Thursday, 29 July 2010
Paris Hilton Is Back
Rebecca - In My Dreams (2000)
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Below: In My Dreams.
Impatient rave-blaster Give Me Your Love craves a darker sensation that would make even the Real McCoy drool. Plummeting bassline deeper than her cleavage, sliced and diced with a razor sharp beat, synths are smeared with no hesitation for dignity and Rebecca 'wha-ooo's for an extra threat. The charts of 1995 would have been all the richer had this been released.
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Below: Give Me Your Love.
Giddy and rampant, Find A Way deposits a squidgy bassline, promoting a rapidity of dance that the tune itself can't actually keep up with, leaving it to sound like a prefab remix. The chorus is a bit too careful for my taste in hardcore eurodance.
Worthy of some faintly substantial praise, Su-Su-Surrender unleashes glossy electronic guitar strums in a very All Or Nothing fashion, and her plaintive plight might be rather passive to compete with dance divas such as Cher, but this is an elegant dance tempo for those still willing to drown in that whole late 90s style.
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With D. B. Boulivard-ish beat-start moment, Far Away sails into a dramatic tide of plaintively gutsy vocals, stoic piano sympathy sinking deep and a head-high disco beat is simply business as usual for this one.
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Below: Once In A Lifetime.
Finally growing some balls on B4U Go-Go, a song that Scooch, Deuce or even vintage Vanessa Amorosi would have been proud to drop out there. 'Reach the sky' lights herher fire and gets me higher, etc. A rash of fast piano keys that could rival Katie Price's stunning Italo-piano pelter Free To Love Again, she sure knows how to unleash an anthem out of nothing.
Below: In My Dreams (UK Mix)
My pants have just exploded - In My Dreams (UK Mix) is simply bubllegumdance heroine. Fizzy enough to make you burp, something just clicks more profoundly with this mix. The gut-wrenching soul search of 'put a little faith in me now' is the lyric to remember, you'll be too out of it to hear anything else. This is on the same scale as Alexia spiked with the faint whiff of Gina G. I need a lie down after this. And a pregnancy test.
Find Away (Tony Loco Mix) brings music back to the days of DJ Quicksilver and Sash! with speeding trance skidmarks creating staines that Rebecca's feeble vocal detergent tries in vain to wash out. In amongst the euphoria the singer forgets herself and even alows her voice to crow, and it's a stunning moment to be grateful for. Making Kylie jealous, Young Forever does not disappoint. Eyeball-bursting beats don't create much mess, but it's another highly lubricated dance-pop affair and the song she is most well known for.
Verdict:
Dizzy dance rascal Rebecca sadly missed out on her chance to expoloit the world's insatiable appetite for rampant Euro-dance flavoured bubblegum pop. The album peaks beyond description when she proves capable of eclipsing the cliches that determine the undeniable facelessness of it all. The quality never dips, and fans of the genre she marries herself to on almost every single track have hit the jackpot with this gem. Corkers include In My Dreams (UK Mix), Give Me Your Love and Once In A Lifetime.
7.5/10
Sunday, 25 July 2010
Kim Wilde - Love Moves (1990)
The foamy lather of her vocals on the swishy love-fest It's Here make it as immediate as anything she has done before, but the rash of adrenaline from her back catalogue has almost cleared up completely into something smoother and more polished. The majestic intro could well be the album's peak at the 0:07-0:13 mark. However, I'm going to compare this old banger to a tractor: yes, the laidback electronic disco ploughs through vaguely country-feeling grains of instrumentation, with the watery nutrients of Kim's voice bringing all the goodness to the surface. Recycling 2nd hand arrangements fertilizes something memorable, but record sales failed to grow and it failed to harvest Kim a top 40 hit in the UK. The simmery track switches lanes at about 1 minute and 30 seconds, and Kim's 'confusion' emphasis give what essentially is one of those faceless big pop moments, that were often massive during the decade (Amy Adams might have had better luck with this), are the shadows tinting the big arrival of whatever it is with something reassuringly less prissy than it might have been. The spritual ressucitation of 2:28 is the reprise of what makes this track something very special and a bit extra.
Sounding a bit stale all these years later, Love (Send Him Back To Me) employs then-contemporary drum strikes and mechanical sexiness, with the plotline no deeper than being 'set free' by cock. Sharp and neck-snappingly bland enough to pass for an Abdul album cut, this is a bit frumpish for my liking, but Kim's sulky incisions always sink in even if it's a shame she can't overcome the facelessness of it all.
