Superstar Olivia Rodrigo’s Secrets to Success

Superstar Olivia Rodrigo’s Secrets to Success

This year’s breakout superstar shares her life advice and love lessons.

How can I write a hit song?
Write from your heart and write as much as you possibly can.

Where should I look for creative inspiration?
From your life and relationships. And also from your friends’ lives and their relationships.

What do you look for in a great fashion buy?
I look for quality, and I like pieces that are kind of funky and weird.

Where do you look?
I try to shop vintage, mostly. I love a Depop or the Real Real purchase, too.

Where should I head to decompress?
Get in the car, play your favourite album and drive around. If I’m feeling really sad, I’ll turn on Adele. Lately, I’ve been listening to a lot of Lady Gaga’s The Fame Monster.

Name a book that shaped you.
Big Magic by Elizabeth Gilbert. It taught me everything I know about creative living.

What’s the best gift you’ve ever received?
My best friend from my hometown got me a box with a bunch of letters that were like “Open this when you feel sad.” “Open this when you feel tired.” They were all little notes tailored to make me feel better. It was so thoughtful and sweet.

What’s the best you’ve ever given?
I just got my mom an iPhone so she could FaceTime me and that’s been really great because now I get to see her more often.

Which up-and-coming musician should I listen to?
Baby Queen. She’s an English artist and she’s cool.

What’s your fragrance?
Baccarat Rouge 540. I like perfumes that have a natural musk.

What’s the best way to get over someone?
Besides cutting off all contact, I think it’s important to not only forgive them, but forgive yourself for letting everything happen. That’s what I’ve learned.

What are the best traits a partner can have?
Consistency, kindness, and respect.

Which film do you always come back to?
Twilight. Edward was my first ever crush.

Okay, I have 24 hours in California. What do I do?
Go to Disneyland. Then go to Malibu. Then go to Frida Tacos in Brentwood.

If you could tell your 16-year-old self one thing what would it be?
That you’re more than enough, and to trust your gut.

What is your prized possession?
My Yamaha piano. I’m sitting on it right now. It was the first big purchase I bought with my own money. I’ve written all my songs on it.

Whose wardrobe do you wish you could raid?
Zoë Kravitz. She can put anything on it and looks super chic and edgy.

Which beauty products do you swear by?
Glossier Boy Brow and sunscreen. And I love First Aid Beauty BB cream.

If you could only listen to one album for the rest of your life, what would it be?
Jagged Little Pill by Alanis Morissette.

What’s your go-to party outfit?
I have a lot of vintage dresses, and I love wearing a little Réalisation Par dress with Doc Martens.

What’s the best way to tell someone I like them?
Write a song for them.

Have you done that for a crush?
(Laughs) Definitely, yeah.

How do you make festive holidays special?
Spend it with people you really love and enjoy.

How do I know when I’m in love?
I know that I’m in love when I want my partner to be happy, even if that means that they’re not with me.

Who is your beauty icon?
Lucy Boynton. She always has great make-up – the best.

Where are the best beaches?
I’m a California girl, so I love Malibu.

What does overnight global fame feel like?
Overwhelming. And exciting. And… lucky.

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Olivia Rodrigo & Casetify Collaborate on Sustainable Phone Cases

Olivia Rodrigo & Casetify Collaborate on Sustainable Phone Cases

Featuring Olivia’s iconic aesthetic, this collection serves as a reminder to keep it tough. Just add Do Not Disturb. Check out the range of cases in this collection that are powered by Re/CASETiFY, created using recycled phone cases and bioplastics from plants.

Olivia Rodrigo is tired of the heartbroken girl trope. Follow her lead and turn your heartache into a daily mantra: Protect yourself, but don’t be afraid to show your colors.

From the Ultra Impact Crush Case to an exclusive purple Impact Case, Olivia Rodrigo’s cool girl aesthetic is written all over this gear, literally. Each case is tough as nails and perfectly styled—much like the woman herself.

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How Olivia Rodrigo Went from Disney Princess to Pop Queen

How Olivia Rodrigo Went from Disney Princess to Pop Queen

Olivia Rodrigo does not, as a general rule, read the comments.

“Sometimes you see one thing and then you’re thinking about it all day,” says the 18-year-old singer and songwriter responsible for 2021’s biggest debut album. “It’s the antithesis of good creativity.”

Late one night last May, though, she made an exception. Rodrigo’s smash LP, “Sour,” had just come out, and with it a lyric video on YouTube for the album’s empathy bomb of a closer, “Hope Ur OK.” Over layers of dreamy electric guitar, the song stitches together “stories that I’ve collected throughout my life,” Rodrigo says, “of people that I’ve known who’ve grown up in broken homes or have parents that didn’t accept them.”

With its focus on the trauma of others — a middle-school friend whose parents “hated who she loved,” a towhead blond who “wore long sleeves ’cause of his dad” — “Hope Ur OK” is in some ways an outlier on “Sour,” which otherwise takes a proudly autobiographical approach to the pleasures and torments of young love in songs such as Rodrigo’s pair of No. 1 hit singles, the gloriously melodramatic “Drivers License” and the gloriously caustic “Good 4 U.” But it also demonstrates this Disney Channel veteran’s desire to reflect something of her generation. So Rodrigo was curious to see how it had landed.

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TIME Magazine Names Olivia Rodrigo ‘Entertainer of the Year’

TIME Magazine Names Olivia Rodrigo ‘Entertainer of the Year’

The air is musty, Buffy the Vampire Slayer is playing on an ancient TV by the door, and Olivia Rodrigo is flipping through racks of slip dresses and flared pants. “What’s your style?” she asks. I tell her, unhelpfully, that I’m looking for something I might actually wear. She nods and says, “Vibes.”

