1 Jan 09...Happy New Year!

http://www.browardpalmbeach.com/2009-01-01/music/rap-amp-bullish/

Rap & bullish
Why today's R&B is pure garbage
By Ben Westhoff


published: January 01, 2009



VIBE Music Editor Sean Fennessey recently argued that contemporary R&B music has gone soft. He's onto something — there are too many emasculated, blue-balled crooners on the radio right now with no true identity. (Hell, whispering whiner/platinum sensation Lloyd's last name is Polite.) But Fennessey overlooked a larger point. R&B isn't just ineffectual right now — it's pointless, derivative, and boring. In terms of social relevance, innovation, and originality, nobody approaches titans of earlier generations like Marvin Gaye, Sam Cooke, Otis Redding, or even Michael Jackson and Prince. R&B is missing a transformative star but seems unlikely to find one right now because, as a genre, it barely exists.

Though always something of a hodgepodge, R&B was once a formidable format, a combination of soul, gospel, and funk whose best artists didn't hesitate to experiment with style. But in the '90s and '00s, R&B has become pigeonholed. Attempting to piggyback on hip-hop's popularity, its artists use rap beats and hire MCs for guest verses, resulting in a sound virtually indistinguishable from rap. (Try turning off the vocals of Ray J's "Sexy Can I," for example, and see if you can tell the difference.) One of R&B's biggest names, Akon, in fact, is so strongly associated with hip-hop that he's sometimes mistakenly referred to as a rapper.

Fusing genres was traditionally a big part of rhythm and blues — Ray Charles initially made a career out of it. But since New Jack Swing injected a street mentality and rowdy backbeats in the late '80s, R&B has shown little desire to evolve or take creative risks. Its crooners have become largely segmented onto urban radio stations, inspiring one mildly successful, format-following clone after another.

The watering down of the genre is one reason it's been disparaged as "Rap & bullish." Another is because it's artistically moribund. The vast majority of R&B lyrics are sappy, disingenuous, corny, and clichéd. Enough already of promises of everlasting fidelity sung by men sleeping with King models and of female-empowerment anthems written by women with multimillionaire husbands. The contrast with hip-hop is especially stark considering rap's creative breakthroughs of late. Lil Wayne, Kanye West, Lupe Fiasco, Nas, and plenty of others are challenging the status quo; for proof, look no further than 808s & Heartbreak, West's top-selling, experimental elegy.

The most successful R&B artists, meanwhile, aren't nearly as compelling. Take Ne-Yo, a decorated singer/songwriter who has become the new face of the format. His recent album Year of the Gentleman is a commercial smash and has been well-reviewed by the likes of Rolling Stone — which gave it four stars out of five — and the Los Angeles Times, which gave it three and a half stars out of four. Pop music critic Michaelangelo Matos called it "a tour de force," and even I didn't totally trash it.

And yet... were we not so starved for R&B possessing even a whisper of creativity, we might have more soberly assessed this banal work. Monster hit "Miss Independent" is arguably the most derivative piece of pop all year. Profoundly asserting that women who have their own thing going on are cool, the song rips off a concept espoused by Webbie and Lil Boosie earlier this year, by Destiny's Child in 2000, and by Susan B. Anthony in 1852. The track's beat is stolen wholesale from Justin Timberlake's hit "My Love" and any number of other Timbaland joints, while Ne-Yo's singing is filled, like Chris Brown's, with grating melisma. I'll give him credit for collaborating with NKOTB — even I can't resist "Single" — but, let's be honest. If Ne-Yo were to stop making records today, would anyone remember him in 20 years?

In truth, Ne-Yo and R&B's other reigning king, Usher, are little more than bland, well-dressed, Michael Jackson wannabes with good choreographers. Neither has done as much to push the genre forward as R. Kelly, who's at least got a stack of undeniably addictive singles to his credit and is willing to take musical chances. Unfortunately, Kels doesn't qualify as a respected R&B icon because he hasn't made strong albums and his legacy is tied up in his perversions.

As for queens like Mary J. Blige, Beyonce, and Keyshia Cole, they offer little more than overproduced girl-jams that only discerning fans can tell apart. None seem to take any pleasure in craft. While all three women have fascinating life stories — Cole's mother was a prostitute and drug addict — you'd never know it from their bland discographies, full of boilerplate love-lost laments and CVS-friendly stay-strong anthems. The music from second-tier soulstresses like Ciara and Ashanti, meanwhile, doesn't hold up without the benefit of gruff male voices to contrast their meek vocals. If you've heard Ashanti's latest album, The Declaration, you know this, but like most everybody else in the world, you haven't.

Crooners like John Legend, Anthony Hamilton, Robin Thicke, and Raheem DeVaughn have gotten critical kudos as well, but they all fall short. Take DeVaughn's latest album, Love Behind the Melody. Though almost universally praised, the work contains some of the most basic, clichéd lyricism imaginable. His Grammy-nominated hit "Woman" is about, get this, how great the female gender is. The words aren't even original; lyrics like "you a lady in the streets and a freak when it's bedroom time" should be credited to Ludacris and "I appreciate so much/Like the 'I love you' feeling girl when we touch" should be credited to a poor translation of an Italian Hallmark card, perhaps. Meanwhile, DeVaughn's offer to "appetize ya or main course ya" on "Customer" is less poetry than soundtrack to a porno flick filmed at Red Lobster.

I make no claims to have heard everything out there, of course, and I'm not contending that the entire genre is devoid of anything worth listening to. Erykah Badu remains an influential, endearing talent, although her recent New Amerykah Part One (4th World War) veers closer to neo-soul and psychedelic funk than to R&B. Inventive Detroit producer/singer Dwele and Philadelphian Jazmine Sullivan, meanwhile, have found success by taking risks, and Atlanta's Janelle Monae's brand of retro futurism is refreshingly eccentric. She dresses like a robot and inhabits an alter ego named Cindy Mayweather, for starters.

None of these artists fit the bill, however, as a true R&B icon for the new millennium. In fact, no one from the genre has recently captured the public's imagination. It's obviously a lot to ask for another Marvin Gaye or Sam Cooke, both of whom pushed for social change and helped revolutionize the role of the black singer/songwriter in the music industry. It may be too much to ask for another purple one or gloved one, both of whom affected everything from rock and pop to popular culture and marketing. But is it too much to expect a single, stand-out talent? I don't think so and, as a result, suggest we amend the "Rap & bullish" moniker to simply "bullish."

I loved the idea behind this article so much I decided to quote it and post it again. Though I can't agree with everything, I agree with the main idea. Hopefully Michael can be one of the last to show us how R&B/Soul/Rock stars are supposed to sound and act this year.

And also happy new year to everyone! 2009, almost done with the 1st decade of the 21'st century...wow!
 
12-31recording.jpg

Andrew Hypes is a music producer and remixer.

In his dark basement studio on Waynesboro’s Main Street, Andrew Hypes bobs his head up and down to the music, his face lit up by the warm, electric glow of his laptop computer.

“This is the moment,” he says, taking his eyes off the YouTube video for just a second. “Check it out.”

His head swings toward his laptop screen just as the familiar baseline for Michael Jackson’s hit “Thriller” booms out of the speakers. On stage in the grainy video, Hypes is in a club in Atlanta. His buddy, Brandon Kate, is behind the camera. Things, as Hypes says, are about to get interesting.

“When the beat comes in,” says Hypes, quickly stopping the video for a second and adjusting the volume, “Brandon just blacks out. He starts going crazy.”

The music stops and in comes a computerized voice that rings out, “A Student C exclusive.” Then the beat kicks back up, the crowd goes crazy and Kate, never seen, screams “That’s my boy,” as the club breaks out into cheers, hoots, hollers and head bobbing.

Hypes keeps bobbing his head up and down as he sits back in his chair behind his keyboard and computer equipment. The video plays on. The music still holds the 21-year-old in its grasp...

http://www.newsvirginian.com/wnv/entertainment/music/article/getting_hyped_up/33475/
 
I loved the idea behind this article so much I decided to quote it and post it again. Though I can't agree with everything, I agree with the main idea. Hopefully Michael can be one of the last to show us how R&B/Soul/Rock stars are supposed to sound and act this year.

And also happy new year to everyone! 2009, almost done with the 1st decade of the 21'st century...wow!


I agree 100% with this.
 
Happy new Year 2009 to all the members and the staff of MJJC!!!
May this year brings the real King of Pop back into the spot light!!!
 
happy new year everybody!
-hoping for the best for you, & ofcourse Michael himself!

love from Denmark. -Benedicte.
 
[URL="http://nt3.ggpht.com/news?imgefp=B4C00ZBQiNEJ&imgurl=www.enjoyfrance.com/images/stories/world/entertainment/Michael-Jackson-health-ok.jpg"]
[SIZE=-2]EnjoyFrance.com[/SIZE][/URL]
[/QUOTE] Michael Jackson biographer Ian Halperin makes false claim
[SIZE=-1]EnjoyFrance.com, France - 12 hours ago[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-1]The author Ian Halperin has made false claims about Michael Jackson’s health in an effort to publicise the unauthorised biography he has written, ...[/QUOTE][/SIZE]



HE MUST poloagize publicly.





 
Happy New Year everyone!

Just wanted to share a little michael-related story about last night!

I DJed in the gorgeous Beach Blanket Babylon venue in Shoreditch for their "Wall Street Crash" NYE party and the last two songs I played before midnight were the medley mix that it's on the You Are Not Alone single and Billie Jean! The crowd went wild with both tracks! The place was packed, lot's of celebs, lot's of glitter, lot's of everything! People just went crazy!...and it was the last song they heard before 2009! ;)

This is Beach Blanket Babylon, the best parties in London: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=i_JdDPZbNe0


Beach Blanket Babylon

RS
 
HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!!!!!!

All the best to Michael Jackson and the entire fan community!

Here's looking forward to what's in store for us in 2009!:cheers:
 
she said her students do.

Then her students are losers. They might be into crap "artists" like Beyonce, Jonas Brothers or Lil Wayne. Those students are missing out. That is their lost.

Anyway, happy new year, people.

That article on R&B music is on point. Too much nonsense in that genre. Not enough meaning.
 
I also wanted to say that it is best that the news team stop posting things from that fraud Ian Halpern or whatever his name is. He is a proven fraud. Can we stop giving him the attention he does not deserve? The man is not gonna apologized, the man is a proven loser and a proven nobody. So, please, no more nonsense from that loser. Over all, again, happy new year and thanks for posting the news.
 
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Whoa, nice rocket! lol j/k Makes me thirsty for some champagne! Cool/creative art/graphic!
 
Thanks for the news and mentionings. Interesting article about R&B. I agree with the majority of it as well. :flowers:

Happy New Year everyone. :cheers:
 
Thanks for the news and mentionings. Interesting article about R&B. I agree with the majority of it as well. :flowers:

Happy New Year everyone. :cheers:

Ditto for me and Happy New Year MJ and fans :)
 
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