Login

Register

Member List

RSS Feed

Amanda | Contact

Auguste | Contact

Jesse | Contact

Pam | Contact

Friday, April 27, 2012

Music Fridays: Lull Edition

Music

Was it just me, or was this past week kinda boring? The only even remotely amusing thing was Monica Crowley calling Sandra Fluke a lesbian, after the right bashed her for weeks for all the cock she's supposedly riding. But I'm going into this week's Panda Party with a spacesuit, because I finally crossed the 10,000 mark!

Hey, get your yuks where you can. Which is in Panda Party, so come play with us!

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 08:44 AM • (3) Comments

Friday, April 20, 2012

Music Fridays: Save the Rap Edition

Music

Today's WTF story via Crommunist:

A landmark Pointe Claire Village bar that was forced to stop selling alcohol in January is expected to get back its liquor licence this week but on the condition that no hip-hop or rap bands play the bar in the future......

Human-rights experts, however, were quick to sound the alarm. Although not the first of its kind, the apparent ban on hip-hop music imposed by the Régie sends a dangerous message, said Fo Niemi.

This being Canada, it seems the first concern was the obvious racism of this, but it's also a free speech concern, as far as I can tell. I don't need to hammer home how this is utter bullshit, I hope.

A video to kick off Panda Party

If you want some tunes to cheer up your work day, Panda Party is there every Friday!

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 08:49 AM • (48) Comments

Friday, April 13, 2012

Music Fridays: Not Traveling Edition

Music

Thrilling stuff! I get to be here all day today, so I'm really looking forward to listening to Panda Party while I catch up on work. Come join me, and enjoy this video by Y.A.C.H.T. that has two---count 'em--two songs in it.

 

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 08:33 AM • (2) Comments

Friday, March 30, 2012

Music Fridays: Spring Is In The Air Edition

Music

It's been warm and then cold again, but gradually getting away from winter-cold temperatures. Between this and returning from SXSW, I feel that it's officially spring and time to take the time to enjoy it a little. And it's a perfect time to Panda Party! So join us. I should be there all day, as work is actually keeping me at my desk instead of on the road today. A couple of bands I saw at SXSW that really put you in that spring feeling mood:

Escort

Escort is an insanely fun Brooklyn band that has roughly a gazillion members and who plays kick-ass modernized disco.

Bleached hasn't got a full-length album yet, but I wait eagerly, because they put out hook-heavy sunny rock and roll that really rocks.

Come to Panda Party and hear more great music to enjoy this spring weather!

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 08:51 AM • (3) Comments

Friday, March 23, 2012

Music Fridays: One Day Will Finish SXSW Post

Music

Yes, I'm aware that the long list of videos I meant to include last week for cool bands I'd seen at SXSW got mostly eaten. I will be trying to figure that out, but in the meantime I'm traveling again. This time to Syracuse, to speak at the university about the relationship of feminism and atheism. But since I'll be taking Amtrak, hopefully I'll be on Panda Party for most of the day. In the meantime, check out this British rapper named Lady Leshurr I saw in the Driskill Hotel, of all places.

I'll be watching her career with interest. She really knew how to work a crowd, so I see big things in her future.

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 08:04 AM • (0) Comments

Friday, March 16, 2012

Music Fridays: SXSW MUSIC Edition

Music

Good morning! I'm still at SXSW and so blogging is slow, but I thought I'd check in share some stuff with you, as well as invite you to Panda Party. I've seen a lot of awesome bands so far, but the biggest is probably Gossip. 

The good news is that it was a tiny venue (maybe 150 people?), and so an experience you don't often get with them. Beth was amazing, as usual, and returned to old school form in that she's still stripping down to her skivvies and daring you to take issue with it. The bad news is they're really pushing their new stuff, which just isn't as good as their first three albums. But the crowd seemed to like it, so who am I?

I've gotten some writing done, believe it or not! "Community" returned last night, and here's my piece on why we deserve closure, as fans. "Portlandia" also finished out its season, and I responded by saying that the show demonstrates that tedious hipster-bashing is finally not hip. Embrace the cool! Orrin Hatch is taking swipes at hipsters now, which means hipster-bashing is what it was always meant to be: snottiness by the jealous and the conservative against the hip and the liberal. The response I've received suggests that there are still some bitter geeks who want to feel cool by bashing hipsters, but I've always found this behavior a bit strange. After all, most people that get labeled "hipster" were geeks in a former life, which is why the byways of the modern hipster are similar to those of geeks: blogs, social networking, obsessiveness. Perhaps it's the similarity that causes the hate.

Here are some great bands I've seen so far:

Hope to see more of the same!

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 10:35 AM • (10) Comments

Friday, February 17, 2012

Music Fridays: Kansas Edition

Music

I'm in Wichita today, so for those who live here and want to see me speak, please come out to College Hill United Methodist Church, where I'll be presenting with a panel about progressivism in red states. If you are or if you aren't, however, may I suggest Panda Party? And a video by one of my favorite Kansas bands:

I should be able to Panda Party today, and that means hopefully blogging!

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 09:59 AM • (6) Comments

Friday, February 03, 2012

Music Fridays: Remembering “Soul Train” Edition

Music

The internet is awash in memories of "Soul Train" this week, because of the loss of Don Cornelius, the host, who died from an apparent suicide. A little-discussed fact of the internet is that watching YouTube clips of "Soul Train" is a surprisingly effective form of stress relief. 

And so is partying down at the Panda Party! So come join us and spin some tunes. Sadly, we can't create a "Soul Train"-style line with our cute avatars, but you can play at home. 

RIP, Don Cornelius. My memories of that era are really dim, since I was a little kid, but I remember that well into the 90s, every dance party occasion would burst, at some point, into a "Soul Train" line.  Now it's more like a circle thing, where people are pushed into the middle to show off their moves. I am fine with both methods, though feel the line version was less pressure-intensive. Share your memories in comments! Or come into Panda Party and share them there. 

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 09:19 AM • (2) Comments

Friday, January 20, 2012

Music Fridays: Don’t Leave Me This Way Edition

Music

Panda Party time!  The title, of course, refers to Rick Perry's sudden and much lamented departure. We'd all grown fond of the way he would grunt out catchphrases during debates, a nice counterpoint to Gingrich droning on and on, as if he was saying anything more meaningful than shouting out catchphrases. Part of me is beginning to feel for the also-rans in the Republican race. Each of them had a moment where the party was lavishing attention, telling them they're the one and only, and then they were suddenly dropped as everyone ran back to Old Dependable. It's like being the mistress who gets a long story about how he's going to leave his wife for you, only to have him, after he satifies himself, yank his pants up and run back to his wife. 

So here's a song for today, and the Panda Party begins now.

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 09:22 AM • (9) Comments

Friday, January 13, 2012

Music Fridays: WAM Prom Edition

Music

I have a friend from out of town staying, so I can't be online today, but that's no reason for the rest of you to deprive yourselves of a Panda Party! After a few months of doing this, choosing themes and booting trolls has become quite the democratic institution, so I think it can fly without my presence this week. But that doesn't mean I won't be sharing a video with you that's fitting for the WAM Prom that will take place mere hours after Panda Party usually peters out. 

And, as an added bonus, here are the two mash-ups Marc Faletti has created and pre-released:

Disco in the Deep (Adele feat. Sister Sledge) by @marcfaletti

Single Ladies' Thing (Lauren Hill feat. Kool & the Gang, Beyonce, and Lil Wayne) by @marcfaletti

To hear the rest of his 90 minute set, New Yorkers: come to WAM Prom. And the RSVP list is packed, so I'd advise showing up early.

