Cat Burns: âI never had music for queer girlsâ

âI just wanna talk about girls.â
Cat Burns couldnât be clearer about whatâs on her mind in her new track.
Called â you guessed it â Girls! she says it marks a shift from her more âseriousâ records and is her shot at writing music she didnât have access to growing up.
âI feel like I never had a song like that for me,â she says. âEspecially for all the queer girls.â
She says sheâs leaning into a new era where she feels increasingly confident celebrating her sexuality.
The singer, 24, has enjoyed in meteoric rise in the past few years.
Her single Go, first released in 2020, became a viral hit on TikTok in 2023 â rising to number 2 in the charts, and propelling Burns on to a Brits Criticsâ Choice award nomination later that year.
She tells BBC Newsbeat having songs like that is âsuper importantâ, especially growing up and figuring out who you are.
âItâs nice to know that people like you exist and exist freely,â she says.
âAnd I think the âfun-nessâ of the song can show people who arenât lesbian or queer or bi or whatever that we are just normal human beings who like just so happen to like the same sex.â

In the past year, the charts have been dominated more than once by queer women writing openly about gay relationships.
Chappell Roanâs Good Luck, Babe! tells the story of being in love with a woman struggling to come to terms with their sexuality and spent 16 weeks in the UK top 10.
And after Billie Eilish claimed she was âoutedâ by Variety magazine in 2023, she followed up with her album Hit Me Hard and Soft, including the single Lunch which explored her desire for women.
Billboard described the track, which peaked at number two in the UK chart, as âa glorious queer awakeningâ.
Before that though, thereâs been slim pickings for mainstream pop songs that celebrate authentic lesbian relationships.
Take, for example, Katy Perryâs 2008 debut I Kissed A Girl.
Itâs âa brilliant pop songâ, Cat says, but doesnât go any deeper than the first stage of exploring sexuality.
âI think itâs always good when we make room and allow space for lesbian and queer artists to to speak about it whilst weâre further into our journey,â she says.
âWhere itâs less curiosity and trying⊠and itâs and itâs more like: âNo, Iâm into it now and really delving to my experience as a queer womanâ.â
âWeâre not a monolithâ
And the more voices that add to that, the better, Cat says.
âThe more representation and more space for different types of queer artist, it can just help paint a more vivid picture of what the communityâs actually like and who exists within that community.
âHaving people like ReneĂ© Rapp and Chappell Roan and, hopefully, someone like myself, weâre starting to show people that weâre not a monolith and we vary across the spectrum.â
Cat, whoâs previously spoken about her ADHD and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) diagnoses, says she âfalls into so many different groupsâ and wants to celebrate differences.
âI just want to continue to show people that weâre just not all one way,â she says.
âWhat you know of something might not always be true.â
As for why it seems more artists are getting comfortable writing about their sexuality, Cat credits social media as well as other artists that have gone before.
âSocial media has allowed more queer artists to be queer loudly,â she says.
âSafety-wise, before it was harder. Thereâs so many icons that have paved the way.
âIâm really happy that I was able to make a song like Girls!, for it to be received the way it has been and for me to be so able to be open about what itâs about.â
With more artists loudly celebrating the LGBT community, Cat says the fan base now has the opportunity to be loud back in their support.
âThe LGBTQ + community, weâre a very hard fan base,â she says. âWe love our favourite artists down and will do forever.
âWe champion and love loads of straight artists, which is great.
âBur I think itâs nice that, in the last five to 10 years, weâre now getting queer artists being able to be championed and loved by our own community.â
