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Reply #120 posted 12/15/13 4:40pm

KCOOLMUZIQ

nd33 said:

KCOOLMUZIQ said:

This whole thing is reminiscent of & turning into dare I say "Thriller"! Hasn't been this type of excitement in the muziq industry for quite some time..I'm not even a fan of hers..... eek

[Edited 12/14/13 22:22pm]

LOL! One difference being that 8 of the 9 songs on Thriller are totally killer and includes songs such as Thriller, Beat It, Billie Jean and Waana Be Starting Something in high rotation 3 DECADES after release! But I'm sure you're having us on! I think the one thing she has proven here, is that in 2013 the record labels are only useful for breaking new artists who need exposure and money behind them. Any established artists can connect directly to their fanbase without marketing. Beyonce is throwing money away by being signed to a label for this. The label principally provides physical distribution, marketing and money lending for recording/video costs, none of which she needs for this project. She may be giving away more than 70% of the profits for no real gain, depending on the terms of her deal. Not that she needs that extra money, but it sure is interesting. This news should have the major labels even more concerned. Their cash cows may not need them at all.

Of course! I'm talking about as far as getting people talking not the MUZIQ! After MJ appeared on the Motown 25th Anniversary Special. The days after that his album was clocking in thousands a day in sells!! This just reminded me of those times when everybody was talking about it. I would NEVER compare her muziq to MJ's!!!!!! She will NEVER be in that league or the reason this site was created by the maestro "MASTERPIECE" maker prince prince prince prince prince prince prince prince

eye will ALWAYS think of prince like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. eye mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that prince wasn't of this earth, eye would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. prince
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Reply #121 posted 12/15/13 5:02pm

KCOOLMUZIQ

lastdecember said:

KCOOLMUZIQ said:

Prince has something Beyonce HAS NOT achieved! Long-term success in EVERY SINGLE decade he has been in the industry, since the 70's. If it wasn't for PRINCE, who was an innovator with the internet before any artist! Beyonce would not have been able to deliver an album straight to the internet so quickly, WITHOUT a hit single herself. Which she has been unable to accomplish this year. In fact her last major hit single was "Single Ladies"! Which was 5 years ago!!

Mainstream or not! Prince has paid his dues! He can do whatever he wants, hit single or not doesn't matter.. He still can out perform any artist! Including Beyonce. This was all Beyonce had left to do! While it was still a brilliant idea. She still has no hit single! Which she proved really doesn't matter anyway. Because she is still at the top of her game.

So don't downplay Prince! Like no one is checking for him anymore. He can still slay her anytime!!!

Again you miss my point no one said no one checks for PRINCE, but you cannot tell me like many are saying on this forum that "He could do this" NO HE CANT, thats just a fact, thats not slighting him because he is on a whole other planet than her and always is. But he is 55 now he is not going to take over facebook for a day with a new album, and go number 1 all over the world for a week, he doesnt want to or care to, and he shouldnt either. For Prince to get this kind of "wide response" or even something like he got for "Musicology" he does have to play the game, he owned that 2004 because he toured everywhere did every type of show talk show etc...interviews, jammed that album and tour down your throat, but also attached it strongly with his past, he couldnt do that when he toured "Rainbow Children" which was a better tour and album by far, but because he was indie, he sold only 150,000 of that album which to me is amazing but that is far from a mainstream record, and he was touring by saying NO OLD SONGS, well that cut down on people that went or paid attention, but that is fine cause to me i enjoyed it more, but it is what it is.

Prince is an INDEPENDENT artist!!!! He can do whatever he wants. Even when he signs one off deals he is in CONTROL. Don't under estimate him!!! Prince still has many tricks up his sleeve.

Prince has TWO sets of fans!!! The diehards for "Rainbow Children" & The casual fans for "Musicology"...He can play both sides at anytime in touring also.

