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070 Shake brings the ‘Petrichor' tour to her true home, Los Angeles

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070 Shake brings the ‘Petrichor' tour to her true home, Los Angeles

For 070 Shake, everything comes back to $50.

Nearly a decade ago, the then-teenage musician spent all her time writing music in her New Jersey home. She eventually hit a point where she was ready to record in a studio, but couldn’t afford the $50 rental fee. So, just as any other adolescent, she turned to her mother, who proceeded to laugh in her face. Shake accepted defeat and went about her day, but as she was leaving her house, she noticed a crisp $50 bill had been intentionally left on the counter.

“I know she didn’t have the money to give me. But she took a chance on me. If I’m seeing it from her perspective, and knowing that this [music] is all that my child has. It’s either this or nothing,” said the musician born as Danielle Balbuena. “She knew I would end up f—ed up or dead if she didn’t give me that $50 .… And thank God, I’m here in the Chateau now.”

In a newsie cap and a well-fitted Canadian tux, the 27-year-old singer sat comfortably in a corner booth in the Chateau Marmont’s restaurant, sipping a glass of Bordeaux. Surrounded by an abundance of velvet furniture and dimly lit portraiture, the “Guilty Conscious” singer was in Los Angeles during a quick break from her world tour. Supporting her third album, “Petrichor,” Shake says she is approaching this run of shows with a more “disciplined” mindset. On Friday, she’ll share that mindset with her L.A. fans at the Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall.

“I don’t want to focus so much on the physical response of the audience. I want to focus more on the spiritual experience,” said Shake. “You connect with music because it connects with you. I want to focus on the connection that we can’t see or touch but can only feel. I want to hone in on how these frequencies — that I’ve created and have never existed in the world before — make people feel.”

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On tours for her previous albums “Modus Vivendi” and “You Can’t Kill Me,” she took more of “a rock star approach” where things were artfully careless — like when the singer, dressed in a suit and tie, would crowd surf atop a mosh pit every night. Though Shake assures that this energy hasn’t disappeared, with “Petrichor” she’s more concerned about growing up.

After finding that fateful $50 bill and recording her first track, “Proud,” she struck a deal with the studio’s owner. He would allow her to record whenever she wanted, but she had to get a job and give him her paychecks — Shake agreed. By day she worked at a kids’ indoor playground called Pump It Up and by night she and her friends, who went by the 070 collective, continued to record and upload songs to Soundcloud.

“Petrichor,” 070 Shake’s third album, was inspired by the smell of rain in the Dominican Republic, where her family is from.

(Gianni Gallant)

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In 2016, Shake’s music caught the attention of Kanye West’s label G.O.O.D. Music and she signed a record deal. From there, she went on to release her first EP, “Glitter,” in 2018, and that same year her vocals were featured on Ye’s “Ghost Town” and “Violent Crimes.” Singing a catchy verse about putting her hand on a stove, in her signature autotuned vocal fry, Shake was on the path to rap stardom.

Since these early career breakthroughs, some of her more recent hits include her feature on Raye’s 2022 “Escapism” and “Guilty Conscious,” the lead single from her debut album which garnered a remix from Tame Impala.

When approaching her third full-length album, “Petrichor,” she set out with the goal of incorporating more classical sounds in her music. Released last November, the creative infused her brooding, futuristic sound into a full-fledged orchestral production. From the escalating string sections in “Pieces of You” to “Into Your Garden’s” soft theatrical piano and the submerged sounds of an electric guitar on “Love,” she matches these conventional instruments with her own distinguishable electronic touches.

Both sonically and lyrically, Shake has never shied away from extremism in her music. As she continues to explore the presence and absence of an all-consuming love, “Petrichor’s” lyrics prove she’s willing to take her artistic expression to its limit — especially in regard to love and death.

“There’s so much beauty in subtlety, but that’s just not my job. Anybody else can do it, but that’s not how I feel,” said Shake. “Even if we want to go about it in a more nonchalant manner, it is still that extreme. That’s really how I feel.… It’s just my nature.”

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070 Shake and girlfriend Lily Rose Depp sit on a music video set.

070 Shake and girlfriend Lily Rose Depp pose on the set of “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues’” music video.

(Vincent Giovinazzo)

On “Blood on Your Hands,” a track that leans more toward a spoken word piece than a rap, she says, “If I die, I want you to be the one to kill me / I want my blood on your hands.” As an industrial-sounding synth steers the song, the voice of her girlfriend, actor Lily Rose Depp begins to read a diary entry — detailing the overwhelming connection they share.

