I was kinda on a nostalgia trip and I stumbled on Jennifer Lopez’s Waiting for Tonight, and it’s basically about how she wants to fuck her partner. It could be more romantic in nature, and for some people it is, but looking at the repression in the West, it’s very racy for its time.

But I ask: Why is it considered bad for straight men to want to listen to a song about how a woman wants to fuck? Volcel Pledge, notwithstanding.

I mean I know the answer is systemic misogyny, but like it doesn’t even make sense?

It’s so bizarre to me as a queer person attracted to men that men and boys are discouraged from listening to musicians who are women.

I’d have loved growing up with musicians I’m attracted to who were attracted to my gender.

I sorta want to explore this experience as an outsider, but I’m curious, what was that like? Did you listen to artists you liked in secret? How are your music tastes now? Any recommendations on music that feels different on a revisit?

  • ButtBidet [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    I feel like it’s taken for granted that men often don’t like women as lead performers. It must be a Western thing, as I can mentally think of many non-Western examples, the most obvious example of which is Korea.

    Unrelated, but my gf was questioning why there’s so few male lead singers in the DPRK. I just assume that it’s because of conscription, but what do I know.

      • ButtBidet [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        11 months ago

        I wonder if the introduction of rock music in the 60s onwards, which is in some ways is just a kind of hyper-masculine split from pop/folk music, has something to do with it.

        Makes sense

    • Mindfury [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      It me

      I legitimately hadn’t heard WAP for 2 months after it came out, not out of contempt for it but because I was basically going through a period of not listening to music at all because i wasn’t commuting and my job didn’t allow for background noise.

      when I heard the huge sub-bass immediately kick in, I lit up like a christmas tree

  • Othello [comrade/them, love/loves]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    i was only allowed to listen to christian music as a kid and then i discovered pop music and would listen to it in secret and then ask god for forgiveness and promise him that it wouldn’t effect me I just like to dance. it absolutely affected me, I watched katy perrys I kissed a girl music video everyday and cried to Born this way everyother day for reasons i would not contemplate. i look back at my middle school music taste and cringe, but I dont feel bad about it, the songs were fun and opened up my world in a big way. i listen to whatever was popular so I could stay relevant and kids wouldn’t make fun of me. now I listen to a lot of kendrick lamar, megan thee stallion, the coup, doechii, hozier, mitski, regina spector, marina, phil ochs, (i USED to listen to lizzo before last week) and taylor swift if i need a good cry evermore and folklore hold up. and red has some bangers but i swear im not a swifty (anymore). and whatever spotfiy throws at me.

  • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    Guilty. I remember being a shithead about the Spice Girls waaaaaaaaay back in the day. I don’t even remember why I thought it wasn’t cool.

    • quarrk [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      I don’t even remember why I thought it wasn’t cool.

      A lot of music itself was meant received/marketed to reinforce binary gender norms, the auditory equivalent of pink Barbie dolls juxtaposed with Hot Wheels or whatever. If you’re a kid who has internalized these norms and is afraid of being seen as non-conforming, the answer is to reject those artists whose have cultivated a brand targeted at the other gender. It is a bit more relaxed today compared to the 90s.

      After posting this comment I found a relevant article about the Spice Girls who did not actually want their music to be specific to girls.

    • ButtBidet [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      I remember that it was very wrong for boys to like the Spice Girls, because girls were icky and weird. Spice Girls were probably the most haram thing imaginable for my 9 year-old brain.

  • Deadend [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    Because you are supposed to sing along to music in your heart.

    If you sing the lady songs, then you aren’t straight and cis.

    It doesn’t matter how good the song is.

  • TheLepidopterists [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    I sorta want to explore this experience as an outsider, but I’m curious, what was that like?

    I don’t think I really thought of my tastes based on the gender of the performer in my youth, I just was into Linkin Park and adjacent stuff because I was an edgy 13 year old rejecting my mom, but to be honest “and adjacent stuff” didn’t include many (any?) female performers. As a ~9 year old I did hate Hansen because a girl I liked liked them (I couldn’t explain how that makes sense, it seems absurd to me in retrospect also), but they were all dudes (target audience was young girls though IIRC). By the time I was making my own listening choices (as a kid, had no influence on the car radio) I didn’t hate pop, just didn’t really seek it out. Hated 80s stuff because my mom only listened to that and “praise songs” but I’ve grown out of that.

    Did you listen to artists you liked in secret?

    Except to the degree that I was avoiding getting my CDs snapped in half for being “Satanic” no.

    How are your music tastes now?

