Posts Tagged ‘stage

26
Feb
25

Current Misunderstanding of Music and Talent

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[I know I’m going to sound like a progressive grown-up turning into his parent (if my parents could type this well), but…]

There’s a distinct misunderstanding of musical talent that has become commonplace in recent years…probably since 2008. I’m talking specifically about female singing “talents.” There have been so many sharp rises from YouTube debut to scantily clad stage show that I’ve lost count and have ceased to enjoy most music from female “artists.” I can’t call them artists when they’re parading in their underwear. I could call them runway models…but not artists.

It’s difficult for me to appreciate a woman’s talent(s) when she’s trying to be sexy. That’s also why women have fantasies of sexy utility workers. The former are not interested in the labors of the latter; they’re just starved for sex and crafting fantasies. Well, sexual fantasies may be creative…but they’re not musical talents.

Unfortunately, we are drenched in attractive women, most of which feel the need to perform scantily clad, which pleases the men (and some women…and some in-between) in the audience. But, that doesn’t give me any drive to attend a concert or buy an album. If I’m buying the album to see the most attractive performer, I’m buying an adult magazine…not a record of great music.

What’s even sadder is when performers of a previous generation, someone like Jennifer Lopez or Shakira, who have matured (not aged in some horrifying, miserable way), feel a need to compete with these younger models. Jennifer Lopez is perpetually looking like someone desperate to be told she’d still hot. I’ve never thought she was unattractive…until she looked desperate for attention.

I just saw Shakira at an awards show with her two sons…who are close to teen age…and she’s doing her familiar belly-dancing on stage. You don’t talk about your family and then go do that on stage in front of them. It just feels…wrong. If my mom, who’s not bad looking, got up on stage and did that…I’d be nauseous if not also confused. [It also would have been nice to hear Shakira sing in English after giving her acceptance speech in English, but…]

If you’re concerned about the competition or no longer being considered attractive, you can take a big sigh of relief because I still think you’re hot. But, trying to be like these younger gals…is not smart. Followers are never trendsetters…they’re just the confetti left behind the parade. Even if you’re not so unique that you shine like the brightest star, you’re still good for who and what you are.

[I know Shakira is an Aquarius, and that often means she’s concerned about being compared to others. Aquarius types want to stand out and be unique. If you tell an Aquarius woman she reminds you of someone, she may get annoyed. Well, you’re not being unique dancing in your underwear and shaking your hips on stage, and that’s not making me interested in your music, which you’re promoting. Honestly, I find Shakira more attractive than talented because I have yet to see past her stunning face, even if I do hear beauty in her voice. I’ve struggled to understand most of her songs; so it’s hard to appreciate the music.]

I thought we were making progress in how we identify and respect all genders, including women. I thought women were finally supposed to get respect and equal billing. How does performing in your underwear and posing for similar photos achieve that?

[Let me sidestep to address one other performer in particular, Taylor Swift. Now, I’ve seen her wear some odd and occasionally skimpy outfits. But, more often, she performs with class. She also has that crazy way of crafting with numbers, often related to her birthday. If anyone is an artist, it’s her. I just don’t care for much of her music because…well…you know. ‘So many bad relationship songs. There ARE other things to sing about (than just your latest ex). And, no matter what anyone else says, I think she’s a little young to be doing a tour of eras. That sounds like something Cher kept saying she was going to do closer to retirement, not when she’s hosting a TV show with Sonny Bono.]

You’d think all of these smart, talented women would grasp this concept. [You’d also think, after so many years, some other “artists” in other music styles would give up singing about drugs, alcohol and wealth to stop people from submitting to crime, both sexual and financial, as well as other bad habits.]

I’m sorry, ladies. Many of you are very attractive…but you’re not artists worthy of any trophy…unless you’re competing for Miss Universe or the front cover of Victoria Secret’s catalog.

Mic drop.

