Arab Times

Hudson crafts a ‘Glorious’ album

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NEW YORK, April 18, (AP): More than two decades ago, Kate

Hudson took on the role of one of the most celebrated music fans to ever hit the silver screen: Penny Lane in “Almost Famous.” It is required viewing for record obsessives - and for Hudson, an extension of a lifelong adoration of music.

“I would die without music,” she told The Associated Press from Los Angeles. “I know what it feels like to sit in your room, put on an album, and dream. It can completely change the trajectory of your life.”

On May 17, Hudson will get the opportunit­y to do that for other listeners when she releases her debut album, “Glorious.” It is an ambitious record, written by Hudson with her close collaborat­ors Linda Perry, Johan Carlsson, and her fiance Danny Fujikawa, spanning folk, rock and synth, soulful ballads and big pop songs. “My influences move,” she says. “I didn’t want to be pigeonhole­d into a genre.”

Album

Hudson has been writing songs since she was a teenager, but the coronaviru­s pandemic brought up big questions and eventually, the desire to pursue an album profession­ally. “’What is the next half of my life going to look like in terms of my connection to the arts?’ One thing that kept circulatin­g for me was that if I didn’t make an album, it would be a great regret,” she says. And so, she gave into the process. “I wanted to be an open channel,” she says. “I didn’t want to overthink anything.”

She wrote 26 songs, 12 of which made the final track list. All the songs are new - self-reflection­s on her life, like “Live Forever,” which considers motherhood and watching your adult children leave home, or “Never Made a Moment,” about the end of a relationsh­ip and learning to survive without that person.

“Glorious” is the title track, which she says “embodies the album. It’s about a life well loved - even in its challenges, it is glorious.”

She aims to uplift listeners with the record, in whatever way they find it resonates. “If there’s just like one person out there that takes the album, and then turns it on, closes their eyes and like, feels something shift in them, then I feel like I’ve achieved success,” she says.

“Or they get in their car, put their windows down and turn up a song really loud and just, like, feel great for a moment. That to me is why I want to make music. If we can get a guitar solo that, like, makes somebody feel explosive in their body, then I feel like I’ve achieved success,” she says, smiling. “It’s really that simple for me.”

Security will be tight during next month’s Eurovision Song Contest in the southern Sweden city of Malmo, police said Wednesday, citing demonstrat­ions that could lead to unrests and a heightened threat of terrorism in the Scandinavi­an country.

“The security is going to be rigorous,” Petra Stenkula, head of police area in Malmo, said according to Swedish broadcaste­r TV4.

Pro-Palestinia­n activists who want Israel out of the Eurovision Song Contest have announced large rallies in downtown Malmo, several kilometers (miles) from the Malmo Arena contest venue.

“Freedom of expression is strong in Sweden,” Stenkula said, according to the Malmo newspaper, Sydsvenska. “Now we first have to assess the applicatio­n that has been received, then we have to see if it gets permission.”

She told a press conference that Swedish police will get reinforcem­ents from across the country as well as from Norway and Denmark. She didn’t provide details.

“We have terror threat level four, so we cannot empty the whole of Sweden of police officers” during the song contest, Stenkula said.

The live televised final is scheduled for May 11, with semi-finals on May 7 and May 9.

Pro-Palestinia­n activists have planned two large demonstrat­ions to protest Israel’s participat­ion, as conflict in the Middle East threatens to overshadow the feelgood pop music festival. Activists and some musicians have urged the European Broadcasti­ng Union, the event organizer, to drop Israel from the event over its conduct of the war against Hamas in Gaza, triggered by the militant group’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

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