LOS ANGELES — For all her dedication to expanding — and sometimes to exploding — the boundaries of good taste in pop music, Lady Gaga never goes long without dropping a killer ballad to remind you what a fundamentally talented singer she is.
Think of the countrified “Million Reasons.” Think of the flag-waving “Hold My Hand.” Think, especially, of “Shallow,” her and Bradley Cooper’s Oscar-winning duet from their remake of “A Star Is Born.” Each reveals a different facet of Gaga’s creative persona while showcasing a voice that can blend tenderness and ferocity.
Her latest is another duet, “Die With a Smile,” in which she and Bruno Mars play lovers at the end of the world amid a shimmering yet muscular production that pulls from rock, country and R&B. (The song was written by Gaga, Mars, Andrew Watt, Dernst “D’Mile” Emile II and James Fauntleroy and produced by the singers, Watt and D’Mile.) Released in August, just as Gaga was ramping up promotion for her role in “Joker: Folie à Deux,” “Die With a Smile” has since racked up more than 1.2 billion streams on Spotify.
Now the song is nominated for two prizes at the 67th Grammy Awards in February: pop duo/group performance — which Gaga won in 2019 with “Shallow” and again in 2021 with her and Ariana Grande’s “ Rain on Me “ — and song of the year, for which she’s been nominated three previous times.