![]() ![]() The ’70s brought glam and disco, gender play, and explicitly queer nightlife back to the mainstream we can’t forget that decade’s great gay pop icon, Elton John, and its great bisexual ones, David Bowie and Freddie Mercury. ![]() In fact, Springfield was one of the first pop icons to come out to the public (as bisexual, in 1970)-and, notably, she covered Gore’s “You Don’t Own Me,” as subversive a song as there ever was, on her debut album. Even in the prescriptive world of ’60s pop, where teen rebellion was anticipated and pre-packaged, there were artists like Lesley Gore and Dusty Springfield. Jazz can’t be imagined without the contributions of giants like Billy Strayhorn (of Duke Ellington’s band), who was openly gay, and, later, Cecil Taylor, who found that three-letter word was too limiting. This didn’t stop LGBTQ+ musicians from shaping American pop culture.
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