Frank Ocean’s Silent Aesthetic

Authors

  • James Little University of Cyprus

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18422/77-2543

Keywords:

silence, snare backbeat, public intimacy, Blonde, Beatles

Abstract

This article contends that silence plays a central role in Frank Ocean’s musical aesthetic. Arguing that the increased use of silence across his body of work comes about in response to his becoming a celebrity musician in our media-soaked 21 st century, the piece uses his 2016 album Blonde as a case study to examine Ocean’s silences as key events in a “situated aesthetics” (Manzotti; see also Born, Lewis and Straw), heavily dependent on the musical material and the media contexts in which they occur. Drawing on P. David Marshall’s definition of the early 21 st century as the age of “public intimacy,” the article analyses Ocean’s music in the light of selected musical precursors and contemporaries (from John Cage to Beyoncé) in order to better understand his uses of silence: to protect his private life from the media, to control his public image in dealings with the music industry, and to draw his listeners in when creating music, both in the studio and during Ocean’s increasingly rare live performances.

Author Biography

James Little, University of Cyprus

James Little is Assistant Professor of Drama, Theatre and Performance at the Department of English Studies, University of Cyprus. His monographs include Samuel Beckett in Confinement: The Politics of Closed Space (2020), The Making of Samuel Beckett’s Not I / Pas moi, That Time / Cette fois and Footfalls / Pas (2021) – for which he edited the online genetic edition [www.beckettarchive.org] (2022) – and the edited collection Ireland: Interfaces and Dialogues (2022; with Ondřej Pilný, Radvan Markus and Daniela Theinová). He is founding director of the UCY Irish Studies Collective [https://www.ucy.ac.cy/irishstudies/]. Together with Christina Morin and Cóilín Parsons, he is founding co-editor of the Bloomsbury Academic book series Global Perspectives in Irish Literary Studies [https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/search/?q=Global%20Perspectives%20in%20Irish%20Literary%20Studies].

Downloads

Published

2025-10-15

How to Cite

Little, J. “Frank Ocean’s Silent Aesthetic”. New American Studies Journal: A Forum, vol. 77, Oct. 2025, https://doi.org/10.18422/77-2543.

Issue

Section

Articles