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My New Book!
My New Book!

Wednesday, April 16, 2025

April 16, 2025: Kyle Contexts: Musical Crossovers

[This week, my amazing younger son Kyle turns 18! So I wanted to dedicate the week’s blog series to AmericanStudying some Kyle Contexts, leading up to a repeat of his excellent Guest Post on the OJ Simpson trial.]

Kyle is a big fan of Kane Brown (whom he and his brother recently got to see in concert!), and also has a personal playlist that moves smoothly between hard-core rap, hip hop, and country, so I wanted to dedicate this post to highlighting a handful of examples of historic musical crossovers:

1)      Popera Performances: Perhaps the most striking crossover genre is popera, a form that combines one of the oldest enduring forms of musical performance with one of its most overtly contemporary. That hyperlinked last.fm page highlights many of the individual artists who have embodied this combinatory cultural medium, but I would also note that many popera performances feature duets between artists in each respective genre. Either way, popera represents what’s possible when genres truly crossover.

2)      Anthrax and Rap: At a very, very different place on the crossover spectrum is Anthrax, a heavy metal band who had been profoundly influenced by rap & hip hop, incorporated those genres into their own music, and then produced pioneering collaborations such as their song with rap legends Public Enemy. Much is (rightly) made of Aerosmith and Run-DMC’s collab, but that a remix of an exiting song, while Anthrax’s multilayered crossovers and collabs were original and to my mind even more groundbreaking.

3)      Jones Jazzes Up Pop: These next two are just individual artists whose music crosses generic boundaries. Jazz and pop have been crossing over since at least Louis Armstrong (and we could say since Scott Joplin himself), but in the 21st century no artist embodies that crossover combination better than Norah Jones. Through nine studio albums and a great deal more, Jones have brought the worlds and audiences of jazz and pop together in groundbreaking ways, creating profoundly American music in the process.

4)      Lil Nas Xplodes: It’s not a hierarchy nor a competition, but I’d say that a crossover between hip hop and country is even more profoundly American (or at least more rare), though. We’ve seen a variety of such crossover artists as well as songs in recent years, with Kane Brown himself high on the list. But no hip hop-country crossover artist and song achieved more success, nor as I wrote in the hyperlinked post at the start of this entry generated more controversy, than did Lil Nas X and “Old Town Road.” And honestly, if he’s making white racists mad, he’s doing exactly what crossovers should do.

5)      Parton Rocks Out: This is a simpler one—I just really love that country (and American, and universal) legend Dolly Parton recently released an album of rock and roll originals and covers, and by all counts it is phenomenal. Not sure it’ll end up on Kyle’s playlist, but it’s definitely on mine!

Next context tomorrow,

Ben

PS. Lemme know any bday wishes I can pass along to my not-so-young man!

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