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Guest post by Emily Blake of Next Big Sound

The Flute Finds Its Stage… In Trap
If you’ve had your ear tuned in to underground rap over the past few years likely could have predicted hip-hop taking a druggy turn this year. But the flute becoming an MVP in trap? The gentlest of woodwinds becoming one of the key players in songs about molly, Percocet? You probably didn’t see that coming. Unless, that is, you were one of those people paying really close attention, like JBoogie, head of Hip-Hop Programming at Pandora.While the so-called “trap flute” popped up in a few 2016 songs like 21 Savage and Future’s “X,” JBoogie notes that 2017 was the year it took center stage. In likely its biggest moment since “Anchorman” — nay, bigger — the flute was the star of Future’s “Mask Off,” on which producer Metro Boomin features a flute sample of Carlton Williams’ “Prison Song.” The track prompted a flurry of flute-y memes, all while the song hit #5 on the Hot 100, marking Future’s highest appearance on that chart to date. But it wasn’t a fluke: By late summer, the trap flute was everywhere. Looking at the Top Thumbed Hundred, four songs have features some sort of woodwind. On Drake’s “Portland,” the recorder makes an epic comeback from third grade. The backbone of Migos’ “Get Right Witcha” is a sophisticated pan flute hook. There’s also a hint of flute on Gucci Mane and Drake’s “Both” as well as Lil Uzi Vert’s “XO Tour Llif3,” if you listen closely.Flautists everywhere, rejoice. You’ve been waiting for this.Pop Has A Bit Of An Identity Crisis
When we looked back on 2016 in music, pop was still the most prominent genre, based on genres and subgenres present in that year’s Top Thumbed Hundred. This year, hip-hop pulled ahead of pop as the most influential genre — which isn’t surprising when you consider that this was also the year thathip-hop and R&B became the most popular genre in terms of overall consumption.So what happened to pop in 2017? In terms of the pop as we knew it, not much, says Tiana Lewis, head of pop programming at Pandora. She noted a shift away from the tried-and-true formula of bubblegum pop songs like “Teenage Dream.” And if they did stick to the formula? For the most part, they didn’t perform well.Most of the pop songs on the Top Thumbed Hundred take one of two paths away from the pop norm: Leaning heavily on genres like hip-pop, soul, and rock, or continuing in the EDM-influenced “pop drop” songs of 2015 and 2016.Take Ed Sheeran’s “Shape of You,” #1 on the Top Thumbed Hundred, which is technically a pop song, but mixes elements of Latin, electronic and soul:

