Tag: elliott smith

GLOW Artist Arlo Parks Is Inspired by Vulnerability, Personal Connection, and Queer Representation

Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter Arlo Parks’s 2021 debut, Collapsed In Sunbeams, is a tender and raw plea from the artist to listeners. But what fans of honest ballads like “Hurt” and “Eugene” may not realize is that Arlo is a self-proclaimed extrovert with a “frantic approach to creativity” who is constantly in motion. 

Arlo’s energy for her passions has been at the fore recently, as she revealed news of her upcoming sophomore album, My Soft Machine, the same week that she was named one of Spotify’s GLOW Spotlight artists. GLOW is our new global music program celebrating and amplifying LGBTQIA+ artists and creators. At launch, we supported Arlo on-platform with a dedicated hub and flagship GLOW playlist, and off-platform via billboards and other takeovers. And our commitment to the artist, and to equity in audio, will continue year-round.

With her latest single, “Weightless,” the London native leans a little more heavily toward her deep love of techno, electronic music, and nightlife culture. “I taught myself to DJ, and I’m inspired by a lot of dance music, actually,” the artist told For the Record. “I feel like it’s a perfect intersection of queerness and music that makes you move—that marriage is super organic.” 

Tell us about your journey into music. How did you find your voice?

I started playing piano when I was very young. That developed into learning to play the guitar a little bit and falling in love with bands like Deftones, My Chemical Romance, and Smashing Pumpkins. I fell in love with the energy of these people who were smashing into each other onstage. Around the same time, I also discovered the more gentle use of guitars with people like Phoebe Bridgers, Elliott Smith, Nick Drake, and Jeff Buckley and seeing how deeply emotionally profound music could be as a medium. 

So, those two things’ colliding led me to teach myself how to produce on GarageBand and just make terrible little demos in my bedroom and in my closet. Making music in the closet turned into making music in the studio. And now I’ve been doing music full-time since I was about 17, so about five years.

How has your music changed as you’ve gotten older?

Over time, I’ve become more brave, more vulnerable. I think honestly, it’s just from having lived more life, becoming more assertive in the studio, and picking up more skills and balancing it with the advice from the people around me. I feel like my approach to writing itself has been quite consistent. I’m often struck by melodies in the middle of the night or at the most inconvenient times and voice-noting those, reading excessively, and mining my lyrics from poetry. 

How does your queer identity influence your music or your songwriting? 

My queer identity has always made its way into my music because it’s who I am. And I’ve always written about love and finding myself in the world and coming of age. I feel like music was also treated as a journal for me, and it was a way that I processed the world around me and became more comfortable and confident with who I was. I’m also super inspired by queer artists, as well as books and films. 

Who are some of those artists?

SOPHIE. Beverly Glenn-Copeland. Phoebe Bridgers, Lucy Dacus, Julien Baker—that boygenius release has sent me into a frenzy. Another major one was Syd from The Internet because she had her own sense of style, her own sense of confidence and presence in herself. The fact that she was a producer who was active and leading the group—I was really inspired by her when I was a kid. 

How does music empower queer communities?

Music builds connection, and a lot of queer people find real comfort in their chosen family. I feel like music really serves to build that, especially in spaces like queer clubs, and especially in London. Many queer kids really find themselves on nights out when they’re finally surrounded by people who they can relate to who they feel close to. And I feel like music is so vital in that dance culture, but music also serves as representation. 

I remember the first time that I heard somebody singing a song about being queer and using pronouns that I felt I could apply to love stories that I had been through, and then also wanting to give that back to people. A big part of encouraging people is just making them feel less alone, and it’s a really powerful tool for empowerment too. 

What do you hope people take away from your music?

I would hope that people feel confident in being vulnerable, because of how vulnerable I am. That’s what I learned from my favorite artists, from listening to “Speed Trials” by Elliott Smith. And I want it to be something that acts as a companion through life, when they’re in the car or bus on their way to work, or hanging out with friends. More softness, that’s what I want. 

Why do you think it’s important to have a program like GLOW that amplifies LGBTQIA+ voices?

What makes a difference is when young people feel like they’re seeing people like them amplified and lifted up into the mainstream—seeing people on billboards and TV and being queer and being happy and making art that a lot of people like. Seeing that was so important to me growing up. I imagine having Heartstopper as a 13- or 14-year-old and what that would have meant to me as a teenager. 

I feel like also the fact that GLOW is amplifying such a range of different queer artists. And there is a sense of variety and acceptance of the fact that there is nuance even within the larger umbrella of queer artistry, that there are so many different people making so many different things. Having that for young people is super important, and long may it continue. 

What’s one piece of advice that you got as a young person that has stuck with you? 

It sounds harsh, but stay with me: At the beginning, nobody cares yet, right? In that anonymity and in that lack of people seeing you; that is when you truly have time to grow. Because you can nurture your craft without people having eyes on you. So in the beginning, nobody cares—and that’s okay.

Catch Arlo on our flagship GLOW playlist as well as Alternative Pride.

10 Iconic Albums From 1998 We’re Still Playing

In 1998, Google was born, Japan hosted the Winter Olympics, and “Titanic” won a record 11 Oscars. While that may feel like a lifetime ago, the decade’s best music is still relevant as ever.

And as streaming data from these 1998 albums proves, we’re still listening.

There was no singular music trend that defined the year. As commercial, candy-coated pop began to dominate the charts, rising artists across genres like electronic, indie pop, punk, and alternative made their marks behind the scenes. Meanwhile, global superstar Madonna defended her title as queen of reinvention, and budding hip-hop masterminds OutKast pushed the limits of rap for a new generation.

Maybe you were front row at 1998’s biggest concerts—or maybe you weren’t born yet. Regardless, check out these 10 iconic records from the year that still hold up.

Air, “Moon Safari”

Released January 16, 1998
2018 Total Streams: Over 3.3 million

Moon Safari,” the debut from French duo Air, is appropriately light and breezy—but it’s far from fluff. Across 10 delicate tracks, Nicolas Godin and Jean-Benoît Dunckel experiment in soft, playful electronica with instruments from synths and organs to bongos and castanets. The result is a gentle assessment of space and atmosphere; elevator music for the time-traveling hipster set of the future.

 

Neutral Milk Hotel, “In the Aeroplane Over the Sea”

Released February 10, 1998
2018 Total Streams: Over 10.6 million

An indie rock concept album inspired by Anne Frank? Sounds like a hard sell, and yet the tender, explosive power that drives “In the Aeroplane Over the Sea” has mesmerized listeners for two straight decades. An unlikely cult classic from a band that only released two studio albums, “Aeroplane” is a sweeping epic fueled by the dense, gut-wrenching lyricism of Neutral Milk Hotel leader Jeff Mangum.

 

Madonna, “Ray of Light”

Released February 22, 1998
2018 Streams: Over 2.2 million

Madonna’s “Ray of Light” didn’t so much mark a comeback as it did a full-blown renaissance; at the time of the record’s release in early 1998, the pop superstar was basking in the glow of a whole new identity. A new mom, Madonna embraced spiritual practices like yoga and Kabbalah and underwent extensive vocal training before recording her seventh studio album. As a result, she sings in a wider, fuller tone that complements her newfound maturity and lush, techno-pop sound.

 

Massive Attack, “Mezzanine”

Released April 20, 1998
2018 Streams: Over 7 million

In the ’90s, Bristol, England, became known for its experiments in trip-hop, a chill blend of hip-hop and electronic. Massive Attack’s landmark “Mezzanine” was born from this rich scene, but ultimately transcended the city limits. Shrouded in eerie tension and cold, sparse beats, “Mezzanine” highlighted the talents of guest vocalists like reggae legend Horace Andy and Liz Fraser of Cocteau Twins; Fraser lends her ethereal vocals to “Teardrop,” a soft anti-ballad that became the album’s biggest hit (and the title sequence song for the TV show “House”). The album’s hypnotic legacy can be found coursing through the work of contemporary artists like James Blake and The xx.

