Britney Spears: Classic or Dud?

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (280 of them)
Cinniblount, the best example of what I'm talking about is what you've been doing since I first posted on this thread.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 18 November 2004 04:53 (nineteen years ago) link

Tim, I really, really like your writing, but I don't get your piece. It seems like you're praising the song for having the same childish view of love expressed in about half a million other love songs. Most of the more interesting reflections on love here are coming from you, not the lyrics. Sure, even the adult longs sometimes for that sense of love, but that very sense is the typical stuff of teen love songs.

I could certainly tell you what I don't like about this song -- the cliched lyrics, the rhyming couplets that sound like they came from an internet love song generator "since you've been gone"/"carry on," "give you my world"/"be your girl", "you and me/way our life should be," etc.

The only thing I do find interesting at all is the subtle creepiness of her saying "I was born to make you happy."

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 18 November 2004 05:04 (nineteen years ago) link

For me ne of the key aspects of that song's success (and this is true of a lot of Britney stuff and a lot of stuff i like generally) is that it does something quite unusual and unexpected with its stereotypical lyrics - Britney's performance makes the song for me.

I'm fascinated by popular culture which attempts to describe the experience of adolescence because we all live our adolescence via a constant negotiation between our own personal experience and the cultural stereotypes which surround us - 2 and a half years on from being a teenager, I find it difficult to tease apart the reality and the myths in my own memories of the period. The importance of these myths to me as I was growing up (despite their strong differences to my own experiences) renders a lot of this stuff somehow very personal-feeling to me.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 18 November 2004 05:30 (nineteen years ago) link

Hmm. The first paragraph of your last post I guess is subjective so I don't want to belabor it (though I personally don't find anything unusual about what she does with her nearly ready-made lyrics and sentiment).

As far as the second paragraph, I feel like you're more getting into Britney's music as an object of cultural inquiry than as songcraft, music, or whatever. There's nothing wrong with doing this, but it could just as easily be done with a song you don't like. I don't think it's valid to say that a song is good because it's a good starting point for exploring adolescence in our culture.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 18 November 2004 05:38 (nineteen years ago) link

Hurting I meant that it was viscerally fascinating for me - I'm drawn to this stuff on an emotional level because of the cultural cues (not all songs about adolescence will do this of course, it's about the intertwined operation of the music, the performance, the lyrics, the moment in time I hear it, the video clip, the film tie-in, and so on right down the line). This is not an argument for why you should like Britney of course, I'm just trying to show the workings behind my appreciation of Britney so that you know we're not all sitting here thinking "Britney rocks rockism sucks" over and over again.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 18 November 2004 05:44 (nineteen years ago) link

No way dude, I don't get your point. Britney SUCKS! Rockism ROCKS!

Seriously, if you connect with the song on an emotional level, more power to you.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 18 November 2004 05:51 (nineteen years ago) link

A ways up thread...

I believe there's these things called 'turning off the radio' and 'iPods' and the like which can help you in this regard.

-- Ned Raggett

Ned I'd have to go one step further there and suggest we experiment with not turning the radio on in the first place.

martin m. (mushrush), Thursday, 18 November 2004 07:07 (nineteen years ago) link

haha what have i 'been doing since you first posted on this thread'??? is asking someone to clarify or explain what they mean some grand anti-rockist plot? show me one example of anything you're talking about when you're talking about anti-rockists. how is 'what are you talking about?' an outrageous request?

cinniblount (James Blount), Thursday, 18 November 2004 07:09 (nineteen years ago) link

Replace your mental image of Britney with oh I don't know... Bea Arthur. How do you think that would fly?

ihttp://www.popcultureshock.com/reviews/2820/2820_2.jpg

B.A.R.M.S. (Barima), Thursday, 18 November 2004 09:52 (nineteen years ago) link

i prefer john coltrane or gustav mahler.

debden, Thursday, 18 November 2004 10:05 (nineteen years ago) link

The Britney entity has meant a suprising amount to me.

B.A.R.M.S. (Barima), Thursday, 18 November 2004 10:13 (nineteen years ago) link

I'll always have a deeper love for music that I find more engaging and complex, as opposed to fun songs with hot beats

Why is it that repeatedly, time and time again, people can't seem to understand that 'engaging and complex' is not mutually exclusive with 'a fun song with hot beats'? I mean Tim linked to that Born To Make You Happy article which is one of the best examples of disproving that, but noooo, the rockists must insist on sticking their heads in the sand.

