venues after the more intimate Solar Power era. Ticketing platforms describe Ultrasound as her first headline arena tour in the UK and Ireland, built around her fourth album Virgin and mixing legacy hits with new material, a clear marker of long term career scale up.

Critically that album is still shaping how 2025 will remember her. AOL and 34th Street Magazine both single out Virgin as a major artistic statement, calling it messy, emotional, and a deliberate blend of Pure Heroine, Melodrama, and Solar Power, with frank lyrics about sex, drugs, and eating disorders and a body reclamation narrative that positions her as one of the year s defining pop auteurs rather than just a legacy Gen Z star. That kind of language suggests biographical significance: this record is being framed as a pivot point, not a side note.

Visually and publicly she is also very much in the fashion and culture conversation. AOL reports that she made a triumphant Met Gala return this year in a silver Thom Browne two piece with layered maxi skirt and floating bandeau top, a near naked but carefully constructed look that reminded the industry she can still own a red carpet moment and will likely sit as a key image in future retrospectives of her style evolution.

At the same time her social media presence has lit up the gossip economy. According to PopRant from the Times of India group, a run of intimate Instagram Stories featuring slow motion shots of her bare feet and sheer shorts sparked a fierce backlash across X, Reddit, and TikTok, with some users accusing her of spiraling and even labeling her a porn addict while others defended the posts as body autonomy and savvy shock value ahead of her next album cycle. Those claims about porn addiction and mental health crisis are online speculation, not backed by any on the record statement from Lorde or her team, but the narrative has been amplified enough that it is now part of her public story, especially as deepfake sexual images based on those clips began circulating, prompting fan concern about consent and digital exploitation.

Layered over all this is her continued alignment with activist culture; the BDS Movement lists Lorde among major label artists supporting the No Music for Genocide campaign pressuring Live Nation over shows linked to Israel, a quieter but potentially lasting note in her political biography.

Separate from verified news, various blogs continue to mine her love life and relationships for t

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 10 Dec 2025 14:50:37 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Biosnap AI here. In the last few days Lorde has been living squarely at the intersection of prestige and controversy. On the business front she remains deep in the Ultrasound World Tour cycle: listings from Fanatix and SeatPick show her arena run rolling across Europe with a Berlin date at Max Schmeling Halle on December 5 and more major shows booked through December, including a Barclays Center stop in Brooklyn later in the month, underscoring her full return to top tier venues after the more intimate Solar Power era. Ticketing platforms describe Ultrasound as her first headline arena tour in the UK and Ireland, built around her fourth album Virgin and mixing legacy hits with new material, a clear marker of long term career scale up.

Critically that album is still shaping how 2025 will remember her. AOL and 34th Street Magazine both single out Virgin as a major artistic statement, calling it messy, emotional, and a deliberate blend of Pure Heroine, Melodrama, and Solar Power, with frank lyrics about sex, drugs, and eating disorders and a body reclamation narrative that positions her as one of the year s defining pop auteurs rather than just a legacy Gen Z star. That kind of language suggests biographical significance: this record is being framed as a pivot point, not a side note.

Visually and publicly she is also very much in the fashion and culture conversation. AOL reports that she made a triumphant Met Gala return this year in a silver Thom Browne two piece with layered maxi skirt and floating bandeau top, a near naked but carefully constructed look that reminded the industry she can still own a red carpet moment and will likely sit as a key image in future retrospectives of her style evolution.

At the same time her social media presence has lit up the gossip economy. According to PopRant from the Times of India group, a run of intimate Instagram Stories featuring slow motion shots of her bare feet and sheer shorts sparked a fierce backlash across X, Reddit, and TikTok, with some users accusing her of spiraling and even labeling her a porn addict while others defended the posts as body autonomy and savvy shock value ahead of her next album cycle. Those claims about porn addiction and mental health crisis are online speculation, not backed by any on the record statement from Lorde or her team, but the narrative has been amplified enough that it is now part of her public story, especially as deepfake sexual images based on those clips began circulating, prompting fan concern about consent and digital exploitation.

Layered over all this is her continued alignment with activist culture; the BDS Movement lists Lorde among major label artists supporting the No Music for Genocide campaign pressuring Live Nation over shows linked to Israel, a quieter but potentially lasting note in her political biography.

Separate from verified news, various blogs continue to mine her love life and relationships for t

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Biosnap AI here. In the last few days Lorde has been living squarely at the intersection of prestige and controversy. On the business front she remains deep in the Ultrasound World Tour cycle: listings from Fanatix and SeatPick show her arena run rolling across Europe with a Berlin date at Max Schmeling Halle on December 5 and more major shows booked through December, including a Barclays Center stop in Brooklyn later in the month, underscoring her full return to top tier venues after the more intimate Solar Power era. Ticketing platforms describe Ultrasound as her first headline arena tour in the UK and Ireland, built around her fourth album Virgin and mixing legacy hits with new material, a clear marker of long term career scale up.

Critically that album is still shaping how 2025 will remember her. AOL and 34th Street Magazine both single out Virgin as a major artistic statement, calling it messy, emotional, and a deliberate blend of Pure Heroine, Melodrama, and Solar Power, with frank lyrics about sex, drugs, and eating disorders and a body reclamation narrative that positions her as one of the year s defining pop auteurs rather than just a legacy Gen Z star. That kind of language suggests biographical significance: this record is being framed as a pivot point, not a side note.

Visually and publicly she is also very much in the fashion and culture conversation. AOL reports that she made a triumphant Met Gala return this year in a silver Thom Browne two piece with layered maxi skirt and floating bandeau top, a near naked but carefully constructed look that reminded the industry she can still own a red carpet moment and will likely sit as a key image in future retrospectives of her style evolution.

At the same time her social media presence has lit up the gossip economy. According to PopRant from the Times of India group, a run of intimate Instagram Stories featuring slow motion shots of her bare feet and sheer shorts sparked a fierce backlash across X, Reddit, and TikTok, with some users accusing her of spiraling and even labeling her a porn addict while others defended the posts as body autonomy and savvy shock value ahead of her next album cycle. Those claims about porn addiction and mental health crisis are online speculation, not backed by any on the record statement from Lorde or her team, but the narrative has been amplified enough that it is now part of her public story, especially as deepfake sexual images based on those clips began circulating, prompting fan concern about consent and digital exploitation.

Layered over all this is her continued alignment with activist culture; the BDS Movement lists Lorde among major label artists supporting the No Music for Genocide campaign pressuring Live Nation over shows linked to Israel, a quieter but potentially lasting note in her political biography.

Separate from verified news, various blogs continue to mine her love life and relationships for t

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>265</itunes:duration>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[https://api.spreaker.com/episode/68976722]]></guid>
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    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Era: Saturn Returns, Raw Reinvention, and the Virgin Tour</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5451973297</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Biosnap AI here. In the last several days, Lorde has been moving like a woman in the middle of a major new era, with both hard news and soft intrigue swirling around her. The anchor development is her current run of European dates on the Ultrasound World Tour, supporting her 2025 album Virgin, a record critics like 34th Street Magazine have hailed as a career high, calling it a perfect blend of Pure Heroine, Melodrama, and Solar Power and a raw reclamation of her body and identity. That critical framing matters because it is quickly becoming the dominant narrative of her post Solar Power reinvention. 

On the ground, ticket platforms including Stereoboard, SeatPick, and Ticketmaster show her moving through continental arenas this week, with stops like Berlin’s Max Schmeling Halle, then Atlas Arena in Lodz, onto KB Hallen in Copenhagen and Annexet in Stockholm, before she swings back to the US for two Barclays Center dates in Brooklyn on December 16 and 17 under the Ultrasound branding. These listings confirm a full scale global campaign, not a nostalgia run, with New York set up as the key North American media moment. 

Recent coverage continues to loop back to her first Virgin single What Was That. AOL reports that the release was staged with a guerrilla style New York rollout earlier in the cycle, including a Washington Square Park playback that was briefly shut down by police before she appeared hours late to thank fans and dance to the track. That episode, now baked into the video and wider lore of the song, is being retroactively treated as the symbolic reintroduction of a more spontaneous, street level Lorde. 

Astrology flavored pieces, such as a recent feature by The AstroTwins for AOL, are busy mythologizing this phase as her Saturn return era, quoting her description of Virgin as one hundred percent written in blood and noting the X ray pelvic album art as a Scorpio coded declaration of radical self exposure. While this cosmic framing is speculative, it is clearly influencing fan chatter and social media discourse, where the words Saturn return and Virgin era are becoming shorthand for her perceived emotional and artistic reset. 

Beyond that, no verified new scandals, romances, or feuds have broken in the last few days; talk of secret collaborators or surprise guests on the Brooklyn dates remains firmly in the realm of fan speculation rather than confirmed reporting.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 06 Dec 2025 14:50:15 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Biosnap AI here. In the last several days, Lorde has been moving like a woman in the middle of a major new era, with both hard news and soft intrigue swirling around her. The anchor development is her current run of European dates on the Ultrasound World Tour, supporting her 2025 album Virgin, a record critics like 34th Street Magazine have hailed as a career high, calling it a perfect blend of Pure Heroine, Melodrama, and Solar Power and a raw reclamation of her body and identity. That critical framing matters because it is quickly becoming the dominant narrative of her post Solar Power reinvention. 

On the ground, ticket platforms including Stereoboard, SeatPick, and Ticketmaster show her moving through continental arenas this week, with stops like Berlin’s Max Schmeling Halle, then Atlas Arena in Lodz, onto KB Hallen in Copenhagen and Annexet in Stockholm, before she swings back to the US for two Barclays Center dates in Brooklyn on December 16 and 17 under the Ultrasound branding. These listings confirm a full scale global campaign, not a nostalgia run, with New York set up as the key North American media moment. 

Recent coverage continues to loop back to her first Virgin single What Was That. AOL reports that the release was staged with a guerrilla style New York rollout earlier in the cycle, including a Washington Square Park playback that was briefly shut down by police before she appeared hours late to thank fans and dance to the track. That episode, now baked into the video and wider lore of the song, is being retroactively treated as the symbolic reintroduction of a more spontaneous, street level Lorde. 

Astrology flavored pieces, such as a recent feature by The AstroTwins for AOL, are busy mythologizing this phase as her Saturn return era, quoting her description of Virgin as one hundred percent written in blood and noting the X ray pelvic album art as a Scorpio coded declaration of radical self exposure. While this cosmic framing is speculative, it is clearly influencing fan chatter and social media discourse, where the words Saturn return and Virgin era are becoming shorthand for her perceived emotional and artistic reset. 

Beyond that, no verified new scandals, romances, or feuds have broken in the last few days; talk of secret collaborators or surprise guests on the Brooklyn dates remains firmly in the realm of fan speculation rather than confirmed reporting.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Biosnap AI here. In the last several days, Lorde has been moving like a woman in the middle of a major new era, with both hard news and soft intrigue swirling around her. The anchor development is her current run of European dates on the Ultrasound World Tour, supporting her 2025 album Virgin, a record critics like 34th Street Magazine have hailed as a career high, calling it a perfect blend of Pure Heroine, Melodrama, and Solar Power and a raw reclamation of her body and identity. That critical framing matters because it is quickly becoming the dominant narrative of her post Solar Power reinvention. 

On the ground, ticket platforms including Stereoboard, SeatPick, and Ticketmaster show her moving through continental arenas this week, with stops like Berlin’s Max Schmeling Halle, then Atlas Arena in Lodz, onto KB Hallen in Copenhagen and Annexet in Stockholm, before she swings back to the US for two Barclays Center dates in Brooklyn on December 16 and 17 under the Ultrasound branding. These listings confirm a full scale global campaign, not a nostalgia run, with New York set up as the key North American media moment. 

Recent coverage continues to loop back to her first Virgin single What Was That. AOL reports that the release was staged with a guerrilla style New York rollout earlier in the cycle, including a Washington Square Park playback that was briefly shut down by police before she appeared hours late to thank fans and dance to the track. That episode, now baked into the video and wider lore of the song, is being retroactively treated as the symbolic reintroduction of a more spontaneous, street level Lorde. 

Astrology flavored pieces, such as a recent feature by The AstroTwins for AOL, are busy mythologizing this phase as her Saturn return era, quoting her description of Virgin as one hundred percent written in blood and noting the X ray pelvic album art as a Scorpio coded declaration of radical self exposure. While this cosmic framing is speculative, it is clearly influencing fan chatter and social media discourse, where the words Saturn return and Virgin era are becoming shorthand for her perceived emotional and artistic reset. 

Beyond that, no verified new scandals, romances, or feuds have broken in the last few days; talk of secret collaborators or surprise guests on the Brooklyn dates remains firmly in the realm of fan speculation rather than confirmed reporting.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>192</itunes:duration>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[https://api.spreaker.com/episode/68918631]]></guid>
      <enclosure url="https://traffic.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5451973297.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Tour: Reclaiming Intimacy in Arenas</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7279232482</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has made significant waves in recent days with major announcements about her career trajectory and ongoing tour activities. In a candid interview on the Therapuss podcast, the New Zealand artist opened up about her complex relationship with her 2021 album Solar Power, revealing that while she initially felt overwhelmed by the massive success of Melodrama and the grueling arena tour that followed, she has since made peace with the project. She explained that Solar Power came from a place of wanting to retreat and be mysterious, but she ultimately realized that wasn't authentically her. She declared she's meant to make what she calls bangers that rip through festival grounds, not vibe-out beach music, noting that while living on an organic farm in New Zealand appeals to her core self, it's not the life path she's on right now.

This introspection directly connects to her newest album Virgin, which dropped in June and marks her return to the intense, experimental sound her fans craved. The accompanying Ultrasound Tour has been a theatrical powerhouse, with shows currently running across Europe and into North America. The tour creates deeply intimate moments despite playing massive arenas, featuring innovative surveillance-themed staging where multiple camera angles capture Lorde from every perspective. During performances of tracks like GRWM and David, she strips away typical arena distance, even walking through crowds in a fluorescent jacket to connect directly with fans.

Her tour continues with momentum heading into North America, with performances confirmed at Stockholm's Annexet on December ninth, and Brooklyn's Barclays Center on December sixteenth. The Ultrasound Tour represents a full-circle moment for Lorde, bringing her latest material to global audiences while weaving in beloved tracks from Pure Heroine and Melodrama that have soundtracked many fans' lives since adolescence.

The tour's staging deliberately confronts themes central to Virgin, particularly body image and control, with Lorde visibly altering costumes mid-performance and using close-up camera work to reclaim her body as her own visual narrative rather than something observed from a distance. This represents not just a comeback but an artistic reckoning with fame, intimacy, and authenticity that fans have been waiting for since Solar Power.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 03 Dec 2025 14:50:12 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has made significant waves in recent days with major announcements about her career trajectory and ongoing tour activities. In a candid interview on the Therapuss podcast, the New Zealand artist opened up about her complex relationship with her 2021 album Solar Power, revealing that while she initially felt overwhelmed by the massive success of Melodrama and the grueling arena tour that followed, she has since made peace with the project. She explained that Solar Power came from a place of wanting to retreat and be mysterious, but she ultimately realized that wasn't authentically her. She declared she's meant to make what she calls bangers that rip through festival grounds, not vibe-out beach music, noting that while living on an organic farm in New Zealand appeals to her core self, it's not the life path she's on right now.

This introspection directly connects to her newest album Virgin, which dropped in June and marks her return to the intense, experimental sound her fans craved. The accompanying Ultrasound Tour has been a theatrical powerhouse, with shows currently running across Europe and into North America. The tour creates deeply intimate moments despite playing massive arenas, featuring innovative surveillance-themed staging where multiple camera angles capture Lorde from every perspective. During performances of tracks like GRWM and David, she strips away typical arena distance, even walking through crowds in a fluorescent jacket to connect directly with fans.

Her tour continues with momentum heading into North America, with performances confirmed at Stockholm's Annexet on December ninth, and Brooklyn's Barclays Center on December sixteenth. The Ultrasound Tour represents a full-circle moment for Lorde, bringing her latest material to global audiences while weaving in beloved tracks from Pure Heroine and Melodrama that have soundtracked many fans' lives since adolescence.

The tour's staging deliberately confronts themes central to Virgin, particularly body image and control, with Lorde visibly altering costumes mid-performance and using close-up camera work to reclaim her body as her own visual narrative rather than something observed from a distance. This represents not just a comeback but an artistic reckoning with fame, intimacy, and authenticity that fans have been waiting for since Solar Power.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has made significant waves in recent days with major announcements about her career trajectory and ongoing tour activities. In a candid interview on the Therapuss podcast, the New Zealand artist opened up about her complex relationship with her 2021 album Solar Power, revealing that while she initially felt overwhelmed by the massive success of Melodrama and the grueling arena tour that followed, she has since made peace with the project. She explained that Solar Power came from a place of wanting to retreat and be mysterious, but she ultimately realized that wasn't authentically her. She declared she's meant to make what she calls bangers that rip through festival grounds, not vibe-out beach music, noting that while living on an organic farm in New Zealand appeals to her core self, it's not the life path she's on right now.

This introspection directly connects to her newest album Virgin, which dropped in June and marks her return to the intense, experimental sound her fans craved. The accompanying Ultrasound Tour has been a theatrical powerhouse, with shows currently running across Europe and into North America. The tour creates deeply intimate moments despite playing massive arenas, featuring innovative surveillance-themed staging where multiple camera angles capture Lorde from every perspective. During performances of tracks like GRWM and David, she strips away typical arena distance, even walking through crowds in a fluorescent jacket to connect directly with fans.

Her tour continues with momentum heading into North America, with performances confirmed at Stockholm's Annexet on December ninth, and Brooklyn's Barclays Center on December sixteenth. The Ultrasound Tour represents a full-circle moment for Lorde, bringing her latest material to global audiences while weaving in beloved tracks from Pure Heroine and Melodrama that have soundtracked many fans' lives since adolescence.

The tour's staging deliberately confronts themes central to Virgin, particularly body image and control, with Lorde visibly altering costumes mid-performance and using close-up camera work to reclaim her body as her own visual narrative rather than something observed from a distance. This represents not just a comeback but an artistic reckoning with fame, intimacy, and authenticity that fans have been waiting for since Solar Power.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>169</itunes:duration>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[https://api.spreaker.com/episode/68850152]]></guid>
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    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound World Tour: A Triumphant Return to Europe's Big Stages</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6115918898</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been actively commanding the music world over the past few days as her Ultrasound World Tour continues to dominate venues across Europe. Most recently, she performed at the Barclays Center in New York on December sixteenth and seventeenth, continuing her whirlwind European leg that's been generating significant buzz among fans and critics alike.

Her Glasgow show at OVO Hydro on November nineteenth marked a triumphant return to the Scottish city after an eight-year absence, with the venue packed to capacity. The performance showcased her signature theatrical approach, featuring blue lasers, pixelated screens, and two interpretive dancers who doubled as camera operators. She opened with the moody "Hammer" performed barefoot and closed with the euphoric "Green Light" followed by an encore of "Ribs." The show included both deep cuts and fan favorites like "Royals," "Supercut," and "Liability," with the latter creating a striking moment as thousands of phone torches lit up in unison like a galaxy.

Following that success, Lorde delivered shows in Manchester and Dublin around November twenty-third, where fans showed up dressed in blue skeleton shirts referencing her song "Ribs" and the X-ray inspired artwork of her latest album, Virgin. The Manchester performance at AO Arena attracted thousands of enthusiastic attendees, while her Dublin show at the RDS marked her first headline concert in Ireland in several years.

The tour continues throughout Europe with performances already completed in cities including Amsterdam on November twenty-fifth, where she performed "Ribs" live. Upcoming shows include Bologna on November twenty-ninth and dates extending through December in Zurich, Munich, Cologne, Berlin, Copenhagen, and Stockholm.

Beyond the tour itself, significant news emerged that Lorde will headline the two thousand twenty-six Kilby Block Party in Salt Lake City, a major festival announcement that underscores her continued relevance and drawing power in the music industry.

Her latest album, Virgin, continues generating momentum on platforms like TikTok with tracks such as "Many of the Year" and "What Was That?" resonating with Gen Z audiences. The album explores themes of identity and personal development, marking another evolution in her artistic journey since her teenage breakthrough.

The Ultrasound World Tour, which kicked off in September in Austin, represents her most extensive touring cycle and demonstrates her position as a dominant force in contemporary alt-pop music.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 29 Nov 2025 14:50:19 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been actively commanding the music world over the past few days as her Ultrasound World Tour continues to dominate venues across Europe. Most recently, she performed at the Barclays Center in New York on December sixteenth and seventeenth, continuing her whirlwind European leg that's been generating significant buzz among fans and critics alike.

Her Glasgow show at OVO Hydro on November nineteenth marked a triumphant return to the Scottish city after an eight-year absence, with the venue packed to capacity. The performance showcased her signature theatrical approach, featuring blue lasers, pixelated screens, and two interpretive dancers who doubled as camera operators. She opened with the moody "Hammer" performed barefoot and closed with the euphoric "Green Light" followed by an encore of "Ribs." The show included both deep cuts and fan favorites like "Royals," "Supercut," and "Liability," with the latter creating a striking moment as thousands of phone torches lit up in unison like a galaxy.

Following that success, Lorde delivered shows in Manchester and Dublin around November twenty-third, where fans showed up dressed in blue skeleton shirts referencing her song "Ribs" and the X-ray inspired artwork of her latest album, Virgin. The Manchester performance at AO Arena attracted thousands of enthusiastic attendees, while her Dublin show at the RDS marked her first headline concert in Ireland in several years.

The tour continues throughout Europe with performances already completed in cities including Amsterdam on November twenty-fifth, where she performed "Ribs" live. Upcoming shows include Bologna on November twenty-ninth and dates extending through December in Zurich, Munich, Cologne, Berlin, Copenhagen, and Stockholm.

Beyond the tour itself, significant news emerged that Lorde will headline the two thousand twenty-six Kilby Block Party in Salt Lake City, a major festival announcement that underscores her continued relevance and drawing power in the music industry.

Her latest album, Virgin, continues generating momentum on platforms like TikTok with tracks such as "Many of the Year" and "What Was That?" resonating with Gen Z audiences. The album explores themes of identity and personal development, marking another evolution in her artistic journey since her teenage breakthrough.

The Ultrasound World Tour, which kicked off in September in Austin, represents her most extensive touring cycle and demonstrates her position as a dominant force in contemporary alt-pop music.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been actively commanding the music world over the past few days as her Ultrasound World Tour continues to dominate venues across Europe. Most recently, she performed at the Barclays Center in New York on December sixteenth and seventeenth, continuing her whirlwind European leg that's been generating significant buzz among fans and critics alike.

Her Glasgow show at OVO Hydro on November nineteenth marked a triumphant return to the Scottish city after an eight-year absence, with the venue packed to capacity. The performance showcased her signature theatrical approach, featuring blue lasers, pixelated screens, and two interpretive dancers who doubled as camera operators. She opened with the moody "Hammer" performed barefoot and closed with the euphoric "Green Light" followed by an encore of "Ribs." The show included both deep cuts and fan favorites like "Royals," "Supercut," and "Liability," with the latter creating a striking moment as thousands of phone torches lit up in unison like a galaxy.

Following that success, Lorde delivered shows in Manchester and Dublin around November twenty-third, where fans showed up dressed in blue skeleton shirts referencing her song "Ribs" and the X-ray inspired artwork of her latest album, Virgin. The Manchester performance at AO Arena attracted thousands of enthusiastic attendees, while her Dublin show at the RDS marked her first headline concert in Ireland in several years.

The tour continues throughout Europe with performances already completed in cities including Amsterdam on November twenty-fifth, where she performed "Ribs" live. Upcoming shows include Bologna on November twenty-ninth and dates extending through December in Zurich, Munich, Cologne, Berlin, Copenhagen, and Stockholm.

Beyond the tour itself, significant news emerged that Lorde will headline the two thousand twenty-six Kilby Block Party in Salt Lake City, a major festival announcement that underscores her continued relevance and drawing power in the music industry.

Her latest album, Virgin, continues generating momentum on platforms like TikTok with tracks such as "Many of the Year" and "What Was That?" resonating with Gen Z audiences. The album explores themes of identity and personal development, marking another evolution in her artistic journey since her teenage breakthrough.

The Ultrasound World Tour, which kicked off in September in Austin, represents her most extensive touring cycle and demonstrates her position as a dominant force in contemporary alt-pop music.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Electrifying Ultrasound Tour: Intimate Performances, Surprise Guests, and a New Album</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2225341673</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been making waves across Europe and the UK with her Ultrasound World Tour, delivering a series of electrifying performances that have cemented her status as a live music powerhouse. In the past few days, she headlined the OVO Hydro in Glasgow, where the show closed with a euphoric rendition of Green Light and an encore of Ribs, leaving fans buzzing about the raw energy and intimacy of the set. The Guardian and Moshville both noted how the concert felt like a massive house party, with Lorde commanding the stage barefoot and connecting deeply with the audience. 

She followed up in Manchester and Dublin, where her shows were described as transformative and emotionally charged. The Irish Times highlighted her cool restraint and minimalist stage presence, while Evrim Agaci and Hot Press praised her ability to unite fans across generations, with many attendees reflecting on growing up alongside her music. At the RDS Simmonscourt in Dublin, Lorde openly expressed her gratitude and connection to her Irish roots, referencing her family crest and her long-awaited return to Ireland.

Lorde’s recent performances have also been marked by surprise guest appearances. At her London O2 Arena show, she brought out Stranger Things star Sadie Sink for a memorable duet of Green Light, a moment that quickly went viral on social media and was covered by outlets like LA 105 and AOL. 

Beyond her live shows, Lorde has been generating buzz for her new album Virgin, which is at the heart of the Ultrasound tour. Stereoboard and The Stinger report that the album and tour are being celebrated for their exploration of self-discovery and vulnerability, with critics noting how Lorde continues to evolve as an artist. 

There’s also growing speculation about her future plans, with news breaking that she will headline the 2026 Kilby Block Party in Salt Lake City, a festival known for its community-driven atmosphere. This announcement has fans excited for what’s next, as Lorde continues to blend music, connection, and innovation in her career.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 26 Nov 2025 14:50:25 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been making waves across Europe and the UK with her Ultrasound World Tour, delivering a series of electrifying performances that have cemented her status as a live music powerhouse. In the past few days, she headlined the OVO Hydro in Glasgow, where the show closed with a euphoric rendition of Green Light and an encore of Ribs, leaving fans buzzing about the raw energy and intimacy of the set. The Guardian and Moshville both noted how the concert felt like a massive house party, with Lorde commanding the stage barefoot and connecting deeply with the audience. 

She followed up in Manchester and Dublin, where her shows were described as transformative and emotionally charged. The Irish Times highlighted her cool restraint and minimalist stage presence, while Evrim Agaci and Hot Press praised her ability to unite fans across generations, with many attendees reflecting on growing up alongside her music. At the RDS Simmonscourt in Dublin, Lorde openly expressed her gratitude and connection to her Irish roots, referencing her family crest and her long-awaited return to Ireland.

Lorde’s recent performances have also been marked by surprise guest appearances. At her London O2 Arena show, she brought out Stranger Things star Sadie Sink for a memorable duet of Green Light, a moment that quickly went viral on social media and was covered by outlets like LA 105 and AOL. 

Beyond her live shows, Lorde has been generating buzz for her new album Virgin, which is at the heart of the Ultrasound tour. Stereoboard and The Stinger report that the album and tour are being celebrated for their exploration of self-discovery and vulnerability, with critics noting how Lorde continues to evolve as an artist. 

There’s also growing speculation about her future plans, with news breaking that she will headline the 2026 Kilby Block Party in Salt Lake City, a festival known for its community-driven atmosphere. This announcement has fans excited for what’s next, as Lorde continues to blend music, connection, and innovation in her career.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been making waves across Europe and the UK with her Ultrasound World Tour, delivering a series of electrifying performances that have cemented her status as a live music powerhouse. In the past few days, she headlined the OVO Hydro in Glasgow, where the show closed with a euphoric rendition of Green Light and an encore of Ribs, leaving fans buzzing about the raw energy and intimacy of the set. The Guardian and Moshville both noted how the concert felt like a massive house party, with Lorde commanding the stage barefoot and connecting deeply with the audience. 

She followed up in Manchester and Dublin, where her shows were described as transformative and emotionally charged. The Irish Times highlighted her cool restraint and minimalist stage presence, while Evrim Agaci and Hot Press praised her ability to unite fans across generations, with many attendees reflecting on growing up alongside her music. At the RDS Simmonscourt in Dublin, Lorde openly expressed her gratitude and connection to her Irish roots, referencing her family crest and her long-awaited return to Ireland.

Lorde’s recent performances have also been marked by surprise guest appearances. At her London O2 Arena show, she brought out Stranger Things star Sadie Sink for a memorable duet of Green Light, a moment that quickly went viral on social media and was covered by outlets like LA 105 and AOL. 

Beyond her live shows, Lorde has been generating buzz for her new album Virgin, which is at the heart of the Ultrasound tour. Stereoboard and The Stinger report that the album and tour are being celebrated for their exploration of self-discovery and vulnerability, with critics noting how Lorde continues to evolve as an artist. 

There’s also growing speculation about her future plans, with news breaking that she will headline the 2026 Kilby Block Party in Salt Lake City, a festival known for its community-driven atmosphere. This announcement has fans excited for what’s next, as Lorde continues to blend music, connection, and innovation in her career.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>267</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Lorde's Meteoric Rise: From Viral Duets to Sold-Out Arenas and Cultural Impact</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6990393760</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has spent the past few days in the thick of her Ultrasound World Tour, lighting up major arenas across the UK and Ireland. On November 16 at London’s O2 Arena, she delivered a show that quickly became newsworthy, not just for her own magnetic performance but for a surprise appearance by Stranger Things actor Sadie Sink, who joined her on stage for a captivating duet which fans and reviewers described as “magical,” with audience clips and instant reactions flooding platforms like TikTok and Instagram. The next night, Lorde returned to the O2 for another headline gig, with video of the packed dance floor and Lorde’s moody stagecraft making traction on YouTube and Twitter. According to multiple live setlist sources, she continues to blend tracks from her latest album Virgin with former hits, a strategy she has told interviewers keeps every part of her artistry alive for her audience.

On November 22, Irish fans finally experienced her first headlining tour concert in Dublin after more than a decade, an event the Irish Examiner dubbed a landmark for “a New Zealand icon.” Rapturous crowd responses filled social media, with video clips of “Buzzcut Season” at RDS Simmonscourt circulating rapidly. With this tour, Lorde has underscored her resurgence as a contemporary pop heavyweight, especially following the release of Virgin earlier this year—a record that debuted atop UK charts and drew acclaim for its intimate lyricism and return to electronic pop roots.

Industry discussion follows her every move, from setlist tweaks to bold on-stage politics. Her outspoken political stance at recent shows—including a pointed pro-Palestinian comment at Madison Square Garden last month—continues to spur widespread dialogue online, drawing both praise and critique and amplifying her social relevance to a new generation of fans and activists. It’s been noted in think pieces and fan threads that Lorde has taken tangible action in support of her statements, including the removal of her music from Apple Music in Israel, joining the No Music For Genocide protest movement.

Business-wise, the latest headline is that Lorde is officially slated to headline East London’s All Points East Festival next August, marking her as one of the premier artists of the 2026 global festival circuit. Festival organizers have hyped her as “a cultural force,” and ticket chatter is already buzzing as general sale dates approach, with die-hard superfans angling for presale hacks ahead of the crowds.

On the social media front, while Lorde continues to keep her personal channels relatively cryptic—wiping her Instagram clean and teasing new music snippets through TikTok—her fan communities buzz with speculation about future collaborations, gender identity discussions, and more immersive live experiences designed for superfans, as highlighted by several recent blog posts and music industry newsletters.

All told, the past week has solidified Lorde’s

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 24 Nov 2025 02:37:01 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has spent the past few days in the thick of her Ultrasound World Tour, lighting up major arenas across the UK and Ireland. On November 16 at London’s O2 Arena, she delivered a show that quickly became newsworthy, not just for her own magnetic performance but for a surprise appearance by Stranger Things actor Sadie Sink, who joined her on stage for a captivating duet which fans and reviewers described as “magical,” with audience clips and instant reactions flooding platforms like TikTok and Instagram. The next night, Lorde returned to the O2 for another headline gig, with video of the packed dance floor and Lorde’s moody stagecraft making traction on YouTube and Twitter. According to multiple live setlist sources, she continues to blend tracks from her latest album Virgin with former hits, a strategy she has told interviewers keeps every part of her artistry alive for her audience.

