Rolling Teenpop 2007 Thread

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xp: Why avoid them??? Europe is so lucky!!!

Myspace etc. bring Italy into the equation:

http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendID=96168005

http://www.holly-dolly.eu/

Aren't Tokio Hotel sort of a glam-rock band?

xhuxk, Sunday, 22 April 2007 20:13 (seventeen years ago) link

14-year-old new metallers, if I remember rightly, though they aren't especially heavy. Lead singer is a boy who could best be described as 'androgynous'.

William Bloody Swygart, Sunday, 22 April 2007 20:21 (seventeen years ago) link

Omg. Just the idea of Jordan Sparks doing "You'll Never Walk Alone" from Carousel makes shivers go down my back. I haven't heard it yet, but I'm calling greatest performance of Sparks all season.

Mordechai Shinefield, Tuesday, 24 April 2007 22:47 (seventeen years ago) link

*deep breath* Wow.

Mordechai Shinefield, Wednesday, 25 April 2007 01:01 (seventeen years ago) link

kinda pitchy but she did her thing, she sold it all the way, she's the best

Dimension 5ive, Wednesday, 25 April 2007 01:44 (seventeen years ago) link

It was good but her emotion continues to be well ahead of her singing. She's still my fave.

Greg Fanoe, Wednesday, 25 April 2007 02:04 (seventeen years ago) link

Translating "Never Again" from what's here to a NIN song would take almost no effort.

i, grey, Wednesday, 25 April 2007 07:47 (seventeen years ago) link

As for "angry" being a surprise--I thought "angry" was an integral part of the whole Kelly thing; it's there under most everything she sings, giving texture if only that.

i, grey, Wednesday, 25 April 2007 07:50 (seventeen years ago) link

Why not, Rolling RD for...what's today...4/25/07: New Hannah Montana (don't remember what it sounds like) on top, two covers by the newly-diabetic Jonas Brothers make 2 and 3, Akon delivers on my promise for him to be the "closest 'Ignition Remix' gets to Radio Disney" by debuting at 11 with "Don't Matter," no sign of the muthafuckin princess (duh). Ever(onicas)life seems to have petered out after the, like, eighth best song on Secret Life Of... fails to pass the TEST OF TIME. In the mailbag: Nickelodeon penetrates the Disneyverse with Naked Brothers Band (but barely, so it probably won't go too far -- more boys who sing like girls, anyway). Does the girl in that new show iCarly sing? I remember her being the band manager in School of Rock, should probably get the cross-promo pop album gravy train started up soon if she can sing. In the incubator: Bittersweet, who I can't seem to stream more than two seconds at a time at the moment.

And if you haven't been paying attention, Hilary Duff looks like this now:

http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y95/nameom/hilaryandroid.jpg

dabug, Wednesday, 25 April 2007 22:31 (seventeen years ago) link

Slight resemblance?

dabug, Wednesday, 25 April 2007 22:38 (seventeen years ago) link

how can I hear all these new hannah montana singles? I can't find a myspace for her, nor are they on any of the music download sites I frequent.

Matt Armstrong, Thursday, 26 April 2007 04:33 (seventeen years ago) link

Listen to Radio Disney (streaming online at their website http://www.radiodisney.com, now whether ya like it or not) for about...oh, twelve minutes or so.

dabug, Thursday, 26 April 2007 04:37 (seventeen years ago) link

(requires Internet Explorer and does not like Firefox very much at all.)

dabug, Thursday, 26 April 2007 04:38 (seventeen years ago) link

Plus there's youtube: Nobodys Perfect. Not great quality. Also not a great song.

dabug, Thursday, 26 April 2007 04:46 (seventeen years ago) link

Dave, I agree that "Nobody's Perfect" and "Make Some Noise" are some pretty weak Hannah Montana songs. Disappointing!

Greg Fanoe, Thursday, 26 April 2007 13:33 (seventeen years ago) link

By the way "Girlfriend" jumps to number one and is the first non-R&B, non-American idol proper pop song to reach number one in...god, years ("Bad Day" and "You're Beautiful" were number one last year but not proper pop!). OK, I'll actually look it up. Since "Come On Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" by Xtina in 2000!

Greg Fanoe, Thursday, 26 April 2007 13:55 (seventeen years ago) link

Tim, upthread:

Ashlee's probing and restless braniacity is also to some extent her "rockism", although there's perhaps a separate "rockism" at work in the way in which that is recognised by almost no rock critics.

Change "rock critics" to "listeners" and I'm very interested in this sort of thing. Reasonable people can differ on what constitutes an attempt at legitimacy, but I think there are times when we can all agree that someone's making a stab at it, when they're trying not to be successful or make what they want to make but to be taken seriously. (These times include maybe pianos, string sections, or Diane Warren.) And what happens when these attempts (which I think can be viewed as an attempt at establishing yourself, which is to say trying to gain job security) fail? When it's seen as a calculated move and it backfires? I think this is a key dynamic in teenpop right now--the artist's swing from "I want to be successful" to "I want to be taken seriously" to "whoops, I want to be successful again and/or do what I actually want, since the whole legitimacy thing isn't going to work." Not saying it happens in everyone, but it's happening with some artists, and curious how it might look without the second step, or if the second step succeeded, or what.

Not really sure where to go with this, but I'm really interested in stuff that's trying to be chart pop but doesn't get accepted as such.

Eppy, Thursday, 26 April 2007 16:52 (seventeen years ago) link

How is "Come On Over" not R&B but "Sexyback" is? And "Bad Day" isn't proper pop? WTF is proper pop?

da croupier, Thursday, 26 April 2007 16:57 (seventeen years ago) link

As you've excluded british ballads I can't even assume you're talking about aryan majesty or something.

If we exclude balladry, it's the first rock song to hit #1 since "How You Remind Me," though!

da croupier, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:02 (seventeen years ago) link

I've been trying to explore some of this in recent columns, and might do something on "seriousness" in the "take me seriously" sense, what "seriously" might mean (the hair thing was hinting at some of these ideas). What's exciting about teenpop artists is that there's no real outline for them; they're kind of making it up as they go along, and a lot of them are making it up at the same time. So you see weird stuff like Lindsay disses as both an attempt to be more fun (Ashlee) and an attempt to be more "serious" (Hilary), hair color as indicator of the paradox of "legitimacy," seemingly arbitrary differentiation (I'm not fake like [insert commonly-perceived-as-"illegitimate" artist], I'm real like [insert commonly-perceived-as-"illegitimate" artist]). It's like what Tom mentioned, where a friend discounted Kelly Clarkson as part of a class of people that (presumably) includes Britney, Lindsay, Ashlee. Whereas in the complicated and sort of arbitrary legitimacy terrain within teenpop, it's Lindsay and Paris (fake) versus Kelly Clarkson (real).

There seems to be a kind of incipient anarchy happening in regard to legitimacy as involvement in corporate/institutional models of record distribution -- also a big issue in indie music, where indie has come to mean something social in distinction rather than aesthetic or economic -- with broad, confusing indicators of personality (type of dress, hair color, "stupid girls" kinda stuff) becoming a vague symbol of imminent doom thru excess capitalistic whatever (Hilary to LiLo: "can't buy respect but you can pick up the bill"). These positions are clearly ridiculous and essentially random (like most "positions" on Paris Hilton), mostly because this is playing out like improv, where the scene is developing and you have to stay true to it, regardless of how bizarre it gets. (And, like in improv, you NEVER deny the scene, you have to play by the rules as they're being made.)

dabug, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:09 (seventeen years ago) link

My definition of R&B for the above, which is admittedly rather inclusive, is hit the R&B charts. Which excludes some probably not-R&B songs like "Hollaback Girl" or "SOS" but I mean something that isn't even arguably R&B. "SexyBack" is R&B because it hit #11 on the R&B charts. As far as I know, and heck I may be wrong, "Come On Over" didn't make an impact on the R&B charts. Though I agree that "Come On Over" is probably about as R&B as "SexyBack" or "SOS" or whatever, I'm just going off of what the R&B stations actually played. Probably speaks more to the broadening of R&B radio than anything else, but that's a topic for a different thread.

"Bad Day" and "You're Beautiful" were both Top 40 hits, not genre hits at all, which makes them proper pop, of course. I was just making a bit of a joke (ie I don't like the songs and therefore they are not PROPER POP). In any event, when it comes to a fun, poppy, non-genre hit, this is the first example of that type to hit #1 since Xtina. ("Butterfly" and "How You Remind Me" also hit number 1 between Xtina and Avril, but those are modern rock songs).

xpost, I strictly mean the US Billboard Hot 100, which is all I can speak to.

