koganbot: (Default)
[personal profile] koganbot
Latest column: why teens sing adult lyrics: a theory (which is that it's the other way around); also, Britney as the little engine that couldn't.

The Rules Of The Game #15: Grown-ups Make Puppy Love

Once again they botched the italics. And I just spent five minutes debating with myself as to whether it should be "Grown-ups" or "Grown-Ups." (Oh, and I know that JoJo is actually 16 not 15, but she was 15 when her second album was recorded and released, and I couldn't be bothered to explain this.)

So, any opinion as to why love and romance lyrics overwhelmingly dominate pop music?

EDIT: Here are links to all but three of my other Rules Of The Game columns (LVW's search results for "Rules of the Game"). Links for the other three (which for some reason didn't get "Rules Of The Game" in their titles), are here: #4, #5, and #8.

UPDATE: I've got all the links here now:

http://koganbot.livejournal.com/179531.html

Date: 2007-09-13 03:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alexmacpherson.livejournal.com
I think love/romance is probably the subject area best suited for...a kind of universal ambiguity, maybe. In that most pop songs about love (and especially teenpop ones) are simultaneously cliché-ridden and strikingly ambiguous - so much of the time the emotional crux of the song isn't a particular word or line that you've heard a million times before, but whether the narrator means it, or is deluding him/herself; the clues will be in other lines, some of which (usually in the initially-overlooked verses) provide some sort of disjoint, and of course in the vocal delivery. It's a subject matter which has great scope for lyrical implication, where one line can make you feel like you know a great deal more of the story. Which can be equally down to the listener's own projections!

I can't think of any other theme which has this kind of potential...work and so on are all certainties. Politics can of course be ambiguous but a) political ambiguity is perhaps not best expressed in popsong form, and b) popstars (not just popstars) always seem to feel a need to emphasise their certainty when it comes to political issues.

Date: 2007-09-13 04:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alexmacpherson.livejournal.com
I think most popstars are pretty dumb, and therefore most lyrics are simpleminded and obvious, but with romance simpleminded/obvious lyrics are still a good way (in fact prob the best way) of expressing emotional complexity and depth, whereas this is...v much not the case for politics.

Profile

koganbot: (Default)
Frank Kogan

December 2025

S M T W T F S
 123456
7891011 1213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 13th, 2026 07:30 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios