25 Tracks to Wrap Up an Iconic Decade for Women

The 2010s allowed female artists to finally be themselves

anna dorn
GEN

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Lana Del Rey. Photo: Daniel Knighton/Getty Images

InIn her 2016 single “Cyber Stockholm Syndrome,” British-Japanese musician Rina Sawayama sings about a sad girl going to a bar by herself and having a blast alone in the corner. Her lyrics embody a decade in which we allowed female musicians to be more than just eye candy. “Came here on my own,” Sawayama declares. “Party on my phone.” She’d rather be engaging in an online fantasy of her own particular creation.

Historically, female musicians have been relegated into two categories: singers and dancers. Men produced and played the instruments, and women looked hot and sang about loving men. Of course, there have always been outliers of women who pushed beyond those boundaries. Alice Coltrane’s spiritual jazz in the ’60s; Lizzy Mercier Descloux’s kooky no wave funk in the ’70s; Grace Jones’ cabaret disco in the ’80s; Björk’s meditative industrial in the ’90s. But before this decade, these women were aberrational fringe artists. At the end of the 2010s, mixed-genre, multitalented women are the norm.

Female artists like Grimes and Charli XCX are two of the most innovative producers today; Cherry Glazerr’s Clementine Creevy and St. Vincent’s Annie Clark play a more engaging riff than any man. When Rolling Stone asked Grimes…

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anna dorn
GEN
Writer for

vagablonde (unnamed press, may 2020); bad lawyer (hachette books, spring 2021)