29
Nov
21

Letter to Lady Gaga (Stefani Germanotta)

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Dear Lady Gaga, Stefani,

Ten years ago, Stefani, I could have written you off as street trash, as the “tramp” you’ve been singing about with classy Tony B. I witnessed your “Edge of Glory” and thought I’d seen enough of you being just a bit too bold. [Was that actually ten years ago?! Holy #^&@!] I admired your outspoken spirit and unique beauty but quickly lost interest in all of the tattoos, sexual references, meat dresses, prostitute-like antics, etc. You get the picture.

the new, more natural, classy Stefani Gaga

the former scandalous exhibitionist Lady Gaga

But, ever since you paired up with Tony, you little Aries tigress, you’ve taken on a magical glow, shed layers of mud and filth and exposed your true talent almost–not quite yet–in its purest form. Your voice; it is a potentially powerful one. [If it didn’t have any power, how would you have made such a stand-out appearance in The Simpsons? They built a whole episode around you.] After witnessing some of that power in recent performances, I’ve come to this conclusion…I need to write you a letter!

I saw the emotion in your face at what may have been your last public concert with Tony. Now, to be fair, you are someone I expect to be good at “faking” as well as shocking the pants off anyone who dares to challenge you. You certainly know how to apply makeup for effect. But, if what I saw was genuine, you were so close to having an emotional breakdown on stage; I wondered if your words were becoming garbled and confused. You seemed a bit…hokey and reminded me of Liza M., Judy G’s daughter. [All that aside, that gold curtain-like dress you had on was fabulous.]

At some point, a light grew inside my head, and a voice said, “Save the music!” Those who were sitting with me told me to shut up so they could listen to the rest of the show. [Ha.]

It wouldn’t stop hounding me; that voice. I saw potential and was dying to harness it; not like a stereotypical record producer from the 70s with tinted glasses, a gold chain and a bad mustache. But, take that “light” you currently have and extend it, expand upon it to (re)create a new flavor of music, something so refreshing and not-so-new that it would clear the air suffocating so many heads, right now. At a time when less powerful variations of the previous you and countless others are dragging the sex-drug-and-wealth mentality through the sludge year after year, you could be the golden force that cleans up the streets, the light that inspires pride in a person, for him or her self and/or their homeland. You could be a statue of liberty (or maybe an Evita telling New-Yorkers not to cry for you when you’re…ya know).

I kept thinking…what happens to you when the current phase you are in comes to an end? Surely, you feel it (coming). [Let’s not get too detailed about the realities of Tony B.] You can only sing those old songs so long before they get even older.

I’ve noticed how certain famous musicians/vocal artists put out albums of familiar songs they get the chance to “cover” when they seem to have run out of original material, just to stay afloat, to stay visible and hopefully keep making money. But, it’s like a bad smell. You can almost see the vultures circling over their heads. The end is near. Or, maybe, the career is already over, and the “remix” is just a pillow to cushion the blow, the departure from the spotlight.

Do we really need another copy of a song sung countless times, even if we like one voice better than another? [I don’t care who sings that old Happy Birthday song, even Marilyn Monroe. I’m going to eventually scream from hearing it too often.]

But, for you, surely, this isn’t the end. You’ve still got plenty of years ahead of you. I’m just concerned about what becomes of you in those coming years. [Why? I’m not sure. Let’s rewind the tape here and see if anything makes sense. Oh, yeah; the light that recently emerged.] I guess I’m concerned you might revert to your former ways and material when you no longer have your current vocal partner, your stabilizing force in the storm (which gives me this potent visual of you as a siren on a rock in the middle of a stormy sea, gleaming in golden scales with your pale hair flapping in the wind).

Rather than witness the lesser of roads taken and wait for you to either shed the glitz of “old New York” or fall hard from “glory,” I feel a need to preserve the “light” that seems to be growing or emerging from inside you, like a little seed of hope. In a world where it’s so easy to fall into bad habits and dark influences, you could change some or all of that just by maintaining your current glow.

I guess what I’m trying to say–in probably too many words–is that you need to put out an album of new “old” music (if that makes any sense). Take what you’ve learned with Tony and write new songs of similar (but potentially better) caliber. I’d like to believe you can do it. You have the opportunity to recreate Tony’s quality of music in the present time and extend its lifetime for as long as that may last. [I’ve seen other artists try and fail; Alicia Keys if I must mention a name (no offense intended to that beautiful woman).] I know, originality is at an all-time low. Even I feel the effects and want to cry out because it pains me to admit. It’s hard to create something new, right now. But, if you could, it might crack the crust on that tired, old mess clouding so many heads. It might start a creative revolution.

