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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Madonna and Bjork: 2 Sides of the Same Coin.
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Reply #60 posted 03/29/05 1:21pm

sosgemini

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on the beatles:

Now, I really respect the Sixties pop culture of the Beatles, where you get one idea and you repeat it nine hundred times. I respect that repetition: "Love, love me do." But that's not where I come from.
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Reply #61 posted 03/29/05 1:25pm

sosgemini

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on joni mitchell:

When I was 13, though, I got into Joni Mitchell with my dad, and played it to pieces. I loved Don Juan's Reckless Daughter but Hejira was the one. It was more acoustic. I've always found guitars a bit difficult because my dad played since I was very little, and he was a bit of a Clapton and Hendrix kind of guitarist, and I've always been critical of that, but I loved her guitar sound very much, although it's very hard to say why.

With hindsight, she was one of the first women I heard who weren't completely stupid. She had her own air of style and independence, whereas a lot of women just wanted to play men's music. I wasn't so much into her voice, more that she had her own world, with her own elements. You definitely knew that it was Joni the second you heard her. It was very strong, but very feminine, you know? It was natural and earthy but modern as well.

She was never my role model, though: I don't think any singer was, to be honest. Instruments influenced me more than singers, like brass and stuff. You might start puking when I say it but I never had the ambition to be a singer, I always wanted to make good music. It's like learning shorthand writing. It's not so much that you're into it, but it makes it easier to write anything. That's why I sing.
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Reply #62 posted 03/29/05 1:27pm

sosgemini

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and on madge:
She asked for 'something Björk'. She also wanted me to sing on the song, to make it a duet. I had written the song especially for her. But my intuition told me that it would be wrong for me to sing on the song. I also refused to meet her officially. When I finally meet her I want it to be totally by coincidence, when we're both drunk in a bar or something like that.


now im sorry...how can woman who breaks it down on public enemy.....respects but doesnt really get the beatles.....and appreciated joni mitchel for being a real woman.....

how you gonna compare her to madge?
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Reply #63 posted 03/29/05 4:06pm

GangstaFam

sosgemini said:

now im sorry...how can woman who breaks it down on public enemy.....respects but doesnt really get the beatles.....and appreciated joni mitchel for being a real woman.....

how you gonna compare her to madge?

lol

Personality-wise, there are certainly no comparisons to be made.
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Reply #64 posted 03/29/05 5:27pm

purpleundergro
und

I am a bigger fan of Madonna than Bjork. But have you ever noticed how many releases Bjork puts out? They are everywhere! She even has remixes of her remixes put-out on disc! Curiousity did get the best of me and I finally decided to invest in something of Bjork's. I bought the "Debut" relase that has that catchy 'Human Behaviour' song on it.

Ever since then, however, it seems like Bjork insists on recording and releasing EVERY bodily noise she makes. Burpring, shrieks, hiccups, yodeling, clearing of sinuses... you name it - it's released on a Bjork CD. Any time this woman farts, she makes it a musical affair! Any noise that comes out of her Icelandic body is recorded for future releases. I'm not sure to count her as the marketing genius Madonna seems to be... but she's always entertaining!
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Reply #65 posted 03/29/05 7:54pm

heartbeatocean

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GangstaFam said:

DavidEye said:

what's her biggest hit song? Or maybe she's more of an "album artist"? Could that be why I've never heard her songs?

Well, she's certainly not mainstream. You're not gonna hear her on the radio outside of college stations. And the big 3 video channels don't play her anymore. You'd be most likely to see her videos on M2 at this point and 120 Minutes back in the day. The videos and songs that got the most attention here in the US would be: Human Behaviour, Big-Time Sensuality, Army of Me, It's Oh So Quiet, Bachelorette and All is Full of Love. The others you'd be lucky to hear.


My introduction to Bjork was seeing the Pagan Poetry 35mm version on big screen before a movie in the theater. She had never crossed my path before. I was like eekeekeekeekeek
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Reply #66 posted 03/29/05 7:57pm

GangstaFam

heartbeatocean said:

My introduction to Bjork was seeing the Pagan Poetry 35mm version on big screen before a movie in the theater. She had never crossed my path before. I was like eekeekeekeekeek

So you became an instant fan then, right? lol
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Reply #67 posted 03/29/05 8:14pm

heartbeatocean

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Madonna is both mainstream and cutting edge. She defines the edge and then cuts with it and crosses it. Not musically perhaps but artistically, because her artistry goes beyond music. She is a player of the media, a performance artist. For Madonna, fame itself is her medium. She's the definition of post-modernism. We even studied her in graduate school. How many artists can be super pop stars and cutting edge? It's much easier to be one or the other, but to be both? She's both instantly accessible and challenging. I can't help it, I appreciate and admire her. She's brilliant.
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Reply #68 posted 03/29/05 8:14pm

heartbeatocean

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GangstaFam said:

heartbeatocean said:

My introduction to Bjork was seeing the Pagan Poetry 35mm version on big screen before a movie in the theater. She had never crossed my path before. I was like eekeekeekeekeek

So you became an instant fan then, right? lol


yes
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Reply #69 posted 03/29/05 8:16pm

heartbeatocean

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...as I run for cover to evade the swooping fury of the madge haters...
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Reply #70 posted 03/29/05 8:19pm

sosgemini

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heartbeatocean said:

Madonna is both mainstream and cutting edge. She defines the edge and then cuts with it and crosses it. Not musically perhaps but artistically, because her artistry goes beyond music. She is a player of the media, a performance artist. For Madonna, fame itself is her medium. She's the definition of post-modernism. We even studied her in graduate school. How many artists can be super pop stars and cutting edge? It's much easier to be one or the other, but to be both? She's both instantly accessible and challenging. I can't help it, I appreciate and admire her. She's brilliant.



madonna is *not* cutting edge...theres a reason why she asked for "something bjork".

this is not to discredit madonna...she is shrewd at researching and selecting sounds that others have created..but in order for her to be cutting edge she would have to have had to been apart of the intial creations..

no?
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Reply #71 posted 03/29/05 8:23pm

GangstaFam

sosgemini said:

madonna is *not* cutting edge...theres a reason why she asked for "something bjork".

this is not to discredit madonna...she is shrewd at researching and selecting sounds that others have created..but in order for her to be cutting edge she would have to have had to been apart of the intial creations..

no?

How bout we compromise and say she's somewhat edgy. deal
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Reply #72 posted 03/29/05 8:28pm

heartbeatocean

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sosgemini said:

heartbeatocean said:

Madonna is both mainstream and cutting edge. She defines the edge and then cuts with it and crosses it. Not musically perhaps but artistically, because her artistry goes beyond music. She is a player of the media, a performance artist. For Madonna, fame itself is her medium. She's the definition of post-modernism. We even studied her in graduate school. How many artists can be super pop stars and cutting edge? It's much easier to be one or the other, but to be both? She's both instantly accessible and challenging. I can't help it, I appreciate and admire her. She's brilliant.



madonna is *not* cutting edge...theres a reason why she asked for "something bjork".

this is not to discredit madonna...she is shrewd at researching and selecting sounds that others have created..but in order for her to be cutting edge she would have to have had to been apart of the intial creations..

no?


She's her own initial creation. Again, I'm not talking about her music per se, I'm talking more about her persona, her fluid play on image, her work with taboos and the stuff of culture. That's what artists should do, in my opinion, stir the pot, change perceptions, break boundaries. I also think she's contributed a hella lot to feminism while at the same time deconstructing the concept. The fact that she can do this within a package of mainstream and heartfelt songs is pretty impressive in my opinion.


....running into my hole again....
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Reply #73 posted 03/29/05 8:30pm

heartbeatocean

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GangstaFam said:

sosgemini said:

madonna is *not* cutting edge...theres a reason why she asked for "something bjork".

this is not to discredit madonna...she is shrewd at researching and selecting sounds that others have created..but in order for her to be cutting edge she would have to have had to been apart of the intial creations..

no?

How bout we compromise and say she's somewhat edgy. deal


That'll do for me. One problem with Madonna is that, while I feel like I really get her, I get bored talking about her really quickly.


...taking a nap inside my hole now...zzz
[Edited 3/29/05 20:31pm]
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Reply #74 posted 03/29/05 8:38pm

sosgemini

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heartbeatocean said:

sosgemini said:




madonna is *not* cutting edge...theres a reason why she asked for "something bjork".

this is not to discredit madonna...she is shrewd at researching and selecting sounds that others have created..but in order for her to be cutting edge she would have to have had to been apart of the intial creations..

no?


She's her own initial creation. Again, I'm not talking about her music per se, I'm talking more about her persona, her fluid play on image, her work with taboos and the stuff of culture. That's what artists should do, in my opinion, stir the pot, change perceptions, break boundaries. I also think she's contributed a hella lot to feminism while at the same time deconstructing the concept. The fact that she can do this within a package of mainstream and heartfelt songs is pretty impressive in my opinion.


