Showing posts with label AATW. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AATW. Show all posts

Friday, 7 May 2010

Elin Lanto - Love Made Me Do It

Whilst this blog falls down the wikio ratings just like the stuff running down the corned-beef thighs belonging to Karen Parry who suspiciously holds her head up high as she walks out of a toilet cubicle, it's time for dance-pop distraction and Elin Lanto has made the first move with her above decent Love Made Me Do It album, which has been released in her native Sweden this very week. Her debut British single, Love Made Me Stupid, will soon be unleashed through career-givers AATW records and God help her, but at least she has a new fan to feel frustrated when it tanks. Let's not not think about that just now.

1st non-buzz single Love Made Me Stupid sounds like an apology from its songwriters - I know the feeling, sometimes porn just turns my brain into a complete vegetable and I don't do anything all evening. I'm still not taken in fully by this one - it reeks of the session songwriters being given a brief 'Elin wants to do rock (but we'll still pay you as much)'.

With the endorphin-invading Almighty remix, Tickles has more take off than Whitney hoovering crack and has usurped into my favourite track of 2010. I like the old fashioned notion of feeling 'tickled' by something, although I must point out it's no excuse for guys with forests inside their boxers - I only hope she buys extra razors incase my concern proves just. Does she sing 're-zip my life'? That gorgeous damsel in distress middle-8 is just pure sex. I am so loyal to the Almighty tart-attack make-over that it will be at least hours before I will even think of going back to the stricter album version.

Ceremonial Heart tribute Funeral, with its piano keys scattering like ashes into water, radiates Hi-NRG vitriol Marc Almond would be proud of (although I don't think she's got the stomach for a proper tribute, and neither did he as the story goes). Singing loud and proud, her hairsprayed headache or heartache depending on your stance on dance resolves to do just that 'on' someone's funeral - the music is joyfully melancholic, and I appreciate the determination to steal someone's thunder at their own funeral when they can't exactly stop you. I can even see myself doing kareoke at more that a few services in a few decades, gladly. The singer's damaged for effect vocals dissolve like an aspirin into the solvent elixar of pounding 80s shoulder-pad style electronica.

Her throaty perfume makes Give It All Up a musk have. The streaky synths are glistening perfection, I can almost imagine Elin singing this into a window pain with pelting rain outside cleansing the agony of 'giving up her fame' for a gorgeous internet lover. Her rich and expressive delivery comes at an expense, tattooing the song with cautionary fibres and a stoic conviction betrayed by the dissonant dissaray of the backing track. The unresolved musical juxtoposition clashing with her tear-smearing lyrics is a key characteristic to all the songs on this impressive starter-kit of an album (well it is not like I have any violent impulse to dish out for her debut).

Stubborn turtle-head ballad dross Alien wants to impress me - the synths have a shimmery treacle and verse two drumbs. Damn, I could not even manage two sentences before having a complete U-turn - it is not bad, there I cracked almost as much as her vocal (seriously, have her balls just dropped or something?). Wailing until it fades, it has classic ballad-for-the-gays symptoms, but she's kind of winging it here and overlooking such brief abandonment it's a classic soggy tampon number.

Synth-glam cougar stomper Toy Boy demonstrates adequately that decent songs can still borrow from Richard X's Some Girls - it is more blatant than Kelly Llorenna's tell-tale cleansing wipes, but less fun to discover. Artless rip-off fun (and that's not actually an insult). I would imagine that in order to experience the best this song has to offer, one would need to be a drag queen wearing knee high boots, lip-synching for their life on RuPaul's Drag Race. Mirror-smashing bravado and winking lyrical sass, chugging guitars, phlegm-readying vocals and a spurting electronic pulse all collide into an epileptic frenzy. With the singer's visceral throat-cut confrontation, it actually wipes the floor with Rachel Stevens even if the song itself isn't as strong architecturally.