We’re at a vintage shop in East Los Angeles, one the 18-year-old singer-songwriter frequented while working on her debut album, Sour. She was out late last night at the American Music Awards, but she’s moving so quickly this morning you’d never guess. She’s using one hand to browse, the other to grip a matcha latte, and somehow, without my noticing, has managed to collect at least five pieces under her elbow.

She suggests, for me, a T-shirt reading #1 MOM. I explain why I can’t take it home: once you’re in your 30s, there’s no room for irony about motherhood. Instead, the winner is a baby blue tee with a spy plane on it. “It’s soft,” she says, handing it my way. I can’t describe why it’s cool. It just is.

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Avril Lavigne Presents Olivia Rodrigo With Variety Hitmakers’ Songwriter of the Year Award

Avril Lavigne Presents Olivia Rodrigo With Variety Hitmakers’ Songwriter of the Year Award

Olivia Rodrigo, who rose to stardom after the success of her debut single “Drivers License” topped the charts in January, was honored with Variety’s Songwriter of the Year award at this year’s Hitmakers event on Saturday.

Avril Lavigne presented Rodrigo with the award, introducing the artist by saying, “This year we were introduced to a new artist whose debut album marked a major return for rock-and-roll on the charts.”

“From ‘Driver’s License’ to ‘Good 4 You’ to ‘Deja Vu,’ Olivia’s singles from her album ‘Sour’ are part of the collective psyche of 2021, and she wrote every single one of them,” Lavigne added.

In Variety’s August cover story on Rodrigo, Lavigne explained why she has so much admiration for the young star. “I think it’s important for people like Olivia to give an honest voice to so many young women who are still discovering themselves,” Lavigne said. “Her songs are her truth, and you can really feel that. You can tell it’s real by the way all of her fans grab onto every single word.”

“Her songs are personal, her songs are raw and her songs are relatable. Please welcome to the stage, Variety’s songwriter of the year, Olivia Rodrigo.”

Rodrigo started off her speech by thanking Lavigne and citing the “Girlfriend” singer as an influence: “I am such a massive fan of you, I look up to you so much, so this is so surreal for me. Thank you for the love and support.”

“I’ve been writing songs since I was like 5-years-old and my favorite part about all of this is that feeling of writing a song that perfectly captures how I feel better than any conversation could have. So to accept an award for songwriting is really meaningful to me,” she continued.

“Drivers License” smashed Spotify’s record upon release for most streams in a single week (on its way to a total of 1.1 billion as of mid-November).

“When I put out ‘Drivers License’ about this really hard time in my life, I watched it effect so many people regardless of sexual orientation, or gender or age — and to me, that’s the really beautiful thing about art and that was really special to me — to not only see how universal these feeling were but how music can bring us together and make us feel less alone,” Rodrigo said in her speech. “My heart and soul lies in songwriting and so for people to connect with my music like they have is beyond a dream come true.”

Lastly, Rodrigo thanked everyone for the Hitmaker award.

“Thank you so much Variety for this honor, and thank you for the opportunity to be in a room with all these people I just adore. Thank you to everyone on my team [and] to my manager at Interscope, I love you guys so much. And thank you especially to all of the amazing, supportive women in my life. I appreciate it, thanks again.”

SOURCE: Variety.com



Paramore Members Given a Writing Credit for ‘good 4 u’

Paramore Members Given a Writing Credit for ‘good 4 u’

Paramore​’s Hayley Williams and former guitarist Josh Farro have been given songwriting credits on Olivia Rodrigo’s 2021 mega-single good 4 u.

The chart-topping Sour track has been a huge hit this year though has also drawn attention for sounding similar to Paramore’s Riot! classic Misery Business. Now, seemingly, this is been acknowledged, with Hayley and Josh retroactively credited alongside Olivia and Daniel Nigro.

A source tells Kerrang! that, ​“The teams have been in touch prior to the song’s release and the production credits have now been updated to include an interpolation of Misery Business, alongside Olivia and the track’s producer, Dan Nigro.”
Read this: Will the success of Olivia Rodrigo’s good 4 u be good for rock music?

The Paramore vocalist also shared the news on her Instagram stories, reposting publisher Warner Chappell Music’s post writing, ​“Our publisher is wildin rn [right now].”

Hayley Williams instagram story

SOURCE: Kerrang!



Living Her Teenage Dream: Olivia Rodrigo Interviewed

Living Her Teenage Dream: Olivia Rodrigo Interviewed

Taking on the world with her potent pop vision, Olivia Rodrigo is far from your typical teenager. But just two weeks ago, the singer was like most others, starry-eyed over her first prom.

In a shimmering teal dress that paid homage to her mom’s own prom look, Olivia Rodrigo swayed under the disco ball, surrounded by 1980s-themed decor. Sounds pretty normal for a high school senior, right? For most teenagers, it would have been. But not for Rodrigo.

In addition to graduating high school and going to prom, she released her debut album ‘Sour,’ which sent shockwaves through the pop music world. And her prom? For kids who were home-schooled (like herself) or missed out on landmark moments from the pandemic, it was an alternative way to celebrate that also doubled as a concert film for her fans. In a year when concerts were largely non-existent, the whole world could absorb the joy of Rodrigo’s ‘Sour’ Prom as she found a way to perform live. After all, she knew it had been a brutal one.

In the midst of a year of “firsts,” Rodrigo, who turned 18 in February, just moved into her first apartment on the Westside of Los Angeles. When we speak, she’s beaming — recharged from a cross-country jaunt to The Hamptons — still revelling in the glory of her alterna-prom. “Since I’ve been working on sets and doing music, I never actually got to go to a real high school prom,” says Rodrigo over Zoom from her new home. “For me, it was a really special experience, because I got to tick off that teenage item on my bucket list.” The best part, though? “I got to share [‘Sour’ Prom] with my fans, who are some of my favourite people ever,” Rodrigo adds, while fidgeting with her colourful “macaroni necklaces.”

