Thursday, 20 December 2012

Oh look, 15 opinions about pop music. Well done.

Shall we just cut the preamble and get on with it this year?

No.

If there's one thing that we think has been missing from 2012, it's been that one MASSIVE album campaign that has eclipsed consideration of everything else. In other words, Adele managed to take a year off, and thankfully didn't sell seventeen million copies of Diamonds Are Forever Skyfall kindly giving everyone else the chance to have a go. This, in our view, is the result.

This would have been massively improved if Kimbra's verse had gone "if he shows up outside my house ONE MORE TIME singing 'Ba Ba Bloody Black Sheep' I'm going to shoot him in the face.

THE REAL TOP 15

In our younger days, we had a bit of a visceral reaction to the news of a new Robbie Williams single. It usually featured us telling the 3 people we could get to listen how overrated he was and how turgid and dull it was inevitably going to be. Age and maturity has changed all of that. As has the realisation that he's a much nicer bloke with the arrogance of the turn of the century kicked out of him by mediocre album sales. (Not to mention a reunion with Take That that we're not sure - deep down - he really wanted). So it was refreshing to see a Robbie who had to focus on the basics - carving out a good, radio-friendly hit. Enter Candy. This is Robbie's strongest work in years, playing to his strengths as the prototype of cheeky-chappie-and-occasional-massive-twat Olly Murs. The brassy hook is infectious, Robbie's lyrics are witty and the reggae tinge to his vocals make this the most refreshing single he's released in years. More of the same, please.

If you'd said at the beginning of the year that we'd include an Icelandic indie band on this list, we'd have slapped you around the face with the copy of Up The Bracket we deny ever buying in 2004. But here we are. Little Talks is simply a stunning song. It has an incredibly catchy hook, and the lyrics describing the internal anguish surrounding a breakup are subtler than Lady Antebellum could ever dream of. We're a sucker for a good vocal duet, and Nanna Bryndís Hilmarsdóttir's voice turned out to be one of the most compelling we heard all year.

Scandinavians just *get* pop music don't they?

Niki and the Dove's Instinct album would definitely scoop our accolade for "best album of 2012 not recorded by Frank Ocean". This lead single sums up everything that's great about it. The atmospheric introduction and the haunting vocals of Marlin Dahlstrom explode into an incredible, swooping chorus. Amidst the ethereal electronica production, it's easy to miss the track's amazing lyrical moments. Such as the first line of the chorus which states "If tomorrow comes, I want to waste my life with you". An incredible track which augurs well for the trio's future. Or, at least, tides us over nicely until Robyn gets on with that new album "thing".

We're not going to lie, readers. The Mylo Xyloto album campaign has had us regularly retreating into a corner, rocking back and forth and feverishly muttering "We like Coldplay. We like Coldplay?! We like Coldplay?!". But despite our previous hostility towards the band (apart from our previously documented crush on Guy Berryman who remains just DREAMY) we can't deny that this album has seen Coldplay produce some amazing pop music. Capping the whole thing off for us, is this duet with Rihanna. Let us be clear: on paper, it's not clear why this should work. It's hard to explain why Rihanna's voice works so well with Chris Martin's. It just does. Or maybe it doesn't. Maybe it's just the brilliant arrangement of the backing track which begins with juddering synths building into long sweeping piano driven crescendos in the last minute of the song. Maybe it's the catchy as all-get-out lyrical hook of "Could've been a princess, could be a king/ Could'a been a castle, I wanna ring". Whatever it is, it's both a roaring success to cap off Coldplay's best album to date, and the best thing Rihanna's been involved in all year. So well done, we suppose.

If we had one phrase to sum up this year's countdown, readers, it would be "love/hate". Jessie J annoys us more than we can put into words. Her overrated vocal ability. Her completely overwrought and self-indulgent song writing. The way that for no given reason on The Voice she would press that bloody button with her leg or elbow. David Guetta also irritates us but more on that later.

But Laserlight is just so bloody GOOD. Yes Jessie's vocal borders on the screechy throughout, yes the production has the subtlety of a brick, but it works. It just. Works. We've been bouncing around clubs all year deafening poor victims around us by trying to scream out the top notes. We've thought ourselves really cool by hitting the "D-D-D-D-David G" bits perfectly. We've developed an amazing arms-outstretched as if preparing for some sort of heavenly translation dance move for the bridge. It's been a great year. So well done Jessie J. We fully expect you to resort to singing dreary ballads about your broken leg in 2013 and we'll go back to our usual antipathy. Normal service will resume.

Max Martin, will you marry us? The man can't stop writing amazing songs. But it's not just Martin's ear for an incredible pop hook that makes this track special. It's Swift's willingness in the lyrics to turn the spotlight on her own relationship history with various Hollywood and entertainment A-listers (and John Mayer). It's Swift's charming country vocal being channelled into a proper full on pop belter. It's THAT interlude.

"So he calls me up and he's like 'I still love you' and I'm like... I'm just... like 'this is exhausting' you know? Like, we are never getting back together... Like ever."

To be honest, the "this is exhausting" bit alone is the finest pop moment of the year by itself.

It was clear from her very first X Factor performance that Misha B was going to be something very special. Putting her stamp on one of the most ubiquitous songs of the year from the get-go, it was clear we were being introduced to a brave, brassy pop star who - whatever happened - would go on to big things. It was a relief, then, that her first single proved to be the attitude-filled Home Run. The MNEK-produced track is laden with hooks, has one of the catchiest choruses of the year and most importantly showcases Misha's incredible range of talents. To channel Louis Walsh, she can sing, she can dance, she can rap, she can be the only X Factor contestant in history to get away with the lyric "wait 'til you see my yin yang up". Disappointingly, the single stalled at number 11. Never mind, I'm sure that whole supporting-Nicki-Minaj-on-tour thing probably offered all the necessary consolation.

Don't worry, we promise we haven't gone all Fearne Cotton on you. Genuinely, we feel that if guitar music must make a comeback in 2013, this is the sort of prototype we want it to be emulating. Punchy riffs; swoon-worthy vocals; catchy lyrics; lead singers we want to jump and then spoon with until around noon. 

In short, not The Enemy.

THE OLYMPICS. Weren't they bloody great? Yes. And the Opening Ceremony? THE ACTUAL QUEEN. Jumping out of the helicopter. Looking royally pissed off that they weren't getting on with the athlete's parade quick enough. 

And then it finally became clear what all those bloody petals were about. And then David Beckham came in on a speedboat, and Steve Redgrace jogged for a bit. And they did the right thing by giving those kids the chance to light the flame.

And then someone assassinated Paul McCartney before he could ruin Hey Jude.

It was a magical event. And this Underworld composition, fronted with the vocals of Alex Trimble from Two Door Cinema Club was its musical highlight. A hauntingly understated affair which nonetheless gave the construction of the torch its due gravitas.

Beat that "Brazil".

Basically what we're saying is that David Guetta is only tolerable when he has an incredible female vocalist who can belt out an incredible vocal over him pressing three buttons on his keyboard. Which, to be fair to him, is exactly what he serves up on Titanium. It was offered around a number of artists, including Mary J Blige who appears to have a knack for turning down massive hits. In any event though, it all worked out for the best and the vocal ended up in the hands of the song's co-writer, Sia.

Who proceeded to knock it out of the bloody park.

Opening guitar riff aside, Titanium is all about Sia and that vocal. The highlight of which is the incredible "bulletproof glaa-aa-aa-aa-aaasss" of the middle eight. It's the performance which rightly catapulted Sia - with her prodigious vocal and songwriting abilities - back into the spotlight. Oh, and well done David Guetta for not bollocksing it up.

I like to think that the genesis of Wings went something like this:

"So I've got this idea for a song. But the only way I can think we're going to pull it off is if we make Beyonce, Christina Aguilera and an excited seal into a nuclear power plant and initiate some sort of meltdown."

"Oh, but hang on, this band called Little Mix won the X Factor. They might be able to do it."

"How are their handclaps?"

"World class."

"Excellent."

When we urged Syco not to fuck Little Mix up last year, we could never have imagined they would produce something like this. It takes everything that made this band so endearing: the tight harmonies, their bubbly personalities, Jade's amazing vocalwobble and throws the kitchen sink at it. The result is a tight, uplifting and catchy as hell pop masterpiece. Without a doubt the best post-X Factor winner's single since Alexander Burke's Bad Boys

Channel ORANGE, by any measure, is the album of 2012. An incredible cinematic eye for detail pervades the lyrics of every track on the album. That songcrafting reaches its zenith here on Pyramids - a nine-minute epic which reimagines Queen Cleopatra as a stripper. Ocean's vocals are stunning as he laments Cleopatra "laying next to Samson". Punctuating the first half of the song is some superb production work, capped off with the incredible gnarly synth beat which follows the climactic "Cleopatra, Cleopatra". 

At the 4:45 mark, the tone of the track completely shifts. Suddenly we're delved into swirling, atmospheric brasses and a sinister snare beat. Ocean's lyrics take on a voyeuristic tone as he narrates Cleopatra getting out of bed and getting dressed to go to work at the Pyramids. His lament becomes truly heartbreaking as the story of a pimp falling in love with his client culminates with the final cry "but your love ain't free no more". Capped off with beautiful guitar work from John Mayer Pyramids feels more like an epic movie than an R n B track.  Truly a superb artistic achievement.

We felt very strongly that fun. only warranted one inclusion on this countdown. Problem was, whilst We Are Young is the track that kicked them into the spotlight, follow-up Some Nights features one of the most incredible vocals of the year. In the end, we decided that Janelle Monae's first UK number one warranted the former's "immortalisation" in our countdown.

We Are Young is two songs thrown together on a collision course. There's the Piano Man-esque scene-setting of the chaotic bar at the end of the night of the verses. Then there's the anthemic chorus which  sees Nate Reuss scream that " we can burn brighter than the sun". Throughout this chorus, Reuss' vocal truly stands out. It's rich and it's defiant, and helps to give the chorus the epic, shoutalong quality which carried all the way to number 1. 

But it's the middle eight and Janelle Monae's cooing "carry me home tonight, just carry me home tonight" which sets the stage for the track's most compelling moment. Reuss screams out "The angels never arrived/but I can hear the choir/so will someone come and carry me home?". Many a time this year we staggered back home with these words ringing in our ears.

Let's not talk about the fact that this was the best song to enter the Eurovision Song Contest in years. Let's not talk about the incredible staging of the performance (even if it remains an ardent wish to clear the dance floor by reenacting the dance one day). Let's not talk about the fact that in the middle of Azerbaijan when asked what she would do after the contest, Loreen answered "get so high" to the horror of the hosts.

No. Let's talk instead about the exquisite structuring of this song, commencing in the moody, bassy verses before building to that heady, whooshing chorus. Let's talk instead about the best heavenly ascent narrative since the Ascension of Isaiah ("we're higher... we're higher than divinity" one for the PhD student crowd, there). Let's talk instead about that "we're going uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-uuuu-up".

Let's talk instead about one of the most euphoric 3 minutes of music ever written.

Like, ever.



"I threw a wish in the well
Don't ask me I'll never tell
I looked to you as it fell
And now you're in my way"

There can be absolutely no doubt that if one song could sum up 2012, it would be the infectious, irresistible and infuriating Call Me Maybe. The musical child of a Canadian Idol runner up, Call Me Maybe tells a ubiquitous story. Girl meets boy. Girl falls in love with boy. Girl awkwardly gives him her number. Everyone disolves in tweenage squee.

And it's exciting. It's giggly. It's immature. It's life-changing. And yes, we are talking about the song.

Strip away the endless irritating parodies (apart from the ADORABLE cookie monster version) and what gives Call Me Maybe its charm is the incredible simplicity of the song. The string hooks, the candy-covered chorus, the energetic yelp of Jepson's vocal. It all blends together to beautifully recreate that sugary rush of teenage love. 

Lyrically, the song has some deceptively sweet moments, such as the great line "before you came into my life I missed you so bad". But we could over-analyse this to death. Call Me Maybe is - to put it as simply as possible - a great pop song. If more writers could bottle the kind of wide-eyed naivety contained in track, music would - we predict - be a much happier place.

Also, the abs of the guy in the video, amirite?

Wednesday, 21 December 2011

Coming back from the dead with a chucked-together top 15 of 2011

It's alive. Well. Sort of. Whilst we largely gave up on this blog-about-pop-music lark earlier in the year, we also felt it wouldn't be right to let the site die with some spur-of-the-moment thoughts about the Born This Way campaign. Especially when we've since almost completely changed our opinions on the tracks in question since then. But never mind all that, let's see how we get on with evaluating pop music in 2011 and see how we get on, shall we?

All in all, it's fair to say it has been a mixed bag of a year. On the one hand, narrowing down a top 15 tracks has been an almost excruciatingly difficult task. On the other hand it's been made considerably easier by dismissing inexorable shit such as this, this and this. Needless to say that LMFAO haven't been on The Pop Web's Christms card list this year (not that we can ever be arsed to write them). All in all, our final fifteen list has had to exclude some tracks/performances which we definitely felt were on the right side of "very good" this year. As a result, we'd like to declare that the following songs are "highly commended" in our esteemed/barely regarded opinion:


Well done, everyone.

