35 Essential Gay Pride Songs: Rolling Stone Editor Picks

35 Essential Gay Pride Songs: Rolling Stone Editor Picks

From Sylvester to Pansy Divsion to Lil Nas X, from disco to punk to pop

Is there an LGBTQ sensibility? What was it 50 years ago, before much of today’s language for gender and sexual identities even existed? Or, much more simply: Which songs best evoke the sex, drama, heartache, struggle, liberation, and mindfucks of queer lives then and now? What follows is not a completely comprehensive (or ranked) list, but one that follows the story from post-Stonewall disco parties to the gender-queer rock, R&B, and pop of today. Here are 25 essential pride songs from the 1970s to today.

  • The Kinks, ‘Lola’ (1970)

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    “Girls will be boys, and boys will be girls,” Ray Davies sings on his love song for a trans woman. “It’s a mixed up, muddled up, shook-up world … except for Lola.” Homosexuality had been legal in England for only three years when Davies dreamt up a full story about falling for a trans woman at a Soho club, ostensibly based on stories he heard from others. Lola in the song had a “dark brown voice” and walked like a woman but talked like a man, and she could pick him up and placing him on her knee. In the most suggestive lyric, Davies confides, “I fell to the floor, I got down on my knees/Well, I looked at her, and she at me,” all leading to the revelation “I’m glad I’m a man, and so is Lola.” The song was an improbable mainstream hit, a Number One in the U.S., making it the first hit song with an LGBTQ theme, according to The New York Times. —Kory Grow

  • Carl Bean, ‘I Was Born This Way’ (1977)

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    Originally performed by Charles “Valentino” Harris in 1975, “I Was Born This Way” is one of the earliest out-and-proud Seventies anthems, a club smash that peaked at number 15 on Billboard’s Disco singles chart. Its dreamy, string-laden production and forthright sentiment may seem archaic now, but it’s reflective of an era when publicly identifying as gay was more fraught – and dangerous. “You laugh at me, and you criticize,” sings Bean in a husky, gospel-inflected voice. “’Cause I’m happy, carefree, and gay.” Bean eventually left the music industry and founded the Unity Fellowship Church in Los Angeles before passing away in 2021. Yet “I Was Born This Way” has influenced artists since its release, including Lady Gaga’s 2011 hit single of the same name.–Mosi Reeves

  • Donna Summer, ‘I Feel Love’ (1977)

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    It’s the Moog-driven song that singlehandedly birthed modern EDM, and debuting in 1977 amid orchestral, vocal-forward disco, the track sounded like a transmission from a distant, sexy planet. More than that, though, the groundbreaking collaboration between Donna Summer, Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte translated, in a brand-new sonic language, the strange, scary ecstasy of erotic desire and fulfillment, and connected the modern dance floor with the sublime; what’s more queer than that? Disco goddess Summer initially needed some convincing. “Giorgio brought me this popcorn track he had recorded,” she later recalled, “and I said, ‘What the hell is this, Giorgio?’” –Justin Ravitz

  • Sylvester, ‘You Make Me Feel Mighty Real’ (1978)

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    With all due respect to Prince, Sylvester may have had the most pristine, expressive falsetto in modern popular music. Somewhat reductively called the “Queen of Disco,” the virtuosic, openly gay singer approached gender (in his performative and private lives) as a fluid, non-binary concept in a pre–Judith Butler era. It’s his gospel roots that arguably make his self-penned disco classic a transcendent ode to joy. The outspoken AIDS advocate and fundraiser died from complications of the disease at age 41 in 1988. Nearly 30 years later, his most-remembered track still makes us dance a lot – through a few tears. –J.R.

  • Queen, ‘Don’t Stop Me Now’ (1978)

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    Although it seems most of Queen’s fans were clueless as to how openly gay and subversive frontman Freddie Mercury was – despite the unabashed swank of his stage presence – he also never really tried to hide it. Queen were on a pretty amazing run by the time their 1978 album Jazz came around; they’d gone from tiny clubs to stadiums, and every single song they released seemed to fly up the charts. “Don’t Stop Me Now,” the lead single from the LP, featuring the group’s trademark multi-tracked harmonies, didn’t quite live up to expectations, peaking at Number 86 in America. It was, however, a Top 10 hit in England. And with lyrics like, “That’s why they call me Mister Fahrenheit/I’m trav’ling at the speed of light/I wanna make a supersonic man out of you,” it sounds like the boys are ready to let it all hang out.  –Jerry Porlwood

