
Saturday, 30 January 2010
2000 Bob The Builder: Can We Fix It?

Friday, 29 January 2010
2000 Eminem: Stan

Following the playful call to arms of ‘The Real Slim Shady’, Eminem's second number one flips the coin to show the darker side of both his own psyche and the consequences of taking his more outré antics too seriously via a tale recounted in the main through the eyes of uber fan/stalker Stan, a man who doesn’t know when to let go.
"My tea's gone cold, I'm wondering why I got out of bed at all. The morning rain clouds up my window and I can't see at all"
Ah yes - before we start though, a word about his ‘co-star’ here; Eminem’s name might be there solo on the cover, but a large part of 'Stan's success is down to the atmosphere setting vocal sample from British singer Dido’s ‘Thank You’, albeit after filtering her voice through what sounds like a black sheet of rain until it’s ghostly. By itself, a ballad of introspective mope, Eminem selectively ‘borrows’ her first verse only and, by ignoring the positive affirmation of that song's chorus, effectively re-writes Dido by turning its repetition into the dread of dead end routine and casts her Greek chorus as a thousand yard stare overture to a life where each and every day is the same as the last with her relentlessness taking on ever desperate overtones as Eminem's protagonist loses grip on reality.
"My tea's gone cold, I'm wondering why I got out of bed at all. The morning rain clouds up my window and I can't see at all"
That process is gradual. On first sighting Stan could be any fan writing an appreciative letter to his idol, though from the off Eminem sets up the one-sided delusion of Stan regarding this as a two way process ("Dear Slim, I wrote you but still ain't callin'.I left my cell, my pager, and my home phone at the bottom"). It's lighthearted and fun in a 'look at the geek' kinda way, but the light dims when Stan’s growing impatience starts up a rant that reveals more and more about himself, his life and his attempt to reach out and make contact ("Dear Slim, you still ain't called or wrote, I hope you have a chance. I ain't mad, I just think it's fucked up you don't answer fans") only to be frustrated by the lack of the response he feels is due. I can just picture Stan, alone in his room getting angrier and angrier, knuckles getting whiter and whiter ("We waited in the blistering cold for you") until a tipping point comes at 2:52 and his "I even got a tattoo of your name across my chest", a confession startlingly punctuated by a sampled aside from Dido that plays out as a gasp of realisation that things are taking a turn for the worse and that joke isn't funny anymore.
"My tea's gone cold, I'm wondering why I got out of bed at all. The morning rain clouds up my window and I can't see at all"
And worse it gets - with no access to Eminem, and in taking out his anger on his pregnant girlfriend, Stan emulates him instead . After kidnapping her (a call back reference to Eminem's "Kim," a song that ends in him slitting his wife’s throat and throwing her in the boot of his car, though Stan changes his MO slightly: "But I didn't slit her throat, I just tied her up, see I ain't like you. Cause if she suffocates she'll suffer more, and then she'll die too"), locks her in his car boot then drives off with a boast of "Hey Slim, I drank a fifth of vodka, you dare me to drive?" (itself a reference to the "Am I coming or going? I can barely decide. I just drank a fifth of vodka, dare me to drive?" from Eminem’s ‘My Name Is’) before hurtling off the road in a squeal of brakes and splash of water, killing all three in the process. Then, after the violence peaks and ends, Dido starts up again for the last time:
"My tea's gone cold, I'm wondering why I got out of bed at all. The morning rain clouds up my window and I can't see at all".
Life goes on, with or without Stan.
Eminem's coda, a response to Stan that comes weeks too late ("Dear Stan, I meant to write you sooner but I just been busy ") could have been a schlocky let-down of hand wringing appeasement (and the sudden "And in the car they found a tape, but they didn't say who it was to. Come to think about, his name was, it was you" ending is a bit 'Tales Of The Totally Expected' for comfort), but Eminem doesn't fumble the ball and uses the opportunity to not just address Stan in the context of song, but also the fans and critics in the 'real world' in a fourth wall breaking monologue of self awareness to explain why we shouldn't be falling for his nonsense and certainly not taking him as a role model ("I say that shit just clownin' dog. Come on, how fucked up is you? You got some issues Stan, I think you need some counselling").
Such denial was hardly new ground for Eminem; he'd done it before and would again, but never with such an absence of anger or sarcasm and his open honesty renders it drama rather than the usual pantomime. Through his own experience, Eminem knows that, no matter how he qualifies it, people do take him seriously and that Stan's do exist; he’s too intelligent to try and deny it. Though the hockey masked, chainsaw wielding rapper of past (and future) revelled in rebellion and violence, here he’s keen to distance himself from Stan’s over-zealous interpretation of his lyrics, not just by his usual ‘I’m only joking’ line, but by counterpointing them with Stan’s own misinterpretation (and mis-quoting) of Phil Collins’ hitherto harmless ‘In The Air Tonight’, a marriage break-up song that speaks to Stan's confusion in terms of actual violence ("You know the song by Phil Collins, "In the Air of the Night" About that guy who could a saved that other guy from drowning But didn't, then Phil saw it all, then at a show he found him?") in where in fact it’s only metaphorical. In Eminem’s parlance, somebody with the latent capacity for violence can be triggered by anything and probably will; Eminem and his ilk are just a convenient scapegoat for wider social ills.
Regardless of any analysis or interpretation, ‘Stan’ can be enjoyed as a simple short story in song with a central character fully fleshed out by Eminem’s rhymes and increasingly agitated (and believably acted) persona. On that level alone it’s quite the creepiest single we’ve come across since ‘Every Breath You Take’s tale of obsession, and on its own merits such a creeping monolith of black dread would have struggled to climb to such popular heights. I'm happy to acknowldge that it probably sits at number one by virtue of that relationship – i.e. a post adolescent fan base getting off on his swearing and cartoon rebellion, but there clearly is more going on here than Gothic melodrama - is Stan in fact the Real Slim Shady, a mirror image of the person Eminem could have been had success not come knocking?
Certainly Stan’s life in song mirrors Eminem’s pre-fame in reality (a rap fan with absent father and a daughter) and would explain his reluctance to meet himself/Stan in the song ("And what's this shit about us meant to be together? That type of shit'll make me not want us to meet each other"). I’m not going to be so presumptuous as to claim any inside knowledge on this so suffice it to say 'Stan' is a complex, multi-dimensional, semi-autobiographical proposition that highlights the popular artist/fan relationship and the extent of the mutual need of both to function. All of which goes toward making 'Stan' as perfect a single as you’re ever likely to hear.
Thursday, 28 January 2010
2000 S Club 7: Never Had A Dream Come True

