Fw: [同志] 25 Great Gay Moments In Music
看板the_L_word作者Architect (Hail to New England!)時間11年前 (2013/06/13 22:47)推噓0(0推 0噓 0→)留言0則, 0人參與討論串1/1
雖然大部分入選的仍舊 ( 毫不意外地 ) 以男同志居多,
不過有些還是蠻酷的.
※ [本文轉錄自 WesternMusic 看板 #1HjLMiTq ]
作者: braveshsu (謊言或真理的技藝。) 看板: WesternMusic
標題: [同志] 25 Great Gay Moments In Music
時間: Mon Jun 10 12:27:22 2013
六月是同志驕傲月 告示牌也做了同志專題
選出了在音樂上25個有關同志的重要時刻
不過還是有很多已經公開出櫃的歌手、重要的歌曲沒被列進來
如k.d. Lang、Boy George、Pet Shop Boys、Erasure、
一下愛男的一下子愛女的的Courtney Love跟Lindsay Lohan、
在公廁...的George Michael、
Boyzone的Stephen Gately公開與Caught In The Act成員交往、
英國X Factor選秀冠軍Will Young出櫃、
AI第二季亞軍Clay Aiken出櫃、
來自菲律賓的Charice也在上禮拜出櫃、
Sigur Ros主唱Jonsi與男友Alex一同推出Riceboy Sleeps專輯、
愛得轟轟烈烈的Glam Rock始祖David Bowie跟Iggy Pop
故事還被導演Todd Haynes拍成電影Velvet Goldmine
由Ewan McGregor跟Jonathan Rhys-Meyers主演、
Annie Lennox的No More 'I Love You's音樂錄影帶由蓄鬍的男舞者穿著女芭蕾服、
Christina Aguilera的Beautiful因為MV出現男男吻歌詞又勵志而成為Gay Anthem…
題外話,今年金球獎Jodie Foster的演說好感人。
以下是告示牌整理出的25個重要時刻:
01 Frank Ocean承認初戀對象是男生 歌曲Bad Religion裡面使用He這個字
02 Adam Lambert登上滾石雜誌封面公開出櫃
03 Ricky Martin出書也出櫃 三個小孩有兩個爸
04 Against Me!樂團主唱Tommy Gabel承認自己是跨性別者
05 Jay-Z與Obama公開表態支持同志婚姻
06 Glee在黃金時段上演同志情節 Teenage Dream因此創下Glee單週最佳銷售成績
07 Chely Wright成為第一位公開出櫃的鄉村歌手
08 Judas Priest主唱Rob Halford在MTV台受訪時出櫃 重金屬搖滾樂史第一人
09 Fun.創立TAC 關懷LGBT平權議題
10 Sylvester James是首位以扮裝皇后之姿登上告示牌的歌手
11 Lady Gaga為同志平權不斷發聲
12 Enrique Iglesias公開擁抱同志歌迷
13 'N Sync成員Lance Bass出櫃
14 Macklemore & Ryan Lewis歌曲Same Love被當作爭取同志婚姻主題歌曲
15 Elton John與David Furnish成為英國第一對合法同志夫夫並且領養小孩
16 Melissa Etheridge面對同志傳言 專輯名稱就直接叫Yes I Am 在美大賣440萬張
17 繞舌歌手Lil B單曲直接叫I'm Gay
18 Madonna歌曲傳達同志訊息 公開挑戰童子軍禁止同性戀禁令
19 Bronski Beat歌曲Smalltown Boy關懷遭受暴力對待的同志
20 拉丁搖滾樂團Mana主唱Fher Olvera在其800萬追隨者的臉書上公開表態支持同性婚姻
21 Queen主唱Freddie Mercury死於愛滋 群星發起致敬及愛滋募款演唱
22 Rufus Wainwright在英國Glastonbury音樂祭出櫃
23 Jill Sobule歌曲I Kissed A Girl直接討論女同志議題
24 Tom Robinson在1976年為倫敦同志遊行創作歌曲Glad to Be Gay
25 墨西哥偶像團體RBD成員Christian Chavez出櫃 並用歌曲Libertad表明立場
http://www.billboard.com/articles/list/513476/25-great-gay-moments-in-music
25 Great Gay Moments In Music
By Billboard Staff | June 05, 2013 4:01 PM EDT
Equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people is today's
defining civil rights issue, but the music world has always played a
significant role in LGBT progress. With Pride Month here, Billboard reflects
on 25 musical moments that have been pivotal in advancing LGBT understanding,
acceptance and rights.
Frank Ocean Opens Up About Sexuality
Last July 4, Odd Future member and R&B artist Frank Ocean published an
intimate Tumblr post explaining that his first love was a man. The
declaration was initially meant to be included in the liner notes to his
debut major-label album, "Channel Orange," which came out a week later, but
Ocean chose to pre-emptively announce it after a British journalist
speculated about the use of the pronoun "he" in love songs like "Bad
Religion" and "Forrest Gump." "The night I posted it, I cried like a fucking
baby," Ocean told GQ in December. "It was like all the frequency just clicked
to a change in my head." (To be clear, Ocean has never publicly defined his
sexuality as gay, bisexual or anything else.)
Subsequently, "Channel Orange" was lauded as a major musical accomplishment,
earning album of the year at the Soul Train Awards and Grammy nods for album
and record of the year, best new artist and best urban contemporary album,
the lattermost of which he won-a milestone as the first openly non-straight
male in hip-hop and R&B to reach mainstream acclaim. While Ocean's confession
garnered support from across the industry--from Beyonce and Jay-Z to
executives Russell Simmons and Joie Manda--his accolades proved that the
music spoke for itself. --Julianne Escobedo Shepherd
Adam Lambert Glams Up "Idol," Debuts at No. 1
While Adam Lambert didn't make his sexuality a major talking point while
competing on "American Idol" -- he later came out in a "Rolling Stone" cover
story -- "Idol" viewers and fans at home knew there was something special
about the flamboyant contestant. Lambert was out in his personal and
professional life well before he hit the "Idol" stage and made his mark as
the contestant to watch. On the show, he fired up audiences with his glam
rock stylings, sexed-up stage persona and multi-octave range. Though he
finished the 2009 season of "Idol" in second place, he remained the season's
breakout star and has since worked to become a role model for LGBT teens. His
major label debut album "For Your Entertainment" earned him a Grammy Award
nomination for the No. 10 Hot 100 hit "Whataya Want From Me," and his
sophomore set, "Trespassing," debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 in 2012.
-- Keith Caulfield
Ricky Martin Reveals All in 'Me'
From fresh-faced Menudo sweetheart to "Latin explosion" leader, Ricky Martin
has spent much of his career dodging relentless scrutiny over his sexuality.
Martin finally put the circus to rest in 2010 and declared himself a
"fortunate homosexual man" in an intimate letter to his fans that eloquently
described the fear that keeps so many potential gay role models like himself
in the closet. "Many people told me: 'Ricky it's not important,' 'it's not
worth it. . . all the years you've worked and everything you've built will
collapse,'" he wrote. Martin ignored the naysayers and discussed his
struggles with his sexuality in his 2010 autobiography 'Me,' which quickly
became a New York Times best seller. Martin and his longtime boyfriend Carlos
Gonzales are now open and raising twin boys, born to a surrogate in 2008. --
Monica Herrera
Against Me! Singer Comes Out as Transgender
In May 2012, Tommy Gabel made a very important announcement. After living for
31 years as a man, half of that as singer/guitarist for Florida punk band
Against Me!, he would be transitioning to life as a woman named Laura Jane
Grace. The story of Grace's lifelong struggle with gender dysphoria was
revealed in an intimate Rolling Stone profile, which also explained that
Heather Gabel, Grace's wife of five years with whom she had a young daughter,
was staying. The immediate public reaction was largely surprised but
overwhelmingly supportive.
While the personal transition of the past year has been both challenging and
liberating, as Grace described in a recent essay for Cosmopolitan, she says
that life in the band has been in many ways business as usual. "I didn't go
into it at all thinking, 'Oh, God, what is this going to do for my career?'
Because that was the furthest thing from what I was scared to death about,"
she says. On the band's tour just one week after the article, she says it
was, "totally humbling how many people would be waiting out back -- new fans
and members of the LGBT community."
When asked if she's become a mentor to transgender fans or others she's met
in the past year, she says, "Yeah, but it's really co-dependent. . . I need
that too." Her own transition was patly inspired by metal band Life of
Agony's Mina Caputo, who came out as transgender in 2011, and the mainstream
success of LGBT acts like Frank Ocean and Tegan & Sara give her optimism. "It
has to get to a point where it isn't even an issue because it's so
commonplace," she says. -- Evie Nagy
Jay-Z and Obama Support Same-Sex Marriage
After Barack Obama publicly endorsed same-sex marriage, Jay-Z voiced his own
support in an interview with CNN. "I've always thought it as something that
was still holding the country back," said the rapper. "What people do in
their own homes is their business and you can choose to love whoever you
love. That's their business. It's no different than discriminating against
blacks. It's discrimination, plain and simple." Other stars, from Lady Gaga
to Alicia Keys, also backed the president's words. -- Sarah Maloy
'Glee' Puts Gay Teens on Primetime
Since we were first introduced to Kurt Hummel -- as he was being thrown into
a dumpster on the series premiere of "Glee" -- the Fox show has tackled gay
issues big and small, bringing LGBT storylines to the forefront. In 2010,
Kurt met the swoontastic (and equally out) Blaine Anderson, causing the
audience to cry "squee!" into their Tumblrs and Twitter accounts at the same
time. Blaine and the Warblers serenaded Kurt with Katy Perry's "Teenage
Dream," and the "Glee" cast earned its best single sales week for a download
with the song's release (214,000, according to Nielsen SoundScan).
Country's Chely Wright: Out, Married, and Now a Mom
Country music has boasted stars of every age, race and gender, but the genre
had long been conspicuously heterosexual. Countrified pop chanteuse k.d. lang
-- who famously graced a 1993 cover of Vanity Fair in a barber chair being
amorously "shaved" by model Cindy Crawford -- fired the first salvo in
shattering that unspoken barrier when she opened up about her sexuality in
the early '90s. Almost two decades later, country singer Chely Wright carried
the conversation into the 21st century when her coming out made headlines in
2010. Wright faced death threats and declining record sales following her
announcement, but rather than take a lower profile, the "Single White Female"
singer married LGBT activist Lauren Blitzer last year.
Wright's story during the past few years has been inspiring to many,
particularly in the form of "Wish Me Away," a documentary about her
experience. Shot during the course of three years, the film made its debut at
the 35th annual Frameline Film Festival in San Francisco in June 2011, and
won several major awards in 2012--including trophies from the Los Angeles
Film Festival, the Seattle LGBT Festival and the Tallgrass Film Festival in
her home state of Kansas.
And this spring, Wright had an even bigger reason to celebrate--she and wife
Lauren Blitzer welcomed twins George Samuel and Everett Joseph Wright on May
18. --Jessica Letkemann & Chuck Dauphin
Rob Halford Makes Metal History
Studs, leather and rough talk are de rigeur accoutrements in mainstream
metal, but the machismo-driven genre had always been worlds away from the
slice of the gay male spectrum that shares its fashion sense until Judas
Priest frontman Rob Halford came out during a 1998 MTV interview. "I've been
a gay man all of my life," Halford told the network on camera. "It's only
been in recent times that it's been an issue that I've been comfortable to
address… This is the moment to discuss it." The Grammy-winning singer went
on to say, "A lot of homophobia still exists in the music world, in all kinds
of music… But that's something we have to address in our own lives." Then he
added with a smile, "If you want to go through your Priest collection, you'll
be surprised how many innuendoes and how many metaphors are used. That was my
way of getting my message out [then] for the people who cared to explore
that." --Jessica Letkemann
Fun. Establishes The Ally Coalition
The Ally Coalition, known as TAC, was formed last year by fun. members Andrew
Dost, Nate Ruess and Jack Antonoff, along with Antonoff's fashion designer
sister Rachel, to raise awareness and funds for LGBT equality. The focus has
been primarily on fun.'s tours, including its upcoming summer headlining trek
with Tegan & Sara, where the group hopes to educate music fans and create a
safe space. The band also takes $1 from each ticket sold and donates it to
TAC along with money raised form specialty merchandise sales and donations.
TAC has raised nearly $100,000 since its founding, according to the group,
and has donated to organizations including the Ruth Ellis Center in Detroit,
the Oasis Center in Nashville and multiple campus based LGBT support groups.
