Top40-Charts.com
Support our efforts,
sign up for our $5 membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Pop / Rock 03 December, 2021

Miles Francis Covers NSYNC & Backstreet Boys Through Twisted Modern Lens Good Man Album Out March 4, 2022

Hot Songs Around The World

A Bar Song (Tipsy)
Shaboozey
569 entries in 22 charts
Birds Of A Feather
Billie Eilish
538 entries in 25 charts
Espresso
Sabrina Carpenter
681 entries in 27 charts
Die With A Smile
Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars
281 entries in 27 charts
I Had Some Help
Post Malone & Morgan Wallen
349 entries in 21 charts
Taste
Sabrina Carpenter
200 entries in 21 charts
Night Changes
One Direction
171 entries in 14 charts
Too Sweet
Hozier
534 entries in 23 charts
The Door
Teddy Swims
185 entries in 12 charts
Castle On The Hill
Ed Sheeran
252 entries in 22 charts
Tu Falta De Querer
Mon Laferte
194 entries in 3 charts
Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido
Karol G
199 entries in 13 charts
Grustnyi Dens
Artik & Asti
206 entries in 2 charts
Lose Control
Teddy Swims
914 entries in 25 charts
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) New York City singer, songwriter & multi-instrumentalist Miles Francis recently announced their new album Good Man (out March 4), along with title track "Good Man." Francis experienced a complete unraveling of conditioning during the project that helped them come out as non-binary, resulting in works of gorgeous paradox: nuanced explorations of masculinity and all its trappings, presented in a sound that's joyfully unfettered. Today, Francis continues this process with their B.O.Y. project, debuted via COOL HUNTING & featuring twisted modern covers of NSYNC's "I Want You Back" & Backstreet Boys' "The Call."

While Francis' childhood walls were lined floor to ceiling with boy band photos from J-14 and Tiger Beat, upon returning to those songs throughout the years, they've become more problematic and sinister -- written by grown men and sung by boys asking for forgiveness despite their wrongdoings. "I wanted to unearth the darker energy within the songs and put it front and center," Francis explains. "What if an NSYNC song was sung by a man's dark subconscious? What if a Backstreet Boys song was reframed to score a suspense film?"

Francis will be hosting an Instagram Livestream at 8pm ET called "The B.O.Y. Show," featuring dramatic readings, special guests, writing a boy band song in 5 minutes and a performance of the two covers.
"The success of boy bands was largely due to the fandom of teenage girls, but the messaging fit into a larger framework of patriarchy," Francis continues. "As someone with white male privilege, I was swept up in that cultural moment as a child, and I am curious as to how it encouraged certain problematic perspectives in my developing brain. It's okay to look back on things we love and question them, and it's necessary for men especially to interrogate the culture that shaped us, whether it's music, movies, or whatever else."

Playing into these themes are previous album singles "Popular" (feat. Lizzie Loveless & Lou Tides - formerly of TEEN - on background vocals) and "Service," complete with mesmerizing boy band clone choreography that mirrors Miles' own recording process in quarantine. "Everyone indulges in having an ego and wanting to be recognized, but men seem particularly bent on the power element — whether it's taking up space in a room or leading a country," says Francis. These were followed by remixes of "Popular" by Future Generations and "Service" from Overcoats, to love from KCRW, Earmilk, The Wild Honey Pie & beyond.

Produced by Francis and recorded in their longtime studio (located in the basement of the Greenwich Village building they grew up in), Good Man arrives as the most visionary and elaborately realized output yet from a polymathic artist known for collaborating with the likes of Angélique Kidjo, Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings, and Arcade Fire's Will Butler. Also naming shapeshifters like Prince and David Bowie among their essential touchstones, Francis ultimately alchemized those inspirations into a highly percussive form of art-pop, both lavishly orchestrated and visceral in impact.

As an artist indelibly informed by the kinetic energy and eclecticism of New York City, Francis drew immense inspiration from their hometown: "At the start of the protests and the resurgence of Black Lives Matter last year, I realized the most direct way I could help was to get a drum and go out to marches and keep a beat for organizers," says Francis, who soon assisted a friend in the founding of a New York-based collective called Musicians United. "In the beginning the goal was to get involved with anti-racist work, but the experiences I had and the people I met through the Black Trans Lives Matter movement opened up my whole world. It gave me a new mirror to see myself in, and helped me to find my own queerness and nonbinaryness."

Francis finally realized: "When I'm in my studio, it feels like being completely free of the outside world, free of gender, free of everything except me. I feel like I'm finally figuring out how to take that freedom beyond my musical expression and bring it into every aspect of my life. Now I want to share that feeling with everybody."

Polymathic artist Miles Francis is already known amongst musicians as one of the best kept secrets of the NYC music scene. Since they started playing - first the drums at 6, then guitar, bass, keyboards, other percussion - they have been an audiophile of the highest order. As a working musician, Miles has collaborated and performed with Sharon Jones, Amber Mark, Angelique Kidjo, Allen Toussaint, Tunde Adebimpe (TV on the Radio) and many others; toured the world with Will Butler (Arcade Fire), Antibalas, and EMEFE; and appeared on shows like Late Night with Jimmy Fallon and The Late Show with David Letterman. Following 2018's Swimmers EP, Francis will release their new Good Man album in 2022.






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2024
top40-charts.com (S6)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.0061970 secs // 4 () queries in 0.004206657409668 secs