Looking one's ears straight in the eye, the theatrical Hater has a sizzling electronic current that won't go a miss on anyone's angst-ridden dance-pop iPod playlist. Lanto's throaty rasp is on ravishing form whether it's affected or not. Some spoken-word Swenglish is peppered when the music pauses that is almost as cute as Linda Sundblad's shrugging off being a suicide girl. Basically any song called 'hater' was never going to be that shit, and this doesn't betray this prejudice. Clearly anticipating excitement from name alone, it builds into a minor breakthrough for identifying jealous 'energy suckers' we all need to scrape off our shoes better late than never. She is holding firm to personal truths and ensuring her dancefloor grandeur stays intact, and I admire her for it. Some people just are not worth the grief.

The trash-can rummage of Good Stuff sounds like Kesha covering Neon Nights album tracks. Unlike most Dannii Minogue fans, I have never been much of a fan for those cuts to begin with, but on this I'll be scavenging for more for long to come. Unlike Blah Blah, she has the perfect fickle tone that surpasses the noise without making one want to slap her. And I swear I thought she sang 'it can be your faggot gay dance / you want to use me for a fuckwhat'. That would make my year if she did, although she would actually be a homophobe and Donna Summer is so far the only dance artist who has ever been brave enough to ever try that.

Another neurotic limitation ballad I Can Do It (Watch Me Now), another disappointment. Second sentence and I still hate it, so that is proof enough. What she does succeed in is convincing me to forget this ever happened.

The dancefloor-thriving Discotheque boasts the most whip-smart, cracking instrumental middle-8s of all time - a complete homerun. The verses are reminiscent of Dead or Alive, but the skyward chorus is slazenger on too many e's. An outstanding single with a teriffic video, the song was forever delayed on the release schedule until it was eventually aborted. The fact that such a rush merely mingles as a digital bonus track is slightly offputting, but it fits in with the discordant nature running through the whole record.

It's in good company: electro-flurry buzz-single Speak N' Spell, the vivacious auto-tune squeeze My Favourite Pair of Jeans and the salivating Melodifestivalen entry Dr Doctor all hold the same grief-full belief as arguments for Elin's status as a grade-A rock-sounding-pop/dance-not-rock artist.

All in all, on Love Made Me Do It, Elin really puts out. Only the personal protest ballads wear thin. The girlie energy implied on tracks such as Tickles, Toy Boy and Hater set her apart, whilst doing the same for my legs if I find myself at the right gay bar at the right time, where her not-oversold strength is the vigour and sheer activity conveyed as opposed to emulating sizeable potent emotions. Bruised-and-rouged torch song Give It All Up is the atypical exception. The other ballads lack the same temptation and leave me feeling misused is all - if you want to do straight rock then don't fuck me about, I'll go there gladly (unless your name is Mel C) but am not a disciple of divas who long to ditch the genre that buys their Gucci and means nothing more to them (I don't think Lanto is one of those ungrateful cows anyway). Nevertheless, the immensely lubricated production pervasively drools over the songs, which are crafted with sharp guitar incisions perfectly employed to flex extra life into them, and laminated with a pouty gloss that has long been the staple of camp-identified dance-pop. The key tracks containing noticeable inflamations of excitement are legendary on first listen alone, but don't take my word for it though... With a song that deserves to become a summer smash all over Europe (the insistent Tickles) and an economical rock-tinge that only backfires on two ballads, I really hope she gets a decent shelf life.

Monday, 23 November 2009

Fight For AATW Supremacy

Karen Parry watch out gurrl, there's a new skank Nazine on the scheme, with about as much star quality as a big shit covered in glitter. I say new, but it was only today I cast my eyes on the dead-eyes of a mysterious session singer staring blankly into presumably some club bouncer holding up his mobile phone at her. Resonance Q got a 2003 tart-over on their 'classic' anthemic cover of Mariah's forgettable hit single Someday. AATW has disabled the video from being embedded onto blogs - Karen must must still be a nervous wreck!

I just love watching AATW music videos on youtube for the comments section alone - where else can you find such class such as the user LiverpoolsOwnJoe's informative 'this is me mates cuzin..shes a dance teacher now in the swan', and Saxyvtr's reccomendation 'sounds great in a Saxo with 2 subs pounding :)' whatever that means.

Wednesday, 7 October 2009

Bisexual Skank Trance Volume 2

More likely to have a massive shit than a massive hit (unless her boyfriend gets really mad), Karren Parry's ambitious neice Skyla cranks up the skank higher than her New Look shoplifted mini-skirt, whilst trying to get a free taxi or kebab, for her second solo AATW release Ayo Technology and it is certainly up there with the labels' finest output. Already a Polish number one, she is quick to cover it and to misquote an AATW forum user, it is being bummed harder than Tina Cousins tying her shoe laces.



Liscensed with hard-boiled chav and Blue Wkd spurred 'romance' on the dancefloor, the song is more infectious than bareback sex in Africa, and unlike her GUM clinic visits her double-vadge-enda is perfectly clear as she g-spots some bitch in the club securing payment for her debts with dancefloor handy j's and full-on cunt teasing:

She work it girl she work the pole
She break it down she take it low
She fine as hell she about the dough
She doing her thing out on the floor

With her vocals soggier than her thrown out used tampons, the midget dance diva can't stop noticing 'she want it like a nympho / the info / I show you where to meet her' and soon finds her same-sex soul-mate as they compare abortion loyalty card rewards - Skyla's record contract came free after she got her 5th stamp in one month and only had to give a further 5 DJ's BJs to show them she was the real deal unlike auntie Karen who simply takes it from behind.

The Divine Inspiration-esque collateral damage is gorgeous, but Skyla's glaringly-faux lesbian pursuits are wonderfully desperate and verge on stunning were it not for the small matter of having no class:

When she ready to ride I´m ready to roll
I´ll be in this bitch till the club close
What should I do one thing on all fours
Now that that shit should be against the law

Her insatiable internal accomodation narrows her limits to just about nothing and compromises:

We can switch positions
From the couch to the counters in my kitchen

I am surprised this teenage trollop even bothers to take girls back to her flat, as I'm sure the bouncers at her favourite club have all had a go already and probably have posted it all on youtube anyway.

She wants it
she wants it
I got to give it to her
I got to give it to her

Eurgh, enough already - clearly this clit-crusader has never heard of a) black men, or b) the vegetable section at her local Lidl (it's the same difference depending on the quality of courgettes, just ask Jenny Frost - and why else do you think Tina Cousins is banned from ASDA?).

I never tire of the sheer ridiculousness of pimping this felch-face primadonna out as some kind of stunner - check out the guys clearly plucked from the nearest gym pretending to be into her for anything more than being seen in a music video:


Below: jealous camgirls cast as 'friends' and gym-fit straight boys make this very watchavable - ooh the angst of being a chav with feelings.

Living this dangerously does not come easy, even if she does cum easy if her twitter account is to be believed, and unless she dies of herpes, shame or a home visit from Kelly Llorenna, then I see no reason why there won't be more to come from this astoundingly tasteless trash diva princess.

Monday, 15 June 2009

Queen of Clubs: The Ugly Truth

Murder on The Dancefloor

Above: AATW label mates Kelly Llorenna and Karen Parry smile whilst taking myspace pictures, but there are 5 men and cover versions to fight over.

Now that wig-on-a-turd Agnes Carlsson has gone and settled the worldwide chav dispute between Kelly Llorenna, Karen Parry, Tina Cousins and Dannii Minogue over who is 'Queen of Clubs' at AATW, I think it is best not to forget what a high drama it was - all that waiting for up to 6 months at a time just for a myspace update (Kelly's current mood is 'up yer maw' apparantly, with 3 pages of comments from her loyal fans), which was more excruciating than a post Ibiza visit to the GUM clinic (you just don't know what you are going to get, etc). In celebration of these gutter divas it is important to pay tribute to their behind-the-scenes legacy's.

While her chances of the crown are thinner than her eyebrows, the classy mother of six-by-twelve-different-fathers Karen Parry is largely unheard of outside her estate in northern England despite a colossal sized number 3 smash hit in the summer of 2002 with a Flip N' Fill usurping production of thewayward Shooting Star, an achievement she cherishes almost as much as her ASBO and teenage appearances on talkshow Trisha for reasons I won't go into.

Above: Parry's face had so much make-up applied it resembled a paper mache art project by ironic 5 year olds. Vying for title of 'Queen of Clubs' on Llorenna's home turf was clearly a faux pas on her part, as upon leaving the venue Parry was impregnated by 5 very angry and turned on lesbians.