"It's really been about how to successfully get it to the places that need
the money, how to successfully educate people on issues that they'll think
about when they're voting and how they'll treat other people in the world,"
Antonoff says. -- Emily Zemler
Sylvester Dons a Dress, Feels Mighty Real
Long before RuPaul sashayed onto the Billboard charts in the early '90s, drag
diva Sylvester was paving the way for queens everywhere with his hi-energy
club tracks. Best known for his 1978 anthem "You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real),"
Sylvester James found his calling and adopted his one-name moniker after
moving to San Francisco to peruse music just a couple of years before New
York's Stonewall riot launched the national gay liberation movement. It was
via the welcoming world of disco that the out, loud and proud soul singer
found worldwide acceptance. Though he tragically died of AIDS in 1988 at age
41, Sylvester's flamed burned bright during his brief life: In his '70s &
'80s heyday, Sylvester earned 10 top 10s on Billboard's Dance/Club Play Songs
chart (including two No. 1s) and a place on the dancefloor for evermore.
--Jessica Letkemann
Lady Gaga Fights for Gay Rights
With her equality anthem "Born This Way" and . . . well, nearly everything
she says, does and wears, Lady Gaga has proven herself to be this era's
gay-friendliest pop star. But Gaga goes well beyond celebrity gestures and
digs her paws into real political action. First came her rallying cry at the
National Equality March on Washington in March 2009. The 2010 MTV VMAs
followed, where U.S. service members affected by the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"
policy accompanied her on the red carpet. Later, she appealed to her millions
of Twitter followers to ask the New York State Senator to vote yes for the
Marriage Equality Act. And since 2009, Gaga has teamed with Virgin Mobile to
help combat homelessness among gay youth. At every U.S. show in the last four
years, Virgin has pledged up to $5,000 for a local gay youth homeless shelter
in each city to match $1 donations made by concert-goers. Gaga has also
notably taken her vocal support of LGBT youth on the road this winter with
her Born Brave Bus, which was part of her Born This Way Foundation's campaign
in partnership with Campus Pride, GLSEN and other youth empowerment groups.
-- Monica Herrera, Andrew Hampp, Jessica Letkemann
Enrique Iglesias Embraces "G-A-Y" Fans
Many female pop stars openly embrace their LGBT fans, but only a few straight
male singers are comfortable enough to play to the gays. Enrique Iglesias
proved that his appreciation for his fans is not specific to gender or sexual
preference in June 2007 during his performance at London's G-A-Y nightclub.
During the show, Iglesias brought a boy on stage serenaded him with his
ballad "Hero." Iglesias confidently hugged, caressed and kissed the swooning
fan and, as the viral video made its way around the world, sent a message to
male pop stars everywhere that they shouldn't be afraid to embrace their LGBT
fans -- literally or figuratively. -- Erika Ramirez
Lance Bass Gets in Sync With His Sexuality
Lance Bass may not have emerged from the closet during *NSYNC's boy-band
reign , but the singer's 2006 coming out was still nothing less than bold. In
a People magazine cover story, Bass declared that he's "not ashamed" of his
sexuality. "I don't think it's wrong, I'm not devastated going through this,"
he added. Following his coming out, Bass was award the 2006 Human Rights
Campaign Visibility Award. He later outlined his life's story and struggle
with his sexuality in "Out Of Sync," his coyly-titled autobiography released
in 2007. Since then, Bass has taken his place in the LGBT community by
working with GLAAD and the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network. --
Jillian Mapes
Macklemore & Ryan Lewis' "Same Love" Becomes Rallying Cry
Macklemore & Ryan Lewis' "Same Love" -- which has been used as a rallying cry
in the fight for marriage equality in Washington state, California and
Minnesota -- is now shaping up as a cross-format radio smash. The song was
written in support of Macklemore's two gay uncles and gay godfather, with
lyrics about how Macklemore himself thought he might be gay when he was
younger.
Seattle's Music for Marriage Equality used "Same Love" as the theme song in a
campaign for the successful passage of Washington Referendum 74, which
legalized same-sex marriage in November. "Before 'Same Love' got a single
spin, it had 30 million plays on YouTube," Macklemore's manager Zach Quillen
says. "There was no multimillion-[dollar] marketing campaign--just what three
or four people could drum up on the Internet."
In March, alternative KTCL Denver afternoon personality/PD Jeb "Nerf" Freeman
passed over "The Heist"'s official second single, "Can't Hold Us," to play
"Same Love" as the follow-up to the duo's smash hit "Thrift Shop." "Same-sex
marriage was on the Colorado ballot in three weeks and I thought, People are
thinking about this, and culture is changing," Freeman says. "'We need to get
right on it.'"
