"My mom always says she hates rap, but I caught her jizzing all over Lil Mama in the car yesterday."
― da croupier, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 17:01 (sixteen years ago) link
I jizzed all over George Michael once.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 17:07 (sixteen years ago) link
http://www.wildsound-filmmaking-feedback-events.com/images/darling.jpg
― da croupier, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 17:10 (sixteen years ago) link
I was superbad.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 17:13 (sixteen years ago) link
there should be more talk about DRUMS on this thread. i love drums and i love how much she loves drums. one big reason i like m.i.a. is that one of my ideas of perfect music is drums + sing-song hooks (see also "milkshake," "umbrella," etc). i can understand why people who don't consider that a form of perfect music would not like her so much.
― tipsy mothra, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 17:15 (sixteen years ago) link
It's not real music unless there's guitars on it.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 17:17 (sixteen years ago) link
blount?
― Alex in Baltimore, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 17:23 (sixteen years ago) link
Werd mothra. I kinda wish that the album had started w/ those drums on "Birdflu."
― Jamesy, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 17:28 (sixteen years ago) link
most of this album i find kind of annoying for some reason.
i do like that pickle song with the kids rapping. it's pretty weird!
― latebloomer, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 17:32 (sixteen years ago) link
'specially since the kids sound like they've been smoking unfiltereds for 40 years.
― Jamesy, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 17:38 (sixteen years ago) link
It's not real music unless there's guitarsit's harmonically complex and nice an' melodicon it.
Geir to thread.
(sorry...I'll get my hat and goat now)
― JN$OT, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 17:38 (sixteen years ago) link
-- Jamesy, Tuesday, August 28, 2007 5:38 PM (1 minute ago) Bookmark Link
that's the best part! kids with gravelly voices rule.
― latebloomer, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 17:40 (sixteen years ago) link
It's not real music unless Paul McCartney wrote it.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 18:10 (sixteen years ago) link
I can't fathom how anybody can hate on this record. It's like the opposite of Arular, thank God, and since I bought it yesterday (for $7.99 new!!!) it's quickly becoming my album of 2007 or something (though Timbaland shouldn't have been allowed to rap, that comes close to ruining the whole thing)
― Beatrix Kiddo, Tuesday, 28 August 2007 21:55 (sixteen years ago) link
Her fans have spoken:
"Eclectic Interscope artist M.I.A. arrives at No. 18 with her sophomore album, "Kala," which moved 29,000 units."
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:01 (sixteen years ago) link
Timbaland shouldn't have been allowed to rap, that comes close to ruining the whole thing.
So true.
M.I.A. arrives at No. 18 with her sophomore album, "Kala," which moved 29,000 units.
Does this mean on the Billboard Albums Chart? 29k units sold gets you to No. 18 these days? Wow.
― Daniel, Esq., Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:05 (sixteen years ago) link
does this also mean Kala sold more in the US first week than in the UK? madness
― blueski, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:12 (sixteen years ago) link
Didn't Arular sell more in the US than the UK?
― Alex in SF, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:12 (sixteen years ago) link
Arular barely charted on the Billboard 200.
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:14 (sixteen years ago) link
There are a lot more people in the US than the UK, ya know.
― da croupier, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:16 (sixteen years ago) link
it's not like even POPULAR British acts automatically sell more albums in the US just because there's more people to buy them.
― blueski, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:19 (sixteen years ago) link
its not 'automatic' but its not 'madness.'
― da croupier, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:22 (sixteen years ago) link
What's The Story (Morning Glory) sold a bit over 4 million in the US and UK each, but it's 14 times platinum in your neck of the woods, and 4 times platinum here.
― da croupier, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:25 (sixteen years ago) link
29k units sold gets you to No. 18 these days? Wow.
It takes fewer copies sold now more than ever to get a higher chart position. Some records that debuted at #1 this year sold half of what an average #1 debut was just a couple of years ago.
― Sara Sara Sara, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:44 (sixteen years ago) link
The register in "Paper Planes" sounds alarmingly like the one from the opening of "Are You Being Served?" -- remix better have Mr. Humphries dropping a guest verse.
Reviews keep calling this "noisy" or "jagged" or whatever, but not pegging the main thing in action. For a major-label shot at pop, you'd expect the beats to be really present and physical, the hip-hop feel where instruments sit in the foreground and have a weight to them -- and yet here they're all kind of attenuated, scraping away in the back. The first track goes on for a good while before its bottom end snaps into place. The album as a whole lets you get something like four songs in before one of them takes on the physicality (and low end) to jump into the foreground and sound like conventional pop. There was only a touch of this feeling on the last album, but it's all over this one: this technique of using the form of "beats" to make music that's not actually beat-centric, music where it's kind of like avant / home-listening "beats," beats you here and listen to even though they're not actually there in a move-to-the-beat kind of way.
― nabisco, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:47 (sixteen years ago) link
remix better have Mr. Humphries dropping a guest verse.
There might be a problem with that.
― Dom Passantino, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:50 (sixteen years ago) link
her musics always been like that though. its like beats taken into that mid-frequency range so they never seem to fully settle down or lock into position.
― titchyschneiderMk2, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:52 (sixteen years ago) link
anyone think bmore club could get quite big post-kala?
― titchyschneiderMk2, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:53 (sixteen years ago) link
ever since tipsy brought up reynolds' comparison to ari up, I'm really hearing that slits vibe. this isn't a bad thing.
x-post waht
― da croupier, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 16:53 (sixteen years ago) link
It does make a hell of a lot more sense than comparing her to Neneh, though.
― JN$OT, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 17:18 (sixteen years ago) link
fine, bmore club "could get quite big" thanks to m.i.a.
