Premium Content:

Shamir returns with a new tune about straight boys

Shamir Bailey is back with a new song, and it’s radically different to the quirky pop rap that first got him global attention.

- Advertisement -

“Can someone tell me why, I always seem to let these straight boys ruin my life?” Shamir asks in the songs opening.

The singer told NPR that the song is about whitewashing and queer-bating in the music industry and media.

“It’s about how frustrating it was for me to have my whole identity picked apart at a young age, just to see straight white men use it as an aesthetic choice,” Shamir said. “The video quite unequivocally depicts the process of whitewashing and the repudiation of the queer and people of color who pioneered.”

The video sees the singer slowly disappear and be replaced with a white version of himself.

While Shamir”s first album featured lighthearted tune like On the Regular and Call It Off, his recent output has been more acoustic, grungier and raw. It’s a distinctive change in style that fans first got a taste of when he surprise released a lo-fi fi free album earlier this year.

Straight Boy will be on Shamir’s next album Revelations which will be out on 3 November on Father / Daughter Records.

OIP Staff


Support OUTinPerth

Thanks for reading OUTinPerth. We can only create LGBTIQA+ focused media with your help.

If you can help support our work, please consider assisting us through a one-off contribution to our GoFundMe campaign, or a regular contribution through our Patreon appeal.

Become a Supporter→     Make a contribution→ 

Latest

On This Gay Day | George Duncan is murdered in Adelaide

His death was a trigger for major law reform in South Australia.

Minister Hannah Beazley praises outgoing Pride CEO Dr Lauren Butterly

On her social media the Minister posted a photograph of herself and Dr Butterly and praised the community leader's work.  

Queer Book Club picks ‘The Dispossessed’ by Ursula K. Le Guin for May

The sci-fi book is one of only three titles to win the Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards, three of the top accolades in speculative fiction.

Spin It | Aldous Harding, Loraine James, MUNA, and Pigeon.

Aldous Harding, Lorraine James, Pigeon and MUNA have got new records out and they supply a mix of pop, glitch, R&B, punk disco and everything in-between.

Newsletter

Don't miss

On This Gay Day | George Duncan is murdered in Adelaide

His death was a trigger for major law reform in South Australia.

Minister Hannah Beazley praises outgoing Pride CEO Dr Lauren Butterly

On her social media the Minister posted a photograph of herself and Dr Butterly and praised the community leader's work.  

Queer Book Club picks ‘The Dispossessed’ by Ursula K. Le Guin for May

The sci-fi book is one of only three titles to win the Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards, three of the top accolades in speculative fiction.

Spin It | Aldous Harding, Loraine James, MUNA, and Pigeon.

Aldous Harding, Lorraine James, Pigeon and MUNA have got new records out and they supply a mix of pop, glitch, R&B, punk disco and everything in-between.

Westlife are coming to Perth in July 2027

The boyband are marking 25 years of entertaining audiences with a massive world tour.

On This Gay Day | George Duncan is murdered in Adelaide

His death was a trigger for major law reform in South Australia.

Minister Hannah Beazley praises outgoing Pride CEO Dr Lauren Butterly

On her social media the Minister posted a photograph of herself and Dr Butterly and praised the community leader's work.  

Queer Book Club picks ‘The Dispossessed’ by Ursula K. Le Guin for May

The sci-fi book is one of only three titles to win the Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards, three of the top accolades in speculative fiction.