 

Lauryn Hill, “The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill”

Released August 25, 1998
2018 Total Streams: Over 29.7 million

The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill” begins with the ring of a school bell—a familiar sound to anyone who remembers (fondly or otherwise) back to the time when they were figuring out who they wanted to be. In many ways, Lauryn Hill’s debut solo album is a coming-of-age story. There’s the love and anxiety of being a young mother (“To Zion”), the ache of broken relationships (“I Used To Love Him”), and exploration of feminism and equality (“Doo Wop (That Thing)”). In breaking with her band Fugees, Hill shifted between singing and rapping with effortless ease, bursting solo into the boys club that is hip-hop with her own strong yet vulnerable style.

 

Elliott Smith, “XO”

Released August 25, 1998
2018 Total Streams: Over 1 million

1998 was a turning point for Elliott Smith, the wistful crooner whose untimely death five years later would leave his legacy shrouded in myth. Months after he appeared at the Academy Awards to perform his nominated song “Miss Misery” (from “Good Will Hunting”), he made his major label debut with “XO,” a characteristically melancholy release. And yet, even as he battled increasingly present inner demons, there was hope and light to be found on “XO”; from the tender, jubilant “Sweet Adeline” to the cheery flourishes of “Baby Britain.”

 

Belle & Sebastian, “The Boy With the Arab Strap”

Released September 7, 1998
2018 Total Streams: Over 1 million

To this day, Belle & Sebastian is one of the most prolific indie bands in the game, but their “brilliant career” first took shape with their third album, “The Boy With the Arab Strap.” A curious collection of enchanting sonic fables, the record saw Belle & Sebastian expand from a solo project into a full-fledged band, with Stuart Murdoch and company touching upon issues of isolation and angst across a quirky dream-pop landscape. They remain the poster children for Glasgow’s weird and wonderful art scene, a hub for artists like Camera ObscuraCHVRCHES, and Franz Ferdinand.

 

Hole, “Celebrity Skin”

Released September 8, 1998
2018 Total Streams: Over 3 million

The spotlight isn’t easy for anyone, but when you’re one-half of a tragic and infamous rock couple, it’s especially hard to keep it together. Courtney Love did that and more on her band Hole’s third record, “Celebrity Skin,” released just a few years after the death of her husband, Kurt Cobain. Driven by the force of the record’s fiery title track, “Celebrity Skin” became the band’s most popular release, a sophisticated departure from the rough, fuzzed-out grunge of their previous records.

 

OutKast, “Aquemini”

Released September 29, 1998
2018 Total Streams: Over 8.7 million

At a time when hip-hop was all about East Coast versus West Coast, OutKast brought it home to the Dirty South with their acclaimed third album, “Aquemini.” An awesome and adventurous saga, the record fuses elements of funk, jazz, soul, blues, and electronic in its long, jazzy meditations and free-flowing verses. Incorporating thoughtful elements like spoken word, rootsy harmonica, and clever skit interludes, the modern masterpiece put Southern rap on the map for good.

 

Fatboy Slim, “You’ve Come a Long Way, Baby”

Released October 19, 1998
2018 Total Streams: Over 4 million

Nineties British dance music hit peak fun with Fatboy Slim, the DJ whose global anthems like “The Rockafeller Skank” and “Praise You” soundtracked the turn of the millennium. “You’ve Come a Long Way, Baby,” a nonstop, hedonistic romp through surf rock, funk, techno, and more, pioneered a signature big-beat sound that was equal parts campy and cool. Listening back, the record is still a sign of the times, but 20 years later, we haven’t stopped dancing.

 

For even more hits and deep cuts from the ’90s, stream our “All Out 90s” playlist here.