On November 22, Irish fans finally experienced her first headlining tour concert in Dublin after more than a decade, an event the Irish Examiner dubbed a landmark for “a New Zealand icon.” Rapturous crowd responses filled social media, with video clips of “Buzzcut Season” at RDS Simmonscourt circulating rapidly. With this tour, Lorde has underscored her resurgence as a contemporary pop heavyweight, especially following the release of Virgin earlier this year—a record that debuted atop UK charts and drew acclaim for its intimate lyricism and return to electronic pop roots.

Industry discussion follows her every move, from setlist tweaks to bold on-stage politics. Her outspoken political stance at recent shows—including a pointed pro-Palestinian comment at Madison Square Garden last month—continues to spur widespread dialogue online, drawing both praise and critique and amplifying her social relevance to a new generation of fans and activists. It’s been noted in think pieces and fan threads that Lorde has taken tangible action in support of her statements, including the removal of her music from Apple Music in Israel, joining the No Music For Genocide protest movement.

Business-wise, the latest headline is that Lorde is officially slated to headline East London’s All Points East Festival next August, marking her as one of the premier artists of the 2026 global festival circuit. Festival organizers have hyped her as “a cultural force,” and ticket chatter is already buzzing as general sale dates approach, with die-hard superfans angling for presale hacks ahead of the crowds.

On the social media front, while Lorde continues to keep her personal channels relatively cryptic—wiping her Instagram clean and teasing new music snippets through TikTok—her fan communities buzz with speculation about future collaborations, gender identity discussions, and more immersive live experiences designed for superfans, as highlighted by several recent blog posts and music industry newsletters.

All told, the past week has solidified Lorde’s

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has spent the past few days in the thick of her Ultrasound World Tour, lighting up major arenas across the UK and Ireland. On November 16 at London’s O2 Arena, she delivered a show that quickly became newsworthy, not just for her own magnetic performance but for a surprise appearance by Stranger Things actor Sadie Sink, who joined her on stage for a captivating duet which fans and reviewers described as “magical,” with audience clips and instant reactions flooding platforms like TikTok and Instagram. The next night, Lorde returned to the O2 for another headline gig, with video of the packed dance floor and Lorde’s moody stagecraft making traction on YouTube and Twitter. According to multiple live setlist sources, she continues to blend tracks from her latest album Virgin with former hits, a strategy she has told interviewers keeps every part of her artistry alive for her audience.

On November 22, Irish fans finally experienced her first headlining tour concert in Dublin after more than a decade, an event the Irish Examiner dubbed a landmark for “a New Zealand icon.” Rapturous crowd responses filled social media, with video clips of “Buzzcut Season” at RDS Simmonscourt circulating rapidly. With this tour, Lorde has underscored her resurgence as a contemporary pop heavyweight, especially following the release of Virgin earlier this year—a record that debuted atop UK charts and drew acclaim for its intimate lyricism and return to electronic pop roots.

Industry discussion follows her every move, from setlist tweaks to bold on-stage politics. Her outspoken political stance at recent shows—including a pointed pro-Palestinian comment at Madison Square Garden last month—continues to spur widespread dialogue online, drawing both praise and critique and amplifying her social relevance to a new generation of fans and activists. It’s been noted in think pieces and fan threads that Lorde has taken tangible action in support of her statements, including the removal of her music from Apple Music in Israel, joining the No Music For Genocide protest movement.

Business-wise, the latest headline is that Lorde is officially slated to headline East London’s All Points East Festival next August, marking her as one of the premier artists of the 2026 global festival circuit. Festival organizers have hyped her as “a cultural force,” and ticket chatter is already buzzing as general sale dates approach, with die-hard superfans angling for presale hacks ahead of the crowds.

On the social media front, while Lorde continues to keep her personal channels relatively cryptic—wiping her Instagram clean and teasing new music snippets through TikTok—her fan communities buzz with speculation about future collaborations, gender identity discussions, and more immersive live experiences designed for superfans, as highlighted by several recent blog posts and music industry newsletters.

All told, the past week has solidified Lorde’s

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Tour: Surprise Guests, Controversies, and 2026 Festival Headline Announcement</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6152940714</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde’s name has dominated headlines the past few days as she brings her Ultrasound world tour to packed UK arenas for the first time in four years celebrating her acclaimed new album Virgin. Her stop at London’s O2 Arena has been especially buzzy thanks to a surprise onstage appearance by Stranger Things star Sadie Sink. NME captured the viral moment as Sink, a self-confessed Lorde superfan, joined the singer for a wild, joyous dance-off to Green Light. The stage lights flooded green as fans and the two hugged it out, marking a memorable pop culture crossover. Lorde’s O2 run continues through November 19 and 20, with fans and critics alike describing the shows as euphoric and visually stunning according to Clash Music and Ticketmaster reviews.

But the London gig also made news for a more serious reason. The Guardian and Stereogum report that O2 Arena security controversially confiscated Palestine-themed shirts from attendees, citing venue policy, despite Lorde herself having repeatedly voiced support for Palestine during her shows including the now-notorious mid-song shout of free Palestine. The venue apologized publicly following social media outcry, stating it would review security procedures. This follows Lorde’s participation in the No Music For Genocide boycott, geoblocking her music in Israel last month in solidarity with the movement.

On social media, Lorde has generated significant conversation as fans hunt for last-minute Ultrasound tour tickets and share clips of her outspoken stage presence and high-energy performances. Buzz has intensified ahead of next year now that Lorde has officially been announced as a headliner for the 2026 All Points East Festival in London’s Victoria Park. LADbible highlights that Lorde will be sharing the bill with Tyler the Creator, Deftones, PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson. General ticket sales open November 20 with a rush of early-buying hacks already being spread among fans. Industry watchers note this booking signals Lorde’s continued stature as a defining pop and alternative tastemaker with sustained global draw. Looking ahead, the European leg of the tour wraps next month in Stockholm before she heads to Brooklyn’s Barclays Center, and then to Australia and New Zealand in early 2026, ensuring Lorde’s biographical timeline remains as eventful and headline-grabbing as ever.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 19 Nov 2025 14:51:18 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde’s name has dominated headlines the past few days as she brings her Ultrasound world tour to packed UK arenas for the first time in four years celebrating her acclaimed new album Virgin. Her stop at London’s O2 Arena has been especially buzzy thanks to a surprise onstage appearance by Stranger Things star Sadie Sink. NME captured the viral moment as Sink, a self-confessed Lorde superfan, joined the singer for a wild, joyous dance-off to Green Light. The stage lights flooded green as fans and the two hugged it out, marking a memorable pop culture crossover. Lorde’s O2 run continues through November 19 and 20, with fans and critics alike describing the shows as euphoric and visually stunning according to Clash Music and Ticketmaster reviews.

But the London gig also made news for a more serious reason. The Guardian and Stereogum report that O2 Arena security controversially confiscated Palestine-themed shirts from attendees, citing venue policy, despite Lorde herself having repeatedly voiced support for Palestine during her shows including the now-notorious mid-song shout of free Palestine. The venue apologized publicly following social media outcry, stating it would review security procedures. This follows Lorde’s participation in the No Music For Genocide boycott, geoblocking her music in Israel last month in solidarity with the movement.

On social media, Lorde has generated significant conversation as fans hunt for last-minute Ultrasound tour tickets and share clips of her outspoken stage presence and high-energy performances. Buzz has intensified ahead of next year now that Lorde has officially been announced as a headliner for the 2026 All Points East Festival in London’s Victoria Park. LADbible highlights that Lorde will be sharing the bill with Tyler the Creator, Deftones, PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson. General ticket sales open November 20 with a rush of early-buying hacks already being spread among fans. Industry watchers note this booking signals Lorde’s continued stature as a defining pop and alternative tastemaker with sustained global draw. Looking ahead, the European leg of the tour wraps next month in Stockholm before she heads to Brooklyn’s Barclays Center, and then to Australia and New Zealand in early 2026, ensuring Lorde’s biographical timeline remains as eventful and headline-grabbing as ever.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde’s name has dominated headlines the past few days as she brings her Ultrasound world tour to packed UK arenas for the first time in four years celebrating her acclaimed new album Virgin. Her stop at London’s O2 Arena has been especially buzzy thanks to a surprise onstage appearance by Stranger Things star Sadie Sink. NME captured the viral moment as Sink, a self-confessed Lorde superfan, joined the singer for a wild, joyous dance-off to Green Light. The stage lights flooded green as fans and the two hugged it out, marking a memorable pop culture crossover. Lorde’s O2 run continues through November 19 and 20, with fans and critics alike describing the shows as euphoric and visually stunning according to Clash Music and Ticketmaster reviews.

But the London gig also made news for a more serious reason. The Guardian and Stereogum report that O2 Arena security controversially confiscated Palestine-themed shirts from attendees, citing venue policy, despite Lorde herself having repeatedly voiced support for Palestine during her shows including the now-notorious mid-song shout of free Palestine. The venue apologized publicly following social media outcry, stating it would review security procedures. This follows Lorde’s participation in the No Music For Genocide boycott, geoblocking her music in Israel last month in solidarity with the movement.

On social media, Lorde has generated significant conversation as fans hunt for last-minute Ultrasound tour tickets and share clips of her outspoken stage presence and high-energy performances. Buzz has intensified ahead of next year now that Lorde has officially been announced as a headliner for the 2026 All Points East Festival in London’s Victoria Park. LADbible highlights that Lorde will be sharing the bill with Tyler the Creator, Deftones, PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson. General ticket sales open November 20 with a rush of early-buying hacks already being spread among fans. Industry watchers note this booking signals Lorde’s continued stature as a defining pop and alternative tastemaker with sustained global draw. Looking ahead, the European leg of the tour wraps next month in Stockholm before she heads to Brooklyn’s Barclays Center, and then to Australia and New Zealand in early 2026, ensuring Lorde’s biographical timeline remains as eventful and headline-grabbing as ever.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>184</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Lorde's Triumphant Return: Illness, Sold-Out Shows, and New Music</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5918757207</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been highly visible over the past few days, anchoring headlines with both her music and personal updates. The most significant recent event was the abrupt cancellation of her November 9, 2025, concert in Luxembourg, which was supposed to kick off her European Ultrasound World Tour. Just hours before showtime, Lorde posted candidly to Instagram describing her “ruthless food poisoning” and apologized to fans, signing off “love from a very sick girl.” This health setback prompted swift action from the local promoter; Den Atelier announced the concert has been rescheduled for September 1, 2026, with all original tickets remaining valid—a sign of Lorde’s enduring fan support and organizational clout, along with the option for refunds requested before November 30, 2025 as reported by RTL Today and the New Zealand Herald.

Despite this brief disruption, Lorde’s tour machine rolled ahead. She remained active on social media, reassuring fans of her recovery and confirming that Paris—her next stop—would proceed as planned. The show at ZENITH PARIS - LA VILLETTE on November 10 was a full-capacity event, and anticipation is surging for her UK dates. Tonight, November 15, Lorde is scheduled to take the stage at Manchester's AO Arena with special guests Blood Orange, Jim-E Stack, and Nilüfer Yanya according to JamBase and Fanatix. The Ultrasound World Tour is in support of her fourth studio album Virgin, released in June 2025, marking her return to synth-pop textures and electronic experimentation—a stylistic pivot garnering strong reviews and solidifying her growth from indie prodigy to major pop auteur.

Lorde’s arena tour is her first in the UK since 2021, touring through major cities on consecutive nights, including London at The O2 Arena November 16 and 17, followed by Glasgow, Birmingham, and Dublin. London’s Time Out confirms Lorde is expected to debut new material alongside signature hits like Royals and Green Light, with doors opening early and setlists packed with highlights from Virgin.

Critically, Lorde’s recent activities carry biographical significance. Virgin’s positive reception and the Ultrasound World Tour represent a new peak in her career, with sold-out venues and high-profile collaborations signaling both creative and commercial strength. On social media, her genuine apology and health updates have fostered fan connection and reinforced her reputation for humility. There’s also online buzz about possible festival surprise appearances—the Glastonbury rumors are unconfirmed but driving speculation among UK fans.

To summarize, Lorde’s week has been dominated by the quick pivot after illness, a rescheduled show, high-profile appearances, buoyant ticket sales, and sustained critical enthusiasm for Virgin. Her public statements and fan engagement underscore her place as both pop icon and relatable artist. No major new business ventures or endorsements have surfaced in this window, and broad

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 15 Nov 2025 14:50:43 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been highly visible over the past few days, anchoring headlines with both her music and personal updates. The most significant recent event was the abrupt cancellation of her November 9, 2025, concert in Luxembourg, which was supposed to kick off her European Ultrasound World Tour. Just hours before showtime, Lorde posted candidly to Instagram describing her “ruthless food poisoning” and apologized to fans, signing off “love from a very sick girl.” This health setback prompted swift action from the local promoter; Den Atelier announced the concert has been rescheduled for September 1, 2026, with all original tickets remaining valid—a sign of Lorde’s enduring fan support and organizational clout, along with the option for refunds requested before November 30, 2025 as reported by RTL Today and the New Zealand Herald.

Despite this brief disruption, Lorde’s tour machine rolled ahead. She remained active on social media, reassuring fans of her recovery and confirming that Paris—her next stop—would proceed as planned. The show at ZENITH PARIS - LA VILLETTE on November 10 was a full-capacity event, and anticipation is surging for her UK dates. Tonight, November 15, Lorde is scheduled to take the stage at Manchester's AO Arena with special guests Blood Orange, Jim-E Stack, and Nilüfer Yanya according to JamBase and Fanatix. The Ultrasound World Tour is in support of her fourth studio album Virgin, released in June 2025, marking her return to synth-pop textures and electronic experimentation—a stylistic pivot garnering strong reviews and solidifying her growth from indie prodigy to major pop auteur.

Lorde’s arena tour is her first in the UK since 2021, touring through major cities on consecutive nights, including London at The O2 Arena November 16 and 17, followed by Glasgow, Birmingham, and Dublin. London’s Time Out confirms Lorde is expected to debut new material alongside signature hits like Royals and Green Light, with doors opening early and setlists packed with highlights from Virgin.

Critically, Lorde’s recent activities carry biographical significance. Virgin’s positive reception and the Ultrasound World Tour represent a new peak in her career, with sold-out venues and high-profile collaborations signaling both creative and commercial strength. On social media, her genuine apology and health updates have fostered fan connection and reinforced her reputation for humility. There’s also online buzz about possible festival surprise appearances—the Glastonbury rumors are unconfirmed but driving speculation among UK fans.

To summarize, Lorde’s week has been dominated by the quick pivot after illness, a rescheduled show, high-profile appearances, buoyant ticket sales, and sustained critical enthusiasm for Virgin. Her public statements and fan engagement underscore her place as both pop icon and relatable artist. No major new business ventures or endorsements have surfaced in this window, and broad

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been highly visible over the past few days, anchoring headlines with both her music and personal updates. The most significant recent event was the abrupt cancellation of her November 9, 2025, concert in Luxembourg, which was supposed to kick off her European Ultrasound World Tour. Just hours before showtime, Lorde posted candidly to Instagram describing her “ruthless food poisoning” and apologized to fans, signing off “love from a very sick girl.” This health setback prompted swift action from the local promoter; Den Atelier announced the concert has been rescheduled for September 1, 2026, with all original tickets remaining valid—a sign of Lorde’s enduring fan support and organizational clout, along with the option for refunds requested before November 30, 2025 as reported by RTL Today and the New Zealand Herald.

Despite this brief disruption, Lorde’s tour machine rolled ahead. She remained active on social media, reassuring fans of her recovery and confirming that Paris—her next stop—would proceed as planned. The show at ZENITH PARIS - LA VILLETTE on November 10 was a full-capacity event, and anticipation is surging for her UK dates. Tonight, November 15, Lorde is scheduled to take the stage at Manchester's AO Arena with special guests Blood Orange, Jim-E Stack, and Nilüfer Yanya according to JamBase and Fanatix. The Ultrasound World Tour is in support of her fourth studio album Virgin, released in June 2025, marking her return to synth-pop textures and electronic experimentation—a stylistic pivot garnering strong reviews and solidifying her growth from indie prodigy to major pop auteur.

Lorde’s arena tour is her first in the UK since 2021, touring through major cities on consecutive nights, including London at The O2 Arena November 16 and 17, followed by Glasgow, Birmingham, and Dublin. London’s Time Out confirms Lorde is expected to debut new material alongside signature hits like Royals and Green Light, with doors opening early and setlists packed with highlights from Virgin.

Critically, Lorde’s recent activities carry biographical significance. Virgin’s positive reception and the Ultrasound World Tour represent a new peak in her career, with sold-out venues and high-profile collaborations signaling both creative and commercial strength. On social media, her genuine apology and health updates have fostered fan connection and reinforced her reputation for humility. There’s also online buzz about possible festival surprise appearances—the Glastonbury rumors are unconfirmed but driving speculation among UK fans.

To summarize, Lorde’s week has been dominated by the quick pivot after illness, a rescheduled show, high-profile appearances, buoyant ticket sales, and sustained critical enthusiasm for Virgin. Her public statements and fan engagement underscore her place as both pop icon and relatable artist. No major new business ventures or endorsements have surfaced in this window, and broad

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Tour: Triumphs, Setbacks, and the Power of Resilience</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI9254391190</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

In the past several days Lorde has made headlines with a mix of career momentum and sudden setbacks the kind that always keep fans and the music industry buzzing. According to the New Zealand Herald and widely shared on Instagram Lorde was forced to abruptly cancel her November 9 concert in Luxembourg the planned kickoff of her European Ultrasound World Tour due to what she described as ruthless food poisoning. She posted that she was barely standing and apologized profusely to fans promising both ticket honors for a rescheduled show and refunds if needed. The illness was also confirmed by the Telegraph which reported fans expressing understanding and support in comment sections as Lorde promised to make it up to them soon.

Despite this setback her Ultrasound World Tour promoting the critically acclaimed album Virgin remains in full swing with shows in Paris London Manchester Glasgow and Birmingham still on the books. The Manc and Lorde’s official channels confirm that her Manchester AO Arena gig is slated for November 15 with tickets in high demand and a setlist heavy on both beloved classics such as Royals Green Light and Ribs as well as new fan favorites from Virgin. Blood Orange and Jim E Stack are supporting across select dates giving credibility and cool factor to these arena shows. The tour itself is being touted by Brand Vision as one of 2025’s top-grossing and most influential pop tours highlighting Lorde’s ongoing market value and global draw.

Headlining news just broke that Lorde will also be one of the major acts at the Mad Cool Festival in Spain come 2026 alongside Florence and the Machine and David Byrne confirming her status as a must-see on the European festival circuit. However while her music is a fixture on charts in Australia New Zealand and the UK after the release of Virgin industry site SSBCrack noted that Lorde was noticeably snubbed in the 2026 Grammy nominations a point of ongoing fan debate about industry recognition and the shifting landscape of pop music.

Social media continues to buzz with #Lorde trending following her illness announcement and discussion of her emotional candor in recent interviews—particularly her admission to BBC Radio 1 of nearly walking away from music in 2023 before returning creatively stronger leading up to Virgin. For business watchers Lorde’s team is reportedly in negotiation for more Ultrasound Tour tickets to combat scalping and ensure fair fan access per updates on her official website. Everything points to Lorde’s resilience and her ability to turn every twist—whether triumph or mishap—into another chapter in a career that refuses to dim.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 12 Nov 2025 22:25:48 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

In the past several days Lorde has made headlines with a mix of career momentum and sudden setbacks the kind that always keep fans and the music industry buzzing. According to the New Zealand Herald and widely shared on Instagram Lorde was forced to abruptly cancel her November 9 concert in Luxembourg the planned kickoff of her European Ultrasound World Tour due to what she described as ruthless food poisoning. She posted that she was barely standing and apologized profusely to fans promising both ticket honors for a rescheduled show and refunds if needed. The illness was also confirmed by the Telegraph which reported fans expressing understanding and support in comment sections as Lorde promised to make it up to them soon.

Despite this setback her Ultrasound World Tour promoting the critically acclaimed album Virgin remains in full swing with shows in Paris London Manchester Glasgow and Birmingham still on the books. The Manc and Lorde’s official channels confirm that her Manchester AO Arena gig is slated for November 15 with tickets in high demand and a setlist heavy on both beloved classics such as Royals Green Light and Ribs as well as new fan favorites from Virgin. Blood Orange and Jim E Stack are supporting across select dates giving credibility and cool factor to these arena shows. The tour itself is being touted by Brand Vision as one of 2025’s top-grossing and most influential pop tours highlighting Lorde’s ongoing market value and global draw.

Headlining news just broke that Lorde will also be one of the major acts at the Mad Cool Festival in Spain come 2026 alongside Florence and the Machine and David Byrne confirming her status as a must-see on the European festival circuit. However while her music is a fixture on charts in Australia New Zealand and the UK after the release of Virgin industry site SSBCrack noted that Lorde was noticeably snubbed in the 2026 Grammy nominations a point of ongoing fan debate about industry recognition and the shifting landscape of pop music.

Social media continues to buzz with #Lorde trending following her illness announcement and discussion of her emotional candor in recent interviews—particularly her admission to BBC Radio 1 of nearly walking away from music in 2023 before returning creatively stronger leading up to Virgin. For business watchers Lorde’s team is reportedly in negotiation for more Ultrasound Tour tickets to combat scalping and ensure fair fan access per updates on her official website. Everything points to Lorde’s resilience and her ability to turn every twist—whether triumph or mishap—into another chapter in a career that refuses to dim.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

In the past several days Lorde has made headlines with a mix of career momentum and sudden setbacks the kind that always keep fans and the music industry buzzing. According to the New Zealand Herald and widely shared on Instagram Lorde was forced to abruptly cancel her November 9 concert in Luxembourg the planned kickoff of her European Ultrasound World Tour due to what she described as ruthless food poisoning. She posted that she was barely standing and apologized profusely to fans promising both ticket honors for a rescheduled show and refunds if needed. The illness was also confirmed by the Telegraph which reported fans expressing understanding and support in comment sections as Lorde promised to make it up to them soon.

Despite this setback her Ultrasound World Tour promoting the critically acclaimed album Virgin remains in full swing with shows in Paris London Manchester Glasgow and Birmingham still on the books. The Manc and Lorde’s official channels confirm that her Manchester AO Arena gig is slated for November 15 with tickets in high demand and a setlist heavy on both beloved classics such as Royals Green Light and Ribs as well as new fan favorites from Virgin. Blood Orange and Jim E Stack are supporting across select dates giving credibility and cool factor to these arena shows. The tour itself is being touted by Brand Vision as one of 2025’s top-grossing and most influential pop tours highlighting Lorde’s ongoing market value and global draw.

Headlining news just broke that Lorde will also be one of the major acts at the Mad Cool Festival in Spain come 2026 alongside Florence and the Machine and David Byrne confirming her status as a must-see on the European festival circuit. However while her music is a fixture on charts in Australia New Zealand and the UK after the release of Virgin industry site SSBCrack noted that Lorde was noticeably snubbed in the 2026 Grammy nominations a point of ongoing fan debate about industry recognition and the shifting landscape of pop music.

Social media continues to buzz with #Lorde trending following her illness announcement and discussion of her emotional candor in recent interviews—particularly her admission to BBC Radio 1 of nearly walking away from music in 2023 before returning creatively stronger leading up to Virgin. For business watchers Lorde’s team is reportedly in negotiation for more Ultrasound Tour tickets to combat scalping and ensure fair fan access per updates on her official website. Everything points to Lorde’s resilience and her ability to turn every twist—whether triumph or mishap—into another chapter in a career that refuses to dim.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Virgin Era: Triumphant Tour, Grammy Snubs, and Pop Dominance</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7087342308</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been firmly back in the cultural spotlight this week for nearly every reason imaginable: new music, scandalous award show snubs, and the start of a world tour. The biggest headline dominating newsfeeds is that Lorde’s fourth album Virgin is officially out, released June 27 to the kind of fanfare that only Lorde can command. Critics are buzzing about its exploration of transformation and emotional rebirth, peppered with her trademark poetic lyrics and a new embrace of trip hop. Consequence and AOL both confirm that Virgin is at the heart of Lorde’s current Ultrasound World Tour, which has just kicked off in Austin with a setlist spanning fan favorites and every new track. Early reviews praise the show’s cinematic stage design and the immersive atmosphere that Lorde herself described in a recent interview as “both womb-like and expansive.”

On the business front, Lorde’s management has focused heavily on the highly anticipated Ultrasound World Tour, which in just days will bring Lorde to Ireland for her first ever solo headline show in the country, November 22 at Dublin’s RDS Simmonscourt. This Irish appearance is being described by Irish Concert Travel as a true event — a one-night-only experience, expected to draw crowds from across the country, with special bus routes even being established just for the concert. There’s clear anticipation that Virgin and its lush synth pop textures will define this new era of Lorde not just artistically but commercially, as tickets are selling rapidly across multiple European venues including Forest National in Belgium later this month.

But while fans and critics celebrate, Lorde has also become an unexpected flashpoint in music industry drama. The Indian Express reports that despite the commercial success of Virgin and sold-out shows, Lorde received zero Grammy nominations for the upcoming ceremony. This sparked instant outrage on social media, with supporters speculating that the Recording Academy may still be holding a grudge over her criticism in 2018 when she wasn’t offered a proper solo spot despite previously being the only woman nominated for Album of the Year. There was a flurry of X posts — including one from Lorde’s mother recalling a New York Times feature about gender gaps in the nominations — fueling discussion about industry politics and the treatment of outspoken female artists.

On socials, Lorde has been active, sharing behind-the-scenes tour clips, candid rehearsal snaps, and cryptic teases hinting at possible unreleased material making its live debut in upcoming shows. Her signature sardonic tone is intact, mixing gratitude for fan devotion with sly digs at fame and the establishment. While there’s speculation about surprise collaborations or visual album projects ahead, these remain unconfirmed and should be watched for official statements in the coming days.

With Virgin, the Ultrasound tour, and Grammy snub chatter keeping Lorde at the

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 08 Nov 2025 15:07:22 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been firmly back in the cultural spotlight this week for nearly every reason imaginable: new music, scandalous award show snubs, and the start of a world tour. The biggest headline dominating newsfeeds is that Lorde’s fourth album Virgin is officially out, released June 27 to the kind of fanfare that only Lorde can command. Critics are buzzing about its exploration of transformation and emotional rebirth, peppered with her trademark poetic lyrics and a new embrace of trip hop. Consequence and AOL both confirm that Virgin is at the heart of Lorde’s current Ultrasound World Tour, which has just kicked off in Austin with a setlist spanning fan favorites and every new track. Early reviews praise the show’s cinematic stage design and the immersive atmosphere that Lorde herself described in a recent interview as “both womb-like and expansive.”

On the business front, Lorde’s management has focused heavily on the highly anticipated Ultrasound World Tour, which in just days will bring Lorde to Ireland for her first ever solo headline show in the country, November 22 at Dublin’s RDS Simmonscourt. This Irish appearance is being described by Irish Concert Travel as a true event — a one-night-only experience, expected to draw crowds from across the country, with special bus routes even being established just for the concert. There’s clear anticipation that Virgin and its lush synth pop textures will define this new era of Lorde not just artistically but commercially, as tickets are selling rapidly across multiple European venues including Forest National in Belgium later this month.

But while fans and critics celebrate, Lorde has also become an unexpected flashpoint in music industry drama. The Indian Express reports that despite the commercial success of Virgin and sold-out shows, Lorde received zero Grammy nominations for the upcoming ceremony. This sparked instant outrage on social media, with supporters speculating that the Recording Academy may still be holding a grudge over her criticism in 2018 when she wasn’t offered a proper solo spot despite previously being the only woman nominated for Album of the Year. There was a flurry of X posts — including one from Lorde’s mother recalling a New York Times feature about gender gaps in the nominations — fueling discussion about industry politics and the treatment of outspoken female artists.

On socials, Lorde has been active, sharing behind-the-scenes tour clips, candid rehearsal snaps, and cryptic teases hinting at possible unreleased material making its live debut in upcoming shows. Her signature sardonic tone is intact, mixing gratitude for fan devotion with sly digs at fame and the establishment. While there’s speculation about surprise collaborations or visual album projects ahead, these remain unconfirmed and should be watched for official statements in the coming days.

With Virgin, the Ultrasound tour, and Grammy snub chatter keeping Lorde at the

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been firmly back in the cultural spotlight this week for nearly every reason imaginable: new music, scandalous award show snubs, and the start of a world tour. The biggest headline dominating newsfeeds is that Lorde’s fourth album Virgin is officially out, released June 27 to the kind of fanfare that only Lorde can command. Critics are buzzing about its exploration of transformation and emotional rebirth, peppered with her trademark poetic lyrics and a new embrace of trip hop. Consequence and AOL both confirm that Virgin is at the heart of Lorde’s current Ultrasound World Tour, which has just kicked off in Austin with a setlist spanning fan favorites and every new track. Early reviews praise the show’s cinematic stage design and the immersive atmosphere that Lorde herself described in a recent interview as “both womb-like and expansive.”

On the business front, Lorde’s management has focused heavily on the highly anticipated Ultrasound World Tour, which in just days will bring Lorde to Ireland for her first ever solo headline show in the country, November 22 at Dublin’s RDS Simmonscourt. This Irish appearance is being described by Irish Concert Travel as a true event — a one-night-only experience, expected to draw crowds from across the country, with special bus routes even being established just for the concert. There’s clear anticipation that Virgin and its lush synth pop textures will define this new era of Lorde not just artistically but commercially, as tickets are selling rapidly across multiple European venues including Forest National in Belgium later this month.

But while fans and critics celebrate, Lorde has also become an unexpected flashpoint in music industry drama. The Indian Express reports that despite the commercial success of Virgin and sold-out shows, Lorde received zero Grammy nominations for the upcoming ceremony. This sparked instant outrage on social media, with supporters speculating that the Recording Academy may still be holding a grudge over her criticism in 2018 when she wasn’t offered a proper solo spot despite previously being the only woman nominated for Album of the Year. There was a flurry of X posts — including one from Lorde’s mother recalling a New York Times feature about gender gaps in the nominations — fueling discussion about industry politics and the treatment of outspoken female artists.

On socials, Lorde has been active, sharing behind-the-scenes tour clips, candid rehearsal snaps, and cryptic teases hinting at possible unreleased material making its live debut in upcoming shows. Her signature sardonic tone is intact, mixing gratitude for fan devotion with sly digs at fame and the establishment. While there’s speculation about surprise collaborations or visual album projects ahead, these remain unconfirmed and should be watched for official statements in the coming days.

With Virgin, the Ultrasound tour, and Grammy snub chatter keeping Lorde at the

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Grammy Snub Sparks Outrage as Ultrasound Tour Triumphs</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5067579975</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has dominated headlines this week after the shocking omission of her critically acclaimed album Virgin from the 2026 Grammy nominations. Virgin dropped in June 2025 to a wave of glowing reviews and a swiftly sold-out arena tour, yet the Recording Academy left her entirely off their slate of nominees. Music fans and insiders are pronouncing it one of the biggest snubs in Grammys history, and the outrage hasn’t stopped. According to Architeg Prints, social media instantly lit up, with devoted followers debating whether Lorde’s 2018 criticism of the Academy has left her “blacklisted” from future consideration, reigniting the long-running drama between Lorde and the Grammy institution—a sting intensified by the fact that less buzzed artists earned nods where she was ignored. The intensity of online discussion is matched by fan speculation, with some wondering if she’ll ever reconcile with mainstream award shows.

Meanwhile, Lorde is making waves for much happier reasons across Europe, headlining major venues as part of her Ultrasound World Tour. Irish Concert Travel reveals she’s set to perform for one-night only at Dublin’s RDS Simmonscourt on November 22, 2025, her first-ever headline show in Ireland. This concert has seen an explosion of interest, not only from longtime fans but from newer listeners eager to see her perform tracks from Virgin live. Each show on the Ultrasound Tour has drawn acclaim for its immersive set design and Lorde’s signature cinematic storytelling; recent interviews suggest she’s exploring a “womb-like and expansive” stage aesthetic that blends visuals with emotionally charged live debuts. Advance word from fans in Austin reported that every song from Virgin was performed at the tour’s opening date, making this run a must-see for devotees.

