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2017 YEAR IN REVIEW: pop music — the album as art form

Dismal year for pop yields several wildly creative sonic tapestries

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It’s been such a shell-shocking year in so many ways that the luxury of being diverted by artists who continue to create richly inspired new music is perhaps more important than ever. You wouldn’t know it by looking at the dreadfully malnourished pop charts, but 2017 yielded a long list of superb new albums.

The 10 (well, make that 12 actually) albums listed below are among those that must not be lost in the cacophony of a constant stream of music and endless other information bombarding us. Each album reinforces the certainty that music is for catharsis and healing as much as for entertainment, and this process manifests itself in wildly diverse styles and voices. All have substantial LGBT followings as the lines between gay and straight acts becomes increasingly a non-issue for music fans.

10. Ride ‘The Weather Diaries’/Slowdive ‘Slowdive’

Yeah, it’s cheating, but it’s impossible to choose between these superb comebacks by two of the cornerstone bands of the ‘90s “shoegaze” sub-genre: Ride’s first album in 21 years and the first for Slowdive in 22. “Slowdive” is perhaps more in line with the narcotic rock dreaminess for which the band is known, while “The Weather Diaries” is spikier and explores a wider palette of sonic space. Despite being pigeonholed with a lazy and meaningless label (“shoegaze” is almost as annoying as “grunge” or “Britpop”), the albums are quite different. Both have an added poignancy and world-weariness, perhaps inevitable for artists who were in their 20s during their “heyday” and are now in the upper-reaches of their 40s. Still, both bands are obviously fully invested in the new material and the songs glow with unmistakable inspiration and intensity.

9. Kehlani ‘SweetSexySavage’

This year was dreadful for pop music overall, but “SweetSexySavage,” the sleek and bold debut by Kehlani, is an obvious exception. The album is perfectly described by its title, much the same as TLC’s “CrazySexyCool” two decades earlier. Kehlani is a talented and versatile singer, able to deliver a wicked edge when she chooses. She merges pop, soul, EDM and hip-hop vibes on songs that show off the power of her voice (“Piece of Mind,” for instance) and range from doggedly defiant (“Undercover”) to achingly vulnerable (“Advice”). The hit single “CRZY” could be a younger and more fiercely untamed version of Rihanna. At only 22, Kehlani’s debut is the kind of triumph on which a massively successful career can be built.

8. Ryan Adams ‘Prisoner’

Always prolific and restless, Ryan Adams has settled into what might be the finest sustained groove of his career. His self-titled 2014 release was his best in a decade (and perhaps his career peak so far), and his first collection of original material since then is almost as good. “Prisoner” shows Adams continuing a seemingly endless ability to churn out great songs, but there’s a gravitas and grittiness borne from experience that his early-career classics “Gold” and “Heartbreaker” lack. Emotions are raw and close to the bone on “Prisoner,” with a garage-rock sensibility somewhat reminiscent of early Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers.

7. Moon Duo ‘Occult Architecture Volumes 1 and 2’

The pairing of Wooden Shjips guitarist Ripley Johnson with keyboardist Sanae Yamada as Moon Duo continues to work magic with two thematically connected albums released several months apart. The two volumes of “Occult Architecture” are zoned-out psychedelic bliss, music for late at night when the haze of smoke is so thick the stereo lights might as well be blurry red eyes staring out from some lost corner of space. The tracks are long, trippy and resplendently beautiful. They are also timeless: Moon Duo’s hypnotic rhythms, rich layers of dreamy guitar and keyboard, and sinuous melodies travel from the late ‘60s, weave through the ‘70s into the present and back again. Put it on for any random music aficionado and ask what year it was released, you’re liable to get guesses of any year from 1968 through … 2017? Yeah, we still need excursions into hazy psychedelic dreamland to escape the sometimes rotten stench of reality and Moon Duo provides the perfect vehicle.

6. Moses Sumney ‘Aromanticism’

Maybe it’s the year, or generation, for “Aromanticism.” It’s always been mythology that one must attach to another human to attain happiness, although that angle isn’t often explored in popular music. Of course, it’s hard to even put that kind of label on Sumney’s work. His debut “Aromanticism” exists in a gauzy connective dimension that touches on sweet soul, jazz, electronica, orchestral and folk — kinda. Sumney never really lands on any of these labels, but rather hints and swirls like a glittery mist just out of reach and firmly in his own realm. Sumney’s sublime voice, often presented in an exquisite falsetto, is the human anchor that wraps the ethereal sounds of his imagination around a heart trying to function alone in a culture that typically views such a state as naturally unfulfilling and incomplete. “Aromanticism” is as stunning a collection of decidedly unromantic yet life-affirming songs as you’re likely to ever hear.

