forevher
The pop singer’s second album is looser, livelier and more ecstatic than her debut, detailing the headlong rush of falling in love.
A superb development of the ideas the London artist explored on her debut album
The London musician's second record queers up and skewers the traditional love song, beautifully articulating the giddiness of romance
Though Shura longed for connection on her debut album, Nothing's Real, its delicate, lonely songs often hinted that she hadn't really fallen in love yet.
Shura's second album is a more mature comeback for the Londoner, forming an interesting conversation with the glitz and glamour of her debut, Nothing's Real.
Sometimes an album is so much more than its music. It represents something that extends further that what we hear. Forevher, the second album from English synth-pop artist Shura, is one of those releases.
Shura’s ‘forevher’ is an intrinsic redefinition of the modern love story. It dissolves perceived boundaries of gender and sexuality,
Shura's new album Forevher employs a simple premise of inserting queer love into the dominant cis-hetero romantic narratives – and it works.
Following her sparkling electropop debut Nothing's Real, Shura returns with an expanded musical palette and mellower tone on her sophomore album forevher...
The UK/Russian singer’s second album channels Prince, Roberta Flack and Joni Mitchell