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Laura Snapes: Pop star, producer or pariah? The conflicted brilliance of Grimes (The Guardian)
Laura Snapes: Pop star, producer or pariah? The conflicted brilliance of Grimes (The Guardian)
Boucher has recently seemed at a loss to regain control over her career, and naive about her role in its dissolution. But Miss Anthropocene reveals an astute understanding – evidently well honed – of humanity’s worst impulses and how to appeal to them. […] Against all odds, Miss Anthropocene is a beautiful and emotionally complex album: Boucher’s continuing personal testament to creativity as resistance against destruction, and an unlikely optimistic gesture that still believes art can be a powerful force for social good. It also finally finds Boucher reconciled to her relationship with the public. On Miss Anthropocene, she is a mirror, inviting us to examine the source of our bad faith.
·theguardian.com·
Laura Snapes: Pop star, producer or pariah? The conflicted brilliance of Grimes (The Guardian)
David Wallace-Wells: Nicki Minaj's Kaleidoscopic Genius (New York Magazine)
David Wallace-Wells: Nicki Minaj's Kaleidoscopic Genius (New York Magazine)
‘Once upon a time, dance pop was about self-affirmation, and the thing being affirmed was usually some sort of identity—ethnicity, gender, sometimes class, and maybe even sexuality. The Nicki generation seizes a whole new subject for pop: not who you are and how you made it, but the meaning and experience of celebrity once you have it. In place of identity, these prima donnas are performing fame. And doing it with what you might even call “taste”: an idiosyncratic aesthetic vision for everyday life, one that has nothing to do with where they’ve been and everything to do with synthetic aspiration. Minaj isn’t being inauthentic about celebrity—celebrity is the most authentic thing about her.’
·nymag.com·
David Wallace-Wells: Nicki Minaj's Kaleidoscopic Genius (New York Magazine)