ReportWire

Tag: kate bush

  • Chappell Roan’s VMAs Performance: A Nod to How We’re Still in Medieval Times

    Chappell Roan’s VMAs Performance: A Nod to How We’re Still in Medieval Times

    There’s no doubt that Medieval Times is still a major institution in the Midwest, with one of its precious few locations being in Chicago (more specifically, Schaumburg, Illinois). And, of course, being a “Midwest princess,” one would like to think that Chappell Roan was vaguely aware of her Medieval Times aura as she took the stage at the MTV Video Music Awards for the first time (on the now always inauspicious date of September 11th). That’s right, like many other celebrities (despite Roan’s continued claim that she’s just “a random bitch”), she schlepped all the way to Long Island for this big debut at the UBS Arena—even going so far as to cancel other scheduled performance dates in Amsterdam and Paris in early September (perhaps not wanting to “overextend” herself while rehearsing for the VMAs) for the sake of making “icon history.”

    And that she did, confirming her increasing comparisons to Kate Bush (mainly on the vocal intonation front, but also embodying the “queer energy” Bush gave off despite being a straight woman…not to mention her ultra-camp sensibilities) as Roan opted to dress as a knight in shining armor for her live rendition of “Good Luck, Babe!” (a standalone single that was released months after The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess). As a matter of fact, there’s an immortal image of Bush dressed as a knight during a photoshoot for a 1980 edition of Melody Maker. But “maybe” Roan didn’t know about that before running with this particular concept and visual.

    In any case, to set the tone for this poignant costume during her performance, Roan arrived on the red carpet in what can best be described as a “Maid Marian getup” (courtesy of a sheer dress by Y/Project) and coordinating cape. Roan, for good measure, additionally packed a sword (how innuendo-laden) in hand as a prop to round out an aesthetic intended to convey that just because she’s a woman, it doesn’t mean she’s a “delicate flower.” Indeed, wielding that sword was in keeping with her snapping back at a press member (that reportedly told her to “shut the fuck up”), “You shut the fuck up! …Not me.”

    Later “explaining” her outburst, Roan remarked, “[The red carpet] is quite overwhelming and quite scary. I think for someone who gets a lot of anxiety around people yelling at you, the carpet is horrifying. And I need to—I yelled back. I yelled back! You don’t get to yell at me like that.” Such “bravado” was an ideal match for her knightly image as she defended her own honor—a theme that goes hand in hand with her entire “brand.” That is to say, women don’t need rescuing—they can ultimately save themselves (as Carrie Bradshaw, of all people, once tried to explain to Charlotte York in a season three episode of Sex and the City called “Where There’s Smoke…”). They just need a night on the town (ideally at a drag bar) to recover from almost any slight. Emphasis on the word almost.

    Alas, Roan is finding it more and more difficult to enjoy such therapeutic nights out on the town as her fame level eclipses her ability to do “normal person things.” Thus, dressing up as a knight also seems to speak to Roan wanting to take back her power by “valoring up.” However, that’s not the only subtext one can take away from the costuming and misleadingly “intricate” set design (modeled after, what else, a medieval castle). There’s also the undeniable message being sent that, despite Kamala Harris running for president, the U.S. (in particular) is still living in some very Dark Ages—complete with the overturning of Roe v. Wade in 2022 that has led to numerous states outright banning abortion. And while Roan claims her costumes aren’t that “deep” and that, most of the time, she thinks she just “looks hot” in them, the decision to don medieval garb doesn’t exactly feel like a coincidence in the current climate. Especially one in which Donald Trump (despite everything about his inherent nature and varied illegal activities that have been revealed to the public since 2016) still has almost half of the country’s vote as of September 2024.

