Rogueish

Ke$ha vs the Beatles

10/12/11

imathers:

thediscography:

screwrocknroll:

(tl;dr: I’m far more committed to the idea that Ke$ha can be better than the Beatles than I am to the idea that she is.)

Precisely.

J-Breezy is just killing it today. (Emphais mine; I like the Beatles, and I certainly like them more than Ke$ha, but that’s not the point.)

I’m always surprised when people have opinions about the Beatles, I really can’t imagine what that’s like. The band always seemed to me to be like gravity or the speed of light or something - an important building block of the universe, but not something you could have any kind of individual aesthetic response to.

(Source: katherinestasaph)

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01/23/11

Soon lots of cassette labels started popping up…. It’s partly a physical thing: you can’t damage a cassette that easily.

― Matt Mondanile in The Times, proving, I guess, that these cassette-touting hipsters don’t actually try and play back the music they’re busy recording.

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another overview of recent Taylor Swift debate

09/08/10

barthel:

agrammar:

one of them consists of things Taylor Swift actually does (like writing lyrics and singing songs) and the other consists in large part of other people’s decisions and perceptions. A lot of the most pointed criticisms of Swift go out of their way to ignore Swift’s own voice, which is a little weird.

Here’s the thing: it’s not so much that the two camps are talking about different aspects of Taylor Swift as it is that music critics are talking about Taylor Swift in particular and cultural critics are talking about Taylor Swift as an exemplar of more widespread issues.

The problem is, though, that the kind of “cultural criticism” the anti-Swift people are engaging in is bad cultural criticism, and, indeed, is bad in a way that ends up being sexist. Ignoring the details of Swift’s lyrics and performance doesn’t just erase her voice, it substitutes the cultural critics’ imagined version of the response to the music to the actual responses of Swift’s listeners, erasing the voice and perception of her (mostly young, female) fans.

The model of cultural criticism animating the anti-Swift people seems to be didactic: if Swift narrates a sexist scene, this is taken to be an endorsement or even celebration of this, which endorsement is then transmitted seamlessly into the minds of the listeners. This underestimates the way in which listeners are able to negotiate these narratives and respond with both recognition and criticism, and the way in which this negotiation is an inherent part of Taylor Swift’s work (perhaps the best example here is “Love Story,” the patriarchial fantasy of which can’t be understood without paying attention to the way this very same fantasy is rejected in “White Horse”).

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07/27/10

Robyn has basically been releasing the same melancholy throbbing electropop accompanied by a video of urban alienation since “With Every Heartbeat.” I hope she continues to do so because this new version of “Hang With Me,” like “Dancing On My Own,” “Be Mine,” and indeed “With Every Heartbeat” before it, is fantastic.

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Janelle Monáe walks the Tightrope between conceptual art weirdness and robo-pop stardom | Music | The Guardian

07/10/10

Slightly odd that Hattie Collins chooses Lady Gaga and Rihanna to contrast Monáe with. Rihanna is probably the most interesting person in mainstream R&B right now, and Gaga is, like Monáe, straddling the line between popularity and artistic extravagance, and also like Monáe (and like Nicki Minaj, too), a lot queerer than most female pop stars.

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Tom Ewing | The changing face of lo-fi indie, from Wavves to Sleigh Bells | Music | The Guardian

07/10/10

Fine attempt by Tom Ewing to explain Wavves and Sleigh Bells in relation to the rhythms of the music blogosphere - but the fact that their more boring version of Lolita Storm is the best “wilfully artificial aesthetic” indie can apparently manage makes me think I’m right not to bother listening to the stuff any more.

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Miley Cyrus - Can't Be Tamed

04/30/10

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

The bridge isn’t too bad, but the new Miley Cyrus track “Can’t Be Tamed” is certainly no “Party in the USA”; that Danja sound wasn’t exactly new three years ago when Britney adopted it, and it hasn’t aged well. I was all set to make my usual rant about how come massively rich Disney never springs the cash for decent songwriters for its biggest artists (with the obvious exception of Dr Luke for, yes, “Party in the USA”); but it turns out that the people who wrote and produced “Can’t Be Tamed” were also behind Selena Gomez’s great “Naturally.” So the terribleness of this track is entirely inexplicable.

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Soul Music — The American, A Magazine of Ideas

03/09/10

I have something of a soft spot for Roger Scruton, as he’s one of the few analytic writers on aesthetics who actually discusses the aesthetic qualities of artworks. But this attempt to criticize pop music is an extraordinary example of building a detailed aesthetic argument on a fundamental misapprehension of its object (via Ian Mathers).

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