But enough of the very-good-but-not-quite-good-enough. What about the top 15 precisely nobody has been waiting for? Here it is:

15. Little Mix - You Got The Love
*Annual token X Factor performance alert*
Little Mix well and truly bucked the X Factor trend this year. Starting out as a thrown-together and distinctly ropey ragtag band with a rubbish name, they metamorphosed into an actually-decent group and went on to win the whole thing. The turning point in our mind was the moment where Little Mix Jade said outside their private gig thing "It all looks very posh in there... I think we'll fit right in." in a Geordie accent so heartwarming it made us homesick for a whole week. This performance was in no way their best vocally, but in terms of setting out a mission statement for what this band could be in the future, it was perfect. Filling a stage with enough dancers you could stage a perfectly choreographed military coup is always a good sign in our book. Add to that the motorbikes and the flags (God we want one of those flags), and it was a recipe for a great performance which set out the post-X Factor Little Mix stall very nicely. Syco: do not fuck this one up. We expect a follow-up single by April at the very latest.

14. Leona Lewis/Avicii - Collide
It's a real shame that this single appears to mark the point in Leona Lewis' career where "sale fail" has started to set in. Despite extensive promotion that largely got overshadowed by a row over the Avicii sample underpinning the track, Collide only reached number 4 and spent a mere 5 weeks in the top 40. Which is a shame, because in our opinion it's bloody good. We've pointed out before how the live Leona experience indicated that things wouldn't be too much of a musical disaster if she went the up-tempo route. At least from a commercial point of view, this appears to be a misjudgement. Syco were so worried about this single's performance that they've delayed the Glassheart album and had her chuck out a not-exactly-brilliant EP of rousing covers of Hurt and Iris (because we all know how well that went for Ronan Keating). It's a shame because Collide represents a promising change in direction for Leona. Her voice still sounds amazing (no qualms there) and the Avicii backing track complements her vocal brilliantly. What would be really sad in the aftermath of all of this is for Syco to return to the tried, tested and tired "covering ballads" route rather than press on with a quite exciting reinvention. This track proves that Leona, with her beautiful, astonishing voice, really can sing anything.

13. Coldplay - Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall
COME BACK! We haven't lost out minds. As a general rule our pathological abhorrence of Chris Martin continues unabated. But even we couldn't deny that this opening single from Xylo Myloto is an excellent achievement from a band who have for the past decade and a bit have bored us to tears. Turning their hand to a more dance-orientated track, Martin and co. created a genuinely interesting single which still contains their trademark arena-rock sound but experiments with new instrumentation to draw in a new audience. The guitars take on a peculiarly Celtic vibe over the top of a driving and energetic drumbeat with Martin's characteristic wailing over the top. And it works. It really does. Now if you'll excuse us we're going to retreat into premature middle age weeping over Radio 2 and consoling ourselves with pictures of the fit bassist Guy Berryman.

12. Nicole Scherzinger - Don't Hold Your Breath
We enthused about Nicole's follow up to Poison earlier in the year, but that was before she took on a new career of making pre-pubescent girls cry in front of an audience of millions. But sometimes, pop music is good enough to make you forget about all that and certain tracks still manage to stand the test of time despite the various infractions of their performers. Don't Hold Your Breath is one of those songs. A not-exactly-original lyric about refusing to go back to a rubbish ex is offset by a feisty vocal delivery, and some excellent production. This was a well-deserved number 1 for Nicole.

11. Vanbot - Lost Without You
Another track which we rhapsodised about earlier in the year. Vanbot (a.k.a. Ester Ideskog) burst to our attention with this devastatingly sad ode to that pervasive melancholia which surrounds after a break up. With lyrics tenderly exploring that sense of lost confidence ("I thought I had it under control") and that desperate attempt to keep calm and carry on ("I close my eyes and maybe wounds would heal"), Lost Without You became the perfect soundtrack to our late-Spring/early-Summer, especially in the absence of a new Robyn album. We expect even bigger and better things from Vanbot in 2012.

10. Kelly Clarkson - What Doesn't Kill You (Stronger)
There is truly nobody on the planet better than Kelly Clarkson at delivering a fist-pumping pop-rock hyphen-friendly single. 8 years after Miss Independent, Kelly demonstrated this year that she still had the knack for delivering a feisty shout-along smash. It's perhaps not a surprise that this guitar-driven rockout works so well given it was co-written by Jörgen Elofsson: a man responsible for a few hits you might have heard of. Coming off the back of the quite-good Mr Know It All this has helped Kelly show that in the arse-end of 2011, despite all the rumoured record company fallouts, Kelly still has the ability to pull a great pop song out of the bag when needs must.

9. Britney Spears - Till The World Ends
You're Britney Spears. At one point you were undoubtedly the biggest pop stars on the planet. After a couple of years of questionable personal-life decisions, a bit of a breakdown and some lukewarm commercial reception, what do you do to prove that you still have something to offer now that you're not. that. innocent anymore? Why, you start listening to a shit-load of dubstep, of course. Till The World Ends brought Britney right back to basics after the slightly more experimental Hold It Against Me. Unleashing her trademark purring vocal over an infectious, juddering backing track and pairing it all up with a video which finally showed her choreography coming together after several years in the doldrums, Till The World Ends was the dancefloor-friendly return to form that all of her fans could get behind. It also spawned this quite good mashup with Adele's Rolling In the Deep. So that's two for the price of one. Very good.

8. Lady Gaga - The Edge of Glory
You know, readers, this was one choice we had to really really agonise over. Without a doubt, Born This Way has been a major talking point of our year. All of the tracks on it have ebbed and flowed in terms of the frequency of their iTunes rotation. One day we like Judas best. One day we like Yoü and I best. At the moment, we're quite liking Marry The Night. Whilst it would be a downright lie to say that it was the best album of the year (the quality in parts is distinctly patchy - we're looking at you Americano) it would be ridiculous for us to fail to include one of its tracks on this list. In the end, we've plumped for Edge of Glory (we should state now that we're just ignoring the abominable video that accompanied it - seriously, that thing is awful).

Why? Because for us it's the track that sort of ties the whole thing together in a funny sort of way. As a not-quite-a-ballad-but-getting-there, it shows that Gaga doesn't have to throw a million and one production techniques at the wall to make something stick. As a lyric, it's reflections on hedonism and mortality ("it isn't hell if everybody knows my name tonight") are in equal parts touching and inspiring. It also has a saxophone solo from the recently deceased Clarence Clemons. While we probably have a more personal connection to Yoü and I, Edge of Glory was probably Born This Way's most successful creative achievement. Now Gaga, please, for the love of God. Do the album's tour and take a holiday. There are flashes of genius on this album, but we genuinely worry that they were largely eclipsed by a frenetic creative fatigue which prevented this from becoming the classic it could so easily have been.

7. Example - Changed The Way You Kissed Me
Back in March, we christened this track "the anti-Kickstarts" and also claimed that it would be kind of a big deal. We'd just like to take this opportunity to reflect modestly on how we were absolutely right. Three months later it had spent two weeks at number 1. And deservedly so. The excellent production, coupled with the sinister lyric about the slow death of a relationship blended perfectly with a surprisingly good vocal from Example. The track dripped with venom but didn't lose its commercial, dance sensibilities. It was a winning formula, which we were right about all along. Did we mention that?

6. The Wanted - Glad You Came
You know sometimes when a boy band decide they're going to record a song that is basically designed to drip with sex appeal and it doesn't work at all. And then sometimes it definitely does? This belongs in the latter category. A track which proceeds from the vas deferens more than it does from the heart, The Wanted's musical evocation of a boozy weekend in Magaluf is carried off with some addictively charismatic vocals and one hell of a opening hook. Yes, it's basically what the writers of Zoo magazine would have come up with if given access to a mixing desk and a notepaper to jot some lyrics down (with the exception of the actually quite poetic "The sun goes down/the stars go out" bit), but it's an undeniably catchy and attitude-filled track. Plus, when you're more than a little bit hammered in a club and it comes on, you get the feeling that you could pull anyone with ease. Yes, even him/her. The fit one. By the bar.

We should at this point state that we were in no way influenced by those bits in the video where they took their shirts off. We are serious music critics. Serious.

5. Neon Hitch - Get Over U
We don't actually know how to begin explaining how much we love this track. It's so hard to pin down. It's not just the beautiful lyrics. It's not just the excellent production job. It's not just the heartbreaking vocal which Neon brings to the track. Get Over U is just the perfect example of all the different constituent parts of a song coming together and creating something brilliant. An accomplished video meant that this should have been the start of an extremely successful 2011. And, of course, there's time yet. And even if that's not quite how it pans out, we'll just be happy to have been left with this heartbreaking, nigh-on-perfect pop song.

4. The Saturdays - All Fired Up
Let it be known. 2011 is the year that The Saturdays arrived. Of course since Up they've been on our peripheral vision, and in retrospect it was an absolute crime that we didn't include Higher on our top 15 last year. But once they teamed up with Xenomania (the production team behind this minor Cher hit and pretty much every good Girls Aloud song) it was impossible to overlook them any longer. All Fired Up is a relentless club smash, with an utterly infectious bassline and seductive vocals from the Sats. The hook "blow my mind, DJ, blow my mind" has been in our heads for pretty-much 4 solid months. That this only made it to number 3 on the UK charts is one of our top pop injustices of the year (don't worry, there's more to come on that score).

3. Rihanna feat. Calvin Harris
Speaking of a club smash. Given that Rihanna has released 6 albums in five years, toured them extensively and appeared relentlessly on collaborations, we'd have forgiven her for taking the rest of the year off, crawling into bed and refusing to come out until she was good and ready. Instead, she decided to release this 100% amazing track accompanied by Calvin Harris. Something about the euphoric crescendo on the bridge and Rihanna's beautiful vocal combines to give this track an amazing energy (Copywrite: all of this year's X Factor judges). The result is a track so infectious that it demands attention and is guaranteed to create a standing-room-only club situation. Yet underpinning the dance sensibilities of We Found Love are flashes of lyrical brilliance. From the opening "Yellow diamonds in the light" to the brilliantly touching "turn away cause I need you more" everything about this track contains a sense of euphoria and intoxication which makes it so damned irresistable.

2. Nicola Roberts - Beat Of My Drum
Having sat by and watch the rest of her Girls Aloud bandmates try their hands more-or-less successfully at media and solo careers during their so-called hiatus, 2011 saw Nicola Roberts throw her hat into the ring. Drawing upon a reservoir of personal experience and (sadly) abuse received during her time in the spotlight, the result was the stunning album Cinderella's Eyes. This, the lead single from the album, was a feat of genius in itself. Getting on board producer Diplo to create a chaotic backing track, Nicola's understated vocal on the verses gives way to expressive yearning tones on the bridge before bursting into the defiant and infectious "L-O-V-E, dance to the beat of my drum" of the chorus. The result is, in our opinion, a more likeable and successful track than this year's other big Diplo production: Beyonce's Run The World (Girls). Yes readers, your eyes don't deceive you. We've just ranked Nicola Roberts higher than Beyonce.

But all that high praise can't correct this year's biggest pop injustice in our eyes. Beat Of My Drum reached no higher than 28 on the singles chart, and the excellent album it was taken from only reached number 17. What the hell, British record-buying public? What the hell?




"There's a fire starting in my heart..."

There is absolutely zero critical kudos to be gained by stating that 2011 was the year of Adele. It's fucking obvious. The album 21 has to date sold more than 13 million copies so far. It remained number one for 18 weeks (over a third of the year). The single Someone Like You has been by far the biggest selling single of the year, largely off the back of a single Brits performance. Yet for our money, it is the album's lead single, Rolling In The Deep which is most deserving of the title of "our favourite song of the year". 

From the moment that the Eye Of The Tiger-esque bass kicks in and Adele's snarling vocal kicks in, everything about this track screams "hit". The vocals have a real blues sensibility, with the backing vocalists giving a really haunting feel to the track in the middle-eight with their ethereal "You're gonna wish you - never had met me", all the while being propelled along by a relentless pulsating backing track. And yet, throughout, Adele's heartbreaking vocal shines through. Oscillating from the defiant "Finally, I can see you crystal clear/ Go ahead and sell you out and I'll lay your shit bare" to the mournful "we could have had it all", Adele belts out these lyrics and her belief in them shines through. The chorus of the track ranks up there with one of the most anthemic of all time. Not least because it is clear from her tortured vocal that she means every single word.

In our opinion, great emotional pop music can make you dance or cry. Truly amazing music can make you do both at the same time. Through this year, we've done our share of both, and Rolling In The Deep has been a constant refrain through it. It will continue to be so for some time to come.

Monday, 16 May 2011

So these last three Lady Gaga tracks...

 
To say Project: Born This Way has gathered steam ahead of the album's release on May 23rd is a huge understatement. Before the album has even been released, we've already heard four songs from Lady Gaga's third album in two and a half years. So moving past our thoughts on the title track, how do we rate Born This Way so far?

Judas


Ladies and gentlemen, it doesn't really get much better than this (apart from Bad Romance, obv). If ever there was a track to answer back to concerns about the album's lead single sounding a little too similar to the output of the previous generation's iconic pop star par excellance, this is it. Gaga delivers one of her most compelling vocals on the verses, before piling into a chorus which, to our mind, creates an amazing triptych with Bad Romance and Poker Face.

It's the video, however, that's the most gratifying part of the Judas campaign. Compared to the ludicrous bombast of the Born This Way video (a song which cried out for a down-to-earth feel-good disco style video) Judas actually sees Gaga having some bloody fun again in a video. At first we were surprised there wasn't a whole lot more sacrilege on offer (lest we forget, Alejandro had Gaga dressed as a nun being set upon by a gaggle of semi-naked men). But then, we were just relieved that the temptation to drape the whole thing in 50 minutes of religious symbolism didn't take over, and the drive to deliver a fun promo video that complimented a great, interesting track won the day.



