Английская Википедия:Chappell Roan

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Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox musical artist

Kayleigh Rose Amstutz (born February 19, 1998), known professionally as Chappell Roan (Шаблон:IPAc-en Шаблон:Respell), is an American singer and songwriter. Working with long-time collaborator Dan Nigro, her music is inspired by 80s synth pop and early 2000s pop hits.[1] Her music is heavily influenced by drag queens and is often described as "campy".[2]

When she was 17 years old, Roan uploaded a song titled "Die Young" to YouTube, leading Atlantic Records to sign her to the label. In summer 2020, she released a song titled "Pink Pony Club", which Vulture described as "the Song of Summer 2021". Her debut album The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess was released on September 22, 2023, through Island Records, Amusement Records, and KRA International.[3]

Early life

Chappell Roan was born Kayleigh Rose Amstutz in Willard, Missouri.[4] She took the stage name Chappell Roan in honor of her grandfather Dennis K. Chappell, who died of brain cancer in 2016; his favorite song was "The Strawberry Roan".[5][6] She has expressed dislike for her birth name.[6]

When she was 10 or 11, she began playing the piano.[7] At thirteen, she performed publicly for the first time, surprising her parents and grandparents by singing and accompanying herself on the piano to her own arrangement of The Christmas Song in a Christmas Pageant in 2011.[8][9] At 14 or 15 years old, she began uploading covers of songs to YouTube, drawing attention from various record labels.[10] When she entered her teen years she began songwriting and attended Prodigy Camp, a performing arts camp where she continued to study music and songwriting.[7][11] When she was 17 years old, she uploaded an original song titled "Die Young" to YouTube.[4][12] She subsequently traveled to New York for several musical showcases, which led to her signing with music label Atlantic Records.[13] Roan later described missing many childhood experiences in the "messy" beginning of her music career, including prom and her high school graduation.[5]

Roan lived with her parents in Missouri through 2017, flying with them to Los Angeles or New York City when necessary. In 2018, she moved to Los Angeles, where she was able to live openly as a queer woman for the first time.[5]

Musical career

2017–2019: Early releases

On August 3, 2017, Roan released her first single, titled "Good Hurt". The song was reviewed favorably in Interview, in which an article praised her "striking maturity and surprisingly deep vocals".[14][12] On September 22, 2017, she released an EP titled School Nights through Atlantic Records.[13] Also in 2017, she went on her first concert tour, the Lay It On Me Tour headlined by Vance Joy.[15]

In 2018, Roan moved to Los Angeles from Springfield, Missouri.[4][16] She later described feeling "overwhelmed with complete love and acceptance" after the move, stating that it allowed her to begin "writing songs as the real me".[17] From January to March 2018, she toured the United States with Declan McKenna.[10]

2020–2021: "Pink Pony Club"

Roan began working with Dan Nigro in early 2020.[18] In April 2020, Roan released "Pink Pony Club". The single was produced by Dan Nigro, and its music video was directed by Griffin Stoddard.[4][16] A year after its release, Vulture described "Pink Pony Club" as "the Song of Summer 2021", calling it a "synthy infectious bangarang".[4] Roan has cited a visit to The Abbey, a gay bar in West Hollywood, as the inspiration for the song.[16][17] She told Cherwell that the song was about her desire to become a go-go dancer in Los Angeles, stating, "truthfully, I'm not confident enough to do that, so I wrote a song about it".[6]

USA Today ranked the song third on a list of the "10 best songs of 2020"; an accompanying description characterized it as dance-pop that "earnestly [celebrates] queer culture, acceptance and chasing your dreams."[19] By Шаблон:As of, the song had been streamed more than 10 million times on Spotify.[6]

"Pink Pony Club" was not profitable enough for Atlantic, who dropped Roan from the label in 2020.[20] Her partner of four years broke up with her the same week, and she spent the next two years working as a production assistant as well as a barista and nanny to support herself. In early 2021, the success of Olivia Rodrigo's song "Drivers License" shifted Dan Nigro's focus from Roan as he worked on Sour with Rodrigo; Roan was unable to find a collaborator whom she liked as much.[5] She then briefly moved back to Missouri to work on her music independently while working in a drive-through.[2]

2022–present: The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess

Файл:Chappell Roan 18 (cropped).jpg
Roan at the Vogue Theatre, November 2022

In 2022, Roan moved back to Los Angeles to continue working on her music independently while working a series of odd jobs, including as a production assistant and working in a donut shop. She then earned a publishing deal with Sony and by March 2022 was able to work with Dan Nigro again to create "Naked in Manhattan".[21] In March 2022, Roan released "Naked in Manhattan". The song was her first release in two years, and her first as an independent artist. It was described by NPR as a "queer girl bop" with lyrics that are "tender, nostalgic" and "flirty yet uncertain".[22] Roan also was selected as the opening act for Olivia Rodrigo for performances on Rodrigo's Sour Tour,[5][23][24] and for Fletcher on her "Girl of My Dreams Tour".[24]

In August 2022, she released a second independent single, "Femininomenon". Earmilk described the song as "so fun and loud but so intricate" and noted that it was different from Roan's past releases.[25] Roan stated that the song, which was produced by Dan Nigro, was an attempt to "get away with being as ridiculous as I possibly can".[25] An accompanying self-directed music video featured Roan riding a dirt bike.[25]

Roan released another single, "Casual", in 2022 after beginning work on it with Dan Nigro in 2020. The song, which has lyrics dissing a romantic partner who refuses to commit, was inspired by a brief relationship Roan had during the pandemic that ended with her partner saying they had met someone else. Morgan St. Jean additionally worked on the song, which has a sad sound inspired by Mazzy Star and Radiohead.[5]

In 2023, Roan kicked off a "Naked in North America Tour". She shared a theme with fans for each stop on the tour, suggesting outfits and providing makeup tutorials on social media[24] while making her own camp outfits herself.[5] Concerts from the tour received positive reviews in The Harvard Crimson[24] and Variety, with Jem Aswad describing it as a concert where "you recognize when a new-ish artist's career is about to blast off" similar to Billie Eilish in 2019 or Lorde in 2013 and characterizing Roan as a superstar.[18] Roan additionally signed to Island Records under Dan Nigro's imprint Amusement Records and KRA International.[18][26][27][28]

On MayШаблон:Nbsp17, she released a single from her upcoming album, "Red Wine Supernova", with an accompanying music video.[5] On SeptemberШаблон:Nbsp13, it was announced that Roan would open for Olivia Rodrigo's Guts World Tour in the United States and Canada from February to April 2024.[29][30] On SeptemberШаблон:Nbsp22, Roan released her debut full-length album The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess,[31] and began her second headlining tour of North America, the Midwest Princess Tour. The Midwest Princess Tour, ending in the spring of 2024, traveled across North America and had shows in London, Paris, Berlin, Melbourne, Brisbane, Sydney, and Amsterdam.[32] Roan donated $1 per ticket sold to the nonprofit For the Gworls[33][34][1] and opened each show with drag performers.[35]

Style

Chappell Roan writes most of her songs by herself, but has co-written some with other songwriters.[14] After the release of her debut single "Good Hurt", her style was described in Interview as "pop sound [...] infused with a dark and unsettling tone that underscores her intense, somber lyrics".[12] In 2018, she described her musical style as a mix of organic and electronic sounds, with a pop tone,[10] and as "dark pop with ballad undertones".[7] In her songs written while she was a teenager, according to Atwood Magazine, she "brought the hardship and turbulence of our teenaged years to life with a candidness and vividness seldom seen from her peers."[36]

Roan has cited inspirations including the artist Abbey Watkins, the film The Beguiled, and musical artists alt-J,[12] Stevie Nicks, Lorde, and Lana Del Rey.[15] A 2017 review of her debut EP in PopCrush compared her sound to the latter two artists.[37] She has stated that the song "Stay" by Rihanna was what inspired her to begin writing music.[7] In 2023, a Variety article described Roan as "glammy and pop and embracing her femininity and shared Gen-Z generational experiences, and also very queer-positive".[18]

Discography

Шаблон:Infobox artist discography

Studio albums

Title Album details
The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess
  • Released: September 22, 2023
  • Label: Island, Amusement, KRA International

Extended plays

Title EP details
School Nights
  • Released: September 22, 2017
  • Label: Atlantic
  • Format: digital download, streaming media

Singles

Title Year Album
"Good Hurt" 2017 School Nights
"Bitter" 2018 rowspan="2" Шаблон:N/a
"School Nights"
"Pink Pony Club" 2020 The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess
"Love Me Anyway" Шаблон:Non-album single
"California" The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess
"Naked in Manhattan" 2022
"My Kink Is Karma"
"Femininomenon"
"Casual"
"Kaleidoscope" 2023
"Red Wine Supernova"
"HOT TO GO!"

Music videos

Title Year Director
"Good Hurt" 2017 Griffin Stoddard
"Die Young" 2018 Catie Laffoon
"Sugar High" Ethan Seneker
"Pink Pony Club" 2020 Griffin Stoddard
"Naked in Manhattan" 2022 Ryan Clemens and Chappell Roan
"My Kink Is Karma" Hadley Hillel
"Casual" Hadley Hillel
"Kaleidoscope"
Шаблон:Small
2023 Hadley Hillel
"Red Wine Supernova" Ryan Clemens
"HOT TO GO!" Jackie! Zhou
"Super Graphic Ultra Modern Girl" Jackie! Zhou

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Authority control