




The Poptimists End of Year polls kick off with the unimportant, but still intriguing, category of Album of the Year. Thankyou for your nominations, which have been distilled to a shortlist (by the scientific means of "most mentioned") as follows:
Paris Hilton - Paris: The year's most controversial release - frothy R&B-pop from the heiress-turned-renaissance-woman.
Ellen Allien & Apparat - Orchestra Of Bubbles: Luscious electronic pop and atmospherics from German boffinette and henchbeing.
The Knife - Silent Shout: Shrieksome electro artpop from Scandinavia.
Marit Larsen - Under The Surface: Scando singing-songwriting popstrel spans country, twee and Euro-pop.
Beyonce - B-Day: Quickly recorded relationship dissections from the reigning queenbot of R&B.
You, the Poptimists Voting Academy, can grace ONE of these with your tick. Do so!
[Poll #891029]
Another category tomorrow - if you didn't nominate you STILL CAN in the other categories by going here!
no subject
Date: 2006-12-18 05:11 pm (UTC)By the way, I've also called Teddybears STHLM "self-defeating," for somewhat similar reasons. They can't get it together with the vocals, which are occasionally great but usually mediocre, and they obviously feel an alienation from pop as such. But it's not the alienation that defeats them, though; it's the fact that they don't know how to have their cake and eat it too, how to go pop and anti-pop at once, how to use the alienation in service of the pop. They need a Mick Jagger type to front them - by which I don't mean a cock rocker; what I mean is someone who's willing as a performer to commit himself totally to the performance in the way that Mick committed himself to the untrustworthy narrators that Mick Jagger the songwriter and musical mind was busy cutting off at the knees. By the way, there are two people on my album list this year have some of this Jagger in them: Paris Hilton and Robyn, both playing a simultaneous commitment and anti-commitment one against the other. (Robyn on my list for the Rakamonie EP.) And I think Robyn's "Cobrastyle" crushes Mad Cobra's. But it's still not the "Cobrastyle" of my dreams. For that, you need someone who can absolutely and exuberantly deliver d-dangy-dang-diggy-diggy with Marcels or Sugarhill Gang passion and force - while also embodying the Paris/Robyn/Mick alienation.
badly-argued defense of The Knife
Date: 2006-12-18 07:04 pm (UTC)'Deep Cuts' is, though, far too long- it could do with having the stupid interlude tracks cut and being whittled down to the ten amazing songs. They are kind of awkward (as are many of their songs) but just in a shy way, more than an avant-garde way. I'd certainly rather listen to 'Deep Cuts' than a lot of 'Anniemal,' which is far more self-consciously arty, in my opinion.
...I didn't mean to go on that long. I think I may have defeated my own argument several times somewhere in that. Oh well!
Re: badly-argued defense of The Knife
Date: 2006-12-18 07:36 pm (UTC)Re: badly-argued defense of The Knife
Date: 2006-12-18 07:43 pm (UTC)Re: badly-argued defense of The Knife
Date: 2006-12-19 01:14 am (UTC)I'm surprised no one's mentioned Bjork yet; Silent Shout isn't at all like Debut really, but on the surface its dance/art/pop split is along the same lines. And I don't think it's fair to say that Karin Dreijer has a bad voice; it's an acquited taste, like Bjork and Tom Waits, but it's hardly awful.
Re: badly-argued defense of The Knife
Date: 2006-12-19 10:06 am (UTC)Re: badly-argued defense of The Knife
Date: 2006-12-19 10:15 am (UTC)Ditto the references to "star quality" because The Knife are coming firmly from a faceless dance 'all about the music' standpoint, which admittedly is quite difficult to pull off if you have a female singer with a very distinctive voice.
Re: badly-argued defense of The Knife
Date: 2006-12-19 12:37 am (UTC)For the last two albums Goldfrapp have gone wholesale 'phwoarr' electropop but there's still a richness to their sound I can enjoy despite their ditching of reference points like Morricone and Barry.
But I think you have a point in that Goldfrapp have lost the sense of menace and mystery they may have had initially. But The Knife are just a whole lot weirder and more alien in the end. Maybe it is because Goldfrapp are British I dunno. I would love them to try and do something more 'out there' and genuinely malveolent like 'Silent Shout' tho.
Re: badly-argued defense of The Knife
Date: 2006-12-19 10:07 am (UTC)Re: badly-argued defense of The Knife
Date: 2006-12-19 10:10 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-12-19 12:27 am (UTC)I don't know why people would consider Dreifer a bad vocalist/singer other than I know that some just find her voice too annoying to deal with - which is understandable. But otherwise, what are her flaws? Too much dependency on effects perhaps. Anything else?
I'm puzzled by how someone might not rate 'Silent Shout' but love 'Orchestra Of Bubbles'. Perhaps this would be because Allien is 'dancier' but the structure, themes and melodic elements of The Knife's songs makes me think of them as slightly poppier (and yet also heavier, by and large - Allien could certainly use more bass imo but then so could a whole bunch of people).