Published
5 years agoon
By
Joe MathewsIf Billie Eilish lives in the neighborhood, is she one of us?
It might seem preposterous to think of Eilish as the California girl next door. The 18-year-old is the first international pop star born in the 21st century, with the best-selling album of the past year, 50 million social media followers, and six nominations at this month’s Grammys. Her other-worldly voice, which can sound by turns angelic or menacing, is already among the most distinctive sounds in popular culture.
Eilish’s Highland Park, by contrast, is a messy mash-up of a neighborhood. Its small homes and apartment buildings, stuffed onto tiny lots, include almost every California architectural style. And its corridors feature an artsy-gritty mix of fancy coffee shops, downscale restaurants, tattoo parlors, and car repair shops, sometimes all on the same block. Eilish — who favors baggy clothes and shocking neon blue or green hair — fits right in.
Highland Park is neither predictable nor stable. It has experienced considerable gentrification, while its middle-income and poor people cram into small rentals.
Not long ago, Highland Park was the site of serious gang violence; homes and businesses still have bars over their windows. The now-famous Eilish home is close to a McDonald’s and two auto body shops. When I visited, a half-dozen homeless people were camped 300 yards from Eilish’s home; one of them danced unsteadily out into traffic.
Highland Park is like many 21st century California neighborhoods: a place of confounding change, where things get better and worse at the same time.
It’s not hard to see how Highland Park influenced Eilish the artist. Her music, like her neighborhood, is a mash-up too, with songs nodding to many different genres, from rap to emo.
In Eilish music, the outside world sounds like a horror film. She is wary of airplanes, fame, love, beauty, and emotion (“If teardrops could be bottled there’d be swimming pools filled by models.”). Her home state is a place of fires and murders. She sings:
Hills burn in California
My turn to ignore ya
Don’t say I didn’t warn ya
All the good girls go to hell
In “Bad Guy,” which is nominated for song and record of the year, she sings, “I do what I want when I’m wanting to. My soul? So cynical.” Her father told Rolling Stone that Eilish “has no tolerance for people she’s not interested in and doesn’t give a — whether you like her or not.”
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