You do get it! But don't put him in a box because of his age. Good muziq will always last. Manufactured muziq like Beyonce's etc. WON'T!! Look out for Prince in 2014!!!

eye will ALWAYS think of prince like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. eye mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that prince wasn't of this earth, eye would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. prince
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Reply #122 posted 12/15/13 5:23pm

G3000

and the reviews are in...

Why ‘Beyoncé’ Makes Me Want to Die

Look, I’ll be honest: I can’t stand Beyoncé. There’s something about her that has always stirred a sort of visceral loathing in me, something I’ve tried hard to articulate over the years. It’s a combination of the narcissism, the materialism, the arrogance, the faux feminism, and the awful, awful songs. And the fact that it seems I am the literal only person who feels this way (well, just about), while everyone else is writing articles like this. Beyoncé is not an avatar of perfection; she is a cashed-up diva with a temperature-controlled personal archive and a penchant for making propaganda films (and trampling people in her way). BUT! I am a professional. And I listened to Beyoncé with an open mind. I tried. I really did. This is what happened.

“Pretty Hurts”
So. The album opens with a song about the pervasiveness of the beauty myth, which sounds somewhat promising until you remember who’s singing it. Sample lyrics: “Just another stage/ Pageant the pain away/ This time I’m gonna take the crown/ Without falling down.” Look, America’s obsession with physical appearance and general superficiality is definitely a subject worth addressing in song. But sorry, you’ll excuse me for not taking you entirely seriously for singing “Perfection is the disease of a nation” when elsewhere on the album you devote an entire song to how perfect you are. (Oh yes, of course she does.) Or singing “Blonder hair, flat chest/ TV says bigger is better… Vogue says thinner is better,” because:

gq beyonce

“Haunted”
If you can make it through this album, you’ll notice a theme: samples from Beyoncé’s past. This song starts with the precocious little Knowles on stage at a talent show, thanking judges, her parents and the city of Houston for giving her some sort of award. Huzzah. But wait, this shit ishard, don’t you know? “All the shit I do is boring/ All these record labels boring/ I don’t trust these record labels/ I’m touring/ All these people on the planet/ Working 9 to 5, just to stay alive.” Yeah, all those funny little people, eh? Must be weird for them, right?

“Drunk in Love”
But look, this song is actually so awful that it’s kinda hilarious: a song about Beyoncé and Jay-Z having sex! Because that’s exactly what the world needed to hear! Clearly, the whole being-pretty-is-oh-so-difficult thing has long since been forgotten by now, since Beyoncé spends plenty of time talking about how hot she is (“No complaints for my body… Last thing I remember is our beautiful bodies grinding off in that club”). But honestly, it all pales in comparison to Jay-Z’s rap, which may be the actual worst thing ever recorded that does not involve will.i.am. It starts with bit of product placement and a “joke” that Jay-Z is so pleased with he repeats it three times (“That D’Ussé is the shit/ If I do say so myself” — GEDDIT?!), and then descends into what must surely be self-parody — ”Foreplay in the foyer/ Fucked up my Warhol.” OH, BOO FUCKING HOO. Also “foyer” and “Warhol” don’t even vaguely rhyme. Even that’s trumped, though, by the immortal line that finishes Jay’s verse: “Your breasteses is my breakfast.” This is like hearing about your parents having sex. Make it stop.

“Blow”
Oh dear god, they’re still at it. “Can you lick my skittles?/ That’s the sweetest in the middle/ Pink that’s the flavor/ Solve the riddle.” What is it with people comparing vaginas to candy this year?

“No Angel”
Meh.

“Partition”
Not, sadly, about the 1947 division of the subcontinent and the creation of Pakistan, nor about the innovation of including a recovery partition with every standard install of OS X 10.7 and later. No, it’s about how hot Beyoncé is. Surprise. “Every boy in here with me got that smoke/ Every girl in here got to look me up and down… Ya man ain’t ever seen a booty like this.” And, oh, wait: THEY’RE FUCKING AGAIN. “Driver roll up the partition please/ I don’t need you seeing ‘yoncé on her knees… Oh he so horny, he want to fuck/ He bucked all my buttons, he ripped my blouse/ He Monica Lewinski all on my gown.” Disappointing product placement opportunity missed there, mind: surely it was a Versace gown or something?

