MusicNewsCardi B’s ‘Up’ video references an erotic 80s photo bookThe ‘WAP’ rapper appears to pay tribute to Patrick Magaud’s 1984 photo book, Exhibition in ParisShareLink copied ✔️February 5, 2021MusicNewsTextGünseli Yalcinkaya Cardi B has released her new track “Up” and, as promised, it comes with an accompanying music video. The Tanu Muino-directed clip opens with a shot of lingerie-clad Cardi in a cemetery near a gravestone that reads “RIP 2020”. Dressed in all-black, she straddles a gravestone in the shape of a man – a shot that eagle-eyed viewers have noted bears a striking resemblance to photographer Patrick Magaud’s Exhibition in Paris series. Released in 1984, Exhibition in Paris is a set of humourous and raunchy photographs of naked or semi-clad women across Paris. The images pull fun at the seriousness of their surroundings, from a naked woman riding a bicycle through a busy junction, to a woman naked in the Louvre fountain. The music video nods to a particular set of images in the series of a woman in a graveyard, dressed in black lingerie and (you guessed it) mounting a man-shaped gravestone. Whether Cardi’s aware of the comparison or not (perhaps it’s her creative team’s doing), the resemblance between the two images is uncanny. “Up” is Cardi’s follow-up to her viral hit with Megan Thee Stallion, “WAP”. In a new interview with Zane Lowe on Apple Music, she talked about how she wanted to make a track that’s more similar to her first mixtape, which was inspired by Chicago drill. “I was young, and I liked that and everything, so my mixtape was very all about gangster violence,” she said. “If it's up, then it’s stuck, and that’s where I wanted to take it with this record.” She also said she plans to put out an album this year and has “like 50 songs” recorded. “I’m just still not satisfied,” she said. “If I’m not satisfied, I’m just not satisfied, but I really want to put out an album this year. I feel like I have no choice now. Now, I feel like I exceeded my limit of holding. I just need to stop with the fear.” Patrick Magaud’s Exhibition in ParisExpand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREAn interview with IC3PEAK, the band Putin couldn’t silenceFrost Children answer the dA-Zed quizThe 5 best features from PinkPantheress’ new remix albumMoses Ideka is making pagan synth-folk from the heart of south LondonBehind-the-scenes at Oklou and FKA twigs’ new video shootBjörk calls for the release of musician ‘kidnapped’ by Israeli authorities‘Her dumbest album yet’: Are Swifties turning on Taylor Swift?IB Kamara on branching out into musicEnter the K-Bass: How SCR revolutionised Korean club culture‘Comic Con meets underground rap’: Photos from Eastern Margins’ day festWho are H.LLS? Get to know London’s anonymous alt-R&B trioTaylor Swift has lost her grip with The Life of a Showgirl