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Music

Olivia Dean Makes SNL Debut, Dijon Announced For Next Month

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

TikTok-viral soft-pop singer Olivia Dean made her debut on SNL last night in an episode hosted by fellow first-timer Glen Powell. Her sophomore album The Art Of Loving arrived in September, and she sang two songs from it, “Man I Need” and “Let Alone The One You Love.”

The episode was light on the music, but Powell did sing in the pre-taped music video “I Miss My Ex’s Dad” alongside Tommy Brennan and Ben Marshall (Powell played the father in question). Other notable moments included a surprise return from former cast member Will Forte in some new MacGruber pre-tapes poking fun at the Epstein files, during which Powell and Chloe Fineman played MacGruber’s partners.

In more SNL news, the show just announced details for their December 6 episode. Dijon will make his musical guest debut with returning host Melissa McCarthy. See highlights from last night below.

next show!!! pic.twitter.com/LfX2gZWgvF

— Saturday Night Live – SNL (@nbcsnl) November 16, 2025

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Watch Olivia Dean perform ‘Man I Need' and ‘Let Alone the One You Love’ on 'SNL'
Music

Watch Olivia Dean perform ‘Man I Need’ and ‘Let Alone the One You Love’ on ‘SNL’

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Olivia Dean sang ‘Man I Need’ and ‘Let Alone the One You Love’ on Saturday Night Live – check out clips of both performances below.

  • READ MORE: Olivia Dean – ‘The Art of Loving’ review: musings on love from a star risen

Following the release of her second album, ‘The Art of Loving‘, the musician made her debut on the show last night (November 15) with a pair of tracks from the record. Fresh off the back of a Grammy nomination for Best New Artist at next year’s ceremony, she kicked things off with ‘Man I Need’.

Performing in front of a shimmering gold backdrop, a jubilant Dean sang backed by a band, who then joined her in slowing things down with ‘Let Alone the One You Love’.

Both tracks come from her highly acclaimed latest album, the success of which saw her become the first female solo artist to ever have four singles in the Official Charts UK Top 10 simultaneously late last month.

The songs in question were ‘Man I Need’, which at that time was sat at Number Two, ‘So Easy (To Fall in Love) at Number Six, ‘Nice To Each Other’ at Number Eight, and ‘Rein Me In’, her collaboration with Sam Fender, at Number 10.

It followed after ‘The Art of Loving’ reached Number One in the album charts upon its release, marking the biggest opening week for a British female artist since Adele in 2021.

Dean’s latest record scored a four-star review from NME, with Hannah Mylrea comparing her to musicians like RAYE and Sam Fender: “British artists who’ve ascended to bigger and bigger stages, crafting music that while sonically is in their own lanes, is filled with honest lyricism coming from a distinct voice.

“As Dean prepares for her own sold-out arena tours – and with her tracks soaring up the UK charts – this record comes to cement her place. With it, marks the next chapter in Dean’s career, one as a popstar risen.”

Next year, she’s headed on a UK and European tour, which includes four dates at London’s O2 Arena. You can find a full list of dates, as well as all ticket information, here.

Ahead of the album’s release, Dean shared the lead single ‘Nice To Each Other’ back in June, and told fans it was about the push and pull of exploring your independence in dating.

In other news, earlier this summer, Dean played a surprise set at Glastonbury and released the duet version of ‘Rein Me In’ with Sam Fender, after the two performed his ‘People Watching’ track during his huge London Stadium show.

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Olivia Dean Performs 'Man I Need,' 'Let Alone The One You Love'
Music

Olivia Dean Performs ‘Man I Need,’ ‘Let Alone The One You Love’

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

British singer-songwriter Olivia Dean debuted on Saturday Night Live by performing two songs from her second studio album, The Art of Loving, which came out in September.

Dean, who was just nominated for Best New Artist at next year’s Grammys, led off with “Man I Need.”

The song “is about knowing how you deserve to be loved and not being afraid to ask for it,” Dean said in statement upon its release earlier this year. “It’s forward, sexy, fun! It’s made for dancing!”

Dean wrote “Man I Need” with Zach Nahome and Tobias Jesso Jr., the winner of the 2023 Grammy for Songwriter of the Year. He is nominated for that award again this year.

Dean’s second performance was of “Let Alone the One You Love,” the sixth track off her latest album.

“We made most of this album in a studio we built in a house in East London,” the 26-year-old wrote on Instagram teasing it. “For 8 weeks we lived in the house of loving! I brought my piano from home and all my favourite people and tried to create things that felt like warmth. Here you have a piece of my heart!”

 The Art of Loving has been widely praised.

“Dean’s star power is radiant and fueled by more than just charisma. She grooves in perfect time with an expertly assembled band, navigating through blaring trumpets, trombones, and saxophones with a delicate attention to detail and synchronicity,” Rolling Stone‘s Larisha Paul wrote in a review of the follow-up to 2023’s Messy.

Trending Stories

On Friday, Dean announced dates for her 14-city The Art of Loving tour, which begins next July in San Francisco, California. She’ll work her way to the east coast before wrapping up in Austin, Texas in late August.

In the last few weeks, Dean was the opener on Sabrina Carpenter’s Short n’ Sweet tour. Before that, she opened for Sam Fender’s People Watching tour, having previously collaborated with Fender on the single “Rein Me In.”

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Dean Davidson: A Toronto-Based Contemporary Jewelry Brand
Fashion

Dean Davidson: A Toronto-Based Contemporary Jewelry Brand

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84


Brand Bio is Fashionista’s guide to the best independent fashion and beauty brands — a resource for retailers, job seekers, B2B companies and consumers alike. If you’d like your brand to be featured, fill out this form. Dean DavidsonHeadquarters: Toronto, CanadaE-commerce: deandavidson.comSocial …

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November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Dean Butler, Alison Arngrim,
TV & Streaming

‘Little House on the Prairie’: Alison Arngrim & Dean Butler Talk Fame 40 Years Later

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84


The actors have wildly different experiences with getting recognized for their roles in the beloved historical drama series.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Can Olivia Dean or Kid Cudi Make Big Moves on the Billboard Charts?
Music

Can Olivia Dean or Kid Cudi Make Big Moves on the Billboard Charts?

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Our Billboard chart experts break down whether Olivia Dean’s “So Easy (To Fall In Love),” Kid Cudi’s “Maui Wowie” or Tame Impala’s “Dracula” make moves on the Billboard charts.

Jerah Milligan 

‘The Life of a Show Girl,’ “Golden” and “Ordinary” still may be dominating our top 10, but who’s in the mix on the hot 100 this week? Could the resurfacing of Kid Cudi’s classic bring this old song to the charts? Is Olivia Dean stealing people’s hearts and staying on repeat, or will Tame Impala’s new music be a  moment? We’re giving you the rundown on some of the contenders on This Week’s Hot 100 this “Maui Wowie” trend is taking over the internet. Will the song make its debut on the charts 17 years after it first was released? 

Treavor Anderson

Kid Cudi’s “Maui Wowie,” which debuts this week in the 70s, really blowing up on TikTok. This is a song from 2008 by the way. So it’s our first time actually seeing Kid Cudion the Hot 100 in a lead role since 2020 so welcome back to the chart, Cudi. But this trend is going crazy. This song is blowing up, so that’s something to watch out for as the streams keep going up, that song could really be a big hit for him. 

Jerah Milligan

It’s so easy to fall in love with Olivia Dean that we may see her climb,

Delisa Shannon

Based off of my streams alone, that one is going to have an uptick on the charts. Everyone is excited about Olivia Dean’s ‘The Art of Loving.’ She has this ability with the way that she arranges, her melodies, her vocals. Everyone is excited, myself included.

Watch the full video above!

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Olivia Dean Is Your Next Favorite Pop Star
Fashion

Olivia Dean Is Your Next Favorite Pop Star

by jummy84 October 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Though the 26-year-old’s songwriting feels very now, she’s not imitating pop-music trends like the heavy-handed satire of Sabrina Carpenter or the very-online language of Taylor Swift. She’s cheery but not trite, earnest but not saccharine. A situationship might be a modern conceit, but “Nice to Each Other” sounds as though it could have been published in any decade between 1950 and the 2020s. Dean captures the messiness of a dalliance with an expiration date for what it is—a push and pull between romance and convenience that is not really modern at all.

