No matter the style, the music world has long been bookended by rising young artists and seasoned veterans alike, wannabes and legends, chart-toppers, cult acts and the journeymen and women in between. Even so, it’s difficult to recall another year in which a new generation of performers and a long-established group of veteran acts each had such a formidable impact.
At one end are such breakout stars as Chappell Roan, 26, pop vixen Sabrina Carpenter, Icelandic retro-jazz singer Laufey, MJ Lenderman and rapper GloRilla, who are all 25; TikTok sensation Tommy Richman and country upstart Dasha, both 24; South African songstress Tyla and Washington-born singer-songwriter Benson Boone, both 22; Mexico’s Angela Aguilar, 20; Jessie Murph, 19; and Mason Ramsey, 17.
The list also includes four young all-female acts: English baroque-pop band the Dinner Party (whose members are in their mid-20s); English R&B throwback vocal trio Flo (whose members are 21 and 22); South Korean K-pop sensations NewJeans (whose four members range in age from 16 to 20); and the Los Angeles garage-rock band the Linda Lindas (whose members range in age from 13 to 19).
At the other end of the spectrum are the still-active veterans who are old enough to be the great-grandparents of Roan, Carpenter, Tyla, et al. They include the senior members of such storied bands as the Rolling Stones, Eagles, Deep Purple, Chicago and Kool & the Gang, and such enduring solo artists as Smokey Robinson, Mavis Staples and Steve Miller.