To move from the frenetic energy of Born This Way and Judas to the comparatively sedate The Edge of Glory was, in our opinion, an absolute masterstroke. A touching dance-oriented track with a soft rock vocal immediately, Edge of Glory is the perfect reminder that when she chooses to, Gaga can strip away the aesthetics and deliver a reflective and poignant pop song which resonates just as deeply as her more attention-grabbing up-tempo repertoire. To put it another way "It isn't hell if everybody knows my name tonight" is probably one of our favourite Gaga lyrics to date.

Initially, we were a little concerned that the track put us immediately in mind of Cher's Song For The Lonely. But then we stopped and thought "you know what, we can't think of a more fitting thing for Gaga to do on her third album than to reference the members of the pop aristocracy who have paved the way for her. Well done everyone." 


And this is the point we have to get a bit cynical *puts on critical face*. In one sense, we can completely see how Hair kind of wraps up some of the themes (both lyrically and musically) being expressed on the three tracks that have preceded it. And believe us, no-one appreciates an artistically contigious set of single releases as much as we do. The only problem is, Hair doesn't quite work as well as the other three tracks does it? There's something about the understated backing track, and the somewhat crammed-in-there vocals which screams "album track". 

In itself, that's no bad thing. Let's face it, no-one is expecting Born This Way to yield 14 singles, do they (although how fucking amazing would that be)? It just wouldn't be the final taste we left in "the market's" mouth before we chucked the album out there. But we suppose there's a reason why we're not heading up the marketing team at Interscope Records (although how fucking amazing would that be?)

The Verdict

It's probably safe to say that Gaga can expect her bank balance to rise by £10 at the very least on May 23rd. Have one on us, why don't you?

Charlie Atlantic returns


In a bit of a Pop Web exclusive, we are thrilled to announce that one of our favourite unsigned singer-songwriters Charlie Atlantic is launching a solo career. Following on from his impressive career as the frontman of Oxford-based band Inlight, Charlie is looking to recapture the buzz that surrounded his vocal and songwriting talents with The Lost Generation EP which will be released in August (further details and preview snippets can be found at his website www.charlieatlantic.com).

First impressions of the tracks we've heard thus far indicate that Charlie is going down a moodier and more atmospheric path than he traversed in his Inlight tenure. The tracks on the EP are largely piano, rather than guitar led and lyrically, Charlie very much plays up the despair in one of the lead tracks Paranoid with anguished cries of "Nobody tells me what's going wrong/ What do they have to lose?" permeating the haunting track Colours. For new listeners, this may all seem a little daunting and oppressive; those of us aware of Charlie's wider range of work, however, will be pleased to see him settling on a sound and exploring a mood in one coherent piece. A little light against the shade is the country-tinged Why Oh Why? which bubbles along beautifully and neatly counterbalances the sombre tone of the rest of the EP.

One of the key tracks underpinning this EP campaign is the sublime Dido and Aeneas. Referencing classical mythology and weaving it into an accessible and emotional ballad is no easy feat, but Charlie's deft musicianship and raw vocal reels the listener in and results in a beautiful and reflective piece. 

Underpinning Charlie's motivations behind this EP, is a considerable dissatisfaction with the present state of pop music, expressed in an open letter on his website. Some of Charlie's points hit a real nerve (pop's current infatuation with "the club" or "the floor", for example - although we'd also like to point out that for every "Club Can't Handle Me" there's a "Telephone"). As the campaign for the EP continues to roll out, however, we'd like to see Charlie highlight some of the positive contributions he can make to the field. Being the talented songwriter that he is, we have no doubt that his aim of recapturing music for the "poets" over and against "the programmers" is one well within his reach.

Tuesday, 12 April 2011

Van Go Lion again

Continuing the "Van" theme pervading the blog over the past two days, we're thrilled to feature the new track by Van Go Lion, the electro-pop duo from Oregon who we were banging on about a few months ago. Body Moves which is due to be released in the US on Ninthwave Records, marks a bit of an evolution from the previous tracks we've highlighted. Have a listen below:


As we have mentioned once or twice in our previous article on the group, we are utterly enamoured with Amy's voice and it's a bit frustrating that it isn't until the last minute of the song that she's allowed to really let loose. But, thankfully, prior to that point, there's plenty to keep the ear interested. We're particularly detecting the influence of Kleerup in the backing track with the twinkling synthy keyboard line. There's also a Calvin Harris-esque shimmer in the bridge between the first chorus and the second verse. The chorus itself has some interesting hooks, particularly in the brilliant line "Love is a dancefloor: take a stand". All in all, offers a cool and shimmering start to the Van Go Lion commercial campaign.