    Indie rock/pop mostly. Favorite bands have a mix of male and female vocalists (Stars, San Fermin) some are fronted only by women (Misterwives, Lake Street Dive, Purity Ring, Lucius).

    Any recommendations on music that feels different on a revisit?

    I like 80s music okay now I guess? Just the hits, don’t seek it out so I don’t know any niche stuff. I definitely recognize that my earlier ill feelings toward it were tied up in “anything my evangelical mom likes is bad by virtue of her liking it.”

  • I remember some shit head coworker from McD’s that heard my techno playing in my car once and said “omg bro ur listening to N’Sync?!?!?” And I never heard the end of it. Fuck I hated growing up as a boy. And I hated the shame put on me for certain things, so I ended up listening to my stuff more privately. In public, it was crappy early 2000’s metal.

  • 😈MedicPig🐷BabySaver😈@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    Umm, I never noticed. I’ve always listened to anything I like. I have lots of female artist in my MP3 collection.

    I love Alicia Keys (seen her in concert), Sarah Barellis, Lana del Rey, Nora Jones… lots more!

  • Rojo27 [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    In my personal experience it feels like people have been better about this sort of thing. Or maybe it’s just that as I’ve grown older and am around older people we just don’t give a fuck anymore. But I do remember when I was younger there certainly was that stigma.

  • mechwarrior2 [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    Guilty, and i was pretty aware of it as I grew older.

    Its been less so as my perspective on gender changed over the years. Plus gaining interest in more types of music, and particularly also making music, chopping up vocal samples

    https://www.thewire.co.uk/in-writing/interviews/burial_unedited-transcript

    Wire: The people on the album seem like wounded or mutilated angels: angels whose wings have been clipped, or who have been trapped or betrayed.

    Burial: Yeah. When you think of some of things people go through, everyday troubles, relationship things, other stuff. Everyone knows those sorts of feelings. I wanted to do songs about that low-key stuff. There are a couple of tunes with the vocal to do with angels on it. Sometimes I’d be hearing a song … I was worrying, I’d made all these dark tunes, and I played ‘em to my mum, and she didn’t like them. I was going to give up, but she was sweet, telling me, ‘just do a tune, fuck everyone off, don’t worry about it.’ My dog died, and I was totally gutted about that. She was just like, ‘make a tune, cheer up, stay up late, make a cup of tea’. And I rang her mobile twenty minutes later and I’d made that ‘Archangel’ tune, and I was like, ‘I’ve made the tune, the tune you told me to make.’ And I heard this vocal and it doesn’t say it but it sounds like ‘archangel’. I like pitching down female vocals so they sound male, and pitching up male vocals so they sound like a girl singing. It can sound sexy as fuck.

    Wire: That works. When I listen to the record, I can’t work out whether the vocals belong to males or females. And angels aren’t supposed to have no gender.

    Burial: Really? Well that works nice with my tunes, kind of half boy half girl, but that can be dark too. Sometimes in a mirror people see the devil’s face for a second, that wrong aspect, the eyes, in your own. When you are young you are pushed around by forces that are nothing to do with you. You’re lost, most of the time you don’t understand what’s going on with yourself, with anything.

    Wire: I’ve read you say that you think it’s Ok for women to like your music, that people shouldn’t be frightened of making tunes that women will like.

    Burial: But girls love the dark tunes too. I understand that moody thing, but some dance music is too male. It’s dry, Some jungle tunes had a balance, the glow, the moodiness that comes from the presence of both girls and boys in the same tune, there’s tension because it’s close, but sometimes perfect together. Men sometimes exist in this place where they don’t have a fucking clue what girls go through and vice versa. I was brought up most by my mum, I’m my mum’s son. I look like her. I am her. I own female dogs. I don’t know what I’m trying to say, but with my new album – blokes might be, like, ‘what the fuck is this?’ But hopefully their girlfriends will like it. [page break]

    Wire: But I think a lot of men want more than blokey music is giving them.

    Yeah? They should listen to some Todd Edwards, his tunes melt anyone. People are different, but the media, the world has made them afraid to create their own space around themselves, when they should just close their eyes and trust in themselves. Sometimes a man needs a break from the darkness, and just needs a dose of chirpy, buzzing tunes.

  • Beaver [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    It’s a deep-seated combination of homophobia and machismo. Singing along to pop music is a very female or queer coded activity in American culture, even though most straight cis men feel exactly the same emotional connections with the song and the desire to sing along. It’s only in very accepting and safe situations that we let loose (and even then, it’s usually a “tee hee I wouldn’t normally do this” sort of situation). I think a lot of men listen to and sing along to pop music while driving, because it’s a private place where they can make a lot of noise without being overheard.