Skip to content
Search

Everything Dua Lipa Has Told Us About ‘Radical Optimism’

Everything Dua Lipa Has Told Us About ‘Radical Optimism’

Dua Lipa’s third album is almost here. She’s been teasing a new era since November, when she debuted “Houdini,” the first single from the long-anticipated project. In March, after weeks of speculation, she revealed the album title: Radical Optimism, which finally drops on Friday.

Lipa first shared details about the album when she spoke at length with Rolling Stone for a cover story that was released in January. Here is everything she told us about her new music and what we can expect from her Radical Optimism era.


She started working on new music in 2021

It took a while for Lipa to launch her Future Nostalgia tour, so she had time in between to start thinking about her next move. “I was like, ‘I might as well get back in the studio and start working on a new project,'” she said. “And for me, I just have to write a lot until I get my idea.” 

She did end up writing quite a lot… 97 songs in fact. Obviously most of what Lipa wrote for the album ended up on the cutting room floor, especially the songs written before she launched her tour. For Lipa, the album didn’t really begin until she put Kevin Parker, Danny L Harle, Tobias Jesso Jr. and Caroline Ailin in a room together. Those four ended up being her primary collaborators on the album — she refers to as her “band” — and ended up working on eight of the 11 songs.

The lyrics chronicle her experience being single

Though Lipa seems to be happily coupled up with actor Callum Turner now, she had gone through a massive break-up in the middle of writing Radical Optimism. She and model Anwar Hadid called it quits in 2021, right before she went on tour. By the time her “band” started working together in July 2022, Lipa had started to date again. As Lipa recalled in the RS cover story, she would come into sessions the morning after a date, armed with stories that inspired songs like “Training Season” and “Illusion.”

“Dating, I think overall, is just a little confusing,” she admitted of her experience. “It’s either through friends of friends or people you trust where you can meet new people, because [dating] is not really so straightforward when you are, I guess, a public person.”

She’s moved on from her heartbreak

At least two songs hint at the end of her long-term, highly publicized relationship with Hadid. One of them is an “evolved” look at the break-up, from the perspective of someone who has not only moved on but who is also happy to see her ex has done so as well. She goes so far as to compliment her ex’s new relationship, calling his new girlfriend “really pretty,” and she finds peace as he moves forward: “I must have loved you more than I ever knew.… I’m not mad/I’m not hurt/You got everything you deserve.”

“When you have a feeling like that one, you feel really grown because you’re like, ‘Oh, whoa, I’m such an evolved human being that I can see my ex move on and feel good about it,’” she explained, adding that this was a new for her. “I think I’ve had breakups in my life where I felt like the only kind of breakup you could have was when things just ended really badly. Things ending in a nice way was such a new thing.… It taught me a lot.”

The sound of the new songs is inspired by Primal Scream, Massive Attack and Nineties Britpop

Lipa’s third LP is a tribute to UK rave culture as well as the psychedelic extended remixes she would hear on the radio late at night while driving around London.

“This record feels a bit more raw,” she explained. “I want to capture the essence of youth and freedom and having fun and just letting things happen, whether it’s good or bad. You can’t change it. You just have to roll with the punches of whatever’s happening in your life.”

More Stories

Pierre Lapointe, Grand duke of broken souls

Cotton two-piece by Marni, SSENSE.com / Shirt from personal collection

Photographer Guillaume Boucher / Stylist Florence O. Durand / HMUA: Raphaël Gagnon / Producers: Malik Hinds & Billy Eff / Studio: Allô Studio

Pierre Lapointe, Grand duke of broken souls

Many years ago, while studying theatrical performance at Cégep de Saint-Hyacinthe, Pierre Lapointe was given a peculiar exercise by his teacher. The students were asked to walk from one end of the classroom to the other while observing their peers. Based solely on their gait, posture, and gaze, they had to assign each other certain qualities, a character, or even a profession.

Lapointe remembers being told that there was something princely about him. That was not exactly the term that this young, queer student, freshly emancipated from the Outaouais region and marked by a childhood tinged with near-chronic sadness, would have instinctively chosen for himself. Though he had been unaware of his own regal qualities, he has spent more than 20 years trying to shed this image, one he admits he may have subtly cultivated in his early days.

Keep ReadingShow less
DNC Brings in Higher Ratings Than RNC All Four Nights

DNC Brings in Higher Ratings Than RNC All Four Nights

The numbers are in, and the viewership of the Democratic National Convention blew last month’s Republican National Convention out of the water. 

Early numbers by Nielsen Fast Nationals indicate that the final night of the DNC garnered 26.20 million viewers across 15 networks, compared to night four of the 2024 RNC Night 4 at 25.4 million viewers.

Keep ReadingShow less
Marketer Behind Fake Quotes in ‘Megalopolis’ Trailer Dropped by Lionsgate

Marketer Behind Fake Quotes in ‘Megalopolis’ Trailer Dropped by Lionsgate

Eddie Egan, a very real marketing consultant, lost his gig with Lionsgate this week after the studio discovered that quotes he used in a trailer for Francis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis were fabricated, according to Variety.

The conceit behind the teaser, which Lionsgate recalled on Wednesday, was that critics had trashed Coppola’s masterpieces throughout the decades, so why trust them? Except that the critics quoted didn’t actually write any of the pith. A quote attributed to Pauline Kael that was said to have run in The New Yorker, claiming The Godfather was “diminished by its artsiness,” never ran.

Keep ReadingShow less
Fact Checkers Try to Shield Trump From Project 2025’s Abortion Madness

Fact Checkers Try to Shield Trump From Project 2025’s Abortion Madness

One of the odder features of American journalism is that the columnists who hold themselves out as “fact checkers” and review claims made by politicians — calling balls, strikes, and “pinocchios” — are unusually terrible at it.

Fact checkers offered up several botched reviews of content from the Democratic National Convention, but nothing has broken their brains like Democrats’ sustained attacks on Donald Trump over Republicans’ anti-abortion agenda, which is laid out in gory detail in conservatives’ Project 2025 policy roadmap. 

Keep ReadingShow less
Cops Who Falsified Warrant Used in Breonna Taylor Raid Didn’t Cause Her Death, Judge Rules

Cops Who Falsified Warrant Used in Breonna Taylor Raid Didn’t Cause Her Death, Judge Rules

A federal judge in Kentucky ruled that two police officers accused of falsifying a warrant ahead of the deadly raid that killed Breonna Taylor were not responsible for her death, The Associated Press reports. And rather than the phony warrant, U.S. District Judge Charles Simpson said Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, was responsible for her death because he fired upon the police officers first — even though he had no idea they were police officers.

The ruling was handed down earlier this week in the civil rights violation case against former Louisville Police Detective Joshua Jaynes and former Sgt. Kyle Meany. The two were not present at the March 2020 raid when Taylor was killed. Instead, in 2022, Attorney General Merrick Garland accused the pair (along with another detective, Kelly Goodlett) of submitting a false affidavit to search Taylor’s home before the raid and then conspiring to create a “false cover story… to escape responsibility” for preparing the phony warrant. 

Keep ReadingShow less