  • Diana Ross, ‘I’m Coming Out’ (1980)

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    Like so many great dance records, 1980’s “I’m Coming Out” began with Nile Rodgers and his Le Chic co-founder Bernard Edwards, who were approached by Diana Ross herself to produce new tunes. Rodgers later told the Mail on Sunday that they wrote the track “because of her gay following,” but fibbed a little to a skittish Ross. “A DJ told her [the song] was going to ruin her career — people would think she was gay,” Rodgers said. “It was the only time I’ve ever lied to an artist. I said: ‘What are you talking about? That’s the craziest thing I’ve ever heard in my life!’” The former Supreme now typically opens her shows with the bubbly, empowering track – which found yet another life in the hip-hop pantheon, thanks to a hear-it-in-your-sleep sample on Diddy and Biggie’s “Mo’ Money Mo’ Problems.”   —J.R.

  • Elton John, ‘Elton’s Song’ (1981)

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    An overlooked one-off from 1981’s The Fox, when Elton was still fumbling through the darkest, most confused period of his career. It’s a quiet piano ballad about growing up gay. The lyrics come from the out-and-proud British punk rocker Tom Robinson, who had a hit of his own with “Glad to be Gay.” The payoff is the tender moment at the end when Elton sings, “I would give my life/For a single night beside you.” Maybe he scared himself with how emotional he could be — it was years before he tried anything this revealing again. —Rob Sheffield

  • The Weather Girls, “It’s Raining Men” (1983)

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    Two amazing facts about this wet, frothy, muscle-bound dream of a dance jam: David Letterman sidekick Paul Shaffer co-wrote it (with Paul Jabara), and none other than Donna Summer passed on recording it. “Lyrically she hated it, because she had become a born-again Christian. She thought it was blasphemous,” Shaffer told Vanity Fair. No matter: Two Tons o’ Fun, rechristened the Weather Girls (featuring multi-decade MVP studio singer Martha Wash), laid it down instead, landing a massive hit that appealed to any man-craving human enduring a dry spell. Hallelujah. —JR

  • Bronski Beat, ‘Smalltown Boy’ (1984)

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    “Smalltown Boy” started as a happy accident, since Bronski Beat initially wanted to cover the Sex Pistols’ “Pretty Vacant.” Unfortunately for them and fortuitously for everyone else, the MC-202 sequencer they were using slowed it down and transformed the music into something desperate and vulnerable. Singer Jimmy Somerville’s falsetto keening and introverted lyrics about running away from a family and town that never understood him and, at times, bullied him, hit listeners on a soul level. “The love that you need will never be found at home,” he sings at one point. The line is coded enough to become a mainstream hit, but explicit enough that anyone who heard Sommerville, who is gay, knew just what he was singing about.Plus, with the “run away, turn away” chorus, and its club-ready beat, it transmits the feeling of rising above adversity and becoming your true self: a message that has transcended decades. —K.G.

  • Erasure, ‘A Little Respect’ (1988)

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    Much of Erasure’s discography embodies not precisely celebratory gay pride but gay romantic reality – a frankness about the emotional, if not overtly sexual, lives of gay men toward the end of the 20th century. So when out British duo Andy Bell and Vince Clarke’s plaintive yet buoyant single became a worldwide hit in gay-unfriendly 1988, it felt quietly revolutionary to anyone in the know. Did straight teens in Iowa realize that they were bopping at prom to a “Borderline”-like plea from one vulnerable, smitten man to his cold, withholding boyfriend? The gay teens and tweens, most of them closeted, definitely did. “If you’re doing music, you should use it for something and have substance,” Bell once told Seventeen. “Being gay and open about it is my substance.” –JR

  • Madonna, ‘Vogue’ (1990)

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    With a small budget of $5,000, Madonna and her then go-to remixer Shep Pettibone banged out this track (originally considered a B side for another single), improvising that movie-star rap last-minute in a basement studio in midtown Manhattan. “She was always a first-take artist,” Pettibone told Billboard in 2015. The result wasn’t just one of the Queen of Pop’s most definitive hits but an improbable connector between Old Hollywood, the late Eighties club scene and Harlem drag balls, finding glamour, subversion, inspiration and self-preservation at the peak of the AIDS epidemic. (Plus, that video! Those men! The dancing!) With this as her springboard, Madonna would later dive head-first into LGBT subcultures via her “Justify My Love” video and, more expansively, in her Sex book and Erotica album. Soul is in the musical. –JR