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 09:01 AM • (2) Comments

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Disco’s lasting influence: Chic

Music

This week, in anticpation of the upcoming WAM Prom on Friday, I'll be blogging some thoughts on music and culture by the way of our mash-up theme of hip-hop and disco.

As regular readers know, I firmly reject the popular history of disco, which claims that it was a value-free trend that the nation was best rid of, in favor of the increasingly popular and often better-researched history that demonstrates that it was an interesting and vital musical form that helped give birth to New Wave, post-punk, techno, and of course, hip-hop. Stating this claim publicly, I've learned, especially if you note some of the racist and homophobic underpinnings the straight white male-dominated "disco sucks" movement, gets you a lot of angry pushback. Usually people engaging in it cherrypick their evidence, citing the soulless crap side of disco, such as "The Hustle" or the Village People, as evidence for their contention that disco was simply worthless and there's no deeper story to why it got so violently rejected. The problem with that argument is that yes, 90% of disco sucked, but as Sturgeon's Law states, 90% of everything is crap. Since the vibrancy of everything from science fiction to rock music is usually judged by the 10%, I demand that disco be held to the same standard. 

With that in mind, let's talk about Chic. Chic is one of the most famous disco bands of all time, but even if you know them, you probably don't know how broad or deep their catalog really is. The band was the brainchild of Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards. They formed in 1976 and disbanded in the early 80s. And it's really hard to imagine what popular music would sound like today without their influence.

Let's start with the songs they're most famous for, "Good Times" and "Le Freak". As noted on Wikipedia, their seamless blending of rock and disco on these tracks was inspirational to people from all corners of the pop music world. Blondie, Queen, and Daft Punk have all borrowed from "Good Times", but its biggest impact was felt on hip-hop. 

It's been sampled in roughly one billion rap songs, but the most famous is probably still "Rapper's Delight" by the Sugarhill Gang.

But while their work under the banner of Chic would have been enough to secure their place in music history forever, Chic did so much more than that. Edwards and Rogers were in it to win it when it came to writing and playing disco. They're the engine behind Sister Sledge, for instance. 

And for Diana Ross in her disco phase. Yep, you have Chic to thank for "Upside Down"

For which MC Lyte was no doubt grateful:

And also behind Diana's massive hit that has become a gay anthem "I'm Coming Out":

Which in turn worked out pretty well for Biggie Smalls:

If it were just Chic, that would be reason enough to laugh off the notion that disco sucks and offered the world nothing but soul-destroying mediocrity. But there's a lot of stories like this, if you do a little digging. For instance, there's the strange and forward-thinking "I Feel Love" by Donna Summer, which was produced by Giorgio Moroder , and so impressed Brian Eno that he said to David Bowie, "I have heard the sound of the future." Bowie went on to work with Moroder on "Cat People (Putting Out Fire)", a song that was famously featured in Quentin Tarantino's "Inglourious Basterds". Or take the case of Sylvester, a gay icon and one of the singers who helped push disco closer towards the house sound with a mutation called Hi-NRG. And, of course, pure disco sound has a few artists who are still holding the torch, to great effect, like New York's Escort or Jhameel

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 05:47 PM • (40) Comments

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

For a couple of years there, big time lady rappers really wanted you to use condoms

MusicSex

This week, in anticpation of the upcoming WAM Prom on Friday, I'll be blogging some thoughts on music and culture by the way of our mash-up theme of hip-hop and disco.

Those of us who lived through the early 90s can attest that it was a time when there was a sudden surge of pop culture interest in HIV and getting out the message about safe sex. MTV started talking about condoms, and having special addressing condom use. Fox, believe it or not, started airing condom ads in 1991. The first major movie about AIDS, the treacly “Philadelphia”, came out in 1993, the same year that a cast member of “The Real World” came out as both gay and infected with HIV. And, the two biggest female hip-hop acts in the country made raising awareness about condoms part of their act.

First you had TLC, who tried to normalize condoms in a sly way, by having Left-Eye Lopez wear one as an eye patch.

