(no subject)
Jul. 1st, 2007 10:14 pmFollowing on from the discussions of what we are 'supposed to like', I thought I would pose the question: How open are you about your pop fandom to your friends? And how about new people you meet?
This was also triggered by thinking about music lists on sites like MySpace and Facebook. The artists I list on there are all ones I like, but there are some big emissions - Bodies Without Organs, Backstreet Boys, Darren Hayes. Some of my all time favourites but there is no mention of them on my MySpace or Facebook. When you're filling out these things you have to think of every person who might see it, and even though I am confident enough in my poptasticness to say that I like pop music, I prefer to list the lesser known poppy bands (such as Robyn and Margaret Berger), or the slightly more critically acclaimed ones (Patrick Wolf or The Pipettes, for eg). How do those of you who use these sites deal with this issue? Do you think anyone is completely honest?
This was also triggered by thinking about music lists on sites like MySpace and Facebook. The artists I list on there are all ones I like, but there are some big emissions - Bodies Without Organs, Backstreet Boys, Darren Hayes. Some of my all time favourites but there is no mention of them on my MySpace or Facebook. When you're filling out these things you have to think of every person who might see it, and even though I am confident enough in my poptasticness to say that I like pop music, I prefer to list the lesser known poppy bands (such as Robyn and Margaret Berger), or the slightly more critically acclaimed ones (Patrick Wolf or The Pipettes, for eg). How do those of you who use these sites deal with this issue? Do you think anyone is completely honest?
no subject
Date: 2007-07-03 12:42 pm (UTC)It helps in my case, and I suspect yours, that we like a lot of 'cool', or at least hipster-friendly music as well as the more poppy stuff, and I think we both have track records of liking things a while before other people catch on...so as people we both have credibility, which rubs off on all the music we like.
I have heard 'The Magic Position' - what I mean is that Patrick Wolf has a lot more in common (in terms of his appeal, his style, his marketing, his background, the people he works with, the places he gets coverage, the whole package) with indie bands than with eg Girls Aloud - it's the same with CSS, 'Let's Make Love' is a great pop song but they're definitely an indie band.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-03 04:11 pm (UTC)There's also a larger group of people who don't know or care who is cool or not and assume Pete Doherty is considered cool by the people who DO care. This is because the tabloids are hugely interested in Doherty, and their excuse for their voyeuristic coverage of his addiction/decline/occasional rally is that he is a Role Model, and if he isn't a Role Model who The Kids think is Cool then their moral case collapses a bit. So they constantly stress that he is cool.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-03 06:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-07-03 06:24 pm (UTC)I agree that it helps knowing about more obscure stuff. It really amuses me when I chat to indie fans and can hold a good conversation and even make them think I'm indie myself, without ever claiming to be - in fact I get people saying I'm indie and have to protest! The best thing is that I can then introduce them to obscure pop that really is pure pop (such as Robyn, Melody Club or Dragonette) but present it as indie-pop and they fall for it every time, and then I have people to go to gigs with. The poppiness of a lot of non-mainstream indie (think Feist, Tilly and the Wall etc.) at the moment is very beneficial to me.
Patrick and CSS are both indie and pop, I think. They don't have to be exclusive terms - a lot of the best music (and the bands I can truthfully claim to like without offending anyone) is indie and pop.