― Zwan (miccio), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 16:28 (seventeen years ago) link
― Zwan (miccio), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 16:29 (seventeen years ago) link
― Zwan (miccio), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 16:31 (seventeen years ago) link
Bryan Adams, "One Night Love Affair" (#13 on pop chart, 1985)
(The thing about extremeness is that the burden of proof is always going to be on the person claiming it exists, too! So I don't even have to explain *why* it's not extreme. It just isn't, that's all. I guarantee that whatever adjective you want to apply to the song above, there are thousands of songs that have that adjective more.)
― xhuxk (xheddy), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 16:54 (seventeen years ago) link
― xhuxk (xheddy), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 16:56 (seventeen years ago) link
― Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 17:01 (seventeen years ago) link
― don (dow), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 17:02 (seventeen years ago) link
It's pretty interesting which acts call themselves "powerpop" on cdbaby. Plenty of them sound nothing like the Raspberries or Matthew Sweet or anybody "experts" would define as powerpop -- they probably have no idea how the word has been used before; they just like how it *sounds.* And actually, as dorky as it's become, it sounds good! (Now I'll start watching out for this, and linking to their pages.)
― xhuxk (xheddy), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 17:06 (seventeen years ago) link
http://cdbaby.com/style/136/all
― xhuxk (xheddy), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 17:09 (seventeen years ago) link
http://cdbaby.com/style/pop
― xhuxk (xheddy), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 17:24 (seventeen years ago) link
Extremely #13. The most #13 song on that pop chart.
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 19:13 (seventeen years ago) link
― xhuxk (xheddy), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 19:18 (seventeen years ago) link
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 19:45 (seventeen years ago) link
(If you look at my original list of "extreme pop," you'd be hard put to come up with a genre that encompassed the performers/songs mentioned.)
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 20:30 (seventeen years ago) link
metal mike teenpop update # 2 (june 3)
Subject: QUICK JOEY SMALL ? as samoans encore song Mike could sing
and would be the FIRST song in our whole set with a "rock beat" i can move my butt to (and also sing well). it has a 70's punk rock connection -- Slaughter & the Dogs did a 45 of it in 1978 , in fact but i don't remember their arrangement. did they play it in the same key? (below, G on the original) our set proper (through the 45 minute mark and my old man's a fatso) is completely nil on the "Elvis hip grinding" quota so we need to be more respectful of the single moms in our audience and what they expect out of a male, testostorone driven performance. i could put my "special Britney shirt" back on for the song too i mean, strip down from the basketball jersey again ha ha. the song would come (as encore) right after MyOldMan'sAFatso, and before any guest singers / gong show / talent match.
--------
metal mike teenpop update # 4 (june 4)
ahhh jonathan hall told me (over the phone) that the Slaughter & The Dogs single (1978 UK Decca) was "exactly like the 60's hit," but that they made the guitars sound kind of like the Sweet so at the 70 second mark I tore the song apart -- besides giving it a "stop / eddie cochran/sweet talking line (in soto voice by the bass player) at the end of EVERY VERSE (and each one with a different way back into the next part --ie , 2nd verse, 1st chorus, and final chorus) -- and dropped the 3rd verseand dropped the 2nd bridge cause our "stage version" has other things it has to accomplish (like get the dance contest winner or Gong Show "guest singer" winner up on stage like any good "end of show" number) in its long version (otherwise IDENTICAL to the official rearranged, now only 2 minute 5 second version (tempo identical and unchanged), just by extending the "spoken middle part" which in a recorded MP3 versoin would just have a "fake voice" be the dance contest winner and briefly demand their rightful Hello Kitty Pink Steering Wheel Cover) (truth! i have ten for the next ten "big gigs"!) so norb your the musicale expert here --with all those dylan songs and all what you think? it scans pretty good, you think? AND CHECK OUT how i tightened up the lyrics, just by dint of how i personally would sing them (automatically tiliting to maximum punchiness, lyrical meaning be damned). once i was done, i felt so inspired i got out my best Buddah 45s -- Indian GiverChewy ChewyYummy Yummy YummyGoody Goody GumdropsSweeter Than Sugar and i'm like "holy crap Batman, insufficient record collection" because both Down At Lulu's and Quick Joey Small were missing! (Shake was not in the "buddah 45s section" but somewhere else with the "shadows of knight rock classics" and therefore ineligible by virtue of standard cinema "auteur theory." but then i realized = this is where the Ramones began! not being able to play Indian Giver for crap, so they had to create their own mutant bubblegum music lyrics for comparison furnished (ours vs the much wordier, clumsier original) -- we smoked it, man. call up the Jan 1974 time machine and let's give the next Chinn/Chap MUD chart single a run for its money! ("Tiger Feet"'s coming on the 19th). -------
metal mike teenpop update #4 (june 13)
Subject: britney's blues influences
yep i'm still sayin' that her older brother must have had ONE Otis Redding album/cd...History Of Otis Redding or something...when brit-brat was growing up. and she thinks of that as "the blues." to a 9 year old it probably would be. and the first line of Baby One More Time...ie, of Mrs Mom's whole career at radio...was a dead on Otis phrasing, it just nailed it. whether on the famous Stockholm/Cheiron demo (that TLC passed on) or not. and good lord, after K-Fed the girl's got the blues for real, livin' with K-Fraud in legal union is about as real-life exerience as a white person can get.
― Charles Joseph Tarcisius Eddy (xheddy), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 00:09 (seventeen years ago) link
― don (dow), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 00:38 (seventeen years ago) link
― don (dow), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 03:49 (seventeen years ago) link
====================================to us old reactionary fucks = MP3s are not music actual discs or plastic or whatever, on loud 100 db amps/speakers = that is music!the walls have to shake if it's your favorite song/band dude! and that is just how we hear it. LAMF or Lesley Gore's Golden Hits, all the same theory. no, these ILM thread people are even more passionate/zealot about modern pop/rock music than anyone ever even was about 60's pop! truth. and the fanbase do indded dicate the eventual critical outcome...esp when a good handful (or more) of these "think tank" types (on ILM) are well known writers in the first place. Max Martin = the eventual music bio will have him as the posited No. 1 of all era, all decades, all everything. swedish pop = has ruled the pop world ever since Waterloo by ABBA won at the dreaded Eurovision contest. and Roxette, then the teenpop Stockholm domination -- it's an unbroken chain. 30 years of amazing pop/rock out of Sweden, with major names like those three (ABBA, Roxette whose huge catalog is almost an equal to ABBA, and then the Max/Cheiron/etc (10 names in all at cherion, the past decades MOTOWN, truth) as important as any in the history of pop music1 remember that ABBA were almost entirely disrepsected or, at best, plain ignored by all but a very few writers (greg shaw one of them, a huge fan from day one) at the time! in the UK trade mags of the 70's (NME and MM, Sounds) they were regarded as Satan. truth. and so will the critical "revision" on the Stockholm-dominated 1997-2001 teenpop era go likewise. (it's already well down the road, far past midpoint). mandatory reading = Bubblegum Music Is The Naked Truth! (although the book has some large gaps). Peter Bagge's chapter on teenpop 1996-current is just hysterical, i meanit's really funny. and yes Tim, i have danced (practiced moves, i should say) to A-Rod Carterns' "Not Too Young, Not Too Old" on top of a parked car right in front of Gilman at a huge dopey GravyTrain! gig where 500 kids were there and 100's were outside between every band, with my pop-loving buddy