Just think, you could be the new song carried in the hearts of millions when they start their day and/or when a certain holiday season approaches. You could be the voice echoed in the streets. You’d be immortalized, in a good way. And, I’d rather see you glimmering in gold than covered in spikes and raw meat. Ya know? I’d rather see you inspiring others to clean themselves up than encouraging them to get down and dirty (just because the world seems to suck and it’s easier to act out like the cast of Rent).

If you think Tony’s “shine” is old and outdated, merely something you are grateful to share for a moment because the world isn’t like that old song, think again. Do you honestly believe the world was a better place when he and those before him made those old songs famous? For all we presently know, the past generations might have had a very similar share of problems, just painted a little differently. Those old songs might have been crafted to lift soiled chins up from their misery. They might have been casting illusions, but they also energized people to get moving and make a (positive) difference. Sure; right now, the world doesn’t seem like it could get any worse. It stinks. It feels doomed and gloomy. And, it’s easy to spit on it all.

You don’t have to go “full Broadway” (and merely be a new face on old “shtick”) or give up that rebellious spirit that first made you famous. That which put your name in lights can be the driving force that steels you against the muck and stale gloom of mediocrity (which seems inevitable when you think of how others quickly try to copy something another performer just did and turn it into a brief but blaring trend of the decade). But, rather than go on being a sexually explicit scandal hidden under a stage name, you could become a household name associated with class.

If you go back to a previous incarnation of yourself, you strip away all of the polish you’ve recently acquired/earned and make your time with Tony look like a sad joke. You make it all feel like a Polaroid moment with grandpa which is just as quickly tossed aside in a shoebox and, eventually, forgotten. You kiss an old man goodbye and hit the road to tag a few more fire hydrants. Is this just your summer vacation or the start of a positive, elating, inspiring revolution?

[By the way, at the end of that recent performance, when you said you were going to escort Tony off the stage one last time? I would have said, “Tony and I are going to take off, now. We’re going to party. Maybe we’ll see some of you, later.” ‘Rather than sound like that moment was…well…the (sad) end. But, I realize, again, you may have been so emotional that you couldn’t think of a better choice of words.]

You could outshine every other young gal donning a top hat and some skin-tight or suffocating outfit, trying to be the best eye candy out there…which seems hard for me to admit, considering how I feel about your past. [But, then again, look at how a prostitute like Mary Magdalene (if that is the correct spelling/person), sharing a first name with the guy’s own virgin mother, could win the heart of someone like Jesus.] I’m aware; there are others with tattoos, pretty faces (under all of the showy stage makeup) and similarly (but not quite the same quality) powerful voices who could steal your spotlight. You don’t have to let that happen.

If the emotion I witnessed in you during that recent concert was genuine, get a firm grip on that light within you and help it grow by working on new songs that emulate the quality of the ones you’ve been singing with Tony. [Am I repeating myself?] MMMaybe wait a few years to write the next New-York anthem; I think that effort has been beaten raw and seems risky, right now. But, let that infamous song inspire you. Kick up your legs like a Rockette in a recording studio and feel the happier music spring from your pores. The world might be looking like it’s at its lowest and as if humankind is just the worst, but you can find the gold in the rough and give even the slimiest of people hope.

[I just wish I had a set of lyrics to deliver rather than be one more badgering voice telling you to do something. If I had more resources, emotional support and a better situation/work environment, I probably would be crafting such songs. But, then again, forces that be might still hinder that development. There is the slim possibility that something outside our control is preventing new quality music from being written.]

As I was clashing with my fellow viewers of your (duet) performance, they actually made a decent suggestion. You could be like Tony and find an “apprentice” to help “carry the torch.” Rather than go on alone when…ya know…you could pick a new partner to be that support/balance and carry on with the same quality of music you now praise when even you have to…ya know. Just imagine…an on-going legacy of quality music that keeps a torch of hope and cheer burning in countless hearts. It’s a prospect bigger than solo fame, bigger than being a legend known by his or her name.

It’s ultimately up to you, new…er, you. New Yooou! Newww Yooooou! Yeah!

Sincerely,

Writingbolt, a rather passionate and morally-conscious artist

P.S. And, if I am completely wrong, if you have no intention of reverting to your former scandalous behavior, if that was just a breakout phase and you’ve matured beyond my comprehension, then I will just button my lip and fade away.

P.S.S. I look forward to your performance in the Gucci movie. But, why didn’t you want to meet with the woman you portray?

25
Jan
19

Perform Yourself! Background Dancers Suck.

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Have I mentioned how background dancers annoy me? I’m quite sure this isn’t the first time I’ve felt the need to spout off about them. Cool as they may try to be, pretty as some may be, what sense do they make? And, when did this become a contageous problem? What ever happened to performers having to stop their show to get extra people off the stage?

If someone I genuinely like to hear sing has background dancers, I am inclined to turn away. I just can’t stand them nor can I understand the point of them.

If I want to watch people dance, I’ll go to a ballroom or buy a ticket to some bigger production with sole focus on dancing to music.

If someone giving a speech had a bunch of people shaking their butts next to the podium, would that make you like the orator more? Would you even hear most of what he or she says? And, what would the dancers be “saying” to enhance the speech?

I can just see a priest giving his Sunday sermon with a “choir” of dancers moving around him. I am so sure people coming to pray and hear “the good word” would appreciate that performance. I am also sure more people would be talking about the dancers than the sermon itself…which is so wrong.

I am not a fan of rap. And, if a rapper–who tries to recite a novel in a matter of minutes–has background dancers, I am not going to grasp an ounce of the “gold” they are supposedly spewing. And, I am certainly not going to buy their albums…because no magic is going to reproduce the dancing balloon butts that stole my focus…unless we’re talking about holograms. But, then, am I buying a hologram projection of pop-o-matic butt action or music I care to hear in the background of my life?

A half-dozen or more Magic-Mike-and-Ike extras are not an improvement to anyone’s performance…with the small exception of being a sports star with his or her own entourage of cheerleaders. And, even that would be distracting.

In fact, if you are dictionary-challenged, the definition of “distraction” includes a stage and a performer outnumbered by people doing something other than what the performer is doing.

[It’s like playing a video game with cheerleaders or spectators choosing to walk in front of the TV screen. How am I supposed to see what I am doing? How am I supposed to concentrate while you think you are boosting my morale? I don’t even like people talking while I am focusing on a video game; it’s very distracting. And, I only get more stressed out and upset when I lose while distracted versus losing from my own lack of skill. I cannot talk and play. So, don’t talk while I am playing…unless we’re both playing and it’s a silly game meant to be fun.

I really miss the old Atari days of two people sitting to play a simple game for points. The games never demanded more than maybe ten minutes apiece, even if you played more than a dozen games and burned through a few hours. No codes or other devices were required. And, the games were nowhere near as violent as too many modern street-crime and warfront simulators are. The concern for warping minds was nothing compared to what it is now. But, I am drifting off the subject.]

**If background dancers need to share the stage, how about having them introduce an act or follow a performance like an intermission? That would actually enhance a performer’s appeal. Make the background a foreground or aftershock to keep the good vibes going. Don’t overlap talents…if that can even be called a talent.**

Back in the day of the sequin-gloved superstar known as Michael Jackson, before things got really sad and weird with him, turning that high-voiced little black boy into a pale, disfigured scapegoat, if he had other dancers with him on stage, they moved like a unit. Or, it was more like a musical with various people doing different things on one stage. But, I cannot recall ever feeling as distracted and annoyed as I am now. I remember watching Lionel Ritchie videos, with so many colorful people moving around him, and not feeling nearly as bothered as I am, today.

[However, I was never a fan of collaborations like Run DMC and Aerosmith. It was fun for lip-synching at talent shows. But, I did not enjoy listening to that noise as much as I favored Billy Joel or Huey Lewis and the News.]

There is just something different about this modern plague of background dancers that makes me want to scream.

If you’re the main attraction on a stage, own it. Don’t share it (unless it’s a duet/group performance). And, let the “sideshow” lead the parade or cover your exit.




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