5. The National ‘Sleep Well Beast’

Cerebral but also soul-baringly real, there are few bands that tap so convincingly into the human experience as the National. The wounded baritone of vocalist Matt Berninger is often whispery and half-spoken, somewhat akin to Lou Reed. There is no more wrenching and honest a periscope directly into a soul’s internal monologue as the stream-of-conscious “Walk it Back.” On the tense title-track, Berninger croaks out in jaded melancholy but, as always, never allows himself to break. Stripped down electronic-tinged rock with plenty of space for the sounds to breathe, “Sleep Well Beast” is the latest top-notch offering by a band that for all their acclaim still flies under the radar. But then, given the unflinching introspection of their music and the time and repeated listens required to truly unravel it, they could hardly fly any other way.

4. Margo Price ‘All American Made’

Following her outstanding 2016 debut “Midwestern Farmer’s Daughter,” Margo Price digs even deeper into the heartland on “All American Made.” Although generally defined as a country singer, Price incorporates a variety of flavors into her gritty and deeply felt studies of life and love. It’s not all weepy maudlin ballads, though, with rave-ups like the opener “Don’t Say It” channeling the dynamic charm of Dolly Parton with the steely-eyed vision of the great Lucinda Williams. Price’s voice is fresh and disarming and there is always more there than first meets the ear. “All American Made” is loaded with piercing observations on modern life despite its sometimes breezy nature. Price is a first-rate songwriter, able to express poignancy while still tappin’ the toes when she feels like it.

3. Thundercat ‘Drunk’

Stephen Bruner aka Thundercat showcases his razor-sharp wit, dextrous musical versatility and boundless imagination on “Drunk,” his third and by far most accomplished release. “Drunk” is a bracing marriage of hip-hop, jazz and electronic elements expressed through song snippets with soulful melodies sparked with sonic flourishes in every direction. Some of his collaborators include A-listers with whom he’s worked before (Kendrick Lamar, Flying Lotus and Kamasi Washington to name a few) and some less expected names (Michael McDonald and Kenny Loggins). “Drunk” is bold but not overbearing, colorful but dreamy and pleasantly chill. It’s an epic 23-track midnight mix-tape cobbled together by an intuitively talented artist that will indeed have the listener drunk on sound by the end.

2. Algiers ‘The Underside of Power’

It’s a tall order to follow a debut as good as Algiers’ self-titled 2015 release, but their second album “The Underside of Power” is a steamroller of human angst, raging against the machine not in slogans or cliches but with viscerally gripping and emotionally charged electro-rock assaults. Complex, tense and defiantly in-your-face, Algiers doesn’t hold back for a second. Fortunately they have the boundless talent and innovation to present their dystopian visions with enough manic energy to reach out of the speakers and physically shake the listener into action. “The Underside of Power” is audacious and experimental electronic rock that sounds exactly like much of 2017 has felt. Now do something.  

1. LCD Soundsystem ‘American Dream’

“American Dream” is a very different album than Algiers’ but it sounds like 2017 as well, albeit different aspects through a different prism. James Murphy had famously retired LCD Soundsystem, concluding with an epic farewell show turned into a box set, so his announcement of a return was met with some degree of cynicism. “American Dream” shows conclusively that Murphy made the right decision, as it may be his finest work yet.

Murphy operates via long electronic grooves that echo the hypnotic rhythms of Talking Heads’ “Remain in Light” while seamlessly appropriating from sources like alt-rock and disco, among others. “American Dream” is a sharp collection of sardonic pop, alternately melancholy and defiant. Murphy presents a different kind of struggle: the bubbling uncertainty that dominates our reality, the pent-up anger riddled with a gnawing fear that perhaps things really are too late and the bad guys have won.

Lest that sound like a misery we can achieve simply by reading the day’s news, Murphy sets the percolating unease to a consistently thrilling and inventive feast for the ears, surprising and ingeniously constructed. Listening to “American Dream” feels like waking up and wanting to believe you are indeed reading fake news, but the pulsing anxiety building in the pit of your stomach tells you that it’s all very real. It’s no American dream at all.

We are untethered in a strange land with no maps to find our way, but hey, at least we can shuffle off into oblivion jamming to funky airtight grooves that wrap around our brains as tightly as Paul Ryan’s chokehold on the throats of the 99 percent.

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Music & Concerts

Queer mega stars (and allies) ready to take D.C. stages this fall

Watch LGBTQ icons light up stages across the DMV as they sing, dance, and drag their way through spectacular shows.

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Doechii performing at WorldPride 2025's closing concert in June earlier this year. (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

One of the best ways to welcome fall is by catching LGBTQ performers (and their allies) lighting up some of the D.C. area’s biggest stages. From country and pop to drag and rock, the season is packed with shows you won’t want to miss.