drummer Clay of portland's Clorox Girls in full support of my er, artistic statement. why...we were run out of the Gilman front room (combination staff room and band room) for playing modern pop (Finnish no less) on my boombox at a reasonable volume while he dug through the free samoans t-shirts to choose from. musically-politically INCORRECT! and you do not get more cutting edge that than, although annoying the PC-dope types at Gilman is admittedly not hard to do. truth = we were playing Noise From The Basement off and on on my same boombox all night (at the Clorox Girls merch table inparticular), and at least 5 people asked, "what IS that?" ie they wanted to own a copy of their own. ----------------- Original Message -----------------, you obviously weren't the bug on the wall in a downtown Little Rock Woolworth's when i was looking through the 45s, summer 1968, age 16 and their house radio system piped out Yummy Yummy Yummy by the Ohio Express as a brand new chart tune. that was my personal ground zero for being a bubblegum music zealot/fan. ( months later, in the 12th grade carpool, when i was the front rider, i cranked the AM radio as far as the law allowed for all time greats "Indian Giver" and "Goody Goody Gumdrops"). funny thing you know -- those were all by the SAME studio band that did the later 1968-69 Tommy James/Shondells 45s! yep, the "Mony Mony" throbbing rhythm section/organ sound. (kenny laguna on organ of course). my 1964-65 buyer's background on girlpop, when i was age 12 and then 13, was the obvious names -- Lesley Gore and the Shangri-Las who were both in the middle of major runs of classic girl group hit 45s. i fuckin LOVED lesley gore's voice the first minute i ever heard her. first 45 i ever wanted to buy? (but didn't, no purchases until months later) "Wishin' And Hopin'" by Dusty Springfield the minute i heard it in a downtown department store, walking by the large record department/room. ahhh and, shortly before Ken Barnes and/or Chris Peake, i was the first person in all of record-collector america to put togther a near-complete run of all girl group lps (issued early 60's with a few into the mid 60's), all from thrift stores or record store used bins (and the earlier swap meets during 1973-74)...this would be during 1970 through summer 1975 before i moved back to arkansas. i eventually (before the move) just booted all the ones that were crappy, over 100 albums i believe (it wasn't an album genre) and traded them in to dealer/collector Chris Peake's space/workroom in hollywood. funny thing, a year or two later Exene did work for him, filing or something. soo i have inarguable credentials anytime anything in a female voice comes on the radio or MTV. i liked it all, the minute i first heard it. (this would include lots of 80's Eurodance, Europop -- which evolve out of early 80's Italo-Disco much of which is very cool, ie -- and even american dance-pop like Stacey Q). actually this just makes me a match for the late Greg Shaw. but due to his diversions like piling up hoards of "blues 45s," i was way way ahead at the point of the early 70's (before he became really well known, or rather before he became the PRM co-editor in early 1973) when it came to collecting girl group 45s and lps. ahh mainly just half because they (like everything else) were dirt cheap when you could find them, very undervalued musically. you should pull a full credit list of all of Max Martni's productions/songs 1997-2006, cause he easily far outstrips Phil Spector as a writer obviously, and at this ponit as a producer ditto (in sheer volume and radio plays it's not even close). not that Spector probably isn't Top 5 or for sure Top 10 for his 1961-1963 work. (the overproductions during 1964 for ALL his acts leave me stone cold..and good god, tunes written by Vinnie Poncia etc, what the fuck, that's Phil for you...he wasprobably getting a better publishing/writing cut on the 2nd rate Poncia-Anders songs) but Max has 10 years in the chute now as the post-ABBA international svengali domo of Swedish export-pop. ah and Dr Luke, his co-god of writing/production. you knew of course that Max/Luke played every single instrument themselves (except for a LIVE real drummer) on kelly clarkson's monstrous hits Since U Been Gone and Behind These Hazel Eyes (two of the 5 most played/popular hit tunes of