Dean’s rich sound and blend of genres—pop, neo-soul, R&B, with a kiss of Motown and the singer-songwriters (Joni Mitchell, Carol King) and vocalists (Aretha Franklin, Whitney Houston) that inspire her—also make her an outlier among her peers. Fans have likened her to Norah Jones and Amy Winehouse for the warm and soulful sound that she appears to deliver effortlessly; the most apt comparison, in my opinion, remains Adele, a fellow graduate of London’s Brit School, where Dean says she learned to let go of her fear of putting her art in front of a judgy audience.

“That’s where I met my band and my best friends and like-minded people,” she says of the renowned arts school. “I was able to just really commit to myself and not be ashamed about my love of music and feel like it was embarrassing or over-the-top.”

Dean is affable but a little reserved during our call, which took place the week between her performances on weekends one and two of the Austin City Limits Festival. She recalls that she was a shy kid, and I wonder if that foreshadowed her tendency toward privacy as she’s entered the spotlight. We chat casually about Cameron Winter, the artist she’s been listening to lately; her curly-hair routine (she’s on a less-is-more, embrace-the-volume kick right now); and her current TV diet, a combination of Sex and the City, Friends, and The Great British Bake Off. She’s quick to laugh, her British accent carrying the same satisfying huskiness she possesses in her singing voice.

October 18, 2025 0 comments
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(All photos by Anthony Batista. Styled by Louise Donegan. Custom stage clothes by Alexander Wang)
Music

Producer Mike Dean on Making Music That Stands the Test of Time

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

As I greet Mike Dean over a video call, it’s five days until the closing of the first round of voting for the 2026 Grammy Awards. His production work on the Weeknd’s Hurry Up Tomorrow is up for 10 categories. I ask him if there’s a particular category he’d like to win. “I’ve never won Song of the Year or Record of the Year…” he says, sitting in the kitchen of his California home, wearing a gray T-shirt, sipping a glass of ice water, and occasionally inhaling from his bong. “I’ve been nominated several times, and just never got the big category.” 

Dean’s not nervous, though. His life doesn’t depend on it, he says. After all, the producer, audio engineer, and multi-instrumentalist has been nominated for 19 Grammy Awards, winning seven of them, most recently in 2022 for Best Rap Song as one of the songwriters for Kanye West’s “Jail,” featuring Jay-Z. 

Over his more than 30-year career, Dean—who’s known for his synth-heavy production sound—has worked with 2Pac, Scarface, Madonna, Selena Gomez, Lana Del Rey, and countless others. He’s also released his own music, the six-album 4:20 series. 

Dean started out in music as a pianist and keyboard player, eventually getting into synthesizers in high school. 

Fresh after graduating in 1983, he started playing with Mexican-American singer Selena. “I’d be in the studio with her, and that’s whenever I started hitting record and overdubbing keyboards and producing,” he says. “That was the beginning of it, I guess, with Selena.”

Dean eventually got into hip-hop, working alongside artists such as Scarface, Geto Boys, and the Dogg Pound before forming a partnership with West as a producer, engineer, and multi-instrumentalist on almost all of his albums. Then there’s Travis Scott, with whom Dean has collaborated on all of his music since 2013.

But it’s Dean’s creative long-term team-up with the Weeknd, of course, that’s been keeping him busy lately, having just finished touring with him on his After Hours til Dawn stadium tour. Dean was not only the opener, but on some dates, he performed alongside Playboi Carti and Kaytranada.  

Now, as Grammy season rolls around, Dean has solidified his status as a legend in the field, with way too many accomplishments to mention here. In our brief chat, we only scrape the surface of all that he’s done throughout his career, how he approaches producing, and how he wants to be remembered.

How do you approach sound design? Do you approach it differently now than when you did back in the ’90s?

Not so much, really. Just still trying not to overproduce and make enough space for every instrument that’s there, instead of putting too many things and then having to fight it in the mix to make it all work. It’s much easier with computers instead of back then, [when] we were using drum machines and tape and SMPTE time code, locking things up. It was a lot harder to get into making beats. You couldn’t just go out and buy loops and figure out with YouTube how to make beats. Back in the day, you’d buy an MPC drum machine, you had this thing with 16 sounds in it that sucked, and you had to find sounds and put them in there and make songs, you know? It’s a different era.

You’ve said before that you “let the synths talk.” What does that mean to you creatively?

You’re always turning knobs trying to find something new or different. And then you’ll have those happy accidents. That’s where all the cool stuff happens. I might play a keyboard part on one keyboard and then assign it to another keyboard, and it does something crazy.

How much of your process is about technical perfection versus emotional instinct? 

It’s a natural balance, a yin-yang type of thing…half technical experience, from doing the same thing over and over and seeing when you’re going down bad paths and stuff, and half just emotional flow state, as people are starting to call it. 

Like getting in the zone?

Yeah, stream of consciousness.

You’ve worked in a lot of different genres. What do you think ties all of your work together sonically? 

My chord voicing and leading notes. I choose to put chords together, and what note goes on top, that turns into what inspires the singer or the rapper.

You’ve worked with Kanye, Travis Scott, The Weeknd, Beyoncé, so many major artists. What do you think makes a collaboration truly work?

Patience and trust. They have to trust you to let you do your thing, which everybody does now. Earlier on, I had to push more to get my ideas across. Now, I just put too many ideas and let the artists pick through it a lot of times, let them thin it out, sit with me, and arrange stuff.

Is it a back-and-forth type thing, where you’ll let them listen and then they come back with feedback? 

Beyoncé is a good example of that. It was her Renaissance album I worked on. I did all those songs. They sent me the songs to work on, and I just sent them the fuck out. I just played synths all over them, and then sent it back to her and she’d sit with her engineer and arrange what I played and where she wanted it. I never heard it again until it came out. That’s one work state that I don’t do very often, but I do enjoy it.

How do you balance contributing to an artist’s vision while keeping your own creative identity? Is that something that you even think about?

Not really. It just happens. I don’t really need a producer tag. I kind of have a sound people can feel, and it’s me. Or hopefully, they can. Sometimes you get into a flow state with the artist where that’s like the perfect situation. Working with Abel [The Weeknd] on this last album, towards the end of the album, me and him were just in the studio, just locked in, just finalizing stuff. And that’s when it gets exciting to me. It’s when you have 72 hours to turn in and you have 144 hours of work to do, and you just do it. 

You’re deadline driven. 

Yeah, I like a deadline. That’s the only way I got my 4:25 album done. I knew I wanted to drop it around 4/20 this year, and I just fucked around and fucked around and didn’t start it until 4/10, you know what I mean? I literally did it in 11 days. And then the album came out really, really good. It’s really cohesive because it’s made in such a short time period.

You’ve mentored a lot of younger producers. What’s the biggest mistake you see up-and-comers make?

Business. I think business mistakes…not standing up for themselves. It’s hard. I know some of the DSPs [digital service providers] are changing. It’s hard to get the credits all right, which is very important to up-and-coming producers. I know some of the DSPs, I won’t mention any names, but they’re working on updating their stuff. I’m kind of working with them. I hope to work with them more and get where everybody’s recognized that works on this music, behind the scenes. You used to get recognition during physical projects because it was all printed out. Now, they only put certain credits online. It’s not really fair. Anyway, that’s my preaching for that.

You’ve had a hand in some of the most influential albums in the past three decades. Do you think about your legacy at all? 

I think about it. Like I was thinking, what do I have left to prove? I can make a good record. Now I’m kind of doing what I want to do, not so driven by trying to get so many projects out. I used to try to do six albums a year or something. Now, I did two albums last year. Or one really. I did Abel’s album and then toured for four months, working on a few things I can’t talk about yet.

When you look back on your catalog, what moment feels like the biggest creative breakthrough for you?

Probably 2011, 2012, whenever I really made the move from being more of a mixer-engineer, to being a producer. I mean, I was a producer in the ’90s. All the beats we did by ourselves. We didn’t have producers. And then with Kanye, I was just mixing for the first two albums, and then the next two albums is where I kind of came into my own, adding synths and guitar solos. My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy uses that growth, you know? 

You’ve said before that you can see sound visually. Can you describe what that looks like when you’re in a session?

It’s kind of like a real-time analyzer (RTA), when you see the frequencies. Before there were RTAs, I would always just kind of see it like that. I’d stare between the speakers and see a mountain of low frequency over here and high, you know? George Augspurger, the guy who designed most of the studios in California and made the famous speakers, he taught me how to tune rooms and he always said that doing music in a room is like pouring water from a pitcher into a glass. If you pour it too fast or pour too much, it just splashes everywhere. You want to pour it in smoothly. And that’s the way I look at sound, too, like water flowing. Too much of one frequency and it shakes everything up. You’ve got to balance everything.

