oneirophrenia: (Hearteat)
[personal profile] oneirophrenia
So. My English 15 students are currently writing response essays to a number of articles in our text dealing with popular music and assorted issues. The most popular article amongst the students is Dave Barry's most-excellent hatchet piece, "Bad Songs," which prettymuch states that Pop Radio can go fellate a anthrax-ridden bull for overplaying "hit songs" to the detriment of so many other perfectly-good tracks. The responses I've gotten have generally been most excellent--as I knew they would, since gods know everyone can get they bitch on when it comes to music...especially me. In fact, these response papers have even inspired a response of my own.

Yesterday, I picked up the newest Britney Spears album, In the Zone. Yeah, I admit it, I'm an uncloseted Britney fan. Her voice is the very definition of bland and average, but she has some of the best producers on earth writing music for her so her albums have been consistently very listenable and catchy, even if they lack any real, lasting substance. As pop ephemera, though, her songs are fucking genius, and this latest album may be the very epitome of that statement.

That is not to say that every track on the album is equally good--a few of them, frankly, blow. "Outrageous," for example, could have been neat if it hadn't been produced by R. Kelly, who took an otherwise nifty, raga-flavored jam and threw in some idiotic lyrics and sexy little jeans and sex drives that no doubt are just thinly-disguised, Britneyfied fantasies of doin' the nastay with a fourteen-year-old. Nonetheless, there are some amazingly good songs on this album: "Breathe on Me" is pure vocal-house erotica with a distinctly Eurotrash flavor reminiscent of Delerium gettin' it on with Amber; "Shadow" is just a flatout beautiful ballad that reminds me a LOT of my teen-queen idol, Debbie Gibson; and the Moby-produced "Early Mornin'" is a straight-up funkdafied 70's-style jam about partying all night. "Toxic" is great, too, with lots of interesting synthwork and mutated strings--it almost sounds like something *I* would write...though without my signature epileptic rhythms and retarded use of the patented "note retrigger buzz."

Any one of these songs could've been the lead single from the album and would've inspired me to go out and get it...but instead, what's the first single? "Me Against the Music"--her insipid "duet" with Madonna. Let me tell you: that song is fucking HORRIBLE. The music is pretty fly, but the vocals just sound like shit, the lyrics are even dumber than usual, and...well, Madonna sounds like a drunken teenager on the damned track. Madonna hasn't been relevant or even interesting in years--not since Ray of Light--and I'd rather shove a fork up my ass than listen to her old soccer-mom ass babbling about "losing control" and "baring your soul" on a teenybopper dancehall track. But, just because Britney suckered her in on that shitty song, it's the first single.

And, of course, the radio played it TO DEATH. Feh. I'm surprised I even bothered to pick up the album at all--"Toxic" prettymuch rescued it for me, and I'm glad it did, because a lot of the songs are great. Which brings me to a point one of my students made: Let's dispense with the idea of "singles" and Top 40 alltogether and just let DJs play whichever album tracks they like best--that way, folks would get a better taste of what they may be getting into with an album without: A) hearing one or two songs played to fucking deat; or B) hearing the one good song on the album, rushing out to buy it, and realizing that...the single is the one good song on the album. That's why I'm glad there's WRCT: at least the DJs that I know there manage to play different tracks from different albums on their shows, so I have a better idea of what to look out for when I'm cruising for new jams.

The same goes for club DJs.

Ohwell, though...as long as there's Top 40 radio and Clearchannel stations, the airwaves will be saturated with at most 20 different songs at a time, and I'll still stick to listening to the 80s Lunchtime shows and stupid-ass talk radio until I get a CD player jammed into my hooptie.

Date: 2004-02-04 11:10 pm (UTC)

Date: 2004-02-04 11:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alternakittyn.livejournal.com
I now officially love you. You and me, we're running off to Ireland, not getting married and living the rest of our days surviving off beer and potatoes. It'll rawk and you know it.

Why the sudden profession of love? I too am a Britney fan. I saw one of your other recent entries had one of the lastest tracks as the current music, and I'm thinking, "what the fuck? Pegritz listens to Britney? This has to be some joke..." But apparently not! Toxic is quite honestly one of my favorite songs right now. The tricky beat, shit sliding around... love it. I also have a thing for the Justin Timberlake album for the same reason. I love anything with a good beat, no matter what genre (o.k... I'll take that back... techno-ized christian or country music would still annoy the piss out of me).

So, there... I'm out of the closet too. I like vapid pop! =^.^=

Re:

Date: 2004-02-05 07:20 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] oneirophrenia.livejournal.com
It is no joke! I love Britney Spears *and* Vanilla Ice! Hell, I even like the Justin Timberlake solo album, though I still find his work with N*Sync a lot better--particularly the album _No Strings Attached_.

But, hell YEAH, I'll move to Ireland with you--we can get PISS DRUNK every damn night, wander around causing all manner of hooliganism, all the while listening to completely mindless radiopop. The more mindless the better. Every now and then you need music that doesn't challenge you in any way but is nothing but good, riotable brain candy.

Re:

Date: 2004-02-05 12:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alternakittyn.livejournal.com
Yeah... we're the same person. Damn... I also dug _No Strings Attached_. That's another one I should probably download. I spent all last night listening to Britney and Justin instead of my usual music. =^.^=

Re:

Date: 2004-02-05 07:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] oneirophrenia.livejournal.com
Heh. I am Mr. Bad Example. Next thing you know, I'll be inspiring you to listen to Warren Zevon and old field recordings of drunk-ass ol' grandpas from the Ozarks pickin' n' grinnin' on the banjo while singing old bluegrass tunes.

Sick thing is...the second song on the new Britney Spears album is this pretty godawful pseudo-kinda-sorta-hiphop thing featuring these two HORRIBLE MCs called Ying and Yang. BUT! It is redeemed by the fact that it features a frickin' *banjo*, which just instantly makes it neat...if only Ding and Wang weren't on it.

Date: 2004-02-04 11:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eolh.livejournal.com
I'm surprised I even bothered to pick up the album at all

No, um, comment. Nope, not going to do it.

If you're really that desperate for new things to listen to, though, I'm sure I could throw some better suggestions your way.

Re:

Date: 2004-02-05 07:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] oneirophrenia.livejournal.com
Hook a brotha up, yo. I haven't found much new stuff lately that I like--other than the new Azure Ray, which is cool, and the new Front Line Assembly. Otherwise, most of the stuff I've been picking up lately has been fairly old: lots of early 90s industrial and old, hard-to-find pre-suck EBM (back when EBM meant slightly hard-edged synthpop a la Sphere Lazza and X-Marks the Pedwalk). And of course, tons of New Wave stuff.

Any new suggestions are welcome!

Date: 2004-02-05 01:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] everyday-gray.livejournal.com
Buried under the depths of my deathrock, 80s pop and punk, apocalyptic folk, and old-school goth albums, you will find Christina Aguilera's "Stripped" and Mya's "Mood Ring." Eh, I guess we all have our guilty pleasures :P

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