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PinkPantheress wants more respect for Black female electronic musicians

“People are less willing to listen to electronic music made by a Black woman,” she recently told The Hollywood Reporter.

July 30, 2025
PinkPantheress wants more respect for Black female electronic musicians PinkPantheress. Photo by HELLE ARENSBAK/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP via Getty Images  

The whitewashing of electronic music is a well-documented issue, and PinkPantheress has spoken out on how bias has affected her own career during a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter.

“People are less willing to listen to electronic music that is made by a Black woman. That’s just fact,” she told the publication. Later, she said that hang-ups about genre are another significant hurdle she faces. “There’s some considerations I would like to get as an artist which I might not be getting right now, since maybe it’s harder to put me into a genre.”

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"I’m in a very privileged position musically,” she continues. “But [I] can feel a little bit like I’m hitting all these markers and it still feels like I’m getting overlooked, simply because there’s a lot of people that don’t necessarily understand what I represent, nor do they want to take a look because I think it just doesn’t make sense for them.”

PinkPantheress has navigated questions of how race connects with her music since the beginning of her career. "People thought I was white before they knew I was Black," she said in a 2024 interview. "When they found out about my identity, many people were shocked. It's a testament to what society defines as Black music."

Fancy That, PinkPantheress's second full-length project, dropped on May 9. She'll tour in support of the album later this year for her first run of dates as a (kind of) full-fledged doctor.

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PinkPantheress wants more respect for Black female electronic musicians