Robert Christgau's Music Criticism Blog - Expert Witness - MSN Music

Nicki Minaj/Macy Gray

Both Badder Than Donna Summer, and in Such Different Ways

By Xgau Apr 24, 2012 4:33AM

Nicki Minaj: Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded: Deluxe Edition (Cash Money/Universal Republic)

Since the positive and negative reviews say pretty much the same thing, we can agree that this is an overstuffed, musically manipulative, thematically directionless bid to put the pink-haired alien on the singles charts until Katy Perry absconds to rehab. She isn't "the female Weezy" or some ill-defined male alter ego. She's an aspiring and most likely inevitable pop queen who raps exceptionally well, sings quite well, rhymes inconsistently but sometimes superbly, and will do anything to be rich and famous. This obviously doesn't make her a heroine. But if you enjoy contemporary pop whose market-tested blare offends both rockist philistines and IDM aesthetes, her second album is a worthwhile investment. It begins strong and, counting the three bonus tracks, ends strong. In between it tends mawkish and loud, neither of which precludes fun, especially with the right cameos. There is, however, a Chris Brown track. (Hey‑-I said anything.) A MINUS

 

Macy Gray: Covered (429)

Ten non-Gray songs, three comedy skits, and three brief cameos for her kids and their high school pals. The songs are all post-1980, meaning post-song‑-from the era when bands began distinguishing themselves by sound. Credit producer Hal Wilner with isolating the melodically verbal in Metallica, Radiohead, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Sublime, My Chemical Romance, and lesser lights. But 1) the high point is the opening "Here Comes the Rain Again," an anthem on the face of it that Gray wrests from Annie Lennox forever; 2) a low point is the closer from the anthemic-on-the-face-of-it Arcade Fire, a major structural mishap; and 3) an even lower point is the Metallica centerpiece, which could be my problem but I bet isn't. Casting directors should note that the comedy skits are genuinely funny; Gray should note that I'm omitting the cameos when I put this in iTunes. But both are distractions. Fun as it is to hear her do "Creep," "Teenagers," and "Smoke Two Joints," this is a bigger mess than it had to be. B PLUS

 

117Comments
Apr 26, 2012 11:27PM
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Jason: Sure he was right. Then again, I was in my thirties, a full-fledged shaving and deodorizing adult, when I converted to the Assembly of Rap Fanaticism, so I always expected that the best hip-hoppers would grow old with me. Then as now, it's not the form or sound of hip-hop that works against the old-timers, it's the audience, which buries its has-beens alive like no other music audience in history. But we're part of the audience too, so we can do our part for the elders. And a good start would be spreading the news on Pos and Dave's wonderful First Serve album (speaking of De La Soul as grown-ups).

Apr 26, 2012 10:04PM
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It's late, but here's a thought that I can't shake -- Xgau's forward-looking observation in his '01 review of De La Soul's AOI:Bionix --

Anyone who ever wondered what hip hop might sound like when it grew up now has an answer  

continues to ring true. I well recall how that seemingly tossed aside observation made me catch my breath. Grown up hip hop still seemed a far-future condition. But with that mere handful of words, I saw pretty clearly how there was no reason the form and sound of hip hop couldn't sustain aging talents the same way country and jazz did. I mean, why the fcuk not? It required a leap of faith in 2001. Still - he was right, wasn't he?
Apr 26, 2012 7:22PM
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Macy Gray career forecast:

Best case: Manages to stay on the same label for two albums in a row
Median case: Above-average tribute album contributor
Worst case: Wacky housekeeper on Tyler Perry-created TV series

Katy Perry career forecast:

Best case: Rom-com manic pixie dream other woman
Median case: Judge on American Idol, seasons 20 to 28
Worst case: Forms close-harmony duo with Zooey Deschanel called Exile in Girlville
Apr 26, 2012 6:38PM
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That "hickey or a bruise" line is detailed, for sure.  Charmingly, I'm not so sure. 

Katy Perry--or "Katy Perry" can play with that"Is it fun or is it dangerous?" line all she wants and with a certain level of comfort and protection.  I hope the young women of USC (and Dartmouth!)--not to mention the much younger girl-children who form her core audience can continue to sort out KP's fantasy play from their real lives. 

Course, I'm writing this sitting across the table from my 15 year old daughter (she's listening to some heavy metal in Arabic right now.  School assignment, I swear).  And she's the one who pulled my coat about this song: "Um, daddy?  Am I right that this is a song about getting so f*cked up drunk that you pass out and maybe later have to try to remember who you had sex with last night? Cool.  I'm glad those 8 year old twins I babysit have been jamming to this one."




Apr 26, 2012 5:45PM
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To be clear, I'd never heard of Tim Parks and never read NLRB for better or worse. His novel may well be dandy, though I wonder. But for him to pretend that Nan Talese didn't like it because of some deep biographical reason when there was a perfectly good surface biographical explanation, albeit a not very polite one, seemed thick, disingenuous, and/or tendentious.

Edit: That should be NYRB, not NLRB. Which do I like better when functional? The NLRB, natch.


Apr 26, 2012 5:44PM
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the reductionism in Parks looks pretty silly. I was hoping for more, er, nuance in the idea than parents they f**k you up, but maybe there isn't much there.

Actually there is quite a great deal more there (there being systems theory as it applies to relationships, from families of origin to couples to work units to neighborhood associations to gangs to rock and roll bands, sports teams, crews on airplanes, the staff at your favorite restaurant and all other sociological units), and the common assertion that it is all about how our parents f us up is only one factor in the system. Most likely they also helped you in many different ways, not to mention that other family members influenced you as well. Among other things, the function of birth order is quite compelling, though none of this is fixed and unmovable.


During the 20th Century, most of the movements that rebelled against layers of paternalism -- the labor movement, feminism, civil rights, even rock and roll itself -- can easily be described by Systems Psychology and Sociology.


What it has to do with the creation of specific and unique works of art, literature or music is certainly open for discussion, and in fact, good criticism does just that. Not to mention considering somatic chemistry, class and yes, even Freud as someone we know demonstrated ably in Barnes and Noble two years ago.


My take is that Parks' reductionism comes simply from trying to fit complex sociological and psychological ideas about equally complex literature into a relatively brief article. Added to the notion that he's still working out the concept. Personally, I think it clearly describes why some people are nearly magically devoted to Bruce Springsteen and other people see him as corny, as just one example. Nicky's story about his friends and Kanye West would be a second.


Apr 26, 2012 5:44PM
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I'd like to stand up for Katy Perry. I think many of the lyrics in her songs are attentive and detailed; maybe not singer-songwriter detailed--which would be a bad match for her music anyway--but charmingly detailed nonetheless. "Teenage Dream" is an obvious example. But "Last Friday Night" is a good one, too: "I smell like a minibar/DJs passed out in the yard/Barbie's on the barbeque/Is this a hickey or a bruise?/Pictures of last night ended up online/I'm screwed/Oh well!/It's a blacked out blur but/I'm pretty sure it ruled/Damn..." and so on. I think that's charming and funny! And accurate: Have you heard about the parties they throw here at USC? I like her. There's plenty of craft, care, and heart in her music. I would vote someone else "lowest common denominator." Actually, that could be a fun poll.
Apr 26, 2012 5:41PM
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xgau, you may have answered this question somewhere... but I can't find anything about it. How exactly did you form a relationship strong enough with Sonic Youth to be able to score the killer post-Thousand Leaves nuptials article after all the bad grades, the rude dik jokes and Kim's wrong-side-of-town animosity? I remember reading that last bit in the SY chapter of Our Band Could Be Yr Life. 
Apr 26, 2012 5:27PM
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My problem with Katy is her obviousness. Her Friday night song and her getting married in Vegas song typify this -- establishing cliched setups that follow through exactly as you think they would, with no surprises, detours, plot twists, or curveballs. I often wonder how much better she would be if someone else wrote her songs -- someone with a little more life experience, or maybe imagination, or verbal panache, or whatever -- though I have to admit, my curiosity to see that come to pass....well, it isn't really that strong.  She's pretty lowest common denominator. 
Apr 26, 2012 5:23PM
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Let's be nice, guys. I suppose Tim Parks' blog entries are hit-or-miss--whose aren't?--but Europa is a funny and quite moving novel about failure and loss and European academic politics. He's a fine translator who helped bring Italo Calvino, Roberto Calasso, and Alberto Moravia to an Anglophone readership. He's a superb journalistic chronicler of Italian politics and society (if anyone's written more perceptively about Berlusconi, please give me the name). And his essays on contemporary European fiction are one of the best reasons to subscribe to the NYRB (and there are a lot of good reasons).

Apr 26, 2012 4:52PM
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Sorry, I forgot the link for the Tim Quirk essay, which is called 'Budweiser bought my baby.'

http://www.toomuchjoy.com/index.php/2011/03/budweiser-bought-my-baby/

Apr 26, 2012 4:51PM
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Tim Quirk, singer with the band 'Too Much Joy', and then music industry executive (at Rhapsody and now I think at Google Music) wrote about licensing songs to advertising. I think he goes on rather too long, but it does have some interest.