And Salt’n’Pepa took on discussions about safe sex on in a big way, both in their hit song “Let’s Talk About Sex” and revised versions that put even more emphasis on the issue of preventing HIV transmission.

Why was there a sudden interest in having even more frank discussion about HIV and AIDS in the early 90s? I think it was a couple of things. Part of it was that it was an era of shaking off the Reagan years, and all the prudery and conservative nonsense that came with the so-called Reagan revolution. But another part of it was that AIDS really stopped being the “gay disease” in the early 90s. 

HIV incidence among women increased gradually until the late 1980s, declined during the early 1990s, and has remained relatively stable since, at approximately a quarter of new infections (23% in 2009).

The realization that women were getting HIV in the late 80s really, I think, made it clear that straight people needed to be educated on protecting themselves. It’s a shame that it took HIV growing into the straight community to get this much attention paid to it, of course, but to be expected considering how much more acceptable homophobia was back then. That women were getting it, too, is why I think it was female rappers specifically felt pressure to address the situation. I’m just speculating here, but I suspect that these women, being, you know, straight women, knew very well how hard it can be for a woman to bring up the topic of safe sex with a man she’s having sex with, and they did a really great thing in trying to make condoms and the discussion of them seem less scary.

What I want to point out is that TLC and Salt’n’Pepa framed portrayals and discussion of safe sex within a larger context of talking about pleasure. Their songs are fun and light-hearted and put a particular emphasis on women as sexual subjects, who have sex for their own reasons and not just because men expect them to. This is in contrast with far too many safe sex messages, which are medicalized and don’t talk about power or pleasure. Many safe sex messages assume that the biggest barrier to condom use is knowledge, but actually, a lot of people who don’t use condoms really know that they should, and so repeating messages about the efficacy of condoms doesn’t do much to improve usage. But if you can associate condoms with having fun, and if you can portray women taking charge of their sex lives in a positive light, you’re going to do a whole lot better.

What’s disappointing is that this trend of women putting out songs portraying women as fun-loving, empowered, sexy women who take care of their own health seems to have been just a blip on the radar. Good luck finding that many women doing anything like TLC or Salt’n’Pepa were doing in the early 90s in hip-hop, dance, or rock music, at least anything that’s topping the charts like these groups were easy to do. Why it went away so fast is something of a mystery to me, even still.

By the way, Marc has released another mash-up from the set he'll be playing on Friday night at WAM Prom. It's two female acts from completely different eras from the one described above, but both with their own strengths. 

Disco in the Deep (Adele feat. Sister Sledge) by @marcfaletti

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 07:01 PM • (34) Comments

Monday, January 09, 2012

The Great Saturday Night Fever Hoax

This week, in anticpation of the upcoming WAM Prom on Friday, I'll be blogging some thoughts on music and culture by the way of our mash-up theme of hip-hop and disco.

One of the myths about disco, one that I think that contributes to a lot of misunderstandings about it, is that it was a brief trend that collapsed as quickly as it rose up in the 70s. In reality, disco was just another step in a long 20th century evolution of dance music, and it ended for the same reason a lot of musical trends do: it morphed into other forms. If anything, disco had a larger impact than most music trends do, as elements of it came out in techno and all other electronic dance music, post-punk, New Wave, and most importantly, hip-hop (which is why we're doing a dual theme for this year's WAM Prom.) But one reason I think there's a sense that disco was its own thing in a way that other trends aren't is that the kind of dancing people think of when they think of disco is this elaborate, ballroom-style dancing that has no relationship to the bouncing and writhing that is most dancing people do in America, whether at a rock show, hip-hop club, or rave. You know what I mean. People think "disco" and they think of John Travolta playing Tony Manero.

