That's RAYE's "Escapism" and it's gone all the way to number one in England ahead of the February release of her debut album MY 21ST CENTURY BLUES.
The 070 Shake-featuring track has been climbing the charts since its release in November and hit the top spot today (January 6) after charting at Number Two last week. It comes three weeks before the release of her long-awaited debut album ‘My 21st Century Blues’.
“I’m feeling all the emotions!” RAYE told NME this afternoon, a few hours after finding out that she hit the top spot in the UK charts. “I’m beyond overwhelmed, and just so proud as well that we’ve done it independent, and with music that I’m so in love with.
[. . .]
The singer wrote ‘Escapism’ two years before its release, and said that its subject matter, which discusses substance abuse, is often seen as taboo for women to sing about in music.
“As someone who has battled with the subjects I’m talking about, [it’s] not necessarily seen as attractive for women to address substance abuse so head on and so viscerally,” she admitted. “It’s really difficult as a woman battling those demons specifically, because there’s no healthy outlet.
“All of this album is me addressing these uncomfortable subjects head on. If the girl that I wrote that song about could see this now, where I’m at and what’s going on, she’d be so emotional, both that she made it out and now that she’s Number One!”
Pop star Raye has claimed her first number one single, 18 months after splitting from the record label that refused to release her debut album.
The five-time Brit nominee has topped the chart with the hard-hitting, drink-the-pain-away club anthem Escapism.
"As someone who writes for a living, I have no words," she told the BBC on Friday. "I've been crying all day."
"It just shows that you should back yourself, no matter what people tell you."
She signed a contract with a label in 2014 and from 2014 through 2021 when she left, nothing. They refused to release her debut album. So she went independent in 2022 and now, in 2023, she has a number one hit in England. I think her success deserves applause and should urge more musicians to take chances and to trust their own instincts.
Closing with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
+ A week after Bush launched the War on Terror Bob Woodward asked Cheney how long it would last. Cheney replied: “It may never end. At least, not in our lifetime.” The wet-dream of weapons contractors had materialized. The Pentagon Budget in 2001 was $287B. Now it’s $857B & rising.
+ Contracts with Raytheon and Lockheed to blow s**t up followed by contracts with BlackRock to “rebuild.” What are the Minsk Accords compared to this kind of deal?
+ According to an analysis by the intrepid Stephen Semler military contractors are set to pocket around $20 billion out of the $47 billion in the last Ukraine aid package.
In the room the arms lobbyists come and go
talking of how they just added another zero…
+ Apparently the Russian military is blaming cell-phone usage by its troops on the frontlines for the recent spate of Ukrainian missile attacks on Russian outposts, attacks which may have killed more than 1000 Russian soldiers. If so, those soldiers in rural Donetsk Oblast get better cell service than I do here in the sprawl of Greater Portland, where I barely get a single bar here in the house. If Russia really wanted to protect their troops they’d force them all onto an AT&T plan…
+ According to an analysis by Max Berger, more than 75% of the $40 million crypto-conman Samuel Bankman-Fried contributed to Democrats in 2022 went to groups that dumped nearly all their money on competitive primaries, largely to neoliberals facing off against more progressive candidates. Not that it would have mattered much in the end, since nearly all of the progressives end up voting with the neoliberals when the chips are down…and even when they aren’t.
+ Life expectancy in the US continues to plummet. The response of Congress and the Biden administration in the omnibus spending bill is to end emergency Covid funding and raise the age of mandatory retirement account withdrawals by three years. Someone’s making out, but it sure ain’t us…
+ Biden campaigned to expand Medicaid. Now he’s signed a bill to sharply curtail it, ending coverage for millions of people in the middle of a pandemic he pretends is over…
+ The Social Security administration continues to deny thousands of disability claims a year, in part because it continues to rely on a 45-year-old list of outdated job titles. We live in a System that is eager to help the people who least need it and quick to ignore, chastise and punish the weakest, sickest and poorest among us.
+ 54% of Mississippi’s hospitals are running out of operating funds and at risk of closing. This “looming disaster” is largely a consequence of Gov. Tate Reeve’s stubborn refusal to accept expanded Medicare funding offered to state under ObamaCare.
+ Our book, An Orgy of Thieves: Neoliberalism & Its Discontents, which the great historian Peter Linebaugh says is written “in acid prose cutting through the machine’s wicked fabrications,” is now available on Kindle…
Today, Friday, the Gulf Arab Cup kicks off its 25th session (Gulf 25) which will be hosted by Iraq in Basra until January 19 with 8 teams from the Gulf, and the eight teams have been divided into two groups where in the first includes Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Oman, Yemen, and the second – the teams of Kuwait, Emirates, Qatar and Bahrain. The opening ceremony of the tournament will be held, after which the opening match between Iraq (the host) and Oman will take place, after which the match of our team with the Yemeni counterpart took place.
Competition in the group is expected to be fierce. In order to qualify for the semi-finals first and then the title, in light of host Iraq’s ambition to win the missing title for 34 years while Al-Akhdar hopes for a fourth title while Oman wanted to win a third title, and finally, Yemen is looking for its first title in the tournament.
In a series of tweets, Kurdistan Region Prime Minister Masrour Barzani expressed his happiness for the opening of the Gulf Club 25 tournament in Basra, Iraq.
He congratulated the people of Basra and all Iraqis for hosting this significant event, especially since it’s been over 40 years since Iraq has hosted these games.
“I’m overwhelmed with great happiness and a wonderful feeling on the occasion of the launch of the Gulf Cup Football Championship,” he wrote in one of his tweets.
He welcomed all the attendees to the event and the “guests” from Arab countries.
In other news, cult leader Moqtada al-Sadr emerged from his public retreat long enough to entertain the fellas.
And check out this Tweet.