Lorde’s European leg doesn’t stop with Dublin—she’ll play Belgium’s Forest National on November 27, with support from The Japanese House, cementing her position as a global headliner this season. Critics and outlets like Consequence praise her stage presence and the bold evolution in sound, noting the fusion of electronic and organic influences throughout Virgin.

On the business and public appearance front, Lorde was spotted among Los Angeles’ artistic elite at the 2025 LACMA Art + Film Gala earlier this week, celebrating the work of filmmaker Ryan Coogler and artist Mary Corse. Haute Living noted the gathering was spectacular but did not specify if Lorde took the stage or made a formal speech. While her brand remains steadfastly anti-mainstream, as described by 34th Street Magazine, her calculated moves—from minimalist production to emotionally rich tour experiences—are ensuring Lorde’s cultural relevance stretches far beyond awards season drama.

In summary, the past few days have seen Lorde’s Grammy snub reverberate through music news and social media, sparking industry conversation about fairness and recognition, while she continues

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 08 Nov 2025 14:52:11 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has dominated headlines this week after the shocking omission of her critically acclaimed album Virgin from the 2026 Grammy nominations. Virgin dropped in June 2025 to a wave of glowing reviews and a swiftly sold-out arena tour, yet the Recording Academy left her entirely off their slate of nominees. Music fans and insiders are pronouncing it one of the biggest snubs in Grammys history, and the outrage hasn’t stopped. According to Architeg Prints, social media instantly lit up, with devoted followers debating whether Lorde’s 2018 criticism of the Academy has left her “blacklisted” from future consideration, reigniting the long-running drama between Lorde and the Grammy institution—a sting intensified by the fact that less buzzed artists earned nods where she was ignored. The intensity of online discussion is matched by fan speculation, with some wondering if she’ll ever reconcile with mainstream award shows.

Meanwhile, Lorde is making waves for much happier reasons across Europe, headlining major venues as part of her Ultrasound World Tour. Irish Concert Travel reveals she’s set to perform for one-night only at Dublin’s RDS Simmonscourt on November 22, 2025, her first-ever headline show in Ireland. This concert has seen an explosion of interest, not only from longtime fans but from newer listeners eager to see her perform tracks from Virgin live. Each show on the Ultrasound Tour has drawn acclaim for its immersive set design and Lorde’s signature cinematic storytelling; recent interviews suggest she’s exploring a “womb-like and expansive” stage aesthetic that blends visuals with emotionally charged live debuts. Advance word from fans in Austin reported that every song from Virgin was performed at the tour’s opening date, making this run a must-see for devotees.

Lorde’s European leg doesn’t stop with Dublin—she’ll play Belgium’s Forest National on November 27, with support from The Japanese House, cementing her position as a global headliner this season. Critics and outlets like Consequence praise her stage presence and the bold evolution in sound, noting the fusion of electronic and organic influences throughout Virgin.

On the business and public appearance front, Lorde was spotted among Los Angeles’ artistic elite at the 2025 LACMA Art + Film Gala earlier this week, celebrating the work of filmmaker Ryan Coogler and artist Mary Corse. Haute Living noted the gathering was spectacular but did not specify if Lorde took the stage or made a formal speech. While her brand remains steadfastly anti-mainstream, as described by 34th Street Magazine, her calculated moves—from minimalist production to emotionally rich tour experiences—are ensuring Lorde’s cultural relevance stretches far beyond awards season drama.

In summary, the past few days have seen Lorde’s Grammy snub reverberate through music news and social media, sparking industry conversation about fairness and recognition, while she continues

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has dominated headlines this week after the shocking omission of her critically acclaimed album Virgin from the 2026 Grammy nominations. Virgin dropped in June 2025 to a wave of glowing reviews and a swiftly sold-out arena tour, yet the Recording Academy left her entirely off their slate of nominees. Music fans and insiders are pronouncing it one of the biggest snubs in Grammys history, and the outrage hasn’t stopped. According to Architeg Prints, social media instantly lit up, with devoted followers debating whether Lorde’s 2018 criticism of the Academy has left her “blacklisted” from future consideration, reigniting the long-running drama between Lorde and the Grammy institution—a sting intensified by the fact that less buzzed artists earned nods where she was ignored. The intensity of online discussion is matched by fan speculation, with some wondering if she’ll ever reconcile with mainstream award shows.

Meanwhile, Lorde is making waves for much happier reasons across Europe, headlining major venues as part of her Ultrasound World Tour. Irish Concert Travel reveals she’s set to perform for one-night only at Dublin’s RDS Simmonscourt on November 22, 2025, her first-ever headline show in Ireland. This concert has seen an explosion of interest, not only from longtime fans but from newer listeners eager to see her perform tracks from Virgin live. Each show on the Ultrasound Tour has drawn acclaim for its immersive set design and Lorde’s signature cinematic storytelling; recent interviews suggest she’s exploring a “womb-like and expansive” stage aesthetic that blends visuals with emotionally charged live debuts. Advance word from fans in Austin reported that every song from Virgin was performed at the tour’s opening date, making this run a must-see for devotees.

Lorde’s European leg doesn’t stop with Dublin—she’ll play Belgium’s Forest National on November 27, with support from The Japanese House, cementing her position as a global headliner this season. Critics and outlets like Consequence praise her stage presence and the bold evolution in sound, noting the fusion of electronic and organic influences throughout Virgin.

On the business and public appearance front, Lorde was spotted among Los Angeles’ artistic elite at the 2025 LACMA Art + Film Gala earlier this week, celebrating the work of filmmaker Ryan Coogler and artist Mary Corse. Haute Living noted the gathering was spectacular but did not specify if Lorde took the stage or made a formal speech. While her brand remains steadfastly anti-mainstream, as described by 34th Street Magazine, her calculated moves—from minimalist production to emotionally rich tour experiences—are ensuring Lorde’s cultural relevance stretches far beyond awards season drama.

In summary, the past few days have seen Lorde’s Grammy snub reverberate through music news and social media, sparking industry conversation about fairness and recognition, while she continues

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's New Era: Reinvention, Vulnerability, and the Buzz Around Virgin</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3988974368</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been the subject of several significant stories this week, and her public profile remains as magnetic and complex as ever. The most talked-about development is her candid interview with Rolling Stone confirming Jack Antonoff will not be collaborating on her upcoming album Virgin. Lorde said Antonoff is a positive and supportive collaborator but explained she made a gut decision to work with new people this time, notably producer Jim-E Stack, whose past work with Danielle Haim and Bon Iver she admires. The announcement has drawn considerable buzz because of Antonoff's highly influential impact on Lorde's previous records like Melodrama and Solar Power and the deep creative and professional connection between them. By pivoting away from Antonoff, Lorde signals a new, possibly defining phase in her career, highlighting her willingness to trust intuition and seek fresh musical vibes. Rolling Stone and AOL both emphasized she wants to play as an "outlier pop star" rather than follow familiar patterns, and fans and music insiders are already theorizing about the sonic direction of Virgin based on these remarks.

Another major headline focuses on Lorde's deeply personal cover story with Document Journal, released May 1. She discussed her evolving relationship with her body, food, and power. Lorde opened up about past struggles with eating and image, noting that she used to eat very little to meet the expectations of being a woman in the spotlight. She now feels "embodied" and refuses to release music unless she is "in her body the way I know I'm supposed to be." This speaks to a broader shift in her creative and personal priorities, emphasizing authenticity and self-care. She tied these revelations to the writing process behind her new single What Was That and referenced a difficult period in late 2023 involving a deep breakup and major life changes. These confessions, coupled with her lyrical contributions on Charli XCX's remix of Girl, so confusing, cement Lorde's willingness to address body image and mental health issues publicly, raising her profile as an artist unafraid of vulnerability.

On the live music front, Lorde is preparing for two major UK arena concerts, one at Manchester's AO Arena on November 15 and another at London's O2 Arena November 16. These appearances will feature artists like Blood Orange, Nilüfer Yanya, and Jim-E Stack, promising an eclectic lineup that reflects Lorde's current musical direction. According to JamBase and ticket outlets, anticipation is high, and both shows are expected to sell out given her new music rollout.

There has also been speculation surrounding festival appearances, particularly concerning a rumored slot at Outside Lands in 2026 following reports of a Sweden headlining date. Extra Chill reports fans are debating potential date clashes and what it means for Lorde's North American schedule, but as of now, nothing has been confirmed and this remains pu

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 05 Nov 2025 14:51:21 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been the subject of several significant stories this week, and her public profile remains as magnetic and complex as ever. The most talked-about development is her candid interview with Rolling Stone confirming Jack Antonoff will not be collaborating on her upcoming album Virgin. Lorde said Antonoff is a positive and supportive collaborator but explained she made a gut decision to work with new people this time, notably producer Jim-E Stack, whose past work with Danielle Haim and Bon Iver she admires. The announcement has drawn considerable buzz because of Antonoff's highly influential impact on Lorde's previous records like Melodrama and Solar Power and the deep creative and professional connection between them. By pivoting away from Antonoff, Lorde signals a new, possibly defining phase in her career, highlighting her willingness to trust intuition and seek fresh musical vibes. Rolling Stone and AOL both emphasized she wants to play as an "outlier pop star" rather than follow familiar patterns, and fans and music insiders are already theorizing about the sonic direction of Virgin based on these remarks.

Another major headline focuses on Lorde's deeply personal cover story with Document Journal, released May 1. She discussed her evolving relationship with her body, food, and power. Lorde opened up about past struggles with eating and image, noting that she used to eat very little to meet the expectations of being a woman in the spotlight. She now feels "embodied" and refuses to release music unless she is "in her body the way I know I'm supposed to be." This speaks to a broader shift in her creative and personal priorities, emphasizing authenticity and self-care. She tied these revelations to the writing process behind her new single What Was That and referenced a difficult period in late 2023 involving a deep breakup and major life changes. These confessions, coupled with her lyrical contributions on Charli XCX's remix of Girl, so confusing, cement Lorde's willingness to address body image and mental health issues publicly, raising her profile as an artist unafraid of vulnerability.

On the live music front, Lorde is preparing for two major UK arena concerts, one at Manchester's AO Arena on November 15 and another at London's O2 Arena November 16. These appearances will feature artists like Blood Orange, Nilüfer Yanya, and Jim-E Stack, promising an eclectic lineup that reflects Lorde's current musical direction. According to JamBase and ticket outlets, anticipation is high, and both shows are expected to sell out given her new music rollout.

There has also been speculation surrounding festival appearances, particularly concerning a rumored slot at Outside Lands in 2026 following reports of a Sweden headlining date. Extra Chill reports fans are debating potential date clashes and what it means for Lorde's North American schedule, but as of now, nothing has been confirmed and this remains pu

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been the subject of several significant stories this week, and her public profile remains as magnetic and complex as ever. The most talked-about development is her candid interview with Rolling Stone confirming Jack Antonoff will not be collaborating on her upcoming album Virgin. Lorde said Antonoff is a positive and supportive collaborator but explained she made a gut decision to work with new people this time, notably producer Jim-E Stack, whose past work with Danielle Haim and Bon Iver she admires. The announcement has drawn considerable buzz because of Antonoff's highly influential impact on Lorde's previous records like Melodrama and Solar Power and the deep creative and professional connection between them. By pivoting away from Antonoff, Lorde signals a new, possibly defining phase in her career, highlighting her willingness to trust intuition and seek fresh musical vibes. Rolling Stone and AOL both emphasized she wants to play as an "outlier pop star" rather than follow familiar patterns, and fans and music insiders are already theorizing about the sonic direction of Virgin based on these remarks.

Another major headline focuses on Lorde's deeply personal cover story with Document Journal, released May 1. She discussed her evolving relationship with her body, food, and power. Lorde opened up about past struggles with eating and image, noting that she used to eat very little to meet the expectations of being a woman in the spotlight. She now feels "embodied" and refuses to release music unless she is "in her body the way I know I'm supposed to be." This speaks to a broader shift in her creative and personal priorities, emphasizing authenticity and self-care. She tied these revelations to the writing process behind her new single What Was That and referenced a difficult period in late 2023 involving a deep breakup and major life changes. These confessions, coupled with her lyrical contributions on Charli XCX's remix of Girl, so confusing, cement Lorde's willingness to address body image and mental health issues publicly, raising her profile as an artist unafraid of vulnerability.

On the live music front, Lorde is preparing for two major UK arena concerts, one at Manchester's AO Arena on November 15 and another at London's O2 Arena November 16. These appearances will feature artists like Blood Orange, Nilüfer Yanya, and Jim-E Stack, promising an eclectic lineup that reflects Lorde's current musical direction. According to JamBase and ticket outlets, anticipation is high, and both shows are expected to sell out given her new music rollout.

There has also been speculation surrounding festival appearances, particularly concerning a rumored slot at Outside Lands in 2026 following reports of a Sweden headlining date. Extra Chill reports fans are debating potential date clashes and what it means for Lorde's North American schedule, but as of now, nothing has been confirmed and this remains pu

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>284</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound World Tour: Viral Moments, Vulnerability, and a New Era of Pop Dominance</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7131501591</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

This week, Lorde is firmly back in the global pop spotlight with a string of developments that leave no doubt she’s entered a new era. Fans across continents are celebrating the launch of her Ultrasound World Tour, her first major global trek since Solar Power, and the arena shows are already making headlines for their emotional pull and dramatic spectacle. According to the Johns Hopkins Newsletter, Lorde opened her shows with the explosive track Hammer from her 2025 album Virgin, weaving together early favorites like Royals and Green Light with new songs that fans are quickly elevating to anthem status. Eyewitness reports describe audiences sobbing, jumping, and holding hands as Lorde cues up heartbreak anthems and vulnerable moments—she even stopped the show twice in DC, calling for medical assistance for overwhelmed fans before resuming her set.

Time Out London notes the Ultrasound Tour has lit up TikTok feeds, with viral clips of Lorde performing on treadmills in Calvin Klein boyshorts—a visual nod to her ongoing exploration of authenticity and transformation. The same source reports that her upcoming gigs at London’s O2 are among the most sought-after shows this month, with thousands scrambling for tickets. She’s set to play Manchester AO Arena on November 15, followed by two sold-out nights at London’s O2 on November 16 and 17, before continuing through major European capitals like Paris and Amsterdam, and heading to Australia, the US, and South America throughout 2026, as confirmed by TourSetlist and Concert Addicts.

Lorde’s new album Virgin, released earlier this year, is fast becoming another milestone. As AOL reveals, on October 27 she dropped Berghain, a new single featuring Björk and Yves Tumor. Her choice of collaborators and producers, including Jim-E Stack and possibly Blood Orange, underscores a deliberate push into bolder sonic territory. Billboard and AOL also highlight her social media strategy: Lorde teased the album with cryptic TikTok and Instagram snippets well before official announcements, a move that’s kept speculation at fever pitch across Twitter, TikTok, and fan forums. Her team continues to amplify the hype by confirming high-visibility festival slots, including a major appearance alongside Nick Cave at the 2026 Way Out West in Sweden, as reported by the Sweden Herald.

In lighter pop culture buzz, IMDB reports Lorde was recently spotted lunching with Taylor Swift—barely a month after speculation about a public falling out—fueling talk of renewed friendship and perhaps future creative collaboration, though neither artist has commented publicly on the meeting. Finally, AOL Entertainment took fans behind the scenes with a feature on Lorde’s stagecraft, revealing her decision to tape her chest onstage stems from a desire to convey vulnerability and control, not just fashion or shock value.

Overall, these days mark what looks likely to be a defining chapter in Lorde’s career

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 01 Nov 2025 13:54:22 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

This week, Lorde is firmly back in the global pop spotlight with a string of developments that leave no doubt she’s entered a new era. Fans across continents are celebrating the launch of her Ultrasound World Tour, her first major global trek since Solar Power, and the arena shows are already making headlines for their emotional pull and dramatic spectacle. According to the Johns Hopkins Newsletter, Lorde opened her shows with the explosive track Hammer from her 2025 album Virgin, weaving together early favorites like Royals and Green Light with new songs that fans are quickly elevating to anthem status. Eyewitness reports describe audiences sobbing, jumping, and holding hands as Lorde cues up heartbreak anthems and vulnerable moments—she even stopped the show twice in DC, calling for medical assistance for overwhelmed fans before resuming her set.

Time Out London notes the Ultrasound Tour has lit up TikTok feeds, with viral clips of Lorde performing on treadmills in Calvin Klein boyshorts—a visual nod to her ongoing exploration of authenticity and transformation. The same source reports that her upcoming gigs at London’s O2 are among the most sought-after shows this month, with thousands scrambling for tickets. She’s set to play Manchester AO Arena on November 15, followed by two sold-out nights at London’s O2 on November 16 and 17, before continuing through major European capitals like Paris and Amsterdam, and heading to Australia, the US, and South America throughout 2026, as confirmed by TourSetlist and Concert Addicts.

Lorde’s new album Virgin, released earlier this year, is fast becoming another milestone. As AOL reveals, on October 27 she dropped Berghain, a new single featuring Björk and Yves Tumor. Her choice of collaborators and producers, including Jim-E Stack and possibly Blood Orange, underscores a deliberate push into bolder sonic territory. Billboard and AOL also highlight her social media strategy: Lorde teased the album with cryptic TikTok and Instagram snippets well before official announcements, a move that’s kept speculation at fever pitch across Twitter, TikTok, and fan forums. Her team continues to amplify the hype by confirming high-visibility festival slots, including a major appearance alongside Nick Cave at the 2026 Way Out West in Sweden, as reported by the Sweden Herald.

In lighter pop culture buzz, IMDB reports Lorde was recently spotted lunching with Taylor Swift—barely a month after speculation about a public falling out—fueling talk of renewed friendship and perhaps future creative collaboration, though neither artist has commented publicly on the meeting. Finally, AOL Entertainment took fans behind the scenes with a feature on Lorde’s stagecraft, revealing her decision to tape her chest onstage stems from a desire to convey vulnerability and control, not just fashion or shock value.

Overall, these days mark what looks likely to be a defining chapter in Lorde’s career

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

This week, Lorde is firmly back in the global pop spotlight with a string of developments that leave no doubt she’s entered a new era. Fans across continents are celebrating the launch of her Ultrasound World Tour, her first major global trek since Solar Power, and the arena shows are already making headlines for their emotional pull and dramatic spectacle. According to the Johns Hopkins Newsletter, Lorde opened her shows with the explosive track Hammer from her 2025 album Virgin, weaving together early favorites like Royals and Green Light with new songs that fans are quickly elevating to anthem status. Eyewitness reports describe audiences sobbing, jumping, and holding hands as Lorde cues up heartbreak anthems and vulnerable moments—she even stopped the show twice in DC, calling for medical assistance for overwhelmed fans before resuming her set.

Time Out London notes the Ultrasound Tour has lit up TikTok feeds, with viral clips of Lorde performing on treadmills in Calvin Klein boyshorts—a visual nod to her ongoing exploration of authenticity and transformation. The same source reports that her upcoming gigs at London’s O2 are among the most sought-after shows this month, with thousands scrambling for tickets. She’s set to play Manchester AO Arena on November 15, followed by two sold-out nights at London’s O2 on November 16 and 17, before continuing through major European capitals like Paris and Amsterdam, and heading to Australia, the US, and South America throughout 2026, as confirmed by TourSetlist and Concert Addicts.

Lorde’s new album Virgin, released earlier this year, is fast becoming another milestone. As AOL reveals, on October 27 she dropped Berghain, a new single featuring Björk and Yves Tumor. Her choice of collaborators and producers, including Jim-E Stack and possibly Blood Orange, underscores a deliberate push into bolder sonic territory. Billboard and AOL also highlight her social media strategy: Lorde teased the album with cryptic TikTok and Instagram snippets well before official announcements, a move that’s kept speculation at fever pitch across Twitter, TikTok, and fan forums. Her team continues to amplify the hype by confirming high-visibility festival slots, including a major appearance alongside Nick Cave at the 2026 Way Out West in Sweden, as reported by the Sweden Herald.

In lighter pop culture buzz, IMDB reports Lorde was recently spotted lunching with Taylor Swift—barely a month after speculation about a public falling out—fueling talk of renewed friendship and perhaps future creative collaboration, though neither artist has commented publicly on the meeting. Finally, AOL Entertainment took fans behind the scenes with a feature on Lorde’s stagecraft, revealing her decision to tape her chest onstage stems from a desire to convey vulnerability and control, not just fashion or shock value.

Overall, these days mark what looks likely to be a defining chapter in Lorde’s career

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>227</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound World Tour: Raw, Provocative, and Sold Out</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6640895139</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Over the past several days Lorde has been making headlines and captivating fans worldwide with the Ultrasound World Tour, a sweeping global trek supporting her June 2025 release Virgin. The new album marks her boldest work yet blending raw confessions with explicit themes—she has called it “written in blood”—exploring everything from sexuality to pregnancy tests to existential crises, all set against a return to her early pop roots. With Virgin, and its accompanying music videos, critics note she is at her most unguarded and provocative, and the fans have responded in turn—the tour has sold out major venues across North America and beyond according to the Massachusetts Daily Collegian.

Just this past week, Lorde electrified crowds at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles and the Greek Theatre in Berkeley with performances described as raw and vulnerable. At the LA show, The Independent details, she brought out Charli XCX for a surprise live duet of Girl So Confusing, turning a track about female relationships and anxieties into a cultural event, a moment of genuine solidarity between contemporary pop’s most introspective voices. At these concerts, the setlists weave new tracks like Hammer, Clearblue, and Current Affairs in with fan favorites including Royals, Buzzcut Season, Ribs, and Green Light. Attendees have described the energy as louder than even Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour, as reported by The Independent, with Lorde shedding layers—literally—onstage in performances that lean into the intimacy and challenging gender identity examined on Virgin.

Her Oct. 4 and 5 shows in DC and her October 22 Seattle concert both saw social media buzzing with footage of her stripped-down balladry and club-ready anthems. The Stanford Daily and The Hoya recounted her costuming—at one point wearing a duct-tape binder during Man of the Year to explore masculinity—her chrome body paint for Current Affairs, and her willingness to remove clothing in a gesture of communal vulnerability. Lorde has also been engaging audiences in singalongs to Ribs and momentous closers, with The Stanford Daily noting her walk among fans during David as a literal and figurative burst of light.

Business-wise, the tour is a smash; every show is a sell-out, cementing Lorde’s place as a global arena act more than a decade into her career. No credible reports have surfaced of new endorsements or public controversies. On social media, fans posted clips from the Berkeley and Seattle shows, and the energy in those comment sections matches what reviewers describe—utter devotion and cathartic joy. For a superstar known for musical reinvention and emotional candor, these days may be remembered as her most daring—and biographically significant—era yet.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 29 Oct 2025 13:51:29 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Over the past several days Lorde has been making headlines and captivating fans worldwide with the Ultrasound World Tour, a sweeping global trek supporting her June 2025 release Virgin. The new album marks her boldest work yet blending raw confessions with explicit themes—she has called it “written in blood”—exploring everything from sexuality to pregnancy tests to existential crises, all set against a return to her early pop roots. With Virgin, and its accompanying music videos, critics note she is at her most unguarded and provocative, and the fans have responded in turn—the tour has sold out major venues across North America and beyond according to the Massachusetts Daily Collegian.

Just this past week, Lorde electrified crowds at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles and the Greek Theatre in Berkeley with performances described as raw and vulnerable. At the LA show, The Independent details, she brought out Charli XCX for a surprise live duet of Girl So Confusing, turning a track about female relationships and anxieties into a cultural event, a moment of genuine solidarity between contemporary pop’s most introspective voices. At these concerts, the setlists weave new tracks like Hammer, Clearblue, and Current Affairs in with fan favorites including Royals, Buzzcut Season, Ribs, and Green Light. Attendees have described the energy as louder than even Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour, as reported by The Independent, with Lorde shedding layers—literally—onstage in performances that lean into the intimacy and challenging gender identity examined on Virgin.

Her Oct. 4 and 5 shows in DC and her October 22 Seattle concert both saw social media buzzing with footage of her stripped-down balladry and club-ready anthems. The Stanford Daily and The Hoya recounted her costuming—at one point wearing a duct-tape binder during Man of the Year to explore masculinity—her chrome body paint for Current Affairs, and her willingness to remove clothing in a gesture of communal vulnerability. Lorde has also been engaging audiences in singalongs to Ribs and momentous closers, with The Stanford Daily noting her walk among fans during David as a literal and figurative burst of light.

Business-wise, the tour is a smash; every show is a sell-out, cementing Lorde’s place as a global arena act more than a decade into her career. No credible reports have surfaced of new endorsements or public controversies. On social media, fans posted clips from the Berkeley and Seattle shows, and the energy in those comment sections matches what reviewers describe—utter devotion and cathartic joy. For a superstar known for musical reinvention and emotional candor, these days may be remembered as her most daring—and biographically significant—era yet.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Over the past several days Lorde has been making headlines and captivating fans worldwide with the Ultrasound World Tour, a sweeping global trek supporting her June 2025 release Virgin. The new album marks her boldest work yet blending raw confessions with explicit themes—she has called it “written in blood”—exploring everything from sexuality to pregnancy tests to existential crises, all set against a return to her early pop roots. With Virgin, and its accompanying music videos, critics note she is at her most unguarded and provocative, and the fans have responded in turn—the tour has sold out major venues across North America and beyond according to the Massachusetts Daily Collegian.

Just this past week, Lorde electrified crowds at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles and the Greek Theatre in Berkeley with performances described as raw and vulnerable. At the LA show, The Independent details, she brought out Charli XCX for a surprise live duet of Girl So Confusing, turning a track about female relationships and anxieties into a cultural event, a moment of genuine solidarity between contemporary pop’s most introspective voices. At these concerts, the setlists weave new tracks like Hammer, Clearblue, and Current Affairs in with fan favorites including Royals, Buzzcut Season, Ribs, and Green Light. Attendees have described the energy as louder than even Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour, as reported by The Independent, with Lorde shedding layers—literally—onstage in performances that lean into the intimacy and challenging gender identity examined on Virgin.

Her Oct. 4 and 5 shows in DC and her October 22 Seattle concert both saw social media buzzing with footage of her stripped-down balladry and club-ready anthems. The Stanford Daily and The Hoya recounted her costuming—at one point wearing a duct-tape binder during Man of the Year to explore masculinity—her chrome body paint for Current Affairs, and her willingness to remove clothing in a gesture of communal vulnerability. Lorde has also been engaging audiences in singalongs to Ribs and momentous closers, with The Stanford Daily noting her walk among fans during David as a literal and figurative burst of light.

Business-wise, the tour is a smash; every show is a sell-out, cementing Lorde’s place as a global arena act more than a decade into her career. No credible reports have surfaced of new endorsements or public controversies. On social media, fans posted clips from the Berkeley and Seattle shows, and the energy in those comment sections matches what reviewers describe—utter devotion and cathartic joy. For a superstar known for musical reinvention and emotional candor, these days may be remembered as her most daring—and biographically significant—era yet.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Tour Electrifies: Raw Singularity, Vulnerability, and a New Creative Arc</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5509272669</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has electrified the music scene over the past few days, cementing this era as one of her most consequential since her debut. Riding massive momentum from the release of her fourth studio album Virgin in early 2025, she’s been commanding headlines with her Ultrasound World Tour, which sold out Madison Square Garden on October 1 and saw blistering back-to-back sellouts at The Anthem in DC. Most recently, she just played a no-holds-barred, intensely personal show at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles, her first time headlining the storied venue, drawing rave reviews for both rawness and intimacy. The Independent described the October 17 Forum show as “raw singularity,” highlighting not only the new material—tracks like Current Affairs, If She Could See Me Now, and the gut-punching Clearblue—but also her willingness to reimagine classics from all eras of her career, with a fanbase described as “diehards” rivaling the passion and volume of any top-tier contemporary act.

Her just-announced return to the Kia Forum is already positioned as a centerpiece for the next leg of her tour, with tickets set to go on sale October 29. Lorde herself has visibly embraced this creative and commercial high, telling crowds—most recently in Berkeley as captured on social media and YouTube—that she feels a new openness and playfulness in these performances, reflecting on revisiting pivotal venues from the start of her career and feeling it is both a “full circle” and a new beginning at year 13. These candid asides, along with her vocal improvisations and acapella stretches—such as at her October 22 Seattle concert, widely shared on TikTok and Instagram—are being celebrated by critics and fans for their vulnerability.

A viral cultural moment came when Charli XCX joined her on stage, performing their deeply meta and much-discussed collaboration Girl So Confusing. Queering the Burbs and fans across X and TikTok immediately spotlighted the live duet as a “moment of real vulnerability and cultural resonance,” as the two explored their creative neuroses, ultimately affirming mutual support—and providing fuel for fan theories and think pieces across social feeds.

Businesswise, Lorde’s tour is projecting nearly two million in grosses per city based on current box office reports from Pollstar, with Brand Vision Insights slotting her among the year’s absolute top touring artists. Music News broke news that her next album will not take another four-year gap, telling press in interviews on October 23 that she’s found a more sustainable, prolific creative rhythm, a headline that reverberated across pop culture outlets and generated thousands of shares within hours.

In sum, Lorde isn’t just maintaining relevance—she’s charting a bold new arc, with industry insiders and passionate fans already calling this her strongest, most ambitious era since Pure Heroine.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 25 Oct 2025 13:51:27 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has electrified the music scene over the past few days, cementing this era as one of her most consequential since her debut. Riding massive momentum from the release of her fourth studio album Virgin in early 2025, she’s been commanding headlines with her Ultrasound World Tour, which sold out Madison Square Garden on October 1 and saw blistering back-to-back sellouts at The Anthem in DC. Most recently, she just played a no-holds-barred, intensely personal show at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles, her first time headlining the storied venue, drawing rave reviews for both rawness and intimacy. The Independent described the October 17 Forum show as “raw singularity,” highlighting not only the new material—tracks like Current Affairs, If She Could See Me Now, and the gut-punching Clearblue—but also her willingness to reimagine classics from all eras of her career, with a fanbase described as “diehards” rivaling the passion and volume of any top-tier contemporary act.

Her just-announced return to the Kia Forum is already positioned as a centerpiece for the next leg of her tour, with tickets set to go on sale October 29. Lorde herself has visibly embraced this creative and commercial high, telling crowds—most recently in Berkeley as captured on social media and YouTube—that she feels a new openness and playfulness in these performances, reflecting on revisiting pivotal venues from the start of her career and feeling it is both a “full circle” and a new beginning at year 13. These candid asides, along with her vocal improvisations and acapella stretches—such as at her October 22 Seattle concert, widely shared on TikTok and Instagram—are being celebrated by critics and fans for their vulnerability.

A viral cultural moment came when Charli XCX joined her on stage, performing their deeply meta and much-discussed collaboration Girl So Confusing. Queering the Burbs and fans across X and TikTok immediately spotlighted the live duet as a “moment of real vulnerability and cultural resonance,” as the two explored their creative neuroses, ultimately affirming mutual support—and providing fuel for fan theories and think pieces across social feeds.

Businesswise, Lorde’s tour is projecting nearly two million in grosses per city based on current box office reports from Pollstar, with Brand Vision Insights slotting her among the year’s absolute top touring artists. Music News broke news that her next album will not take another four-year gap, telling press in interviews on October 23 that she’s found a more sustainable, prolific creative rhythm, a headline that reverberated across pop culture outlets and generated thousands of shares within hours.

In sum, Lorde isn’t just maintaining relevance—she’s charting a bold new arc, with industry insiders and passionate fans already calling this her strongest, most ambitious era since Pure Heroine.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has electrified the music scene over the past few days, cementing this era as one of her most consequential since her debut. Riding massive momentum from the release of her fourth studio album Virgin in early 2025, she’s been commanding headlines with her Ultrasound World Tour, which sold out Madison Square Garden on October 1 and saw blistering back-to-back sellouts at The Anthem in DC. Most recently, she just played a no-holds-barred, intensely personal show at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles, her first time headlining the storied venue, drawing rave reviews for both rawness and intimacy. The Independent described the October 17 Forum show as “raw singularity,” highlighting not only the new material—tracks like Current Affairs, If She Could See Me Now, and the gut-punching Clearblue—but also her willingness to reimagine classics from all eras of her career, with a fanbase described as “diehards” rivaling the passion and volume of any top-tier contemporary act.