    As for Roan’s Medieval Times energy, it bears noting that, in 2017 (the year of #MeToo, incidentally), the franchise changed the show (as they’re known for doing about every six years) to include a queen at the center of the event rather than a king. With Roan’s medieval interpretation, however, the “lady” herself becomes the “man.” Or at least one butch-ass bitch. Bedecked in her armor and faux chainmail, the performance begins with Roan standing behind the gates of the castle wielding a crossbow with a fiery arrow. She soon struts outside of the gate (opened for her by a bevy of “lackey knights”), approaches the center of the stage, turns around and then aims it directly back toward the gates, which, in turn, light up into a fiery pattern on select bars. The lackey knights then dance and preen around her with swords in hand as Roan boasts about how she “told you so.”

    As the fire burns in a glorious blaze behind her (including over-the-top explosions on the spires of the castle itself—courtesy of a screen, [un]naturally), the chaoticness of everything around her echoes the ways in which Roan is seeking to “burn it all to the ground.” From conventional pop stardom to the ongoing political “safeness” of most everything in pop culture—even in spite of all the insistence about how much “things have changed.” Of course, whether she “intended” to say all of this isn’t the point. It’s right there, between the lines displayed by those spiky, oppressive gates.

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • I Can't Stop Listening To This Song From Saltburn

    I Can't Stop Listening To This Song From Saltburn

    By now, you should have seen Saltburn. One of the most viral moments of 2023 came at the very end of the year when Emerald Fennell’s film hit Amazon Prime Video. Starring two of Hollywood’s favorite leading men, Jacob Elordi as Felix and Barry Keoghan as Oliver, the movie is both appalling and captivating. I describe it as like watching a car accident: the events taking place so vile that you can’t help but stare at the damage.


    And forget about the infamous bathtub scene (the only thing I knew to expect from the film) or even the graveyard scene (the thing I did not expect in my wildest dreams)…I’m constantly replaying one scene: the final one where Oliver Quick has finally overtaken the estate and can dance around naked. By this point in the movie, my jaw had permanently resided on the floor…but this scene made me want to get up and dance too.

    It’s thanks to Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s 2001 song “Murder On The Dance Floor”, which is having a spike in popularity similar to Kate Bush’s 1985 hit “Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God) after playing in Stranger Things. On New Year’s Eve alone, “Murder On The Dance Floor” had its biggest streaming date on Spotify with 1.5 million plays and entered the Global Spotify Chart for the first time at no. 130.

    In the week after
    Saltburn’s theater release on November 22, streaming increased over 360% for the song and 340% for Ellis-Bextor’s Read My Lips album. It was a song that perfectly juxtaposed the dark message behind the film- which was riddled with comic relief and short, witty quips to satirically add to the mood.

    “Murder On The Dance Floor” should be on everyone’s playlist this week…For more
    Saltburn-related music, check out Amazon Prime’s “Saltburn: Official Playlist” on Spotify!

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • No Smoke, Just Mirrors: Dua Lipa Offers Up Some Madonna-Inspired Magic on “Houdini”

    No Smoke, Just Mirrors: Dua Lipa Offers Up Some Madonna-Inspired Magic on “Houdini”

    By now, it’s not exactly “undercover” (despite any “spy movies” a certain pop star is about to be in [*cough cough* Argylle]) that Dua Lipa is heavily inspired by Madonna. Just as most pop stars are, and will likely continue to be whether they’re aware of it or not (such is the power of being a progenitor). For, as listeners already witnessed on her sophomore album, Future Nostalgia, Lipa went all in on emulating the disco-fied but modern sound that Madonna cultivated for 2005’s Confessions on a Dance Floor. She even went so far as to tap Madonna for a collaboration on a remix of “Levitating” for Club Future Nostalgia (the twenty-first century’s answer to You Can Dance…apart from Finally Enough Love). But now that Lipa has mastered the sound of Madonna’s mid-00s era, she appears determined to do the same for its aesthetic. 

