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The Vulgarity Of Modern Pop Music

post #1 of 4
Thread Starter 

GET OFF MY LAWN.

 

I don't really keep up with pop music, other than the pretty good indie stuff. It's not a preference thing, I just never listen to the radio and am usually behind the times. So today, I was at my sister's house, and they aren't really into music, so her husband just put on a Yahoo pop station over the internet for a small bbq we were having.

 

And maybe I'm getting old, but I just could not believe the amount of cursing and vulgarity (unbleeped) in these songs. Out of every ten songs, maybe eight had at least one curse word, with the ninth being a Lady Gaga song, and the tenth some generic dance crap. Maybe I remember my childhood differently, but I remember that if a song on the Billboard top ten had a curse word, it was an anomaly. Now it was just wall-to-wall language that I would feel uncomfortable playing to my (hypothetical) children, but with tons of suggestive comments and language relating to rape and violence.

 

I went to a wedding the other day, and the DJ played a lot of bleeped-out hip hop, and one line featured the word "shit" bleeped out, followed by the rapper/singer demanding a girl pull down her pants to show her thong. Which line is more offensive and should be bleeped?

 

In other words, am I the only one bothered by the nonstop vulgarity of modern pop music? Or am I getting old?

post #2 of 4

To be honest, I think you're just getting old.

 

How can you not love this shit? Classic.

 

 

Who the fuck is this, paging me at 5:46 in the morning?

post #3 of 4

Oddly enough I had nearly this thought last night.  I was camping with my spawn and we went to the "DJ dance party" bit that every campground does on at least one night during holiday weekends.  Gives the teens something to do before they make out I suppose.  But I'm sitting there watching a bunch of littles say 1 to 8 years old dancing crazily and enjoying myself.  Until I started listening to the lyrics.  Holy hell!  Its not so much the swearing, because most of that is bleeped but the suggestive crap.

 

Try explaining that Rhianna/Eminem song to a 5 year old. ha!  Or what a thong is.   But maybe it isn't just a new thing, because explaining that Brit didn't really want to be slapped around was another fun conversation.   Bleh,  makes me remember why we love having sat radio in the car.  

post #4 of 4

It seems the record exec in charge of Adele has similar thoughts but more about the overt sexualising of modern pop...

 

 

Quote:
'Faux porn' music videos may be headed for a sex change, says label boss
 
A top record executive has launched a damning attack on music industry attitudes, claiming the insistence on over-sexualising female artists has led to "boring, crass and unoriginal" music.
Richard Russell is founder of record label XL Recordings, home to the hugely successful UK singer-songwriter Adele, 23, who he said had the potential to change the way women were seen in the industry by focusing on her music rather than her sexuality.
"The whole message with [Adele] is that it's just music, it's just really good music," said Russell. "There is nothing else. There are no gimmicks, no selling of sexuality. I think in the American market, particularly, they have come to the conclusion that is what you have to do."
 
The two-time Grammy winner's record-breaking second album 21, which has spent 15 of the last 17 weeks at No 1, smashing Madonna's record of nine weeks in the top slot, was "almost political and sort of radical", Russell added.
His attack follows recent songs such as S&M by Rihanna, which contains the line "sticks and stones may break my bones but chains and whips excite me". The song was criticised by some for the extensive use of bondage imagery in its video.
British media regulator Ofcom ruled last month that raunchy routines by Rihanna and Christina Aguilera during the December final of local talent show X Factor were "at the limit of acceptability for transmission before the 9pm watershed". Ofcom had 2,868 complaints.
 
Russell said he was shocked while watching a recent MTV show featuring top 10 hits from female artists, as each video used "faux porn" imagery. "I felt a bit queasy," he said. "But now you see that Adele is No 1. What a great thing, how amazing. Not only are young girls going to see that, but [also] the business people who are behind all those videos. It's going to make them rethink what they should be doing."
Russell dismissed criticism that Adele is too mainstream, saying she was as radical as the Prodigy, who he worked with in the 1990s. "At the level it is at now, it is radical," he said. "It is clearly about the music and the talent and the things it is meant to be about. I think there has been a certain amount of confusion, and it's resulting in garbage being sold and marketing with little real value to it ... Adele is a good thing to be happening."
 
That a strong female performer could succeed without bowing to pressure to conform to a certain body type or being over-sexualised, was "unbelievable", he said.
 
"It's just so boring, crass and unoriginal," he said, adding that the problem goes "way beyond" the music industry.
 
Adele talked openly about her image in an interview with Q magazine, insisting that a sexualised image did not fit her music. "If you've got it, flaunt it, if it works with your music," she said.
 
"But I can't imagine having guns and whipped cream coming out of my tits. Even if I had Rihanna's body, I'd still be making the music I make and that don't go together."
 
 

 


Edited by The Rain Dog - 5/30/11 at 11:32pm
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