Albums '00s
Dec. 30th, 2009 05:41 pmI have made a decision for the remainder of 2009 to listen to no more Albums I Haven't Heard Yet. So, a trifle early, here is my decade's end albums list:
Top Ten Albums Of The '00s
1. Ashlee Simpson Autobiography
2. Montgomery Gentry Carrying On
3. Big & Rich Horse Of A Different Color
4. Britney Spears Blackout
5. t.A.T.u. Dangerous & Moving
6. Various Artists Global Hits 2002
7. Eminem The Marshall Mathers LP
8. Ying Yang Twins Me & My Brother
9. Fannypack See You Next Tuesday
10. Paris Hilton Paris
I wouldn't say that these albums are representative of the decade, or my decade, or my listening, even, and I've also not until this moment given any thought to what they might have in common. So let's try: not counting Global Hits 2002, an anthology of Eurodance that spans the late '90s and early '00s, all but two of these are debut albums or second albums, the Ying Yang's being their third and Britney's being her fifth. And all but the Britney strike me as fundamentally exuberant, though that needs elaboration. Global Hits and Paris are bread-and-butter dance albums, so their exuberance is mundane, eye-level, everyday and every night exuberance, Paris being a nice tour through the loneliness and promise of the dance club. And of course all the others are just as danceable, different dances in different locations. Ashlee's exuberance is shot through with an underlying sadness, Montgomery Gentry's with defensiveness and low self-esteem, Eminem's with anger and weakness - the album could be subtitled "In Which Our Hero Explores His Anger And Weakness" - t.A.T.u.'s with poignance (blatantly cheesy poignance is their shtick, the shtickiness making it more eerily beautiful, not less), Ying Yang Twins' with alcohol, and Fannypack's with even more exuberance. Big & Rich's nonstop two-voice harmonies sound simultaneously full of regret and full of gall. Leaving Britney, who in her hedonistic self-involved dance sounds like she's scratching fiercely and insinuatingly at the world - somehow the angriest thing on the list, closer to punk than even Eminem and Montgomery Gentry are, and they kind of are punks in the pre-musical sense.
The feelings that run contrary to the exuberance kick the exuberance forward. When Ashlee introduces herself (first line of the second verse on the first song of her first album) with "I walked a thousand miles while everyone was asleep," she's speaking of long dreadful loneliness, but the line is total chutzpah, telling us in effect, "NOW I'll show you."
Ying Yangs and Big & Rich clown all over the place ("I got a spaceship, fully equipped; I'm a cowboy Stevie Wonder," which makes me think of when the National Lampoon put Stevie Wonder on the cover of their special 3-D issue, wearing 3-D glasses), but Ashlee's got the most full-scale hilarious song ("Love Me For Me," and while being deliberately funny it's dead serious, a raucous comedy of manners on the subject of Ashlee's intense refusal to be taken for granted or on anything other than her own terms), and Fannypack ("Get off, like a wedding gown!") and Eminem have the funniest lines ("Oh, now he's raping his own mother" and "Dear Mr. I'm Too Good Call Or Write My Fans" still crack me up whenever I hear them, but my favorite is "When I go out, I'mma go out shootin'! [Pause.] I don't mean when I die, I mean when I go out to the club, stupid").
A final thought, though: whatever record I might have picked as my favorite for every other decade (in '69 I'd probably have chosen Beggars Banquet, in '79 it'd have been either Raw Power or Never Mind The Bollocks, in '89 it was Appetite For Destruction*, in '99 Midi, Maxi & Efti, which was Swedish reggae-pop but it was fronted by three immigrants who made a point that they were from an area of civil war), there'd have been the presence of politics - or at least a sense of a social push-and-pull - in the songs. I wouldn't say that the records on this decade's list should have more such push-and-pull than they do (and the country duos, Big & Rich and right-wingers Montgomery Gentry, do reference war and racial politics, and there's the exploitation of identity politics by t.A.T.u., and Eminem is punching every social button in sight), but the fact of wars (the U.S. is fighting two of them) and likely environmental catastrophe, and a decade of fairly blatant class division, isn't the presence it would have been when they occurred in other decades, except from the country guys.** This doesn't mean such songs aren't out there, but - except for the country guys - the people making them weren't the ones who put together the really good albums, at least not the ones that reached me.
