Chloe x Halle Cover Teen Vogue and Take Us through the Playlist of Their Lives (and Ours)

It’s fun proving people wrong. Even with our music, early on when we were even much younger, people sometimes said our music should be more simple, more digestible, but my sister and I, we just pushed through together and we’re like, β€œBam. We’re gonna do what we want to do.” β€” Chloe Bailey Suggested Reading…

It’s fun proving people wrong. Even with our music, early on when we were even much younger, people sometimes said our music should be more simple, more digestible, but my sister and I, we just pushed through together and we’re like, β€œBam. We’re gonna do what we want to do.” β€” Chloe Bailey

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Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

Chloe and Halle Baileyβ€”currently better known as musical duo Chloe x Halleβ€”have always seemed to possess maturity far beyond their years (currently 19 and 18 years old, respectively). In the past several years, the sisters have been blazing a trail for themselves, evolving from YouTube upstarts to primetime television standouts (on Grown-ish) with a critically-acclaimed debut album (The Kids Are Alright) on no less than Beyoncé’s independent labelβ€”and they’re doing it on their own terms.

This week, the sisters were featured on the second of seven covers of Teen Vogue’s Music Issue, β€œPass the Mic,” dropping gems of wisdom and music alike as they discuss finding their voices, the power in vulnerability and how they hope to inspire other young women in the era of the #MeToo movement.

The fact of the matter is women are strong, but we’re vulnerable at the same time. Getting that perspective and allowing us to get out and share our voices, it’s powerful. ... Finding our voices as young women, not only in music but as young women in this world. Finding ourselves and speaking up about what’s right and what’s wrong and talking about our insecurities and learning to love them.

[The album is] a moment of being vulnerable but at the same time you’re OK with it because you realize that you’re human and others are human, too, At the end of the day, it’s going to help girls like us. We all feel insecurities. We’re all going through the same things.

We’re trying to raise awareness for what we can be and prove to others that we don’t need to stay in this cookie-cutter image of what a woman should be. We can be so much more. β€” Halle

People are actually listening. It’s not that we haven’t been speaking out: We have been for so many years. It’s just people are now paying attention. β€” Chloe

But perhaps out favorite part of the sisters’ interview was a brief Teen Vogue-produced video in which the two run down β€œThe Playlist of Our Lives.” Who knew two girls barely out of their teens would have tastes that so closely paralleled our own?

Musical influences of the duo include Jill Scott’s β€œGolden,” Billie Holiday’s β€œI’m a Fool to Want You” (which I also fell in love with in my teen yearsβ€”apparently Halle was only five when she discovered it), β€œMe, Myself & I” by mentor BeyoncΓ©, β€œSummertime” by Nina Simone, β€œToo Young” by Nat King Cole, and, in a shameless but well-deserved bit of self-promotion, β€œHappy Without Me” byβ€”you guessed itβ€”Chloe x Halle.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A_Rs-FyEWBI

But while their musical tastes may be advanced, Chloe x Halle remain as adorable as ever, with a lot of life left to live. Can’t wait to hear what their playlistsβ€”and musicβ€”sound like in 20 years.

Straight From The Root

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