....running into my hole again....



i disagree once again....because all of her images were taken from others....she was great at immulating other icons and making them her own...

i will agree she has contributed a lot...she was a master at marketing herself....

however..ill cool with agreeing to disagree on this subject....and end the debate here... wink
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Reply #75 posted 03/29/05 9:06pm

GangstaFam

heartbeatocean said:

That'll do for me. One problem with Madonna is that, while I feel like I really get her, I get bored talking about her really quickly.


...taking a nap inside my hole now...zzz

Me too. I never feel the need to defend her, cuz we've heard it all ad nauseum. Everybody's got an opinion on Madonna and everyone's sure that theirs is right, so who cares?
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Reply #76 posted 03/29/05 10:51pm

CynicKill

I guess what I was trying to say is that aesthetically they seem to be doing the same things (not literally) only in different genres.
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Reply #77 posted 03/30/05 12:53am

DavidEye

heartbeatocean said:

Madonna is both mainstream and cutting edge. She defines the edge and then cuts with it and crosses it. Not musically perhaps but artistically, because her artistry goes beyond music. She is a player of the media, a performance artist. For Madonna, fame itself is her medium. She's the definition of post-modernism. We even studied her in graduate school. How many artists can be super pop stars and cutting edge? It's much easier to be one or the other, but to be both? She's both instantly accessible and challenging. I can't help it, I appreciate and admire her. She's brilliant.



clapping
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Reply #78 posted 03/30/05 12:38pm

heartbeatocean

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sosgemini said:



i disagree once again....because all of her images were taken from others....she was great at immulating other icons and making them her own...


That's the point. If one studies art history or intellectual history, it's common knowledge that we are no longer in the age of Modernism, but Post-Modernism. Not that it's good or bad, but Madonna is perfectly at pace with it.

Modernism= distinctions between high and low art, concept of artist as 'genius' and 'auteur', individualism, existence of an avant-garde vs. pop art, the idea of originality

Post-modernism= culture is a play of surfaces, borrowed and recycled unceasingly; distinctions between avant-garde and pop no longer have meaning; the end of dialectics; the prevalence of parody and pastiche

That's why Andy Warhol painted soup cans. And that's why Madonna imitates Marilyn Monroe, dresses like a nun at party, co-opts every trend and cultural icon and has no quantifiable image of her own.
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Reply #79 posted 03/30/05 12:44pm

heartbeatocean

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So sosgemini, I don't disagree with you at all. I think we're both seeing the same thing from two sides.
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Reply #80 posted 03/30/05 1:48pm

CynicKill

A good example of the way they come at different angles in terms of cutting edge ideas would be when Bjork put out her "Human Nature" video. In that video they use the frozen, rotating shot that people went all crazy about "The Matrix" for. But Bjork's video was out years before "The Matrix", making her the one who actually introduced the trend. So she's more impressed with ideas she's never seen before more then madonna is.

Madonna, like you said, is more from that Andy Warhol school, and I think her early 80's New York influences have pretty much made her. Madonna will take something that isn't quite accepted from the underground, like S&M and crossdressing, and "expose" it to the world, which gives off more of a how-dare-she allure then Bjork which is more like what-is-she. You can also "blame" Madonna for "ruining" those subcultures. Anyone who is appalled by s&m and crossdressing (as well as any number of taboos Madonna has presented) is quite literally just waking from a 20 year coma.
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Reply #81 posted 03/30/05 1:57pm

sosgemini

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heartbeatocean said:

So sosgemini, I don't disagree with you at all. I think we're both seeing the same thing from two sides.



i see where you are getting at...but i still disagree with her being cutting edge....and i site nina hagen and grace jones as perfect examples of what truly is cutting edge in pop music.....i guess i look at cutting edge as an uncompromising vision of ones art..and im sorry, maddonna has always danced the line but she has always played it fairly safe...with the exception of her Sex book which is interestingly enough the one time period in her career that she seems to regret.....

look at it this way, would Madonna have release an album thats the equivalent of a can of soup? a slap in the mainstreams face? i think bjork would....its called Medulla. wink


btw: as i read your comments i just happened to be listening to "I'd rather be your lover" on girlbros.....so see, i do like madge.....i really do...i just like her for what she is, not what i want her to be...(not saying your are like that heart....[cough cough davideye cough cough].) wink
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Reply #82 posted 03/30/05 2:36pm

heartbeatocean

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sosgemini said:

heartbeatocean said:

So sosgemini, I don't disagree with you at all. I think we're both seeing the same thing from two sides.