"KROQ [Los Angeles] added 'Same Love' on the first day of Supreme Court
hearings addressing [California equality bill] Prop 8," says Tyson Haller, VP
of promotion and label services for Alternative Distribution Alliance, which
handles distribution and radio promotion for Macklemore and Lewis. "KDWB in
Minneapolis put the record in its playlist the same week Minnesota approved
gay marriage." According to Nielsen SoundScan, the track has sold 581,000
copies--all without being worked as an official single.
"When [Macklemore] and Ryan approached me with 'Same Love,' I knew it was
revolutionary," says Mary Lambert, the lesbian singer/songwriter who provides
the song's heart-stirring refrain. "I get to sing a song about gay rights and
how much I love my girlfriend--and 15-year-old boys are singing the song at
the top of their lungs at our shows. I think we're changing the world. Maybe
it's egotistical to say that, but music has done that before."
--Matt Diehl
Elton & David Tie the Knot, Welcome Sons
In the '70s, Elton John was famously slippery about his sexual preferences.
But the singer set aside all ambiguities on December 21, 2005 when John
celebrated England's recognition of same-sex civil partnerships and wed his
longtime partner, filmmaker David Furnish. The couple, who have been together
since the early '90s, held a small ceremony in Windsor in which both sets of
parents acted as witnesses. Five years later, John and Furnish adopted a baby
boy, Zachary Jackson Levon Furnish-John, who was born to a surrogate. And in
January 2013, the couple welcomed Elijah Joseph Daniel Furnish-John, a little
brother for Zachary. -- Jason Lipshutz
Melissa Etheridge Says "Yes I Am"
While out rocker Melissa Etheridge had experienced a good deal of success on
the charts in the late '80s and early '90s, it wasn't until her 1993 album
"Yes I Am" that she hit paydirt. The album -- whose title served as an answer
to questions about her sexuality -- spent 138 weeks on the Billboard 200
chart and has sold 4.4 million copies in the U.S. according to Nielsen
SoundScan. The set spawned the Hot 100 top 40 hits "Come to My Window" (No.
25), "I'm the Only One" (No. 8) and "Like the Way I Do/If I Wanted To" (No.
16) and helped make Etheridge a household name. -- Keith Caulfield
Rapper Lil B Goes "Gay"
Hip-hop aficionados were left dumbfounded when heterosexual MC Lil B
announced that his forthcoming album was to be called "I'm Gay." The Oakland
rapper's announcement, made during his performance at the 2011 Coachella
festival, came days after Hot 97 DJ Mr. Cee was controversially arrested for
lewd conduct with another man. "No matter what you do, it doesn't matter,"
said Lil B. "We only have one life to live. Be happy. F*ck the hating, baby."
After months of receiving death threats, Lil B stuck with the title --
although the album cover shows the title to be "I'm Gay (I'm Happy)." Diluted
message or not, Lil B's stand for individuality is an admirable and a
potentially groundbreaking move that is bringing the discussion gay issues
into the largely homophobic world of hip-hop. -- Erika Ramirez
Madonna Makes Vogueing Mainstream, Battles Boy Scouts
Madonna had already established herself as an advocate for LGBT rights and
causes in the '80s, but she took her gay-positive message to a different
level when she introduced mainstream America to vogueing, a flamboyant style
of dance which dated back to the 1960s underground drag-ball scene. Released
in 1990, "Vogue" soared to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and came with a
striking black-and-white video that taught the world how to strike a pose.
More than 20 years later, you'll still find everyone from fratboys to
grandmas giving good face whenever the song is played.
Madonna continues to speak out for LGBT equality. In 2013, she arrived at the
GLAAD Media Awards dressed a Boy Scout uniform, called on the Boy Scouts to
lift its ban on gays while also calling for a "revolution" to prevent
discrimination and abuse of the gay, lesbian, transgender and bisexual
community. "When I think about young kids in America who are being bullied
and tortured, who are taking their own lives because they feel alone and
judged, outcast and misunderstood, I want to sit down and cry a river of
tears," Madonna said from the GLAAD podium. Later she added, "I don't know
about you, but I can't take this (expletive) anymore. That is why I want to
start a revolution."