Her just-announced return to the Kia Forum is already positioned as a centerpiece for the next leg of her tour, with tickets set to go on sale October 29. Lorde herself has visibly embraced this creative and commercial high, telling crowds—most recently in Berkeley as captured on social media and YouTube—that she feels a new openness and playfulness in these performances, reflecting on revisiting pivotal venues from the start of her career and feeling it is both a “full circle” and a new beginning at year 13. These candid asides, along with her vocal improvisations and acapella stretches—such as at her October 22 Seattle concert, widely shared on TikTok and Instagram—are being celebrated by critics and fans for their vulnerability.

A viral cultural moment came when Charli XCX joined her on stage, performing their deeply meta and much-discussed collaboration Girl So Confusing. Queering the Burbs and fans across X and TikTok immediately spotlighted the live duet as a “moment of real vulnerability and cultural resonance,” as the two explored their creative neuroses, ultimately affirming mutual support—and providing fuel for fan theories and think pieces across social feeds.

Businesswise, Lorde’s tour is projecting nearly two million in grosses per city based on current box office reports from Pollstar, with Brand Vision Insights slotting her among the year’s absolute top touring artists. Music News broke news that her next album will not take another four-year gap, telling press in interviews on October 23 that she’s found a more sustainable, prolific creative rhythm, a headline that reverberated across pop culture outlets and generated thousands of shares within hours.

In sum, Lorde isn’t just maintaining relevance—she’s charting a bold new arc, with industry insiders and passionate fans already calling this her strongest, most ambitious era since Pure Heroine.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Emotional Ultrasound World Tour: From Catharsis to Coming Full Circle</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7926610532</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde’s week has been defined by the sold-out Ultrasound World Tour, which is currently promoting her newest studio album Virgin. She hit St. Louis at the Chaifetz Arena on October 9, with crowds moved by the raw emotion in her setlist as well as her calculated choreography and expressive dance ensemble, all meticulously designed to evoke the stripped-down aesthetic of Virgin. According to The University News, each performance moment felt choreographed to match the underlying emotional themes of her songs, with audience attire echoing album art and minimalist fashion, an aesthetic that’s become her signature in this era.

Fast-forward to October 18, and the tour landed for a one-night-only stop at Los Angeles’ Kia Forum, selling out and drawing veterans and fresh fans alike who crowded for nostalgia and insight. Lorde then marked a personal milestone at Berkeley’s Greek Theatre on October 19, with the SF Chronicle reporting that she specifically requested to perform there to revisit her first-ever US stage from over a decade ago—a “passion situation,” as she put it. The Greek’s performance put sincerity over spectacle, with Lorde donning a simple blue T-shirt and jeans which she later replaced with baby blue Calvin Klein underwear and taped chest, a performance choice she’s linked to exploring gender identity.

The Berkeley performance was not without subtle headline moments. SF Chronicle notes Lorde performed her 2013 hit “Team” under lights that bathed the crowd in red, green, and white—colors of the Palestinian flag—though she stopped short of explicit political commentary, a marked shift from prior shows where she has been more outspoken. Fans reported tears and catharsis, with many connecting her setlist’s coming-of-age themes to their own emotional journeys. Riff Magazine quotes Lorde reflecting on the transformative nature of her career: “If I'm lucky, a song stops being mine and starts to belong to you,” capturing the mood of reciprocity she’s fostered on tour.

On social media, footage has gone viral of her and Charli XCX dancing together on stage, amplifying buzz and connecting her performances to the wider female pop community. The Faze further captures her personal reflections mid-show: “the older I get, I think it’s really important to come full circle with certain moments of life,” as she discusses feeling curiosity and openness at this point in her career.

No major business deals or new social media controversies have surfaced directly tied to Lorde this week, but commentary about shifts in the music industry from industry insiders like Matt Pincus—who helped sign Lorde in her early career—suggests artists like her are navigating a “financialized” landscape that could impact creative freedom and career autonomy going forward, according to Billboard’s On the Record podcast.

In summary, Lorde’s past few days have been less about viral drama and more about reflection, emotional reconnectio

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 22 Oct 2025 13:51:24 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde’s week has been defined by the sold-out Ultrasound World Tour, which is currently promoting her newest studio album Virgin. She hit St. Louis at the Chaifetz Arena on October 9, with crowds moved by the raw emotion in her setlist as well as her calculated choreography and expressive dance ensemble, all meticulously designed to evoke the stripped-down aesthetic of Virgin. According to The University News, each performance moment felt choreographed to match the underlying emotional themes of her songs, with audience attire echoing album art and minimalist fashion, an aesthetic that’s become her signature in this era.

Fast-forward to October 18, and the tour landed for a one-night-only stop at Los Angeles’ Kia Forum, selling out and drawing veterans and fresh fans alike who crowded for nostalgia and insight. Lorde then marked a personal milestone at Berkeley’s Greek Theatre on October 19, with the SF Chronicle reporting that she specifically requested to perform there to revisit her first-ever US stage from over a decade ago—a “passion situation,” as she put it. The Greek’s performance put sincerity over spectacle, with Lorde donning a simple blue T-shirt and jeans which she later replaced with baby blue Calvin Klein underwear and taped chest, a performance choice she’s linked to exploring gender identity.

The Berkeley performance was not without subtle headline moments. SF Chronicle notes Lorde performed her 2013 hit “Team” under lights that bathed the crowd in red, green, and white—colors of the Palestinian flag—though she stopped short of explicit political commentary, a marked shift from prior shows where she has been more outspoken. Fans reported tears and catharsis, with many connecting her setlist’s coming-of-age themes to their own emotional journeys. Riff Magazine quotes Lorde reflecting on the transformative nature of her career: “If I'm lucky, a song stops being mine and starts to belong to you,” capturing the mood of reciprocity she’s fostered on tour.

On social media, footage has gone viral of her and Charli XCX dancing together on stage, amplifying buzz and connecting her performances to the wider female pop community. The Faze further captures her personal reflections mid-show: “the older I get, I think it’s really important to come full circle with certain moments of life,” as she discusses feeling curiosity and openness at this point in her career.

No major business deals or new social media controversies have surfaced directly tied to Lorde this week, but commentary about shifts in the music industry from industry insiders like Matt Pincus—who helped sign Lorde in her early career—suggests artists like her are navigating a “financialized” landscape that could impact creative freedom and career autonomy going forward, according to Billboard’s On the Record podcast.

In summary, Lorde’s past few days have been less about viral drama and more about reflection, emotional reconnectio

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde’s week has been defined by the sold-out Ultrasound World Tour, which is currently promoting her newest studio album Virgin. She hit St. Louis at the Chaifetz Arena on October 9, with crowds moved by the raw emotion in her setlist as well as her calculated choreography and expressive dance ensemble, all meticulously designed to evoke the stripped-down aesthetic of Virgin. According to The University News, each performance moment felt choreographed to match the underlying emotional themes of her songs, with audience attire echoing album art and minimalist fashion, an aesthetic that’s become her signature in this era.

Fast-forward to October 18, and the tour landed for a one-night-only stop at Los Angeles’ Kia Forum, selling out and drawing veterans and fresh fans alike who crowded for nostalgia and insight. Lorde then marked a personal milestone at Berkeley’s Greek Theatre on October 19, with the SF Chronicle reporting that she specifically requested to perform there to revisit her first-ever US stage from over a decade ago—a “passion situation,” as she put it. The Greek’s performance put sincerity over spectacle, with Lorde donning a simple blue T-shirt and jeans which she later replaced with baby blue Calvin Klein underwear and taped chest, a performance choice she’s linked to exploring gender identity.

The Berkeley performance was not without subtle headline moments. SF Chronicle notes Lorde performed her 2013 hit “Team” under lights that bathed the crowd in red, green, and white—colors of the Palestinian flag—though she stopped short of explicit political commentary, a marked shift from prior shows where she has been more outspoken. Fans reported tears and catharsis, with many connecting her setlist’s coming-of-age themes to their own emotional journeys. Riff Magazine quotes Lorde reflecting on the transformative nature of her career: “If I'm lucky, a song stops being mine and starts to belong to you,” capturing the mood of reciprocity she’s fostered on tour.

On social media, footage has gone viral of her and Charli XCX dancing together on stage, amplifying buzz and connecting her performances to the wider female pop community. The Faze further captures her personal reflections mid-show: “the older I get, I think it’s really important to come full circle with certain moments of life,” as she discusses feeling curiosity and openness at this point in her career.

No major business deals or new social media controversies have surfaced directly tied to Lorde this week, but commentary about shifts in the music industry from industry insiders like Matt Pincus—who helped sign Lorde in her early career—suggests artists like her are navigating a “financialized” landscape that could impact creative freedom and career autonomy going forward, according to Billboard’s On the Record podcast.

In summary, Lorde’s past few days have been less about viral drama and more about reflection, emotional reconnectio

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Electrifying Comeback: Sold-Out Shows, New Album Virgin, and NOS Alive Headliner Announcement</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2244950293</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde is in the thick of what might be her most ambitious and attention-grabbing era since her teenage debut. After four years of relative quiet, she exploded back onto the scene in April with What Was That, a commanding single that shot to number one on Spotify in the US and immediately established her as a dominant force in pop once more. Produced with Jim-E Stack and Dan Nigro, the track is the vanguard for her fourth album, Virgin, which landed June 27 and has already drawn praise for returning Lorde to more synth-driven, electronic textures, moving purposely away from the folk-pop vibes of Solar Power. Variety and Rolling Stone spotlighted the single drop, noting the splashy pop-up performance she tried to stage in New York’s Washington Square Park—as hundreds swarmed, police nearly shut it down, but Lorde still turned up hours late to personally thank fans and premiere the song through a portable speaker. Such scenes embody her ability to generate buzz with little more than a text and her own formidable presence.

Her Ultrasound World Tour is barreling across North America now and garners rave reviews everywhere from Philadelphia to Minneapolis to her sold-out show at Red Rocks Amphitheatre on October 14, where the energy crackled and the crowd roared for new tracks like Hammer and old favorites like Royals The Denver Westword called the set electrifying, and BroadwayWorld’s Minneapolis review described a palpable sense of intimacy with the audience even in cavernous venues. Fans and critics alike are talking about her intentionality and evolution. She herself told Rolling Stone, I’ve never felt more intentional with every single piece of what I’m doing. Setlists span her full career, but Virgin’s new songs—plunging into topics like vulnerability, gender and aging—are at the center. Social media buzzed this past week with clips and photos from her performances at venues like the MGM Grand Garden in Vegas and The Greek Theatre in Berkeley, as well as her openers, Blood Orange and The Japanese House, who are drawing praise for their synergy on tour.

The biggest headline came just days ago with confirmation that Lorde will headline Portugal’s NOS Alive festival next July, marking her first time performing the new era overseas. The Portugal News described her as a cultural force and highlighted her remarkable streaming and sales numbers—over 18 billion streams and 18 million albums. There’s no indication of business ventures beyond music or major interviews in the past week, but the steady drumbeat of sold-out concerts, deftly managed fan interactions, and strong streaming suggests Lorde is cementing a new phase rather than chasing fleeting headlines. No major controversies, only the sort of electric artistry and fan devotion that bodes well for Lorde’s long-term presence at the heart of pop culture.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 18 Oct 2025 13:51:23 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde is in the thick of what might be her most ambitious and attention-grabbing era since her teenage debut. After four years of relative quiet, she exploded back onto the scene in April with What Was That, a commanding single that shot to number one on Spotify in the US and immediately established her as a dominant force in pop once more. Produced with Jim-E Stack and Dan Nigro, the track is the vanguard for her fourth album, Virgin, which landed June 27 and has already drawn praise for returning Lorde to more synth-driven, electronic textures, moving purposely away from the folk-pop vibes of Solar Power. Variety and Rolling Stone spotlighted the single drop, noting the splashy pop-up performance she tried to stage in New York’s Washington Square Park—as hundreds swarmed, police nearly shut it down, but Lorde still turned up hours late to personally thank fans and premiere the song through a portable speaker. Such scenes embody her ability to generate buzz with little more than a text and her own formidable presence.

Her Ultrasound World Tour is barreling across North America now and garners rave reviews everywhere from Philadelphia to Minneapolis to her sold-out show at Red Rocks Amphitheatre on October 14, where the energy crackled and the crowd roared for new tracks like Hammer and old favorites like Royals The Denver Westword called the set electrifying, and BroadwayWorld’s Minneapolis review described a palpable sense of intimacy with the audience even in cavernous venues. Fans and critics alike are talking about her intentionality and evolution. She herself told Rolling Stone, I’ve never felt more intentional with every single piece of what I’m doing. Setlists span her full career, but Virgin’s new songs—plunging into topics like vulnerability, gender and aging—are at the center. Social media buzzed this past week with clips and photos from her performances at venues like the MGM Grand Garden in Vegas and The Greek Theatre in Berkeley, as well as her openers, Blood Orange and The Japanese House, who are drawing praise for their synergy on tour.

The biggest headline came just days ago with confirmation that Lorde will headline Portugal’s NOS Alive festival next July, marking her first time performing the new era overseas. The Portugal News described her as a cultural force and highlighted her remarkable streaming and sales numbers—over 18 billion streams and 18 million albums. There’s no indication of business ventures beyond music or major interviews in the past week, but the steady drumbeat of sold-out concerts, deftly managed fan interactions, and strong streaming suggests Lorde is cementing a new phase rather than chasing fleeting headlines. No major controversies, only the sort of electric artistry and fan devotion that bodes well for Lorde’s long-term presence at the heart of pop culture.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde is in the thick of what might be her most ambitious and attention-grabbing era since her teenage debut. After four years of relative quiet, she exploded back onto the scene in April with What Was That, a commanding single that shot to number one on Spotify in the US and immediately established her as a dominant force in pop once more. Produced with Jim-E Stack and Dan Nigro, the track is the vanguard for her fourth album, Virgin, which landed June 27 and has already drawn praise for returning Lorde to more synth-driven, electronic textures, moving purposely away from the folk-pop vibes of Solar Power. Variety and Rolling Stone spotlighted the single drop, noting the splashy pop-up performance she tried to stage in New York’s Washington Square Park—as hundreds swarmed, police nearly shut it down, but Lorde still turned up hours late to personally thank fans and premiere the song through a portable speaker. Such scenes embody her ability to generate buzz with little more than a text and her own formidable presence.

Her Ultrasound World Tour is barreling across North America now and garners rave reviews everywhere from Philadelphia to Minneapolis to her sold-out show at Red Rocks Amphitheatre on October 14, where the energy crackled and the crowd roared for new tracks like Hammer and old favorites like Royals The Denver Westword called the set electrifying, and BroadwayWorld’s Minneapolis review described a palpable sense of intimacy with the audience even in cavernous venues. Fans and critics alike are talking about her intentionality and evolution. She herself told Rolling Stone, I’ve never felt more intentional with every single piece of what I’m doing. Setlists span her full career, but Virgin’s new songs—plunging into topics like vulnerability, gender and aging—are at the center. Social media buzzed this past week with clips and photos from her performances at venues like the MGM Grand Garden in Vegas and The Greek Theatre in Berkeley, as well as her openers, Blood Orange and The Japanese House, who are drawing praise for their synergy on tour.

The biggest headline came just days ago with confirmation that Lorde will headline Portugal’s NOS Alive festival next July, marking her first time performing the new era overseas. The Portugal News described her as a cultural force and highlighted her remarkable streaming and sales numbers—over 18 billion streams and 18 million albums. There’s no indication of business ventures beyond music or major interviews in the past week, but the steady drumbeat of sold-out concerts, deftly managed fan interactions, and strong streaming suggests Lorde is cementing a new phase rather than chasing fleeting headlines. No major controversies, only the sort of electric artistry and fan devotion that bodes well for Lorde’s long-term presence at the heart of pop culture.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>212</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Tour: A Transformative Journey of Raw Honesty and Vulnerability</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4290585886</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has dominated music headlines in the past few days with her Ultrasound Tour, which celebrates her bold new album Virgin and signals a transformative moment in her career. After a triumphant sold-out performance at Madison Square Garden on October 1, as reported by The Phoenix, Lorde brought both spectacle and intimacy, effortlessly filling the venue with her signature blend of raw honesty and vulnerability. The show unfolded as more than just a concert—it was a narrative journey punctuated by outfit changes reflecting her candid exploration of gender identity, notably when she appeared in boxers and later revealed a duct-taped chest during Man of the Year, echoing the song’s music video. The set highlighted not just fan favorites like Royals and Green Light but also her evolving sound and emotional openness. A particularly poignant moment came during her six-minute speech ahead of Liability, where she spoke about her resolve to tell the unfiltered truth on Virgin, reinforcing this era as one of uncompromising self-expression.

Her North American run continued with two nights at the Armory in Minneapolis, October 11 and 12, where BroadwayWorld and The Current captured the electric atmosphere and deep connection she fostered, particularly as she left the main stage to perform among fans during David and delivered a stripped-down encore with Ribs. Her ability to transform vast venues into intimate confessions has not gone unnoticed, earning social media buzz for the authenticity and emotional charge of these shows. Critics like Daniel Bromfield at Willamette Week have praised the skeletal pop textures on Virgin as some of her best work, highlighting the album’s long-term significance in her discography.

Lorde’s tour reached the iconic Red Rocks Amphitheatre on October 14, continuing her streak of major sold-out venues before her upcoming performance at Berkeley’s Greek Theatre scheduled for October 19, according to KQED and Shazam. An interview with KQED contextualizes Virgin as Lorde’s most uninhibited work yet, delving into identity, gender, and physical self-acceptance, with Lorde herself stating, “This album is a byproduct of that process of fully coming into my body and feeling the fullness of my power. I’m not hiding from myself.” Social media has amplified these themes, with fans echoing her declarations of self-truth and non-conformity, especially in discussions around songs like Hammer, Shapeshifter, and Current Affairs.

No significant new business ventures or brand endorsements for Lorde have surfaced in the last week, nor any notable controversies. The spotlight remains firmly on her artistic reinvention—her recent public appearances and performances centering on Virgin are widely regarded as landmark moments, likely to define this chapter of her career and broaden the scope of pop discourse around gender and personal authenticity.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 15 Oct 2025 13:50:59 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has dominated music headlines in the past few days with her Ultrasound Tour, which celebrates her bold new album Virgin and signals a transformative moment in her career. After a triumphant sold-out performance at Madison Square Garden on October 1, as reported by The Phoenix, Lorde brought both spectacle and intimacy, effortlessly filling the venue with her signature blend of raw honesty and vulnerability. The show unfolded as more than just a concert—it was a narrative journey punctuated by outfit changes reflecting her candid exploration of gender identity, notably when she appeared in boxers and later revealed a duct-taped chest during Man of the Year, echoing the song’s music video. The set highlighted not just fan favorites like Royals and Green Light but also her evolving sound and emotional openness. A particularly poignant moment came during her six-minute speech ahead of Liability, where she spoke about her resolve to tell the unfiltered truth on Virgin, reinforcing this era as one of uncompromising self-expression.

Her North American run continued with two nights at the Armory in Minneapolis, October 11 and 12, where BroadwayWorld and The Current captured the electric atmosphere and deep connection she fostered, particularly as she left the main stage to perform among fans during David and delivered a stripped-down encore with Ribs. Her ability to transform vast venues into intimate confessions has not gone unnoticed, earning social media buzz for the authenticity and emotional charge of these shows. Critics like Daniel Bromfield at Willamette Week have praised the skeletal pop textures on Virgin as some of her best work, highlighting the album’s long-term significance in her discography.

Lorde’s tour reached the iconic Red Rocks Amphitheatre on October 14, continuing her streak of major sold-out venues before her upcoming performance at Berkeley’s Greek Theatre scheduled for October 19, according to KQED and Shazam. An interview with KQED contextualizes Virgin as Lorde’s most uninhibited work yet, delving into identity, gender, and physical self-acceptance, with Lorde herself stating, “This album is a byproduct of that process of fully coming into my body and feeling the fullness of my power. I’m not hiding from myself.” Social media has amplified these themes, with fans echoing her declarations of self-truth and non-conformity, especially in discussions around songs like Hammer, Shapeshifter, and Current Affairs.

No significant new business ventures or brand endorsements for Lorde have surfaced in the last week, nor any notable controversies. The spotlight remains firmly on her artistic reinvention—her recent public appearances and performances centering on Virgin are widely regarded as landmark moments, likely to define this chapter of her career and broaden the scope of pop discourse around gender and personal authenticity.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has dominated music headlines in the past few days with her Ultrasound Tour, which celebrates her bold new album Virgin and signals a transformative moment in her career. After a triumphant sold-out performance at Madison Square Garden on October 1, as reported by The Phoenix, Lorde brought both spectacle and intimacy, effortlessly filling the venue with her signature blend of raw honesty and vulnerability. The show unfolded as more than just a concert—it was a narrative journey punctuated by outfit changes reflecting her candid exploration of gender identity, notably when she appeared in boxers and later revealed a duct-taped chest during Man of the Year, echoing the song’s music video. The set highlighted not just fan favorites like Royals and Green Light but also her evolving sound and emotional openness. A particularly poignant moment came during her six-minute speech ahead of Liability, where she spoke about her resolve to tell the unfiltered truth on Virgin, reinforcing this era as one of uncompromising self-expression.

Her North American run continued with two nights at the Armory in Minneapolis, October 11 and 12, where BroadwayWorld and The Current captured the electric atmosphere and deep connection she fostered, particularly as she left the main stage to perform among fans during David and delivered a stripped-down encore with Ribs. Her ability to transform vast venues into intimate confessions has not gone unnoticed, earning social media buzz for the authenticity and emotional charge of these shows. Critics like Daniel Bromfield at Willamette Week have praised the skeletal pop textures on Virgin as some of her best work, highlighting the album’s long-term significance in her discography.

Lorde’s tour reached the iconic Red Rocks Amphitheatre on October 14, continuing her streak of major sold-out venues before her upcoming performance at Berkeley’s Greek Theatre scheduled for October 19, according to KQED and Shazam. An interview with KQED contextualizes Virgin as Lorde’s most uninhibited work yet, delving into identity, gender, and physical self-acceptance, with Lorde herself stating, “This album is a byproduct of that process of fully coming into my body and feeling the fullness of my power. I’m not hiding from myself.” Social media has amplified these themes, with fans echoing her declarations of self-truth and non-conformity, especially in discussions around songs like Hammer, Shapeshifter, and Current Affairs.

No significant new business ventures or brand endorsements for Lorde have surfaced in the last week, nor any notable controversies. The spotlight remains firmly on her artistic reinvention—her recent public appearances and performances centering on Virgin are widely regarded as landmark moments, likely to define this chapter of her career and broaden the scope of pop discourse around gender and personal authenticity.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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    <item>
      <title>Lorde's Enigmatic Era: Sold-Out Shows, Activism, and Shocking Selfies</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI1818710060</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde’s past few days have been a whirlwind blending tour stops, personal revelations, and headline controversies. As her Ultrasound Tour continues sweeping North America, she’s confirmed her position as pop’s most enigmatic and boundary-pushing star. The biggest news headline broke October 1st, when Lorde sold out Madison Square Garden, marking one of the largest shows in her career and cementing her new era’s impact, according to The Phoenix. Across recent shows from Boston’s TD Garden to Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena and St. Louis’s Chaifetz Arena, reviewers consistently spotlighted Lorde’s fearless vulnerability: stripping away layers both musically and physically, even removing her pants mid-show and performing in Calvin Klein boxer briefs as a raw statement of rebirth and self-acceptance. Brock Press and Berkeley Beacon praised the way she interacts with the crowd, weaving through fans in LED-lit jackets and encouraging collective release with tracks old and new.

Her live performances aren’t the only drama. On social media, Lorde recently wiped her Instagram and raised concern with fans by posting selfies showing a black eye, prompting a wave of speculation about her well-being. AOL reports this happened on September 30th, with Lorde remaining coy and sharing only cryptic captions. While Reddit and Twitter have been ablaze with theories, no official explanation has emerged, leaving fans hoping it was a minor accident but fearing it hints at unseen struggles.

Business activity also intersects with activism. In October 2025, Lorde joined the “No Music for Genocide” campaign, pulling her music from streaming platforms in Israel, as noted by both Instagram and The Jerusalem Post. This has reignited debates about her stance on Palestinian rights; NewsHub and JPost confirm that following Lorde’s “free Palestine” outburst at a recent show, platforms like Apple Music and Spotify removed her catalog for Israeli users. This marks a biographically significant moment, recalling her 2017 cancellation of a Tel Aviv concert and amplifying her role as an artist willing to take bold political stands even at the cost of fan backlash.

Musically, the Virgin album and its themes of gender fluidity, transformation, and body positivity dominate every headline. The Badger and JamBase describe the record as a synthesis of sonic experimentation and emotional honesty—a cycle Lorde channels through each setlist, often running barefoot on treadmills and transforming each arena into an almost ritualistic community.

On social, Lorde remains elusive, with few direct posts but frequent mention across fan pages, Instagram reels, and music blogs. Her appearance with Charli XCX at Madison Square Garden for a surprise remix of Girl, So Confusing quickly went viral, dispelling years of rumored feuds. Her only recent personal Instagram update was a casually cryptic snapshot captioned “Day off by a highway.” With every tour date, story

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 11 Oct 2025 13:51:22 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde’s past few days have been a whirlwind blending tour stops, personal revelations, and headline controversies. As her Ultrasound Tour continues sweeping North America, she’s confirmed her position as pop’s most enigmatic and boundary-pushing star. The biggest news headline broke October 1st, when Lorde sold out Madison Square Garden, marking one of the largest shows in her career and cementing her new era’s impact, according to The Phoenix. Across recent shows from Boston’s TD Garden to Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena and St. Louis’s Chaifetz Arena, reviewers consistently spotlighted Lorde’s fearless vulnerability: stripping away layers both musically and physically, even removing her pants mid-show and performing in Calvin Klein boxer briefs as a raw statement of rebirth and self-acceptance. Brock Press and Berkeley Beacon praised the way she interacts with the crowd, weaving through fans in LED-lit jackets and encouraging collective release with tracks old and new.

Her live performances aren’t the only drama. On social media, Lorde recently wiped her Instagram and raised concern with fans by posting selfies showing a black eye, prompting a wave of speculation about her well-being. AOL reports this happened on September 30th, with Lorde remaining coy and sharing only cryptic captions. While Reddit and Twitter have been ablaze with theories, no official explanation has emerged, leaving fans hoping it was a minor accident but fearing it hints at unseen struggles.

Business activity also intersects with activism. In October 2025, Lorde joined the “No Music for Genocide” campaign, pulling her music from streaming platforms in Israel, as noted by both Instagram and The Jerusalem Post. This has reignited debates about her stance on Palestinian rights; NewsHub and JPost confirm that following Lorde’s “free Palestine” outburst at a recent show, platforms like Apple Music and Spotify removed her catalog for Israeli users. This marks a biographically significant moment, recalling her 2017 cancellation of a Tel Aviv concert and amplifying her role as an artist willing to take bold political stands even at the cost of fan backlash.

Musically, the Virgin album and its themes of gender fluidity, transformation, and body positivity dominate every headline. The Badger and JamBase describe the record as a synthesis of sonic experimentation and emotional honesty—a cycle Lorde channels through each setlist, often running barefoot on treadmills and transforming each arena into an almost ritualistic community.

On social, Lorde remains elusive, with few direct posts but frequent mention across fan pages, Instagram reels, and music blogs. Her appearance with Charli XCX at Madison Square Garden for a surprise remix of Girl, So Confusing quickly went viral, dispelling years of rumored feuds. Her only recent personal Instagram update was a casually cryptic snapshot captioned “Day off by a highway.” With every tour date, story

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde’s past few days have been a whirlwind blending tour stops, personal revelations, and headline controversies. As her Ultrasound Tour continues sweeping North America, she’s confirmed her position as pop’s most enigmatic and boundary-pushing star. The biggest news headline broke October 1st, when Lorde sold out Madison Square Garden, marking one of the largest shows in her career and cementing her new era’s impact, according to The Phoenix. Across recent shows from Boston’s TD Garden to Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena and St. Louis’s Chaifetz Arena, reviewers consistently spotlighted Lorde’s fearless vulnerability: stripping away layers both musically and physically, even removing her pants mid-show and performing in Calvin Klein boxer briefs as a raw statement of rebirth and self-acceptance. Brock Press and Berkeley Beacon praised the way she interacts with the crowd, weaving through fans in LED-lit jackets and encouraging collective release with tracks old and new.

Her live performances aren’t the only drama. On social media, Lorde recently wiped her Instagram and raised concern with fans by posting selfies showing a black eye, prompting a wave of speculation about her well-being. AOL reports this happened on September 30th, with Lorde remaining coy and sharing only cryptic captions. While Reddit and Twitter have been ablaze with theories, no official explanation has emerged, leaving fans hoping it was a minor accident but fearing it hints at unseen struggles.

Business activity also intersects with activism. In October 2025, Lorde joined the “No Music for Genocide” campaign, pulling her music from streaming platforms in Israel, as noted by both Instagram and The Jerusalem Post. This has reignited debates about her stance on Palestinian rights; NewsHub and JPost confirm that following Lorde’s “free Palestine” outburst at a recent show, platforms like Apple Music and Spotify removed her catalog for Israeli users. This marks a biographically significant moment, recalling her 2017 cancellation of a Tel Aviv concert and amplifying her role as an artist willing to take bold political stands even at the cost of fan backlash.

Musically, the Virgin album and its themes of gender fluidity, transformation, and body positivity dominate every headline. The Badger and JamBase describe the record as a synthesis of sonic experimentation and emotional honesty—a cycle Lorde channels through each setlist, often running barefoot on treadmills and transforming each arena into an almost ritualistic community.

On social, Lorde remains elusive, with few direct posts but frequent mention across fan pages, Instagram reels, and music blogs. Her appearance with Charli XCX at Madison Square Garden for a surprise remix of Girl, So Confusing quickly went viral, dispelling years of rumored feuds. Her only recent personal Instagram update was a casually cryptic snapshot captioned “Day off by a highway.” With every tour date, story

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound World Tour: Art, Activism, and Controversy Collide</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2082011836</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has seized the pop culture spotlight in the past week with a combination of breathtaking artistic highs and unflinching political controversy. On October 3, she mesmerized Pittsburgh at the Petersen Events Center with a show that pivoted from the melancholy to the defiantly hopeful following her acclaimed album Virgin. Fans described the energy as electric, with opening acts Chanel Beads and The Japanese House setting a mood of activism and vulnerability. The Japanese House’s statement, Trans rights are human rights, resonated with the diverse crowd and foreshadowed Lorde’s own willingness to fuse art and advocacy. The Anthem in Washington DC saw Lorde command the stage barefoot, running on a treadmill while the opening synths of Hammer underscored her raw, intense presence. Critics from The Eagle and The Pitt News agreed—this was a communal catharsis, as Lorde assured fans they’d be leaving in a puddle of sweat and tears.

Her Ultrasound World Tour, in support of Virgin, has cemented her as a risk-taker. According to The Post Athens and multiple outlets, her new album is a return to synth-heavy introspection after the acoustic turn of Solar Power. The cover, an X-ray of a pelvis with a visible IUD, and opening lyrics that toy with gender identity, have launched Virgin into conversation as one of the most influential albums of 2025.

Yet, this triumph spilled quickly into controversy. During a recent show, Lorde shouted free Palestine from the stage, and soon after, as reported by NewsHub and The Jerusalem Post, her music vanished from Apple Music and Spotify in Israel. While it remains unconfirmed if Lorde herself orchestrated the removal or if the streaming services acted independently, her history of pro-Palestinian activism—she canceled her 2017 show in Tel Aviv under similar pressure—places this move squarely in the context of the No Music for Genocide campaign. The debate raging on social media is fierce, with some lauding her commitment, others decrying her politics.