Greg Fanoe, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:13 (seventeen years ago) link

xpost to Dave

Also kinda interested in how this'll all be viewed years down the line--for instance, some of those trying-to-be-pop groups I'm talking about (like, to pick an example only useful to me, Mpath) are I guess analagous to what we might regard today as "lost soul classics," people working a popular sound but failing to find popularity. (Or are they? Are they more equivalent to, I dunno, failed crooners, who no one really cares about even now?)

Who'll be first-tier in thirty years? Who'll be an also-ran? This is another aspect of legitimacy, although I'm unclear exactly how much any of the teenpop artists have their eye on the judgments of history etc. etc.

Eppy, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:14 (seventeen years ago) link

A new rock #1! Totally missed that. Will people see it as such, though?

(if this were the rest of ILX I would post some sort of crying-eagle jpeg with a "our long national nightmare is over" tag or something)

Eppy, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:15 (seventeen years ago) link

(Oh, and it seems relevent to me because in Sasha's EMP talk about the 01-02 Hot 100 charts and R&B's dominance on such he mentioned Nickleback right at the start.)

Eppy, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:16 (seventeen years ago) link

And also, just to make this perfectly clear, I like many/most of the R&B songs that hit number one between Nickelback and James Blunt

Greg Fanoe, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:16 (seventeen years ago) link

I don't think most people see Blunt as rock, maybe because it kinda sounds like some of Xtina's recent ballads.

Eppy, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:18 (seventeen years ago) link

Weird thing about it is, it just snuck up overnight. In 00, about half the number ones were non-R&B. In 01, you had 3 or 4. Then wham, none for 5 years. "Girlfriend" won't be seen as a rock #1 because it gets no play on rock stations. Blunt isn't rock because he wasn't played on the rock stations. Thems the breaks.

Greg Fanoe, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:19 (seventeen years ago) link

Mildly interesting how teenpop has complicated the genre of rock.

When Sasha was reading his paper (dunno if you were there or not, Greg), he just read out the title of the #1 song for each week as a poem or something. It was fairly effective--just total dominance for a few tracks, and almost all of those R&B. Also, kind of a conversation.

Eppy, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:22 (seventeen years ago) link

(Heh, can anybody tell I'm trying to avoid doing work right now)

Dave, thought you might be interested in hearing this, which I heard a DJ saying on the radio this afternoon: "I think it's funny how when Avril first came up, she was all like 'No, I'm not in league with Britney or whoever. I want to be taken seriously. I am a serious musician. But now she's all like 'well, never mind that, I'm just fun and poppy'."

Greg Fanoe, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:25 (seventeen years ago) link

In 00, about half the number ones were non-R&B. In 01, you had 3 or 4. Then wham, none for 5 years.

there were several non-R&B #1s. you've listed some yourself.

da croupier, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:25 (seventeen years ago) link

they were by american idol contestant and balladeers, but still.

da croupier, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:25 (seventeen years ago) link

uptempo teenpop artists did either drop in sales or move towards R&B this decade though, yes.

da croupier, Thursday, 26 April 2007 17:29 (seventeen years ago) link

Who'll be first-tier in thirty years? Who'll be an also-ran? This is another aspect of legitimacy, although I'm unclear exactly how much any of the teenpop artists have their eye on the judgments of history etc. etc.

When the dust settles on the big tabloid boom, I hope that a lot of people are embarrassed by how they conducted themselves on all sides. A lot of the misogyny (in particular) is just awful, regardless of how awful the subjects are, and I hope that any kind of revisionism will at least recognize how out of control the emphasis on personal responsibility of teenpop/tabloid celebs in the perpetuation of their image is ("it's not news when you get a new bag, it's not news when somebody slaps you," says Hil, as if Lindsay is asking for it). But I doubt this will happen, more likely people will think "remember Lindsay and Paris and Britney? *shudder* GROSS, but at least there were some fun tunes."

dabug, Thursday, 26 April 2007 18:25 (seventeen years ago) link

Re: Avril, Greg, when I use the (admittedly stupid) term post-teenpop, I'm getting at what I think is happening with Avril, i.e., she's simultaneously pandering to and insulting her intended audience. Like, here's your teenpop, but we all know this is really stupid *wink*. It's aggressive, way too self-conscious (which is strange because when Skye did what might be the most self-conscious version of a "Girlfriend"-like song with "Hypocrite," it was endearing, mostly because she's really saying she LIKES this kinda music, this is really her; whereas with Avril, it's implied that this isn't really her, it's this little pop starlet character she's constructed for everyone).

dabug, Thursday, 26 April 2007 18:37 (seventeen years ago) link

they more equivalent to, I dunno, failed crooners, who no one really cares about even now?