“I always touch on that subject [death]. It is the most fascinating thing to me, because it’s something that we all have in common, but nobody ever wants to talk about it,” said Shake, who wears a delicate gold chain with the words “Lily-Rose” around her neck. “It’s the biggest part of life, but also something we’re afraid of. It’s why we stay on the sidewalks. It’s why we stop at red lights. It’s why we drink water and eat certain foods. But still, it’s inevitable.”

Between mortality and passion, the creative, having lived in L.A. for the past six years, also shares some hindsight into her New Jersey upbringing. On the Beach Boys-esque “Winter Baby / New Jersey Blues,” Shake brings up this idea of having “paid [her] dues,” and consuming “toxic fumes” and “processed foods.” In this anti-homesick anthem, she is able to leave her previous lifestyle, in “dirty Jersey” where all she would eat was ramen and cheap salami, behind her and open her arms to a new one — where Erewhon smoothies are plentiful.

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“I spent 20 years in the same house and I did my time there. It doesn’t even feel like home anymore. It feels like I have a new home,” said Shake. “Now I have the luxury to eat the quality of things that I want to eat. But it also makes me feel bad, because I know what it is to live to be on the other side and grow up in a place where the only options you have are with the cards you’re given.”

As Shake indulges in her new way of life, she says it’s probably time to thank her mother for leaving behind that $50 bill over a decade ago, an exchange that to this day they have never openly discussed. “I got to thank her for not only that, but thank her for everything I have in life.”

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Review | Hoppers: Pixar’s new animation is a hilarious, heartfelt animal Avatar

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Review | Hoppers: Pixar’s new animation is a hilarious, heartfelt animal Avatar

4/5 stars

Bounding into cinemas just in time for spring, the latest Pixar animation is a pleasingly charming tale of man vs nature, with a bit of crazy robot tech thrown in.

The star of Hoppers is Mabel Tanaka (voiced by Piper Curda), a young animal-lover leading a one-girl protest over a freeway being built through the tranquil countryside near her hometown of Beaverton.

Because the freeway is the pet project of the town’s popular mayor, Jerry (Jon Hamm), who is vying for re-election, Mabel’s protests fall on deaf ears.

Everything changes when she stumbles upon top-secret research by her biology professor, Dr Sam Fairfax (Kathy Najimy), that allows for the human consciousness to be linked to robotic animals. This lets users get up close and personal with other species.

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“This is like Avatar,” Mabel coos, and, in truth, it is. Plugged into a headset, Mabel is reborn inside a robotic beaver. She plans to recruit a real beaver to help populate the glade, which is set to be destroyed by Jerry’s proposed road.
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Kurt Cobain’s Fender, Beatles drum head among $1-billion collection going to auction

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Kurt Cobain’s Fender, Beatles drum head among -billion collection going to auction

In the summer of 1991, Nirvana filmed the music video for “Smells Like Teen Spirit” on a Culver City sound stage. Kurt Cobain strummed the grunge anthem’s iconic four-chord opening riff on a 1969 Fender Mustang, Lake Placid Blue with a signature racing stripe.

Nearly 35 years later, the six-string relic hung on a gallery wall at Christie’s in Beverly Hills as part of a display of late billionaire businessman Jim Irsay’s world-renowned guitar collection, which heads to auction at Christie’s, New York, beginning Tuesday. Each piece in the Beverly Hills gallery, illuminated by an arched spotlight and flanked by a label chronicling its history, carried the aura of a Renaissance painting.

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Irsay’s billion-dollar guitar arsenal, crowned “The Greatest Guitar Collection on Earth” by Guitar World magazine, is the focal point of the Christie’s auction, which has split approximately 400 objects — about half of which are guitars — into four segments: the “Hall of Fame” group of anchor items, the “Icons of Pop Culture” class of miscellaneous memorabilia, the “Icons of Music” mixed batch of electric and acoustic guitars and an online segment that compiles the remainder of Irsay’s collection. The online sale, featuring various autographed items, smaller instruments and historical documents, features the items at the lowest price points.

A portion of auction proceeds will be donated to charities that Irsay supported during his lifetime.

The instruments of famous musicians have long been coveted collector’s items. But in the case of the Jim Irsay Collection, the handcrafted six-strings have acquired a more ephemeral quality in the eyes of their admirers.

Amelia Walker, the specialist head of private and iconic collections at Christie’s, said at the recent highlight exhibition in L.A. that the auction represents “a real moment where these [objects] are being elevated beyond what we traditionally call memorabilia” into artistic masterpieces.