33-1/3 readers will have noticed that the main subject of the pretty decent book on Nick Drake focuses on the issues of licensing Pink Moon for an advertisement, and how  that affected Drake's posthumous career.

Apr 26, 2012 4:43PM
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I've never heard anything by Katy Perry as self-regarding as that Tim Parks blog on the New York Review of books website someone just referenced. The last paragraph is particularly striking because that put-down (did it really originate with Nan Talese?) is so memorable, and I am sure will long, long outlive Tim Parks' novel. Interesting that the amazon.uk reviews are positive, but the amazon.us reviews -- and  the NYT review -- are *extremely* mixed: lots of 'turgid', 'worst of his career', and 'pretentious'.
Apr 26, 2012 4:35PM
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Certainly there is a generic Dr. Luke sound. I just happen to like it.  
Last thing (I keep getting bested): personally, I think Dr. Luke is something of an American hero. As radioland producers go, the man is responsible for more individual electrobeat triumphs in recent memory than most. But I guess it's all about the song -- "Tik Tok" and "Your Love is My Drug" and "Party in the U.S.A." and "California Gurls" and "Price Tag" and "Dynamite" and "Till the World Ends" (phew) somehow exist in a higher realm of pure pleasure than "Right Round" or "Blow" or "Part of Me". And since all those songs have their fans and detractors I guess it really does come down to gut-feeling subjectivity re: Katy and every other gloriously shameless pop single-slinger.

Meanwhile, RedOne did right by Nicki for the most part, but she really did deserve something on the majestically faux-twisted level of "Bad Romance" rather than all the expert peppiness and prom-themery. Next time around (and I guess in the meantime there is "Roman Holiday"'...').
Apr 26, 2012 4:15PM
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The impressive thing about "Firework" is how self-regarding Perry makes the chorus sound. Even Jay-Z should tip his cap at the way she brings out the "I-I-I" in a second-person song.
Apr 26, 2012 4:05PM
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I'm not so much annoyed by her (she's tremendously inoffensive) as bored by her
Oh, this would break her rainbow colored little heart. Cruel. So cruel. But totally understandable. I don't find her stand-out songs bland. Certainly there is a generic Dr. Luke sound. I just happen to like it. 

As for sex-positivity, jury's out as far as I can see -- Rihanna/Ke$ha/Britne​y/ Nicki ("Turn Me On"!!) are just as celebratory and more direct
Actually, I hear those others as more sexual, but less direct, more complicated, and more dark. (To which you'd probably add "more interesting," and probably be right.) But I may just be thinking of Rihanna, whose linkage of love, sex and disease/dysfunction (most notably in "Disturbia," a song written by Chris Brown, no less) is what makes her a major artist in my book. 
Apr 26, 2012 3:47PM
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I have a couple of those songs from the Broadside Ballads, but I always forget to listen to them.
Apr 26, 2012 3:45PM
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I became a convert to "Firework" when I heard several hundred teenage girls belt it out at the top of their lungs in a gym. Two of them were my daughters. Sounded just as inspirational as it's supposed to. 

Apr 26, 2012 3:41PM
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They opened with a new song called "All Future and No Past

Actually that's an old song. The BBall project released a bunch of web only songs on the Yep Roc website in between albums. I have some of them but I may have missed a few.

 

They were called the Broadside Ballads, Here's what I have and if anyone knows differently please correct me.

(Do the the)Triple Crown

Phenom

The Way It's Gonna Be

Lima Time!

Cubs 2010

All Future No Past

 

As I said there may be others that I have missed so please chime in if there are corrections. I'd be glad to post these later if anyone wants them.

 

Apr 26, 2012 3:35PM
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I've been in love with "Teenage Dream" ever since the moment I first heard it, a year or two ago, and I wish it a long and blessed career in the upper echelons of the Clear Channel roster. Otherwise the only two songs I enjoy from her so far are "Hot & Cold" and "Firework". The first of those I came to appreciate by watching its video, and was skeptical that the luminary of recent "I Kissed a Girl" fame could charm me so thoroughly, while I was skeptical of "Firework" just because I prefer to live in a world where the specifics of problems merit more attention than the fact that there are problems, and self-esteem is not a transferable commodity. But it's a very good song, and I'd never seen someone shoot that many fireworks out of their tits before, so there you go.
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about the blogger

Robert Christgau

Starting in 1967, Robert Christgau has covered popular music for The Village Voice, Esquire, Blender, Playboy, Rolling Stone, and many other publications. He teaches in New York University's Clive Davis Department of Recorded Music, maintains a comprehensive website at robertchristgau.com, and has published five books based on his journalism. He has written for MSN Music since 2006.

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