  • George Michael, ‘Freedom! ’90’ (1990)

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    It would be eight more years until George Michael would come out to the general public, but the gifted, soulful and charismatic former Wham! frontman had long been a white-hot sex symbol, role model and trendsetter for gay men and other LGBTQ individuals across the world. “In terms of my work, I’ve never been reticent in terms of defining my sexuality. I write about my life,” he told CNN in his 1998 coming-out interview. And while later music would directly address his sexuality and his relationships (including the loss of a partner to AIDS), his ageless 1990 single pointed to a radical, transformative honesty not yet ready to be said aloud: “I think there’s something you should know/I think it’s time I told you so/There’s something deep inside of me / There’s someone else I’ve got to be.” The accompanying video — in which the marquee-handsome superstar goes M.I.A. to let supermodels do the lip-syncing, and his cheesy Faith-era leather jacket goes up in flames — remains unmatched. —JR

  • Deee-Lite, ‘Groove Is in the Heart’ (1990)

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    Expertly layering one funky sample after another, the psychedelic, pansexual trio of Deee-Lite — fronted by a drag-inspired Lady Miss Kier — introduced a vibrant queer club-kid energy and aesthetic to the masses with this orgiastic track and accompanying video. It remains a magnetic gateway for anyone itching to let their freak flag fly.  —JR

  • Pansy Division, “Anthem” (1993)

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    These Bay Area gay punk pioneers found a hint of mainstream fame when they toured with Green Day on their Dookie run in 1994, but it was their sexy lyrics and who-gives-a-fuck attitude that endeared them to a generation of queer kids — before that term was even fashionable. It’s difficult to pick one song that defines them — with songs like “Dick of Death,” “Groovy Underwear” or their classic cover of Prince’s “Jack You Off” — but we went with one that seems to defy the idea of a gay “anthem” no matter how you think of it. “One thing that we have is that we’ve always sung about being gay. We’re not just gay and musicians,” Jon Ginoli told Rolling Stone last year before the release of their latest album, Quite Contrary. “We have sung about being gay as a part of the topic within our songs. I think, over time, some of them are less specifically gay than they were at first because it seemed like, when we had the chance that was really what we wanted to sing about and that was really unique.” —J.P.

  • Melissa Etheridge, ‘Come to My Window’ (1993)

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    Etheridge was feeling lonesome on tour, longing for a lover who was slipping away, when she penned this hit that ended up on her brazenly titled breakthrough album, Yes I Am. Little did she know that her cowgirl blues would not only win her the Grammy for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance but would also yield an empowering theme for the gay community. “At the same time the album became a hit, I came out publicly,” she told Entertainment Weekly in 2009. “The gay community lifted me up and supported me. That bridge in the song was taken to an anthem level. (‘I don’t care what they think/I don’t care what they say/What do they know about this love anyway?’) It bypassed any meaning I ever put in the song and became part of a mass consciousness. It is still a huge moment when I perform it live.” —Susy Exposito

  • Peaches, “Fuck the Pain Away’ (2000)

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    Good advice from Canada’s raunchiest sex sage. With the help of a Roland MC-505, the bisexual drama teacher–turned-rapper sparked a titillating new wave of sleazebag disco with her 2000 LP, Teaches of Peaches. Although “Fuck the Pain Away” was too risqué to chart, its unforgettable, braggadocious lines permeated everything from South Park to 30 Rock and 2003 film Lost In Translation: “Suckin’ on my titties like you wanted me/Calling me all the time like Blondie/Check out my Chrissy behind/It’s fine all of the time.” It was reportedly Madonna’s favorite workout song, and she also featured it in her London play, Up For Grabs. In a 2003 interview with The Guardian, Peaches divulges that she sent Madonna and Guy Ritchie some autographed panties as thanks. “I signed some underwear,” she says, “I wrote, ‘Dear Guy, fuck ya later, love Peaches,’ and for Madonna I wrote, ‘Dear Madonna, fuck ya now, love Peaches.’ It’s cool.” –S.E.

  • Limp Wrist, ‘I Love Hardcore Boys/I Love Boys Hardcore’ (2001)

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    Leathered up and lathered in each others’ sweat, American hardcore band Limp Wrist were at the forefront of the Queercore movement in the late Nineties. As both devoutly straight edge and proudly homosexual, their substance-free stance made them stand out in a time when bars, clubs and other intoxicating spaces comprised the few safe havens for LGBTQ people. Their 2001 song “I Love Hardcore Boys/I Love Boys Hardcore” was an especially cheeky, cathartic release for frontman Martin Sorrondeguy, who came out in the later years of his tenure in Latinx punk band Los Crudos. “I would have never come out in the Eighties,” Sorrondeguy once professed to The Portland Mercury. “I recall spotting a few folks who were queer in those times and I was nervous for them. There were many violent folks around at the time so it was a bit scary. When I came to the point where I was actively gay it took a bit of time to get comfortable and come out but I felt ready for whatever came my way.” –S.E.

  • Scissor Sisters, ‘Take Your Mama’ (2004)

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    New York City’s queens of camp Scissor Sisters portrayed the dilemma of coming out to family as pure comedy: In “Take Your Mama” out, frontman Jake Shears suggests plying your mother with liquor before you break the news. The song appeared on their self-titled debut, which topped the U.K. Albums chart and went nine times platinum. Bono lauded them as “the best pop group in the world” that year, and Elton John would collaborate with the band on their 2006 smash hit “I Don’t Feel Like Dancin’.” Although only a fraction of the band’s success in Europe translated to the United States, “Take Your Mama” remains a staple in gay bars across the country. —S.E.

  • Hercules and Love Affair, ‘Blind’ (2008)

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    “Blind,” the 2008 collaboration between DJ Andy Butler and transgender singer Anohni, became an instant dance-floor classic in the aughts. Anohni elevated the dark nu-disco cut with her syrupy, Nina Simone–inspired lilt. Butler later told The New York Times that “Blind” recalled “growing up a gay kid, my immediate family and social group rejecting me, and asking why I was born into this situation … But knowing that as soon as I could escape, I would, and that I would find freedom and solace. As an adult, however, I found a life full of excess and other wounded people and confusion. Thus, I felt blind.” —S.E.

  • Robyn, ‘Dancing on My Own’ (2010)

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    Yes, this historic banger also belongs to Lena Dunham and brilliant Swedish women of all persuasions. But there’s something about the picture painted in Robyn’s not-so-mini pop masterpiece that’s deeply resonant to queer, marginalized people: Its protagonist is at her most rejected, lonely and isolated as she tries not to feel like a freak eyeing an ex with his (or her) new piece at a club. Rather than go home or make a scene, however, this heartbroken heroine does what we all should: Dance alone and for herself. —J.R.

  • Lady Gaga, ‘Born This Way’ (2011)

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    Forget the (admittedly delicious) Madonna feud it provoked, and focus instead on the anthem’s bombastic disco-metal sound and its message of self-love and self-acceptance — as preached by Mother Monster, one of the most steadfast and powerful LGBTQ allies in the world. “I had this sort of ‘Eureka!’ revelation moment that those three words ‘Born This Way’ were the answer to so many questions that I’d been asked over the years: ‘Who are you, who are you really?’ I was born this way,” Gaga told Rolling Stone in 2011. “It gets bigger every day, the meaning of it. Every single day my fans realize the gravity of the words.” —J.R.

  • Frank Ocean, ‘Bad Religion’ (2012)

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    Days before the release of Frank Ocean’s debut album Channel Orange, he posted a note on Tumblr about a teenage crush on another man. His revelation has become a key moment in the evolution of Black pop, signaling the emergence of countless artists, from Kehlani and Victoria Monet to serpentwithfeet and Steve Lacy, who openly explore queer desire, regardless of gender. But on “Bad Religion,” he admits that society makes same-sex desire feel illicit and heretical. “I can’t tell you the truth about my disguise / I can’t trust no one,” he sings to an unnamed taxi driver that he enlists as his “shrink” over heartbreakingly dramatic organ chords and strings. “It’s a bad religion to be in love with someone who could never love you.”–M.R.

  • Mary Lambert, ‘She Keeps Me Warm’ (2013)

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    An outspoken lesbian and a Christian, Seattle singer-songwriter Mary Lambert sheds her shame and gets swept away by the ultimate dream girl in “She Keeps Me Warm.” Lambert drafted the song from her hook in “Same Love,” the 2012 hit single by Macklemore and Ryan Lewis. The trio would later make headlines after the 2014 Grammy Awards, where their landmark performance of the song would soundtrack a mass wedding between 33 gay and straight couples. (Not to mention it was officiated by Queen Latifah.) “I’m not crying on Sundays,” she sings impassionately — and it feels just like a prayer. –S.E.

  • Tegan and Sara, ‘Closer’ (2013)

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    Canadian sister act Tegan and Sara capture the thrill behind fleeting moments of intimacy in “Closer,” a track from their platinum 2013 LP Heartthrob. The video depicts friends and lovers of all genders, cuddling in blanket forts and taking cosmetic trust falls by applying each others’ makeup. It’s a breathtaking portrait of queer friendship, describing love that exists not just in the sexual or romantic sense, but as a broader spectrum of good feelings. Tegan Quin says: “I was writing about my youth — a time when we got closer by linking arms and walking down our school hallway, or talked all night on the telephone about every thought or experience we’d ever had. It wasn’t necessarily even about hooking up or admitting your feelings back then … It was the anticipation of something maybe happening that was truly exciting and satisfying.” She adds, “These relationships existed in a state of sexual and physical ambiguity. Is there anything more romantic than that?” –S.E.

  • Perfume Genius, ‘Queen’ (2014)

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    Seattle’s Michael Hadreas transforms from young man into queer menace in the sparkling video for “Queen.” Singing “No family is safe when I sashay,” he slinks into a conference room and gyrates his hips for a room full of suits — a sly riposte to the legions of homophobes who weaponize their fears against LGBTQ people, from within board rooms, in Congress, or out on the streets. In a 2014 interview with The Guardian, Hadreas says: “I’ve always been very resentful of the fact that something I have no control over would make people uncomfortable. So with this song it was more of a ‘fuck you’ thing — I was hoping other people would feel uncomfortable for once, not me.” -S.E.

  • Against Me!, ‘True Trans Soul Rebel’ (2014)

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    In her 2016 memoir, Tranny: Confessions of Punk Rock’s Most Infamous Anarchist Sellout, Against Me! frontwoman Laura Jane Grace recalls the time leading up to her transition, when she would disappear into motel rooms to practice wearing dresses. “You become more brave about presenting femme, but you’re still closeted, so you have nowhere to go,” she explained to Rolling Stone in 2014. “You end up in a weird motel in the middle of nowhere, wandering down halls, hoping nobody sees you.” Those days would inspire her song “True Trans Soul Rebel,” a punk-Western battle cry for trans women fighting to live. —S.E.

  • Christine & The Queens, Tilted’ (2014)

    Image Credit: Eloïse Larbarbe-Lafon

    Singer-songwriter Rahim Redcar’s synthpop alter ego Christine and the Queens made their mark in 2015 with this slinky celebration of walking one’s own path  Finding its strength in gentle defiance—“I’m actually good/ Can’t help it if we’re tilted,” Redcar shrugs on the chorus—“Tilted” is a subtle anthem for those who know that dancing is welcome at any revolution of import. “The song is about trying to embrace this weirdness, awkwardness of yours, all those thoughts and details that make you feel like you don’t belong,” Redcar wrote on Genius in 2015. “This is not tough, beautiful, fitting enough? Very well then. We shall dance for those who can hear the music.”–Maura Johnston

  • Shamir, ‘On the Regular’ (2015)

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    In the tradition of fellow pop countertenors Prince and Klaus Nomi, 22-year-old Shamir Bailey stunned listeners with slinky, androgynous wordplay in his 2015 debut, Ratchet. That same year, Bailey tweeted that he identifies as genderqueer — “I have no gender, no sexuality, and no fucks to give.” He later clarified in The Advocate: “Ever since I was little I showed traits of both masculine and feminine energies. Androgyny was never something that I thought about or tried for.” As sweet as he may sound, he doesn’t dare hold back the swagger, especially not in the cowbell-inflected disco track “On the Regular.” “Don’t try me,” he croons, “I’m not a free sample.” —JP

  • Hayley Kiyoko, ‘Girls Like Girls’ (2015)

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    “Girls Like Girls” earned Disney Channel alum Kiyoko the title of “Lesbian Jesus.” The synth-pop track, in which she declares that “girls like girls like boys do, nothing” in its chorus, served as Kiyoko’s own coming out to the world. In the song’s second verse, Kiyoko asserts herself as a force to be reckoned with as she’s surrounded by boys vying for the heart of the girl she’s into. The song (and its cinematic video of two female best friends falling in love) even inspired a novel written by Kiyoko and released in May 2023. As singer Gigi Perez told Rolling Stone, ““Hayley coming out with ‘Girls Like Girls’ was literally an earthquake,” she says. “She truly is a pioneer of queer music, of gay music, of lesbian music; she didn’t have a trampoline to fall back on. —Tomas Mier

