Kalmanta Posted Wednesday at 08:15 PM Posted Wednesday at 08:15 PM 13 minutes ago, kimberly said: based on their criteria, it is a mix of both. I still think it'll be Taylor at #1, mainly due to recency bias. While her "debut" might be in 2006, Taylor Swift's pop iconography only kicked in at the beginning of Red era, in 2012. Whereas Beyoncé has been a dominant force the entire time. It's difficult to ignore that but I'm not surprised by the mental gymnastics done here to minimize that massive gap. Taylor had an insane 2009 and topped the charts even one year earlier with Fearless. And last year we've also not seen an artist being this ubiquitous since the 80s. Taylor will get the #1 spot, but it's closer than some might expect.
CherryBay Posted Wednesday at 08:30 PM Posted Wednesday at 08:30 PM Probably Taylor Should be Beyonce
whiteferrari Posted Wednesday at 08:34 PM Posted Wednesday at 08:34 PM 4 minutes ago, CherryBay said: Probably Taylor Should be Beyonce
Into The Void Posted Wednesday at 08:49 PM Posted Wednesday at 08:49 PM Who cares about a dumb list Billboard came up with
kimberly Posted Wednesday at 09:45 PM Posted Wednesday at 09:45 PM 1 hour ago, Kalmanta said: Taylor had an insane 2009 and topped the charts even one year earlier with Fearless. And last year we've also not seen an artist being this ubiquitous since the 80s. Taylor will get the #1 spot, but it's closer than some might expect. while "You Belong With Me" and "Love Story" are big hits, they are her first two. Speak Now was mostly a dud, failing to send anything into the pop radio Top 10. her foray into the pop sphere didn't really kick off until she collaborated with Max Martin on "We're Never Getting Back Together." that's when she even became a pop star, to begin with. Beyoncé is the first-ever woman to do a stadium tour. Changed music release day to Friday. Visual albums. Conquered Pop, Rhythmic, R&B, AC and even found success in Country and Rock. these are not minor talking points. there would be no Taylor Swift without Beyoncé — she herself says this. but yes, I do feel like Billboard will give this to Taylor, because her peak is more recent and sales figures unmatched. 3
byzantium Posted Wednesday at 10:59 PM Posted Wednesday at 10:59 PM Based on influence and impact on the music industry from a sonic, artistic, and business standpoint, it should be Taylor. But billboard will probably give it to Beyonce. 1
byzantium Posted Wednesday at 11:13 PM Posted Wednesday at 11:13 PM (edited) 3 hours ago, kimberly said: I still think it'll be Taylor at #1, mainly due to recency bias. While her "debut" might be in 2006, Taylor Swift's pop iconography only kicked in at the beginning of Red era, in 2012. I feel like you would need to not be from the US to be making this statement. She was absolutely a staple of pop culture and a household name by 2009 in the US ( and Canada, much of Asia, Australia etc) Edited Wednesday at 11:14 PM by byzantium
theboyismine Posted Wednesday at 11:14 PM Posted Wednesday at 11:14 PM 13 minutes ago, byzantium said: influence impact Taylor. 3 1
byzantium Posted Wednesday at 11:15 PM Posted Wednesday at 11:15 PM Just now, theboyismine said: Seethe more
kimberly Posted Wednesday at 11:22 PM Posted Wednesday at 11:22 PM 1 minute ago, byzantium said: I feel like you would need to not be from the US to be making this statement. She was absolutely a staple of pop culture by 2009. for young girls, maybe. the main thing she did that permeated every level of pop culture that year wasn't even her own doing — and I've already acknowledged her two big hits from that year. that was a great breakthrough era for her. but when we think of Taylor Swift the pop icon & business mogul, the one that's dominating today, the one that reaches beyond her core demographic — 2012 is the beginning of her "greatest pop stardom" story. (as opposed to, I would say, 2003 for Beyoncé — when she goes solo and dominates with back-to-back hits.) kinda referring to this, really, as someone shared earlier — the first time they each were honored with this: Quote According to Billboard's own Greatest Pop Stars of each year: Taylor: Honorable Mention in 2008 Honorable Mention in 2009 Honorable Mention in 2012 Greatest Pop Star of 2015 Beyoncé: Honorable Mention in 2001 (as Destiny's Child) Greatest Pop Star of 2003 3
byzantium Posted Wednesday at 11:33 PM Posted Wednesday at 11:33 PM (edited) 10 minutes ago, kimberly said: for young girls, maybe. the main thing she did that permeated every level of pop culture that year wasn't even her own doing — and I've already acknowledged her two big hits from that year. that was a great breakthrough era for her. but when we think of Taylor Swift the pop icon & business mogul, the one that's dominating today, the one that reaches beyond her core demographic — 2012 is the beginning of her "greatest pop stardom" story. (as opposed to, I would say, 2003 for Beyoncé — when she goes solo and dominates with back-to-back hits.) kinda referring to this, really, as someone shared earlier — the first time they each were honored with this: So you are just making an argument that neither of them really became pop stars until about 6 years into their careers. At least you are consistent. Personally I would put it at both of their second albums but sure, whatever. Edited Wednesday at 11:33 PM by byzantium
slw84 Posted Wednesday at 11:42 PM Posted Wednesday at 11:42 PM I think the Eras tour will put Taylor over the edge in terms of touring stats. I think if they can put Beyonce, Drake and Rihanna in the top 5 then they can put Taylor at #1 and back it up without needing to think about any backlash. Taylor misses with the vocals and performance skills but covers her bases for everything else.