I assume Ashlee's politics run pretty close to mine - she supports gay marriage and she's a Green Day fan, is probably liberal left - but this doesn't feed her art.
*Stacey Q's Hard Machine was a near miss as my number one, almost upsetting my generalization. And there's always implied identity politics in everything, but that's a different matter.
**And I'd say the same tends to be true of what made the charts.
Top Ten Albums Of The '00s
1. Ashlee Simpson Autobiography
2. Montgomery Gentry Carrying On
3. Big & Rich Horse Of A Different Color
4. Britney Spears Blackout
5. t.A.T.u. Dangerous & Moving
6. Various Artists Global Hits 2002
7. Eminem The Marshall Mathers LP
8. Ying Yang Twins Me & My Brother
9. Fannypack See You Next Tuesday
10. Paris Hilton Paris
I wouldn't say that these albums are representative of the decade, or my decade, or my listening, even, and I've also not until this moment given any thought to what they might have in common. So let's try: not counting Global Hits 2002, an anthology of Eurodance that spans the late '90s and early '00s, all but two of these are debut albums or second albums, the Ying Yang's being their third and Britney's being her fifth. And all but the Britney strike me as fundamentally exuberant, though that needs elaboration. Global Hits and Paris are bread-and-butter dance albums, so their exuberance is mundane, eye-level, everyday and every night exuberance, Paris being a nice tour through the loneliness and promise of the dance club. And of course all the others are just as danceable, different dances in different locations. Ashlee's exuberance is shot through with an underlying sadness, Montgomery Gentry's with defensiveness and low self-esteem, Eminem's with anger and weakness - the album could be subtitled "In Which Our Hero Explores His Anger And Weakness" - t.A.T.u.'s with poignance (blatantly cheesy poignance is their shtick, the shtickiness making it more eerily beautiful, not less), Ying Yang Twins' with alcohol, and Fannypack's with even more exuberance. Big & Rich's nonstop two-voice harmonies sound simultaneously full of regret and full of gall. Leaving Britney, who in her hedonistic self-involved dance sounds like she's scratching fiercely and insinuatingly at the world - somehow the angriest thing on the list, closer to punk than even Eminem and Montgomery Gentry are, and they kind of are punks in the pre-musical sense.
The feelings that run contrary to the exuberance kick the exuberance forward. When Ashlee introduces herself (first line of the second verse on the first song of her first album) with "I walked a thousand miles while everyone was asleep," she's speaking of long dreadful loneliness, but the line is total chutzpah, telling us in effect, "NOW I'll show you."
Ying Yangs and Big & Rich clown all over the place ("I got a spaceship, fully equipped; I'm a cowboy Stevie Wonder," which makes me think of when the National Lampoon put Stevie Wonder on the cover of their special 3-D issue, wearing 3-D glasses), but Ashlee's got the most full-scale hilarious song ("Love Me For Me," and while being deliberately funny it's dead serious, a raucous comedy of manners on the subject of Ashlee's intense refusal to be taken for granted or on anything other than her own terms), and Fannypack ("Get off, like a wedding gown!") and Eminem have the funniest lines ("Oh, now he's raping his own mother" and "Dear Mr. I'm Too Good Call Or Write My Fans" still crack me up whenever I hear them, but my favorite is "When I go out, I'mma go out shootin'! [Pause.] I don't mean when I die, I mean when I go out to the club, stupid").
A final thought, though: whatever record I might have picked as my favorite for every other decade (in '69 I'd probably have chosen Beggars Banquet, in '79 it'd have been either Raw Power or Never Mind The Bollocks, in '89 it was Appetite For Destruction*, in '99 Midi, Maxi & Efti, which was Swedish reggae-pop but it was fronted by three immigrants who made a point that they were from an area of civil war), there'd have been the presence of politics - or at least a sense of a social push-and-pull - in the songs. I wouldn't say that the records on this decade's list should have more such push-and-pull than they do (and the country duos, Big & Rich and right-wingers Montgomery Gentry, do reference war and racial politics, and there's the exploitation of identity politics by t.A.T.u., and Eminem is punching every social button in sight), but the fact of wars (the U.S. is fighting two of them) and likely environmental catastrophe, and a decade of fairly blatant class division, isn't the presence it would have been when they occurred in other decades, except from the country guys.** This doesn't mean such songs aren't out there, but - except for the country guys - the people making them weren't the ones who put together the really good albums, at least not the ones that reached me.