i see where you are getting at...but i still disagree with her being cutting edge....and i site nina hagen and grace jones as perfect examples of what truly is cutting edge in pop music.....i guess i look at cutting edge as an uncompromising vision of ones art..and im sorry, maddonna has always danced the line but she has always played it fairly safe...with the exception of her Sex book which is interestingly enough the one time period in her career that she seems to regret.....

look at it this way, would Madonna have release an album thats the equivalent of a can of soup? a slap in the mainstreams face? i think bjork would....its called Medulla. wink


btw: as i read your comments i just happened to be listening to "I'd rather be your lover" on girlbros.....so see, i do like madge.....i really do...i just like her for what she is, not what i want her to be...(not saying your are like that heart....[cough cough davideye cough cough].) wink


I repeat, Madonna is not avant-garde (ok, NOT cutting edge), she's postmodern. A can of soup is not a "slap in the face" to the mainstream, it's an act of surrender to art as a consumer product and a statement that "true art" is dead or irrelevant. How can we say Madonna has played it safe and not been controversial? not musically, I know

whatever...wall

I certainly don't have any agenda about Madonna. I'm not even really a fan and it's all kind of boring to talk about. But I do find her relevant, considering where we are in this culture. It's just the way I see it.
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Reply #83 posted 03/30/05 2:51pm

sosgemini

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heartbeatocean said:

sosgemini said:




i see where you are getting at...but i still disagree with her being cutting edge....and i site nina hagen and grace jones as perfect examples of what truly is cutting edge in pop music.....i guess i look at cutting edge as an uncompromising vision of ones art..and im sorry, maddonna has always danced the line but she has always played it fairly safe...with the exception of her Sex book which is interestingly enough the one time period in her career that she seems to regret.....

look at it this way, would Madonna have release an album thats the equivalent of a can of soup? a slap in the mainstreams face? i think bjork would....its called Medulla. wink


btw: as i read your comments i just happened to be listening to "I'd rather be your lover" on girlbros.....so see, i do like madge.....i really do...i just like her for what she is, not what i want her to be...(not saying your are like that heart....[cough cough davideye cough cough].) wink


I repeat, Madonna is not avant-garde (ok, NOT cutting edge), she's postmodern. A can of soup is not a "slap in the face" to the mainstream, it's an act of surrender to art as a consumer product and a statement that "true art" is dead or irrelevant. How can we say Madonna has played it safe and not been controversial? not musically, I know

whatever...wall

I certainly don't have any agenda about Madonna. I'm not even really a fan and it's all kind of boring to talk about. But I do find her relevant, considering where we are in this culture. It's just the way I see it.



:hugs: its okay..its okay.. giggle

i agree with this statement 100%. I too find her relevant.... kisses
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Reply #84 posted 03/30/05 2:53pm

sosgemini

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and while i agree with your assesment of the Soup Can I still see it as a slap to the art worlds face.....just like I thought Bjork went back to basics with Medulla while slaping the music worlds face...

wink

maybe im too much of a simpleton for these types of conversations.. confused


biggrin
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Reply #85 posted 03/30/05 9:56pm

heartbeatocean

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sosgemini said:

and while i agree with your assesment of the Soup Can I still see it as a slap to the art worlds face.....just like I thought Bjork went back to basics with Medulla while slaping the music worlds face...


Well, maybe a slap in the face to any archetype of an "elite artworld" or the "artist as genius", but the artworld has certainly gobbled it up in its commodified fashion, as Warhol knew it would. He was also pointing to the death of authenticity and the prevalance of commercialized reproduction. That's why he produced numerous copies of the same image: Marilyn Monroe, Jackie O, soup cans...it's all about the recycling of image, lack of depth, heightened superficiality where even art itself operates as currency in the free market.

I love Andy Warhol. Don't know much about Bjork though...
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Reply #86 posted 03/31/05 12:18am

GangstaFam

heartbeatocean said:

I love Andy Warhol. Don't know much about Bjork though...

She's pure instinct, emotion and discipline. About as far removed from Warhol as it gets. lol
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Reply #87 posted 03/31/05 7:21am

CinisterCee

heartbeatocean shines on this thread.
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Reply #88 posted 03/31/05 7:35am

sosgemini

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CinisterCee said:

heartbeatocean shines on this thread.


ass-breath.. rolleyes

razz
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Reply #89 posted 03/31/05 7:40am

CinisterCee

sosgemini said:

CinisterCee said:

heartbeatocean shines on this thread.


ass-breath.. rolleyes

razz


Sorry, only because I don't know who Nina Hagen is. Wasn't she an MTV vj razz

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