    Enter the video for “Houdini,” the lead single from her forthcoming third album (the title of which has yet to be revealed). While Gen Z might not be aware of Harry Houdini’s renown as a master of “magic” (or even Madonna’s)—or, more to the point, escape artistry—they could be forced to look into it now thanks to Lipa’s analogy. One that she chooses to carry out within the confines of an empty dance studio à la, that’s right, Madonna in the “Hung Up” video. Directed by Emmanuel Cossu, Lipa’s visual accompaniment to “Houdini” starts out, as “Hung Up” does, with Lipa working out some moves in an empty dance studio, complete with a full-length mirror that serves as an entire wall. The opening notes to the song then immediately confirm that, yes, it’s produced by Tame Impala (a.k.a. Kevin Parker). Along with Danny L Harle of PC Music repute. So it is that Lipa wants us to know that, although she’s “veering away” from the 70s disco sound in favor of a 70s psychedelia one (which makes Tame Impala the perfect collaborator), she’s still very much in full Madonna Confessions on a Dance Floor mode. Even if it’s minus the hot pink leotard with coordinating sparkly purple belt. 

    Indeed, Lipa opts for more “sexy-comfortable chic” (think: a riff on what Sporty Spice was already doing) in dark blue track pants and a black mesh tank with a flesh-colored top underneath. The latter deliberately giving off the “is she topless?” vibe (Madonna, in contrast, never left that as a question mark during her Erotica era…or any era, for that matter). As she walks with sultry panache along the length of the mirror, Lipa’s reflection proceeds to do its own thing on the choreo front (and yes, the video’s choreography, Charm La’Donna [how coincidental that her last name rhymes with Madonna] is a key part of what makes it so captivating). Thus begins the “magic” (i.e., optical illusion) portion of the program that one would expect of a song with such a title. A brief “blackout” of the lights in the studio then allows for the “magic” of materialization, for that’s when a bevy of shirtless dancers subsequently appear all around Lipa in an orgiastic mise-en-scène. One that also mimics certain portions of the “Hung Up” video—specifically, when all of Madonna’s dancers are writhing around on and near each other in a club (one that also apparently has arcade game options, including the then-pervasive Dancing Stage Fusion…just an upgraded version of Dance Dance Revolution, really). 

    While Lipa never leaves the dance studio for any “slice of life” purposes, the undeniable visual connection between “Houdini” and “Hung Up” (oh, look at that—both songs start with an “H”) is further heightened by the lyrics themselves. For a start, that comes in the form of Lipa declaring, “Time is passin’ like a solar eclipse…/It’s your moment, baby/Don’t let it slip.” This is like her version of Madonna saying, “Time goes by so slowly for those who wait/No time to hesitate.”

    Additional similarities in the lyrical motifs also occur via Lipa’s own warning that she won’t stick around very long for someone who isn’t worthwhile. As manifest in the lines, “Tell me all the ways you need me/I’m not here for long/Catch me or I go Houdini/I come and I go/Prove you got the right to please me.” This not only mimics Madonna’s sentiments when she says, “I can’t keep on waiting for you/You’ll wake up one day/But it’ll be too late,” but also mirrors who she was as a person during her early days of trying to make it/“be somebody” in New York. A journey that was slightly more circuitous than Lipa’s, who had the “London advantage” of attending schools targeted specifically toward singing and acting. And clearly, all that education has paid off…as one can see by watching Lipa own the rehearsal studio. Whether or not the dancers she’s only seeing in the mirror are “actually there” or mere phantasms (how Black Swan) of a magical nature depends largely if one believes in magic in general, and hauntings in particular. 

    Appearing multiple times and in multiple ways throughout the video, the dancers (all sporting the same shade of red-hued hair as Lipa), at the zenith of the song’s musical breakdown, multiply in such a way as to give an “in da club” effect before Lipa is shown once again entirely alone in the studio. After all, half the work of being a creative person is having the imagination to envision how the final product will turn out once the necessary collaborators become involved. 

    The indelible images from both “Houdini” and “Hung Up” are the ones of each pop star watching themselves in the mirror as they perform (and, at one point, Lipa’s barrage of mirrored images become quite funhouse-y). As though that reflection they see is the performer self, while the one watching is the “mere mortal” self who yearns to be seen the same way (/live up to impossible expectations) the performer is by her fans.