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 18 November 2004 11:32 (nineteen years ago) link

and Hurting and darin have not once managed to criticise Britney's music beyond making vague noises about her voice! Listen, you can't get offended that no one understands why you don't like Britney if you don't elaborate.

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 18 November 2004 11:33 (nineteen years ago) link

The best part of arguments like these is no matter how eloquent the opposition can be, they struggle far harder to comprehend the positives than the other side does with them.

B.A.R.M.S. (Barima), Thursday, 18 November 2004 11:52 (nineteen years ago) link

Hurting, the reason that most of these posts are just "yay Britney!" and stuff is because they were written in 2001. ILM was a different place now: back then it was mostly a close community of like-minded ppl, now it's a pretty gigantic forum of tons of diferent ppl with diferent viewpoints. Thus, you're more likely to get called on stuff now than you were then.

Daniel_Rf (Daniel_Rf), Thursday, 18 November 2004 11:53 (nineteen years ago) link

What grounds would you card-carrying non-rockists accept as valid for criticising Britney Spears anyway?

I don't hate her, but I don't like her much either, it's just a general shoulder-shrugging indifference. I don't have any profound non-subjective reasons for my indifference. Off the top of my head, I'd say: her personality as I perceive it doesn't attract me much; she has a very bland California-type beauty that doesn't appeal to me; the song structures are predictable; the lyrics are pretty banal, and even if they weren't, they're talking about things that don't interest me; the songs don't fuck with the genre, they smoothly go along with the genre; the whole ambience of the songs/image etc smacks of an unimaginative narrow minded vision of the world/America/adolescence/sexual relationships, etc.; I don't like that she's such a big Bush supporter; her voice doesn't sound particularly bad to me, merely ordinary and uninteresting; I'm not much interested in the gossip mag celebrity culture she's part of and typifies; she's a photofit celeb of the late nineties... etc., etc.

I'm fully aware that some of those judgement criteria can be labelled as "rockist", and I don't much care, I don't see them as anything higher than personal preference and I'm certainly not claiming Spears is less authentic than the people I like, merely less interesting to me.

F.R. Leavis, Thursday, 18 November 2004 11:56 (nineteen years ago) link

For the record F.R., I don't care much about Britney either, and if she had come along a bit sooner I guess I would have been young enough to even hate her for a while, but:

the songs don't fuck with the genre, they smoothly go along with the genre

So I take it you've never heard the one with the Ying Yang Twins and the banjos?

Daniel_Rf (Daniel_Rf), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:06 (nineteen years ago) link

"I don't hate her, but I don't like her much either, it's just a general shoulder-shrugging indifference."

otm

latebloomer (latebloomer), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:06 (nineteen years ago) link

or indeed "I'm A Slave 4 U"

(xpost)

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:07 (nineteen years ago) link

also: Britney has songs about the world/America?

Daniel_Rf (Daniel_Rf), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:09 (nineteen years ago) link

No, she leaves those to her ex-backing singer.

B.A.R.M.S. (Barima), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:20 (nineteen years ago) link

To be honest, my knowledge of Britney is none too profound, and maybe she has made some genre-bending tracks, but her huge hits of the oops and hit me baby variety are exercises in smooth, seamless blandness in every way as far as I can see.

Songs about the world/America - I just mean the type of ideology that can be read off her songs, the type of worlds she's singing about, and they don't seem startlingly original.

F.R. Leavis, Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:20 (nineteen years ago) link

'Toxic' is clearly about WMD

'Born To Make You Happy' is TOTALLY about America!

Freelance Hiveminder (blueski), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:25 (nineteen years ago) link

Other genre-fucking joints on the last album: 'Showdown', 'Brave New Girl', 'The Hook-Up' (spectral-voiced white girl sings reggae wtf?), 'Toxic', 'Early Mornin' (listenable Moby omg).

F.R., your Britney song references are years out of date, please become contemporary. And maybe get an angular haircut.

B.A.R.M.S. (Barima), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:26 (nineteen years ago) link

"I'm A Slave 4U" was a pretty gigantic hit though, and yeah, embracing the Neptunes was breaking all sorts of molds, for that time.

I'd like her Max Martin era much better if I thought it was "smooth" and "seamless", actually.

Daniel_Rf (Daniel_Rf), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:27 (nineteen years ago) link

I'd argue that "Everytime" is pretty genre-fucking as well, Tim and I concluded that it was in fact a micro-power-ballad.

