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Jayson Greene: How Indie Went Pop—and Pop Went Indie—in the 2010s (Pitchfork)
Jayson Greene: How Indie Went Pop—and Pop Went Indie—in the 2010s (Pitchfork)
Your unconscious mind, it turns out, does not care what label a piece of music comes out on. It doesn’t care much about the artistic ethics behind it, either. Which means that the artists having the most fun in this new playground, at least creatively speaking, are the ones like Charli and Vernon—the ones who make the most of collaborative possibilities and don’t ask anyone listening to make distinctions about where any of their influences came from. That may sound jarringly utopian for a mostly dystopic moment, but if there is one thing we still want from pop music, even if the lyrics are downcast, it is a sense of possibility, of endless horizons.
·pitchfork.com·
Jayson Greene: How Indie Went Pop—and Pop Went Indie—in the 2010s (Pitchfork)