What’s the most misunderstood part of being a producer? 

That it’s really easy and you just hang out and smoke weed and listen to music real loud. Yeah, it’s a little more than that. 

How do you define success at this point in your career?

I don’t know…just helping more people come up in the business. To have more people that I work with be successful. That’s important to me. And just continuing to push the envelope with sounds and technology.

Do you feel like you still have anything to prove? 

I mean, nothing to prove, but I want to keep on the forefront of everything, just keep in tune with the youth and what they’re doing.

I want to be remembered like all the greats one day. In 200 years, hopefully people are still talking about Mike Dean’s music, you know? How did he make so much music in his lifetime?

October 13, 2025 0 comments
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About the Late Carl Thomas Dean – Hollywood Life
Celebrity News

About the Late Carl Thomas Dean – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Getty Images

Dolly Parton has been a staple of the music industry for nearly 60 years after getting her big break in the 1960s. Her career has made her a country icon, with numerous hits including songs like “Jolene” and “9 to 5,” and she continues to be a massively influential singer to this day. Almost as long as she’s been making music, she was also married to late retired businessman Carl Thomas Dean. The pair married in 1966, and their marriage lasted until Carl’s death in March 2025. The loss deeply affected Dolly, who once revealed to Khloé Kardashian that she struggled to find motivation to write new music in the months following his death.

In a candid May 2025 interview with Today, Dolly reflected on their six decades together, saying, “Oh, you know what, I get very emotional when people bring it up. But we were together 60 years. I’ve loved him since I was 18 years old.”

Following Carl’s death, Dolly admitted that she let some of her own health problems slide as she focused on grieving and adjusting to life without him. Earlier this year, she was hospitalized for kidney stones and an infection, which forced her to postpone several public appearances, including her Las Vegas residency. After weeks of fan concern, she took to social media to reassure everyone with her trademark humor, writing in a caption, “I ain’t dead yet!”

Find out more about Dolly’s husband Carl Dean, and what they’ve said about their relationship.

Do Dolly Parton & Carl Dean Have Kids?

Dolly and Carl don’t have any kids, but it once crossed their mind. Dolly revealed that she’d “dreamed” of having kids, but it wasn’t “meant to be” in a 2014 interview with The Guardian. “My husband and I, when we first got married, we thought about if we had kids, what would they look like? Would they be tall – because he’s tall? Or would they be little squats like me? If we’d had a girl, she was gonna be called Carla,” she said. “I would have been a great mother, I think. I would probably have given up everything else. Because I would’ve felt guilty about that, if I’d have left them [to work, to tour]. Everything would have changed. I probably wouldn’t have been a star.”

Dolly admitted that she never felt the pull towards motherhood in a 2023 interview with Saga Exceptional. “When you’re a young couple, you think you’re going to have kids, but it just wasn’t one of those burning things for me. I had my career and my music and I was traveling,” she said. “If I’d had kids, I’d have stayed home with them, I’m sure, and worried myself to death about them. With everything that’s going on, I’d hate to be bringing a child into this world right now.”

That drive to work and be successful in a tough industry like country music has been a major factor in why Dolly didn’t regret not having children of her own. “I believe that I know what I’m supposed to, but you’ve got to make the sacrifice. Since I had no kids, and my husband was pretty independent, I had freedom. I think a big part of my whole success is the fact that I was free to work, and I didn’t have children, because I believe that God didn’t mean for me to have kids so everybody’s kids could be mine, so I could do things, like the Imagination Library,” Dolly told Oprah Winfrey in a 2020 interview, via Today.

How Did Dolly Parton & Carl Dean Meet?

Dolly revealed that Carl had called out to her as she was doing laundry in a 2014 interview with The Guardian. “I was walking down the street to the laundromat, and he stopped me,” she said. “He said, ‘Hey, you’re going to get sunburned out here!’ Well, he had to say something.”

Why Was Carl Dean So Private?

While Dolly is instantly recognizable to just about anyone, Carl kept out of the spotlight for much of his wife’s career. Dolly spoke about why her husband values his privacy in a 2020 interview with ET. “He’s like, a quiet, reserved person and he figured if he ever got out there in that, he’d never get a minute’s peace and he’s right about that,” she explained, noting that she’s always tried to “keep him out of the limelight,” as he wants. “He said, ‘I didn’t choose this world, I chose you, and you chose that world. But we can keep our lives separate and together.’ And we do and we have. We’ve been together 56 years, married 54.” Dolly even joked that the pair playfully say that her busy schedule is part of why their relationship has lasted so long.