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:28 (nineteen years ago) link

"Songs about the world/America - I just mean the type of ideology that can be read off her songs, the type of worlds she's singing about, and they don't seem startlingly original. "

Argh surface level reading of ideology in pop songs argh!

deconstruction or post-marxism or hell anything to thread!

"I'd argue that "Everytime" is pretty genre-fucking as well, Tim and I concluded that it was in fact a micro-power-ballad. "

Did we file a report on the matter?

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:29 (nineteen years ago) link

can we just ignore this whole 'reading ideology off Britney songs' trope that FR is trying to push, it is very stupid mentalism.

I suspect we did file a report Tim.

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:30 (nineteen years ago) link

Thing is Alex I enjoy ideological interpretations of pop culture but not those which sound like they got their definition of ideology off a Socialist Alternative leaflet.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:35 (nineteen years ago) link

During the Max Martin years, she had her moments (of course Mr. Martin is the one who deserves praise for whatever good stuff she released). "Oops I Did It Again" is a great pop song, as is "Stronger".

However, after she parted with Martin, virtually everything she has done has been the same awful R&B crap that has dominated most of the current hitlists. And she herself never had any talent for anything but dancing and acting anyway. DUD!

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:50 (nineteen years ago) link

I find it odd that Geir credits Britney with being a talented actress (after Crossroads!) but not a talented singer.

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:52 (nineteen years ago) link

"can we just ignore this whole 'reading ideology off Britney songs' trope that FR is trying to push, it is very stupid mentalism."

I think that's a bit more snotty than necessary, and a rather rank-pulling means of dismissing an argument without actually having to do so.

I freely admitted to being fairly indifferent to Britney, and to having no great depth of knowledge about her oeuvre. I do hope you're not going to pull some rockist crap on me that my opinion is worth less because of it? I didn't mean 'reading ideology off Britney songs' in any particular technical way, just a very general impression of a world view I got from listening to her. And if you can't do the occasional superficial reading of a lyric of a pop song of someone you're not especially interested in, what is the world coming to? Superficiality is one of the things that makes pop music great.

F.R. Leavis, Thursday, 18 November 2004 12:58 (nineteen years ago) link

I find it odd that Geir can't tell the difference between 'I Love Rock'n'Roll' and current R&B. Actually, no I don't.

FR, if you're going to be indifferent to Britney in the first place and then spout off cursory analysis of her music that is neither noteworthy nor substantial, well...

B.A.R.M.S. (Barima), Thursday, 18 November 2004 13:02 (nineteen years ago) link

Ha ha mental gymnastics at work, Mr Leavis. Superficiality makes pop music great therefore we should superficially dismiss pop music on the basis of superficial readings of their ideology which conclude that they're not original?

The problem with this is that you're trying to use a very serious criteria (let's call it "ideological innovation") in order to make a somewhat profound statement (let's paraphrase it as "the worldview as expressed in Britney's songs is a tired reiteration of America's most unpleasant ideological characteristics) based on an entirely superficial reading of the song, which you justify on the basis that the music shouldn't be taken seriously anyway?

(btw this is me engaging w/ your arguments, not dismissing or disallowing them)

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 18 November 2004 13:06 (nineteen years ago) link

xpost

It's sort of damned if you do and damned if you do, though, isn't it? I responded originally because someone upthread commented that the people who didn't like Britney couldn't muster anything more significant reason than they didn't like her voice. But if you don't particularly like someone, you're not going to be hugely acquainted with their output, so you're hardly going to be in a position to give a closely read textural analysis are you? So the next step is to dismiss your views as too cursory.

F.R. Leavis, Thursday, 18 November 2004 13:08 (nineteen years ago) link

xpost

Tim, you are indeed engaging. Unfortunately I have work to do that can't wait, but thanks for the interesting discussion!

F.R. Leavis, Thursday, 18 November 2004 13:11 (nineteen years ago) link

Thank you Mr Leavis! I thought you wrote about D H Lawrence quite engagingly BTW and I even agreed with you on occasion.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 18 November 2004 13:14 (nineteen years ago) link

the songs don't fuck with the genre, they smoothly go along with the genre

So I take it you've never heard the one with the Ying Yang Twins and the banjos?

-- Daniel_Rf (filosofiaebolacha...), November 18th, 2004.

that IS its own genre:

According to pitchfork, "wtf" is a genre now.

latebloomer (latebloomer), Thursday, 18 November 2004 13:30 (nineteen years ago) link

It's sort of damned if you do and damned if you do, though, isn't it?

