Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Music insiders spin the soundtrack for a once-in-a-lifetime season

- By Mikael Wood Los Angeles Times

Anointing the song of the summer was going to be a challenge even before oncein-a-generation protests roared to life last month in response to George Floyd’s killing by Minneapoli­s police.

By shutting down so many of the activities that make a song of the summer happen — concerts, sporting events, pool parties involving people beyond your immediate family — the COVID-19 pandemic had already interrupte­d the annual process that led tunes like Lil Nas X’s “Old Town Road” and Luis Fonsi’s “Despacito” to warmweathe­r cultural ubiquity.

But the explosive widening of the Black Lives Matter movement only deepened the task at hand: Suddenly, the establishe­d hallmarks of the song of the summer — a casually flirty lyric or a groove to inspire a night without cares — felt insufficie­nt to soundtrack a season of such righteous discontent.

We asked 17 arts and music journalist­s and industry insiders to pick the song that best embodies the spirit of a summer defined by contradict­ory imperative­s: to stay inside or to take to the streets? That so little consensus materializ­ed says plenty about the different needs listeners count on music to meet.

Ideally, one song could exult, could object, could mourn, could reassure. And indeed, just such a tune appeared last week from Beyoncé, whose exuberant “Black Parade” — released with no advance notice but plenty of symbolic significan­ce on Juneteenth — celebrates Blackness in its many glories, even as it acknowledg­es the persistent threats of racism and police violence.

Over a swaggering beat brightened with wind instrument­s redolent of an outdoor march, Beyoncé boasts of looking “pandemic fly on the runway” and of having “made a picket sign off your picket fence.” She’s rapping and singing with equal command in another display of her mastery of synthesis.

Yet as good as the track is — and in spite of Beyoncé’s authority as pop’s most clear-eyed thought leader — “Black Parade” is unlikely to end up as 2020’s song of the summer, if only because it came out late in a season that typically starts heating up in the spring.

Often the songs competing in a given year are well known by Memorial Day, which means you can think of the actual summer as the home stretch of a longer race. (Last year, “Old Town Road” began its recordsett­ing 19-week run atop Billboard’s Hot 100 in early April.)

This summer, the Weeknd’s gleaming “Blinding Lights” and Megan

Thee Stallion’s “Savage” — the latter best heard in a remix featuring fellow Houston native Beyoncé — are among the tunes that softened the ground well in advance; ditto “Toosie

Slide” by Drake, who claimed the song of the summer in 2018 with the similarly sleek “In My Feelings.”

But these songs spent a relatively short time at No. 1 — just a week each for “Toosie Slide” and “Savage,” and four nonconsecu­tive weeks for “Blinding Lights.”

In fact, as nine different chart-toppers emerged over the last three months — including “Rain on Me,” Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande’s club jam for an era with no clubs, and DaBaby and Roddy Ricch’s “Rockstar,” with its references to abusive cops — the top of the Hot 100 has experience­d more churn, according to Billboard, than at any point since 1990.

That’s another sign, along with our poll responses, that this fraught moment has splintered listeners’ desires. (Also: that TikTok, where many a smash first catches on these days, is chewing through new songs with increasing speed.)

One upside of this fragmentat­ion is that it’s created a window for viral hits from outside the pop machine — see the irrepressi­ble “Lose Yo Job,” with vocals sourced from a Facebook video shot in a parking lot. No longer do listeners need giant record companies to tell them what’s happening; no longer do folks with something to say need those companies to help them say it.

At a time when it feels like anything might happen, we should be on the lookout for major statements from anywhere. injustice, everyone twerks alone. important young female R&B artist of this era, H.E.R. has made a song about intimacy in a year when our ideas about connection, personal space and human touch are being transforme­d by COVID-19.

 ?? BRAD BARKET/GETTY ??
BRAD BARKET/GETTY
 ?? CARLOS ALVAREZ/GETTY 2009 ?? Clockwise from top: Lil Baby, Harry Styles, H.E.R. and Chrissie Hynde of the Pretenders. Music insiders picked the songs that embody a summer defined by contradict­ory imperative­s: to stay inside or to take to the streets?
CARLOS ALVAREZ/GETTY 2009 Clockwise from top: Lil Baby, Harry Styles, H.E.R. and Chrissie Hynde of the Pretenders. Music insiders picked the songs that embody a summer defined by contradict­ory imperative­s: to stay inside or to take to the streets?
 ?? KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/FOR THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE ??
KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/FOR THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE

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