Found 143 bookmarks
Custom sorting
Brandon Soderberg: Nicki Minaj and 2 Chainz’ ‘Beez in the Trap’ (SPIN)
Brandon Soderberg: Nicki Minaj and 2 Chainz’ ‘Beez in the Trap’ (SPIN)
Nicki employs street hardness as a signifier of how great she is at rapping, not as an attempt to actually convince anybody that she's "hood" or any of that authenticity nonsense. She's successfully occupying the trap, ground zero for hardness, and calling its inhabitants "bitches," all to prove that she is the consummate rhyming bad-ass.
·spin.com·
Brandon Soderberg: Nicki Minaj and 2 Chainz’ ‘Beez in the Trap’ (SPIN)
Jenn Pelly: Mirrorring: Foreign Body (Pitchfork)
Jenn Pelly: Mirrorring: Foreign Body (Pitchfork)
There is a tendency among music critics to create sub-stories with records and impose narratives. We might identify with a hardcore punk group this year because we are a restless generation, or with a work of hyperactive pop because the internet has made us incapable of concentrating, and so on. But sometimes we take a record for what it is: a resistant piece of art, existing as a singular entity. In a world that is newly full of "content" at every turn, it can be refreshing to find an uncompromising record that exists so honestly on its own.
·pitchfork.com·
Jenn Pelly: Mirrorring: Foreign Body (Pitchfork)
Nitsuh Abebe: Why We Fight: Your Chemical Romance (Pitchfork)
Nitsuh Abebe: Why We Fight: Your Chemical Romance (Pitchfork)
People born during a dip in the birth rate grow up consuming a lot of culture that's aimed at someone older than them. People born during a boom do not do cultural apprenticeship, because everything is quickly aimed at them; they watch the things that appeal to their age group bloom and succeed, whether anyone else is interested in it or not. This is why some Americans have spent decades clutching their heads as the Baby Boom generation makes big chunks of our world revolve around itself: Large cohorts have a large gravitational pull.
·pitchfork.com·
Nitsuh Abebe: Why We Fight: Your Chemical Romance (Pitchfork)
Tom Breihan: In Defense of Skrillex (Stereogum)
Tom Breihan: In Defense of Skrillex (Stereogum)
I’ve spent the morning listening to Skrillex’s three EPs, and they’re fun, but they’re not really any indication of what this guy does. Maybe he’ll make a great record some day, and his tracks certainly bring the hooks, and sometimes they sound the way people wish that last Justice album sounded. But at this point, listening to Skrillex at home is almost like listening to Gwar at home. The live experience is the thing.
·stereogum.com·
Tom Breihan: In Defense of Skrillex (Stereogum)
Steven Hyden: The Shins: Port of Morrow (The A.V. Club)
Steven Hyden: The Shins: Port of Morrow (The A.V. Club)
That’s the realm that Mercer is working in now, and when he has the confidence on Morrow to follow through on his glossy pop ambitions, his music manages to be as likeable as it always has been. It’s when Mercer tries to update the old Shins playbook with big-budget production that Morrow sounds awkward and dangerously sleepy.
·avclub.com·
Steven Hyden: The Shins: Port of Morrow (The A.V. Club)
Mark Richardson: Resonant Frequency: You Masculine You (Pitchfork)
Mark Richardson: Resonant Frequency: You Masculine You (Pitchfork)
On Bill Callahan and Grimes. Letting the hero die might mean opening yourself to new experiences. Finding more to identify with. Noticing the commonalities that point to the one, along with the differences point to the many, and identifying with songs from the inside and outside at the same time.
·pitchfork.com·
Mark Richardson: Resonant Frequency: You Masculine You (Pitchfork)
Alex Pappademas: Ninja: A Short History of a Less Troublesome Word (Grantland)
Alex Pappademas: Ninja: A Short History of a Less Troublesome Word (Grantland)
On Katy Perry covering ‘N***** in Paris’. The dumb, tee-hee transgression of saying the edited-for-television version sort of obscures what’s interesting and daring about this performance, which is that under the guise of tribute/ironic cover tune (it feels about half-and-half) it’s a girl refusing to let this song’s imaginary world of swinging-dick privilege be off-limits to her. But that’s all that’s happening here; she puts the word on like a piece of borrowed jewelry and parades in front of the mirror.
·grantland.com·
Alex Pappademas: Ninja: A Short History of a Less Troublesome Word (Grantland)
Sasha Frere-Jones: Lana Del Rey (The New Yorker)
Sasha Frere-Jones: Lana Del Rey (The New Yorker)
‘Del Rey doesn’t have the emotional and psychological depth to support all the satin and spotlights. Her invocations of Sinatra and Lolita are entirely appropriate to the sumptuous backing tracks, but, when it comes to lyrics, she and her collaborators get lost in a tangle of keywords.’
·newyorker.com·
Sasha Frere-Jones: Lana Del Rey (The New Yorker)
Julianne Escobedo Shepherd: Deconstructing: Grimes (Stereogum)
Julianne Escobedo Shepherd: Deconstructing: Grimes (Stereogum)
On one hand, it’s great that she’s this new hot blog thing, because she is a woman who creates her own beats in a space that historically is not that friendly to non-males. On the other hand, her elevation been a case study in the values people consign to the music they love — in this case, thin representations of ideas, that people have praised her for her “naive” and “elf-like” qualities, as though by filtering her voice into wispiness to the point that she’s almost a specter (as she does), she becomes more admirable, a negation of herself.
·stereogum.com·
Julianne Escobedo Shepherd: Deconstructing: Grimes (Stereogum)
Jessica Hopper: Sleigh Bells, 'Reign of Terror' (SPIN)
Jessica Hopper: Sleigh Bells, 'Reign of Terror' (SPIN)
‘It's tempting to view Reign of Terror as somehow ironic, pairing Krauss' saccharine cheerleader delivery with raging guitars and martial dance beats, but it doesn't feel that purposeful. Such a juxtaposition seems to arise naturally out of what they like and what they want to express: cheesy pop triumphalism dialed to "mosh" and drenched in tar-black bloodlust. It lacks cynicism, and goes for nothing deeper than the sacred ideal of teen gimme-gimme: the glorious joy of the big, loud, timeless Fuck You.’
·spin.com·
Jessica Hopper: Sleigh Bells, 'Reign of Terror' (SPIN)
Jon Caramanica: Rihanna and Chris Brown Appear on Each Other’s Songs (NYTimes.com)
Jon Caramanica: Rihanna and Chris Brown Appear on Each Other’s Songs (NYTimes.com)
‘If the songs were dull or disposable, they’d still be important, but they might matter less. But they’re both good, “Birthday Cake” very much so. The quality matters because they’re likely to lodge themselves in the public consciousness and seep onto radio playlists: this mess won’t just melt into the air.’
·nytimes.com·
Jon Caramanica: Rihanna and Chris Brown Appear on Each Other’s Songs (NYTimes.com)
Eric Harvey: Grimes, 'Visions' (SPIN.com)
Eric Harvey: Grimes, 'Visions' (SPIN.com)
‘Like so many spotlit debuts, Visions displays a young singer developing a relationship with her own voice and the seemingly infinite possibilities for shaping and representing it. The mirror stage for emergent artists who spend a lot of time online and work alone with inexpensive tools often can (and does) lead to merely replicating the surface qualities of the stuff that streams their way. Boucher's talent lies in the balance of exploiting her gifts and leveraging what's come before her, but judiciously.’
·spin.com·
Eric Harvey: Grimes, 'Visions' (SPIN.com)
Mike Barthel: Sleigh Bells' Positive Rock (The Atlantic)
Mike Barthel: Sleigh Bells' Positive Rock (The Atlantic)
‘Sleigh Bells' music has always been about overwhelming your senses, making things so loud and so blurred that you don't know where one thing stops and another ends, how fast the day is passing. Slow things run at double-time, fast things run at half-time; the world runs backwards, slows down, speeds up.’
·theatlantic.com·
Mike Barthel: Sleigh Bells' Positive Rock (The Atlantic)
Rob Harvilla: Lana Del Rey: 'Born to Die' (SPIN.com)
Rob Harvilla: Lana Del Rey: 'Born to Die' (SPIN.com)
‘The vast majority of this record is given over to rhapsodizing over some hunky, dangerous fella, and none of the alterations — sonic, biographical, cosmetic — allegedly made to the real-life Lana/Lizzy could distort the truth as thoroughly as her unrelenting Ooh He's a Bad, Bad, Sexy Man routine. It's instructive to picture what this guy would actually look like IRL, some clown with a real emotional haircut, Crocs hanging off his feet, Urban Outfitters leather jacket hung over his IKEA futon, remnants of that Taco Bell burrito with the Fritos in it congregating at the corners of his mouth as he binges on Skyrim, blasts "Pumped Up Kicks" on infinite repeat, and gargles dozens of shots of, like, Goldschläger.’
·spin.com·
Rob Harvilla: Lana Del Rey: 'Born to Die' (SPIN.com)
Maura Johnston: How Not to Write About Female Musicians: A Handy Guide (Village Voice)
Maura Johnston: How Not to Write About Female Musicians: A Handy Guide (Village Voice)
‘1. Go through your piece and flip the gender of your descriptive phrases' subjects. Are there any that sound ludicrous as a result? 2. Are you essentially making shit up about the artist in order to sexualize her? 3. Are you comparing the artist you're writing about to other female artists only? If so, why? 4. Are you writing about a moment where your subject flirts with you and you respond in kind?’
·blogs.villagevoice.com·
Maura Johnston: How Not to Write About Female Musicians: A Handy Guide (Village Voice)
Eric Harvey: Human Beings, Not "Narratives."
Eric Harvey: Human Beings, Not "Narratives."
On Rihanna possibly working with Chris Brown. ‘Human feelings are much more complicated than the narratives we try to fit them into. If we’re willing to allow pop stars to thrill us with unpredictable art, we have to grant them the right to make their own artistic decisions—provided they don’t directly hurt anyone else, of course—and react accordingly. We have to understand that though they are public figures who may figure into the aspirations of countless others, they are also human beings, and the most important response to their actions is careful deliberation about the issues raised, not instantaneous (and condescending) condemnation that eliminates their perspective altogether.’
·marathonpacks.tumblr.com·
Eric Harvey: Human Beings, Not "Narratives."
David Wallace-Wells: Nicki Minaj's Kaleidoscopic Genius (New York Magazine)
David Wallace-Wells: Nicki Minaj's Kaleidoscopic Genius (New York Magazine)
‘Once upon a time, dance pop was about self-affirmation, and the thing being affirmed was usually some sort of identity—ethnicity, gender, sometimes class, and maybe even sexuality. The Nicki generation seizes a whole new subject for pop: not who you are and how you made it, but the meaning and experience of celebrity once you have it. In place of identity, these prima donnas are performing fame. And doing it with what you might even call “taste”: an idiosyncratic aesthetic vision for everyday life, one that has nothing to do with where they’ve been and everything to do with synthetic aspiration. Minaj isn’t being inauthentic about celebrity—celebrity is the most authentic thing about her.’
·nymag.com·
David Wallace-Wells: Nicki Minaj's Kaleidoscopic Genius (New York Magazine)
Sasha Frere-Jones: The Grammy Awards: Chris Brown Overload (The New Yorker)
Sasha Frere-Jones: The Grammy Awards: Chris Brown Overload (The New Yorker)
‘Woman-beating rage-broccoli Chris Brown lip-synced his single “Turn Up the Music” (without being threatened by Sir Elton John) and danced roughly as well as a third-rate Chicago footwork dancer. He ended his performance by back-flipping off the stage, though sadly not off the earth.’
·newyorker.com·
Sasha Frere-Jones: The Grammy Awards: Chris Brown Overload (The New Yorker)
Eric Harvey: “The big question here is not: Is she real? But, rather, why it seems impossible to believe that she could be.”
Eric Harvey: “The big question here is not: Is she real? But, rather, why it seems impossible to believe that she could be.”
‘Songs are always already their own advertisements; that’s what makes them such a compelling commodity. But my main problem with BTD is that it steps beyond the necessary function of pop song-as-ad and embodies the form of advertising as well. It doesn’t mean that LDR critiques thus can’t be (unconsciously) gendered (even this one), but to me it’s impossible to get past. We can both embrace the multiple pleasures of pop artifice while simultaneously critiquing its most craven examples.’
·marathonpacks.tumblr.com·
Eric Harvey: “The big question here is not: Is she real? But, rather, why it seems impossible to believe that she could be.”
Sasha Frere-Jones: Lana Del Rey’s Image on “Born to Die” (The New Yorker)
Sasha Frere-Jones: Lana Del Rey’s Image on “Born to Die” (The New Yorker)
‘Why is pop music the only art form that still inspires such arrantly stupid discussion? The debates that surround authenticity have no relationship to popular music as it’s been practiced for more than a century. Artists write material, alone or with assistance, revise it, and then present a final work created with the help of professionals who are trained for specific and relevant production tasks. This makes popular music similar to film, television, visual art, books, dance, and related areas like food and fashion. And yet no movie review begins, “Meryl Streep, despite not being a Prime Minister, is reasonably convincing in ‘The Iron Lady.’”‘
·newyorker.com·
Sasha Frere-Jones: Lana Del Rey’s Image on “Born to Die” (The New Yorker)
Judy Berman: Just the Music: An Experimental Review of Lana Del Rey’s ‘Born to Die’ (Flavorwire)
Judy Berman: Just the Music: An Experimental Review of Lana Del Rey’s ‘Born to Die’ (Flavorwire)
‘So, here’s where this experiment fails. This is the point where I concede that it’s impossible to talk about Lana Del Rey without delving into the reams of criticism that attack, defend, or otherwise analyze her existence. It’s the lyrics to her songs themselves that prove there’s no way to think about her on her own terms — she doesn’t have her own terms. What she wants so desperately is to know what we — that is, the default heterosexual male listener — make of her.’
·flavorwire.com·
Judy Berman: Just the Music: An Experimental Review of Lana Del Rey’s ‘Born to Die’ (Flavorwire)
Amy Rebecca Klein: The Last Thing I'll Ever Write About Lana Del Rey
Amy Rebecca Klein: The Last Thing I'll Ever Write About Lana Del Rey
‘Exploring “what a woman should be” is boring and cliche in the 21st century, and perhaps that is why Lana Del Rey seems to many to be so bored and sad on stage. So let’s take Lana Del Rey for what she is—a pop star playing a role, a woman whose real life we know nothing about—and learn from what she’s taught us about our own insufferable addiction to a vapid version of femininity. In the future, I’m hoping we’ll accept more female artists who are interested in mining the depths of who they really are.’
·amyrebeccaklein.tumblr.com·
Amy Rebecca Klein: The Last Thing I'll Ever Write About Lana Del Rey
Simon Reynolds: Maximal Nation (Pitchfork)
Simon Reynolds: Maximal Nation (Pitchfork)
On maximalism in electronic music. ‘Meanwhile, the software's scope for tweaking the parameters of any given sonic event opens up a potential "bad infinity" abyss of fiddly fine-tuning. When digital software meshes with the minimalist aesthetic you get what Ingram calls "audio trickle": a finicky focus on sound-design, intricate fluctuations in rhythm, and other minutiae that will be awfully familiar to anyone who has followed mnml or post-dubstep during the last decade. But now that same digital technology is getting deployed to opposite purposes: rococo-florid riffs, eruptions of digitally-enhanced virtuosity, skyscraping solos, and other "maxutiae," all daubed from a palette of fluorescent primary colors. Audio trickle has given way to audio torrent-- the frothing extravagance of fountain gardens in the Versailles style.’
·pitchfork.com·
Simon Reynolds: Maximal Nation (Pitchfork)