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Next to You - Single by Clara Rubensson
Next to You - Single by Clara Rubensson
8
8.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Rating
Clara Rubensson is an up-and-coming 17-year-old singer-songwriter from Sweden. Not too long ago, she released a charming debut single, entitled, “Next to You”.

“Can’t you see I got something on my mind and I got this feeling I cannot get it right. I see smiling faces telling me I’m wrong. That I don’t fit in and we’ll never find a home.” – lyrics

‘Next to You’ tells an interesting tale of a young woman who feels safe whenever she’s in the presence of her significant other.

Later, she admits that it doesn’t matter what people say or do because she feels okay when she’s next to her partner.

‘Next to You’ contains a relatable storyline, ear-welcoming vocals, and top-notch instrumentation scented with a commercial pop fragrance.

Clara Rubensson has an edgy and cool attitude and her unique voice is wrapped in a modern partly organic soundscape.

Her ”Next to You” single is one of the finalists in the nationwide Swedish music competition P4 Nästa. The final will take place on July 4, 2019. Also, the song is currently on priority airplay at the radio station P4.

https://www.bongminesentertainment.com/clara-rubensson-next-to-you/
  
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Awix (3310 KP) rated Midsommar (2019) in Movies

Jul 10, 2019  
Midsommar (2019)
Midsommar (2019)
2019 | Drama, Horror, Mystery
American attempt at folk horror retains most of the strengths of the same director's Hereditary but also manages to come up with a more coherent plot. A young couple in a moribund relationship head off to a nine-day community festival in rural Sweden with several friends. It goes without saying that there is more on the festival's schedule than they have been told about - given the Swedish background, this is not so much the Wicker Man as the IKEA Man.

It is very easy to see where this is going from near the start, but the various grisly sights and ideas that Aster has come up with are much more difficult to predict. The slowly building atmosphere of unsettling, creeping wrongness is probably at least as effective as any of the film's more shocking moments. In these terms the film is undeniably successful, but the central metaphor of the film remains unclear, and while a slow build is all very well, the film arguably outstays its welcome at nearly two and a half hours long. Nevertheless, an extremely disturbing and powerful film, the simple label 'horror' doesn't do it justice.