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1[[quoteright:240:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/robyntrope_4662.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:240:"Konnichiwa, bitches."]]
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4''[[JustForFun/DescribeTopicHere Describe Robyn here.]]''
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6Okay, but first we're going to need some rain, thunder, and some hell's bells.
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8Robyn Miriam Carlsson (born 12 June 1979), known by her {{stage name|s}} Robyn, is a [[UsefulNotes/{{Sweden}} Swedish]] singer-songwriter who is famed for her combination of dance-pop and keen, earnest subject matter, as shown in her hit singles "With Every Heartbeat", "Dancing on My Own" and "Call Your Girlfriend".
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10In the 1990s, Robyn was hailed as a typical, blemish-free pop act. Her 1995 album ''Robyn is Here'' produced two top 10 singles on America's ''Billboard'' Hot 100 chart ("Do You Know (What It Takes)" and "Show Me Love"), but Robyn was dissatisfied with the box that she found herself in. In the midst of her growing international popularity, she was diagnosed with exhaustion and returned to her native Sweden to recover. Her producer, Max Martin, shrugged off her departure and gave the world someone named Music/BritneySpears instead.
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12Robyn's next two albums, 1999's ''My Truth'' and 2002's ''Don't Stop the Music'', were only released in Sweden and Japan, due to her label balking at ''My Truth'''s lyrical content, effectively kneecapping her career.
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14In 2003, Robyn left Creator/JiveRecords due to {{creative differences}}. She ended up founding her own record label with some help from Karin Dreijer of Music/TheKnife. 2005 saw the release of her fourth album ''[[SelfTitledAlbum Robyn]]'', a bold statement that switched out her straight pop[=/=]R&B sound for songs indebted to {{synthpop}} and electro. The album took two full years to reach the United States, but it did re-ignite Robyn's career there and gave her her first UsefulNotes/GrammyAward nomination.
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162010 saw the release of the ''Body Talk'' mini-album trilogy, which cemented Robyn's career as a solidified pop songwriter and a tastemaker (it's telling that Max Martin, who's had a hand in writing and producing a sizable chunk of all of the pop hits of the last 20 years, is handed a copy of Robyn's latest album as a creative starting point when a singer comes to work with him). Her fanbase extends to celebrities such as {{Music/Lorde}}, Music/CarlyRaeJepsen, Music/PerfumeGenius, and Ariel Rechtshaid, all of whom have cited Robyn's work as inspiration for their careers.
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18Outside of music, Robyn is known for championing equality and empathy, which has won her a sizable queer audience. She also promotes [=STEM=][[note]]Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics[[/note]] education in girls, with her Teklafestival only open to girls aged 11-18 (plus their parents).
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20----
21!! Discography:
22* ''Robyn is Here'' (1995) [[note]]Released in 2004 as ''Robyn's Best''[[/note]]
23* ''My Truth'' (1999)
24* ''Don't Stop the Music'' (2002)
25* ''[[NewSoundAlbum Robyn]]'' (2005)
26* ''Body Talk'' (2010) [[note]]originally released as three mini-albums[[/note]]
27* ''Do It Again'' (with Röyksopp, 2014)
28* ''Love is Free'' (with La Bagatelle Magique, 2015)
29* ''Honey'' (2018)
30
31----
32!!Robyn provides examples of:
33* BadassBoast: "Curriculum Vitae" and "You Should Know Better" are two really strong contenders for the poster child of this trope, even though they border on parody.
34* BoastfulRap: "Konichiwa Bitches", bordering on AffectionateParody.
35* BreakupSong: "Call Your Girlfriend" (which takes the uncommon form of the Other Woman's advice to the breaker-upper), "Dancing On My Own", "With Every Heartbeat", and "Be Mine!".
36* TheCoverChangesTheGender: Averted in her cover of Music/{{Prince}}'s "Jack U Off".