sasashite Posted Thursday at 01:28 PM Posted Thursday at 01:28 PM 14 hours ago, kimberly said: for young girls, maybe. the main thing she did that permeated every level of pop culture that year wasn't even her own doing — and I've already acknowledged her two big hits from that year. that was a great breakthrough era for her. but when we think of Taylor Swift the pop icon & business mogul, the one that's dominating today, the one that reaches beyond her core demographic — 2012 is the beginning of her "greatest pop stardom" story. (as opposed to, I would say, 2003 for Beyoncé — when she goes solo and dominates with back-to-back hits.) kinda referring to this, really, as someone shared earlier — the first time they each were honored with this: The fact that they included Taylor as an honorable mention in 2008 and 2009 demonstrates that they recognized her as a pop star before the Red era.
einando Posted Thursday at 03:14 PM Posted Thursday at 03:14 PM It should be Beyoncé because she has been dominant since day one of the 21st century, but it'll be Taylor. 2
Moonlight Nation Posted Thursday at 08:20 PM Posted Thursday at 08:20 PM 20 hours ago, slw84 said: Taylor misses with the vocals and performance skills but covers her bases for everything else. Vocals and performance skills being two crucial factors in determining a popstar's greatness. Arguably the bare minimum, even if mainly excelling on one field (Britney Spears in performance skills or Kelly Clarkson on vocals, for example). I'd argue popstar Taylor Swift is comfortably her weakest facet, which would make her taking the top honour rather ironic. She was a wonderful country artist and her singer-songwriter moments both musically and performance-wise are often her finest. But with the exception of a few stand-out moments ("Red" 's pop singles, "Blank Space", "Style", "Cruel Summer", and several "Lover" deep cuts) I feel she fundamentally misunderstands what pop greatness should be, with any 'fierce pop girl' attempts ("Bad Blood" MV, everything about "Look What You Made Me Do", her bizarre stage presence) being inauthentic and extremely try-hard. I feel she struggles playing to her strengths when doing pop, leading to inconsistent results which hardly belong in the same conversation as others ranked below her, let alone Beyoncé. Won't argue against her commercial success and impressive business acumen, but Beyoncé covers similar bases while having a longer career (literally scoring #1s from 2000 all the way to 2024) and having had significantly more hurdles to get to this stage. Each to their own, though. 5
sasashite Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago 4 hours ago, Moonlight Nation said: Vocals and performance skills being two crucial factors in determining a popstar's greatness. Arguably the bare minimum, even if mainly excelling on one field (Britney Spears in performance skills or Kelly Clarkson on vocals, for example). I'd argue popstar Taylor Swift is comfortably her weakest facet, which would make her taking the top honour rather ironic. She was a wonderful country artist and her singer-songwriter moments both musically and performance-wise are often her finest. But with the exception of a few stand-out moments ("Red" 's pop singles, "Blank Space", "Style", "Cruel Summer", and several "Lover" deep cuts) I feel she fundamentally misunderstands what pop greatness should be, with any 'fierce pop girl' attempts ("Bad Blood" MV, everything about "Look What You Made Me Do", her bizarre stage presence) being inauthentic and extremely try-hard. I feel she struggles playing to her strengths when doing pop, leading to inconsistent results which hardly belong in the same conversation as others ranked below her, let alone Beyoncé. Won't argue against her commercial success and impressive business acumen, but Beyoncé covers similar bases while having a longer career (literally scoring #1s from 2000 all the way to 2024) and having had significantly more hurdles to get to this stage. Each to their own, though. The problem with some pop fans (often Taylor Swift haters) is that they associate pop stardom solely with fierceness and sex appeal. The Beatles are the greatest pop stars of all time and they were nothing like that. Taylor Swift is more popular, more famous, more discussed, more omnipresent, more powerful than Beyoncé. She deserves the #1 spot. 1
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