Or Travolta's solo style dancing in the same movie:

Nothing against Travolta's unbelievable dancing skills, but this wasn't actually how people (at least prior to this movie) danced to disco, which was, from what I understand, much like they've danced to everything since, which is mostly formless bouncing and writhing. Now, all sorts of music trends have movies that exploited them to make semi-musicals with elaborate dancing, but Saturday Night Fever became synonymous in the public imagination with disco in a way that hasn't happened before or since to a musical form. Why? 

There's a lot of reasons: the dancing is really that good, the music is that much better, a zeitgeists was hit. But I think one reason is that Saturday Night Fever purported to be based on a true story, giving the audience the feeling that they really were taking a peek into the Brooklyn disco scene by watching this fictional film, in much the same way that 8 Mile got a little extra boost because it's so well-known that Eminem did in fact scrape his way up through rap battles like the one portrayed in the movie. But while I think Eminem's life is pretty well-documented, the "true story" of Saturday Night Fever is actually, well, a hoax. 

The whole thing started with a New York Magazine story by Nik Cohn in 1976 called "Inside the Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night", a story about the elaborate disco lifestyle of the Italian-American regulars at a Bay Ridge, Brooklyn disco. The story was a hit; it seems it must have gone into development as a movie in record time. The only problem wiht it is that Cohn made the whole thing up. 

He finally admitted the hoax 20 years later, in 1997.

For an article in the December 8 issue celebrating the 20th anniversary of the movie, Cohn tells of a disco deception born of frustration. The British writer describes how he went to Brooklyn's now legendary 2001 Odyssey searching in vain for a flamboyantly dressed fellow he had spotted in the club's entrance a week earlier. "I didn't learn much...I made a lousy interviewer: I knew nothing about this world, and it showed. Quite literally, I didn't speak the language.

"So I faked it. I conjured up the story of the figure in the doorway, and named him Vincent...I wrote it all up. And presented it as fact," Cohn confesses. "There was no excuse for it...I knew the rules of magazine reporting, and I knew that I was breaking them. Bluntly put, I cheated."

The culture and specifically the emphasis on dancing skills was a mish-mash of Cohn's own imagination and what he observed in the Northern soul clubs in Great Britain in the 60s. It's one of those stories that has drifted under the waves, because most people don't really think it's that important (though why not in our James Frey-bashing era, I don't know). But while it's far from the most important story of journalistic misinformation, I still think it's not something that should be waved off. After all, Cohn's imaginings supplanted the more reality-based portrayals of disco, most of which I think are far more interesting than the image that Cohn painted. To make it all worse, if people had a better idea of how disco actually was in the 70s, I think it would be easier to see it as part of the larger quilt of American pop music, which is always mutating as different genres swap and steal and morph into something new, yet still familiar. 

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 05:06 PM • (63) Comments

Friday, December 30, 2011

Music Fridays: End of the Year

Music

Let's get this Panda Party started! Only two days left in the year, so you best be partying. I know most of us have to work today, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't Panda Party.

With that in mind, here's another one of my favorite records of the year:

This was definitely the year for women in music, as far as I'm concerned: Wild Flag, Shilpa Ray, Dum Dum Girls, CSS, Le Butcherettes, Vivian Girls, and probably a bunch more that I'll remember after my coffee is consumed. All put out great albums this year, all worth checking out. But I have a special place in my heart for Shilpa Ray, who is intense in a way that pretty much no one else can do effectively right now.

So, Panda Party! Drop in.

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 09:13 AM • (7) Comments

Friday, December 23, 2011

Music Fridays: Christmas Edition

Music

Merry Christmas! Let's kick this thing off right, with a Panda Party! I'm a fan of much of Christmas: presents, food, enforced cheer, eggnog. But I'm just not that into Christmas music, so while we will have holiday-related themes today, we won't be playing any Christmas tunes. Unless Joey Ramone sings them.

So come into the Panda Party and let's enjoy some holiday cheer.

What are your plans for the holidays?

Posted by Amanda Marcotte at 09:56 AM • (11) Comments

Page 1 of 11 pages  1 2 3 >  Last ›