37* DarkerAndEdgier: ''Robyn'' was a complete genre shift with more confrontational and boastful lyrical subjects. Before this, ''My Truth'' wasn't released outside of Sweden because they thought her (slightly) stronger subject matter was inappropriate for a 90's pop starlet.
38** Her mini-album ''Do It Again'' with Röyksopp. Its lead song, "Monument", is about humanity's quest to be remembered and recognized for their achievements, even as the knowledge that their monuments to themselves will disintegrate in the future looms over them.
39* DeadpanSnarker: Half of her songs include some form of this.
40* DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment: In "Konichiwa Bitches": "This shit is gettin' heavy like it weighs a ton." Also a CaptainObvious moment.
41* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: ''Robyn is Here'' may be her most successful album in America, but it features a teen-pop, proto-Music/BritneySpears sound that is quite different from her later, more acclaimed work.
42* GratuitousJapanese: Her record label is Konichiwa Records.
43* GreatestHitsAlbum: "Det bästa med Robyn".
44* IAmGreatSong: "Robyn Is Here", "Konichiwa Bitches", and "U Should Know Better", among others.
45* LighterAndSofter: ''Honey'', which is themed around self-care[[note]]a term coined by black female Americans referring to the act of taking the time to care for oneself as one would take care of their own family, in order to revitalize oneself mentally[[/note]] and re-connecting with a former partner, is full of airy synths and slight builds.
46* ListSong: "Don't Fucking Tell Me What to Do" is a list of all of the things that are giving Robyn grief. An interactive music video for the song allowed fans to add their own grievances to the list, which would extend the length of the song almost indefinitely.
47* LoveMakesYouCrazy: "My Only Reason", where she sings about how "love can make you do crazy things".
48* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: She sings about rather realistic regrets and desires to go back and change them in "Time Machine".
49* OddFriendship: With Music/SnoopDogg. They've made 3 songs together, all of which are SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic.
50* TheOner: "Call Your Girlfriend." It takes some serious chops to completely captivate the viewer for the length of a music video with nothing but [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F6ImxY6hnfA dancing and a lighting rig.]]
51* PunkInTheTrunk: The end of "Konichiwa Bitches": "tape you up good, put you in the trunk, [[CountryMatters see you next tuesday]], you is a punk"
52* RedOniBlueOni: With herself, actually. She has two personalities in her music. In some songs, she's overly confident to the point of being over-the-top; in others, she is sensitive, sombre and heartfelt.
53* SelfTitledAlbum: "Robyn". "Robyn Is Here" is a nearly-eponymous one with a nearly-eponymous song also called "Robyn Is Here".
54* SingleWomanSeeksGoodMan: Pretty much the theme of her earlier hits "Do You Really Want Me (Show Respect)" and "Do You Know (What It Takes)".
55* SmallNameBigEgo: Mostly PlayedForLaughs.
56* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: "Crash and Burn Girl" and "Handle Me".
57* ThisIsForEmphasisBitch: "Konichiwa Bitches"
58* TimeMachine: The song, er, [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin "Time Machine"]], has her singing about wanting one.
59* UpdatedRerelease:
60** 1995's ''Robyn Is Here'' was reissued in 1997 for the international market with "Show Me Love" replacing "Where Did Our Love Go".
61** Likewise, 2005's ''Robyn'' was reissued internationally in 2007 with an entirely re-organized tracklist, re-recordings of "Bum Like You" and "Robotboy", and singles "Cobrastyle" and "With Every Heartbeat" added.
62** ''Body Talk'' was released in three parts across 2010: in June, September and November. A compilation featuring five songs from each part was also released on the same day that ''Pt3'' was.
63* WhamLine: Her collaborative song with Röyksopp, "Do It Again", sounds like an innocuous dancefloor filler ("Wait for the build up / And then let's do it again") until the middle eight comes and the context of the full song is laid bare:
64--->"We can not be friends. We'll just do it again. If you stay around, we'll just do it again."

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