Tuesday, 26 January 2010
2000 Destiny's Child: Independent Women Part One

In a similar way, 'Independent Women Part One' works on a multi-level too, but instead of Aretha's tunnel visioned purpose, it serves up a self conscious muddle that works on none of the levels it aspires to. Firstly, though not a cover version itself but an original song taken from the soundtrack of this year's Charlie's Angels re-boot, its lyric namechecks that source data in a way that suggests Destiny's Child had less of a free hand in their presentation of an original song than Franklin did in her cover. But then not only does restrict itself to referencing the film itself ("Charlie, how your Angels get down like that?"), it namechecks the actresses playing those Angels ("Lucy Liu... with my girl, Drew, Cameron D and Destiny Charlie's Angels") rather than the characters themselves. Which at a stroke makes 'Independent Women Part One' part of both the film, it's promotion and the real world process behind it. How very post-modern.
To muddy the waters further, that scenario then slams up against the song's inherent central theme of promoting female independence (presumably from any pesky controlling males) in an emotionless, capitalist society consumerist role call of pride - "The shoes on my feet, I've bought it. The clothes I'm wearing, I've bought it. The rock I'm rocking 'Cause I depend on me. If I wanted the watch you're wearing, I'll buy it. The house I live in, I've bought it. The car I'm driving, I've bought it, I depend on me". But just who are these independent women? Destiny's Child? Charlie's Angels? Or Cameron Diaz et al?
If it's either of the latter two, then this gets a shoulder shrugging 'so what?' from me. Because who cares? But if its the former, then hearing Beyonce and co bragging about chattels bought from the proceeds of soundtracking film versions of ropy seventies television serials doesn't warm my cockles either. Better by far I think to take it on an Aretha level and regard it as an aspiration to feminine independence as a whole. That would work. But then expressing independence as being purely financial and in the context of promoting a megabucks Hollywood film that sells itself to a broadly male audience on the basis of the sexuality of its leads is.....what exactly? And I have to confess, I don't know. Franklin wanted something that money can't buy, I get that, but try as I might I can't penetrate the diamond hard surface that the above analysis puts between me and the song and all I hear in 'Independent Women Part One' is a soulless, drum tight song of shiny slickness that offers no point of entry to allow any appreciation other than what's there on that shiny slick surface. Which, given the rotten, throwaway film behind it, is quite apt I guess.
Monday, 25 January 2010
2000 LeAnn Rimes: Can't Fight The Moonlight