At the top of 2021, Rodrigo shared what would be the first single — ‘Driver’s License’ — a vulnerable power ballad that stirred up emotions worldwide. If you weren’t a Gen-Zer enduring your first heartbreak, ‘Drivers License’ likely made you wistful for late-night drives crying over an ex or made you nostalgic for your old diary entries. “It was really cool to watch not only teenage girls that are going through the same thing that I was going through, but also older, straight guys, relate to it and be like, ‘Oh, it brings me back to when I broke up with my girlfriend in high school,’” she recalls. As a songwriter, it was rewarding for her to see how universally relatable the song was for people.

But as ‘Drivers License’ gained traction, rumours swirled about Rodrigo’s own love life: that the song — which details a love triangle — was about her ‘High School Musical’ co-star Joshua Bassett and actress Sabrina Carpenter. “I remember when ‘Drivers License’ came out, and all of these major news publications were speculating about my 17-year-old love life, and I was like, ‘What? That’s weird. I hate that,’” she recalls. Rodrigo, who has always gone to therapy, found coping mechanisms to help her manage the attention. “I had to learn how to dissociate myself with what people say about me in that regard because at the end of the day it’s truly none of your business if you do your work and do the best job that you can,” she adds.

Beyond tabloid fodder, the world remained captivated by ‘Drivers License’ as a masterclass in pop songwriting, full of sharp storytelling and keen observations. And its release came at a time when the world was an open wound, resonating as a much-needed balm from an artist who was also feeling it all. In years to come, it will be challenging not to associate that song with 2021: It shattered more than a handful of records, including breaking the Spotify record for most single-day streams for a non-holiday song just days after its release and made Rodrigo the youngest artist ever to debut at No.1 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart. Plus, Rodrigo’s ability to hyperfocus on details and pack an emotional punch garnered her comparisons to Taylor Swift, Lorde and Phoebe Bridgers.

“I was seeing all of these records being broken, all these people streaming the song and loving it, but at the same time, I wasn’t actually able to meet anyone that was listening to it. I wasn’t able to play a show or anything like that,” notes Rodrigo. But in hindsight, she thinks experiencing the fame that came with ‘Drivers License’ in isolation “was really great for my psyche and mental health.” She found comfort in her own creative bubble. “I think, maybe if I had been in LA with all these people while the song was getting big, then I would have put more pressure on myself to make the rest of the album as successful as that song,” she says.

While some listeners became dedicated Livies (the name for her fandom) because of ‘Drivers License,’ Rodrigo had already developed a solid following in recent years. Born in California, Rodrigo grew up as a theatre kid who began writing songs at nine years old. In 2015, she landed her first lead acting role in the straight-to-video feature American Girl: Grace Stirs Up Success. That project was followed by roles in Disney shows like Bizaardvark, where she played guitarist Paige Olvera and in High School Musical: The Musical: The Series, where she currently stars as Nini Salazar-Roberts.

As she joined the Disney family, she became a part of the fandom that came with it. That’s why it wasn’t too surprising to see Rodrigo transition to music, considering the network was the foundation for the careers of everyone from Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera to Selena Gomez and Demi Lovato. “I always thought of myself as a singer-songwriter who fell into acting and really liked it, rather than a child actor who’s like, ‘Oh, I’m going to try to be a pop star now,’” Rodrigo explains. Becoming an instant pop sensation, however? That was unexpected. “I still pinch myself about it every day,” she says of her success.

But ‘Drivers License’ was just the beginning. With follow-up singles like the bittersweet psych-pop ‘deja vu’ and the defiant anthem ‘good 4 u,’ Rodrigo was not going to be written off as a one-hit-wonder or boxed in by genre. Despite her debut hit being a sweeping ballad, ‘Sour’ is underscored by grunge, folk and pop-punk, and the self-aware LP — co-written and produced by Dan Nigro — is bursting with themes of melancholy, anger, jealousy and revenge. The influence of singer-songwriters like Carole King, Alanis Morrissette and Taylor Swift (she even sampled Swift’s ‘Reputation’ closer ‘New Year’s Day’ on ‘Sour’) is a through-line of Rodrigo’s work. “I really love women who are not afraid to speak their mind and tell their perspective,” she notes.

‘Sour,’ in fact, embodies Rodrigo as the self-described “Spicy Pisces” she is. “Lots of my songs are literally about crying, which is very Pisces, but I’m a little angsty, too,” Rodrigo explains. Like Liz Phair, Fiona Apple and the ‘90s alt-rockers before her, she sings about those emotions sans shame. And Rodrigo expresses her emotions without villainising or punching down at other women. “I’m never the type of person who’s like, ‘Oh, it’s the girl’s fault that this guy did something wrong to me,’” she says. “It’s never made sense logically in my head, and I don’t subscribe to that mindset.”

With ‘Sour,’ the singer has also been lauded for helping usher in a new era of pop-punk. Influences from early 2000s alt-rock girls like Paramore’s Hayley Williams and Ashlee Simpson to Avril Lavigne and Fefe Dobson can be heard throughout Rodrigo’s 11-track LP. But the landscape has shifted since the early aughts: Rodrigo — alongside artists like Meet Me @ The Altar and Willow — is diversifying the genre which was once a white monolith.

