It’s not so much that the term “hipster R&B” is inaccurate. I’m no hipster, but if The Weeknd and Frank Ocean are getting mad love from people who consider themselves hipsters, then I suppose hipsters can call it whatever makes them feel comfortable. But as non-hipsters like to say, let’s keep it all the way real. Calling it “hipster R&B” is a nice way of saying it’s R&B that white people like (black hipsters notwithstanding), and here’s my problem with that: It’s myopic, lazy, and it sounds to me like a form of musical segregation that’s not entirely based on genre.

Here’s a proposal—how about we call it “nappy-headed pop”? If that sounds even slightly politically incorrect or lazy, then you understand my frustrations with the term “hipster R&B.” It’s not with the term “hipster”; it’s with any hipster or white critic labeling a black artist “an R&B artist” just because he or she sings a little.

@ TheAwl