“Every song on this album was written and rewritten until I felt it was perfect,” said the singer in an interview with Jimmy Kimmel this Thursday (8).
Currently working on the release of his next album, which will be released later this year, Dua Lipa revealed that he wrote almost 100 songs for the project. The statement came on the talk show Jimmy Kimmel Live on Thursday night (8).
In conversation with the presenter Jimmy KimmelLipa showed the notebook in which she wrote almost 100 compositions – including those already released “Houdini” It is “Training Season”.
“[O livro] it has every single song I wrote for this album,” said the singer. “I wrote 97 tracks.”
Asked by Kimmel if any of the nearly 100 tracks would be “terrible,” Lipa joked, affirmatively: “Lots. Like 80 of them.”

Going deep into the creative process for the album, her third, the singer explained that, in this work, her focus would be on achieving perfection.
“The minute I write a song, I know whether it’s good or not, or even close to it. Every song on this album, unlike every other record I’ve made, has been written and rewritten over and over again, until I felt like I would be perfect – which I didn’t have as much confidence in doing on my last albums.”
The process, according to her, would be different from previous works, such as the album Future Nostalgia, with which she achieved her greatest success in 2020. According to her, the tracks written by her for the first time would have been almost exactly “what everyone heard”. .
“I’m much more confident in myself as a songwriter and as a performer and in how I want things to be,” Lipa summarized.
Check out the excerpt from the interview below:
Dua Lipa and DL3
Lipa is working hard now. Her fans eagerly await her third album, which they have dubbed DL3. She’s not ready to reveal the actual title just yet, but shares that it’s a tribute to UK rave culture with psychedelic-pop influences. It is heavily inspired by artists like Primal Scream It is Massive Attack, mainstays for a London girl with a penchant for evening strolls around the city. Even their aesthetic is a stark departure from their later era, dialing back the glamorous, shiny bodysuits in an attempt to evoke the “I don’t care” vibe of Britpop groups like Oasis It is Blurmore references for your new song.
“This record feels a little more raw,” she says. “I want to capture the essence of youth, freedom, fun and just letting things happen, whether good or bad. You can’t change that. You just have to roll with the punches of what’s going on in your life.”
Source: Rollingstone

Earl Johnson is a music writer at Gossipify, known for his in-depth analysis and unique perspective on the industry. A graduate of USC with a degree in Music, he brings years of experience and passion to his writing. He covers the latest releases and trends, always on the lookout for the next big thing in music.