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • 12 Sleeper Hits: Songs That Gained Popularity Years After Release

    12 Sleeper Hits: Songs That Gained Popularity Years After Release

    What Is a Sleeper Hit?

    In music, a “sleeper hit” is a song that didn’t see initial success when it was released but gained recognition later on. Many of these sleeper hits got enormous boosts in popularity from inclusion in movies, TV shows, commercials, or (more recently) TikTok trends.

    “Cruel Summer,” Taylor Swift’s self-professed favorite song from her 2019 album Lover, is the latest example of a certified sleeper hit. The Jack Antonoff collaboration just hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart on October 28, 2023 despite being released four years ago.

    This isn’t the first time a song has gotten its flowers late, though. Sometimes it just takes a while for a song to truly pop off! Join us as we look at 12 sleeper hits that only gained popularity years on from their initial drop.

    Songs that Became Hits Years After Release

    “Cruel Summer” – Taylor Swift

    Let’s be honest: The runaway success of “Cruel Summer” should have happened back in 2019. The absolute banger was initially passed over for a single release as it felt inappropriate for the pandemic, and the song missed greater exposure when said pandemic forced the cancelation of Taylor’s Lover Fest, too.

    Since then, “Cruel Summer” gained some popularity after appearing in Prime’s The Summer I Turned Pretty, but it’s only now getting the appreciation it deserves. As the opener for Taylor’s 44-song set on her Eras Tour, “Cruel Summer” is fresh in everyone’s minds — as it rightly should be.

    “Here I Go Again” – Whitesnake

    Spinning off from Deep Purple, Whitesnake may not have reached the same heights as the original band, but they did give us this iconic tune. “Here I Go Again” initially featured on 1982’s Saints’ N’ Sinners but wasn’t released as a single.

    In keeping with the song’s themes and “hanging on the promises of yesterday,” Whitesnake re-recorded it in 1987 for their self-titled album. “Here I Go Again” also received a radio mix version on that same album, which removed the keyboard intro. This version eventually reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    Third time’s the charm, as they say!

    “Layla” – Derek and the Dominos

    “Layla” initially flopped due to lack of promotion. Assuming people would know that legendary guitarist Eric Clapton was in Derek and the Dominos, Polydor did little to promote Layla and Other Love Songs in 1970. The album underperformed, and “Layla” only reached No. 50 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    Two years later, Derek and the Dominos re-recorded “Layla” for The History Of Eric Clapton compilation album — finally adding the iconic outro. This version allowed the song to finally receive the recognition it deserved, jumping up to No. 10.

    “Running Up That Hill” – Kate Bush

    One of Kate Bush’s most well-known songs, “Running Up That Hill” had a massive resurgence 37 years after its release. The song played during a pivotal moment in the fourth season of Netflix’s Stranger Things — when Maxine attempts to escape from Vecna — and “Running Up That Hill” started running up the charts.

    Reaching No. 1 on Billboard’s Global 200 and No. 4 on the Hot 100, the song proved even more popular nearly four decades later. The delayed success even surprised Kate Bush herself.

    Honorable mention goes to Metallica’s “Master of Puppets,” which also gained a considerable following after being featured in the same show. To quote Eddie Munson, “This IS music!”

    “Long, Long Time” – Linda Ronstadt

    Like the viral success of “Running Up That Hill,” Linda Ronstadt’s 1970 song “Long, Long Time” found a whole new audience after its inclusion in HBO’s The Last of Us. Bill and Frank, played by Nick Offerman and Murray Bartlett, perform the song together in a heartachingly tender moment. The episode then ended with Linda Ronstadt’s original.

    After it aired, US streams of “Long, Long Time” jumped 4900%, introducing the song to a new generation. It may have taken a “Long, Long Time” but this sleeper hit was worth the wait!

    “Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand)” – Irma Thomas

    Upon release in 1964, this Jeannie Seely and Randy Newman-penned song barely made a splash. It faded so far into obscurity that even Newman forgot it existed. That all changed after its inclusion in Netflix’s Black Mirror.