Danniipop moment World In Perfect Harmony's big surprise is that Cathy Dennis had no part in its creation, or that Dannii Minogue didn't record it in 1995, 1993 or 2007 on top of a Sash! instrumental. A rash of piano keys aggrevate Kim enough to pravoke her vocals to pour out like sunshine for the type of glossy finish only porn stars can relate to.
Below: Kim's position as the next Sugababe was already secured, with a mumsy sex vamp look that Heid would kill for, before the girls were even at school bullying their classmates (and teachers).
Verdict:
Exhiled from the pop charts and arriving after Close, Love Moves comes as something of a retreat but is not without undeniable charm. Commercially-driven, it tanked but the real capital is Kim herself, with her watery voice flooding into all the filler without hesitation. Initially lacking the infinite pinaccles such as You Came and Stranger, Kim is admittedly capable of dizzier heights than mostly everything here, but the album is a steady stream of well-matched songs all thriving on the good taste of its artiste and production flourishes. Her most unequivocal pop album.8/10
Wednesday, 21 July 2010
K-Lo Returns As Freakasylum
Kelly can now be found on popjustice trolling her own thread and addressing readers as 'Freaks' (as in her own 'monsters') - I am only disappointed that she didn't spell it with a 'z' as she is obviously not the speller I thought she wasn't.
Monday, 19 July 2010
Saturday, 17 July 2010
Melissa Tkautz - Glamorous Life (2006)
Warning: this is not a classy post, and ever-so contrived - I'm going back to my roots! I also get far too carried away for my own good.
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Verdict:
I absolute adore this album and honestly have died and gone to heaven with it. Mel doesn't mince her disco, this is straight up wanton trash galore. Thumping disco, guitar bruises and blunt lyrics are her high-value currency, but despite the studio thrills, it is Mel herself who superficially exerts full control with a seemingly courageous inability to justify it beyond celebrating and dissing matters of the flesh. There is not one dud here, just thuds and studs. Perhaps the defiantly insular nature of dance music that dares to articulate different shades of sexualised dancefloor lust just isn't considered classy enough for the charts. Just ask Holly Vallance and Colleen Fitzpatrick. Fans know this of course. Perhaps, for the (generalised) gay fan, it is the thrill of hearing a woman's desire for the hot straight guy we all know she can get with just one click of the finger, accidental condom drop or drink-spillage down a top. 'Our' own world left to draw parallels with the toying sense of irony or intentionally self-dramatizing fascination with one's own emotions and image. The music has to be good for sure, but dance-pop with a kink delivers sensations that are arguably drawn from interpreting the image in vicarious terms whether intended or not, and usually they are embraced by the performer in various ways. Conversely, 'we' like the music regardless of appearance, but it is a tangible layer of experience worth mentioning whether it's a fact or not. Respecting the conventions of the genre, Melissa Tkautz is that curious case of floptastic singer producing an album that makes its splash without adhering to social responsibilites, which gives it the added pleasure of rewarding far greater than ever could have been expected. Somehow, a 'nobody' commercialy-speaking, for me at least has just managed to stir up waves far greater, usurping and obliterating than the work of many of my so-called favourites have in recent times. Functioning unquestionably via an aesthetic mission, I don't regard myself as an escapist - Mel does not equate her own self-preservation with complacency. Undoubtedly contrived, but remarkably unforced, I am blown away by this.
8.5/10
JX - A Brief Remembrance
Wednesday, 14 July 2010
Kim Wilde - Close
Spending yet more time feeling sensitive, Love's A No huffs and puffs itself up into a right old state. However, Kim's MOR journey is ornate enough to dazzle those willing to put up with it.
The album's collision of Wilde's trademark tough and pouty style with the softer material makes for an album that never loses its queasy tension. At her most instinctive and assured, Kim triumphs on the stadium-ready You Came and Stranger and even when the material dips, she delivers a credibility that such substances wouldn't deserve if sung by any other 80s any-others. Reigning in her shoulder-pad pop is brave, but politely executed sultriness is something she pulls off along with not just her bra, but also an unassuming wit and subtle sense of guessing exactly what we're all thinking when she sings that love is a four letter word, etc. Her man problems are simply more engaging when complimenting their semen volume or grimmacing reverberations about trusting strangers that's all, but altogether it's a slick and cohesively compelling collection.
7.5/10
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