Still, Lorde’s upcoming tour dates are selling out at lightning speed, with stops slated for Las Vegas on October 17 and Berkeley’s Greek Theatre on October 19, both promising her signature stripped-down but visually immersive experience. Her setlists traverse her career, including rare deep cuts and reinvented classics. Lorde’s performance art now routinely includes symbolic acts of vulnerability—gradually removing layers of clothing on stage, walking barefoot, or even shedding her spotlight entirely to join fans in the crowd. Each night, the audience becomes part of the show, the sense of mutual reckoning both intimate and overwhelming. Critics have called this tour a masterpiece of communal release and self-reinvention, and for now, Lorde remains at the very center of both adulation and debate.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 08 Oct 2025 13:51:10 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has seized the pop culture spotlight in the past week with a combination of breathtaking artistic highs and unflinching political controversy. On October 3, she mesmerized Pittsburgh at the Petersen Events Center with a show that pivoted from the melancholy to the defiantly hopeful following her acclaimed album Virgin. Fans described the energy as electric, with opening acts Chanel Beads and The Japanese House setting a mood of activism and vulnerability. The Japanese House’s statement, Trans rights are human rights, resonated with the diverse crowd and foreshadowed Lorde’s own willingness to fuse art and advocacy. The Anthem in Washington DC saw Lorde command the stage barefoot, running on a treadmill while the opening synths of Hammer underscored her raw, intense presence. Critics from The Eagle and The Pitt News agreed—this was a communal catharsis, as Lorde assured fans they’d be leaving in a puddle of sweat and tears.

Her Ultrasound World Tour, in support of Virgin, has cemented her as a risk-taker. According to The Post Athens and multiple outlets, her new album is a return to synth-heavy introspection after the acoustic turn of Solar Power. The cover, an X-ray of a pelvis with a visible IUD, and opening lyrics that toy with gender identity, have launched Virgin into conversation as one of the most influential albums of 2025.

Yet, this triumph spilled quickly into controversy. During a recent show, Lorde shouted free Palestine from the stage, and soon after, as reported by NewsHub and The Jerusalem Post, her music vanished from Apple Music and Spotify in Israel. While it remains unconfirmed if Lorde herself orchestrated the removal or if the streaming services acted independently, her history of pro-Palestinian activism—she canceled her 2017 show in Tel Aviv under similar pressure—places this move squarely in the context of the No Music for Genocide campaign. The debate raging on social media is fierce, with some lauding her commitment, others decrying her politics.

Still, Lorde’s upcoming tour dates are selling out at lightning speed, with stops slated for Las Vegas on October 17 and Berkeley’s Greek Theatre on October 19, both promising her signature stripped-down but visually immersive experience. Her setlists traverse her career, including rare deep cuts and reinvented classics. Lorde’s performance art now routinely includes symbolic acts of vulnerability—gradually removing layers of clothing on stage, walking barefoot, or even shedding her spotlight entirely to join fans in the crowd. Each night, the audience becomes part of the show, the sense of mutual reckoning both intimate and overwhelming. Critics have called this tour a masterpiece of communal release and self-reinvention, and for now, Lorde remains at the very center of both adulation and debate.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has seized the pop culture spotlight in the past week with a combination of breathtaking artistic highs and unflinching political controversy. On October 3, she mesmerized Pittsburgh at the Petersen Events Center with a show that pivoted from the melancholy to the defiantly hopeful following her acclaimed album Virgin. Fans described the energy as electric, with opening acts Chanel Beads and The Japanese House setting a mood of activism and vulnerability. The Japanese House’s statement, Trans rights are human rights, resonated with the diverse crowd and foreshadowed Lorde’s own willingness to fuse art and advocacy. The Anthem in Washington DC saw Lorde command the stage barefoot, running on a treadmill while the opening synths of Hammer underscored her raw, intense presence. Critics from The Eagle and The Pitt News agreed—this was a communal catharsis, as Lorde assured fans they’d be leaving in a puddle of sweat and tears.

Her Ultrasound World Tour, in support of Virgin, has cemented her as a risk-taker. According to The Post Athens and multiple outlets, her new album is a return to synth-heavy introspection after the acoustic turn of Solar Power. The cover, an X-ray of a pelvis with a visible IUD, and opening lyrics that toy with gender identity, have launched Virgin into conversation as one of the most influential albums of 2025.

Yet, this triumph spilled quickly into controversy. During a recent show, Lorde shouted free Palestine from the stage, and soon after, as reported by NewsHub and The Jerusalem Post, her music vanished from Apple Music and Spotify in Israel. While it remains unconfirmed if Lorde herself orchestrated the removal or if the streaming services acted independently, her history of pro-Palestinian activism—she canceled her 2017 show in Tel Aviv under similar pressure—places this move squarely in the context of the No Music for Genocide campaign. The debate raging on social media is fierce, with some lauding her commitment, others decrying her politics.

Still, Lorde’s upcoming tour dates are selling out at lightning speed, with stops slated for Las Vegas on October 17 and Berkeley’s Greek Theatre on October 19, both promising her signature stripped-down but visually immersive experience. Her setlists traverse her career, including rare deep cuts and reinvented classics. Lorde’s performance art now routinely includes symbolic acts of vulnerability—gradually removing layers of clothing on stage, walking barefoot, or even shedding her spotlight entirely to join fans in the crowd. Each night, the audience becomes part of the show, the sense of mutual reckoning both intimate and overwhelming. Critics have called this tour a masterpiece of communal release and self-reinvention, and for now, Lorde remains at the very center of both adulation and debate.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Bold Moves: Pulling Music from Israel, Viral TikToks, and Her Ultrasound World Tour</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI8180534351</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been at the center of headlines this week as her latest bold political stance has ignited both music and geopolitical circles. According to Haaretz and Consequence, she officially joined the No Music for Genocide boycott and pulled her entire catalog from streaming and download platforms in Israel, aligning with more than a thousand artists including Björk and Paramore. This escalated after Lorde shouted Free Palestine during a performance of Team at Madison Square Garden, punctuating her support for the Palestinian cause as stage lights flashed the colors of the Palestinian flag. Her activism has drawn fierce criticism from outlets like Showbiz411, which resurfaced accusations of antisemitism and emphasized her minimal current music sales, noting industry data that most of her recent streaming numbers still come from her earliest hits like Royals.

Nonetheless, this controversy has not derailed her career momentum. Lorde is in the thick of her massive Ultrasound World Tour to support her fourth studio album Virgin, with sold-out dates in iconic venues like Madison Square Garden and the upcoming show at Greek Theatre in Berkeley on October 19 alongside Japanese House and Empress Of. Virgin itself has become a focal point on social media and among critics. The album is being hailed in outlets like The Miscellany News as Lorde’s boldest self-discovery to date, especially the tracks Man of the Year and Broken Glass, which delve into gender identity, eating disorder recovery, and heartbreak. Man of the Year in particular exploded into a viral TikTok trend, as reported by AOL, with Gen Z users repurposing the song’s themes to air grievances about past relationships while Lorde herself acknowledged the trend in a wry TikTok response.

Business-wise, while industry insiders like Showbiz411 deride her for reportedly low current North American sales, her live show demand and passionate digital following continue to keep her prominent. Her shifting public persona – from introspective alt-pop prodigy to outspoken activist – appears to polarize but not silence her impact, as every public appearance or post prompts heated discussion from her wide and devoted fanbase. While her withdrawal from Israeli streaming may have long-term consequences for her global reach and reputation in some quarters, it further cements her as an artist unwilling to separate music from deeply held convictions.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 04 Oct 2025 13:51:16 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been at the center of headlines this week as her latest bold political stance has ignited both music and geopolitical circles. According to Haaretz and Consequence, she officially joined the No Music for Genocide boycott and pulled her entire catalog from streaming and download platforms in Israel, aligning with more than a thousand artists including Björk and Paramore. This escalated after Lorde shouted Free Palestine during a performance of Team at Madison Square Garden, punctuating her support for the Palestinian cause as stage lights flashed the colors of the Palestinian flag. Her activism has drawn fierce criticism from outlets like Showbiz411, which resurfaced accusations of antisemitism and emphasized her minimal current music sales, noting industry data that most of her recent streaming numbers still come from her earliest hits like Royals.

Nonetheless, this controversy has not derailed her career momentum. Lorde is in the thick of her massive Ultrasound World Tour to support her fourth studio album Virgin, with sold-out dates in iconic venues like Madison Square Garden and the upcoming show at Greek Theatre in Berkeley on October 19 alongside Japanese House and Empress Of. Virgin itself has become a focal point on social media and among critics. The album is being hailed in outlets like The Miscellany News as Lorde’s boldest self-discovery to date, especially the tracks Man of the Year and Broken Glass, which delve into gender identity, eating disorder recovery, and heartbreak. Man of the Year in particular exploded into a viral TikTok trend, as reported by AOL, with Gen Z users repurposing the song’s themes to air grievances about past relationships while Lorde herself acknowledged the trend in a wry TikTok response.

Business-wise, while industry insiders like Showbiz411 deride her for reportedly low current North American sales, her live show demand and passionate digital following continue to keep her prominent. Her shifting public persona – from introspective alt-pop prodigy to outspoken activist – appears to polarize but not silence her impact, as every public appearance or post prompts heated discussion from her wide and devoted fanbase. While her withdrawal from Israeli streaming may have long-term consequences for her global reach and reputation in some quarters, it further cements her as an artist unwilling to separate music from deeply held convictions.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been at the center of headlines this week as her latest bold political stance has ignited both music and geopolitical circles. According to Haaretz and Consequence, she officially joined the No Music for Genocide boycott and pulled her entire catalog from streaming and download platforms in Israel, aligning with more than a thousand artists including Björk and Paramore. This escalated after Lorde shouted Free Palestine during a performance of Team at Madison Square Garden, punctuating her support for the Palestinian cause as stage lights flashed the colors of the Palestinian flag. Her activism has drawn fierce criticism from outlets like Showbiz411, which resurfaced accusations of antisemitism and emphasized her minimal current music sales, noting industry data that most of her recent streaming numbers still come from her earliest hits like Royals.

Nonetheless, this controversy has not derailed her career momentum. Lorde is in the thick of her massive Ultrasound World Tour to support her fourth studio album Virgin, with sold-out dates in iconic venues like Madison Square Garden and the upcoming show at Greek Theatre in Berkeley on October 19 alongside Japanese House and Empress Of. Virgin itself has become a focal point on social media and among critics. The album is being hailed in outlets like The Miscellany News as Lorde’s boldest self-discovery to date, especially the tracks Man of the Year and Broken Glass, which delve into gender identity, eating disorder recovery, and heartbreak. Man of the Year in particular exploded into a viral TikTok trend, as reported by AOL, with Gen Z users repurposing the song’s themes to air grievances about past relationships while Lorde herself acknowledged the trend in a wry TikTok response.

Business-wise, while industry insiders like Showbiz411 deride her for reportedly low current North American sales, her live show demand and passionate digital following continue to keep her prominent. Her shifting public persona – from introspective alt-pop prodigy to outspoken activist – appears to polarize but not silence her impact, as every public appearance or post prompts heated discussion from her wide and devoted fanbase. While her withdrawal from Israeli streaming may have long-term consequences for her global reach and reputation in some quarters, it further cements her as an artist unwilling to separate music from deeply held convictions.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Tour: Emotional Authenticity, Gender Fluidity, and a Triumphant Comeback</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6967753482</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has made headlines over the past few days with her emotional candor, artistic reinvention, and return to arena stages for her highly anticipated Ultrasound World Tour. Just last night, she played a sold-out show at the newly renamed Xfinity Mobile Arena in Philadelphia, marking a significant comeback after several years away from headlining in major venues. The Philly concert—practically an instant sellout when announced—featured opening acts Blood Orange and The Japanese House. Lorde’s setlist spanned from early hits like Royals and Team to new material from Virgin, her latest album, including the genre-blending opener Hammer and fan favorite What Was That. Demand for tickets remains intense, with only a few seats trickling out on official and resale platforms earlier this week according to 94.5 PST.

Social media erupted with footage and audience reactions from the Philly show, where Lorde’s emotionally raw performances and stripped-back staging dominated. Critics and fans alike are calling her Ultrasound tour “a revelation,” repeatedly citing her ability to blur the lines between persona and person, sharing personal catharsis with thousands of fans each night, as recently described by Melodic Mag and WERS.

Fresh interviews have added deeper layers to Lorde’s public narrative. In a widely discussed episode of Take 5 with Zan Rowe airing this week on ABC, Lorde opened up about heartbreak and healing, the end of a defining relationship, and her ongoing process of self-discovery. She reflected on the confidence that propelled her as a teenager, the supportive role of her mother, and the unique pressures of growing up in the public eye. She spoke honestly about friendship in the spotlight, highlighting how Charli XCX’s song Girl, So Confusing—rumored to be about their complex relationship—became a powerful tool for connection and honesty rather than competition.

Major headlines from Dazed and Rolling Stone center on Lorde’s exploration of gender fluidity and femininity in the making of Virgin. The artist has stated she still uses she/her pronouns but spoke candidly about sometimes not being able to wear women’s clothes, describing days of feeling out-of-body and the need for personal authenticity in fashion and makeup. She traced the inspiration for her new single Man of the Year to moments of gender questioning and was frank about how these feelings have surprised and challenged her, but that she’s willing to let her evolving identity take its time. According to Dazed, Lorde remains resistant to strict labels and insists her journey is still unfolding.

Speculation about new music videos, secret collaborations, and unreleased remixes has fueled ongoing buzz but nothing has been officially confirmed. For now, the most biographically significant developments are her celebrated return to touring, her unguarded interviews, and her public grappling with identity—each shaping the next chapter for this

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 01 Oct 2025 13:50:56 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has made headlines over the past few days with her emotional candor, artistic reinvention, and return to arena stages for her highly anticipated Ultrasound World Tour. Just last night, she played a sold-out show at the newly renamed Xfinity Mobile Arena in Philadelphia, marking a significant comeback after several years away from headlining in major venues. The Philly concert—practically an instant sellout when announced—featured opening acts Blood Orange and The Japanese House. Lorde’s setlist spanned from early hits like Royals and Team to new material from Virgin, her latest album, including the genre-blending opener Hammer and fan favorite What Was That. Demand for tickets remains intense, with only a few seats trickling out on official and resale platforms earlier this week according to 94.5 PST.

Social media erupted with footage and audience reactions from the Philly show, where Lorde’s emotionally raw performances and stripped-back staging dominated. Critics and fans alike are calling her Ultrasound tour “a revelation,” repeatedly citing her ability to blur the lines between persona and person, sharing personal catharsis with thousands of fans each night, as recently described by Melodic Mag and WERS.

Fresh interviews have added deeper layers to Lorde’s public narrative. In a widely discussed episode of Take 5 with Zan Rowe airing this week on ABC, Lorde opened up about heartbreak and healing, the end of a defining relationship, and her ongoing process of self-discovery. She reflected on the confidence that propelled her as a teenager, the supportive role of her mother, and the unique pressures of growing up in the public eye. She spoke honestly about friendship in the spotlight, highlighting how Charli XCX’s song Girl, So Confusing—rumored to be about their complex relationship—became a powerful tool for connection and honesty rather than competition.

Major headlines from Dazed and Rolling Stone center on Lorde’s exploration of gender fluidity and femininity in the making of Virgin. The artist has stated she still uses she/her pronouns but spoke candidly about sometimes not being able to wear women’s clothes, describing days of feeling out-of-body and the need for personal authenticity in fashion and makeup. She traced the inspiration for her new single Man of the Year to moments of gender questioning and was frank about how these feelings have surprised and challenged her, but that she’s willing to let her evolving identity take its time. According to Dazed, Lorde remains resistant to strict labels and insists her journey is still unfolding.

Speculation about new music videos, secret collaborations, and unreleased remixes has fueled ongoing buzz but nothing has been officially confirmed. For now, the most biographically significant developments are her celebrated return to touring, her unguarded interviews, and her public grappling with identity—each shaping the next chapter for this

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has made headlines over the past few days with her emotional candor, artistic reinvention, and return to arena stages for her highly anticipated Ultrasound World Tour. Just last night, she played a sold-out show at the newly renamed Xfinity Mobile Arena in Philadelphia, marking a significant comeback after several years away from headlining in major venues. The Philly concert—practically an instant sellout when announced—featured opening acts Blood Orange and The Japanese House. Lorde’s setlist spanned from early hits like Royals and Team to new material from Virgin, her latest album, including the genre-blending opener Hammer and fan favorite What Was That. Demand for tickets remains intense, with only a few seats trickling out on official and resale platforms earlier this week according to 94.5 PST.

Social media erupted with footage and audience reactions from the Philly show, where Lorde’s emotionally raw performances and stripped-back staging dominated. Critics and fans alike are calling her Ultrasound tour “a revelation,” repeatedly citing her ability to blur the lines between persona and person, sharing personal catharsis with thousands of fans each night, as recently described by Melodic Mag and WERS.

Fresh interviews have added deeper layers to Lorde’s public narrative. In a widely discussed episode of Take 5 with Zan Rowe airing this week on ABC, Lorde opened up about heartbreak and healing, the end of a defining relationship, and her ongoing process of self-discovery. She reflected on the confidence that propelled her as a teenager, the supportive role of her mother, and the unique pressures of growing up in the public eye. She spoke honestly about friendship in the spotlight, highlighting how Charli XCX’s song Girl, So Confusing—rumored to be about their complex relationship—became a powerful tool for connection and honesty rather than competition.

Major headlines from Dazed and Rolling Stone center on Lorde’s exploration of gender fluidity and femininity in the making of Virgin. The artist has stated she still uses she/her pronouns but spoke candidly about sometimes not being able to wear women’s clothes, describing days of feeling out-of-body and the need for personal authenticity in fashion and makeup. She traced the inspiration for her new single Man of the Year to moments of gender questioning and was frank about how these feelings have surprised and challenged her, but that she’s willing to let her evolving identity take its time. According to Dazed, Lorde remains resistant to strict labels and insists her journey is still unfolding.

Speculation about new music videos, secret collaborations, and unreleased remixes has fueled ongoing buzz but nothing has been officially confirmed. For now, the most biographically significant developments are her celebrated return to touring, her unguarded interviews, and her public grappling with identity—each shaping the next chapter for this

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Tour Electrifies: Intimate Confessions, Theatrical Magic, and a New Era</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6485904860</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde is everywhere these past few days and the headlines have not stopped. On September 26 at Boston’s TD Garden, Lorde electrified fans with the kickoff of her highly anticipated Ultrasound World Tour, a major business and artistic move that spotlights songs from her latest album Virgin. As captured by DropVibe, her setlist split between her new hits like What Was That, Shapeshifter, and Man of the Year, plus fan-favorites like Royals and Ribs. The visual direction leaned moody and cinematic, with dramatic lighting and those now-signature x-ray inspired visuals. Blood Orange and The Japanese House joined her for special guest sets and social chatter around the show dominated music Twitter and TikTok on both sides of the Atlantic.

A similar level of devotion greeted Lorde earlier in the week at Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena, where nearly twenty thousand packed in for the September 24 date. Live reviews have focused on her charismatic stage presence and her ability to blend vulnerability, poetry, and raw performance—making each show feel like an intimate confession. Fans online debated the setlist, some wishing for older cuts like Tennis Court and Sober, but overwhelmingly declaring the experience unforgettable. Lorde-mania trended for hours post-show.

Variety described Lorde’s Chicago performance on September 25 as both “energetic” and “vulnerable.” She repeatedly blurred the line between persona and person, conducting wardrobe changes on stage—including jeans dropped and silver tape applied to her chest for Man of the Year—echoing themes of gender and identity central to her new material. During David, she left the stage, walked through the crowd, and sang with touchingly direct access. The press crowned her the “master of decreation,” constantly remaking herself in front of our eyes.

ThePatriotTalon placed her September 17 tour opener in Austin as a “new era,” noting it’s Lorde’s most expansive tour yet with 53 arena shows across 16 countries through February 2026. She’s back after a lull post-Solar Power and her fans are riding the wave. Critically, the stage design is praised for its minimalistic grandeur—lifting her up and down with each entrance and exit, adding a bit of theatrical magic.

On social, Lorde made waves commenting on Primavera Sound’s 2026 lineup via Instagram: “This line-up rules.” Fans immediately speculated she could be added, as rumors about her appearing at the Barcelona festival persist. Reddit threads dissected every word, and Twitter blew up with memes lamenting her absence from the official bill.

No major business deals or surprise business ventures surfaced apart from touring. But for Lorde, the Ultrasound Tour is itself a masterful business play—shoring up music sales, solidifying her visual brand, and keeping fans breathlessly engaged through live experiences. The buzz is only set to grow as she heads toward European live dates.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvO

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 27 Sep 2025 13:51:33 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde is everywhere these past few days and the headlines have not stopped. On September 26 at Boston’s TD Garden, Lorde electrified fans with the kickoff of her highly anticipated Ultrasound World Tour, a major business and artistic move that spotlights songs from her latest album Virgin. As captured by DropVibe, her setlist split between her new hits like What Was That, Shapeshifter, and Man of the Year, plus fan-favorites like Royals and Ribs. The visual direction leaned moody and cinematic, with dramatic lighting and those now-signature x-ray inspired visuals. Blood Orange and The Japanese House joined her for special guest sets and social chatter around the show dominated music Twitter and TikTok on both sides of the Atlantic.

A similar level of devotion greeted Lorde earlier in the week at Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena, where nearly twenty thousand packed in for the September 24 date. Live reviews have focused on her charismatic stage presence and her ability to blend vulnerability, poetry, and raw performance—making each show feel like an intimate confession. Fans online debated the setlist, some wishing for older cuts like Tennis Court and Sober, but overwhelmingly declaring the experience unforgettable. Lorde-mania trended for hours post-show.

Variety described Lorde’s Chicago performance on September 25 as both “energetic” and “vulnerable.” She repeatedly blurred the line between persona and person, conducting wardrobe changes on stage—including jeans dropped and silver tape applied to her chest for Man of the Year—echoing themes of gender and identity central to her new material. During David, she left the stage, walked through the crowd, and sang with touchingly direct access. The press crowned her the “master of decreation,” constantly remaking herself in front of our eyes.

ThePatriotTalon placed her September 17 tour opener in Austin as a “new era,” noting it’s Lorde’s most expansive tour yet with 53 arena shows across 16 countries through February 2026. She’s back after a lull post-Solar Power and her fans are riding the wave. Critically, the stage design is praised for its minimalistic grandeur—lifting her up and down with each entrance and exit, adding a bit of theatrical magic.

On social, Lorde made waves commenting on Primavera Sound’s 2026 lineup via Instagram: “This line-up rules.” Fans immediately speculated she could be added, as rumors about her appearing at the Barcelona festival persist. Reddit threads dissected every word, and Twitter blew up with memes lamenting her absence from the official bill.

No major business deals or surprise business ventures surfaced apart from touring. But for Lorde, the Ultrasound Tour is itself a masterful business play—shoring up music sales, solidifying her visual brand, and keeping fans breathlessly engaged through live experiences. The buzz is only set to grow as she heads toward European live dates.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvO

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde is everywhere these past few days and the headlines have not stopped. On September 26 at Boston’s TD Garden, Lorde electrified fans with the kickoff of her highly anticipated Ultrasound World Tour, a major business and artistic move that spotlights songs from her latest album Virgin. As captured by DropVibe, her setlist split between her new hits like What Was That, Shapeshifter, and Man of the Year, plus fan-favorites like Royals and Ribs. The visual direction leaned moody and cinematic, with dramatic lighting and those now-signature x-ray inspired visuals. Blood Orange and The Japanese House joined her for special guest sets and social chatter around the show dominated music Twitter and TikTok on both sides of the Atlantic.

A similar level of devotion greeted Lorde earlier in the week at Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena, where nearly twenty thousand packed in for the September 24 date. Live reviews have focused on her charismatic stage presence and her ability to blend vulnerability, poetry, and raw performance—making each show feel like an intimate confession. Fans online debated the setlist, some wishing for older cuts like Tennis Court and Sober, but overwhelmingly declaring the experience unforgettable. Lorde-mania trended for hours post-show.

Variety described Lorde’s Chicago performance on September 25 as both “energetic” and “vulnerable.” She repeatedly blurred the line between persona and person, conducting wardrobe changes on stage—including jeans dropped and silver tape applied to her chest for Man of the Year—echoing themes of gender and identity central to her new material. During David, she left the stage, walked through the crowd, and sang with touchingly direct access. The press crowned her the “master of decreation,” constantly remaking herself in front of our eyes.

ThePatriotTalon placed her September 17 tour opener in Austin as a “new era,” noting it’s Lorde’s most expansive tour yet with 53 arena shows across 16 countries through February 2026. She’s back after a lull post-Solar Power and her fans are riding the wave. Critically, the stage design is praised for its minimalistic grandeur—lifting her up and down with each entrance and exit, adding a bit of theatrical magic.

On social, Lorde made waves commenting on Primavera Sound’s 2026 lineup via Instagram: “This line-up rules.” Fans immediately speculated she could be added, as rumors about her appearing at the Barcelona festival persist. Reddit threads dissected every word, and Twitter blew up with memes lamenting her absence from the official bill.

No major business deals or surprise business ventures surfaced apart from touring. But for Lorde, the Ultrasound Tour is itself a masterful business play—shoring up music sales, solidifying her visual brand, and keeping fans breathlessly engaged through live experiences. The buzz is only set to grow as she heads toward European live dates.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvO

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Triumphant Return: Ultrasound Tour Ignites Fans &amp; Critics Alike | Virgin Album Soars</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI5155889488</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde is making headlines again this week with what critics are calling a “show-stopping” return to touring as she officially launched her 2025 Ultrasound World Tour in North America just days ago. The launch took place at the Moody Center in Austin, Texas on September 17, where a sold-out crowd of 15,000 witnessed Lorde deliver a raw, confessional performance, opening with songs from her just-released fourth album, Virgin, which critics and fans have described as the centerpiece of her most ambitious tour yet. The Ultrasound tour moves through major arenas including Chicago’s United Center on September 19, Los Angeles’ Kia Forum, New York’s Madison Square Garden, and will close with a massive December 9 show in Stockholm, marking her biggest world tour to date according to Variety and RNZ.

Virgin, her new album out since June, has quickly established itself as a defining work, with tracks like Hammer, What Was That, and the intensely intimate Current Affairs getting rave reviews for their emotional immediacy. The tour’s setlist is a power-move, artfully balancing new material with hits like Royals, Liability, Ribs, and the euphoric Supercut, which, by the way, saw a special extended remix trend as audio for highlight reels and compilation videos on Instagram in January, as reported by Later.com, highlighting Lorde’s enduring influence across social media culture. Her show in Austin even featured the first live performance of No Better since 2014, sending longtime fans into a frenzy, as covered by Secret Chicago and Reality Tea.

Lorde has also generated buzz with a series of signature surprise appearances over the last few months, including debuting unreleased tracks at a club night in Sydney and even organizing a midnight bathroom performance at a YMCA in Auckland, making headlines in Rolling Stone and the Aotearoa press. Her personal newsletter teased fans with confessional updates about stripping away any excess—she wrote Ultrasound could be her “masterpiece” and invited fans to join her in “finding what’s under the skin.” Instagram has also lit up with fans posting rapturous reviews and behind-the-scenes moments, with the Austin show’s energy and raw emotion dominating Reels, and her stage presence being called “otherworldly.”

No recent business ventures or brand partnerships have been publicly announced in the last few days, nor has there been any major controversy or sustained speculation around her personal life. At 28, Lorde’s remarkable comeback is commanding both mainstream media attention and niche fan devotion, with the Ultrasound tour and album already being framed as long-term defining moments in her career.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 24 Sep 2025 13:51:18 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde is making headlines again this week with what critics are calling a “show-stopping” return to touring as she officially launched her 2025 Ultrasound World Tour in North America just days ago. The launch took place at the Moody Center in Austin, Texas on September 17, where a sold-out crowd of 15,000 witnessed Lorde deliver a raw, confessional performance, opening with songs from her just-released fourth album, Virgin, which critics and fans have described as the centerpiece of her most ambitious tour yet. The Ultrasound tour moves through major arenas including Chicago’s United Center on September 19, Los Angeles’ Kia Forum, New York’s Madison Square Garden, and will close with a massive December 9 show in Stockholm, marking her biggest world tour to date according to Variety and RNZ.

Virgin, her new album out since June, has quickly established itself as a defining work, with tracks like Hammer, What Was That, and the intensely intimate Current Affairs getting rave reviews for their emotional immediacy. The tour’s setlist is a power-move, artfully balancing new material with hits like Royals, Liability, Ribs, and the euphoric Supercut, which, by the way, saw a special extended remix trend as audio for highlight reels and compilation videos on Instagram in January, as reported by Later.com, highlighting Lorde’s enduring influence across social media culture. Her show in Austin even featured the first live performance of No Better since 2014, sending longtime fans into a frenzy, as covered by Secret Chicago and Reality Tea.

Lorde has also generated buzz with a series of signature surprise appearances over the last few months, including debuting unreleased tracks at a club night in Sydney and even organizing a midnight bathroom performance at a YMCA in Auckland, making headlines in Rolling Stone and the Aotearoa press. Her personal newsletter teased fans with confessional updates about stripping away any excess—she wrote Ultrasound could be her “masterpiece” and invited fans to join her in “finding what’s under the skin.” Instagram has also lit up with fans posting rapturous reviews and behind-the-scenes moments, with the Austin show’s energy and raw emotion dominating Reels, and her stage presence being called “otherworldly.”

No recent business ventures or brand partnerships have been publicly announced in the last few days, nor has there been any major controversy or sustained speculation around her personal life. At 28, Lorde’s remarkable comeback is commanding both mainstream media attention and niche fan devotion, with the Ultrasound tour and album already being framed as long-term defining moments in her career.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde is making headlines again this week with what critics are calling a “show-stopping” return to touring as she officially launched her 2025 Ultrasound World Tour in North America just days ago. The launch took place at the Moody Center in Austin, Texas on September 17, where a sold-out crowd of 15,000 witnessed Lorde deliver a raw, confessional performance, opening with songs from her just-released fourth album, Virgin, which critics and fans have described as the centerpiece of her most ambitious tour yet. The Ultrasound tour moves through major arenas including Chicago’s United Center on September 19, Los Angeles’ Kia Forum, New York’s Madison Square Garden, and will close with a massive December 9 show in Stockholm, marking her biggest world tour to date according to Variety and RNZ.

Virgin, her new album out since June, has quickly established itself as a defining work, with tracks like Hammer, What Was That, and the intensely intimate Current Affairs getting rave reviews for their emotional immediacy. The tour’s setlist is a power-move, artfully balancing new material with hits like Royals, Liability, Ribs, and the euphoric Supercut, which, by the way, saw a special extended remix trend as audio for highlight reels and compilation videos on Instagram in January, as reported by Later.com, highlighting Lorde’s enduring influence across social media culture. Her show in Austin even featured the first live performance of No Better since 2014, sending longtime fans into a frenzy, as covered by Secret Chicago and Reality Tea.

Lorde has also generated buzz with a series of signature surprise appearances over the last few months, including debuting unreleased tracks at a club night in Sydney and even organizing a midnight bathroom performance at a YMCA in Auckland, making headlines in Rolling Stone and the Aotearoa press. Her personal newsletter teased fans with confessional updates about stripping away any excess—she wrote Ultrasound could be her “masterpiece” and invited fans to join her in “finding what’s under the skin.” Instagram has also lit up with fans posting rapturous reviews and behind-the-scenes moments, with the Austin show’s energy and raw emotion dominating Reels, and her stage presence being called “otherworldly.”

No recent business ventures or brand partnerships have been publicly announced in the last few days, nor has there been any major controversy or sustained speculation around her personal life. At 28, Lorde’s remarkable comeback is commanding both mainstream media attention and niche fan devotion, with the Ultrasound tour and album already being framed as long-term defining moments in her career.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Triumphant Return: Ultrasound World Tour Kicks Off in Austin</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI9513850897</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

This week marked a huge moment in my career as I officially relaunched into arenas for the first time in seven years. According to Consequence of Sound, I kicked off my 2025 Ultrasound World Tour on September 17 at the Moody Center in Austin, Texas, playing to a packed house and signaling my return to the big stage after the more intimate Solar Power Tour wrapped in 2023. The tour is in support of my latest album, Virgin, released this past June, which has been described in interviews as my most transparent and vulnerable work yet, with nowhere to hide and a sense of creative exposure I have never experienced before. The title of the tour, Ultrasound, and the show's visual themes, reflect this, featuring X-ray and transparency motifs and attempting to create deeply collaborative moments with my fans at each show.    