    While each episode of Black Mirror is mostly self-contained, “Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand)” is one of the few recurring elements. The song appeared regularly since its appearance in the first season’s “Fifteen Million Merits” episode, becoming synonymous with the series and finding renewed success amongst Black Mirror‘s loyal fans.

    “Bohemian Rhapsody” – Queen

    There’s no denying the immense success of Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody,” one of the greatest songs ever written. So why is it on this list? Because it managed to break back into the charts not once, but three times!

    The legendary track first reached No. 9 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in 1975. In 1992, one year after Freddie Mercury’s death, it re-entered the charts after its iconic appearance in Wayne’s World. That time, it peaked at No. 2. Then, it broke into the charts again following the 2018 release of Bohemian Rhapsody, the Freddie Mercury biopic, proving that some songs will always be loved.

    “Mary On A Cross” – Ghost

    Anyone who knows metal knows Ghost. Their unique blend of arena rock and heavy metal made them one of the most exciting acts of the 21st century. However, it’s thanks to the viral success of “Mary on a Cross” that Ghost broke into the mainstream.

    Released as half of 2019’s single-come-EP Seven Inches of Satanic Panic, a slowed-down version of this sleeper hit blew up on TikTok. After its use in nearly half a million videos to date, “Mary on a Cross” became the band’s first song to chart on the Billboard Hot 100, reaching No. 90. It also led the band to drop an official “Slowed + Reverb” version.

    “Makeba” – Jain

    You may not know the name, but chances are you know the anthem. “Makeba” has been all over TikTok this year, often accompanied by clips from Saturday Night Live of Bill Hader dancing. The truth is, though, “Makeba” has a long history.

    Jain originally released the song in 2015 as a tribute to South African singer, songwriter, and civil rights activist Miriam Makeba. Its 2016 music video received a GRAMMY nomination, and Levi’s featured the song in a popular 2017 commercial. “Makeba” continues to grow in strength online, even eight years after release.

    “I Love You So” – The Walters

    Can a song become so popular in its resurgence that it brings the original band back together? Well, that’s what happened with The Walters after their song “I Love You So” went viral on TikTok.

    When the song dropped in 2014, it achieved mild indie success for The Walters. After two EPs, the band called it quits three years later. However, since appearing on TikTok in late 2021, “I Love You So” has been used in over 700,000 videos on the platform. It spent nine weeks on streaming charts that same year. The sleeper hit’s success led the band to reform in 2022 and release a new EP, unironically titled Try Again.

    “Bloody Mary” – Lady Gaga

    Lady Gaga has no shortage of certified bops to her name, but “Bloody Mary” from 2011’s Born This Way album largely escaped wider notice. Fighting for attention with other significant hits on the album like the title track, “Judas,” and “Edge of Glory,” it’s understandable why Gaga’s “Bloody Mary” wasn’t heavily promoted. Cue the release of Netflix’s Wednesday 11 years later.

    Footage of the titular character’s “Goo Goo Muck” dance went viral on TikTok, but one user replaced the show’s actual song with a sped-up version of “Bloody Mary.” This video’s viral success and subsequent platform-wide dance trend led to the song gaining sleeper hit status.

    In response, Gaga recorded her own version of the Wednesday dance and re-released the song. “Bloody Mary” eventually broke into Billboard’s Hot 100 in early 2023 so we can “dance, dance, dance” all we want!

    “What I Like About You” – The Romantics

    When “What I Like About You” was first released in 1980, it was far from a hit. Appearing on The Romantics’ self-titled debut album, the song only peaked at No. 85 on the charts.

    However, “What I Like About You” finally became popular towards the end of the ’80s when it began appearing in TV commercials — chiefly for Budweiser. Since then, this sleeper hit has gained the recognition it deserves as an incredible song in its own right.


    Whether it’s a sleeper hit or the latest groundbreaking track, you can hear them all and more on SiriusXM!


    SiriusXM Editors

    Source link