“Jealous”
Wait! Trouble in paradise! They’re not fucking because Jay-Z’s out on the town somewhere! THE DRAMA! “I’m in my penthouse half naked/ I cooked this meal for you naked/ So where the hell you at?” Hey, we’ve all been there, right? The whole naked cooking thing? What? Oh.

“Rocket”
Normal service restored: they’re fucking again. “Rock right up to the side of my mountain/ Climb until you reach my peak babe, my peak, the peak/ And reach right into the bottom of my fountain.” #splash. (Also, it’s somewhat disturbing how she keeps calling him “daddy.” As in: “You ain’t right for doing that to me, daddy/ Even though I’ve been a bad, bad, bad, bad, bad, bad, bad, bad, bad, bad, bad girl/ Tell me what you’re gonna do about that/ Punish me, please.” Um.)

“Mine”
Wait! Trouble in paradise again! “I’ve been watching for the signs/ Took a trip to clear my mind/ Now I’m even more lost/ And you’re still so fine, oh my, oh my/ Been having conversations about breakups and separations/ I’m not feeling like myself since the baby.” Actually, there’s something pleasantly relatable about this: a hint of humanity beneath the gold-plated, airbrushed veneer. It turns out that even this is carefully contrived, though, because the rest of the song is devoted to a narrative that, yes, brings her back to her dear husband. Reviewers are already falling over themselves to call this “a revealing look at Beyoncé,” and all such things, but it’s not, of course. You only ever see exactly what she wants you to see.

“XO”
I mean, what do you want me to say? It’s a big ol’ power ballad with a fucking choir on it.

“Flawless”
This is the compulsory pseudofeminist anthem on this record, the successor to “Independent Women” and “Single Ladies,” and it’s a load of utter fucking codswallop. You’ll have heard part of this before, as “Bow Down,” but now the “Bow down bitches” refrain is counterpointed by a long monologue from Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, who speaks eloquently about how the world sets women in competition against one another and how they’re taught to “shrink themselves… to make themselves smaller.” And LITERALLY A MINUTE LATER, Beyoncé is singing “This diamond, flawless/ My diamond, flawless… God damn, say I, I look so good tonight.” These boasts are interspersed by some sort of woolly cheerleading for girlz in general (“We flawless, ladies, tell ‘em”), but as a demonstration of how hollow Beyoncé’s patented brand of “modern day feminism” is, you couldn’t do much better: her version of empowerment, such as it is, is based on a sort of inherent conservatism, rooted not in compassion and generosity, but instead in materialism, braggadocio, and inescapable narcissism. Feminism is actually caring about people who are oppressed — women, minorities, the poor. It is not spending 99% of your time talking about how great you are and how much hotter you are than other women and how rich you are, and occasionally inserting some sort of nebulous piffle about “girls running the world” or whatever else. The empress isn’t naked; she’s dressed in shit you could never, ever afford, and she’s laughing at you. Bow down, bitches. (Also, the production is fucking dreadful.)

“Superpower”
Features Frank Ocean. More pseudoromantic bilge. I’m tired. My head hurts.

“Heaven”
An understated ballad for a loved one who’s died. And, hey, it’s really quite beautiful, actually.

“Blue”
And, finally, a song about the world’s most famous baby. Say whatever else you like about Beyoncé, she obviously loves her daughter. Good for her. And anyway, the album’s over. I need a drink.