― da croupier, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 17:28 (sixteen years ago) link
-- titchyschneiderMk2, Wednesday, August 29, 2007 4:53 PM (35 minutes ago) Bookmark Link
er? there's one song on there with a Bmore producer, Blaq Starr (plus another he did that's I think a bonus track on the Japanese edition), and it isn't very Baltimore club-like anyway, even compared to the "You Big Dummy" jack on her last album. I think if club music gets 'big' (or at least, bigger than it's been) anytime soon it'd be more likely on a "Crank Dat"/"Watch My Feet" kids-doing-the-dances-on-YouTube tip than from Kala or the kind of half-assed Blaq Starr EP that Mad Decent put out. (xpost lol anthony)
― Alex in Baltimore, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 17:32 (sixteen years ago) link
so you dont hear bmore club rhythms/bmore-style programming on at least half the album? its right there on the first song.
― titchyschneiderMk2, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 17:42 (sixteen years ago) link
I haven't listened to the album, just cherry-picked the Blaq Starr productions and happened to hear a couple songs elsewhere, I just flat out don't like her as a vocalist. other producers using those kinds of beats isn't going to make Bmore club 'big', though, it'll just be the usual "wow that's a great beat that Diplo/Switch/etc. made" nevermind where they bit the style from. OTOH supposedly MTV was down here shooting a M.I.A./Blaq Starr event for some reason a few weeks ago.
― Alex in Baltimore, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 17:45 (sixteen years ago) link
theres no real breaks used on the album, so that kinda gritty aesthetic i associate with the genre isnt there, but the rhythms are most def lifted right from bmore club.
― titchyschneiderMk2, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 17:51 (sixteen years ago) link
wtf 'rhythms' are unique to bmore club w/out the breakbeats???
― deej, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 17:57 (sixteen years ago) link
the "Dick Control" kick drum pattern is somewhat unique to Bmore and not breakbeat-based. there's some others that are more recent and/or less easy to define, too.
― Alex in Baltimore, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 18:00 (sixteen years ago) link
i dunno, it seems to me that certain kick drum patterns have been around a long time and between bounce, house and bass music you'd have a hard time pinning origins on bmore club
regardless tho, the idea that MIA is going to help any genre 'get quite big' after selling 29,000 records is playing themselves.
― deej, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 18:05 (sixteen years ago) link
hmm that sentence made no sense. i think u know where i was going with it tho
"i dunno, it seems to me that certain kick drum patterns have been around a long time and between bounce, house and bass music you'd have a hard time pinning origins on bmore club"
hip hop breakbeats had been around for years too before marley marl and whoever started looping them up but we still recognise the end product as 'hip hop rhythms'. same for bmore club.
― titchyschneiderMk2, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 18:08 (sixteen years ago) link
really i'd put it down to tempo and not rhythms if I was gonna say something is Bmore or Bmore-influenced. certain rhythms or "Think"/"Sing Sing" breaks are only gonna bear any similiarity if they're at or around 130bpm.
― Alex in Baltimore, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 18:10 (sixteen years ago) link
^^^^^^^^^^^^http://www.freewebs.com/charliethewallflower/apnet%20emoticons/stfu.jpg^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
― and what, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 18:12 (sixteen years ago) link
"regardless tho, the idea that MIA is going to help any genre 'get quite big' after selling 29,000 records is playing themselves."
untwist your knickers. im obv not talking about bmore cranking out great blockbuster hits. i just mean on a slightly bigger level than it is already. i mean, virtually every review you read of kala mentions the scene/music. thats going to have some effect.
"wtf 'rhythms' are unique to bmore club w/out the breakbeats???"
listen to a track like bombin cock - before the breakbeats kick in, theres a distinctly bmore rhythm in the handclap/kick drum track that you hear in the intro.
this isnt that hard to hear. not sure why youre getting so flustered about it.
― titchyschneiderMk2, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 18:16 (sixteen years ago) link
noone's flustered, it was just kind of a dumb question to begin with. let the hollerboard sweat whether Bmore is "dead" or "blowing up" every 2 weeks.
― Alex in Baltimore, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 18:22 (sixteen years ago) link
i didnt say you were flustered, was talking to deej as he was getting all 'wtf omg wtf'.
― titchyschneiderMk2, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 18:33 (sixteen years ago) link
"noone" = "not anyone, including deej"
now I'm all grammar-flustered!
― Alex in Baltimore, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 18:34 (sixteen years ago) link
you didnt start that sentence with a capital N.
― titchyschneiderMk2, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 18:38 (sixteen years ago) link
this technique of using the form of "beats" to make music that's not actually beat-centric, music where it's kind of like avant / home-listening "beats," beats you here and listen to even though they're not actually there in a move-to-the-beat kind of way.
i think the album has both kinds of beats. the faster/noisier tracks are plenty beat-centric .(for this experiment i put on "boyz" and observed its effect on an almost-3-year-old. mad pogoing ensued.) some of the slower/blearier tracks take a more, i don't know, sculptural approach to the beats.they're meditative, maybe, rather than declarative. but i think rhythm remains the organizing principle. and i guess you could accuse her of a certain amount of rhythmic tourism. but of course you could accuse timbaland (for example) of the same thing. i like the connections she makes between the rhythms she finds (or has found for her, i don't really care), and i think she hangs them together coherently.
― tipsy mothra, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 18:47 (sixteen years ago) link
holy shit why do i keep clicking this thread
― and what, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 18:48 (sixteen years ago) link
^^^^^^
― Alex in Baltimore, Wednesday, 29 August 2007 18:58 (sixteen years ago) link