There are plenty of really bizarre casualties of c. 2000 teenpop, groups like Gemz or Valli Girls or Brittney Cleary (before she became Nikki Cleary -- her second incarnation isn't quite in this category), the stuff I totally missed out on then and only even know about by the scant writing there was about them at the time. I'm still trying to get RD playlists for 1996-2003 or so to find more...Swirl 360 etc. (You could also check out the Radio Disney incubator, which houses a ton of more recent examples of nobody cares at all [but me] artists).

Another group, closer to the "lost soul classics," but probably not "long lost but great" to anyone too far outside this thread (until one of us writes a book or puts out a compilation or starts a Serious(ly good) Magazine to canonize some of this stuff hinthinthint) will be artists like Fefe Dobson and Hope Partlow and Lillix, the wannabe-never-wases (but came sorta close). Hope Skye isn't in this category.

(In the above post I'm really talking more about the people who were big big big but totally loathed in their time.)

dabug, Thursday, 26 April 2007 21:15 (seventeen years ago) link

oh wow, that last Gemz album, which I had no idea even existed until dabug just mentioned it, has some good songs on it! "You Can Call Me" is good stuff.

The album cover is absolutely dreadful, reminiscent of the great-bad album covers of the 80s:

http://ec1.images-amazon.com/images/P/B000E5N6C0.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_V46063834_SS500_.jpg

apparently this one came out last year, but I don't see it on TP2k6. Maybe the album cover turned everyone off.

Matt Armstrong, Thursday, 26 April 2007 23:09 (seventeen years ago) link

Who'll be first-tier in thirty years? Who'll be an also-ran? This is another aspect of legitimacy, although I'm unclear exactly how much any of the teenpop artists have their eye on the judgments of history etc. etc.

the issue of legitimacy is a really interesting discussion, because i think it's linked to the declining popularity of teenpop. as i recall, in the early 00s the trend in teenpop seemed to be one of attempting to legitimise itself, and in a specific way - deliberately taking on signifiers of rock authenticity (guitars/real instruments (played by artist), confessional/personal lyrics (written by artist)). i'm thinking avril, michelle branch, vanessa carlton. partly i guess this was consumer backlash over out-and-out plastic, sexualised pop like britney and xtina, partly because this was clearly a generation of girls whose formative music was alanis morissette, tori amos et al, now coming of age.

but it was still teenpop, by virtue of its marketing,the fact that they were still pretty young girls, and not as off-kilter as amos/morisette, and this completely precluded acceptance by an actual rock audience. BUT the way they wore their legitimising rock signifiers was possibly a kind of gateway drug to their fans, maybe? leading to the indie boom amongst teenagers now, the 'hard stuff', and the a priori rejection of simpson/lohan/hilton because of who they are and what they've done.

thoughts are getting quite muddled here so i'll stop but the conclusion i was aiming for was that it feels weird that teenpop wears more legitimating signifiers than ever before - including the "no one likes it, a lot of its stars toil in obscurity" - and the tension of how to square that with teenpop's traditional assumption of commercial pre-eminence is pretty interesting.

lex pretend, Friday, 27 April 2007 10:07 (seventeen years ago) link

I don't remember when the Gemz album I have is from (got it in a batch of Metal Mike's dollar bin dupes)...I seem to remember weird classic rockish mystical-type lyrics over a more bubblegum teenrock sound but I'd have to listen again. Didn't know they were still making music!

Lex, I like your "gateway drug" idea but I don't think Avril, Branch et al were ever anywhere near in conversation with the type of indie that's taken off in the past couple of years. I think that can be traced to increasing web exposure, film crossovers, the general "professionalization" of indie (h/t Eppy), etc. I did mention this re: twin-pop once, though, that it's funny that one of the attractions of twin-pop/sib-pop etc. is a legit performance thing, i.e. two people singing at the same time! But again, this is intra-teenpop legitimacy, which is kind of its own language, since anyone making a distinction between legit and illegit-rock in the first place isn't likely to ever even give this stuff a chance.

Honestly, I really think the artists and producers are just winging it. Kara's denunciation of "La La" is upsetting, but also kind of arbitrary -- what is it about that particular song that's morally questionable to her? Especially since, having written it, she should know that it's deceptively complex and actually empowering if you listen to it on its own (Kara and Ashlee's own) terms? And if it's a front, who's she fronting to, for, etc?

dabug, Friday, 27 April 2007 16:12 (seventeen years ago) link

teenpop wears more legitimating signifiers than ever before - including the "no one likes it, a lot of its stars toil in obscurity"

And is this true? I mean, we say this (I know I do), but I think the fundamental assumption -- and one thing that differentiates teenpoppers from, say, indie artists -- is that they're trying to be famous, going for the superstar audience. They're "Imaginary Superstars," as Skye'd say. So the fact that the Veronicas and Fefe and Lillix and whoever else don't sell may be true, but they're sort of presenting themselves as if they're not toiling in obscurity, that obscurity is a temporary inconvenience, which means that there's nothing to "square" w/r/t commercial viability.

Even the post-teenpoppers like Shut Up Stella -- recently signed to Epic -- have the goal of being big big big, they're not OK with settling with the middle of the road or moderate concessions to commercialism that most indie artists make. They want to right the wrongs of Lindsay & Paris by shouting it to the world and selling a million records. It would be interesting if they professed NOT to want celebrity, but they're really advocating a kind of celebrity-corrective -- "we should have celebs in the normal fashion/system, but they should act like, look like, say *this*...Hilary is doing this in "Dignity" (the song), too, and P!nk is doing it in "Stupid Girls."

dabug, Friday, 27 April 2007 16:22 (seventeen years ago) link

WTF is that Gemz cover, that is the ugliest thing I have ever seen.

The professionalisation/cross-media-pollination of indie point is important. I look at my little sister who was 12 when "Baby One More Time" came out, and she totally gets her current tastes from Garden State/Grey's Anatomy kind of exposure. It's not enough for music to be soundtrack to life-ish - it has to make it onto a soundtrack!

Tim F, Friday, 27 April 2007 16:45 (seventeen years ago) link

Actually, now that you've said that, there is a sort of oblique connection btw teenpop and indie as "gateway" (or something like that) with soundtrack albums, in that now the trend is for OSTs to be sort of indie-sympathetic (Garden State, Veronica Mars, etc.) whereas back in 2000, or even in the early 00s when Lindsay started to get big, you'd have teenpop (the only place to find Melissa Lefton is on OSTs) or, a little later, a "gateway" band covering, e.g. "Baby One More Time" in a slightly indier fashion (like on the Freaky Friday OST, also LiLo's musical debut). And now, kid soundtracks are pretty much the best place to find a range of current teenpop. (Very different musical climate recorded over on that Crow OST thread!)

dabug, Friday, 27 April 2007 17:29 (seventeen years ago) link

Also pertinent to this whole discussion: Megan McCauley might have "pulled a Mandy" (h/t Eppy again) faster than any teenpop personality in history. Maura (does she post here?) @ idolator tipped me to this:

OK, now that our latest comunication gap has been breeched... I feel safe to say, that I am a bit proud of myself today. I took my own advise and stood up for what I believe in. I have consulted with the forces that be, and in a more civil and professional vocabulary, I politely expressed my current feels, which are as follows:



I CAN'T TAKE IT ANYMORE!

I AM A BLUES SINGER

I WOULD RATHER NEVER SING ANOTHER NOTE IN MY LIFE THAN REALEASE THESE POP SONGS!



And I am proud to inform you, that they agreed! TAP THAT IS G-O-N-E! That booty shakin music isn't me! I've decided that when I'm not myself...I SUCK! I have to be ME. Not a fuckin Pussy Cat Doll...although that "Buttons" song is off the heezy!


I hate myself for contributing to this new fad, where everyone sings the same song with different lyrics and we happily smile, as we knowingly deface music!

The whole reason I wanted to sing was to change the world...

dabug, Friday, 27 April 2007 17:32 (seventeen years ago) link

xpost to Tim
This is probably something I should've pursued with my paper more, but I'm curious when exactly shows started using "real" songs as their soundtrack. The TV usages of "Hallelujah" really started to crop up in 2002, but maybe it comes from the "killer soundtrack" phenomenon of the 90s--The Crow, Trainspotting, Pulp Fiction, etc. Once music is discovered through its wedding to visual images it becomes natural to think of music in terms of visual images rather than the music itself etc. etc. I should look that up.

xpost to Dave
The analogy I'm trying to make would be easier if I was a bigger rock nerd. Maybe I'm trying to say that teenpop right now is like Lauren Canyon? No, apparently that's too self-consciously arty, according to the internet. I guess I maybe mean like Motown. The performers differ but the same background players crop up on different recordings, it's aiming for commercial viability but some people don't make it, etc. And nowadays it seems like there's a sort of implied hierarchy of Motown artists that doesn't necessarily have to do with their commercial success, and there's an appreciation for some of the "minor" artists who might have slipped through the cracks at the time.

Eppy, Friday, 27 April 2007 17:37 (seventeen years ago) link

Actually that second xpost was more to Lex. Or everyone. Whatever.

Eppy, Friday, 27 April 2007 17:38 (seventeen years ago) link

(Notice the Freudian slip in "REALEASE"...ya got some issues, Meg.) xpost

dabug, Friday, 27 April 2007 17:41 (seventeen years ago) link

I agree with you, and I think if history's kind to teenpop since the late 90s, we might get a killer Back to Mono-style retrospective of, e.g., Max Martin (and later Max/Luke) or Kara or John Shanks. But there are also artists that didn't just fall through the cracks of the not-even-close variety (maybe this isn't so much like the crooners, though). (And again I should point out that people on this thread could be the very ones to create something like a Back to Max, or foster an environment in which there's a collector's or appreciator's or whatever desire for this kind of thing. (But I hesitate to say any of this, really, since right now I'm much more interested in recognizing the music where it exists -- I mean, almost every artist I've named as a never-was is still trying to get their career going.)

dabug, Friday, 27 April 2007 17:50 (seventeen years ago) link

http://hotstufffiles.com/imagegallery/data/media/2/shakira_2.jpg

Shakira stealing her new look from Gemz.

also shakira hit number 1 last year - she's not R&B or balladeer or AI?

danzig, Friday, 27 April 2007 18:21 (seventeen years ago) link

As often as I feel bad focusing almost solely on widely-known music, I really do think there's something important about making that jump into a place where the mainstream can be conscious of you. It changes the art and it changes the artists. So like teenpop is just not analogous to a local scene or whatever, even if it shares some of its qualities (insular, self-referential, internicine rivalries and jealousies and backbiting and mate-swapping). Even if people didn't know about Gemz, the fact that they're working in the same context as H-Duff means you can't treat them like any of the things they would normally be (kiddie music, dance music, rock music). I don't entirely know how this applies to the current discussion but it seems to. I think the term Eric of Marathonpacks used was "affective potency." Which sounds SUPER DIRTY.

Eppy, Friday, 27 April 2007 19:10 (seventeen years ago) link

Everyone should read/respond to Koganbot's latest blog post, btw, but maybe he'll xpost here himself.

dabug, Friday, 27 April 2007 19:20 (seventeen years ago) link

Been thinking about this comment from Eppy:

I think there are times when we can all agree that someone's making a stab at it, when they're trying not to be successful or make what they want to make but to be taken seriously. (These times include maybe pianos, string sections, or Diane Warren.)

Funny, because the three things listed are things I think you don't do if you're trying to be taken seriously. (They're things you do if you're Aerosmith and you want to not matter anymore.)

But what's more interesting to me is those three categories: successful, serious, and making what you want to make. Whereas where I come from, "serious" and "making what you want to make" are the exact same thing. I mean, you can have illegitimate pop--like when Jewel did "Intuition" and everyone hated it even more than Britney, because Britney was "at least" "really" a pop artist, and then the only way Jewel could do damage control was to say she did a pop album because she wanted to do a pop album. Britney was okay because she was serious about pop--you could dismiss her by dismissing pop, but you couldn't dismiss her. And Jewel's still suspect, even now, everybody's like, "Oh, so you're a country artist today? Sure."

Which is why I think indie teens are direct descendants of Michelle Branch fans. Looking at people, say, five years younger than me, they were first forming their ideas about music when singer-songwriter pop was hitting it big, everyone was being branded as "the anti-Britney," and the idea being ingrained was that you shouldn't let record companies feed you pre-fab pop. Because that was uncool! (Plus suddenly you were able to download music for free, and the dominant justification for doing so was that the artist or the record company "didn't deserve my money." So you didn't buy music you wanted to hear, you bought music you wanted to support.) And so we got singer-songwriters, but then singer-songwriters seemed like pre-fab pop, so we got rebellious singer-songwriters, but then rebellious singer-songwriters seemed like pre-fab pop--so now we're off in the indie world, where we know these artists aren't label creations because they aren't on labels. And/or we want pop that is really seriously pop, like Gwen and Fergie.

Nia, Friday, 27 April 2007 21:25 (seventeen years ago) link


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