The “Jolene” singer also revealed the reason why Carl wouldn’t join her on red carpets in a What Would Dolly Do? Radio broadcast in November 2023. “Carl has never been in the limelight and all, never wanted to be in it. He don’t like it,” she said, via Southern Living. “He went to one thing with me early on, when we first married, to a BMI Song of the Year [event], and he came out of there taking off his tuxedo, his tie and all that and said, ‘Don’t ever ask me to go to another one of these damn things because I ain’t going.’ I never asked him and he never did.”

Dolly Parton Has Said That Carl Dean Supported Her

Other than making their life together work between Dolly’s larger-than-life persona and Carl’s want for privacy, Dolly said that the pair maintained a strong relationship. When speaking about her tumultous relationship with late musician Porter Wagoner in a 2021 interview with W, Dolly revealed that her relationship with Carl was much different from the partnership she had with Porter. “My husband and I don’t argue,” she said. “But Porter and I did nothing but fight. It was a love-hate relationship.”

Dolly also took to her Instagram in November 2021 to share a photo of the rarely-seen Carl, and she celebrated his help. The photo was an older picture of the pair, and Carl was wearing a T-shirt with his wife’s face on it. “Find you a partner who will support you like my Carl Dean does!” Dolly captioned the post at the time.

Why Didn’t Dolly Parton Take Carl Dean’s Last Name?

While many fans know Dolly by her maiden name, she revealed that she took her late husband’s last name but performs with her own. “My passport is Dolly Parton Dean. I sign a lot of my contracts Dean. I didn’t change names [publicly] because I already had a record deal. It made no sense. He never asked me to,” she told The Guardian in 2014. “At home, to me, I’m Dolly Dean. But then I’m also Dolly Parton. I’m Dolly Parton Dean. I’m myself… If I had chosen the name Dolly Dean… I’d have been Double D. Again.”

Dolly Parton’s Husband Carl Dean’s Cause of Death

Dolly announced March 2025 that her husband had died, and a cause of death was not immediately disclosed. However, according to TMZ, Carl was previously diagnosed with Alzheimer’s Disease in 2019.

October 9, 2025 0 comments
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Olivia Dean: The Art of Loving Album Review
Music

Olivia Dean: The Art of Loving Album Review

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

“I’ve done all the classic stuff,” Olivia Dean sings on “Nice to Each Other,” the lead single from her second album, The Art of Loving. And it certainly does seem that way—the rising British neo-soul star studied songwriting at London’s prestigious BRIT School, got her first gig as a backing vocalist for the chart-topping dance-pop group Rudimental, and, throughout the 2020s, has worked her way up the United Kingdom’s traditional ladder to stardom: BBC Introducing Artist of the Year, Glastonbury, Jools Holland. She cites Amy Winehouse and Carole King in interviews and has covered the Supremes and Nat King Cole. So I’ll respectfully disagree with Dean’s follow-up claim, that “all the classic stuff… it never works.” Arriving at the peak of her fame to date, The Art of Loving is a genuinely lovely collection of would-be classic pop songs, all variations on the titular theme. It moves with the timeless grace of some bygone, indeterminate era in music and celebrity, one that maybe never existed to begin with.

Prior to recording The Art of Loving, Dean had immersed herself—as many of her generation have and many more surely will—in bell hooks’ All About Love. “‘Gotta throw some paint,’ that’s what bell would say,” she sings on the album’s brief prelude. More precisely, Dean drew inspiration from an exhibition of the same name by the artist Mickalene Thomas, itself a response to hooks’ influential work of theory. Whereas Thomas’ paintings are elaborate and rhinestone-encrusted, The Art of Loving is filled with little marvels of economy. Dean and executive producer Zach Nahome borrow a spare set of bongos from a Laurel Canyon open mic, a buttery Brill Building Rhodes organ, and some well-placed bah-bah-bahs courtesy of Motown girl-groups. In their fastidious arrangements, little details that might otherwise go unnoticed—a five-note, hyaline piano motif on “Nice to Each Other” or the passage of double-time horns that follow the first chorus of “Let Alone the One You Love”—instead become focal points.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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