all 2005). dude, i had five years of 45s/lps in my young collection when the Stooges racked their first record....i've got maybe 3,000 albums (vinyl i mean) and in the long run, every record is "just another record i like" until i put it on and it jumps out and claims some esthetic space. and for ten years now -- no one even CLOSE to max martin...the man is a god of writing/engineering/production, and for toppers he and Dr Luke are a one-man band in the studio. if you don't own the Kelly album you haven't even vaguely heard her hits! the max/luke productions just BLOW WALLS OVER. they are almost unprecedented in their guitar/pop ooomph power. i mean seriously banging, on any good loud stereo. us pop-oriented people you know, consider 99.999% of all guitar-rock of the last 20 to 25 years to be just unlistenable..from metal to punk to mope rock...don't even get me going on "indie rock" or "college rock," (both of which i hated and hate to the point of breaking all 3,000,000,000 pointless recordings/albums over my kneecap, starting oh uh, with the first R.E.M. 45, o rwould that be the first Bangs 45?), i'm just talking about major label guitar rock. ah the current one at his Cure For Bedbugs site is interesting..."EXTREME POP" as a musical genre. and yes, halfway down that's bolton canada's Skye in a sailor moon/samoans reject (we couldn't give away Sailor Moon girls t's in california, so bratbrain wound up with several of them). she did some writing (for the 2nd Capitol album) w/Tim of (eh) Rancid this year, but she'll eventually figure out to route her writing-team work in that genre to Joe King or Metal Mike soon enough. in case you haven't been paying attention since 2002's surprise Top 40 hit "Billy S" (on canadian capitol, from the How To Deal mandy moore movie that tanked in about 5 days, or 5 minutes), skye is this decade's lou reed. where else but a young girl in a outer-outer-Toronto exurb (so far out they didn't have cable tv or the internet until the very late 90's)? "EXTREME POP" column in Cure For Bedbugs --http://66.102.7.104/search?q=cache:eabQrTwL74QJ:www.cureforbedbugs.blogspot.com/+%22buzzsaw+haircut%22+%2B+%22dave+moore%22+%2B+%22radio+disney%22+%2B+%22metal+mike%22&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=1
my next favorite pop singer/star -- MYLIE CYRUS. her voice sounds great so far, every song i've heard. since i neither under 14 or over 6,the TV show makes me want to kill myself very very quickly, after throwing the set out the front window at passing cars. .. --------- the monkees were one of the 60's great recordings acts, which is to say that Micky D absolutely is one of the 5 greatest ROCK SINGERS of that decade. you would have to fight both Rev Norb and me on this , so don't even try. mandatory thrift store album: HEADQUARTERS in MONO. very cool album! anyway, their catalog tapers off pretty quick (after the best say 20 tracks) but their 10 best cuts = anyone's 10 best cuts of the 60's. beatles, kinks, beach boys....anybody. there absolutley is not a better rock/pop song written than "Look Out (Here Comes Tomorrow)" -- we're talking classic NEIL fuckin DIAMOND! (the 20 or so Bang tracks mostly rule the entire universe; produced by Ellie Greenwich ya know...jeff's name on there is just a divorce-settlement phantom). and yes, You Got To Me is one of the Top 20 45 rpm rock hits of all time, all decades all universes. ahh you shojld just trade in some of those 1st Fear 45 and Sex Pistols A&M 45s you've been hoarding, for a good loud stereo system (mid-fi works fine as long as the amp and cartridge have name-brand power...i personallhy love 70's/earlyu 80's silver face intergrated solid state power amps, they last for fucking EVER) -- buy the Kelly cd, and play it full blast for about i dunno, 7 to 10 days straight. then and only then will you see things a little differently.
----------------- Original Message ----------------- you really are underestimating the huge impact Hanna Montana is gonig to have on the music world though. her songs just sound AWESOME on the radio so far, the ones i've heard. (nothing let go to retail yet). huge hillbilly accent, singing good rock/pop music. like Kim Wilde (and Marty Wilde), probably all written by her dad -- Mylie Cyrus's dad that is (in real life, not the lame HM cable show) -- yep, Billy Ray. goddamn, yall.
