
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Tegan & Sara and King Princess have found themselves placed under the banner, "sapphic pop," a term recently coined referring to music by and/or for sapphics (a.k.a. women or femme folks attracted to other femme folks). Journalist Emma Madden defines the folk-inspired sound as having a “soft tactile approach” that’s “more sensual than it is sexual.” This umbrella folds in everyone from indie pop veterans Tegan & Sara to nonbinary artists like King Princess; even artists like Hozier and Sufjan Stevens are, improbably, considered sapphic pop, with their music having the same sonic qualities of other songs dedicated to feminine yearning.
From articles popping up in multiple news outlets to the majority of Taylor Swift’s openers for this upcoming tour (looking at MUNA, girl in red, and Phoebe Bridgers, specifically), the terminology of “sapphic pop” has come to define a scene almost out of nowhere.
This week on Switched On Pop, we explore exactly what sapphic pop is, where it came from, and how artists feel about it – even asking Tegan & Sara and King Princess directly. You can listen wherever you get podcasts.
Songs discussed
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By Vulture4.6
26302,630 ratings
Tegan & Sara and King Princess have found themselves placed under the banner, "sapphic pop," a term recently coined referring to music by and/or for sapphics (a.k.a. women or femme folks attracted to other femme folks). Journalist Emma Madden defines the folk-inspired sound as having a “soft tactile approach” that’s “more sensual than it is sexual.” This umbrella folds in everyone from indie pop veterans Tegan & Sara to nonbinary artists like King Princess; even artists like Hozier and Sufjan Stevens are, improbably, considered sapphic pop, with their music having the same sonic qualities of other songs dedicated to feminine yearning.
From articles popping up in multiple news outlets to the majority of Taylor Swift’s openers for this upcoming tour (looking at MUNA, girl in red, and Phoebe Bridgers, specifically), the terminology of “sapphic pop” has come to define a scene almost out of nowhere.
This week on Switched On Pop, we explore exactly what sapphic pop is, where it came from, and how artists feel about it – even asking Tegan & Sara and King Princess directly. You can listen wherever you get podcasts.
Songs discussed
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

11,542 Listeners

26,217 Listeners

5,980 Listeners

7,851 Listeners

10,728 Listeners

3,149 Listeners

1,487 Listeners

9,522 Listeners

3,662 Listeners

3,152 Listeners

4,182 Listeners

1,872 Listeners

1,482 Listeners

2,062 Listeners

2,109 Listeners

1,021 Listeners

3,575 Listeners

2,163 Listeners

5,986 Listeners

23,588 Listeners

727 Listeners

6,475 Listeners

2,312 Listeners

525 Listeners

763 Listeners

1,219 Listeners

152 Listeners

1,749 Listeners

1,190 Listeners

1,420 Listeners

589 Listeners

438 Listeners

31 Listeners