I have always said, jokingly-seriously, that if Andy Warhol wouldn’t have painted you then you don’t matter to pop culture. I'm sure it’s just one of those conversation starters that people love me for (no sarcasm here...move along). Sometimes people try to talk to me about music by squeezing in some indie-bands and I admit to secretly thinking, “These guys aren’t bad, but there's no way Andy Warhol would’ve painted them, they're boring” I do feel pretty confident that Mr. Warhol would have painted Lady Gaga... about 20 times this year alone. She is definitely not boring.
Lady Gaga is quite possibly the most adjective inducing pop star to come along in over decade.... since one Britney Spears at the very the least. That is where the comparison to Britney (who I love) ends, but where the comparison to whole other list begins. Blondie, Madonna, David Bowie, Michael/Janet Jackson, Prince, Grace Jones, you know people Andy would’ve painted. No digs on Gwen Stefani (who I also like), but Lady Gaga seems to be pop-phenom Gwen wanted to be, but just never quite got there. Lady Gaga exudes a certain confidence, intelligence, and attitude that only a special kinda person can pull off. Some pop stars are just too sweet... which is fine, I love my sweet popsters, but to change the game a bit you gotta go after it Red Queen style. Take heads now and take names later.
Of course, it is fine to compare to artists to artists, I mean let’s face it all of pop-culture is rather repetitive; but where the media, the critics, and even the fans sometimes fail is to measure an artist on their own accord. This is where Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta (Gaga to the masses) excels. She is slowly/quickly building her own case... “C’mon I challenge you not to like me or at the very least know who I am and respect me”... is the vibe I get from her. Hell yeah.
She understands the ways of Pop Art better than anyone since Madonna. Lady Gaga gets that unless your music is good all of the outfits, statements, and performance in the world won’t make you matter. For better or worse every single she has put out has been a repetitive radio smash, but as a music fan she gets interesting when you start digging around her album and not listening to the “singles”. You start to understand that any number of tracks could be singles and that’s a hard feat in the world of 2009 pop music... especially an American pop act who is just expected to churn out the money shot single in hopes of selling people a record.
This is where Lady Gaga gets even more interesting. In some ways she is the first pop star of the download era. This is something I will write more about in future, but quite simply the iTunes Store, the internet, and the media are creating a culture of letting the single matter again... which I find incredibly exciting. Yet, she could be the one artist who takes advantage of this and seems to want to make great albums. I love it when artists are at odds with the logic of the times.
See, in the 1990’s and early “noughties” the labels took even more advantage of the record buying public (if that’s possible) by selling us albums by artists only capable of writing one or two good songs, but forcing those artists to make an album. Back in the 1950’s and 60’s, in the heyday of the ’45 record, artists could press a great single and that was ok... that was all they had in them so that is all that was expected. Just because you can't write an album doesn't mean you can't write one the greatest songs of all time.
This was my initial reaction to Lady Gaga, which was fine. I heard “Just Dance” and thought... holy crap that’s a good pop song and proceeded to buy it instantly out of the iTunes store. Then came “Poker Face” which I didn’t like as much, but was fine. “Paparazzi”, though, was fantastic... so I got the record. And then the new record. Yes, I call them records... which she would probably appreciate.
Where I’m going with this is that she makes really good music, it might all be fleeting, but we'll just have to wait and see. Right now she is making the most interesting 4 chord pop music this side of the Atlantic which already makes her fun in my world. She makes bold over-the-top statements about changing pop music forever and I think, “Hell yeah... go do it. Shake it up!”
I want to believe.
The best thing is that if she wanted to be just be a flavor of the month... she would’ve already succeeded; she could’ve taken the money and ran. But there is one song on the Fame Monster called “Speechless” which sounds like a lost David Bowie song. It’s amazing. I listened to like 10 times in a row the other day. I don’t think flavors of the month write songs like that.
