Kim Gordon Captures the Deafening Chaos of the iPhone Era on The Collective
The former Sonic Youth bassist’s concepts are intrinsic and rapturous on her second solo album, rendered in blankets of feedback and nonsense phrases that are expressionistic and accessible all the same.

The smartphone era has been disastrous for boomer artists. It’s not their fault, really—it’s the most nihilistic epoch in human history. Creative output is invisible without corporate backing and heavy digital promotion, and what is out there that strikes that populist chord is often mired in irony and insincerity. To even make it into art school you have to mine your own trauma to stand out; the autobiographical mode has become the default, a place where we overshare as if the world was a giant diary and we are the silly monkeys with cymbals clamoring for attention.
It might not be such a bad thing that boomer creatives feel cringe in comparison. Madonna’s earnest Celebration Tour features drag queens in referential cosplay, a litany of random celebrity judges for an on-stage voguing ball and guest appearances from her children—who affectionately receive 10s across the board. Every few weeks a song like “Running Up That Hill” or “Fast Car” appears in a TV show or goes viral on TikTok, acting as a career revitalizer (Kate Bush even thanked Stranger Things for giving the song a “new lease on life”). The rarefied “authenticity” these artists became famous for—naked, unselfconscious, and often weepy—contrasts directly with the bad bitch personae that conquer the airwaves and the disaffected Twitter youths that brush against it.
But where most of this cohort struggles to relate to young people on their level, Kim Gordon thrives in the muck. Notably the oldest among her former Sonic Youth bandmates, Gordon’s career post-breakup has been the most interesting and consistent in its aesthetic concerns—a conceptual blending of noise and pop sensibility that never quite becomes “noise-pop” proper, instead emphasizing the dissonance between the sounds. Gordon’s 2019 album No Home Record exemplified that she not only understands the modern things the younger generations deal with on a daily basis, but participates in it directly—Airbnb superhosts, naive trap-gamelan and late, late capitalism, like going to yoga in Shein leggings.
Kim Gordon’s brand of cool has always been successful precisely because it isn’t a brand at all. Her concepts are intrinsic and rapturous, rendered in blankets of feedback and nonsense phrases that are expressionistic and accessible all the same. Her stoic face graces the cover of fashion magazines decked out in Balenciaga and Celine. She posts blurry selfies shot from below to show off her new t-shirts. In her memoir, she name-drops someone every other sentence and talks shit about half the people she mentions. “Cool” is less a matter of curation for Gordon and more a matter of how she moves through the world, flitting from connection to connection, engaging in superficial LA culture while openly stating how mentally ill it all is.