“They deserve the kind of the pedestal that we give to art as well,” Walker said. “Because they are not only works of art in terms of their creation, but what they have created, what their owners have created with them — it’s the purest form of art.”

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Cobain’s Fender was only one of the music history treasures nestled in Christie’s gallery. A few paces away, Jerry Garcia’s “Budman” amplifier, once part of the Grateful Dead’s three-story high “Wall of Sound,” perched atop a podium. Just past it lay the Beatles logo drum head (estimated between $1 million and $2 million) used for the band’s debut appearance on “The Ed Sullivan Show,” which garnered a historic 73 million viewers and catalyzed the British Invasion. Pencil lines were still visible beneath the logo’s signature “drop T.”

A drum head.

Pencil lines are still visible on the drum head Ringo Starr played during the Beatles’ debut appearance on “The Ed Sullivan Show.”

(Christie’s Images LTD, 2026)

It is exceptionally rare for even one such artifact to go to market, let alone a billion-dollar group of them at once, Walker said. But a public sale enabling many to participate and demonstrate the “true market value” of these objects is what Irsay would have wanted, she added.

Dropping tens of millions of dollars on pop culture memorabilia may seem an odd hobby for an NFL general manager, yet Irsay viewed collecting much like he viewed leading the Indianapolis Colts.

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Irsay, the youngest NFL general manager in history, said in a 2014 Colts Media interview that watching and emulating the legendary NFL owners who came before him “really taught me to be a steward.”

“Ownership is a great responsibility. You can’t buy respect,” he said. “Respect only comes from you being a steward.”

The first major acquisition in Irsay’s collection came in 2001, with his $2.4-million purchase of the original 120-foot scroll for Jack Kerouac’s 1957 novel, “On the Road.” He loved the book and wanted to preserve it, Walker said. But he also frequently lent it out, just like he regularly toured his guitar collection beginning 20 years later.

A scroll of writing.

Jim Irsay purchased the original 120-foot scroll manuscript of Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road” for $2.4 million in 2001.

(Christie’s Images)

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“He said publicly, ‘I’m not the owner of these things. I’m just that current custodian looking after them for future generations,’ ” Walker said. “And I think that’s what true collectors always say.”

At its L.A. highlight exhibition, Irsay’s collection held an air of synchronicity. Paul McCartney’s handwritten lyrics for “Hey Jude” hung just a few steps from a promotional poster — the only one in existence — for the 1959 concert Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. “The Big Bopper” Richardson were en route to perform when their plane crashed. The tragedy spurred Don McLean to write “American Pie,” about “the day the music died.”

Holly was McCartney’s “great inspiration,” Christie’s specialist Zita Gibson said. “So everything connects.”

Later, the Beatles’ 1966 song “Paperback Writer” played over the speakers near-parallel to the guitars the song was written on.

Irsay’s collection also contains a bit of whimsy, with gems like a prop golden ticket from 1971’s “Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory” — estimated between $60,000 and $120,000 — and reading, “In your wildest dreams you could not imagine the marvelous surprises that await you!”

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Another fan-favorite is the “Wilson” volleyball from 2000’s “Cast Away,” starring Tom Hanks, estimated between $60,000 and $80,000, Gibson said.

Historically, such objects were often preserved by accident. But as the memorabilia market has ballooned over the last decade or so, Gibson said, “a lot of artists are much more careful about making sure that things don’t get into the wrong hands. After rehearsals, they tidy up after themselves.”

If anything proves the market value of seemingly worthless ephemera, Walker added, it’s fans clawing for printed set lists at the end of a concert.

“They’re desperate for that connection. This is what it’s all about,” the specialist said. It’s what drove Irsay as well, she said: “He wanted to have a connection with these great artists of his generation and also the generation above him. And he wanted to share them with people.”

In Irsay’s home, his favorite guitars weren’t hung like classic paintings. Instead, they were strewn about the rooms he frequented, available for him to play whenever the urge struck him.

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Thanks to tune-up efforts from Walker, many of the guitars headed to auction are fully operational in the hopes that their buyers can do the same.

“They’re working instruments. They need to be looked after, to be played,” Walker said. And even though they make for great gallery art, “they’re not just for hanging on the wall.”

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Movie Reviews

Film reviews: ‘How to Make a Killing,’ ‘Pillion,’ and ‘Midwinter Break’

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Film reviews: ‘How to Make a Killing,’ ‘Pillion,’ and ‘Midwinter Break’

‘How to Make a Killing’

Directed by John Patton Ford (R)

★★

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