‘Sour’ allowed her to make space for her lived experience as a biracial, Filipina woman. “I’m very proud of who I am and where I came from now,” she pauses. “But growing up, me and my other more ethnic friends grew up in this world where we thought that being a white girl would be better, and you’d be happier, and people would like you more.” Rodrigo no longer subscribes to that mentality, but she has subtly injected “the insecurity that goes along with growing up in the world and figuring out your placement in society” into her songwriting. “I think race and ethnicity plays a very big role in that, even if it’s not super obvious that it does,” she says. “Hopefully young girls who felt the way that I did growing up can relate or find confidence and solace in the music that I write. That would be the coolest thing.”

Two months since its release, the conversation around ‘Sour’ has yet to die down. From people regularly tweeting the album’s song lyrics like AIM away messages to the internet obsessing over the ‘Jennifer’s Body’ allusions in her ‘good 4 u’ music video, Rodrigo’s debut has continually permeated pop culture and everyday life. Just the other day, Rodrigo and a friend were grabbing coffee, and a girl came up to her and said, “‘I love your album so much. I hope this is not overstepping, but the other day I had sex to the entirety of [‘Sour.’] I was like, ‘First of all, good for you. Second of all, really interesting choice to have sex to all these sad break-up songs. But I’m so flattered.’”

Rodrigo has even been at the centre of an online debate regarding who owns the “teen girl” aesthetic after her ‘good 4 u’ cheerleading outfit drew comparisons to indie rock band Pom Pom Squad and she faced allegations from Courtney Love that she plagiarised her promo image for ‘Sour’ Prom — which featured Rodrigo in smeared mascara and a tiara clutching flowers — from Hole’s 1994 album cover for ‘Live Through This.’ “I’m really flattered that Courtney Love even noticed who I am, to be completely honest,” she laughs. “I think we were both obviously inspired by [the movie] Carrie, but beyond that, I’m trying not to focus on that too much.”

As Rodrigo’s profile has grown — and so has the chatter around her — it’s been a priority for her to manage both the excitement and stress that comes from success. “Taking responsibility for my mental health and sanity has been a really important lesson that I had to learn throughout all of this,” she says. “Because it’s so easy to get fucked up in all of the craziness of the industry.” She’s giving herself the grace to grow up: After all, she’s still young and learning.

But she’s choosing to lean into the joy of it all: Rodrigo is riding the wave of ‘Sour’ and plans to tour eventually. She’s not sure when. Still, that hasn’t stopped fans from speculating about more music. Fans have been convinced that Rodrigo has another album coming called ‘Sweet,’ fueled by the internet and a collaboration with Sour Patch Kids for her debut’s release. Featured on the candy boxes is the slogan, “Sour then sweet,” with ‘sweet’ in red letters. Rodrigo says it’s “a very interesting rumor,” adding that it takes her “a long time to make a record.” “That was not my idea to do the ‘sour then sweet’ thing,” she says. “I don’t have any plans to put that out, but I love seeing people’s theories.”

Looking ahead though, she predicts that her next LP is “probably going to be a lot happier than the record I just made.” “My tastes are always changing, and I think that will be reflected in the next album,” Rodrigo says coyly. While the timing for new music is uncertain, she remains sure of her dream collaborations. “It would be so cool to make a song with St. Vincent,” she muses, adding that she’s also “obsessed” with Jack White. “It would be cool to do a song with him and have him produce a song of mine.”

Rodrigo, full of ambition, knows any semblance of a normal teenage life she might have had has dissipated. But she’s not mad about it. “I’m so happy,” she says. “I’m doing everything that I’ve always wanted to be doing.” She’s living her teenage dream.

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Inside Olivia Rodrigo’s Musical Journey to Become the Voice of Her Generation

Inside Olivia Rodrigo’s Musical Journey to Become the Voice of Her Generation

Criticism doesn’t scare Olivia Rodrigo.

If anything, the 18-year-old — whose platinum-certified debut, “Sour,” captured the biggest U.S. opening week sales for an album in 2021 so far — fully embraces it.

“I love criticism, honestly,” Rodrigo tells Variety in a thoughtful tone, as if she’s confiding a secret. “I think I can grow so much from people being like, ‘Oh, I wish it was more like this,’ and I’m like, ‘Oh cool, this is my first album; I’m learning.’”

While “Sour” has received rave reviews — so much so that it’s already secured a place alongside Taylor Swift’s “Red,” Alanis Morissette’s “Jagged Little Pill” and No Doubt’s “Tragic Kingdom” in the pantheon of mega-successful breakup albums — it’s also invited some drama. Take a recent Instagram dust-up involving ’90s rocker Courtney Love.

On the day of Rodrigo’s Variety cover shoot, as the photo team and a gaggle of assistants readied the second setup, the room buzzed with the news that the former Hole frontwoman had reposted the art for Rodrigo’s upcoming virtual concert, “Sour Prom.” The photo featured Rodrigo wearing a crown and holding a bouquet of flowers with mascara running down her face, and Love captioned it “Spot the difference! #twinning!” It didn’t take long for Instagram users to draw comparisons to the cover of Hole’s 1994 album “Live Through This.”

At first it seemed that Love was giving Rodrigo her seal of approval. Rodrigo even commented: “love u and live through this sooooo much.” But things soon turned, er, sour in the comments section, where Love clapped back requesting flowers, and in another comment called it “rude” that Rodrigo had not asked her permission.

Some users agreed with Love that the similarities were too close for comfort. Others pointed out that the “Live Through This” artwork was itself reminiscent of the 1976 horror film “Carrie.” (Representatives for Love declined Variety’s request for further comment.)

When asked about Love’s remarks, Rodrigo doesn’t seem fazed. “I mean, to be honest I’m flattered that Courtney Love knows who I am,” she says. “She’s from a totally different generation, so I thought that was cool, but I think we’re both obviously really inspired by the film ‘Carrie.’ I don’t know — I didn’t really give it too much thought.”