I assume Ashlee's politics run pretty close to mine - she supports gay marriage and she's a Green Day fan, is probably liberal left - but this doesn't feed her art.
*Stacey Q's Hard Machine was a near miss as my number one, almost upsetting my generalization. And there's always implied identity politics in everything, but that's a different matter.
**And I'd say the same tends to be true of what made the charts.
no subject
Date: 2009-12-31 05:28 am (UTC)Haven't heard Midi, Maxi & Efti and haven't listened to Beggars Banquet any time recently, either, but I don't exactly hear politics in the other ones, more a music that (politically speaking) makes you look to the social forces surrounding it to figure out what the hell is going on.
But I guess I could see a fairly major difference in the fact that Ashlee doesn't really want to point to her surrounding social forces -- they seem more thrust on her, sometimes unfairly and sometimes not, but usually harshly. Where Sex Pistols and Stooges and Rolling Stones and Guns and Roses are out for blood from their audience, with Ashlee it's her audience (or "audience" -- the people who word on the street sez think they know her) that wants blood -- and more often than not in the teen confessional stuff, the singers are kind of after their own blood, too, they have a way of turning the lashing out in on themselves. (Eminem did both at the same time, then imploded.)
no subject
Date: 2009-12-31 05:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-31 10:26 am (UTC)But also, looking more broadly, I'd say that American society isn't behaving as if Iraq and Afghanistan and global warming are a big deal in the way that it was treating civil rights and Vietnam as a big deal in the '60s. For that matter, I'm not behaving as if such things are a big deal in the way that I was in the '60s. And though race, class, gender, immigration etc. are always issues, I wouldn't say that people are consciously engaged with them. Obviously, some people are engaged, like my brother, but not nearly as many as when I was growing up. (People reading this overseas: you have no idea how disengaged from politics most Americans are.)
(As for a cogent politics, you can't get them out of most politicians either.)
By the way, if I did an 11 through 20, Piracy Funds Terrorism might be there.
Stooges and Stones and GN'R are very much out for their own blood too, just as much as Eminem is.
no subject
Date: 2009-12-31 05:13 pm (UTC)I guess the politics question is a tough one, and you're right that Ashlee isn't making the gestures, regardless of their coherence, in the way that the others are. But there's something exciting about understanding how Ashlee's album helps to change the (external, though I wish I could find a better word -- contextual?) politics around it. I can't think of another album that comparably changed my own understanding of the entire social context in which it was made (reconfiguring cliches of teenybopper, teens, "intended audience," what makes "this sort of music" special, lots of other stuff...), but that's because my narratives for the Sex Pistols and Stones and Stooges were received -- I didn't initially figure the narrative out for myself, it was handed to me. (I think that this given narrative often misses out on what each group may have actually been doing, but you're not going to find much resistance taking up any of those bands intellectually in the way that you will with Ashlee.)
And given your previous comment, I think Eminem pretty clearly falls into the "political" camp -- I'm not sure if there's a major political event he didn't take up explicitly. (You have to include, e.g., overwrought anti-Bush "Mosh"...)
no subject
Date: 2009-12-31 05:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-31 05:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-31 10:59 am (UTC)(Neither of these tracks refers to politics much, though "bad boys" is certainly a socially loaded term.)
By the way, have you heard K'naan? He's in Canada but was born in Somalia.
And the boys from the 'hood are always hard
Let alone in Mogadishu it's a mastered art
If you bring the world 'hood to a seminar
We from the only place worse than Kandahar
And that's kinda hard
no subject
Date: 2019-11-26 03:44 pm (UTC)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yMq5dLOjl5A
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNHlgdrrxrM