The Sunday Music Drop is a weekly radio series hosted by the KQED weekend news team. In each segment, we feature a song from a local musician or band with an upcoming show and hear about what inspires their music.
San Francisco’s Chrissy is a musician, DJ, and producer who makes dance music in the realm of house, rave, and techno. Chrissy grew up in a fairly rough neighborhood in Kansas City, where he didn’t feel accepted as someone who didn’t consider themselves as a “super heteronormative, gender conforming, person out in the world.”
Chrissy’s older sister was involved in the rave scene and introduced him to the music through mixtapes when he was a child. He later began attending diverse events and nightclubs while learning more about the dance music scene on his own. The song “Things Can’t Go On Like This Forever” was written and produced by Chrissy and sang by his friend Carrie Wilds.
Regarding the origins of queer dance music, Chrissy says it’s historically tied to many of the struggles from the Civil Rights Movement.
“It used to be that when you went out for a night of dancing, you and your partner would dance face to face,” said Chrissy. “Music performances evolved out of the era when men dancing with other men or women dancing with other women at underground gay bars was illegal. The scene kind of originated out of a place of refuge and acceptance.”