Usually the doyen of the soft rocker or power ballad, Warren's song this time slips into a hinterland between the two that ticks neither of those boxes with any satisfaction. Rimes gamely looks for the hook to snare the casual listener but it's simply not there and the lack of it makes 'Can't Fight The Moonlight' a watched kettle that never boils, while the "Well just wait until the sun goes down. Underneath the starlight there's a magical feeling so right, it will steal your heart tonight" lyric is as flat, contrived and taste free as the 'Coyote Ugly' bar of the eponymous film that this soundtracks; as far as I'm concerned, it doesn't matter how scantily clad the bar staff are or how suggestively they dance on the bar, it's no substitute for quick service on a Friday night when all you want is to get pissed I'm afraid. Similarly, Warren's faceless song is no substitute for.....well anything meaningful really.
Sunday, 24 January 2010
2000 A1: Same Old Brand New You

2000 Westlife: My Love

2000 Spice Girls: Holler/Let Love Lead The Way
'Holler' tips its hat at urban R&B/hip hop with a lyric of female sexual domination: "Boy don't you hesitate, I won't keep waiting for you to come and let me take you to my fantasy room. You're gonna like it there and all the things that I do. I'll treat you right all through the night". Saucy. And to hammer home the point that we're not in playful Scary, Sporty, Baby or Posh territory any more, the video has the girls gyrating their booty's for all their worth in outfits from the S&M aisle of Mothercare. Which is a roundabout way of saying that none of this is particularly convincing. Mel C may have picked up 'Holler's bare bones from her solo collaboration with Lisa Lopes, but the sub Neptunes production clicks and drips where it should thump and flow, and any 'holler' is met by a hollow echo rebounding off the empty surfaces where the guts should be. For a song selling sexiness, it isn't and any initial surprise or enjoyment wears off long before it limps to a close.
If anything, 'Let Love Lead The Way' is even less successful. A sparkly ballad that sets its sights on the 'big issues', the song's obvious earnestness is cut down by a lyric of cod philosophising that, in its race to try so very hard to 'mean' something, winds up as a set of trite platitudes ("Why is there joy? Why is there pain? Why is there sunshine and the rain?") and vacuous "Just keep the faith and let love lead the way" statements of ideal living that wallow in their own meaninglessness like some B*Witched B side. Which is hardly a good point of reference when you're casting yourself as a set of Muses delivering the wisdom of the ancients. Whatever else the in-prime Spice Girls weren't, they were always fun and cartoony - a gang that every schoolgirl wanted to a member of and every schoolboy yearned to be noticed by. My main beef with 'Let Love Lead The Way' isn't just that it's no fun (and it isn't), but that like a latter day non violent, all speaking Tom & Jerry cartoon, there is nothing but a howling void to fill the gap where that fun used to be.
2000 Steps: Stomp

As another aside, I've often though that if Steps had been active in the seventies, their releases would be on KTel or Ronco, a suitable home for party music that needed no personality other than its own in-built party kazoos and streamers.* They weren't of course, but ironically if they were, then being very much a throwback to the string driven disco sound that held sway in the seventies, 'Stomp' would have fitted right in without much need for leverage.
Again, I don't have a problem with revivals or homage's per se, but what irritates about 'Stomp' is its shameless yet unacknowledged borrowing of its main themes from Chic's 'Everybody Dance', a song that, at certain moments, the band sound like they're about to break into before an unheard stage cough from their intellectual property lawyers brings them to their senses and they hold their tongues. This doesn't make 'Stomp' a bad song or any less danceable (which was Steps' whole raison d'etre after all), but it does make it a depreciated and rather tacky one, a song that will appeal most to those who only want to see the shadows flickering on the wall of Plato's cave and have no interest in turning to see (or in this case hear) the entities that cast them. Or for those not familiar with Book VII of The Republic, to those who think that brand Corn Flakes taste absolutely fine when they've never tried Kellogg's. In other words, to the inherently cheap. Which is what 'Stomp' is. Oh yes, I 'get' Steps alright......
* Those who have never heard of either of these labels wouldn't benefit from an explanation, but for music fans active in the late eighties/early nineties, then the fact that were actually on Jive is no less apt.
2000 U2: Beautiful Day

