Within a career full of momentous, often inescapable singles, “Anti-Hero” may be the Taylor Swift smash that best showcases the different facets of her songwriting brilliance. As soon as she claps back (“Let go of that bad boy life that you’ve got on the street/ Find yourself a serious woman for you”), the hard-hitting banger becomes a hypnotic hip-hop opus, where Bad Bunny is presumably pressured into settling down - making this the greatest playboy retirement anthem of our generation. With an explosive combination of dembow and reggaetón - courtesy of Puerto Rican-Dominican producer Mag - the song also embraces Dominican culture and the teteo lifestyle, as portrayed in its video, where viewers see the Bunny turnin’ up in the Bronx with fellow Dominican compatriots. NEENA ROUHANIīad Bunny’s love for Caribbean culture runs deep, as exemplified by “Tití Me Preguntó.” Leading with a slinky guitar riff sampled from “No Te Puedo Olvidar” by bachata legend Antony Santos, the Boricua singer/rapper begins pondering his aunt’s question: Do I have many girlfriends? Tití’s innocent question gets answered with an outpouring of girls’ names that date back to Benito’s kindergarten days, right up to his present as the world’s most sought-after superstar. No matter the outcome of Iranians’ valiant efforts in their home country, “Baraye” will forever be cemented in history as a reminder of the power of music in galvanizing a generation. “For dancing on the streets/ For the fear of kissing your lover in public,” he begins, going on to mention child labor, pollution, mass imprisonment and “nonstop tears.” The song earned international recognition, being chanted word-for-word in protests across the globe, gaining over 40 million views in two days and being submitted over 100,000 times to the Grammys’ new category for a song dedicated to social change. In September, singer-songwriter Shervin Hajipour released the pained but hopeful “Baraye,” loosely translating to “For.” In doing so, the 25-year-old artist made history, creating a rallying call for Iranians everywhere who are demanding the removal of a government that has oppressed, imprisoned, tortured and murdered its people-especially women-en masse for over four decades.įollowing the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini and subsequent uprisings, Hajipour pulled the poignant ballad’s lyrics from tweets shared by Iranians, spelling out the forbidden privileges they’d be willing to die for-privileges that for many of us are basic rights. But at the center of a painfully long-awaited political revolution, it can happen. There aren’t too many scenarios where a year-end songs list pick could have cost the artist their life. (Songs were considered eligible for the list if they either came out in 2022, were first released as an official single in 2022, or peaked on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2022 - though sorry, Stranger Things heads, we still couldn’t quite justify including “Running Up That Hill” or “Master of Puppets.”) Here are our 100 favorite songs of 2022, a year that once again proved that no matter the time or context, pop music always finds a way. But the year just wouldn’t have felt complete without those late-arriving, chart-crashing smashes, particularly since we ended up getting a handful who proved more than worthy of their position. And of course, it wasn’t just the big songs that enraptured us in 2022 we found plenty of smaller favorites to save to our streaming playlists and inspire our vinyl orders in between those. Luckily for us, the hits showed: first from some of pop’s biggest returning heroes, then from some artists taking the next step towards stardom, some longtime hitmakers we hadn’t heard from in a bit, and some new names we hope to be hearing a lot more from in the years to come. With 2021’s biggest singles refusing to go away and this year’s listenership seemingly too spread out to elect new consensus hits to replace the incumbents, it was starting to look like we might go the whole calendar subsisting on nothing but reruns. It was a refrain heard throughout the Billboard offices in the first half of 2022: Where are the hits? The slow start for new entries really impacting the Billboard Hot 100 had us all looking left and looking right for the sort of songs we usually take for granted - the kind that slowly (or not-so-slowly) spread to all corners of the culture, connecting every kind of music fan and becoming unavoidable parts of a given year’s experience.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |