Why 2015’s Pop Music Scene Looks a Lot Like 1995’s [View all]
Why 2015s Pop Music Scene Looks a Lot Like 1995s
Sleater-Kinney, Bjork and PJ Harvey are back. And they have something to teach the new wave of feminist artists.
BY SADY DOYLE
According to just about every reputable source, we live in a golden age of feminist music. TIME magazine declared 2014 the year of pop feminism; Carl Wilson, in Billboard, called 2014 Pop Musics End of Men Moment; VICE, meanwhile, has dubbed 2014 The Year Feminism Reclaimed Pop. This is all well-deserved. Beyoncés choice to sample a feminist lecture by Chimamanda Ngozie Adichiecomplete with definition of the termwas a watershed moment even before the pop star stood in front of a gigantic, glaring FEMINIST sign at the VMAs.
Beyoncé made feminism fashionable. Lorde, Charli XCX, Miley Cyrus and Taylor Swift have since claimed the term; even the nominally apolitical Meghan Trainor made her name with a song about fat-shaming and Photoshop abuse, topics that used to be the exclusive province of feminist blogs.
All of thiscoupled with pop culture's 20-year nostalgia cyclehas created the perfect climate for legacy feminist musicians to get more serious attention than they have in years. Were only a month into 2015 and already, Sleater-Kinney has released its first album in ten years, Björk unexpectedly dropped a new album, and PJ Harvey began recording a new album as a live exhibit in Somerset House, a London art space.
But feminism's dominance can be a precarious thing. The very names Sleater-Kinney and Björk ought to remind us thatin the immortal words of Battlestar Galacticaall of this has happened before, and it will happen again. Feminism reclaimed mainstream music two decades ago and was hailed as a conquering force, only to be wiped off the map by the next hot trend. Musically, 2015 looks a lot like 1995.
http://inthesetimes.com/article/17587/feminist_rock_2015_is_the_new_1995