Maren Morris – The country, rock, and pop diva—known for hits like “The Bones” and for standing up against Nashville’s anti-LGBTQ voices—takes the stage at Wolf Trap (1551 Trap Rd, Vienna, Va.) on Friday, Sept. 12 at 8 p.m. Tickets start at $64.

RuPaul – The mother of modern drag and host of “RuPaul’s Drag Race” will spin a DJ set at Echostage (2135 Queens Chapel Rd NE) in Northeast D.C. on Sept. 20. Before RuPaul swaps wigs for headphones, Trade and Number 9 owner Ed Bailey will warm up the decks. For tickets and details visit echostage.com.

Conan Gray – The queer pop prince, celebrated for his Gen Z anthems like “Heather” and “Maniac,” brings his Wishbone Pajama Show to EagleBank Arena in Fairfax, VA, (4500 Patriot Cir) on Sept. 20 at 8 p.m. Tickets start at $113. For more info visit shop.conangray.com/pages/tour.

All Things Go Music Festival – With a lineup that includes Noah Kahan, Lucy Dacus, Kesha, Clairo, Doechii, and more, the beloved LGBTQ-friendly festival takes over Merriweather Post Pavilion (10475 Little Patuxent Pkwy, Columbia, Md.) Sept. 26–28. For tickets and details visit allthingsgofestival.com.

BERTHA: Grateful Drag – This unique tribute brings drag artistry and the sounds of the Grateful Dead to The Atlantis (2047 9th St NW) on Sept. 27. Tickets start at $47 at theatlantis.com.

Peach PRC – Rising Australian pop star and out lesbian, whose confessional tracks like “Perfect for You” and “Forever Drunk” have made her a queer TikTok darling, performs at The Atlantis on Sept. 29 at 6:30 p.m. The show is general admission only. Additional details are on theatlantis.com.

Addison Rae – The TikTok star-turned-pop princess, who’s crossed over into music with glossy hits like “Diet Pepsi” brings her sold out show to The Anthem (901 Wharf St., S.W.) on Sept. 30. Tickets are sold out, but resale options start around $80. For more info visit theanthemdc.com.

The Rocky Horror Picture Show 50th Anniversary – Celebrate the cult classic that’s been a queer midnight-movie staple for decades, with Barry Bostwick (a.k.a. Brad Majors) at the Warner Theatre (513 13th St., N.W.) on Oct. 2 at 8 p.m. Tickets start at $41 via Ticketmaster.

Chaka Khan, Patti LaBelle, Gladys Knight & Stephanie Mills – Four legends, one stage. Between Khan’s funk, LaBelle’s soul, Knight’s R&B, and Mills’ powerhouse vocals, this concert at Capital One Arena (601 F St NW) on Oct. 3 at 8 p.m. promises pure diva magic. Tickets start at $103. For more details visit capitalonearena.com.

Lorde – Joined by The Japanese House and Chanel Beads, the Grammy-winning New Zealand singer-songwriter behind “Royals” and “Solar Power” returns to The Anthem on Oct. 4 at 7 p.m. Lorde has long been embraced by queer fans for her dreamy pop and subversive lyrics. For more info visit theanthemdc.com.

Andy Bell (of Erasure) – The British queer rock icon, best known for synth-pop classics like “A Little Respect” and “Chains of Love,” brings his Ten Crowns Tour to the Lincoln Theatre (1215 U St., N.W.) on Friday, Oct. 17 at 8 p.m. Tickets are $90.45.

Doechii – The self-described queer “Swamp Princess”—and WorldPride 2025 headliner—continues her breakout year with the Live from the Swamp Tour at The Anthem on Oct. 21 at 8 p.m. Known for blending rap, R&B, and avant-garde performance art, Doechii is one to watch. Tickets start at $153.

Neon Trees – The out-and-proud Utah rockers behind “Everybody Talks” and “Animal” perform at the Lincoln Theatre on Friday, Oct. 24 at 8 p.m. Lead singer Tyler Glenn, who came out publicly in 2014, has become a strong queer voice in alternative rock. For tickets and info visit impconcerts.com.

Sasha Colby – The “RuPaul’s Drag Race” Season 15 winner strips down on the Stripped II Tour at the Warner Theatre on Nov. 2 at 8 p.m. Tickets available now on Ticketmaster.

Lola Young – The bisexual indie-pop sensation, whose raw songwriting has earned her millions of TikTok fans and multiple chart soaring hits visits The Anthem on Nov. 9 at 8 p.m. Tickets are still available.

Opera Lafayette

Purcell’s Dido & Aeneas

Featuring Mary Elizabeth Williams as Dido

+ Elijah McCormack, Chelsea Helm

Oct. 16, 7:30 p.m.