In the short time since releasing her breakout single “Drivers License,” Rodrigo has become a voice of her generation, as a recent trip to the White House to endorse COVID-19 vaccines affirmed. And despite the comparisons or the social media drama, she’s determined to keep doing things her way: chronicling heartbreak and growing pains in the raw fashion that could be delivered only by a teenager experiencing it all for the first time.

A quiet power practically radiates off Rodrigo’s petite frame, which on this summer day is adorned with a multicolored neon Marc Jacobs shirt (designed by friend Devon Lee Carlson), black pants featuring full-length zippers down the front and formidable heels that would make a Bratz doll jealous. Though Rodrigo maintains a professional poise at all times, her free-spiritedness shines through in a handful of moments: discussing her undying admiration for Gwen Stefani, pausing her photo-shoot posing to sing along to Lorde’s “Solar Power” and embracing the choice of wearing her long, brown locks in two braided buns instead of down.

Rodrigo’s face also lights up when she talks about her love for songwriting, a pursuit that she still can’t quite fathom has become her career. But for her, the proof is in the pudding — just take a look at the smash hit that “Drivers License” has become.

The song, in which she belts her heart out about driving past an ex’s house, was released in January and made the actor — who stars as Nini on “High School Musical: The Musical: The Series” (the Disney Plus reboot of the famed franchise) — an instant pop star. Through Rodrigo’s then newly minted deal with Geffen Records, the four-minute track didn’t just take off — it became the most widely heard song on earth.

Out of the gate, “Drivers License” reached No. 1 on the top three streaming charts — Spotify, Apple Music and Amazon Music — and broke the Spotify record for the highest streaming numbers for a debut single by a female artist. It also debuted atop the Billboard Hot 100, making Rodrigo, at just 17 (she turned 18 in February), the youngest solo artist to achieve that. It stayed at No. 1 for eight consecutive weeks.

But to truly get a sense of the enormous impact of “Drivers License,” look no further than the Feb. 20 “Saturday Night Live” skit in which host Regé-Jean Page and six male cast members earnestly recite the song’s most crushing verses — “Can’t drive past the places we used to go to / ’Cause I still fucking love you, babe.” (Life and art came full circle when Rodrigo sang it on the show on May 15 — her second live performance ever.)

Rodrigo is no stranger to show business. But the success of “Drivers License” was something else. “Oh, my gosh, that was the craziest time of my life,” she says, noting that she was in Utah filming “HSMTMTS” when the song came out. “I was sitting in a grocery-store parking lot, and I called my A&R guy. It had just gone No. 1 on Apple Music, which is hard for a pop act to do. We were looking at each other on FaceTime, speechless, and just stared at each other for a minute. ‘What do we do?’ ‘I don’t know.’ That was the moment that I knew that it was going to be something bigger than I expected.”

Rodrigo’s manager, Kristen Smith of Camp Far West, says the song offered a “collective cry” after a heartbreaking year of pandemic. “But I don’t think anyone could have predicted what happened, mainly because some of it has never been done.”

Adds Sam Riback, executive vice president and co-head of A&R at Interscope Geffen A&M: “Did we know it was going to be this global smash that would break all these records? No. But we did know it was an incredible song and the perfect first step for what we were trying to paint for this album campaign.”

The rapturous response to “Drivers License” threw Rodrigo into a bit of a tailspin. Speculation as to who the heartbreak anthem was about — as well as the identity of “that blond girl” mentioned in the lyrics — ran rampant as fans and tabloids alike settled on Joshua Bassett, Rodrigo’s Troy Bolton-esque co-star on “HSMTMTS,” and Sabrina Carpenter, another Disney starlet with whom Bassett had been seen prior to the song’s release. (Representatives for Bassett and Carpenter did not respond to Variety’s requests for comment.)

Though neither she nor Bassett publicly confirmed a relationship, Rodrigo admits: “I put it out not knowing that it would get that reaction, so it was really strange [when] it did. I just remember [everyone being] so weird and speculative about stuff they had no idea about.” Besides, she adds, “I don’t really subscribe to hating other women because of boys. I think that’s so stupid, and I really resent that narrative that was being tossed around.”

• • •

Long before “Sour,” “Drivers License” and even “HSM,” Rodrigo had a flair for dramatic songwriting. “I literally wrote breakup songs before I’d ever held a boy’s hand or even remotely dated someone,” she says. “When I was 4 years old, my parents made videos of me just making up random stuff. I think it wasn’t until I was like 9 or 10 years old that I learned how to play piano and how to do chords, and actually started writing them down, recording them, listening to them back and trying to get better.”

A self-professed “theater kid” from Temecula, Calif., Rodrigo grew up performing in school productions and singing competitions like the local Boys & Girls Club Idol, where she delivered attitude-heavy covers of Mötley Crüe’s “Home Sweet Home” and Jessie J’s “Mamma Knows Best.”

At home, Rodrigo’s parents blasted alt-rock bands of the ’90s and early 2000s like No Doubt (during the photo shoot, Rodrigo rocked out to the Stefani-fronted group’s 2000 album “Return of Saturn”), Pearl Jam, the White Stripes and Green Day. Her first concert was Weezer.

Rodrigo grew enamored with songwriting through country music, and it quickly became a much-needed emotional outlet. She proudly calls herself a “fangirl for life” and has cited Taylor Swift as a songwriting idol — nods to Swift’s lyrical style and knack for big bridges can be heard all over “Sour.” The artist also was one of Rodrigo’s early champions on social media.