― xhuxk (xheddy), Thursday, 15 June 2006 15:51 (seventeen years ago) link
― Je4nn3 Æ’urÂ¥ (Je4nne Fury), Thursday, 15 June 2006 20:07 (seventeen years ago) link
― Zwan (miccio), Thursday, 15 June 2006 20:12 (seventeen years ago) link
― don (dow), Thursday, 15 June 2006 20:18 (seventeen years ago) link
"Pieces Of Me With a Butcher Knife"
Best all-time teenpop butcher-knife song (if you're willing to count the Supremes as teenpop) might be:
"You Can't Hurry Love With a Butcher Knife"
(though there are hundreds of good possibilities here: "The Best Part of Breaking Up Is When You're Making Up With a Butcher Knife").
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Friday, 16 June 2006 12:15 (seventeen years ago) link
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Friday, 16 June 2006 12:47 (seventeen years ago) link
(That said, I've been exploring her on youtube - for a few days I'm staying in a house with broadband - and found her incorporating strong versions of "Sweet Dreams" and some old swing-era number into her current live show, and a slowed-down almost menacing version of "La La." So if all goes well "Invisible" won't be any dominating tendency. Does anyone know the writing/producing credits on that song?)
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Friday, 16 June 2006 13:54 (seventeen years ago) link
could work equally well aimed at either a boyfriend or a dad
Other examples? Stephen Thomas Erlewine claims this is true of "I Want You to Want Me" on RAW, and I'm hearing it in "Black Hole" and a little in "I Live for the Day." (The latter doesn't need the butcher knife, which would be kind of redundant -- we know she's living for that day with a butcher knife; it's kind of in the song already.) "Oops! ...I Did It Again with a Butcher Knife"
― nameom (nameom), Friday, 16 June 2006 15:16 (seventeen years ago) link
From Jade Era's MySpace blog:
, Ashlee Simpson is Covering Our Song Current mood: hopeful
Hey guys Jeff & Kira here. Ya, what you heard is true. Ashlee Simpson is re-releasing her "I AM ME" album, with our song "Invisible" as the next big single! It's actually pretty exciting to see something your band has been performing for years be put into full motion like that. This may or may not cause some controversy, especially with our long-term die hard fans, but rest assured this was a decision we all made to help Jaded Era get out there as much as possible, so others can love us as much as you! ;) Don't worry, we'll still be performing and selling our Invisible album and all that good stuff.
"Invisible" is a song that will always be near and dear to our hearts. It was recorded at such a crucial turning point for Jaded Era and is the cornerstone for this band and where we come from. There was always something special about it ever since Jeff tracked that little riff on a cassette when he was 17 and Kira wrote the lyrics on the palms of her hands during a lonely day away at college. The bridge that "Invisible" created between JE and all our fans on a local / regional level was so inspirational. Like Kira always said, everyone has felt completely invisible once in their lifetime, and sometimes it's just you against the world. We have been rocking and rolling with that attitude for almost 10 years now, and if it's one thing weve learned in this business being an independent artist is to take anything you can get. It wasn't an easy decision at first, but we feel it was the best thing to do at this time, especially because JE's sound has branched off into a whole new direction these past few years since we released Invisible in 2003, and there is so much more you haven't heard yet!
We are really flattered by how much faith everyone has in this song, including the honchos at Interscope / Geffen, JE fans and Ashlee fans. We really hope it does well and we appreciate Ashlee putting it out there. So keep your eyes and ears peeled this summer. You may be seeing it on MTV and hearing about it soon. Whether or not it sells like hotcakes doesnt really matter to us. The life you put into one of your own songs is getting a chance, and that is an amazing feeling.
In the meantime, we'll be doing some more shows in Ohio and in studio soon doing a demo for Geffen. Well keep you posted about the progress in the studio as soon as we sort things out!
See you at the big DVD/CD release show June 29th in Akron!
Rocknroll,Jeff & Kira
So now it's a reasonably catchy song with hit potential and dull words that she didn't write!
Frank's mood = hopeful.
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Saturday, 17 June 2006 03:36 (seventeen years ago) link
― nameom (nameom), Saturday, 17 June 2006 16:26 (seventeen years ago) link
― Sigmund (dow), Saturday, 17 June 2006 18:24 (seventeen years ago) link
But now I discover myself whistling the song totally against my conscious will. Fair and/or Simpson must've noticed this insinuatingness when they decided to cover it.