-- Keith Caulfield & M. Tye Comer
Synth-Pop Gets Political
Bronski Beat wasn't the only LGBT-friendly synth-pop group of the '80s. But
back when bands like Pet Shop Boys and Erasure were only making veiled
references to their sexualities, falsetto vocalist Jimmy Sommerville and co.
were adorning their album covers with pink triangles and writing political,
gay-empowering club tunes that left no room for misinterpretation. 1984's
"Smalltown Boy" was trio's most celebrated hit, and the song's video was one
of the first of any genre to address the issue of violence against gays. --
M. Tye Comer
Mana Supports Marriage Equality
The world's biggest Latin touring act, Mana, made a strong statement on April
2, 2012. The Mexican rock band's lead singer, Fher Olvera, joined a chorus of
other like-minded musicians and backed gay couples on the band's 8
million-strong Facebook account. "Full recognition for same-sex couples is
not just a question of equality, it is also a matter of justice," the singer
wrote. "In a chaotic world where there is still too much hatred, all
expressions of love are important so that we do not forget that, even in
spite of our imperfections, we are called to be angels. Because the only sin
is the absence of love."
Although other high-profile artists have expressed their support of the LGBT
community, the politically charged topic is rarely touched so directly in
Latin music, where heterosexual love ballads frequently chart. Like in the
real world, responses ranged from opposition to supportive fans like Olivia
Ramirez, who applauded the band and echoed its sentiments in a reply post:
"If two men or two women love each other who are we to say what love is bad?
Peace and love for all." -- Justino Aguila
Stars Pay Tribute to Freddie Mercury
Queen frontman Freddie Mercury never wore his sexuality on his sleeve, though
the flamboyant performer openly had relationships with both men and women
during the band's popularity. In November 1991, Mercury revealed to the world
that he had contracted HIV, and -- upon his passing one day later --became
the first major rock star to die of AIDS. In April 1992, the remaining
members of Queen staged The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert for AIDS
Awareness to celebrate the life and legacy of Mercury and raise money for
AIDS research. The concert, which featured performances by Robert Plant,
Roger Daltrey, Elton John, Metallica, David Bowie, Guns N' Roses and also U2
among others, was broadcast live to 76 countries, had an estimated viewing
audience of 1 billion people, and was instrumental in bringing awareness
about the disease to a generation of music fans. -- M. Tye Comer
Rufus Wainwright, Friend of Dorothy
In 1961, Judy Garland made a comeback at Carnegie Hall that is revered as one
of her most legendary performances. The campy magic of that night was
recreated by singer Rufus Wainwright, who paid homage to the gay icon by
recreating the her show in June 2006. In 2007, Wainwright took the act to
Britain's Glastonbury festival, where he donned lipstick and heels for a
performance that declared his friendship with Dorothy. Over the rainbow,
indeed. -- M. Tye Comer
Jill Sobule Kisses a Girl
Long before Katy Perry catered to male fantasies by singing "I kissed a girl
and I liked it," singer-songwriter Jill Sobule made the same declaration in
earnest. Her 1995 hit reached No. 75 on the Hot 100 chart in spite of -- or
perhaps because of -- its overt declaration of lesbianism. The subversive
song struck a chord as a character-driven narrative, giving voice to sexual
exploration in a way rarely touched in pop. -- Jillian Mapes
Tom Robinson is 'Glad to Be Gay'
In 1976, British songwriter Tom Robinson penned the tune "Glad to Be Gay" for
a London gay pride rally that year. Inspired by the in-your-face posturing of
punk bands like the Sex Pistols, the song's lyrics were bold and brave,
especially considering the climate towards homosexuals at the time. Some 40
years later, the song still serves as Britain's national gay anthem. -- M.
Tye Comer
Christian Chavez Fights for 'Libertad'
Christian Chavez came out of the closet back in 2007 while he was a member of
wildly popular Mexican teen pop group RBD. But in March 2011, Chavez fully
demanded his own liberty through song. In the provocative video for
"Libertad," the Latin-pop singer uses a sexy narrative about two gay lovers
who meet in a club to make a stance for gay rights and sexual freedom.
Spliced between flashing images of Harvey Milk, RuPaul, Martin Luther King
Jr. and many others, Chavez and his new flame go in for the kill with a kiss
that has helped the video garner millions of YouTube hits and wide applause.
-- Jillian Mapes
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06/13 14:41, 12F
推
06/13 22:46, , 13F
06/13 22:46, 13F
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
※ 轉錄者: Architect (118.170.41.231), 時間: 06/13/2013 22:47:46
※ 編輯: Architect 來自: 118.170.41.231 (06/13 22:50)