“It’s so nice to be welcomed into the music industry and so great to be supportive of other women,” Rodrigo says. “She wrote me a letter a while ago, and she wrote something about how you make your own luck in the world, and how you treat other people always comes back to you.”

Most of the tracks on “Sour” came from Rodrigo’s deep arsenal of songs, many of which were written during the COVID-19 quarantine that began in March 2020. During that period, Rodrigo says she wrote a song every day for four months, ultimately sharing writing credits on all but three of the album’s tracks with her key collaborator, songwriter-producer Dan Nigro.

“She’s so effortless when it comes to lyric writing it’s pretty incredible to witness,” says Nigro. “Sometimes she’ll run a line by me, and I’ll help her tweak it to make it stronger. But most of the time she’s just running with it.”

Released on April 1, “Deja Vu” added more of an alt-rock sensibility to Rodrigo’s lyric-driven songwriting with fuzzy guitars and saturated drums, courtesy of Nigro. Recounting the sneaking suspicion that an ex is now repeating history with someone else, “Deja Vu” references Billy Joel, “Glee” and strawberry ice cream.  

“I think specificity is one of the most important things you can do as a songwriter,” Rodrigo says. “I love songs where you can listen to them and sort of feel like you’re in another world… and the way you do that is through imagery and details.” 

Indeed, though the sonic diversity of “Sour” is impressive, what really stands out is Rodrigo’s brutally honest lyrics, especially when recounting the all-too-familiar pain of a relationship gone wrong. Even on upbeat cuts like “Good 4 U,” the words cut like a knife: “Maybe I’m too emotional / But your apathy’s like a wound in salt,” she snarls in the song’s bridge.

“I definitely talked about my deepest, darkest secrets and insecurities on ‘Sour’ — which is sort of strange to be like, ‘Here, you guys can have this. Anyone who wants to listen to it can listen to it,’” Rodrigo says. “But it’s really empowering when it comes out, and it’s been really awesome for me to see people resonate with that vulnerability and relate to it.”

Rodrigo credits Nigro’s background as the former lead singer and guitarist of indie rock band As Tall as Lions with helping her find the pop-punk sound for “Good 4 U.” She says she came up with the track’s hook — “Good for you / You look happy and healthy / Not me / If you ever cared to ask” — in the shower. “I didn’t want the entire record to be sad piano songs,” Rodrigo says. “But then again, I didn’t want to write a poppy, happy, ‘I’m in love’ song, because that was so far from how I was truly feeling at the time. So writing ‘Good 4 U’ was really satisfying because the song is upbeat and high energy and people can dance to it, but I didn’t have to sacrifice being honest and authentic in order to write it.”

Though “Sour” is heavy with heartbreak ballads, its edgier tracks bolster Rodrigo’s genre-shifting abilities – most of all, opener “Brutal,” which smacks you in the face with angst and ferocity. Other album highlights include “Traitor,” Rodrigo’s belted manifesto on how emotional affairs can hurt just as much as physical ones, which she initially wrote off as not being relatable enough. Little did she know, the result would be the opposite.

“I wrote it on my bed while I was crying,” Rodrigo says. “I never really thought that it was going to be a song that resonated with so many people. I thought that it was a very specific situation that I was going through, and it’s so funny that that’s the non-single song that’s the most successful. So many people have been like, ‘How did you know? This is exactly what happened to me!’”But not every song on “Sour” has to do with heartbreak. Toward the end of the album, the jazzy “Jealousy, Jealousy” and closer “Hope Ur Ok” deal with themes of insecurity and self-acceptance. In particular, “Jealousy, Jealousy” riffs on growing up in the social media age and confusing Instagram with reality – something that Rodrigo says she has struggled with herself.

“I definitely saw ‘Sour’ as a kind of slice of teenage life,” Rodrigo says. “I think a big part of growing up is going through your first love and first heartbreak, and that was definitely reflected in the album, but I think songs like ‘Brutal’ and ‘Jealousy, Jealousy’ reflect the other parts of being a teenager and feeling insecure and not sure how you fit into the world.”

In fact, pop-punk pioneer Avril Lavigne, who was struck by the “depth and mood” of “Drivers License,” counts herself among Rodrigo’s many fans. According to Lavigne, Rodrigo’s vulnerability is her superpower.

“I think it’s important for people like Olivia to give an honest voice to so many young women who are still discovering themselves,” Lavigne says. “Her songs are her truth, and you can really feel that. You can tell it’s real by the way all of her fans grab onto every single word she says.”

• • •

With Rodrigo’s freewheeling use of the f-word in her lyrics, it’s easy to forget that she still stars on a Disney show. “People ask me all the time, ‘Oh, did you just swear so that people would know that you’re not a Disney kid anymore?’” she says. “It truly isn’t a calculated decision in my head. It’s not like, ‘Oh, I’m gonna be an edgy kid now.’ I just tend to have a very dirty mouth, and I think that obviously reflects itself in my songwriting.”

Still, Rodrigo’s path has strayed from that of other Disney alums who branched out into music — Miley Cyrus, Selena Gomez and Demi Lovato, to name a few — in that she didn’t sign with Disney Music Group’s relatively straitlaced Hollywood Records. Rodrigo’s break with tradition is an important differentiator when it comes to the trajectory of Disney stars, who have often found themselves pigeonholed into a certain genre or kid-friendly category. Rodrigo says she has learned a great deal from those who came before her.

“I met Selena, and she was so kind,” Rodrigo recalls. “She talked to me a lot about prioritizing mental health, which I think is really important in this industry. All of us were in the limelight very young. … That can be taxing on your psyche and can bring about all these weird issues.”

Kristen Smith, Rodrigo’s manager, says: “Watching Olivia step into her power, that’s most gratifying to me and most important. We’re just starting to see what she’s going to do.”

