32 min

Growing Pains with Lucy Dacus Switched on Pop

    • Music Commentary

Growing up is never easy. But pop songs about adolescence too often gloss over the complicated moments. The “teenage dream” archetype is just a pop culture fantasy. And no one really wants to be 17 forever. 
On her new album “Home Video,” Lucy Dacus talks about youthful growing pains. She remembers the uncomfortable moments. Dacus says that “a lot of childhood is crisis mode… you get pushed around by the world and the rules that are set for you.” Her songs examine unequal power relationships between parents and friends and lovers. 
On the lighter side, the album opens up with “Hot And Heavy,” which takes us back to the scene of an early romantic encounter on a basement sofa, red faced and awkward. But by the next song, “Christine,” the amorous feelings fade: “He can be nice, sometimes / Other nights, you admit he's not what you had in mind.” Bad dads, bible camp indoctrination, and perpetual peer pressure all take the stage in Dacus’ coming of age album. 
Dacus says that writing about those years is “a process of extorting control over things that I didn’t have control over at the time.” With untethered teenage dreams safely behind her, Dacus now gets to reclaim the meaning of youth: “I am the narrator of my own life so I get to say what this meant.”

Songs Discussed
Lucy Dacus - Night Shift
Frank Zappa - Sharleena
boygenius - Souvenir
Lukas Graham - 7 Years
Kendrick Lamar - Beyonce
Justin Bieber - Baby
Mandy Moore - Fifteen
Hilary Duff - Sweet Sixteen
The Beatles - When I'm Sixty Four
ABBA - Dancing Queen
Sound of Music - Sixteen Going On Seventeen
Avril Lavigne - 17
Kings Of Leon - 17
Lake Street Dive - Seventeen
Sharon Van Etten - Seventeen
Alessia Cara - Seventeen
Stevie Nicks - Edge of Seventeen
Janis Ian - At Seventeen

More
Playlist of coming of age songs 
Study on songs that references age
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Growing up is never easy. But pop songs about adolescence too often gloss over the complicated moments. The “teenage dream” archetype is just a pop culture fantasy. And no one really wants to be 17 forever. 
On her new album “Home Video,” Lucy Dacus talks about youthful growing pains. She remembers the uncomfortable moments. Dacus says that “a lot of childhood is crisis mode… you get pushed around by the world and the rules that are set for you.” Her songs examine unequal power relationships between parents and friends and lovers. 
On the lighter side, the album opens up with “Hot And Heavy,” which takes us back to the scene of an early romantic encounter on a basement sofa, red faced and awkward. But by the next song, “Christine,” the amorous feelings fade: “He can be nice, sometimes / Other nights, you admit he's not what you had in mind.” Bad dads, bible camp indoctrination, and perpetual peer pressure all take the stage in Dacus’ coming of age album. 
Dacus says that writing about those years is “a process of extorting control over things that I didn’t have control over at the time.” With untethered teenage dreams safely behind her, Dacus now gets to reclaim the meaning of youth: “I am the narrator of my own life so I get to say what this meant.”

Songs Discussed
Lucy Dacus - Night Shift
Frank Zappa - Sharleena
boygenius - Souvenir
Lukas Graham - 7 Years
Kendrick Lamar - Beyonce
Justin Bieber - Baby
Mandy Moore - Fifteen
Hilary Duff - Sweet Sixteen
The Beatles - When I'm Sixty Four
ABBA - Dancing Queen
Sound of Music - Sixteen Going On Seventeen
Avril Lavigne - 17
Kings Of Leon - 17
Lake Street Dive - Seventeen
Sharon Van Etten - Seventeen
Alessia Cara - Seventeen
Stevie Nicks - Edge of Seventeen
Janis Ian - At Seventeen

More
Playlist of coming of age songs 
Study on songs that references age
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

32 min

More by Vulture

Switched on Pop
Vulture
Good One: A Podcast About Jokes
Vulture
The Vulture TV Podcast
New York Magazine
Vulture Festival Podcast
Vulture Festival Podcast