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Everything you need to know about King Princess, the queer pop-star you should be listening to by now
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KNOWN BY THE stage name King Princess, Mikeala Straus is a 20-year-old singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and producer from Williamsburg in Brooklyn, NYC.
Although she has yet to release a full length album, her fans include Harry Styles and Mark Ronson – which is pretty impressive, to say the least. But who is King Princess? Why does everybody on the internet love her? And why does it feel so hard to keep up with the music that the kids like these days? Are you really that old?
Anyway, Straus was born in 1998 and grew up in the recording studio owned by her father, Oliver Straus. Having spent her entire life surrounded by instruments and high-profile recording artists, it was really only a matter of time until Straus began a music career of her own. According to the Boston Globe, she was offered her first record deal at the age of 11, but she turned it down to focus on education, presumably because her family had no doubt that there’d be plenty more opportunities like this down the line.
As a result of her upbringing, she’s a natural at this whole music thing. In a recent interview, SiriusXM mentioned how unusual it was that Lorde wanted to write and produce her entire album, as a young female artist. King Princess replied:
Apart from the writing and production side of things, what makes King Princess so special is the fact that everything she makes is so unapologetically queer. Look at the music video for her heart-wrenching single Talia, which features her grieving the loss of a relationship while hanging out with a sex doll in a seedy motel room.
This unapologetic queerness is not necessarily executed in a “I’m not going to apologise for who I am” kind of way, but rather a “It didn’t even occur to me to apologise, because this is all very normal” kind of way – something that’s heartening to see because it’s indicative of the fact that we’re living in a period of history where, for the first time, there are queer people growing up feeling completely normal, accepted and free of shame.
That’s not to say that all young queer people feel like this – or even that most of them do. Things are still quite shit for young LGBTQ people and they have a completely different experience growing up than their heterosexual peers, but little by little, we’re making a better world for them.
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Comfortably dealing with queer themes in her songs with a natural effortlessness, it almost seems as though she’s emulating something had watched thousands of other artists do so before her, but in reality, that’s not the case. Straus is very quick to acknowledge (both in her songs and in interviews) that this was totally impossible for others in the past.
King Princess teamed up with Genius.com to explain some of the lyrics of the Carol-inspired song 1950 (which Harry Styles previously tweeted the lyrics of), and said that this song was written as an homage to the majority of queer history, when it was impossible to even exist in public, never mind openly show love and affection.
It’s worth listening to the song itself first in entirety before sitting through the Genius.com explainer on Youtube:
But if you want to hear the song broken down line-by-line, here it is:
Although Patricia Highsmith’s novel The Price of Salt has been around since 1952, it was only made into the movie Carol in 2015. In the three years since that film’s release, it has already been recognised as incredibly important piece of art by LGBTQ people and was voted the ‘Best LGBT film of all time‘.
Autostraddle, a website that focuses on queer culture aimed at women, even devoted an entire month to Carol-related content, entitled 30 Days of Carol (which is not only hilarious and absolutely genius, but testament to how important it is to have movies, books, music, art and stories that feature positive, healthy and normal relationships between queer women).
It might seem like we’re going off topic here by entering into a rant about how brilliant Carol is, but the point we’re trying to make here is that depictions of queer female relationships like the ones we see in Carol, and in the music of the emerging generation of queer artists like King Princess, makes a huge impact on those who see and hear these stories.
Okay, back to King Princess.
King Princess is delighted to be hailed as a ‘gay icon’ this early on in her career – but she is wary of receiving too much credit. In January this year, Straus said:
And Mikeala has her mind set on elevating these voices as her career moves forward. While speaking to NME last summer, she explained that “It’s about time that we had some game-changers hoisted up in 2018 from the gay, trans, black, immigrant communities. It’s really important that these people find their voice now, especially with what’s going down.”
At present, King Princess is working on a new album, that could possibly be out before summer (but there’s no official release date yet). As much as we want this album to be a 3-CD boxset with 99 tracks, it’s more likely that it’ll feature around fifteen songs.
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