Not exactly. I was pointing out possibilities for why Alex and Tim weren't taken with your posts. I personally don't feel the need to engage with them, partly for the reasons above and things like this:

And if you can't do the occasional superficial reading of a lyric of a pop song of someone you're not especially interested in, what is the world coming to? Superficiality is one of the things that makes pop music great.

If you're going to do such a thing, it lends itself to nothing positive because it's ultimately a way of furthering disinterest. And it renders the entire exercise even more pointless.

But if you don't particularly like someone, you're not going to be hugely acquainted with their output, so you're hardly going to be in a position to give a closely read textural analysis are you?

No one's actually damning you for this though. In fact, this would be the point where someone asks you to reconsider by recommending songs or simply stating "fair enough".

I think something interesting might come out of the potential dialogue between yourself and Tim.

B.A.R.M.S. (Barima), Thursday, 18 November 2004 13:38 (nineteen years ago) link

What Barms just said.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 18 November 2004 13:40 (nineteen years ago) link

TS (voice only): Britney Spears vs Belinda Carlisle

The Ghost of Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Thursday, 18 November 2004 14:30 (nineteen years ago) link

Belinda, but if Britney wants to do a cover of "La Luna", then fine by me.

edward o (edwardo), Thursday, 18 November 2004 16:29 (nineteen years ago) link

Britney plus Autotune sounds better than Belinda Carlisle did sans autotune in the 80s.

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Thursday, 18 November 2004 20:34 (nineteen years ago) link

And nobody knows what Britney sans Autotune sounds like.

martin m. (mushrush), Thursday, 18 November 2004 20:40 (nineteen years ago) link

nor does anyone know what wilco or franz ferdinand would sound like without electronic guitar tuners, but i don't hear anyone complaining about that.

fact checking cuz (fcc), Thursday, 18 November 2004 20:45 (nineteen years ago) link

That's not a valid analogy because a) presumably those guys (like most guitarists with even a decent ear) can actually tune an instrument to a reference pitch (like from a pitchpipe or a piano) without an electronic tuner if they have to.

Further, electronic guitar tuners aren't constantly looking for deviations in pitch and correcting them on the fly while somebody is playing.

martin m. (mushrush), Thursday, 18 November 2004 20:48 (nineteen years ago) link

I mean I was being facetious with the first comment, but there is a big difference.

martin m. (mushrush), Thursday, 18 November 2004 20:50 (nineteen years ago) link

actually, the professional music world is loaded with guitarists who couldn't tune a guitar without a tuner even if you gave them a reference pitch and pointed a gun at their head.

and also actually, autotune is commonly used to correct wayward instrumental playing in studios. maybe not as common as it's used to correct wayward pitch. but i can assure you it IS used for that.

fact checking cuz (fcc), Thursday, 18 November 2004 20:53 (nineteen years ago) link

oh, and one more thing: what makes you think britney can't sing reasonably on pitch if she has to?

fact checking cuz (fcc), Thursday, 18 November 2004 21:02 (nineteen years ago) link

That's what I meant by facetious... I've no idea how on pitch she is without Autotuner. I don't have a beef with the use of Autotuner, and I don't have some kind of rockist view that using it is any less "authentic" than using, say, delay, reverb or chorus, at least one of which can be heard on just about every vocal track from 1950 to the present.

I do know that everything I've heard of Britney's stuff smacks of Autotuner on the vocals, and yes, I can hear the effect. I've even used it on my own vocal tracks on occasion and I actually do own the software. (It's a legitimate registered copy even...)

Autotune is commonly used to correct the playing of bass, particularly fretless bass (where it much more possible to be slightly off even if your instrument is completely intonated and in tune). I've also been present at a recording session where it was used on a theramin... another instrument difficult to control with perfect pitch.

I have never seen or heard of Autotune being used on guitar although it's certainly possible. It'd have to be the software version though, as the hardware units simply don't track quickly enough to handle any kind of hammer-on or pull-off technique. Not to mention how badly the hardware box would completely freak out the second a guitarist hits more than one string at the same time.

I have never met a professional guitarist who can't at least tune a guitar to itself. But then, I grew up in Nashville where throwing 10 rocks means you injure 9 session guitarists and one struggle Christian or Country songwriter.

martin m. (mushrush), Thursday, 18 November 2004 21:34 (nineteen years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.