We still have our eyes on this group, and we hope you will too. What we would particularly like is to hear a track where the two go all out both on the vocals and the backing track. Amy and Josh clearly have a great ear for understated, mood-driven electropop which is fast becoming their signature sound. It would be fantastic if they could transfer that to something more dancefloor friendly. That's nitpicking on our part though. For the time being it's great just to sit back and enjoy an act brimming with potential, growing in confidence with every track released.

Monday, 11 April 2011

Vanbot in the Sunshine

Over this extremely sunny weekend, we encountered a new artist who kindly provided the soundtrack to two blissful days of sunbathing and alcohol.



That artist is called Vanbot, the alter ego of Stockholm-based vocalist Ester Ideskog. Her eponymous debut album will be available here in the UK and across Europe on April 15th on iTunes and the like (other music download services are, of course, available). And if her latest single Lost Without You is anything to go by, it's set to contain some of the most exciting and heart-felt electro pop since Robyn's Body Talk series. You can have a listen (and indeed download the track for free) from the player below:

  Lost Without You by Vanbot

As you will probably hear, the Stockholm-forged beats and Vanbot's voice immediately invite comparisons with Robyn. The track certainly sits very nicely alongside something like Dancing On My Own which, frankly, is excellent company to be keeping.

If diversity is a concern for you, though, then you may like to take a quick gander at Vanbot's debut single, Make Me Break Me, which is also available for download ahead of the album's release.

  Make Me, Break Me by Vanbot 

We'd like you to pay particular attention to the intro, which sounds a little bit like a head-on collision between Cascada's Evacuate The Dancefloor and Pet Shop Boys' Always On My Mind before breaking into something which is at the same time punchy and melancholic. This is a very good thing.

The reason all of this works so well (particularly when accompanied by an unseasonably hot weekend) is that it provides the perfect soundtrack to those summer moments when you find yourself introspectively staring into the middle distance, allowing the world to pass by around you for those few short moments before you get yanked back into reality. Those moments where you tune out of the conversation or gaze out of the car window and wonder and question whether everything really is alright with the world; whether life is really turning out the way it should be...

Oh, you don't have a soundtrack for those moments?

What the hell is wrong with you?

So... erm.... yes. Vanbot. Very good. Buy the album.

Thursday, 31 March 2011

The Retro-tastic Robin Sparkles

Over the past few weeks here at The Pop Web we've become absolutely obsessed with emerging young artist Robin Sparkles. After having carved out a cult following in her native Canada, Sparkles is attempting to crack the lucrative US market with her unique brand of retro-pop.

Front and centre in the Sparkles back catalogue is the infectious Let's Go To The Mall. Look past the somewhat trite, bubblegum lyrics ("Everybody come and play/ Throw every last care away") and the nationalistic jingoism and Sparkles has actually managed to effortlessly recapture the spirit and energy which pervaded (for example) Madonna's eponymous debut album.


Madge's influences on this track are, to the trained ear, self-evident. The chorus in particular calls to mind Holiday whilst the track as a whole would sit quite comfortably alongside tracks like Borderline or Lucky Star. So far so good, but you may well be wondering why we'd need someone like Sparkles dredging up memories of the Queen of Pop, when her back catalogue more than speaks for itself.

Enter Sparkles' follow-up effort, Sandcastles In The Sand, quickly helps dispel any doubts about Sparkle's versatility and also testifies to her burgeoning popularity across the pond. Recruiting Dawson's Creek star James Van der Beek and veteran Canadian actor Alan Thicke for the video, Sparkles' sophomore effort brings to mind the seminal Circle In The Sand video by Pop Web favourite Belinda Carlisle.


Vocally, Sparkles is on top form, particularly in the middle eight when she mournfully laments "Life is crazy/nobody gets me/castles wash away". Clearly underpinning the veneer of 80s nostalgia, Sparkles possesses an admirable ability to connect with the song's emotion with her vocal delivery. "Sandcastles" acts as a refreshing complement to Let's Go To The Mall, by showing off her impressive vocal range, whilst also refusing to shy away from the retro styling which has so effectively captivated the music-buying public in Canada. 

To be sure, there is a lot to work on here. We'd very much like Sparkles move out of her comfort zone and see her take on songs which have a little more emotional maturity to them rather than pandering to trite teenage clichés. But what these initial tracks show us is that Sparkles is loaded with potential, and if her recent relocation to New York City is handled correctly, Dominant Records could well be responsible for launching pop's next great superstar. And that's not something we say lightly.