ABSTRACT
In her essay ‘Mainstream as Metaphor: Imagining Dominant Culture’, Alison Huber lists some of the values often assigned to mainstream pop music in Dick Hebdige’s Subculture: The Meaning of Style, and other sources, both ‘popularly and academically’ – ‘banal, homogeneous, unsophisticated, undiscerning, uncultured, low, inauthentic, fake, commercial, conservative, conformist or just plain stupid’ – before going on to defend it. Pop ‘mainstreamness’, she asserts, is also now achieved through ‘digital downloads, file-sharing and social media’ rather than ‘CD singles, hit countdowns and music magazines’. This shift in mediatisation – although the hegemony of the US Billboard Hot 100 and Billboard Music Awards, Grammy Awards and, to a lesser extent, Brit Awards and local music awards still reigns supreme – partly explains how a completely unknown 16-year-old from Auckland, New Zealand, can suddenly achieve US mainstream pop supremacy, and appear to completely overturn all of Huber’s list of perceived negative values. This article considers Lorde from eight different perspectives: Lorde as a celebrity, Lorde the ‘gifted child’, Lorde as a feminist, Lorde and Miley Cyrus, Lorde’s influences, Lorde in/on the music industry, Lorde as a teenager and, finally, the impact and value of Lorde’s music.
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Tony Mitchell
Tony Mitchell is honorary research associate at the University of Technology, Sydney, Australia. He is the author of Dario Fo: People’s Court Jester (London: Methuen, 1999) and Popular Music and Local Identity: Pop, Rock and Rap in Europe and Oceania (University of Leicester Press, 1996), and the editor of Global Noise: Rap and Hip Hop outside the USA (Wesleyan University Press, 2001). He co-edited Sounds of Then, Sounds of Now: Popular Music in Australia (Australian Clearing House for Youth Studies, 2008), North Meets South: Popular Music in Aotearoa/New Zealand (Perfect Beat, 1994) and Home, Land and Sea: Situating Popular Music in Aotearoa New Zealand (Pearson Education, 2011). He is currently co-editing Sounds Icelandic.