“We’ve gotten used to seeing white queer men become megastars.
But people had to warm up to it and sometimes the collective warm-up can take more time than we think,” said singer-songwriter Iman Jordan (Rihanna, “Empire”). “Frank Ocean was the beginning of the revolution. Ocean, who sprung from the rowdy, L.A.-based hip-hop collective Odd Future, went on to become a Grammy-winning star and in-demand collaborator for Jay-Z, ASAP Rocky and Travis Scott. I don’t have any secrets I need kept anymore,” he wrote.
In 2012, avant-garde R&B-hip-hop singer Frank Ocean broke ground by boldly writing about falling in love with a man on the eve of releasing his breathlessly hyped debut album “Channel Orange.” “I don’t know what happens now, and that’s alrite. “I don’t have any secrets I need to keep anymore” This moment isn’t some blip, because it’s not a blip in society.” “But with entertainment becoming more accepting, music is going to be right there. “We know folks in our community have always been religiously conservative, and being gay is still seen as taboo,” said Ebro Darden, the global editorial head of hip-hop and R&B for Apple Music and host of “Ebro in the Morning” on New York’s Hot 97 radio station. Slang such as “sus” and “No homo” and “Pause” that use queerness as a punchline have been thrown around casually for years.īut as the old guard has been replaced with a younger generation unconcerned with rigid labels and unbothered by genre, today’s rap and R&B scene isn’t as exclusively heteronormative as it once was. In fact, an entire lexicon dedicated to pointing out discomfort with gay men has permeated rap lyrics. Rap culture has always been powered by unbridled machismo, and one would be hard pressed to not find a gay slur embedded in the lyrics of any of the genre’s most famous architects. Hip-hop’s refusal to embrace anything queer has been a blemish on the genre for as long as its been around.
But this is still a genre that has never been supportive of change.” “We are finally starting to see queer black men celebrated in the genre. “It’s hard to be out in genres where being gay, or expressing your sexuality, is frowned upon,” added platinum rapper and singer iLoveMakonnen, born Makonnen Sheran, who rose to fame as a protégé of Drake and came out as gay in 2017. “Lil Nas X re-imagined an image of the Wrangler-wearing, horseback-riding man’s man into a young black representative of youth culture, got the attention of two traditionally macho cultures and then came out on the last day of Pride,” said Roy Kinsey, a Chicago-based librarian and rapper at the forefront of Chicago’s queer rap scene. That he did so in the orbit of hip-hop and country, genres that have historically snubbed queer artists, was groundbreaking. Overnight, the 20-year-old Atlanta native - born Montero Lamar Hill - became the biggest gay pop star in the world. “But I look back at this moment, I’ll see that I’m fine.” “Embracin’ this news I behold unfolding … I know it don’t feel like it’s time,” he raps. but before this month ends i want y’all to listen closely to ‘c7osure’” he wrote, referring to a track from his debut EP “7,” then the No. “Some of y’all already know, some of y’all don’t care, some of y’all not gone fwm no more. On June 30, the final day of Pride Month, the young country-rap sensation Lil Nas X came out to his 2.2 million Twitter followers.