Tag: lauryn hill

EQUAL Ambassador of the Month Simi Uses Her Music To Send Powerful Messages

Singer-songwriter, sound engineer, and actress are just a few of the hats Simi Bolatito Ogunleye wears. Mother and advocate round out that list, with Simi’s career being punctuated by songs that reflect her life experiences. Whether it’s looking back on the birth of her daughter on “Duduke” or challenging gender stereotypes on “Woman,” Simi’s music gives listeners a window into her world. 

The Nigerian-born multihyphenate started singing in church choirs as a child and wrote her first song at 10 years old. After years of making gospel music, in 2014 Simi switched to Afro-pop, where she made waves with her song “TIFF.” In 2015, she followed that up with “Jamb Question,” which became a chart-topping hit and secured her position as an industry mainstay. 

Simi’s extensive catalog and passion for women advocacy make her selection as the ambassador for Spotify’s EQUAL Global Music Program a no-brainer. EQUAL aims to combat gender disparity in the music industry by amplifying and celebrating the work of women creators around the world. As part of Simi’s involvement, her song Naked Wire will be featured on this month’s EQUAL Global playlist

For the Record caught up with Simi to learn about her musical inspirations and the advice she has for her fellow women musicians. 

The artists who have most inspired me are _____.

Aṣa and Ms. Lauryn Hill. I would say Aṣa most especially because when I started singing professionally, I felt like I could do anything when I listened to her. 

One piece of advice I’d give other women artists is _____.

They’re gonna tell you all the things you think you can’t do. Don’t listen to them. 

One notable moment in my career so far is _____.

When I made a song for my daughter because I was able to perfectly blend my personal life and my career in one little beautiful bubble, and it was such an experience. 

My creative process _____.

Can vary. But my favorite thing is when I have an idea and I can’t go to sleep until I put it down.

One way I’d like to see greater gender equity in the music industry is _____.

Inclusion of women and having opportunities to give women what they deserve, because there are so many of us. 

A few up-and-coming women artists I’m excited to watch are _____.

Ladé, Ria Sean, and Liya, amongst a few others. 

My girl-power anthem is _____.

Woman” by me. 

Hear more from Simi and other women artists sharing their voices with the world on our EQUAL Global playlist. 

 

Carl Chery and Sydney Lopes Discuss Spotify’s Home for Women in Hip-Hop

Hip-hop’s new golden age is here, and it’s being led by women. There’s arguably more female rap stars now than ever before in hip-hop history, and these women—including City Girls, Cardi B, and Megan Thee Stallion—have influenced the taglines and catch phrases that are now part of the cultural vernacular. Yet, the majority of Spotify hip-hop playlists still have a predominantly male listenership. 

In 2019, Spotify launched a new playlist, Feelin’ Myself to start to equalize the barriers to entry for female rappers. The playlist has since become the second-fastest-growing hip-hop playlist on Spotify with over 1.7 million followers. And starting today, we are launching a full-scale campaign to transform the playlist from innovative to truly impactful. 

Carl Cherry, Spotify’s Creative Director, Head of Urban, developed the idea for the playlist a few years ago, and formed a passionate team to help make it a reality. One member is Sydney Lopes, Spotify’s Head of Hip-Hop and R&B, Artists and Label Partnerships. We brought the pair together to discuss the campaign, the importance of spotlighting female rappers, and where the playlist goes from here. 

Sydney Lopes: Can you explain the essence of Feelin’ Myself? How did the playlist come to be?

Carl Chery: The essence of Feelin’ Myself is confidence, edge, and high self-esteem. If you look at the songs that have been playlisted on Feelin’ Myself over the course of the last year and a half, there are a few songs that really embody the playlist. I’m thinking about Erica Banks, “Buss It” or “Best Friend” from Saweetie or even “WAP” by Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion. They exude confidence, self-esteem, and sexiness. 

The playlist came about because there’s an industry-wide gender bias when it comes to women. It came about as an attempt to level the playing field. “What can we do to create a space where women can thrive?” The first step was really reaching out to my female colleagues to see how they felt about creating a space for women only. The answer was to create a space where women can thrive—and then go on to other playlists. 

Sydney: This isn’t the first time we’ve seen women in hip hop, but it’s the first time there seems to be a dedicated platform and playlist for them. What makes this the right time for it, and what would the mood of the playlist be if this playlist was created 20 years ago, for the rappers who were in the game? 

Carl: Wow. Well, 20 years ago, I think it would have been a little bit more split in terms of the aesthetic of the playlist. It wouldn’t have been all women who are from the lineage of Lil’ Kim. There would have been Lauryn Hill, Da Brat—there would have been like a little bit more diversity 20 years ago. But right now, trap is the dominant sound. It’s not only specific to women—there’s always a dominant aesthetic in hip-hop—same around RapCaviar. They want to hear Saweetie, they want to hear Doja Cat, they want to hear Cardi. 

But also, from the time we had the idea for the playlist, to the time it launched, to now, the field is completely different. When we first had the idea, we actually would have struggled to find artists to populate the playlist. We probably would have added a few male artists with big female fan bases, to just round it out and make sure there was enough music. I don’t think Doja Cat was having a moment just yet. I don’t think Meg was what she was just yet. But by the time it launched there was enough, and now a year and a half later there’s just a lot more activity like that. The timing couldn’t have been more perfect. 

Sydney: On our team, we constantly talk about all the different sub-genres of hip-hop, but we’re always thinking about men, right? We talk about lyricists, we talk about West Coast versus East Coast, Down South, trap; we never really think about how that applies to women. As more female rappers enter the landscape, I’m curious about how we will start to think about the sub-genres and how they apply to women. 