Interscope Geffen A&M’s Riback adds that Rodrigo has navigated her rise to fame “like a professional,” taking both good and bad in stride. “I honestly just want her to keep living life, and keep documenting it in only the way she can,” he says. “I’ve been doing A&R for 20 years, and she’s potentially one of the most — if not the most — talented songwriter I’ve ever been around.”

Says Rodrigo of her process: “I write about what I know and what I am feeling intensely. The album is about heartbreak, but I think all the songs are sort of a different aspect of heartbreak. There’s plenty of emotions that come along with something like that: anger, spite, sadness, jealousy, longing.”

Indeed, she acknowledges that her fans are helping her make it through the messy, insecure maze of young adulthood just as much as she is helping them.

“It makes me feel so much less alone when a fan says, ‘That perfectly captured how I felt in my relationship,’” she says. “That makes me feel so seen.”

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Olivia Rodrigo and Dan Nigro Dive Deep on ‘SOUR’s’ Songwriting & Production Process

Olivia Rodrigo and Dan Nigro Dive Deep on ‘SOUR’s’ Songwriting & Production Process

When Olivia Rodrigo went into the studio to start the production process for her debut album, “Sour,” she was a little intimidated.

For as long as the 18-year-old could remember, it had just been her voice accompanied by an acoustic guitar or piano — as was showcased often on her Instagram account and her “High School Musical” breakout single “All I Want.” Now that she had the opportunity to do something more, what would that be?

“Going into the studio and being like, ‘What do I actually want this to sound like?’ and ‘What does big production sound like, is that my thing?’ was a learning curve and a little bit of a challenge at first,” Rodrigo, who is one of the cover stars of our Young Hollywood issue, tells Variety.

Luckily, Rodrigo had the production expertise of Dan Nigro, the former frontman of indie band As Tall as Lions who has worked with Conan Gray, Carly Rae Jepsen and others. Introduced through Rodrigo’s publisher and A&R team at Interscope Geffen A&M, the two met just one week before the COVID-19 lockdown began in March 2020. Nigro had watched an Instagram video of Rodrigo playing her song “Happier” and “was blown away,” he says.

“I remember getting the chills when she sang the line ‘I hope you’re happy, but don’t be happier,’” Nigro recalls in an email. “There was this beautiful intensity in her voice that I fell in love with immediately.”

What Rodrigo brought to the table in raw talent, Nigro matched with a keen ear for clean yet creative production. “I just really appreciated the way that he was really constructive with my songs,” Rodrigo says. “He just kind of takes my songs and elevates them and polishes them up and makes them better. I think we work really well together.”

Thus their sonic partnership was born, one that formed Rodrigo’s debut album “Sour,” which won over critics and charts alike (the album had the biggest sales week of 2021 to date and spent four weeks on top of the Billboard album chart). Nigro produced the entire album and shares songwriting credit with Rodrigo on all but three of the 11 songs. Rodrigo says the duo wrote three tracks together entirely from scratch: “Brutal,” “Deja Vu” and “Favorite Crime,” with Nigro contributing structural and melodic changes to the rest.

“I do tend to want a little more structure melodically, so I’ll interject here or there when I feel like there are too many words in a stanza or too little for that matter… and then we’ll symmetrically [or] melodically work it out,” Nigro says of their songwriting process.

Ultimately, the album’s three singles – the record-breaking “Drivers License,” alt-rock “Deja Vu” and pop-punk tinged “Good 4 U” – provided a pretty solid overview of the musical landscape of “Sour.” But the album’s opening track, “Brutal,” kicks the project off in an unexpected way with seven spoken words: “I want it to be, like, messy.” Placed after a cacophony of strings that soon crash into high-voltage guitar, the phrase captures the essence of the record – they are both a warning and a welcome; a preview of the vulnerable, brutally honest songwriting to come.

“It is sort of a statement of intent,” Rodrigo says of the opening. “I think ‘Brutal,’ just as an opening song, is very much ‘This is what the album is going to be like. This is the state of mind I am in while I am writing this album.’”

But that now-iconic first line wasn’t exactly planned.

“I wanted there to be crazy, weird drums at the end of ‘Brutal,’ like it was sort of falling apart. Dan was recording me playing all these weird drums, and I couldn’t get it right, so I was like, ‘No, Dan, I want it to be messy,’” Rodrigo explains. “And he just sampled that and put it at the beginning, which I thought was so brilliant. So it was an accident, but yeah, I love that being the first line that you hear on the record, because I think it’s so indicative of the record as a whole.”

The anecdote is a perfect example of how Nigro and Rodrigo complement each other in the studio, often finding new ideas in unexpected ways.

“I think the balance lies in the fact that Olivia is so lyric-focused, while I’m more melody- and texture-focused,” Nigro says of their dynamic. “Her main objective while we’re working on each song is making sure that every word hits exactly how it needs to, while I obsess over each chord and which inversion of it to play, or how much low-end to introduce when a chorus hits to make sure the impact is right without taking away from the vocal performance.”

Nigro says that during the making of Rodrigo’s debut single and smash hit “Drivers License” – a piano ballad that eventually crescendos into a grand, glittering bridge – is when the duo really found their stride in the production and songwriting process.

“The verse and chorus are super minimal, which is what Olivia was gravitating towards at that moment and the bridge was maximalist, which was something I was more into,” Nigro says. “I think it took a little time for each part to grow the other. I remember feeling the need to add more stuff to the verses, and remember her thinking there was too much in the bridge. After us both stating our cases to each other, we lived with it for a few days and agreed to keep it as is.”

Indeed, though Rodrigo’s bright-yet-rich voice stands out on the track, it’s the song’s cinematic-sounding bridge (“Red lights / Stop signs / I still see your face in the white cars / Front yards…”) that really made an impact, even being featured in a “SNL” skit in February.

“I remember listening to ‘Drivers License ’for the first time… and being like ‘Okay, maybe I do like big production, maybe I can produce a song out and it doesn’t have to feel unnecessarily poppy or big and doesn’t have to feel saturated in the way that I thought it would,’” Rodrigo says.

Rodrigo – who has co-producing credits on two tracks from “Sour” – also started to explore her own ideas in production when making “Drivers License.” In fact, the seatbelt warning sound that the song’s lilting piano morphs into at the very beginning was her idea.

“I was in the studio and was almost nervous to bring up that idea because I thought [Dan] was going to think it was super stupid and weird,” Rodrigo remembers. “But I said, ‘What if it sounds like a car in the beginning and then it morphed into the piano?’ And he was like, ‘That sounds really sick, let’s try it.’ I had my mom, who was at home while I was in the studio, record the noises to her car and she sent it over to me and we put it on the track.” Nigro says he then used pitch correction software “to make the seatbelt beep into the same note as the piano so it would flow seamlessly.”

Another track on which production shines through is the pop-punk homage “Good 4 U,” which starts out with a throbbing bass line before diving into a fluttery, guitar-driven chorus. The song also debuted atop the Billboard Hot 100, making “Sour” the first debut album in history to have two singles land at the chart’s top spot upon their release. It’s safe to say that pop-punk is having a revival moment right now, with Blink 182 drummer Travis Barker shepherding in a new era of the genre with talents like Machine Gun Kelly, Jxdn and Willow Smith – but the fact that Rodrigo bounced from ballads to pop-punk so effortlessly, and topped the charts in the process, is something entirely new.

Rodrigo says the duo “worked really hard to make the production fresh by coming up with ideas with the instrumentation that might not be expected.”

For Nigro, that meant — somewhat surprisingly — using computerized instrumentation.

“‘Good 4 U’ was definitely the most fun song to make in the studio,” Nigro says. “I think the fact that the song kinda feels like it’s one thing in the verse and does a switch-up in the chorus is kinda the most exciting thing we accomplished with it. But also little things like using a synth bass in the verses instead of a real bass, and the fact that all the drums in the song are programmed and not played (with the exception of the hi-hats in the second verse), give the song a twist to me.”

Though production remains an important part of the album, especially in its genre-shifting moments, Rodrigo’s minimalist tendencies still found a place on cuts like “Traitor,” “Enough for You,” “Happier” and closer “Hope Ur Ok.” After all, oftentimes the most vulnerable songs about heartbreak require a sparse sonic landscape to let their lyrics truly shine through. And despite Rodrigo’s songs being extremely personal and close to her heart, she recognizes the importance of collaboration when it comes to finding your sound as an artist.

“I write the majority of my songs, but I’m not afraid of collaborating with people,” Rodrigo says. “I think that’s something that great artists that I look up to do; they collaborate with people and share ideas, and that’s one of the most important parts of creativity.”

Nigro, too, says he learned a wealth of lessons from co-writing and producing “Sour,” including the value of time and patience.

“I think because of the pandemic we were oddly very fortunate to have as much time as we did to make music. I’m not sure if I could say the same if life was running at a normal pace,” Nigro says. “With less distractions we were really able to work on a song… take time off from it, go back and redo things about it if it didn’t feel right and grow together as a team and find a real groove.”



Olivia Rodrigo Signs Deal With Sony Music Publishing

Olivia Rodrigo Signs Deal With Sony Music Publishing

Olivia Rodrigo, whose ‘Drivers License’ single and ‘Sour’ album have made her the breakout music star of 2021, has signed with Sony Music Publishing, the company announced on Wednesday (August 4). It is her first publishing deal.

While she was already well-known for her role as Nini on “High School Musical: The Musical: The Series,” Rodrigo’s career quickly lofted into the stratosphere with the release of her ubiquitous song “Drivers License” in January and her debut album, “Sour,” in May. The album is the biggest debut of 2021 to date, and broke the record for the most-streamed album in a week by a female artist in Spotify history.

In addition to becoming RIAA Certified Gold in its first week, all 11 tracks from the album have landed in the top 30 of Billboard’s Hot 100 chart, making Rodrigo the first female artist, and the fourth act overall, to simultaneously chart 11 or more songs in the top 30. The 18-year-old musician’s album also spawned a second hit so far, with “Good 4 U,” which also reached No. 1 on the Hot 100.

Oliva Rodrigo said, “There’s nothing I love more than songwriting; it’s my favorite thing in the world, and I’m excited to be working with the team at Sony Music Publishing.”

Sony Music Publishing Chairman & CEO Jon Platt said, “Olivia is a once-in-a-generation talent with the heart of a true songwriter – there is no limit to what she can accomplish. Along with the entire Sony Music Publishing team, we look forward to supporting Olivia’s incredible artistry and creating the best opportunities for her songs as she begins this exciting new chapter.”

Sony Music Publishing Director, A&R Thomas Krottinger said, “It has been a great privilege to work with Olivia over the last year – she constantly pushes her creative boundaries, allowing her to craft genuine, emotive songs that transcend genres and bring people together. We are honored to partner with Olivia and her incredible team, and we are beyond excited to champion her as she continues inspiring the world!”

Sony Music Publishing SVP, Creative Jennifer Knoepfle said, “What strikes me most about Olivia is her incredible storytelling ability. Every song on SOUR spins a narrative that is both unique to her and relatable to so many. She has a gift with words, and we are so lucky to support her from the beginning of what will surely be a long and fruitful career.”

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