close
 

Poly Styrene: Taking Moral Stances Solo

Poly Styrene's newest solo album, Generation Indigo, comes out April 26.
Enlarge Fabrizio Rainone/Courtesy of the artist

Poly Styrene's newest solo album, Generation Indigo, comes out April 26.

Poly Styrene's newest solo album, Generation Indigo, comes out April 26.
Fabrizio Rainone/Courtesy of the artist

Poly Styrene's newest solo album, Generation Indigo, comes out April 26.

Hear the Music

"I Luv Ur Sneakers"

[3 min 47 sec]
close

Purchase Featured Music

  • "I Luv Ur Sneakers"
  • Album: Generation Indigo
  • Artist: Poly Styrene
  • Label: Future Noise
  • Released: 2011
 

"Generation Indigo"

[2 min 24 sec]
close

Purchase Featured Music

  • "Generation Indigo"
  • Album: Generation Indigo
  • Artist: Poly Styrene
  • Label: Future Noise
  • Released: 2011
 
text size A A A
April 25, 2011

Poly Styrene stood out in British punk. Female in a male world, heavy in a skinny world, half-African in a white world, flaunting braces that looked like they could dent a lorry, she's linked in history to a song as iconic as "Anarchy in the U.K." itself.

Though many remember Poly Styrene solely for "Oh Bondage Up Yours!" the X-Ray Spex album Germfree Adolescents was a Britpunk monument, bristling with unforgettable statements of principle like "Genetic Engineering" and "I Am a Poseur." But just two years later came her quiet, slick, melodic, uncategorizable solo album Translucence. Then Poly Styrene joined Hare Krishna, quit the movement but kept the faith, raised a daughter who leads her own band, and just now released her third album, Generation Indigo.

In "I Luv Ur Sneakers," the line "No animal died or lost its soul" — and that accelerating hook — is enough to put the song on the fashion victim's edition of the all-time vegan hit parade. Though her ingrained defiance coexists peacefully with her religious commitment, Poly Styrene claims she's still a poseur. But she's never let image get in the way of lucidity. She always says what she means plainly, winningly and tunefully, and on Generation Indigo those meanings are moral.

If songs like "Colour Blind" suggest a do-gooder's pop-reggae album, well, tough. Good is what Poly Styrene wants to do with Generation Indigo. Producer Martin Glover balances his biggest credits with a range that suits her perfectly: Killing Joke and Paul McCartney. Sadly, treatment for recently diagnosed breast cancer has caused the postponement of an American tour. But Poly Styrene is ready to meet you anyway, on her own idiosyncratic terms.

Update, April 26: Poly Styrene reportedly passed away last night. We'll have more news throughout the day.

 

More Music Reviews

Podcast + RSS Feeds

Podcast RSS

  • Music Reviews
     
  • Music Articles
     
 
 
 

Comments

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use. See also the Community FAQ.

 

NPR reserves the right to read on the air and/or publish on its website or in any medium now known or unknown the e-mails and letters that we receive. We may edit them for clarity or brevity and identify authors by name and location. For additional information, please consult our Terms of Use.

 

Exclusive First Listen

Spektor is an oddball sentimentalist whose words summon universal feelings of love, hope and desire.

First Listen: Regina Spektor, 'What We Saw From The Cheap Seats'

Spektor is an oddball sentimentalist whose words summon universal feelings of love, hope and desire.

more

NPR thanks our sponsors

Become an NPR Sponsor

Purchase Featured Music

Generation Indigo

Purchase Music

close

Purchase Featured Music

  • Album: Generation Indigo
  • Artist: Poly Styrene
  • Label: Future Noise
  • Released: 2011
 

More Must Hear Music

The saxophonist performs a piece by his contemporary — a practice much rarer than you might think.

An Uncommon 'Riddle': Joshua Redman Covers His Musical Peer

The saxophonist performs a piece by his contemporary — a practice much rarer than you might think.

Six grandmothers, a half-Congolese Ukrainian singer and more are competing in Baku, Azerbaijan.

Eurovision 2012: The Babushkas Make It To The Final

Six grandmothers, a half-Congolese Ukrainian singer and more are competing in Baku, Azerbaijan.

Who listens to metal? Engineers and government employees who wear leather in 85-degree weather.

Metalheads Are People, Too

Who listens to metal? Engineers and government employees who wear leather in 85-degree weather.

Through early live bootlegs, Spektor culled 10 years' worth of songs for her new album.

Regina Spektor Still Doesn't Write Anything Down

Through early live bootlegs, Spektor culled 10 years' worth of songs for her new album.

more