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Taylor Swift, Billie Eilish and the album comeback

Beyoncé released two in one go, Dua Lipa let her fans have three. Taylor Swift? She kept everything under wraps.The Tortured Poets Department dropped last week with no singles released in advance and, next month, Billie Eilish says she’ll be doing the same.For years, commentators have been warning that the album is dead and the single reigns supreme.

That’s partly down to streaming apps like Spotify and Apple Music which let fans pick and choose their favourite tracks from artists and curate personalised playlists.But could two of the world’s biggest stars opting to ditch singles breathe life back into albums?

Announcing Hit Me Hard and Soft, Billie said she wanted her fans to hear the album in one go.And in an interview with Rolling Stone, she explained why.”Every single time an artist I love puts out a single without the context of the album, I’m just already prone to hating on it,” she said.”I really don’t like when things are out of context. This album is like a family: I don’t want one little kid to be in the middle of the room alone.”
Even though he’s responsible for the weekly Official Singles Chart, Martin Talbot, the chief executive of the Official Charts Company, admits he’s more of an album fan himself.”It’s fantastic that Billie Eilish and Taylor Swift are doing what appears to be something designed to push music fans back to the concept of an album,” he tells BBC Newsbeat.”There is a danger that music fans lose sight of what an album is and what an album represents.”The album represents the kind of apex of the creative vision of a particular artist.”And it’s really important for the creative health of music and the cultural environment we preserve that.”

source:bbc

United asks pilots to take unpaid time off, citing Boeing’s delayed aircraft

United Airlines is asking pilots to take unpaid time off next month, citing late-arriving aircraft from Boeing, according to a note sent to pilots.It’s another example of how Boeing’s customers say the manufacturer’s production problems and safety crisis are impacting their growth plans. The offer comes after United and other airlines in recent years have clamored for more pilots when the Covid-19 pandemic travel slump ended and demand surged.“Due to recent changes to our Boeing deliveries, the remaining 2024 forecast block hours for United have been significantly reduced,” the United chapter of the Air Line Pilots Association, the pilots’ union, said in a note to members Friday. “While the delivery issues surround our 787 and 737 fleets, the impact will affect other fleets as well.” United confirmed the request for voluntary, unpaid time off. The airline previously said it would pause pilot hiring this spring because of aircraft arriving late from Boeing, CNBC reported last month. The union said it expects United to offer more time off “for the summer bid periods and potentially into the fall.”United was contracted to receive 43 Boeing 737 Max 8 planes and 34 Max 9 models this year, but now expects to receive 37 and 19, respectively, according to a company filing in February. It had expected Boeing would also hand over 80 Max 10s this year and 71 next year. That model hasn’t yet been certified by the Federal Aviation Administration, and the airline removed them from the delivery schedule because it is “unable to accurately forecast the expected delivery period,” it said in the filing.United CEO Scott Kirby has been among the most vocal about the production problems and delivery delays at Boeing, including most recently the crisis stemming from a door plug that blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by an Alaska Airlinesflight that was at about 16,000 feet. Other airlines bosses have also grown frustrated with the delivery delays resulting from Boeing’s manufacturing issues.Southwest Airlineslast month said it was reevaluating its 2024 financial guidance, citing fewer Boeing deliveries, and has paused pilot and flight attendant hiring, while Alaska Airlines said its 2024 capacity estimates are “in flux due to uncertainty around the timing of aircraft deliveries as a result of increased Federal Aviation Administration and Department of Justice scrutiny on Boeing and its operations.” source:cnbc

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Creating a safe space for women Veterans at VA

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