Sixth & I 

PostClassical Ensemble

The Pale Blue Do: A Musical Voyage Inspired By Nature

Featuring National Geographic’s Enric Sala, Guest Curator

Wednesday, November 19, 7:30 p.m.

Terrace Theater 

Washington Concert Opera

Gluck’s Iphigénie en Tauride

Starring Kate Lindsey, Theo Hoffman, John Moore, and Fran Daniel Laucerica

Nov. 23, 6 p.m.

Lisner Auditorium

Washington Master Chorale

Sacred Jewel Box

An intimate a capella concert taking place in an architectural jewel, featuring cherished choral gems from Anglican and Catholic tradition and early American hymns. The concert will also present the world premiere of Christopher Hoh’s Holy, Holy, Holy is the Lord God of Hosts, and hymn singing featuring Robert Church, organist and choirmaster at St David’s.

Oct. 18, 7:30 p.m.

October 19, 5 p.m.

St. David’s Episcopal Church

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Music & Concerts

Cyndi Lauper ready to have fun in Virginia

Superstar to bring final leg of farewell tour to Jiffy Lube Live

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Pop icon Cyndi Lauper brings her farewell tour to Jiffy Lube Live on July 24. (Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)

Superstar Cyndi Lauper will bring the final leg of her farewell tour “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” to Bristow, Va., on Thursday, July 24 at Jiffy Lube Live. 

Lauper’s international Farewell Tour – her first major headlining run in a decade – kicked off in North America last October, and included her first time ever headlining (and selling out) Madison Square Garden. Lauper’s performances have earned raves from the New York Times, Rolling Stone, Billboard, and many more, and surprise guests have included Chaka Khan, Sam Smith, and Hayley Williams. The tour just visited the U.K. and Europe, and will head to Australia and Japan in April.  

Tickets are available on Live Nation’s website

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Music & Concerts

Red, White, and Beyoncé: Queen Bey takes Cowboy Carter to D.C. for the Fourth of July

The legendary music icon performed on July 4 and 7 to a nearly sold-out Northwest Stadium.

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Beyoncé performs on July 7. (Washington Blade photo by Joe Reberkenny)

Just in time for Independence Day, Beyoncé lit up Landover’s Commanders Field (formerly FedEx Field) with fireworks and fiery patriotism, bringing her deeply moving and genre-defying “Cowboy Carter” tour to the Washington, D.C. area.

The tour, which takes the global icon across nine cities in support of her chart-topping and Grammy-winning country album Cowboy Carter,” landed in Prince George’s County, Maryland, over the Fourth of July weekend. From the moment Beyoncé stepped on stage, it was clear this was more than just a concert — it was a reclamation.

Drawing from classic Americana, sharp political commentary, and a reimagined vision of country music, the show served as a powerful reminder of how Black Americans — especially Black women — have long been overlooked in spaces they helped create. “Cowboy Carter” released in March 2024, is the second act in Beyoncé’s genre-traversing trilogy. With it, she became the first Black woman to win a Grammy for Best Country Album and also took home the coveted Album of the Year.

The record examines the Black American experience through the lens of country music, grappling with the tension between the mythology of the American Dream and the lived realities of those historically excluded from it. That theme comes alive in the show’s opening number, “American Requiem,” where Beyoncé sings:

“Said I wouldn’t saddle up, but
If that ain’t country, tell me, what is?
Plant my bare feet on solid ground for years
They don’t, don’t know how hard I had to fight for this
When I sing my song…”

Throughout the performance, Beyoncé incorporated arresting visuals: Black cowboys on horseback, vintage American iconography, and Fox News clips criticizing her genre shift — all woven together with voiceovers from country legends like Dolly Parton and Willie Nelson. The result was a multimedia masterclass in storytelling and subversion.

The “Cowboy Carter” tour has been a social media sensation for weeks, with fans scrambling for tickets, curating elaborate “cowboy couture” outfits, and tailgating under the summer sun. At Commanders Field, thousands waited in long lines for exclusive merch and even longer ones to enter the stadium — a pilgrimage that, for many, felt more like attending church than a concert.

One group out in full force for the concert was Black queer men — some rocking “denim on denim on denim on denim,” while others opted for more polished Cowboy Couture looks. The celebration of Black identity within Americana was ever-present, making the concert feel like the world’s biggest gay country-western club.

A standout moment of the night was the appearance of Beyoncé’s 13-year-old daughter, Blue Ivy Carter. Commanding the stage with poise and power, she matched the intensity and choreography of her mother and the professional dancers — a remarkable feat for someone her age and a clear sign that the Carter legacy continues to shine.

It’s been nearly two decades since Beyoncé and Destiny’s Child parted ways, and since then, she’s more than lived up to her title as the voice of a generation. With Cowboy Carter,” she’s not just making music — she’s rewriting history and reclaiming the space Black artists have always deserved in the country canon.

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