I became a feminist in the early 70s (second wave). That didn't and doesn't stop me from loving the music of the Rolling Stones, which is rife with sexism and (in some places) downright misogyny.
I love the tunes, I love the beat, I love the hooks (okay, I love Keith Richards too <snrk>). If I think too closely about the lyrics of some of my favourite Stones songs, I get really uncomfortable... so I don't think too closely about them and just enjoy what I enjoy.
I suspect that bands like Odd Future appeal to teens like Sierra because they don't have a visceral response to rape, violence, murder. Those things just seem really edgy and daring to teens.
When I start to judge teens who listen to this stuff, I have to remind myself that despite 40+ years of feminism, I'm still listening to the Rolling Stones. I'm certainly old enough to know better... but I do it anyway.
I disagree about the idea that song lyrics that celebrate rape, violence & murder are innocuous, and that those who listen to these song lyrics are unaffected by them. Teens are highly influenced by the music they listen to, IMO.
According to this website, about 44 percent of all sexual assault victims are under age 18.
http://www.teenviolencestatistics.com/content/rape-statistics.html
As far as I'm concerned, it's high time and then some to educate our young women & our young men on the facts of sexual assault. Dumbing them down will not serve them well, and pretending that something is innocent (song lyrics that celebrate rape, violence, murder) when it's clearly not, will only serve to perpetuate sexual assaults against women, especially young women who haven't yet gained the life experience necessary to discern the subtle signs of predatory behavior.
Everyone should have a visceral response to rape, violence, and murder. Teens included. I refuse to accept the idea that rape & murder are "edgy", simply because they're rapped in popular song lyrics.
Rape and murder are heinous crimes. If we accept the idea that it's edgy (i.e. artistic) to celebrate these heinous crimes in song lyrics, how can we reconcile that idea with the awful reality of rape and murder?
The two are not mutually exclusive, no matter how avant-garde we might believe ourselves to be.
ETA: I'm not only a rape survivor (as a teen), but a gang-bang rape survivor. It will never be acceptable to me for anyone to celebrate rape under any guise. Song lyrics & artistic license be damned. Rape is rape. There is nothing edgy about it. My experience altered my entire life - in some ways for the better, in some ways for the worse.