The Daily Guardian and Billboard reported that the first night in Austin made waves on social media as fans posted the full set list, which featured new tracks like Broken Glass, Favourite Daughter, and What Was That, plus classics spanning all four albums. There were also deep cuts like performing No Better for the first time since 2014—much to the delight of longtime listeners. The show divided into multiple acts, included an extended intro for hits like Supercut and Liability, and finished strong with Green Light, David, and Ribs, ensuring both new and old fans were engaged throughout the night. In my own email to fans, shared widely across Twitter and Instagram, I described my initial nerves about returning to massive rooms after my past Melodrama days, but affirmed that these songs demanded big spaces and grateful energy.    

Throughout North America, I am joined on different nights by Virgin album collaborators Jim E-Stack and Blood Orange, with other special guests including The Japanese House and Nilüfer Yanya, generating buzz among live music circles for varied set lists and opening acts. Tonight, according to Secret Chicago, I am set to perform at the United Center in Chicago with support from The Japanese House and Chanel Beads. There is also increased activity around venue policies, transportation plans, and fan meetups reported by United Center and local outlets, highlighting just how anticipated and complex these arena-scale dates have become.    

No major interviews or TV appearances have surfaced this week, but the dominant story on platforms from Instagram Stories to TikTok remains the tour’s launch, the setlist surprises, and the ambitious scope of both the staging and musical direction. As reported, my own words sum up this moment: Ultrasound could be our masterpiece, and each show is another chance to craft something unforgettable together. No rumors or controversies have gained traction—just excitement, rave reviews, and a visible sense of both personal and professional evolution as Virgin and the Ultrasound era unfold.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 20 Sep 2025 13:52:24 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

This week marked a huge moment in my career as I officially relaunched into arenas for the first time in seven years. According to Consequence of Sound, I kicked off my 2025 Ultrasound World Tour on September 17 at the Moody Center in Austin, Texas, playing to a packed house and signaling my return to the big stage after the more intimate Solar Power Tour wrapped in 2023. The tour is in support of my latest album, Virgin, released this past June, which has been described in interviews as my most transparent and vulnerable work yet, with nowhere to hide and a sense of creative exposure I have never experienced before. The title of the tour, Ultrasound, and the show's visual themes, reflect this, featuring X-ray and transparency motifs and attempting to create deeply collaborative moments with my fans at each show.    

The Daily Guardian and Billboard reported that the first night in Austin made waves on social media as fans posted the full set list, which featured new tracks like Broken Glass, Favourite Daughter, and What Was That, plus classics spanning all four albums. There were also deep cuts like performing No Better for the first time since 2014—much to the delight of longtime listeners. The show divided into multiple acts, included an extended intro for hits like Supercut and Liability, and finished strong with Green Light, David, and Ribs, ensuring both new and old fans were engaged throughout the night. In my own email to fans, shared widely across Twitter and Instagram, I described my initial nerves about returning to massive rooms after my past Melodrama days, but affirmed that these songs demanded big spaces and grateful energy.    

Throughout North America, I am joined on different nights by Virgin album collaborators Jim E-Stack and Blood Orange, with other special guests including The Japanese House and Nilüfer Yanya, generating buzz among live music circles for varied set lists and opening acts. Tonight, according to Secret Chicago, I am set to perform at the United Center in Chicago with support from The Japanese House and Chanel Beads. There is also increased activity around venue policies, transportation plans, and fan meetups reported by United Center and local outlets, highlighting just how anticipated and complex these arena-scale dates have become.    

No major interviews or TV appearances have surfaced this week, but the dominant story on platforms from Instagram Stories to TikTok remains the tour’s launch, the setlist surprises, and the ambitious scope of both the staging and musical direction. As reported, my own words sum up this moment: Ultrasound could be our masterpiece, and each show is another chance to craft something unforgettable together. No rumors or controversies have gained traction—just excitement, rave reviews, and a visible sense of both personal and professional evolution as Virgin and the Ultrasound era unfold.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

This week marked a huge moment in my career as I officially relaunched into arenas for the first time in seven years. According to Consequence of Sound, I kicked off my 2025 Ultrasound World Tour on September 17 at the Moody Center in Austin, Texas, playing to a packed house and signaling my return to the big stage after the more intimate Solar Power Tour wrapped in 2023. The tour is in support of my latest album, Virgin, released this past June, which has been described in interviews as my most transparent and vulnerable work yet, with nowhere to hide and a sense of creative exposure I have never experienced before. The title of the tour, Ultrasound, and the show's visual themes, reflect this, featuring X-ray and transparency motifs and attempting to create deeply collaborative moments with my fans at each show.    

The Daily Guardian and Billboard reported that the first night in Austin made waves on social media as fans posted the full set list, which featured new tracks like Broken Glass, Favourite Daughter, and What Was That, plus classics spanning all four albums. There were also deep cuts like performing No Better for the first time since 2014—much to the delight of longtime listeners. The show divided into multiple acts, included an extended intro for hits like Supercut and Liability, and finished strong with Green Light, David, and Ribs, ensuring both new and old fans were engaged throughout the night. In my own email to fans, shared widely across Twitter and Instagram, I described my initial nerves about returning to massive rooms after my past Melodrama days, but affirmed that these songs demanded big spaces and grateful energy.    

Throughout North America, I am joined on different nights by Virgin album collaborators Jim E-Stack and Blood Orange, with other special guests including The Japanese House and Nilüfer Yanya, generating buzz among live music circles for varied set lists and opening acts. Tonight, according to Secret Chicago, I am set to perform at the United Center in Chicago with support from The Japanese House and Chanel Beads. There is also increased activity around venue policies, transportation plans, and fan meetups reported by United Center and local outlets, highlighting just how anticipated and complex these arena-scale dates have become.    

No major interviews or TV appearances have surfaced this week, but the dominant story on platforms from Instagram Stories to TikTok remains the tour’s launch, the setlist surprises, and the ambitious scope of both the staging and musical direction. As reported, my own words sum up this moment: Ultrasound could be our masterpiece, and each show is another chance to craft something unforgettable together. No rumors or controversies have gained traction—just excitement, rave reviews, and a visible sense of both personal and professional evolution as Virgin and the Ultrasound era unfold.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Tour: Pop Redefined in Her Most Ambitious Era Yet</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2549179681</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Fresh off her critically acclaimed fourth album Virgin, Lorde steps back into the limelight this week with the launch of her Ultrasound World Tour, her first large-scale headlining trek since 2023. The buzz began months ago when she teased new music in a fifteen-second TikTok clip from Washington Square Park back in April, singing Since I was 17, I gave you everything. That snippet, coupled with subtle studio reveals on Instagram and confirmed work with top producer Jim-E Stack and rumored collaborations with Blood Orange, ignited intense anticipation among fans, with outlets like AOL and Billboard highlighting the social surge and music press fever. When Virgin officially dropped in early summer via Universal Music, reviewers called it one of her most vulnerable and purpose-driven projects yet, with The Brock Press noting its bare production and thematic focus on gender identity, womanhood, and personal reinvention.

The album’s lead single What Was That, which first surfaced through viral social media leaks, will be formally released later this week, but fans already got a taste during a surprise New York promotional performance that was famously shut down by police, a moment that trended on Twitter and TikTok. That impromptu event only added to the mystique, and Lorde’s public statement afterwards—delivered with Blood Orange at her side—hinted at her continued turn towards radical transparency, both sonically and personally. Virgin takes bold steps away from the earthy tones of Solar Power, embracing pop-forward electronics and confessional songwriting that’s being dissected across Spotify playlists and fan forums.

Business activity has surged as well; the Ultrasound tour, announced in May and expanded after that due to record demand, has officially kicked off in Austin at the Moody Center and will sweep through arenas in Chicago, Nashville, Toronto, Boston, New York, and more, before stretching into Europe later in the year. According to Business Insider, nearly every show has sold out. Lorde herself describes the tour as a collaboration between artist and audience, declaring in a fan letter that Ultrasound could be our masterpiece. Social media mentions have spiked since Monday, with Instagram and TikTok ablaze from pop-up ticket drops, behind-the-scenes rehearsal footage, and snaps of her eclectic opening lineup including The Japanese House, Nilüfer Yanya, Chanel Beads, Empress Of, and Blood Orange, who just released his own album Essex Honey.

On the industry side, Lorde’s team is banking on expanded festival appearances—she’s locked in for Lollapalooza Argentina, Chile, Brazil, and Festival Estéreo Picnic in Colombia early next year—a move seen as signaling her most commercially ambitious era yet. Headlines this week call her comeback a summer-defining moment, with Consequence of Sound saying that the Ultrasound tour and Virgin mark Lorde’s most transparent, intimate performance experience to d

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 17 Sep 2025 13:51:12 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Fresh off her critically acclaimed fourth album Virgin, Lorde steps back into the limelight this week with the launch of her Ultrasound World Tour, her first large-scale headlining trek since 2023. The buzz began months ago when she teased new music in a fifteen-second TikTok clip from Washington Square Park back in April, singing Since I was 17, I gave you everything. That snippet, coupled with subtle studio reveals on Instagram and confirmed work with top producer Jim-E Stack and rumored collaborations with Blood Orange, ignited intense anticipation among fans, with outlets like AOL and Billboard highlighting the social surge and music press fever. When Virgin officially dropped in early summer via Universal Music, reviewers called it one of her most vulnerable and purpose-driven projects yet, with The Brock Press noting its bare production and thematic focus on gender identity, womanhood, and personal reinvention.

The album’s lead single What Was That, which first surfaced through viral social media leaks, will be formally released later this week, but fans already got a taste during a surprise New York promotional performance that was famously shut down by police, a moment that trended on Twitter and TikTok. That impromptu event only added to the mystique, and Lorde’s public statement afterwards—delivered with Blood Orange at her side—hinted at her continued turn towards radical transparency, both sonically and personally. Virgin takes bold steps away from the earthy tones of Solar Power, embracing pop-forward electronics and confessional songwriting that’s being dissected across Spotify playlists and fan forums.

Business activity has surged as well; the Ultrasound tour, announced in May and expanded after that due to record demand, has officially kicked off in Austin at the Moody Center and will sweep through arenas in Chicago, Nashville, Toronto, Boston, New York, and more, before stretching into Europe later in the year. According to Business Insider, nearly every show has sold out. Lorde herself describes the tour as a collaboration between artist and audience, declaring in a fan letter that Ultrasound could be our masterpiece. Social media mentions have spiked since Monday, with Instagram and TikTok ablaze from pop-up ticket drops, behind-the-scenes rehearsal footage, and snaps of her eclectic opening lineup including The Japanese House, Nilüfer Yanya, Chanel Beads, Empress Of, and Blood Orange, who just released his own album Essex Honey.

On the industry side, Lorde’s team is banking on expanded festival appearances—she’s locked in for Lollapalooza Argentina, Chile, Brazil, and Festival Estéreo Picnic in Colombia early next year—a move seen as signaling her most commercially ambitious era yet. Headlines this week call her comeback a summer-defining moment, with Consequence of Sound saying that the Ultrasound tour and Virgin mark Lorde’s most transparent, intimate performance experience to d

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Fresh off her critically acclaimed fourth album Virgin, Lorde steps back into the limelight this week with the launch of her Ultrasound World Tour, her first large-scale headlining trek since 2023. The buzz began months ago when she teased new music in a fifteen-second TikTok clip from Washington Square Park back in April, singing Since I was 17, I gave you everything. That snippet, coupled with subtle studio reveals on Instagram and confirmed work with top producer Jim-E Stack and rumored collaborations with Blood Orange, ignited intense anticipation among fans, with outlets like AOL and Billboard highlighting the social surge and music press fever. When Virgin officially dropped in early summer via Universal Music, reviewers called it one of her most vulnerable and purpose-driven projects yet, with The Brock Press noting its bare production and thematic focus on gender identity, womanhood, and personal reinvention.

The album’s lead single What Was That, which first surfaced through viral social media leaks, will be formally released later this week, but fans already got a taste during a surprise New York promotional performance that was famously shut down by police, a moment that trended on Twitter and TikTok. That impromptu event only added to the mystique, and Lorde’s public statement afterwards—delivered with Blood Orange at her side—hinted at her continued turn towards radical transparency, both sonically and personally. Virgin takes bold steps away from the earthy tones of Solar Power, embracing pop-forward electronics and confessional songwriting that’s being dissected across Spotify playlists and fan forums.

Business activity has surged as well; the Ultrasound tour, announced in May and expanded after that due to record demand, has officially kicked off in Austin at the Moody Center and will sweep through arenas in Chicago, Nashville, Toronto, Boston, New York, and more, before stretching into Europe later in the year. According to Business Insider, nearly every show has sold out. Lorde herself describes the tour as a collaboration between artist and audience, declaring in a fan letter that Ultrasound could be our masterpiece. Social media mentions have spiked since Monday, with Instagram and TikTok ablaze from pop-up ticket drops, behind-the-scenes rehearsal footage, and snaps of her eclectic opening lineup including The Japanese House, Nilüfer Yanya, Chanel Beads, Empress Of, and Blood Orange, who just released his own album Essex Honey.

On the industry side, Lorde’s team is banking on expanded festival appearances—she’s locked in for Lollapalooza Argentina, Chile, Brazil, and Festival Estéreo Picnic in Colombia early next year—a move seen as signaling her most commercially ambitious era yet. Headlines this week call her comeback a summer-defining moment, with Consequence of Sound saying that the Ultrasound tour and Virgin mark Lorde’s most transparent, intimate performance experience to d

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Brave New Era: Gender Journey, Stripped-Down Sound, and Ultrasound Tour</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3004878764</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has had a whirlwind of significant developments and headlines the past few days as she cements her position at the center of pop’s evolving conversation. Most notably, she was absent from the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards last Sunday in Elmont, New York, despite being nominated in three categories, including Best Pop Artist and Song of the Year for What Was That. Elle reports she lost all her categories and chose to keep a strikingly low profile that night, fueling speculation on social media about her priorities and hinting at a new era of selectiveness in her public appearances. Her new album Virgin, released this summer after a prolonged hiatus, is generating sustained buzz. Lorde told Radio 1 and Elle that her work with Charli XCX on the track Girl So Confusing reignited her artistic fire, inspiring a stripped-down sound aimed at the core of who she is, a clear contrast to the warmth of her previous Solar Power era.

The big story this week, however, revolves around Lorde’s candid revelations about her gender identity journey in a cover story for DAZED magazine, picked up by People, Star94.1, AOL, and others. She spoke tenderly about coming to terms with her identity while writing Man of the Year, describing how chest taping during songwriting triggered a striking feeling of authenticity. Lorde clarified that her pronouns remain the same for now, but she acknowledged the fluid and ongoing nature of her journey, noting how some days she simply cannot wear women’s clothes and needs makeup styled in what she calls a male grooming approach. She corrected previous remarks about Chappell Roan asking her about being nonbinary, emphasizing her uncertainty and that the process is still unfolding. This nuanced discussion has been a lively topic across music journalism and fan threads, with many applauding her openness.

On the business side, the announcement and fast sellout of her Ultrasound world tour, which supports Virgin, has made headlines in publications like Business Insider and SeatGeek. The tour begins September 17 in Austin, Texas, then sweeps through North America, the UK, and Europe, with support acts including Blood Orange, The Japanese House, Nilüfer Yanya, Chanel Beads, and others. Most US dates are already sold out except through resale, showing the real heat behind her return. Lorde’s introspective comments continue to ripple, such as her assertion on NZCity that pop music works best when it’s about the collective, a mission she hopes to take on the road as she describes this tour as a true collaboration with her audience.

Fans, and gossip sites alike, have zeroed in on the biographical consequences of this moment for Lorde: shifting public engagement, artistic reinvention, and brave personal truth-telling, with many awaiting her live performances for any signs of how these changes will play out on stage. For now, the pop world is watching, and Lorde is charting a path uniquely her own.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 13 Sep 2025 13:51:04 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has had a whirlwind of significant developments and headlines the past few days as she cements her position at the center of pop’s evolving conversation. Most notably, she was absent from the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards last Sunday in Elmont, New York, despite being nominated in three categories, including Best Pop Artist and Song of the Year for What Was That. Elle reports she lost all her categories and chose to keep a strikingly low profile that night, fueling speculation on social media about her priorities and hinting at a new era of selectiveness in her public appearances. Her new album Virgin, released this summer after a prolonged hiatus, is generating sustained buzz. Lorde told Radio 1 and Elle that her work with Charli XCX on the track Girl So Confusing reignited her artistic fire, inspiring a stripped-down sound aimed at the core of who she is, a clear contrast to the warmth of her previous Solar Power era.

The big story this week, however, revolves around Lorde’s candid revelations about her gender identity journey in a cover story for DAZED magazine, picked up by People, Star94.1, AOL, and others. She spoke tenderly about coming to terms with her identity while writing Man of the Year, describing how chest taping during songwriting triggered a striking feeling of authenticity. Lorde clarified that her pronouns remain the same for now, but she acknowledged the fluid and ongoing nature of her journey, noting how some days she simply cannot wear women’s clothes and needs makeup styled in what she calls a male grooming approach. She corrected previous remarks about Chappell Roan asking her about being nonbinary, emphasizing her uncertainty and that the process is still unfolding. This nuanced discussion has been a lively topic across music journalism and fan threads, with many applauding her openness.

On the business side, the announcement and fast sellout of her Ultrasound world tour, which supports Virgin, has made headlines in publications like Business Insider and SeatGeek. The tour begins September 17 in Austin, Texas, then sweeps through North America, the UK, and Europe, with support acts including Blood Orange, The Japanese House, Nilüfer Yanya, Chanel Beads, and others. Most US dates are already sold out except through resale, showing the real heat behind her return. Lorde’s introspective comments continue to ripple, such as her assertion on NZCity that pop music works best when it’s about the collective, a mission she hopes to take on the road as she describes this tour as a true collaboration with her audience.

Fans, and gossip sites alike, have zeroed in on the biographical consequences of this moment for Lorde: shifting public engagement, artistic reinvention, and brave personal truth-telling, with many awaiting her live performances for any signs of how these changes will play out on stage. For now, the pop world is watching, and Lorde is charting a path uniquely her own.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has had a whirlwind of significant developments and headlines the past few days as she cements her position at the center of pop’s evolving conversation. Most notably, she was absent from the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards last Sunday in Elmont, New York, despite being nominated in three categories, including Best Pop Artist and Song of the Year for What Was That. Elle reports she lost all her categories and chose to keep a strikingly low profile that night, fueling speculation on social media about her priorities and hinting at a new era of selectiveness in her public appearances. Her new album Virgin, released this summer after a prolonged hiatus, is generating sustained buzz. Lorde told Radio 1 and Elle that her work with Charli XCX on the track Girl So Confusing reignited her artistic fire, inspiring a stripped-down sound aimed at the core of who she is, a clear contrast to the warmth of her previous Solar Power era.

The big story this week, however, revolves around Lorde’s candid revelations about her gender identity journey in a cover story for DAZED magazine, picked up by People, Star94.1, AOL, and others. She spoke tenderly about coming to terms with her identity while writing Man of the Year, describing how chest taping during songwriting triggered a striking feeling of authenticity. Lorde clarified that her pronouns remain the same for now, but she acknowledged the fluid and ongoing nature of her journey, noting how some days she simply cannot wear women’s clothes and needs makeup styled in what she calls a male grooming approach. She corrected previous remarks about Chappell Roan asking her about being nonbinary, emphasizing her uncertainty and that the process is still unfolding. This nuanced discussion has been a lively topic across music journalism and fan threads, with many applauding her openness.

On the business side, the announcement and fast sellout of her Ultrasound world tour, which supports Virgin, has made headlines in publications like Business Insider and SeatGeek. The tour begins September 17 in Austin, Texas, then sweeps through North America, the UK, and Europe, with support acts including Blood Orange, The Japanese House, Nilüfer Yanya, Chanel Beads, and others. Most US dates are already sold out except through resale, showing the real heat behind her return. Lorde’s introspective comments continue to ripple, such as her assertion on NZCity that pop music works best when it’s about the collective, a mission she hopes to take on the road as she describes this tour as a true collaboration with her audience.

Fans, and gossip sites alike, have zeroed in on the biographical consequences of this moment for Lorde: shifting public engagement, artistic reinvention, and brave personal truth-telling, with many awaiting her live performances for any signs of how these changes will play out on stage. For now, the pop world is watching, and Lorde is charting a path uniquely her own.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Electric Truth: Vulnerability, Viral Hits, and a Virgin Era</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI1253407711</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde’s week has been nothing short of electric, personally and professionally. All eyes are on her as she takes her Ultrasound World Tour across North America, with sold out dates announced in Chicago, New York, and Toronto—Madison Square Garden’s show landing among the fastest sellers, and excitement swirling for upcoming stops at legendary venues like Red Rocks and the MGM Grand Garden Arena. The momentum follows her June release of Virgin, the widely talked-about fourth studio album, which devotees and critics have hailed as a sort of artistic rebirth. Attention has zeroed in on the single What Was That, praised for its raw emotion and produced with an indie dream team of Jim-E Stack and Dan Nigro, further staking her claim as a driving force in pop innovation. According to United Center’s own announcement, anticipation for her live set is running high after powerful glimpses into the new material’s sonic world.

But it’s not just her music making headlines—in a candid cover feature for Dazed magazine, Lorde opened up with rare vulnerability about her gender identity journey, elaborating on statements she made to Rolling Stone earlier this year. She recounted first taping her chest in 2023, describing the revelation as a “pure version of myself,” and shared how songwriting for her track Man of the Year crystallized years of therapy and personal exploration. She explained that while she continues to use she/her pronouns, her relationship with gender is fluid, with some days finding her eschewing traditional women’s clothes and makeup, preferring what she calls male grooming. Lorde admitted the process is ongoing and uncertain, saying, “I have no idea where it's gonna go; it doesn't feel like I've arrived anywhere permanent at all.” This forthrightness has only deepened public fascination, sparking waves of support and discussion on social media, and trending topics like #LordeTruth and #VirginEra now regularly cycle on X and Instagram.

Socially, Lorde’s honest reflections on her mental health and internet habits have also drawn buzz. In her Dazed interview she described the internet as a “poisonous place,” while also admitting she’s “plugged in” to online culture again—an observation quickly recirculated by NZCity and representing a reversal from her former digital withdrawal. On Instagram Reels, her older track The Butterfly Effect from Solar Power is experiencing a renaissance as the soundtrack for a nostalgia-driven viral trend, racking up over 15K posts and underscoring her continued cultural relevance even beyond her most recent album cycle.

No major business ventures or endorsements have come to light in the past few days, with her focus remaining squarely on the art and her performances. Long-term, Lorde’s willingness to speak openly about evolving identity and mental health may prove nearly as significant to her legacy as her music, carving out new space for honesty and fluidity in contempo

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 10 Sep 2025 13:53:45 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde’s week has been nothing short of electric, personally and professionally. All eyes are on her as she takes her Ultrasound World Tour across North America, with sold out dates announced in Chicago, New York, and Toronto—Madison Square Garden’s show landing among the fastest sellers, and excitement swirling for upcoming stops at legendary venues like Red Rocks and the MGM Grand Garden Arena. The momentum follows her June release of Virgin, the widely talked-about fourth studio album, which devotees and critics have hailed as a sort of artistic rebirth. Attention has zeroed in on the single What Was That, praised for its raw emotion and produced with an indie dream team of Jim-E Stack and Dan Nigro, further staking her claim as a driving force in pop innovation. According to United Center’s own announcement, anticipation for her live set is running high after powerful glimpses into the new material’s sonic world.

But it’s not just her music making headlines—in a candid cover feature for Dazed magazine, Lorde opened up with rare vulnerability about her gender identity journey, elaborating on statements she made to Rolling Stone earlier this year. She recounted first taping her chest in 2023, describing the revelation as a “pure version of myself,” and shared how songwriting for her track Man of the Year crystallized years of therapy and personal exploration. She explained that while she continues to use she/her pronouns, her relationship with gender is fluid, with some days finding her eschewing traditional women’s clothes and makeup, preferring what she calls male grooming. Lorde admitted the process is ongoing and uncertain, saying, “I have no idea where it's gonna go; it doesn't feel like I've arrived anywhere permanent at all.” This forthrightness has only deepened public fascination, sparking waves of support and discussion on social media, and trending topics like #LordeTruth and #VirginEra now regularly cycle on X and Instagram.

Socially, Lorde’s honest reflections on her mental health and internet habits have also drawn buzz. In her Dazed interview she described the internet as a “poisonous place,” while also admitting she’s “plugged in” to online culture again—an observation quickly recirculated by NZCity and representing a reversal from her former digital withdrawal. On Instagram Reels, her older track The Butterfly Effect from Solar Power is experiencing a renaissance as the soundtrack for a nostalgia-driven viral trend, racking up over 15K posts and underscoring her continued cultural relevance even beyond her most recent album cycle.

No major business ventures or endorsements have come to light in the past few days, with her focus remaining squarely on the art and her performances. Long-term, Lorde’s willingness to speak openly about evolving identity and mental health may prove nearly as significant to her legacy as her music, carving out new space for honesty and fluidity in contempo

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde’s week has been nothing short of electric, personally and professionally. All eyes are on her as she takes her Ultrasound World Tour across North America, with sold out dates announced in Chicago, New York, and Toronto—Madison Square Garden’s show landing among the fastest sellers, and excitement swirling for upcoming stops at legendary venues like Red Rocks and the MGM Grand Garden Arena. The momentum follows her June release of Virgin, the widely talked-about fourth studio album, which devotees and critics have hailed as a sort of artistic rebirth. Attention has zeroed in on the single What Was That, praised for its raw emotion and produced with an indie dream team of Jim-E Stack and Dan Nigro, further staking her claim as a driving force in pop innovation. According to United Center’s own announcement, anticipation for her live set is running high after powerful glimpses into the new material’s sonic world.

But it’s not just her music making headlines—in a candid cover feature for Dazed magazine, Lorde opened up with rare vulnerability about her gender identity journey, elaborating on statements she made to Rolling Stone earlier this year. She recounted first taping her chest in 2023, describing the revelation as a “pure version of myself,” and shared how songwriting for her track Man of the Year crystallized years of therapy and personal exploration. She explained that while she continues to use she/her pronouns, her relationship with gender is fluid, with some days finding her eschewing traditional women’s clothes and makeup, preferring what she calls male grooming. Lorde admitted the process is ongoing and uncertain, saying, “I have no idea where it's gonna go; it doesn't feel like I've arrived anywhere permanent at all.” This forthrightness has only deepened public fascination, sparking waves of support and discussion on social media, and trending topics like #LordeTruth and #VirginEra now regularly cycle on X and Instagram.

Socially, Lorde’s honest reflections on her mental health and internet habits have also drawn buzz. In her Dazed interview she described the internet as a “poisonous place,” while also admitting she’s “plugged in” to online culture again—an observation quickly recirculated by NZCity and representing a reversal from her former digital withdrawal. On Instagram Reels, her older track The Butterfly Effect from Solar Power is experiencing a renaissance as the soundtrack for a nostalgia-driven viral trend, racking up over 15K posts and underscoring her continued cultural relevance even beyond her most recent album cycle.

No major business ventures or endorsements have come to light in the past few days, with her focus remaining squarely on the art and her performances. Long-term, Lorde’s willingness to speak openly about evolving identity and mental health may prove nearly as significant to her legacy as her music, carving out new space for honesty and fluidity in contempo

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>224</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Lorde's Virgin: A Provocative Pop Manifesto on Identity and Womanhood | Podcast Episode 27</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6216950433</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has fully reasserted herself as one of music’s most provocative and influential voices in the past few days with the release of her fourth studio album, Virgin, on June 27, 2025. The album’s debut was nothing short of triumphant, landing at number one in Australia, New Zealand, and the UK, and the critics’ consensus paints Virgin as her most raw and emotionally honest work to date, returning to a sleek electronic palette and exploring deeply personal themes of identity, femininity, and gender fluidity, especially in tracks like Hammer and Man of the Year. According to her candid interviews with Document Journal and Le Monde, Lorde’s creative process was inseparable from her journey through body image struggles and a candid period of recovery; she discussed her eating disorder openly, saying she “would think about not eating very much” before finally reclaiming a healthy relationship with her body and her art. Virgin’s lyrics, including the widely dissected “Don’t know if it’s love or if it’s ovulation,” have ignited headlines and social media discussions about womanhood and gender identity at a time when these conversations have rarely felt more resonant, with Rolling Stone and The Guardian both framing the album as a generational manifesto.

Virgin’s surprise live unveiling at Glastonbury instantly became one of the most talked about sets of the summer, with Lorde performing the full album alongside classics like Ribs and Green Light, according to reports from Los40 and NME. In addition to this bold on-stage statement, Lorde officially announced the Ultrasound World Tour, launching September 17 in Austin and spanning North America, Europe, and Oceania, with Blood Orange and The Japanese House among the openers. She is also now confirmed as a Lollapalooza Brazil 2026 headliner, making clear her new era has traction like never before.

On the personal side, Lorde recently made headlines with a rare “accidental” public appearance in New York, where fans caught her visiting her friend Paul Mescal backstage at the BAM Harvey Theater—fan footage lit up X and Instagram, fueling a spike in trending searches. Musically, she also surprised fans by appearing on Marlon Williams’ Māori-language single Kāhore He Manu E and contributing a Talking Heads cover for a star-studded tribute album produced by A24.

There is fresh speculation about her relationship with album co-producer Jim-E Stack, after paparazzi photos from Glastonbury and a London heliport; neither has confirmed anything, and Lorde is not publicly dating anyone as of September 2025. Ultimately, Lorde’s relentless creativity, unwavering candor, and willingness to place her own life at the center of her work have cemented Virgin as a turning point not just in her discography, but in the broader pop conversation.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 06 Sep 2025 17:19:52 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has fully reasserted herself as one of music’s most provocative and influential voices in the past few days with the release of her fourth studio album, Virgin, on June 27, 2025. The album’s debut was nothing short of triumphant, landing at number one in Australia, New Zealand, and the UK, and the critics’ consensus paints Virgin as her most raw and emotionally honest work to date, returning to a sleek electronic palette and exploring deeply personal themes of identity, femininity, and gender fluidity, especially in tracks like Hammer and Man of the Year. According to her candid interviews with Document Journal and Le Monde, Lorde’s creative process was inseparable from her journey through body image struggles and a candid period of recovery; she discussed her eating disorder openly, saying she “would think about not eating very much” before finally reclaiming a healthy relationship with her body and her art. Virgin’s lyrics, including the widely dissected “Don’t know if it’s love or if it’s ovulation,” have ignited headlines and social media discussions about womanhood and gender identity at a time when these conversations have rarely felt more resonant, with Rolling Stone and The Guardian both framing the album as a generational manifesto.

Virgin’s surprise live unveiling at Glastonbury instantly became one of the most talked about sets of the summer, with Lorde performing the full album alongside classics like Ribs and Green Light, according to reports from Los40 and NME. In addition to this bold on-stage statement, Lorde officially announced the Ultrasound World Tour, launching September 17 in Austin and spanning North America, Europe, and Oceania, with Blood Orange and The Japanese House among the openers. She is also now confirmed as a Lollapalooza Brazil 2026 headliner, making clear her new era has traction like never before.

On the personal side, Lorde recently made headlines with a rare “accidental” public appearance in New York, where fans caught her visiting her friend Paul Mescal backstage at the BAM Harvey Theater—fan footage lit up X and Instagram, fueling a spike in trending searches. Musically, she also surprised fans by appearing on Marlon Williams’ Māori-language single Kāhore He Manu E and contributing a Talking Heads cover for a star-studded tribute album produced by A24.

There is fresh speculation about her relationship with album co-producer Jim-E Stack, after paparazzi photos from Glastonbury and a London heliport; neither has confirmed anything, and Lorde is not publicly dating anyone as of September 2025. Ultimately, Lorde’s relentless creativity, unwavering candor, and willingness to place her own life at the center of her work have cemented Virgin as a turning point not just in her discography, but in the broader pop conversation.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has fully reasserted herself as one of music’s most provocative and influential voices in the past few days with the release of her fourth studio album, Virgin, on June 27, 2025. The album’s debut was nothing short of triumphant, landing at number one in Australia, New Zealand, and the UK, and the critics’ consensus paints Virgin as her most raw and emotionally honest work to date, returning to a sleek electronic palette and exploring deeply personal themes of identity, femininity, and gender fluidity, especially in tracks like Hammer and Man of the Year. According to her candid interviews with Document Journal and Le Monde, Lorde’s creative process was inseparable from her journey through body image struggles and a candid period of recovery; she discussed her eating disorder openly, saying she “would think about not eating very much” before finally reclaiming a healthy relationship with her body and her art. Virgin’s lyrics, including the widely dissected “Don’t know if it’s love or if it’s ovulation,” have ignited headlines and social media discussions about womanhood and gender identity at a time when these conversations have rarely felt more resonant, with Rolling Stone and The Guardian both framing the album as a generational manifesto.