The key is its apparent simplicity: what I like best about 'Beautiful Day' is its clean directness and genuine optimism. "It's a beautiful day, the sky falls and you feel like it's a beautiful day. Don’t let it get away" - unlike most of the band's output there's a complete lack of that usual knowing force of will that tries to automatically induct the song into a mythical rock and roll hall of fame via self conscious worthiness, hyperbole and bad metaphor. There's a straightforward honesty about it that I've not heard on a U2 song since their debut album way back in 1980 and for once all four members sound like they're breathing out in harmony to release the tension born of just being in U2. Of course, the tortuous writing, recording and mixing process behind the song belies the artless purity of the end result, but that's down to the production work of Lanois and Eno who inject the air between the tracks that make it float to an audience who might otherwise be turned off by the weight of the ballast they usually carry. Like me. And yes I know all this probably winds up the average U2 fan/obsessive, but as these are exactly the sort of people I enjoy seeing wound up then it's all to the good.
2000 All Saints: Black Coffee

Saturday, 23 January 2010
2000 Mariah Carey Featuring Westlife: Against All Odds

You see, Collins has always known his way round a ballad. The 1973 'More Fool Me' (on Genesis' 'Selling England By The Pound') laid down a template that Collins' most successful work has followed ever since; fragile lyric of heartbreak sparsely arranged for maximum effect. Written over ten years later (it dates from 1984), 'Against All Odds' takes the same, simple self pity and applies it to good effect - Phil's woman is walking out on him but he's pleading for a Lot's wife glance back in the hope she'll remember what they had and reconsider. Phil knows he's probably wasting his time, but he's not too proud to beg ("I wish I could just make you turn around turn around and see me cry"), yet though we're not told if she does or not, it's a fair bet that by the song's end he's facing the wrong side of a closed door.
What always catches my ear is, in the middle of the careful build up of 'we're still good together' pathos, Collins lobs in a non scanning, non rhyming line of self interest that reveals a mask off vulnerability and long term thinking that's probably the root cause as to why he wants her to stay - "You're the only one who really knew me at all"; he's scared of the relationship ending not for it's own sake but because he thinks he'll never find anyone to replace her. It's a clunking line but it's meant to clunk, a moment of singular self pity drowned out by the shared empathy of the rousing "So take a look at me now" chorus that drowns it out.
It's a neat touch and it's one from a man confident in his craft. In 1973 in a played down tempo and minor key it would have been killer, but 1984 was the height of Collins' fame and Phil was too full of his own Phillness in 1984 to entertain that. Any fragile emotion inherent in the song was bulldozered by Phil's wailing wind through a rusty lock vocal and a typical, unconscionably heavy handed eighties production that insisted a sole piano had to resonate like an orchestra in an empty cathedral. Horrible in fact, and a good number of bricks in the wall between me and my liking of him. But whatever, it's a song ripe for rediscovery and re-interpretation. Unfortunately, Mariah Carey and Westlife are game for the former, but not the latter - their version of 'Against All Odds' is a cover of Phil Collins 'doing' 'Against All Odds' rather than covering 'Against All Odds' itself. And in so doing, Carey and Westlife, two acts for who 'restraint' is a word from a foreign language, make the same mistakes all over again, only moreso.
For a start, 'Against All Odds' is a song written for a single voice and splitting the lines into a 'duet' at a stroke whips away any building tension or emotion though linking the lines together and instead it becomes more of a duel between the lads and the lass as to who is the more overwrought in building their chain of hysteria (it's Carey, if you're wondering), completely losing sight of the fact that they're all meant to be on the same side. Add to this the usual power ballad bombast and 'Against All Odds 2000' puts me in mind of a tag team of heavyweight boxers taking it in turns to beat a disabled child into a submission it was already expressing. Frankly, it's ugly - 'Against All Odds' deserved better than the hand Collins dealt it and it certainly deserves better than this. But just what has caught Bryan McFadden's eye on that cover shot?
2000 Modjo: Lady (Hear Me Tonight)

2000 A1: Take On Me

2000 Madonna: Music

The difference is palpable. Where Orbit's electronic treatments spun strands of sound between the spaces of the music like angel hair, Mirwais Francophile dance credentials ensures 'Music' itself is sparse, wired and comes stripped of background filler; if there are spaces, then they are left for the dancefloor feet to fill by themselves. Different, albeit not wholly original ('Music' reminds me of a one off collaboration by a Daft Punk offshoot), it's the most un-Madonna sounding Madonna single yet.
With her vocal largely strung out and strangled unrecognisable by the technology, it's hard to pick out the Madonna of old on the electronic yelp of the recurring "Do you like to boogie-woogie" refrain and "Hey DJ" intro. Not only that, the usual 'Madonna' persona and the forced sexuality that usually entails takes a seat far enough back in the mix until she blends organically into the music itself; 'Music' is never going to be a first choice for anyone on karaoke night. But that's fine - Madonna has been a frustrating proposition over the years, and by God she will be again, but when she gets it right she hits the bull's-eye with a satisfying THWACK loud enough to drown out some of her......less successful forays.
2000 Spiller: Groovejet (If This Ain't Love)

Wednesday, 20 January 2010
2000 Melanie C: I Turn To You

2000 Robbie Williams: Rock DJ

Tuesday, 19 January 2010
2000 Craig David: 7 Days

* Though an incredibly dry precis of the song on Wikipedia believes that he took her out for a pint of mild. I have no idea if this summary is the result of someone's subversive sarcasm or the work of the genuinely deluded, but it doesn't matter; it makes me laugh either way.
2000 Five & Queen: We Will Rock You

Sunday, 17 January 2010
2000 Ronan Keating: Life Is A Rollercoaster

2000 The Corrs: Breathless

'Breathless' at least has a winebar unfriendly AOR rock urgency that distances itself from some of the more over earnest sermons in their catalogue, but when that rock urgency is borrowed/stolen wholesale from Mary Chapin Carpenter's 1993 'Passionate Kisses' then my interest is doomed to pale regardless. But even if it didn't, Andrea Corr's twee hiccup delivery on the "So go on, go on come on leave me breathless" is a ladle full of sugar with no accompanying medicine that offers not so much a slick come on as a throwback reminder of Mrs Doyle forcing yet another cup of tea on Father Ted. And it generates a similar reaction from me as Mrs Doyle tended to get from Ted; irritation mixed with the wish that she'd just shut up and go away.
Monday, 11 January 2010
2000 Eminem: The Real Slim Shady

And keep you amused I’m sure”
Let me say straight off the bat that I have a lot of time for Eminem. An awful lot of time in fact. In the months and years ahead there will be occasions where the mediocrity of what I’m called to listen to and then write about will weigh heavily. But then just when things seem irredeemably hopeless, like a cavalry charge over the horizon a new Eminem single will arrive to banish the badness and restore my faith in popular music. But that’s to come – for his first appearance I think there are some other points to address that are more pressing.
Unless you’ve been living under a stone for the past ten years or so then there are at least two facts about Eminem that are likely to be regarded as common knowledge; that he’s one of those rappers and that he’s white. By themselves alone these two facts are enough to furrow brows aplenty in certain circles and to raise the question as to whether both are meant to co-exist within the same being, or should they be mutually exclusive? Bottom line question – can white men rap? We have to go back to 1990 and Vanilla Ice for the last example on these pages, but Mr Ice’s infamous effort doesn’t exactly do his ethnicity proud.
Then again, being predominantly black in origin and predominantly a product of the inner city born from the inventiveness that poverty can bring then maybe the question should be ‘do white folk have any business rapping’? The same simplistic analysis can be applied to the blues too, and that genre has witnessed its own long raging debate over whether white men can play it. Is there any value in (for example) the Rolling Stones’ take on ‘Little Red Rooster’ over any version by Willie Dixon or Howling Wolf? Probably not; the Stones smoothed out the edges to make it more palatable to a white audience, but while Jagger caught and carried the sexuality of the “Cause little red rooster is on the prowl”, the front facing ‘down on the farm’ lyric is not something a white boy from Dartford is going to invest with any believability. And he doesn’t, but I think a line can be drawn between playing the blues and covering them. Certainly, musicians from the Home Counties would like to think they’re steeped in the Mississippi Delta culture that spawned it, but that’s not to say they don’t have their own hardships to sing about.
And that’s why I opened this review with some lines from Fleetwood Mac’s ‘Man Of The World’. To this writer, Peter Green is probably the single most definitive statement or example to illustrate that white men can play the blues. “I guess I’ve got everything I need. I wouldn’t ask for more. And there’s no one I’d rather be, but I just wish that I’d never been born” - I don’t subscribe to the school of thought that believes if a black man is singing about hardship then it’s ‘the blues’ but a white man doing the same is just whingeing. Green’s blues (sorry) are no less real or heartfelt than Howling Wolf’s, and the fact he’s working within the medium and fashioning it to his own ends rather than copying it is important. Green wrote ‘Man Of The World’ about his own mental state and experiences rather than trying to impose them onto an existing blues standard and then processing through some dust bowl, sharecropper with a failed harvest imagery or persona, a gimmick of ‘authenticity’ that rarely works and is frequently embarrassing. Early White Stripes managed to pull it off to an extent, but such examples are the exception rather than the rule.
So, whither Eminem – can white men rap? Hailing from Missouri and raised in Detroit, the one time Marshal Mather’s background was no less impoverished or broken than any of the acts that rap made famous, but what separates him from the pack is that, for the most part, Eminem’s raps are as personal as the blues were to Green. “I could tell you about my life and keep you amused I’m sure” – Eminem does, and Eminem does. Sometimes acerbic, sometimes humorous but always honest, Eminem has detailed his personal trials and tribulations in excruciating detail on his releases in a way that’s unique to him; rather than try to copy black rap he avoids rap cliché and fashions the genre after his own ends by celebrating his own white trash culture with a style that at a stroke puts paid to any wannabe accusations in the same way that Peter Green did by not singing about dust bowls and boll weevils.
On ‘The Real Slim Shady’ Eminem is in a playful mood, adopting his ‘other’ slim shady persona to detail the trials and tribulations of himself and your average white jock filtered through the medium of rap. As a song it has the jovial jaunt of a fairground cantaloupe as Eminem throws up his hands in mock despair at the world around him with comments tuned to appeal to the outsider “Screaming "I don't give a fuck!" with his windows down and his system up” and reduced to minor acts of rebellion (“And every single person is a Slim Shady lurking. He could be working at Burger King, spitting on your onion rings” – a line that always reminds of Johnny Rotten’s own simplistic brand of “Give the wrong time, stop a traffic line” anarchy and I’m always struck at how both artists are seen as equal parts court jester and antichrist) to get through the day and exert some control over a world they otherwise can’t.
There are no blings, beefs, ho’s, bitches, niggas, working the corners in the hood or playing ‘the game here’; it’s a tongue in cheek state of Eminem’s nation address of all that’s wrong with his world where figures from the white side of the tracks (Britney, Christina, Fred Durst, Pamela Anderson, Tommy Lee and Carson Daly et al) are name checked as cameo role models and marshalled by ringmaster Eminem in the low rent, throwaway three ring circus that he and his ilk inhabit. And by singing about his own world within the medium of rap, Eminem climbs inside the genre and wrestles with the controls until the machine does his bidding instead of letting it control his presentation and delivery. Can white men rap? Hell yes; that's one question that Eminem has successfully put to bed.
2000 Kylie Minogue: Spinning Around

Well that would be a nice legend anyway, and even though Kylie does her best to back me up with her "I'm through with the past, isn't no point in looking back, the future will be. And did I forget to mention that I found a new direction", it's sadly all a bit fanciful. Because she hasn't really been away and her direction toward the more palatable wasn't new. Granted, there have been no number ones, but her presence in the top ten has been a constant and a glance at her nineties discography shows a growing maturity and better grip on quality control in terms of what was released in her name. 'Better The Devil You Know', 'Shocked' 'Confide In Me' - all were all leagues ahead of the 'I Should Be So Lucky' pop pap and all would have been worthy chart toppers in their own right.
The work of four writers, 'Spinning Around' continues the upward trend and handily re-enforces my earlier comments about a good song not requiring any particular artist to bring it to life. 'Spinning Around' was originally planned as a Paula Abdul (one of the writers) comeback single, but it's hard to imagine that she could have done a better (or worse) job than Kylie; as a song, 'Spinning Around' is prime seventies disco overlain with contemporary electronica to neuter the cheese to create a Formula One racing car that drives itself.
Wisely, Kylie knows a gift horse when she sees one and doesn't treat the song like she's the bigger star of the two, choosing to settle into the dance groove to let it carry her instead of forcing herself over the top like mustard on cream. Not that it gives her much opportunity to do her own thing anyway; 'Spinning Around's air glide sparkles like Kylie's hotpants as it slides from verse to chorus and back again with nary a chance to catch breath. But despite her deference to the quality of the song, her "I'm spinning around. Move out of my way" are delivered as defiant statements of intent that brook no disagreement and perfectly catch all the hedonism and all the fun of disco's glory years. "I know you're feeling me, cause you like it like this" - yes Kylie, I am and I do. Well done.
Sunday, 10 January 2010
2000 Black Legend: You See The Trouble With Me

Saturday, 9 January 2010
2000 Sonique: It Feels So Good

2000 Billie Piper: Day And Night

Friday, 8 January 2010
2000 Madison Avenue: Don't Call Me Baby

2000 Britney Spears: Oops!....I Did It Again

As a general rule of thumb, such acts produce some monster early singles and a debut album that flies off the shelves like the hottest of hot cakes. Which, after all, is exactly what they are. It's album number two that's make or break time - if it sells well then the boat can steady enough to build some sort of career on. If it flops, then the boat sinks and them along with it. In 1999 Britney Spears had such a monster series of singles and a debut album that sold in phenomenal quantities (fourteen times platinum in the US). Now in 2000 there was a new album in the wings and, in the light of the above analysis, it's obvious that no one was resting on their laurels. A re-imagination was never going to be on the cards at this stage in her career, but in an attempt to ensure history repeated, Team Spears pulled out all the stops to ensure Britney's did just that.
For a start, like '....Baby One More Time', lead off single 'Oops....I Did It Again' had the same title (and ....spacing) as the parent album, so free publicity galore there, but away from such trite observations it's uncanny at just how similar 'Oops....' and '....Baby' are. True, 'Oops....' tries to build the anticipation of an 'event' by dragging out a teaser introduction of Spears croaks and groans, but once it leaves the traps proper it quickly latches limpet-like onto the same lurching, robotic beat a la 'Baby' that builds to the same tension releasing chorus with Britney's "I'm not that innocent" would be leer taking the place of the schoolgirl kit (and a tease to those who swallowed the 'I'm still a virgin' line) to leave us hanging until the cycle resumes from the bottom once more. There's even a middle eight change of key - I mean really, 'Oops' is 'Baby' slightly re-arranged with a fresh polish but at heart they share more DNA than not.
It's a risk free release that kept the Spears star burning, but while a manager might get short term results through playing the same team in the same formation week in week out, others soon get wise and in any case over reliance on the familiar can backfire when the first team ages in one fell swoop. Like when that fickle wind starts blowing the other way. Which, for Britney, it would do soon enough.
2000 Oxide & Neutrino: Bound 4 Da Reload (Casualty)

Thursday, 7 January 2010
2000 Fragma: Toca's Miracle

Basically a straight layering of the vocal from Coco Star's 1996 'I Need A Miracle' dance track over a musical backing from German act Fragma's 'Toca Me', the seamless mix of the two generates no friction or sparks or points of interest and is content to simply create a.n.other trance anthem that, in 2000, sounded about five years out of date. And without that lightbulb over the head realisation that you're listening to twains that were not supposed to have met, the absence of all components of the thesis + antithesis = synthesis equation begs the question as to the merit of bringing them together in the first place when all you get at the end is more of the same. Frankly, I'd rather listen to both pieces in their orignal formats.
2000 Craig David: Fill Me In

Wednesday, 6 January 2010
2000 Westlife: Fool Again

Given the fist clenching angst of their previous four singles, a title like 'Fool Again' sets the scene nicely for tragedy and heartbreak on an operatic scale, but for once Westlife wrong foot me by stepping back from the brink by instead peddling four minutes of polite pop that could be the work of almost any other contemporary boy band. And by toning it down, Westlife not only deny me the chance to stick my usual knife in, but also deny the song itself any essence of substance or memorability, of which 'Fool Again' has neither. What really irritates is the boy's grinning and flirting with the camera on the video when they're meant to be delivering the heartbreak of "Can't believe that I'm the fool again, I thought this love would never end", a cynical ploy that covers all lovestruck bases which, to paraphrase Aneurin Bevan, meant they were wearing a crown of thorns and taking the thirty pieces of silver,* though the biggest irritation is that they were preaching to an audience so bewitched that they let them get away with it.
* Though he wasn't talking about the new Westlife single when he said it. Obviously.
2000 Melanie C featuring Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes: Never Be The Same Again

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