At least one of the members of this all female B+ list group who all identify as LGBTQ is actually none of that and admitted the band wanted a hook and it was an easy way to do it.

MUNA

MUNA Goes for ‘Dyke Boy Band’ Supremacy

For MUNA’s self-titled third album, they had an immersive mood board for what it should encompass that included a combination of “Lilith Fair core,” the world of 2000s Max Martin pop and being “a dyke boy band.” As bandleader Katie Gavin says, “We didn’t worry too much about it all making sense together because it’s all definitely a part of what goes into MUNA.”

The fact that the queer-pop trio, comprised of Gavin, as well as Naomi McPherson (who identifies as nonbinary) and Josette Maskin, has expanded their palette is no surprise. Since the release of their 2017 studio debut, the Los Angeles trio has been seemingly unstoppable. They’ve crafted a series of catchy and often dark synth-pop tracks that expertly capture everything from pining to unbridled joy.

Their second album, Saves the World in 2019 on RCA, further widened their fan base. “Our intention was being a big pop band, but we did get thrown into the machine a little bit,” Maskin explains. However, Gavin is quick to add that it wasn’t necessarily a bad thing: “It was really an experience that we all grew from and we wouldn’t have been able to make the record that we made now without that experience.” – Source


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