I don’t know if Bruce Springsteen thinks about death as much as I think about the inevitability of his dying. All other source photographs: Getty Images. Photo illustration source photographs: Rosalía: Christian Bertrand/Alamy. Nitsuh Abebe is a story editor for the magazine. (“The society we live in at the moment,” Robyn says - “we didn’t really make it very good, you know?”) But they’re a lot more motivated - whether it’s to articulate something bleak or find their way toward something better - than you might expect. The artists do not always sound thrilled about the circumstances. No, a lot of these songs seem focused on deeper challenges: How do we get to those joys in the first place? Who gets to have them, and who deserves them? And in one case: Which of them are worth the corresponding rise in sea levels? The 25 songs and artists below include blockbuster hits, critical darlings and inescapable conversation pieces, but few of them take a direct route to the usual joys of pop - the songs about dancing and boasting and sex and love, the ones about what a fantastic night everyone’s about to have or what ecstasies they intend to find by the end of it.
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(Though there is, in certain genres, plenty of all that as well.) Read through this list, and what you’ll often see instead is a very earnest, very serious desire to find the right reaction to a world that feels tense and high-stakes - an ambient conviction that music should be looking for ways to cope, ways to protect ourselves, moments of escape, hard reckonings with our collective responsibilities, ideas for how to make the world feel less brutal. What’s amazing is that the musical expression of all this isn’t always some big swing toward darkness, or anger, or anxiety. “The music kids are listening to is heavy! Maybe it’s hard to be positive and optimistic at the moment.” The Swedish singer Robyn acknowledges that “pop at the moment is depressing” in an interview midway through this issue. “Life is pretty tumultuous right now for all of us,” said the crossover country star Kacey Musgraves, while accepting a Grammy for the Album of the Year. At some point it became a routine conversational tic for all sorts of people, of all sorts of persuasions, to express, with an incredulous gesture, that things feel a bit grueling and frantic lately, don’t they? Musicians are no exception. There’s an oddly strong in-the-moment consensus on how everyone is feeling these days, and it is not good. It takes a certain amount of hindsight to notice how all the wildly different reactions people had to the moment were still, in the end, reactions to the same thing all the different poses they adopted were still being struck against the same backdrop.īut this era - this year, and the last one, and one or two before that - might be an exception. It usually takes a while - a decade or two - before we can look back at a particular era of American life and see it as something coherent, something whose every aspect is marked by one overarching mood.
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25 ‘My Queen Is Harriet Tubman’ Sons of Kemet Full Track.23 ‘Can’t Knock the Hustle’ Weezer Full Track.22 ‘Love It If We Made It’ The 1975 Full Track.21 ‘Assume Form’ James Blake Full Track.16 ‘Girls Like You’ Maroon 5 Full Track.15 ‘I Shall Love 2’ Julia Holter Full Track.10 ‘Slow Burn’ Kacey Musgraves Full Track.6 ‘Why Did You Do That?’ Lady Gaga Full Track.2 ‘Thank u, Next’ Ariana Grande Full Track.
1 ‘Born in the U.S.A.’ (2018) Bruce Spring.