Virgin’s surprise live unveiling at Glastonbury instantly became one of the most talked about sets of the summer, with Lorde performing the full album alongside classics like Ribs and Green Light, according to reports from Los40 and NME. In addition to this bold on-stage statement, Lorde officially announced the Ultrasound World Tour, launching September 17 in Austin and spanning North America, Europe, and Oceania, with Blood Orange and The Japanese House among the openers. She is also now confirmed as a Lollapalooza Brazil 2026 headliner, making clear her new era has traction like never before.

On the personal side, Lorde recently made headlines with a rare “accidental” public appearance in New York, where fans caught her visiting her friend Paul Mescal backstage at the BAM Harvey Theater—fan footage lit up X and Instagram, fueling a spike in trending searches. Musically, she also surprised fans by appearing on Marlon Williams’ Māori-language single Kāhore He Manu E and contributing a Talking Heads cover for a star-studded tribute album produced by A24.

There is fresh speculation about her relationship with album co-producer Jim-E Stack, after paparazzi photos from Glastonbury and a London heliport; neither has confirmed anything, and Lorde is not publicly dating anyone as of September 2025. Ultimately, Lorde’s relentless creativity, unwavering candor, and willingness to place her own life at the center of her work have cemented Virgin as a turning point not just in her discography, but in the broader pop conversation.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Resurgence: Horniness, Heartbreak, and Healing in "Virgin"</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI4667136780</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been at the center of a major musical resurgence over the past several days with a string of headline-grabbing developments, new music releases, public appearances, and influential interviews. Her new single Hammer just dropped, celebrated as an “ode to city life and horniness,” and marks the final teaser ahead of her highly anticipated album Virgin, set for global release on June 27. The song and its stylish, city-drenched video have been showcased across major music publications and social feeds, with Consequence even naming her prior comeback single What Was That as one of the best of 2025 so far. In the last week, she built enormous buzz by hosting a pop-up performance in Washington Square Park, which was ultimately dispersed by the NYPD due to permitting issues. Despite police intervention, Lorde managed to return later in the evening, dancing and singing the new track to a crowd of diehard fans. This spontaneous event and its drama splashed across news sites, TikTok, and fan Twitter accounts, cementing her public profile as both enigmatic and fan-dedicated.

Adding further fuel, Lorde announced her long-awaited Ultrasound tour, a sweeping set of North American and international dates running from September through December and including arena stops in Austin, Chicago, Toronto, New York, London, Berlin, and many more cities worldwide. The pre-sale for the tour has generated a frenzy on social media, from clips of classic hits like Ribs and Green Light to speculation about possible surprise collaborations. She also confirmed a headliner slot at Lollapalooza 2026 in Chile, Argentina, and Brazil, where she’ll share the bill with Tyler The Creator and Sabrina Carpenter, providing a major global stage for her new music. 

Critically, Virgin is already making waves, debuting at number two on the Billboard 200 and receiving in-depth reviews for its introspective lyrics—reflecting on themes of nostalgia, heartbreak, and post-breakup renewal. In a revealing interview with BBC Radio 1, Lorde opened up about past struggles with disordered eating and how overcoming those issues has reignited her creativity and performance energy—a candid admission widely reported and supported by the personal themes echoed in Virgin’s tracks. As always, Lorde’s every move—whether an impromptu park singalong or a festival announcement—seems to ignite both media attention and heartfelt discussion among fans, confirming her status as a defining pop auteur of her generation.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 30 Aug 2025 13:58:37 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been at the center of a major musical resurgence over the past several days with a string of headline-grabbing developments, new music releases, public appearances, and influential interviews. Her new single Hammer just dropped, celebrated as an “ode to city life and horniness,” and marks the final teaser ahead of her highly anticipated album Virgin, set for global release on June 27. The song and its stylish, city-drenched video have been showcased across major music publications and social feeds, with Consequence even naming her prior comeback single What Was That as one of the best of 2025 so far. In the last week, she built enormous buzz by hosting a pop-up performance in Washington Square Park, which was ultimately dispersed by the NYPD due to permitting issues. Despite police intervention, Lorde managed to return later in the evening, dancing and singing the new track to a crowd of diehard fans. This spontaneous event and its drama splashed across news sites, TikTok, and fan Twitter accounts, cementing her public profile as both enigmatic and fan-dedicated.

Adding further fuel, Lorde announced her long-awaited Ultrasound tour, a sweeping set of North American and international dates running from September through December and including arena stops in Austin, Chicago, Toronto, New York, London, Berlin, and many more cities worldwide. The pre-sale for the tour has generated a frenzy on social media, from clips of classic hits like Ribs and Green Light to speculation about possible surprise collaborations. She also confirmed a headliner slot at Lollapalooza 2026 in Chile, Argentina, and Brazil, where she’ll share the bill with Tyler The Creator and Sabrina Carpenter, providing a major global stage for her new music. 

Critically, Virgin is already making waves, debuting at number two on the Billboard 200 and receiving in-depth reviews for its introspective lyrics—reflecting on themes of nostalgia, heartbreak, and post-breakup renewal. In a revealing interview with BBC Radio 1, Lorde opened up about past struggles with disordered eating and how overcoming those issues has reignited her creativity and performance energy—a candid admission widely reported and supported by the personal themes echoed in Virgin’s tracks. As always, Lorde’s every move—whether an impromptu park singalong or a festival announcement—seems to ignite both media attention and heartfelt discussion among fans, confirming her status as a defining pop auteur of her generation.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been at the center of a major musical resurgence over the past several days with a string of headline-grabbing developments, new music releases, public appearances, and influential interviews. Her new single Hammer just dropped, celebrated as an “ode to city life and horniness,” and marks the final teaser ahead of her highly anticipated album Virgin, set for global release on June 27. The song and its stylish, city-drenched video have been showcased across major music publications and social feeds, with Consequence even naming her prior comeback single What Was That as one of the best of 2025 so far. In the last week, she built enormous buzz by hosting a pop-up performance in Washington Square Park, which was ultimately dispersed by the NYPD due to permitting issues. Despite police intervention, Lorde managed to return later in the evening, dancing and singing the new track to a crowd of diehard fans. This spontaneous event and its drama splashed across news sites, TikTok, and fan Twitter accounts, cementing her public profile as both enigmatic and fan-dedicated.

Adding further fuel, Lorde announced her long-awaited Ultrasound tour, a sweeping set of North American and international dates running from September through December and including arena stops in Austin, Chicago, Toronto, New York, London, Berlin, and many more cities worldwide. The pre-sale for the tour has generated a frenzy on social media, from clips of classic hits like Ribs and Green Light to speculation about possible surprise collaborations. She also confirmed a headliner slot at Lollapalooza 2026 in Chile, Argentina, and Brazil, where she’ll share the bill with Tyler The Creator and Sabrina Carpenter, providing a major global stage for her new music. 

Critically, Virgin is already making waves, debuting at number two on the Billboard 200 and receiving in-depth reviews for its introspective lyrics—reflecting on themes of nostalgia, heartbreak, and post-breakup renewal. In a revealing interview with BBC Radio 1, Lorde opened up about past struggles with disordered eating and how overcoming those issues has reignited her creativity and performance energy—a candid admission widely reported and supported by the personal themes echoed in Virgin’s tracks. As always, Lorde’s every move—whether an impromptu park singalong or a festival announcement—seems to ignite both media attention and heartfelt discussion among fans, confirming her status as a defining pop auteur of her generation.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Electrifying Comeback: Raw, Primal, and Unapologetic in Virgin Era</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI1769831371</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

In just the past few days, Lorde has dominated both the headlines and the conversation around pop’s most creative comebacks. The release of her new single Hammer on August 21 caught immediate fire, with the synth-driven opener off her upcoming album Virgin described by Consequence and IMDb as an energetic ode to city life and desire. On Instagram, Lorde called it an ode to city life and horniness and the media quickly picked up on its themes of reinvention and candid sexuality. Following that, she dropped the highly anticipated What Was That, a first single in nearly four years, with a cinematic video shot throughout New York City, featuring scenes of her cycling and walking, capturing both intimacy and chaos. According to Variety, this new single had days of cryptic social media teasers and culminated with a headline-grabbing pop-up performance in Washington Square Park which initially spiraled into confusion as the police shut it down due to the huge turnout. Despite that, Lorde made a surprise appearance later in the evening, dancing to her song alongside Blood Orange’s Dev Hynes, which several outlets described as a viral, euphoric moment for her fanbase. The same week, reviews of her just-released album Virgin, which officially dropped at the end of June, have been rapturous. According to M-A Chronicle, critics have called Virgin her boldest, most vulnerable, and self-reflective record yet, echoing the intense emotion and electrified sound once heard in Melodrama, but digging even deeper into raw confessions on identity and reinvention. The album scored 273 million-plus total streams by the third week of August and trended heavily on TikTok and Instagram, with the stripped-back track Clearblue and the closing ballad David earning particular attention for their frankness and minimalism.

Lorde’s public appearances this week also included her surprise set at Coachella with Charli XCX, where they performed Girl, So Confusing, a collaboration dissecting their own real-life misunderstandings in the public eye. She’s been highly active on social media as well, with Instagram Stories and reels announcing the countdown to her Ultrasound World Tour, set to begin September 17 in Austin, already generating frenzied posts by Glastonbury festival fans and thousands of excited global followers. Multiple social accounts, such as lordestars on Instagram, speculated she will headline Lollapalooza’s South American dates in 2026, though as of today these bookings are not yet publicly confirmed by her team. Among the most heavily shared content, Lorde’s July cover shoot for a major magazine trended, framing her new era as raw and primal, and her image was everywhere on fan and music pages this weekend. According to The Raider Voice and Lush Collective, the press is calling this the defining pop music comeback of 2025, and the world is watching to see if her Ultrasound Tour, which extends into 2026 for Australia and Ne

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 27 Aug 2025 13:56:10 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

In just the past few days, Lorde has dominated both the headlines and the conversation around pop’s most creative comebacks. The release of her new single Hammer on August 21 caught immediate fire, with the synth-driven opener off her upcoming album Virgin described by Consequence and IMDb as an energetic ode to city life and desire. On Instagram, Lorde called it an ode to city life and horniness and the media quickly picked up on its themes of reinvention and candid sexuality. Following that, she dropped the highly anticipated What Was That, a first single in nearly four years, with a cinematic video shot throughout New York City, featuring scenes of her cycling and walking, capturing both intimacy and chaos. According to Variety, this new single had days of cryptic social media teasers and culminated with a headline-grabbing pop-up performance in Washington Square Park which initially spiraled into confusion as the police shut it down due to the huge turnout. Despite that, Lorde made a surprise appearance later in the evening, dancing to her song alongside Blood Orange’s Dev Hynes, which several outlets described as a viral, euphoric moment for her fanbase. The same week, reviews of her just-released album Virgin, which officially dropped at the end of June, have been rapturous. According to M-A Chronicle, critics have called Virgin her boldest, most vulnerable, and self-reflective record yet, echoing the intense emotion and electrified sound once heard in Melodrama, but digging even deeper into raw confessions on identity and reinvention. The album scored 273 million-plus total streams by the third week of August and trended heavily on TikTok and Instagram, with the stripped-back track Clearblue and the closing ballad David earning particular attention for their frankness and minimalism.

Lorde’s public appearances this week also included her surprise set at Coachella with Charli XCX, where they performed Girl, So Confusing, a collaboration dissecting their own real-life misunderstandings in the public eye. She’s been highly active on social media as well, with Instagram Stories and reels announcing the countdown to her Ultrasound World Tour, set to begin September 17 in Austin, already generating frenzied posts by Glastonbury festival fans and thousands of excited global followers. Multiple social accounts, such as lordestars on Instagram, speculated she will headline Lollapalooza’s South American dates in 2026, though as of today these bookings are not yet publicly confirmed by her team. Among the most heavily shared content, Lorde’s July cover shoot for a major magazine trended, framing her new era as raw and primal, and her image was everywhere on fan and music pages this weekend. According to The Raider Voice and Lush Collective, the press is calling this the defining pop music comeback of 2025, and the world is watching to see if her Ultrasound Tour, which extends into 2026 for Australia and Ne

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

In just the past few days, Lorde has dominated both the headlines and the conversation around pop’s most creative comebacks. The release of her new single Hammer on August 21 caught immediate fire, with the synth-driven opener off her upcoming album Virgin described by Consequence and IMDb as an energetic ode to city life and desire. On Instagram, Lorde called it an ode to city life and horniness and the media quickly picked up on its themes of reinvention and candid sexuality. Following that, she dropped the highly anticipated What Was That, a first single in nearly four years, with a cinematic video shot throughout New York City, featuring scenes of her cycling and walking, capturing both intimacy and chaos. According to Variety, this new single had days of cryptic social media teasers and culminated with a headline-grabbing pop-up performance in Washington Square Park which initially spiraled into confusion as the police shut it down due to the huge turnout. Despite that, Lorde made a surprise appearance later in the evening, dancing to her song alongside Blood Orange’s Dev Hynes, which several outlets described as a viral, euphoric moment for her fanbase. The same week, reviews of her just-released album Virgin, which officially dropped at the end of June, have been rapturous. According to M-A Chronicle, critics have called Virgin her boldest, most vulnerable, and self-reflective record yet, echoing the intense emotion and electrified sound once heard in Melodrama, but digging even deeper into raw confessions on identity and reinvention. The album scored 273 million-plus total streams by the third week of August and trended heavily on TikTok and Instagram, with the stripped-back track Clearblue and the closing ballad David earning particular attention for their frankness and minimalism.

Lorde’s public appearances this week also included her surprise set at Coachella with Charli XCX, where they performed Girl, So Confusing, a collaboration dissecting their own real-life misunderstandings in the public eye. She’s been highly active on social media as well, with Instagram Stories and reels announcing the countdown to her Ultrasound World Tour, set to begin September 17 in Austin, already generating frenzied posts by Glastonbury festival fans and thousands of excited global followers. Multiple social accounts, such as lordestars on Instagram, speculated she will headline Lollapalooza’s South American dates in 2026, though as of today these bookings are not yet publicly confirmed by her team. Among the most heavily shared content, Lorde’s July cover shoot for a major magazine trended, framing her new era as raw and primal, and her image was everywhere on fan and music pages this weekend. According to The Raider Voice and Lush Collective, the press is calling this the defining pop music comeback of 2025, and the world is watching to see if her Ultrasound Tour, which extends into 2026 for Australia and Ne

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Virgin: Raw Vulnerability, Sold-Out Tours, and Surprise Appearances</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI8321907067</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde is firmly back in the pop zeitgeist this week after a sprint of headline-making developments, most notably with the release of her acclaimed fourth studio album Virgin in late June 2025. The album shattered expectations, racking up more than 273 million streams and registering 16 million first-day Spotify plays, solidifying her as a streaming powerhouse. According to The RaideR Voice, Virgin is a raw, vulnerable exploration of femininity, adulthood, and Lorde’s signature existential honesty, typified by its lead single What Was That and the evocative album opener Hammer. Professional critics like The Emory Wheel highlight how Virgin marks a bold return to her brooding, poetically dark roots, stripping back both production and artifice for a nakedly intimate experience produced with Jim-E Stack and rumored contributions from Blood Orange.

Fresh music arrived this spring when Lorde teased What Was That on TikTok with a cryptic 15-second Manhattan-bound video, then rapidly built buzz by dropping the single on April 24. According to The Hollywood Reporter and Rolling Stone, she staged a guerrilla-style listening event in Washington Square Park, though NYPD shut the spontaneous show down—a classic Lorde twist that instantly trended on social media, as fan-shot videos captured her dancing for hundreds of fans. This impromptu charisma spilled onto TikTok and Instagram, where she also teased behind-the-scenes snippets and announced the album title Virgin.

Business activity is intensifying with the just-announced Ultrasound World Tour. Kicking off September 17 in Austin, Lorde will traverse North America and Europe, joined by openers like Blood Orange, The Japanese House, and Nilüfer Yanya. According to Universal Music Group statements, tour imagery and the album cover feature x-ray motifs, reinforcing Virgin’s theme of transparency, both literal and emotional. Massive demand has seen European concert dates—like her November Amsterdam shows—sold out in minutes, and Australian/New Zealand dates slated for early 2026 have fans desperate to snag tickets.

On the public appearance front, Lorde was recently spotted dashing from BAM’s Harvey Theater in Brooklyn after visiting friend Paul Mescal, inadvertently setting Twitter alight with surprise fan videos. Earlier this year, she contributed a Māori-language duet with Marlon Williams and took part in an A24 Talking Heads tribute alongside Miley Cyrus—a reminder of her broad artistic alliances.

As social media buzz surges, speculation is swirling about further new singles and possible documentary footage from her tour, but no official confirmation exists yet. With Virgin’s introspective candor, a major world tour, and her unpredictable flair for public moments, Lorde is proving 2025 a pivotal chapter in her ever-evolving story.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 23 Aug 2025 13:54:49 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde is firmly back in the pop zeitgeist this week after a sprint of headline-making developments, most notably with the release of her acclaimed fourth studio album Virgin in late June 2025. The album shattered expectations, racking up more than 273 million streams and registering 16 million first-day Spotify plays, solidifying her as a streaming powerhouse. According to The RaideR Voice, Virgin is a raw, vulnerable exploration of femininity, adulthood, and Lorde’s signature existential honesty, typified by its lead single What Was That and the evocative album opener Hammer. Professional critics like The Emory Wheel highlight how Virgin marks a bold return to her brooding, poetically dark roots, stripping back both production and artifice for a nakedly intimate experience produced with Jim-E Stack and rumored contributions from Blood Orange.

Fresh music arrived this spring when Lorde teased What Was That on TikTok with a cryptic 15-second Manhattan-bound video, then rapidly built buzz by dropping the single on April 24. According to The Hollywood Reporter and Rolling Stone, she staged a guerrilla-style listening event in Washington Square Park, though NYPD shut the spontaneous show down—a classic Lorde twist that instantly trended on social media, as fan-shot videos captured her dancing for hundreds of fans. This impromptu charisma spilled onto TikTok and Instagram, where she also teased behind-the-scenes snippets and announced the album title Virgin.

Business activity is intensifying with the just-announced Ultrasound World Tour. Kicking off September 17 in Austin, Lorde will traverse North America and Europe, joined by openers like Blood Orange, The Japanese House, and Nilüfer Yanya. According to Universal Music Group statements, tour imagery and the album cover feature x-ray motifs, reinforcing Virgin’s theme of transparency, both literal and emotional. Massive demand has seen European concert dates—like her November Amsterdam shows—sold out in minutes, and Australian/New Zealand dates slated for early 2026 have fans desperate to snag tickets.

On the public appearance front, Lorde was recently spotted dashing from BAM’s Harvey Theater in Brooklyn after visiting friend Paul Mescal, inadvertently setting Twitter alight with surprise fan videos. Earlier this year, she contributed a Māori-language duet with Marlon Williams and took part in an A24 Talking Heads tribute alongside Miley Cyrus—a reminder of her broad artistic alliances.

As social media buzz surges, speculation is swirling about further new singles and possible documentary footage from her tour, but no official confirmation exists yet. With Virgin’s introspective candor, a major world tour, and her unpredictable flair for public moments, Lorde is proving 2025 a pivotal chapter in her ever-evolving story.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde is firmly back in the pop zeitgeist this week after a sprint of headline-making developments, most notably with the release of her acclaimed fourth studio album Virgin in late June 2025. The album shattered expectations, racking up more than 273 million streams and registering 16 million first-day Spotify plays, solidifying her as a streaming powerhouse. According to The RaideR Voice, Virgin is a raw, vulnerable exploration of femininity, adulthood, and Lorde’s signature existential honesty, typified by its lead single What Was That and the evocative album opener Hammer. Professional critics like The Emory Wheel highlight how Virgin marks a bold return to her brooding, poetically dark roots, stripping back both production and artifice for a nakedly intimate experience produced with Jim-E Stack and rumored contributions from Blood Orange.

Fresh music arrived this spring when Lorde teased What Was That on TikTok with a cryptic 15-second Manhattan-bound video, then rapidly built buzz by dropping the single on April 24. According to The Hollywood Reporter and Rolling Stone, she staged a guerrilla-style listening event in Washington Square Park, though NYPD shut the spontaneous show down—a classic Lorde twist that instantly trended on social media, as fan-shot videos captured her dancing for hundreds of fans. This impromptu charisma spilled onto TikTok and Instagram, where she also teased behind-the-scenes snippets and announced the album title Virgin.

Business activity is intensifying with the just-announced Ultrasound World Tour. Kicking off September 17 in Austin, Lorde will traverse North America and Europe, joined by openers like Blood Orange, The Japanese House, and Nilüfer Yanya. According to Universal Music Group statements, tour imagery and the album cover feature x-ray motifs, reinforcing Virgin’s theme of transparency, both literal and emotional. Massive demand has seen European concert dates—like her November Amsterdam shows—sold out in minutes, and Australian/New Zealand dates slated for early 2026 have fans desperate to snag tickets.

On the public appearance front, Lorde was recently spotted dashing from BAM’s Harvey Theater in Brooklyn after visiting friend Paul Mescal, inadvertently setting Twitter alight with surprise fan videos. Earlier this year, she contributed a Māori-language duet with Marlon Williams and took part in an A24 Talking Heads tribute alongside Miley Cyrus—a reminder of her broad artistic alliances.

As social media buzz surges, speculation is swirling about further new singles and possible documentary footage from her tour, but no official confirmation exists yet. With Virgin’s introspective candor, a major world tour, and her unpredictable flair for public moments, Lorde is proving 2025 a pivotal chapter in her ever-evolving story.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's 'Virgin' Era: Raw Femininity, Fluid Identity &amp; a Triumphant Return</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2623313578</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

In the past few days Lorde has been at the center of music headlines following the release of her highly anticipated fourth studio album Virgin on June 27 the first new record since 2021s Solar Power. According to Just Jared the new album includes singles like What Was That Man of the Year and Hammer and marks a thematic return to merging the private and public sides of her life instead of drawing the sharp divide she kept in earlier years. Lorde told Zane Lowe she wanted to capture her femininity in a raw elegant and unsentimental way with the album which she described as full transparency. Rolling Stone ran a revealing cover story in which Lorde opened up further about her identity saying she still identifies as a cis woman with she her pronouns but adds that she feels in the middle gender-wise and sometimes jokes I am a woman except for the days when I am a man. She discussed these feelings at length including stories about duct-taping her chest as a younger person and resisting any pressure to neatly box up her gender identity. In the same interview she expressed admiration for younger LGBTQ activists but clarified she is not trying to speak over or take space from anyone with more at stake than her. 

Virgin has sparked global anticipation for Lordes Ultrasound World Tour which was formally announced mid August with initial dates publicized through outlets like AOL and XS Rock. The North American leg of the tour opens September 17 in Austin and runs through major cities like Chicago New York Boston and Seattle before heading to Europe in November with reported sold out dates including the highly anticipated stop at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles on October 18. Lorde shared her excitement online about touring with friends including opening acts Blood Orange and the Japanese House among others. The tours visuals and promotional material use x-ray imagery echoing the rawness and transparency of the album cover and theme. 

In recent public appearances Lorde made a pop-culture splash by attending a New York Knicks basketball game where she wore a Balenciaga polo referencing the teams colors as reported by AOL a rare appearance that generated some buzz on social media especially since the pop icon is usually quite private. On Instagram the pop cabaret 54 Below promoted a tribute night celebrating Lordes music further reflecting her pop influence and relevance. Adding to the visual attention her latest music video which dropped just ahead of the album features Lorde performing alongside three imagined versions of herself—the Child the Lover and the Gardener—symbolizing the personal evolution she sings about on Virgin. The video has garnered extensive commentary for its earnest exploration of self and identity. 

Overall Virgin and its rollout—accompanied by deeply personal interviews major tour announcements sold out shows new music videos and high-visibility public appearances—represent the most biographi

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 20 Aug 2025 13:54:53 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

In the past few days Lorde has been at the center of music headlines following the release of her highly anticipated fourth studio album Virgin on June 27 the first new record since 2021s Solar Power. According to Just Jared the new album includes singles like What Was That Man of the Year and Hammer and marks a thematic return to merging the private and public sides of her life instead of drawing the sharp divide she kept in earlier years. Lorde told Zane Lowe she wanted to capture her femininity in a raw elegant and unsentimental way with the album which she described as full transparency. Rolling Stone ran a revealing cover story in which Lorde opened up further about her identity saying she still identifies as a cis woman with she her pronouns but adds that she feels in the middle gender-wise and sometimes jokes I am a woman except for the days when I am a man. She discussed these feelings at length including stories about duct-taping her chest as a younger person and resisting any pressure to neatly box up her gender identity. In the same interview she expressed admiration for younger LGBTQ activists but clarified she is not trying to speak over or take space from anyone with more at stake than her. 

Virgin has sparked global anticipation for Lordes Ultrasound World Tour which was formally announced mid August with initial dates publicized through outlets like AOL and XS Rock. The North American leg of the tour opens September 17 in Austin and runs through major cities like Chicago New York Boston and Seattle before heading to Europe in November with reported sold out dates including the highly anticipated stop at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles on October 18. Lorde shared her excitement online about touring with friends including opening acts Blood Orange and the Japanese House among others. The tours visuals and promotional material use x-ray imagery echoing the rawness and transparency of the album cover and theme. 

In recent public appearances Lorde made a pop-culture splash by attending a New York Knicks basketball game where she wore a Balenciaga polo referencing the teams colors as reported by AOL a rare appearance that generated some buzz on social media especially since the pop icon is usually quite private. On Instagram the pop cabaret 54 Below promoted a tribute night celebrating Lordes music further reflecting her pop influence and relevance. Adding to the visual attention her latest music video which dropped just ahead of the album features Lorde performing alongside three imagined versions of herself—the Child the Lover and the Gardener—symbolizing the personal evolution she sings about on Virgin. The video has garnered extensive commentary for its earnest exploration of self and identity. 

Overall Virgin and its rollout—accompanied by deeply personal interviews major tour announcements sold out shows new music videos and high-visibility public appearances—represent the most biographi

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

In the past few days Lorde has been at the center of music headlines following the release of her highly anticipated fourth studio album Virgin on June 27 the first new record since 2021s Solar Power. According to Just Jared the new album includes singles like What Was That Man of the Year and Hammer and marks a thematic return to merging the private and public sides of her life instead of drawing the sharp divide she kept in earlier years. Lorde told Zane Lowe she wanted to capture her femininity in a raw elegant and unsentimental way with the album which she described as full transparency. Rolling Stone ran a revealing cover story in which Lorde opened up further about her identity saying she still identifies as a cis woman with she her pronouns but adds that she feels in the middle gender-wise and sometimes jokes I am a woman except for the days when I am a man. She discussed these feelings at length including stories about duct-taping her chest as a younger person and resisting any pressure to neatly box up her gender identity. In the same interview she expressed admiration for younger LGBTQ activists but clarified she is not trying to speak over or take space from anyone with more at stake than her. 

Virgin has sparked global anticipation for Lordes Ultrasound World Tour which was formally announced mid August with initial dates publicized through outlets like AOL and XS Rock. The North American leg of the tour opens September 17 in Austin and runs through major cities like Chicago New York Boston and Seattle before heading to Europe in November with reported sold out dates including the highly anticipated stop at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles on October 18. Lorde shared her excitement online about touring with friends including opening acts Blood Orange and the Japanese House among others. The tours visuals and promotional material use x-ray imagery echoing the rawness and transparency of the album cover and theme. 

In recent public appearances Lorde made a pop-culture splash by attending a New York Knicks basketball game where she wore a Balenciaga polo referencing the teams colors as reported by AOL a rare appearance that generated some buzz on social media especially since the pop icon is usually quite private. On Instagram the pop cabaret 54 Below promoted a tribute night celebrating Lordes music further reflecting her pop influence and relevance. Adding to the visual attention her latest music video which dropped just ahead of the album features Lorde performing alongside three imagined versions of herself—the Child the Lover and the Gardener—symbolizing the personal evolution she sings about on Virgin. The video has garnered extensive commentary for its earnest exploration of self and identity. 

Overall Virgin and its rollout—accompanied by deeply personal interviews major tour announcements sold out shows new music videos and high-visibility public appearances—represent the most biographi

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Triumphant Return: Virgin Album Drops, Ultrasound Tour Unveiled</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2167276596</link>
      <description>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.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 16 Aug 2025 17:21:11 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>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.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[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.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Chaotic Grace: New Single, Album Buzz, and Global Tour Resurgence</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI8473237101</link>
      <description>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.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Aug 2025 13:55:19 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>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.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[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.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <itunes:duration>207</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Lorde's Daring Return: Unveiling Virgin, Ultrasound Tour, and a Bold New Era</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI3572234388</link>
      <description>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.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 09 Aug 2025 13:54:52 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>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.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[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.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Triumphant Return: Glastonbury Surprise, New Album, and World Tour</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI7452527643</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has stormed back into the public eye over the past few days, seizing attention with a flurry of major announcements and memorable appearances that signal a bold new chapter in her already storied career. Late last week, the alt-pop powerhouse shocked and delighted fans by staging a secret set at Glastonbury, timed to celebrate the release of her fourth studio album, Virgin. According to Variety, the Saturday morning set was a full-fledged event: cryptically teased via Instagram, Lorde drew hundreds of fans to the Woodsies Stage, where she performed Virgin in its entirety—including the singles Hammer and What Was That—while dressed in an all-white ensemble backed by a new four-piece band. The moment was as emotional as it was electric, with Lorde herself pausing mid-set to reflect on her time away from music and her uncertainty about ever making another album. She told the crowd, “I didn’t know if I’d make another record, but I’m back here completely free. And I’m so grateful to you for waiting.” Not content to stick to new material, she capped the performance by launching into fan favorites Ribs and Green Light, sending the crowd into a frenzy.

Alongside her Glastonbury triumph, Lorde has launched her 2025 International Ultrasound Tour, a globe-spanning arena trek beginning September in Austin and hitting New York’s Madison Square Garden, Montreal’s Bell Centre, London’s O2 Arena, and dozens more high-profile stops before wrapping in Copenhagen according to XS Rock and the official tour site. Openers will include Blood Orange and The Japanese House, according to Montreal tourism’s official concert roundup, marking a high-profile return for Lorde as a live force.

Virgin itself has been generating critical and cultural buzz, widely seen as both a return to her early, synth-driven sound and an intensely personal statement. Cryptic Rock and student papers like The Lanthorn praise the album for its blend of dancefloor bangers and intimate lyrical exploration. Songs such as Hammer and GRWM reportedly chronicle her recent experiences of identity, health struggles, and finding freedom after a difficult period. The press is also spotlighting new single Man of the Year, released alongside a candid video that has fans and media discussing both its sonic flair and Lorde’s striking new look, according to IMDB and fashion sites.

Recent social media activity reflects this renaissance, with Lorde’s posts about Virgin, her Glastonbury set, and tour selling out pre-sale tickets in minutes and drawing enthusiastic responses across Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok. No major controversies or unverified rumors have emerged; rather, coverage has focused on her creative resurgence, honest interviews, and magnetic stage presence. The next few months look to be a victory lap for Lorde, who has returned with her most ambitious work—and boldest sense of self—yet.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 06 Aug 2025 13:53:30 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has stormed back into the public eye over the past few days, seizing attention with a flurry of major announcements and memorable appearances that signal a bold new chapter in her already storied career. Late last week, the alt-pop powerhouse shocked and delighted fans by staging a secret set at Glastonbury, timed to celebrate the release of her fourth studio album, Virgin. According to Variety, the Saturday morning set was a full-fledged event: cryptically teased via Instagram, Lorde drew hundreds of fans to the Woodsies Stage, where she performed Virgin in its entirety—including the singles Hammer and What Was That—while dressed in an all-white ensemble backed by a new four-piece band. The moment was as emotional as it was electric, with Lorde herself pausing mid-set to reflect on her time away from music and her uncertainty about ever making another album. She told the crowd, “I didn’t know if I’d make another record, but I’m back here completely free. And I’m so grateful to you for waiting.” Not content to stick to new material, she capped the performance by launching into fan favorites Ribs and Green Light, sending the crowd into a frenzy.