I prefer the other songs Jaded Era streams to "Invisible." At least, I prefer them as Jaded Era songs, their loud rock working better with Kira's over-emphatic rock babe voice. (All four Jaded Era myspace tracks, incl. "Invisible," are downloadable.) Ashlee's a much smarter singer. Wish she'd chosen a better song, but then this one could hit and revive her alb (so far has sold less than half as well as Autobiography), and the video - while not a new idea (she's boxing, girl power) - is more striking (and jabbing and punching) (sorry, my jokes are bad today) than her recent we-are-driving-fast-and-dancing-around-and-it-bothers-the-cops-and-we're-so-transgressive shoots.
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Sunday, 18 June 2006 14:12 (seventeen years ago) link
― Sigmund (dow), Sunday, 18 June 2006 16:19 (seventeen years ago) link
As some of you know, or as some of you have heard - I am no longer with Island/defjam. I am starting a new journey into the very music industry that I have grown up so quickly in. I have been with Island for four years and it is now time for me to spread my wings and continue the search to utter and complete satisfaction. There will always be a place in my heart for that record company.Because of all these changes Sunday Love is on hold, once again. I know that seems like such a bummer for many of you, but please look at it this way - when I DO get this album to all of you, it will be so right - so perfect. I always believe everything happens for a reason, and that change is a very good thing. If things always just stayed the same, then life woulld be so predictably boring.This is such a wonderful thing for me to work with new people and get fresh ideas.I will keep everyone in the loop with everything, and I will let you know when Sunday Love has a new release date.
A million kisses to you all,
fefe dobson.
― nameom (nameom), Monday, 19 June 2006 15:06 (seventeen years ago) link
― Dom Passantino (Dom Passantino), Monday, 19 June 2006 15:09 (seventeen years ago) link
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Tuesday, 20 June 2006 22:21 (seventeen years ago) link
― don (dow), Wednesday, 21 June 2006 04:07 (seventeen years ago) link
According to a MySpace poll (and such polls are definitive) I am equally goth and emo (or equally not goth or emo):
[GOTH][x] Red or black is one of your favorite colors.[x] You have thought about death.[ ] You wear chains.[x] You like heavy metal.[ ] You love/ like Hot Topic.[ ] You have worn black lipstick.[x] Your hair is dark.[ ] You dislike preps.[x] You're an atheist.[ ] You have/want piercings in unusual places?Total: 5
[SKATERBOARDER][ ] You can skateboard.[ ] You wear plaid.[ ] You love/like Converse[x] You think you're different.[ ] You hate MTV.[ ] You have moshed[ ] You have/have had/want blue, pink, red, purple, or green hair or hihglights[x] You love skater girls/boys.[ ] You dislike pink[X] You hate rich kids sometimesTotal: 3
[EMO][x] You're depressed sometimes[ ] You have black or red-rimmed glasses[ ] You like Thursday[ ] You comb your hair in front of your face.[x] You cry easily[ ] You like emo music[ ] You hate being called emo[x] You keep a journal/diary[x] You have written a sad poem[x] You have had a sad MySpace layout (well, it's merely a bad MySpace layout, but I'll count it)Total: 5
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Thursday, 22 June 2006 19:03 (seventeen years ago) link
(The album is still hanging on in the top 100.)
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Thursday, 22 June 2006 19:14 (seventeen years ago) link
― xhuxk (xheddy), Friday, 23 June 2006 11:59 (seventeen years ago) link
Answers to all the questions in your bulbous heads!
Hey Bubble Bee's and Bumblegums!
You're all probably wondering y I was in Sweden... not only is it a wonderful place but there's wonderful music men who make magic songs that turn into magnificent mega hits! And I was seeking their services like Dorthy on her way to the Wizard. I captured the Wizard and brought him back to Kansas ( LA) where we're finishing a song as I type!... k ... jkjk... sing!...hjakj GUITAR!.. ghsja
It's hella hot in Cali, summer has arrived my friends! Can you feel it? Protect your skin, SPF!