Did you have a specific vision of how you wanted this campaign to roll out? What was your thinking around the energy you wanted to bring to the campaign?

Carl: Feelin’ Myself is the second biggest, second-fastest-growing hip-hop playlist on Spotify. I knew it was something that needed to be marketed. So, part of the idea or the goal was to have the playlist become such a destination for women in hip-hop that some of these women would then migrate to other playlists, and hopefully change the audience and in turn, help improve the performance of songs by women on a lot of those playlists. We’re starting the campaign by featuring women on all of our hip-hop covers, and they’re going to remain there the rest of the month of June. 

A lot of it was more collaborative—I had shells of ideas—but I have to give credit to the team, it was important to have a full female team behind this. The director, Jillian Iscaro; visual identity artist Laci Jordan; the production company, Spang TV; and some of the merch, designed by Divine Individual, all of that was created by women.

Sydney: We’re even seeing female vocalists and lyricists on the playlist. You’ve got SZA, Yung Baby Tate, talented singers, too. There’s a wide breadth of what could be on this playlist and a part of this brand. 

And so, as our first big push on the marketing side for this playlist, not only are we gonna make sure that editorial is supporting in a significant way on platform, but we’ll have a couple of social ads featuring Coi Leray and Iamdoechii, who are rising artists right now that have made an enormous impact in what feels like a really short amount of time. Carl, can you speak to the reason for choosing these two artists and bringing their energies into this campaign?

Carl: Coi Leray is arguably the hottest rapper who just happens to be a woman right now. We talked about diversity earlier—her style is different. I hate making comparisons because I think it’s unfair, but she reminds me of a female Playboi Carti, a little bit. She’s fearless. And Iamdoechii is different because she’s a little bit lesser known, but she’s one of the earliest examples of a woman being playlisted early on Feelin’ Myself, and her song taking off and being on the trajectory of potentially becoming a hit. She’s unique. She has duality. 

Sydney: Right, and this is really just the beginning, just the first time we’ll be doing something of this nature. And our hope is to bring this back to life in some way when the pandemic is over. Our RapCaviar Live show that featured all women was one of the most successful RapCaviar Live shows we ever had. We’re hoping we can do something similar. Do you see Feelin’ Myself making an impact in culture the way RapCaviar has?

Carl: One hundred percent. It’s already happening more than we know. The campaign is not only about Feelin’ Myself, it’s a campaign celebrating women in hip-hop and the moment that they’re having. Sydney, what do you think needs to happen to break down barriers to entry?

Sydney: One part is dialogue. A huge part of it is listening, for the gatekeepers. There are not enough women who are considered the gatekeepers. It’s about providing opportunity. It’s about taking a risk on things that haven’t been done before, in a way we haven’t seen before—and doing so in a way that isn’t performative. We need to be a lot more collaborative, we need to listen to women, and let them do what’s never been done. 

No matter what you’re feelin’, there’s no better time to stream the women of hip-hop. Check out Feelin’ Myself below. 

Beyoncé’s ‘Lemonade’ Gets a Fresh Take on Season 6 of Spotify’s ‘Dissect’ Podcast

Back in 2016, Beyoncé’s Lemonade album and film provoked a worldwide discussion about race, feminism, social media, and the music industry at large. Lemonade became the highest-selling album globally at 2.5 million copies, and it brought Beyoncé’s longstanding themes of female empowerment and camaraderie, emotional vulnerability, and the costs and pleasures of fame to the forefront of pop consciousness. It changed culture, politics, music, and their intersections. And now, it’s the subject of Spotify’s Dissect Season 6 podcast. 

Each season, Dissect, a serialized music podcast found exclusively on Spotify, takes an academic approach to analyzing iconic albums. Every episode focuses on one song in the release that had an undeniable influence on music and hip-hop culture. Beyoncé’s Lemonade now joins the ranks of Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly (S1), Kanye West’s My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy (S2), Frank Ocean’s Blonde (S3), Tyler, The Creator’s Flower Boy (S4), Ms. Lauryn Hill’s The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill (Mini Season), and Kendrick Lamar’s DAMN. (S5). 

Plus, Season 6 brings new changes worthy of Queen Bey. For the first time ever, host and creator Cole Cuchna will be joined by a cohost, Titi Shodiya (winner of Spotify’s Sound Up podcast workshop and creator and cohost of Dope Labs podcast, a Spotify Original). The two make leaps of interpretative wonder, fusing insights, music theory, instrumentation, and lyric interpretation with social analysis to empower fans to build deeper connections with Beyoncé’s artistry. For the first time in the show’s history, Dissect will also include behind-the-scenes video footage from the hosts’ travels to exclusive music video sites to accompany the episodes. 

Unlike Beyoncé’s previous albums, the 12-track Lemonade is edgy, full of vitriol and real talk. It contains scornful tales and lyrics that address Jay Z’s long-rumored infidelity in the track “Sorry,” as well as references to social injustices and police brutality on “Formation.” The album alongside its accompanying film not only ushered in a new era of surprise releases and visual experiences, but created a ripple effect that kept it front and center in the cultural zeitgeist.

The Dissect series launches on the fourth anniversary of Lemonade’s surprise release. Check out the first two episodes, “Pray You Catch Me” and “Hold Up,” starting today, April 24. All in, the season will include 12 episodes, with a new one airing every Tuesday following today’s two-episode binge drop. 

Get a refreshing take on the album geared for both lifelong Beyoncé fans and Lemonade-era newcomers. Stream the first few episodes below.

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.