Alongside her Glastonbury triumph, Lorde has launched her 2025 International Ultrasound Tour, a globe-spanning arena trek beginning September in Austin and hitting New York’s Madison Square Garden, Montreal’s Bell Centre, London’s O2 Arena, and dozens more high-profile stops before wrapping in Copenhagen according to XS Rock and the official tour site. Openers will include Blood Orange and The Japanese House, according to Montreal tourism’s official concert roundup, marking a high-profile return for Lorde as a live force.

Virgin itself has been generating critical and cultural buzz, widely seen as both a return to her early, synth-driven sound and an intensely personal statement. Cryptic Rock and student papers like The Lanthorn praise the album for its blend of dancefloor bangers and intimate lyrical exploration. Songs such as Hammer and GRWM reportedly chronicle her recent experiences of identity, health struggles, and finding freedom after a difficult period. The press is also spotlighting new single Man of the Year, released alongside a candid video that has fans and media discussing both its sonic flair and Lorde’s striking new look, according to IMDB and fashion sites.

Recent social media activity reflects this renaissance, with Lorde’s posts about Virgin, her Glastonbury set, and tour selling out pre-sale tickets in minutes and drawing enthusiastic responses across Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok. No major controversies or unverified rumors have emerged; rather, coverage has focused on her creative resurgence, honest interviews, and magnetic stage presence. The next few months look to be a victory lap for Lorde, who has returned with her most ambitious work—and boldest sense of self—yet.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has stormed back into the public eye over the past few days, seizing attention with a flurry of major announcements and memorable appearances that signal a bold new chapter in her already storied career. Late last week, the alt-pop powerhouse shocked and delighted fans by staging a secret set at Glastonbury, timed to celebrate the release of her fourth studio album, Virgin. According to Variety, the Saturday morning set was a full-fledged event: cryptically teased via Instagram, Lorde drew hundreds of fans to the Woodsies Stage, where she performed Virgin in its entirety—including the singles Hammer and What Was That—while dressed in an all-white ensemble backed by a new four-piece band. The moment was as emotional as it was electric, with Lorde herself pausing mid-set to reflect on her time away from music and her uncertainty about ever making another album. She told the crowd, “I didn’t know if I’d make another record, but I’m back here completely free. And I’m so grateful to you for waiting.” Not content to stick to new material, she capped the performance by launching into fan favorites Ribs and Green Light, sending the crowd into a frenzy.

Alongside her Glastonbury triumph, Lorde has launched her 2025 International Ultrasound Tour, a globe-spanning arena trek beginning September in Austin and hitting New York’s Madison Square Garden, Montreal’s Bell Centre, London’s O2 Arena, and dozens more high-profile stops before wrapping in Copenhagen according to XS Rock and the official tour site. Openers will include Blood Orange and The Japanese House, according to Montreal tourism’s official concert roundup, marking a high-profile return for Lorde as a live force.

Virgin itself has been generating critical and cultural buzz, widely seen as both a return to her early, synth-driven sound and an intensely personal statement. Cryptic Rock and student papers like The Lanthorn praise the album for its blend of dancefloor bangers and intimate lyrical exploration. Songs such as Hammer and GRWM reportedly chronicle her recent experiences of identity, health struggles, and finding freedom after a difficult period. The press is also spotlighting new single Man of the Year, released alongside a candid video that has fans and media discussing both its sonic flair and Lorde’s striking new look, according to IMDB and fashion sites.

Recent social media activity reflects this renaissance, with Lorde’s posts about Virgin, her Glastonbury set, and tour selling out pre-sale tickets in minutes and drawing enthusiastic responses across Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok. No major controversies or unverified rumors have emerged; rather, coverage has focused on her creative resurgence, honest interviews, and magnetic stage presence. The next few months look to be a victory lap for Lorde, who has returned with her most ambitious work—and boldest sense of self—yet.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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      <title>Lorde's Ultrasound Tour: Pop Icon Returns with New Album, Igniting Fan Frenzy</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI8082453916</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been making notable headlines this week, sparking both music press and social media buzz as anticipation builds for her upcoming tour and new album. According to Parade and AOL, the New Zealand pop icon took a much-publicized "week off" from work, sharing candid snapshots on Instagram of herself in a bright red and blue bikini, surrounded by trees and sunsets. The social posts radiated a mix of playfulness and vulnerability, with Lorde telling fans, “Had a week off. I’m a living creature again,” and reflecting on the challenge and mission to remain human, even through “bitter” moments. This resonated deeply with fans, fueling discussion about her current mindset and readiness to return to live performances. 

Tour excitement is reaching a fever pitch. XS Rock and Parade confirm that Lorde’s Ultrasound Tour is launching September 17 in Austin, Texas, with major arena stops across North America and Europe, including headline shows at Madison Square Garden and London’s O2 Arena. The tour will support her fourth studio album, Virgin, which has already been called by Daily Nexus "an explosion of nostalgia, sensuality, and vulnerability," marking both a sonic return to her synth-pop roots and a turning point after the challenges of her previous Solar Power era. In a recent Rolling Stone interview, Lorde shared personal struggles with her body image, heartbreak, and therapy during her last album cycle, and detailed her journey to reclaiming her creative spark and sense of self.

On the music front, Lorde has teased setlists—specifically promising the song “David” live for the first time—which triggered a flurry of fan excitement on Instagram and Twitter. She was also recently featured in Marlon Williams’ Māori language album and contributed a cover to the A24 Talking Heads tribute project, Everyone’s Getting Involved. Yesterday, Rolling Stone tagged Lorde in a new Instagram post, remobilizing buzz around her public re-emergence. Meanwhile, campaign accounts on Instagram are rallying for “Liability (Reprise)” to be performed on tour, underlining the strong grassroots fan engagement leading up to the shows. 

Perhaps the most talked-about incident was her unintentional public appearance outside Brooklyn’s BAM Harvey Theater. AOL reports that Lorde was spotted by fans as she exited the stage door after visiting actor Paul Mescal during his run in A Streetcar Named Desire, briefly making her a trending topic as passing fans realized a pop legend was in their midst. Throughout all this, Lorde herself has been forthright about where she stands artistically, telling People Magazine, “I don’t think I’m supposed to vibe out. I’m meant to make these bangers that f--- us all up,” further raising expectations for a more electrifying era ahead. No significant controversies or negative headlines have surfaced—only growing anticipation, media affection, and the sense that Lorde is entering a major new chapter.

Get

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 02 Aug 2025 13:53:59 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been making notable headlines this week, sparking both music press and social media buzz as anticipation builds for her upcoming tour and new album. According to Parade and AOL, the New Zealand pop icon took a much-publicized "week off" from work, sharing candid snapshots on Instagram of herself in a bright red and blue bikini, surrounded by trees and sunsets. The social posts radiated a mix of playfulness and vulnerability, with Lorde telling fans, “Had a week off. I’m a living creature again,” and reflecting on the challenge and mission to remain human, even through “bitter” moments. This resonated deeply with fans, fueling discussion about her current mindset and readiness to return to live performances. 

Tour excitement is reaching a fever pitch. XS Rock and Parade confirm that Lorde’s Ultrasound Tour is launching September 17 in Austin, Texas, with major arena stops across North America and Europe, including headline shows at Madison Square Garden and London’s O2 Arena. The tour will support her fourth studio album, Virgin, which has already been called by Daily Nexus "an explosion of nostalgia, sensuality, and vulnerability," marking both a sonic return to her synth-pop roots and a turning point after the challenges of her previous Solar Power era. In a recent Rolling Stone interview, Lorde shared personal struggles with her body image, heartbreak, and therapy during her last album cycle, and detailed her journey to reclaiming her creative spark and sense of self.

On the music front, Lorde has teased setlists—specifically promising the song “David” live for the first time—which triggered a flurry of fan excitement on Instagram and Twitter. She was also recently featured in Marlon Williams’ Māori language album and contributed a cover to the A24 Talking Heads tribute project, Everyone’s Getting Involved. Yesterday, Rolling Stone tagged Lorde in a new Instagram post, remobilizing buzz around her public re-emergence. Meanwhile, campaign accounts on Instagram are rallying for “Liability (Reprise)” to be performed on tour, underlining the strong grassroots fan engagement leading up to the shows. 

Perhaps the most talked-about incident was her unintentional public appearance outside Brooklyn’s BAM Harvey Theater. AOL reports that Lorde was spotted by fans as she exited the stage door after visiting actor Paul Mescal during his run in A Streetcar Named Desire, briefly making her a trending topic as passing fans realized a pop legend was in their midst. Throughout all this, Lorde herself has been forthright about where she stands artistically, telling People Magazine, “I don’t think I’m supposed to vibe out. I’m meant to make these bangers that f--- us all up,” further raising expectations for a more electrifying era ahead. No significant controversies or negative headlines have surfaced—only growing anticipation, media affection, and the sense that Lorde is entering a major new chapter.

Get

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Lorde has been making notable headlines this week, sparking both music press and social media buzz as anticipation builds for her upcoming tour and new album. According to Parade and AOL, the New Zealand pop icon took a much-publicized "week off" from work, sharing candid snapshots on Instagram of herself in a bright red and blue bikini, surrounded by trees and sunsets. The social posts radiated a mix of playfulness and vulnerability, with Lorde telling fans, “Had a week off. I’m a living creature again,” and reflecting on the challenge and mission to remain human, even through “bitter” moments. This resonated deeply with fans, fueling discussion about her current mindset and readiness to return to live performances. 

Tour excitement is reaching a fever pitch. XS Rock and Parade confirm that Lorde’s Ultrasound Tour is launching September 17 in Austin, Texas, with major arena stops across North America and Europe, including headline shows at Madison Square Garden and London’s O2 Arena. The tour will support her fourth studio album, Virgin, which has already been called by Daily Nexus "an explosion of nostalgia, sensuality, and vulnerability," marking both a sonic return to her synth-pop roots and a turning point after the challenges of her previous Solar Power era. In a recent Rolling Stone interview, Lorde shared personal struggles with her body image, heartbreak, and therapy during her last album cycle, and detailed her journey to reclaiming her creative spark and sense of self.

On the music front, Lorde has teased setlists—specifically promising the song “David” live for the first time—which triggered a flurry of fan excitement on Instagram and Twitter. She was also recently featured in Marlon Williams’ Māori language album and contributed a cover to the A24 Talking Heads tribute project, Everyone’s Getting Involved. Yesterday, Rolling Stone tagged Lorde in a new Instagram post, remobilizing buzz around her public re-emergence. Meanwhile, campaign accounts on Instagram are rallying for “Liability (Reprise)” to be performed on tour, underlining the strong grassroots fan engagement leading up to the shows. 

Perhaps the most talked-about incident was her unintentional public appearance outside Brooklyn’s BAM Harvey Theater. AOL reports that Lorde was spotted by fans as she exited the stage door after visiting actor Paul Mescal during his run in A Streetcar Named Desire, briefly making her a trending topic as passing fans realized a pop legend was in their midst. Throughout all this, Lorde herself has been forthright about where she stands artistically, telling People Magazine, “I don’t think I’m supposed to vibe out. I’m meant to make these bangers that f--- us all up,” further raising expectations for a more electrifying era ahead. No significant controversies or negative headlines have surfaced—only growing anticipation, media affection, and the sense that Lorde is entering a major new chapter.

Get

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>248</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Lorde's Luminous Comeback: Healing, Hits, and Headlining in 2025</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI2473442083</link>
      <description>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

In the past few days Lorde has moved into the summer spotlight with momentum that feels unmistakable. On July 29 Parade highlighted Lorde’s personal update on social media where she posted cheerful bikini photos and reflected on “a week off” from work, reminding fans she’s focused on “trying to stay human, even when it tastes bitter.” Fans quickly responded with adoration and anticipation, especially since Lorde teased them with clues about her upcoming tour setlist, fueling speculation that she may perform “David” live for the first time. According to her own posts Lorde seems energized as she prepares for her Ultrasound Tour beginning September 17 in Austin Texas a campaign that will promote her much-discussed new album Virgin Parade, United Center and other sources confirm her U.S. tour will also include support acts The Japanese House and Chanel Beads.

Just days before that social media update Lorde dropped her first new single in four years “What Was That” produced with Jim-E Stack and Dan Nigro, as detailed in AOL and Variety coverage. The song’s release was intertwined with a headline-grabbing incident in New York’s Washington Square Park, where Lorde announced a pop-up performance on social media—only for the event to be abruptly canceled due to crowd safety and police intervention when thousands showed up. Always committed to her fans, Lorde arrived two hours late and played the track in person for those still lingering, a move that only intensified social buzz and cemented the single’s rollout as an event in itself.

Simultaneously the press has been mining her new interview with Rolling Stone in which Lorde honestly discussed overcoming stage fright and an eating disorder, revealing that MDMA-assisted therapy and psilocybin sessions played pivotal roles in her healing—this continues to draw both praise and controversy, especially given ongoing FDA debates over psychedelic therapy. Her on-the-record transparency marks a new chapter, with Lorde saying she found personal transformation and creative rejuvenation as she worked on Virgin, her first album since 2021’s Solar Power.

Finally with rumors swirling and Lorde herself hinting on Instagram there is considerable speculation about a possible secret set at Glastonbury 2025, which would coincide with her continuing ascendancy this year. Media reviews like Daily Nexus are already suggesting Virgin as a major album of 2025, citing its return to synth-pop roots and Lorde’s characteristic mix of introspection and euphoria. All told, with a triumphant new album, a chart-topping single, fearless candor about her struggles, and the imminent launch of a major tour Lorde is bigger news than ever—and owning every minute of it.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 31 Jul 2025 19:30:42 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

In the past few days Lorde has moved into the summer spotlight with momentum that feels unmistakable. On July 29 Parade highlighted Lorde’s personal update on social media where she posted cheerful bikini photos and reflected on “a week off” from work, reminding fans she’s focused on “trying to stay human, even when it tastes bitter.” Fans quickly responded with adoration and anticipation, especially since Lorde teased them with clues about her upcoming tour setlist, fueling speculation that she may perform “David” live for the first time. According to her own posts Lorde seems energized as she prepares for her Ultrasound Tour beginning September 17 in Austin Texas a campaign that will promote her much-discussed new album Virgin Parade, United Center and other sources confirm her U.S. tour will also include support acts The Japanese House and Chanel Beads.

Just days before that social media update Lorde dropped her first new single in four years “What Was That” produced with Jim-E Stack and Dan Nigro, as detailed in AOL and Variety coverage. The song’s release was intertwined with a headline-grabbing incident in New York’s Washington Square Park, where Lorde announced a pop-up performance on social media—only for the event to be abruptly canceled due to crowd safety and police intervention when thousands showed up. Always committed to her fans, Lorde arrived two hours late and played the track in person for those still lingering, a move that only intensified social buzz and cemented the single’s rollout as an event in itself.

Simultaneously the press has been mining her new interview with Rolling Stone in which Lorde honestly discussed overcoming stage fright and an eating disorder, revealing that MDMA-assisted therapy and psilocybin sessions played pivotal roles in her healing—this continues to draw both praise and controversy, especially given ongoing FDA debates over psychedelic therapy. Her on-the-record transparency marks a new chapter, with Lorde saying she found personal transformation and creative rejuvenation as she worked on Virgin, her first album since 2021’s Solar Power.

Finally with rumors swirling and Lorde herself hinting on Instagram there is considerable speculation about a possible secret set at Glastonbury 2025, which would coincide with her continuing ascendancy this year. Media reviews like Daily Nexus are already suggesting Virgin as a major album of 2025, citing its return to synth-pop roots and Lorde’s characteristic mix of introspection and euphoria. All told, with a triumphant new album, a chart-topping single, fearless candor about her struggles, and the imminent launch of a major tour Lorde is bigger news than ever—and owning every minute of it.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[Lorde  BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

In the past few days Lorde has moved into the summer spotlight with momentum that feels unmistakable. On July 29 Parade highlighted Lorde’s personal update on social media where she posted cheerful bikini photos and reflected on “a week off” from work, reminding fans she’s focused on “trying to stay human, even when it tastes bitter.” Fans quickly responded with adoration and anticipation, especially since Lorde teased them with clues about her upcoming tour setlist, fueling speculation that she may perform “David” live for the first time. According to her own posts Lorde seems energized as she prepares for her Ultrasound Tour beginning September 17 in Austin Texas a campaign that will promote her much-discussed new album Virgin Parade, United Center and other sources confirm her U.S. tour will also include support acts The Japanese House and Chanel Beads.

Just days before that social media update Lorde dropped her first new single in four years “What Was That” produced with Jim-E Stack and Dan Nigro, as detailed in AOL and Variety coverage. The song’s release was intertwined with a headline-grabbing incident in New York’s Washington Square Park, where Lorde announced a pop-up performance on social media—only for the event to be abruptly canceled due to crowd safety and police intervention when thousands showed up. Always committed to her fans, Lorde arrived two hours late and played the track in person for those still lingering, a move that only intensified social buzz and cemented the single’s rollout as an event in itself.

Simultaneously the press has been mining her new interview with Rolling Stone in which Lorde honestly discussed overcoming stage fright and an eating disorder, revealing that MDMA-assisted therapy and psilocybin sessions played pivotal roles in her healing—this continues to draw both praise and controversy, especially given ongoing FDA debates over psychedelic therapy. Her on-the-record transparency marks a new chapter, with Lorde saying she found personal transformation and creative rejuvenation as she worked on Virgin, her first album since 2021’s Solar Power.

Finally with rumors swirling and Lorde herself hinting on Instagram there is considerable speculation about a possible secret set at Glastonbury 2025, which would coincide with her continuing ascendancy this year. Media reviews like Daily Nexus are already suggesting Virgin as a major album of 2025, citing its return to synth-pop roots and Lorde’s characteristic mix of introspection and euphoria. All told, with a triumphant new album, a chart-topping single, fearless candor about her struggles, and the imminent launch of a major tour Lorde is bigger news than ever—and owning every minute of it.

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
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      <title>Lorde's Electrifying Return: New Album, World Tour, and Cultural Dominance in 2025</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6077253126</link>
      <description>It has been an electrifying week for Lorde, and her presence is dominating both the headlines and cultural conversation. The biggest news came today with the official announcement that Lorde is expanding her “Ultrasound World Tour” to include major arena dates across New Zealand and Australia in February 2026. The excitement is palpable as this marks her first return to hometown venues since the Solar Power era, with presales starting tomorrow and general ticket sales opening July 18 as reported by Pollstar and echoed across socials. Her fans in Auckland, Christchurch, Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne, and Perth are buzzing, especially after Lorde herself posted her enthusiasm for these “rawest and most liquid” home shows on Facebook.

This tour is in support of her new album Virgin, which dropped at the end of June and is being hailed as her most confessional and critically acclaimed work in years according to Bustle and God Is In The TV Zine. The record includes singles like What Was That, Man of the Year, and Hammer, and the “Ultrasound” tour is set to bring a rotating cast of cool openers, including Blood Orange and Japanese House, to arenas throughout North America and Europe starting in September, before heading Down Under in 2026.

Lorde has also made notable waves in the cultural and fashion landscape. She stole attention at the 2025 Met Ball in a custom Thom Browne piece, which she told Vogue’s Emma Chamberlain was an “Easter egg” for Virgin, hinting at the gender exploration themes of her album. Social media posts dissected everything from the open-back dress to her cryptic comments about feeling like both a man and a woman. Fans and fashion critics alike are pointing to her new look as a sign of the times, with Vogue proclaiming Lorde’s “unfussy” style as the next big trend.

In the theater world, Lorde’s impact was underscored by her front-row appearance at Broadway’s John Proctor is the Villain on July 11, where her song Green Light plays a key role. She met with the cast, signed Playbills at the stage door, and was embraced by fans and the playwright, who described the night as “surreal and beautiful,” according to Playbill.

Festival season has been Lorde’s playground as well; she delivered a secret set at Glastonbury 2025 that set the tone for what the press is calling “Lorde Summer.” Instagram posts from Visit Perth and coverage in City AM and Bustle illustrate just how central Lorde has become to the pop zeitgeist, with her Virgin-era persona and music dominating playlists, memes, and pop culture discourse. In short, Lorde is everywhere right now—recording, performing, inspiring, and setting the agenda for what pop music sounds and looks like in 2025 and beyond.

Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs

For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 14 Jul 2025 20:14:23 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>It has been an electrifying week for Lorde, and her presence is dominating both the headlines and cultural conversation. The biggest news came today with the official announcement that Lorde is expanding her “Ultrasound World Tour” to include major arena dates across New Zealand and Australia in February 2026. The excitement is palpable as this marks her first return to hometown venues since the Solar Power era, with presales starting tomorrow and general ticket sales opening July 18 as reported by Pollstar and echoed across socials. Her fans in Auckland, Christchurch, Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne, and Perth are buzzing, especially after Lorde herself posted her enthusiasm for these “rawest and most liquid” home shows on Facebook.

This tour is in support of her new album Virgin, which dropped at the end of June and is being hailed as her most confessional and critically acclaimed work in years according to Bustle and God Is In The TV Zine. The record includes singles like What Was That, Man of the Year, and Hammer, and the “Ultrasound” tour is set to bring a rotating cast of cool openers, including Blood Orange and Japanese House, to arenas throughout North America and Europe starting in September, before heading Down Under in 2026.

Lorde has also made notable waves in the cultural and fashion landscape. She stole attention at the 2025 Met Ball in a custom Thom Browne piece, which she told Vogue’s Emma Chamberlain was an “Easter egg” for Virgin, hinting at the gender exploration themes of her album. Social media posts dissected everything from the open-back dress to her cryptic comments about feeling like both a man and a woman. Fans and fashion critics alike are pointing to her new look as a sign of the times, with Vogue proclaiming Lorde’s “unfussy” style as the next big trend.

In the theater world, Lorde’s impact was underscored by her front-row appearance at Broadway’s John Proctor is the Villain on July 11, where her song Green Light plays a key role. She met with the cast, signed Playbills at the stage door, and was embraced by fans and the playwright, who described the night as “surreal and beautiful,” according to Playbill.

Festival season has been Lorde’s playground as well; she delivered a secret set at Glastonbury 2025 that set the tone for what the press is calling “Lorde Summer.” Instagram posts from Visit Perth and coverage in City AM and Bustle illustrate just how central Lorde has become to the pop zeitgeist, with her Virgin-era persona and music dominating playlists, memes, and pop culture discourse. In short, Lorde is everywhere right now—recording, performing, inspiring, and setting the agenda for what pop music sounds and looks like in 2025 and beyond.

Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs

For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[It has been an electrifying week for Lorde, and her presence is dominating both the headlines and cultural conversation. The biggest news came today with the official announcement that Lorde is expanding her “Ultrasound World Tour” to include major arena dates across New Zealand and Australia in February 2026. The excitement is palpable as this marks her first return to hometown venues since the Solar Power era, with presales starting tomorrow and general ticket sales opening July 18 as reported by Pollstar and echoed across socials. Her fans in Auckland, Christchurch, Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne, and Perth are buzzing, especially after Lorde herself posted her enthusiasm for these “rawest and most liquid” home shows on Facebook.

This tour is in support of her new album Virgin, which dropped at the end of June and is being hailed as her most confessional and critically acclaimed work in years according to Bustle and God Is In The TV Zine. The record includes singles like What Was That, Man of the Year, and Hammer, and the “Ultrasound” tour is set to bring a rotating cast of cool openers, including Blood Orange and Japanese House, to arenas throughout North America and Europe starting in September, before heading Down Under in 2026.

Lorde has also made notable waves in the cultural and fashion landscape. She stole attention at the 2025 Met Ball in a custom Thom Browne piece, which she told Vogue’s Emma Chamberlain was an “Easter egg” for Virgin, hinting at the gender exploration themes of her album. Social media posts dissected everything from the open-back dress to her cryptic comments about feeling like both a man and a woman. Fans and fashion critics alike are pointing to her new look as a sign of the times, with Vogue proclaiming Lorde’s “unfussy” style as the next big trend.

In the theater world, Lorde’s impact was underscored by her front-row appearance at Broadway’s John Proctor is the Villain on July 11, where her song Green Light plays a key role. She met with the cast, signed Playbills at the stage door, and was embraced by fans and the playwright, who described the night as “surreal and beautiful,” according to Playbill.

Festival season has been Lorde’s playground as well; she delivered a secret set at Glastonbury 2025 that set the tone for what the press is calling “Lorde Summer.” Instagram posts from Visit Perth and coverage in City AM and Bustle illustrate just how central Lorde has become to the pop zeitgeist, with her Virgin-era persona and music dominating playlists, memes, and pop culture discourse. In short, Lorde is everywhere right now—recording, performing, inspiring, and setting the agenda for what pop music sounds and looks like in 2025 and beyond.

Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs

For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>237</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Lorde: From New Zealand Teenage Sensation to Global Pop Icon Redefining Music and Authenticity</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6821915055</link>
      <description># Lorde: From Auckland Talent Shows to Grammy-Winning Global Icon | Podcast Episode

Discover the extraordinary journey of Lorde, the New Zealand-born singer-songwriter who redefined pop music with her poetic lyrics and distinctive sound. In this episode, we trace her evolution from performing in Auckland school talent shows to becoming a two-time Grammy winner and festival headliner.

Learn how Lorde's creative family environment and early exposure to literature shaped her artistic vision, leading to breakthrough hits like "Royals" and critically acclaimed albums including Pure Heroine, Melodrama, and Solar Power. We explore her musical transformation across her discography, culminating in her latest studio album Virgin, which boldly tackles themes of sexual awakening and liberation.

Beyond her musical achievements, we discuss Lorde's environmental advocacy, cultural engagement through projects like Te Ao Mārama, and her refreshingly grounded approach to fame despite international success. Gain insights into how this influential artist maintains her enigmatic persona while balancing global stardom with ordinary life in New York City.

Subscribe for weekly updates on Lorde and visit QuietPlease.ai for more information. This Quiet Please production offers the perfect blend of biography, music analysis, and cultural commentary for both longtime fans and newcomers to Lorde's remarkable artistry.

Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs

For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 14 Jul 2025 20:11:53 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary># Lorde: From Auckland Talent Shows to Grammy-Winning Global Icon | Podcast Episode

Discover the extraordinary journey of Lorde, the New Zealand-born singer-songwriter who redefined pop music with her poetic lyrics and distinctive sound. In this episode, we trace her evolution from performing in Auckland school talent shows to becoming a two-time Grammy winner and festival headliner.

Learn how Lorde's creative family environment and early exposure to literature shaped her artistic vision, leading to breakthrough hits like "Royals" and critically acclaimed albums including Pure Heroine, Melodrama, and Solar Power. We explore her musical transformation across her discography, culminating in her latest studio album Virgin, which boldly tackles themes of sexual awakening and liberation.

Beyond her musical achievements, we discuss Lorde's environmental advocacy, cultural engagement through projects like Te Ao Mārama, and her refreshingly grounded approach to fame despite international success. Gain insights into how this influential artist maintains her enigmatic persona while balancing global stardom with ordinary life in New York City.

Subscribe for weekly updates on Lorde and visit QuietPlease.ai for more information. This Quiet Please production offers the perfect blend of biography, music analysis, and cultural commentary for both longtime fans and newcomers to Lorde's remarkable artistry.

Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs

For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[# Lorde: From Auckland Talent Shows to Grammy-Winning Global Icon | Podcast Episode

Discover the extraordinary journey of Lorde, the New Zealand-born singer-songwriter who redefined pop music with her poetic lyrics and distinctive sound. In this episode, we trace her evolution from performing in Auckland school talent shows to becoming a two-time Grammy winner and festival headliner.

Learn how Lorde's creative family environment and early exposure to literature shaped her artistic vision, leading to breakthrough hits like "Royals" and critically acclaimed albums including Pure Heroine, Melodrama, and Solar Power. We explore her musical transformation across her discography, culminating in her latest studio album Virgin, which boldly tackles themes of sexual awakening and liberation.

Beyond her musical achievements, we discuss Lorde's environmental advocacy, cultural engagement through projects like Te Ao Mārama, and her refreshingly grounded approach to fame despite international success. Gain insights into how this influential artist maintains her enigmatic persona while balancing global stardom with ordinary life in New York City.

Subscribe for weekly updates on Lorde and visit QuietPlease.ai for more information. This Quiet Please production offers the perfect blend of biography, music analysis, and cultural commentary for both longtime fans and newcomers to Lorde's remarkable artistry.

Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs

For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>293</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>Lorde Unveiled: An Intimate Odyssey Behind the Artist's Rise to Global Stardom</title>
      <link>https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI6933583815</link>
      <description>Here's a dynamic 1-minute podcast promo script:

Have you ever wondered what truly drives a musical prodigy from suburban New Zealand to global superstardom? Lorde Audio Biography takes you behind the scenes of one of the most fascinating artists of our generation, offering an intimate journey through her extraordinary life.

Each episode peels back the layers of Ella Yelich-O'Connor's remarkable story, revealing the raw emotions, creative inspirations, and personal challenges that shaped her unprecedented rise in the music industry. From her breakthrough hit "Royals" to her deeply introspective albums, we dive deep into the world of an artist who redefined pop music before she could legally drink.

Our meticulously researched podcast doesn't just chronicle her achievements—it explores the heart and mind of a young woman who challenged musical conventions and spoke to an entire generation. Updated regularly with exclusive insights, interviews, and never-before-heard stories, Lorde Audio Biography is more than a podcast—it's a living, breathing narrative of artistic evolution.

Whether you're a die-hard fan or simply curious about one of modern music's most compelling voices, this podcast promises to transform how you understand Lorde. Subscribe now and immerse yourself in a story that's as complex, powerful, and nuanced as her music itself.
 

Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs

For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 14 Jul 2025 20:07:20 -0000</pubDate>
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      <itunes:author>Inception Point AI</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle/>
      <itunes:summary>Here's a dynamic 1-minute podcast promo script:

Have you ever wondered what truly drives a musical prodigy from suburban New Zealand to global superstardom? Lorde Audio Biography takes you behind the scenes of one of the most fascinating artists of our generation, offering an intimate journey through her extraordinary life.

Each episode peels back the layers of Ella Yelich-O'Connor's remarkable story, revealing the raw emotions, creative inspirations, and personal challenges that shaped her unprecedented rise in the music industry. From her breakthrough hit "Royals" to her deeply introspective albums, we dive deep into the world of an artist who redefined pop music before she could legally drink.

Our meticulously researched podcast doesn't just chronicle her achievements—it explores the heart and mind of a young woman who challenged musical conventions and spoke to an entire generation. Updated regularly with exclusive insights, interviews, and never-before-heard stories, Lorde Audio Biography is more than a podcast—it's a living, breathing narrative of artistic evolution.

Whether you're a die-hard fan or simply curious about one of modern music's most compelling voices, this podcast promises to transform how you understand Lorde. Subscribe now and immerse yourself in a story that's as complex, powerful, and nuanced as her music itself.
 

Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs

For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.</itunes:summary>
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Have you ever wondered what truly drives a musical prodigy from suburban New Zealand to global superstardom? Lorde Audio Biography takes you behind the scenes of one of the most fascinating artists of our generation, offering an intimate journey through her extraordinary life.

Each episode peels back the layers of Ella Yelich-O'Connor's remarkable story, revealing the raw emotions, creative inspirations, and personal challenges that shaped her unprecedented rise in the music industry. From her breakthrough hit "Royals" to her deeply introspective albums, we dive deep into the world of an artist who redefined pop music before she could legally drink.

Our meticulously researched podcast doesn't just chronicle her achievements—it explores the heart and mind of a young woman who challenged musical conventions and spoke to an entire generation. Updated regularly with exclusive insights, interviews, and never-before-heard stories, Lorde Audio Biography is more than a podcast—it's a living, breathing narrative of artistic evolution.

Whether you're a die-hard fan or simply curious about one of modern music's most compelling voices, this podcast promises to transform how you understand Lorde. Subscribe now and immerse yourself in a story that's as complex, powerful, and nuanced as her music itself.
 

Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs

For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.]]>
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