Billie Eilish Pop Superstar releases Quarantine Single 'My Future'

Billie Eilish has released quarantine single ‘my future’. The 18-year-old pop superstar has followed up her Bond theme for ‘No Time To Die’ with the “personal” new track recorded at the start of the coronavirus pandemic.

Billie Eilish Pop Superstar releases Quarantine Single 'My Future'

By Bang Showbiz

The ‘everything i wanted’ singer has explained that she penned the song during a period of great “reflection and self-growth”.

And Billie hopes the song, which has taken on a new meaning since the global health crisis, will relate to her fans during these unsettling times.

In a statement, she said of the track: “We wrote this at the very beginning of quarantine. It’s a song that’s really, really personal and special to me.

“When we wrote this song, it was exactly where my head was at — hopeful, excited and a crazy amount of self-reflection and self-growth.

But recently it has also taken on a lot of new meaning in the context of what’s happening in the world now.

“I hope you can all find meaning in it for yourselves.”

‘my future’ sees Billie sing in her signature whisper-pop style: “Can’t you hear me? I’m not coming home / Do you understand? / I’ve changed my plans.”

The song and accompanying animated music video’s release comes after the ‘xanny’ singer bagged six MTV VMA nominations.

The teenage phenomenon has become the first artist to score two Video of the Year nods as an adolescent, with ‘everything i wanted’ shortlisted this year, and ‘bad guy’ nominated in 2019.

Billie Eilish is currently hard at work on her second album, the follow-up to last year’s record-breaking debut ‘When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?’.

The singer’s sibling, Finneas – who is also her producer – previously teased she would be heading in an “experimental” direction on her second studio effort.

He explained: “I think so far, in album two … there’s just a lot of stories we felt we didn’t get to tell yet.

“We’re just trying to tell all those and we’re being a little bit experimental. I think if you’re not trying to change things a little bit, you’re not evolving.

So I think we’re just trying to embrace everything that we are proud of in our music and also just try new things and experiment and give people stuff to look forward to.”

Originally published at Bang Showbiz