From the moment her widescreen green-lit forehead shines gruesomely in the midst of an ilegal garage party in the Shooting Star video, a star was born, and also sworn (her atrocious bad language has saw her barred from appearing on British TV and radio leaving her forced to promote in clubs so dire that Kelly Llorenna wouldn't even squat to take a piss in). Despite being in debt, Karen is guaranteed to masacre any half-bad dance track that's going to pay for the vodka and cigarettes lifestyle she worked so hard for and has the rashes to prove it. She earned that success, and to Kelly Llorenna's cost started to steal favour with the critically acclaimed Pascal on their classic trance version of I Think We're Alone Now, which finally gave the song some personality exploiting Parry's trademark warmth and sensitivity. However, if she starts shagging the fat bloke from N-Trance, Llorenna will probably have her killed (just look what happened to Aaliyah). Parry sings with more clarity and honesty than most of her recent D.N.A tests would suggest, and her next logical move is to beat the Swedish tranny at her own game with a Flip N' Fill remix of her rival's On & On.

When not crashing planes (and her 9/11 whereabouts are still a mystery, despite her protests that she was locked safely in a tanning booth that week), old cowpat face Kelly Llorenna, the original chav-before-chav 'Queen of Chavs', has sang on no less than 4 top ten hits throughout her 15 year career in clubbing. Not without a sense of humour, her well-documented brawls over post-gig leftover kebabs scavenged from bins earned her numerous baseball bat injuries and the right to call her debut album All Clubbed Up (she even wears shades on the front cover to hide her black eyes). Affectionately labelled 'an old slag' by her former N-Trance producer on the official AATW messageboard, Llorenna is still waiting to crisp her skin up before taking to the stage again and reclaiming her crown - with skin like crispy batter, she'd better keep an eye out for Danniigoose swooping down and taking even more pecks at her.

Above: Llorenna languishing in the spotlight of Manchester's M.E.N arena, gurning to save her life. Kelly proves she really does call the shots, performing as N-Trance on their one truly enduring hit single Set You Free (notably bypassing Forever), as well as her two biggest solo hits Tell It To Me Pimp and True Tans Never Fade.

Below: Tina's hunched shoulders can't hide her homophobic discomfort, lip-synching in front of gays more interested in practicing their felatio technique on empty Bacardi Breezer bottles, in Glasgow's Bennets nightclub. Only when she got her cock out did the crowd fall under her dark spell of apocaliptic trance and MILF euro-pop. Tina's drink of choice was a shot of Amyl nitrite mixed with diet Fanta with no ice.
Equally as trodden on if her close-ups are anything to go by, Tina Cousins is my favourite bulbous-nosed antipodean stretch-marked dance diva - her stoic verses are cautious and seek justice for various narratives that all vary on her favourite subject of being a loser in love, life and the music industy. Her erupting choruses are so stodgy and epic they could block a toilet as they overflow with so much of the shit that woman has been through. Unwilling to fight anymore, Tina lost out on the chance to record Dannii's 2005 trash smash Persperation. These anxious days bored fans can look forward to being promised new singles every 2 years and are only too happy to help clean up her shit as I wasn't joking about her toilet issues - girl goes through bog-roll like Dannii does cancer victims.

Speaking of survivors, Dannii Minogue's 18 year slog in the music industry is well-documented, but her tactic of collapsing under pressure has taken a palpable influence in her infrequent, revered Ibiza hits. Dannii was never truly up to competing for the AATW crown; tantrums ensued, telling her fans (i.e. me) to fuck off for suggesting she release unreleased material and then doing so anyway, refusing to record trashy anthems such as Dannii's Theme by the then-unknown Shapeshifters (telling me again to fuck off for wanting this confimred) showed she wouldn't lower herself by recording anything as tacky as a number one hit single. Dannii still leaves smug voicemales to Cher, mocking the Oscar winner for cashing in on her leftovers and the damage it did to the potential record sales of the Believe album ('can you believe I'm in Ibiza and you're stuck in Las Vegas perfoming on stage - later, bitch' was a low blow from even Dannii who can't acknowledge her self-destructive sunlounger weekends are starting to bring out the worst in her). At least she never hung around with this lot for chem-friendly group sex in a Travelodge hotel: