Navigation |
pop musicAre the Sugababes getting too sweet?They may not be well-known in the
States, but British girl group the Sugababes have been one of
my favorite musical acts for about seven years now. Indeed, they’re
a big hit in the U.K. generally, having notched up six No. 1 singles as
well as a Brit award (our equivalent of the Grammys). This despite persistent
rumors of infighting, and multiple lineup changes that perhaps make
them the U.K. equivalent of Destiny’s Child. They burst on the scene in their
first incarnation in 2000:
Baby-faced Keisha Buchanan
(left) and feisty Mutya Buena (right) were already friends
from school, while the enigmatic-looking redhead Siobhan Donaghy
(center) was added by Buena’s manager. Their first big hit single,
when they were still in their mid-teens, was "Overload." It made
use of the girls’ sweet, throaty, pop-soul harmonies (reminiscent
of the group En Vogue) and their barbed-wire attitude, as well as
their multiracial look (Buchanan’s background is Jamaican; Buena’s
is Filipina, Irish, Spanish and Chinese; and Donaghy’s is Irish): Submitted on January 22, 2008 at 4:00 pm Bjork loves tables and fansI guess we already knew that Björk is living in a braver, newer world than the rest of us.
But a recent post on the Wired website revealed just how cutting-edge she is. The article describes the reacTable, a "tangible music interface." The first two sentences kinda made me drool:
Leave it to Björk to popularize something like this, right? She's sorta the patron saint of the off-kilter. … continue reading Submitted on August 15, 2007 at 1:01 am Spice Girls back with more seasoningPeople of the world, get ready to spice up your life … again. Apparently, the world just wasn't savory enough. By now, every boy and every girl has probably already heard that the Spice Girls are reuniting for a world (well, eleven cities) tour. My response to the (pre-)Fab Five’s announcement is a resounding “zig-a-zig whaaa?”
Listen, I’m not going to get into an academic discourse about the musical merits of a group whose lyrics include such profound social statements as “slam your body down and wind it all around.” While I was never a fan (I’m averse to all groups who have their own dolls), I didn’t hate the group. They represented a superficial kind of “Girl Power” (gosh, remember when that was all the rage?) that, while simply a by-product of its marketing machine, still seems downright scholarly compared to the trash-talking, lady parts–flashing and rehab-entering that is so in vogue with today’s starlets. … continue reading Submitted on June 29, 2007 at 5:17 pm |
User login
Recent blog posts
|





Recent comments
2 min 11 sec ago
2 min 21 sec ago
2 min 27 sec ago
3 min 6 sec ago
3 min 36 sec ago
4 min ago
4 min 43 sec ago
8 min 25 sec ago
12 min 35 sec ago
20 min 32 sec ago