Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Få ubegrenset tilgang til over 9000 magasiner, aviser og premiumhistorier for bare

$149.99
 
$74.99/År

Prøve GULL - Gratis

The Emancipation of Addison Rae

New York magazine

|

June 16-29, 2025

The TikTok star's debut album breaks with the past.

- MUSIC / CRAIG JENKINS

The Emancipation of Addison Rae

THE INFLUENCER-POP sphere is a graveyard peppered with more misfires than successful conversions of internet cachet into hits. The machine that helped Troye Sivan and Benson Boone evolve also yields terrible singles by the likes of controversial beauty-industry personality James Charles. When Addison Rae first dipped her toe into pop in 2021, she seemed destined for the latter bucket. Her first single, “Obsessed,” didn’t register as the satire she'd intended; listeners assumed the TikTok dancer, now suddenly a singer, was deeply conceited. But in pop—with the right ideas and co-signs—the bubbliness and determination people came to resent in Rae’s TikTok demeanor can become currency. On her 2023 EP, AR, she worked with up to five co-writers per song as well as producers who bathed her wispy, inviting voice in familiar dance-pop tropes. Its bops quietly succeeded where Rae’s dalliances in makeup and movies floundered. She has spent the interim workshopping a sound worthy of encouragement from Charli XCX and Ariana Grande.

Her debut album, Addison, doesn’t seek simple portfolio diversification—it stages a symbolic break with the past. This is her thing now. She's leaning into her first name. Her parents, frequent fixtures in her early content, are out of the picture. Addison documents a 24-year-old budding artist coolly working out what to sing and write about. Unlike her EP, the album is largely the work of just three composers: Addison and the Max Martin affiliates Luka Kloser and Elvira Anderfjärd. It’s refreshing and light thanks not just to the sunny, southern ersatz-cheerleader disposition that made Addison famous but also to three young women’s trust in one another and relative freedom from industry veterans’ nagging, predictable oversight.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA New York magazine

New York magazine

New York magazine

Brilliant, workaholic teenagers are flooding the city— and reshaping our future in their image.

THE AI KIDS TAKE SAN FRANCISCO

time to read

26 mins

September 22 - October 05, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

TOP GOON

With the help of her closest adviser, Corey Lewandowski, Kristi Noem has turned DHS into Trump's most devastating weapon against the right's enemies.

time to read

27 mins

September 22 - October 05, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

Immigrant Identity Crisis

Kiran Desai's highly anticipated new work doesn't quite cohere.

time to read

6 mins

September 22 - October 05, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

CRITICS

Alison Willmore on One Battle After Another ... Sanjena Sathian on Kiran Desai's The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny ... Jerry Saltz on \"Sixties Surreal\" at the Whitney Museum.

time to read

4 mins

September 22 - October 05, 2025

New York magazine

TO DO Twenty-five things to see, hear, watch, and read.

Signature Theatre, opening September 30.

time to read

6 mins

September 22 - October 05, 2025

New York magazine

Stop the Presses: Charlotte Klein

In media, even at the highest of perches, there's a new sense of vulnerability.

time to read

5 mins

September 22 - October 05, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

The City Politic: David Freedlander

Andrew Cuomo's Plan to Win It's not exactly likely. But it's also not impossible.

time to read

5 mins

September 22 - October 05, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

The People's Bestie

How Sherri Shepherd went from being “the Black girl on all the white sitcoms” to making The Wendy Williams Show her own.

time to read

17 mins

September 22 - October 05, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

A Proud Iconoclast

The artist Coco Fusco gets her first U.S. survey after years of creating work that defies political orthodoxy.

time to read

6 mins

September 22 - October 05, 2025

New York magazine

New York magazine

Making the '60s Weird Again

The Whitney's boisterous survey breathes new life into a stagnant decade.

time to read

3 mins

September 22 - October 05, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size