  • Kehlani, ‘Honey’ (2017)

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    “I like my girls just like I like my honey/Sweet, a little selfish,” sings Kehlani. This non-album standout from the SweetSexySavage era pays homage to lovers past and present, and she praises them for their compassion and emotional complexity in dealing with a “beautiful wreck, a beautiful mess” as her voice lifts with audible joy over acoustic guitar. Certified gold by the RIAA, “Honey” has grown into something of an anthem for young women in love.–M.R.

  • Chappell Roan, ‘Pink Pony Club’ (2020)

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    Chappell Roan’s chronicle of a young dancer finding their true purpose while dancing at “a special place/ Where boys and girls can all be queens every single day” has it all—a plucky hero, two guitar solos, “blacklights and a mirrored disco ball,” and a chorus that can inspire throngs of people to sing-scream along with it. The story of “Pink Pony Club” is almost as triumphant as Roan’s declaration that she’s “gonna keep on dancin’”: It had a soft landing after its release in 2020, then began getting traction among in-the-know pop fans before the release of her debut The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess, then exploded when Roan’s live sets made listeners all around the world realize she was the real deal. “this is so corny,” she wrote in 2025 while celebrating the six-year anniversary of writing her celebration of being true to one’s self, “but literally follow your wicked dreams ok Tootles!”–M.J.

  • Lil Nas X, ‘Montero (Call Me By Your Name)’ (2021)

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    The lead single from Lil Nas X’s 2021 debut MONTERO acted as a signal flare for that album’s barrage of thrilling curveballs. Propelled by a frantically picked guitar, “MONTERO” is a heady pop gem that uses party-photo imagery to depict the way fast-rising fame and fast-growing lust can bend the mind. Named after Lil Nas X himself as well as André Aciman’s 2007 coming-of-queer-age novel, “MONTERO” is both raunchy and tender, with Nas’ brawny, yet vulnerable vocal helping strike that balance and making his worrying about his intended’s partying ways and his desire to “feel on [that man’s] ass in Hawaii” land with equal emotional weight.–M.J.

  • Muna feat. Pheobe Bridgers, ‘Silk Chiffon’ (2022)

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    On “Silk Chiffon,” MUNA bottle up the unique essence of queer joy into one perfect pop song teeming with bright synths and sunny acoustic guitar strums. The indie pop band leans into the thrill of new love, and it’s both sexy, sweet, and a whole lot of fun as they compare a lover’s soft touch to silk. But the best, and gayest, part of the whole song is the second half when Phoebe Bridgers chimes in. The sound of Bridgers and lead singer Katie Gavin harmonizing as they sing “That’s how it feels when she’s on me” is pure sapphic gold.–M.G.

  • Troye Sivan, ‘One of Your Girls’ (2023)

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    Sivan was inspired to write this melancholic synthpop cut from 2023’s Something To Give Each Other by, he told Song Exploder, men who’d been flirting with him despite never having been with a man before—and how he would sometimes take those men in. The “deep longing” he felt afterwards, he said, inspired him to write. “What was really interesting to me,” he said, “was, ‘Why do I keep putting myself in this situation? How does this keep happening?’ And that was the starting point of the song.” Sivan handles his longing with grace and elliptical compliments like “you should insure that waist,” while the moody synths and gently strummed guitar give the song a lonely-night glow.–M.J.

  • Isaiah Rashad, ‘Act Normal’ (2026)

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    While much of popular music has opened to queer voices, albeit sometimes grudgingly, rap remains a “boys’ club,” as Megan Thee Stallion once called it, a place where men freely deploy homophobic language while lyrically dominate women. That makes Isaiah Rashad’s admission to having sex with men and women on “Act Normal” an extraordinary development. It’s rendered in a hypnotically blurry groove typical of Rashad’s work as he depicts his sexuality as a source of angst yet something he ultimately can’t control, resulting in him being “at war with yourself” and unable to trust anyone. It may seem unlikely that other closeted mainstream rappers will follow his bracing honesty. But liberation needs to start somewhere.–M.R.

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