I hate to say it but this means the records pushed back again! Thanks to my spastic amounts of creativity surging unexspectedly. Haha! Not like you guys haven't found out yet! You always know what's going on before I do! So yes, Oct. 3rd is where we stand right now... so hold on!
LOVE YOU!!! oxox
Skye Sweetass
― nameom (nameom), Saturday, 24 June 2006 00:06 (seventeen years ago) link
― don (dow), Saturday, 24 June 2006 03:59 (seventeen years ago) link
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Saturday, 24 June 2006 22:01 (seventeen years ago) link
i need a talent.
an odd talent.
like sticking a noodle up your nose and pulling it out your mouth.or riding a unicycle.
today i must find that gift.
and im maknig you help me.
I was going to suggest setting her farts on fire, but that's too much a boy thing.
Q: Is setting your farts on fire goth or is it emo?
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Saturday, 24 June 2006 22:07 (seventeen years ago) link
Also, you can be in her new video!
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Saturday, 24 June 2006 22:26 (seventeen years ago) link
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Saturday, 24 June 2006 22:43 (seventeen years ago) link
--------------
Subject: Jessica Simpson's Pubic Affair Date: Mon, 26 Jun 2006 10:29:52 -0400 From: ???@sonybmg.com Add to Address Book Add Mobile Alert
Call me for a listen of the new single…For Immediate Release June 26, 2006JESSICA SIMPSON’S NEW MUSIC IS ‘A PUBLIC AFFAIR’First Single Blasts Off Everywhere On June 27th; New Album Set ForAugust 29thNew York, NY—Superstar JESSICA SIMPSON is gearing up to release her fifth solo album A Public Affair on August 29th, 2006. Simpson boasts songwriting credits on nine out of the twelve slated tracks, produced by the most sought-after producers in the business: Lester Mendez, Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, Cory Rooney, Scott Storch and Stargate. The festivities surrounding the Affair kick off on Tuesday, June 27th with the explosion of her first single, a dance-pop summer smash entitled “A Public Affair.” Reminiscent of a fun roller-skating jam, co-written by Jessica and Johnta Austin (Mariah Carey, Mary J. Blige) and produced by Lester Mendez, the anthem is already tearing up the airwaves and the internet. This week, Chuck Taylor of Billboard proclaimed, “Jessica Simpson opens a new chapter in her life ready to set the charts ablaze. This record is perfect!”
---
There was more, but what the heck...
― xhuxk (xheddy), Monday, 26 June 2006 14:08 (seventeen years ago) link
Curious to hear other people's opinions on "A Public Affair." Jessica's doing a restrained Madonna "Holiday" bit ("restrained Madonna 'Holiday'" might seem like a contradiction in terms, but this works: "Holiday"'s sweet haze, though without the emotional reach of Madonna's early years).
Are any of you going to try and be in Jessica's video?
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Tuesday, 27 June 2006 20:27 (seventeen years ago) link
The thing is, with any new Shanks product I have insanely high expectations, but unless he's working with one of the teenies I also get secret satisfaction from believing its mediocre, since I can then say, "See, without Ashlee and Lindsay and Hilary he can't do it. Their talents are crucial to the enterprise."
By the way, Sheryl Crow is a co-writer on a couple of the SHeDAISY tracks, again with a so-what result.
(Apologies if this is a double post; I've been getting poxy fuled all over.)
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Tuesday, 27 June 2006 21:03 (seventeen years ago) link
(Not teenpop - among other things, Kraus would be too old for the category (don't know how old, but she sang backup on the second Blind Melon album) - but still the same basic family-drama confessional shoutback that you're getting from the teen angstpoppers.)
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Tuesday, 27 June 2006 22:25 (seventeen years ago) link
― Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Tuesday, 27 June 2006 22:29 (seventeen years ago) link
― nameom (nameom), Tuesday, 27 June 2006 23:26 (seventeen years ago) link