[Edited 12/15/13 17:24pm]

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Reply #123 posted 12/15/13 5:51pm

go2theMax

avatar

http://www.metacritic.com/music/beyonce/beyonce

  1. Dec 13, 2013
    91
    Here more than ever Bey indulges clashing impulses--between strength and escape, megapop and fresh sounds, big messages and resonant lyrics.
  2. Dec 13, 2013
    90
    Once the initial novelty and shock wears off of Beyoncé's impressive stealth-release feat, the brilliance and creative audacity of the album itself can sink in.
  3. Dec 13, 2013
    90
    The songs are alert to the current sound of clubs and radio, but not trapped by it; the refrains are terse and direct, but what happens between them isn’t formulaic. And while Beyoncé constructed the songs with a phalanx of collaborators, they all know better than to eclipse her creamy, soulful voice.
  4. Dec 13, 2013
    80
    The best surprise of all, in an autumn in which Beyoncé's closest competitors--Gaga, Katy Perry and Miley Cyrus--made underperforming bids for the throne, is how thoroughly assured, immersive and substantial this album is.
  5. Dec 13, 2013
    80
    Beyoncé's got the tour out of the way first--with this year's Mrs Carter jaunt--and released a singleless, multi-layered, head-spinning album second. Maybe she knew what she was doing after all.
  6. Dec 13, 2013
    80
    For all its length (16 tracks) and elaborate staging (with videos for every song), the album has a focus and intensity unusual in multi-writer ensemble productions, a sense of purposefulness that holds the attention even when the songs sometimes drift off in search of a chorus.
  7. Dec 13, 2013
    60
    Musically, it's the same kind of electro R&B with which radio is already awash--in large part because it's produced by the same small coterie of hip producers, with Timbaland appearing to take the most prominent role amongst the likes of Detail, Jerome Harmon, Pharrell Williams and Ryan Tedder.

[Edited 12/15/13 17:53pm]

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Reply #124 posted 12/15/13 5:55pm

chriss

avatar

"Rocket" sounds like a duet with Josh Stone and D'Angelo!

Good combo I might add...

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Reply #125 posted 12/15/13 8:20pm

mjscarousal

^ Wow very interesting. Michael Jackson, Prince and Madonna's 00's albums received poor reviews despite being better than all the crap thats out now but they gave Beyonce 5 stars for basically doing the same shit Rihanna, KatyPerry, Miley Cyrus and Gaga does? hmmm The only objective and non biased review was the very last one.

NaughtyKitty said:

mjscarousal said:

But you should know by now that it is a "inside industry thing" to kiss Beyonce's ass regardless of the quality of her craft. lol Regardless if David Bowie was the FIRST to do it since Beyonce did it, the media and her peers are going to insist she did it first. Why didnt people give David Bowie props when he did it first? I thought it was impressive when he did it because he didn't have the Super Bowl, a World Tour, a Pepsi commerical, Videos, Perfume line or clothing line to help him lol I am not sure why people are bringing Prince into this topic either. Prince IS a legend and has nothing to prove. Prince does not have to do desperate gimmicks in order to get folks to buy his album.Prince puts his music out the regular way and if you like it... you like it and if you dont.... you dont. Prince doesnt give a damn. There is no gimmicks or tricks involved because his music speaks for itself.

^ALL OF THIS!!!!

MJscarousal and a few other folks here get it--everyone else here losing their mind over this "groundbreaking achievement" rolleyes thinking she changed the game and acting like she's the first ever artist in the history of ever to do this, dont get it because they've fallen for all the hype and got caught up in the crazy spin her PR team is making out of this. Like Cindymay said Beyonce is a corporate puppet. Pretty sure this whole idea was cooked up by her handlers but the hype and hysteria over this is ridiculous. All she did was record songs and film videos in secret and release it. If someone like Christina Aguilera, or Pink or Brandy did this would there be all this crazy hysteria and stanning over it? I dont think so. Beyonce has a brilliant team behind her that I'm sure she pays very well and this was a great idea. They pulled it off and it will go on to be #1 on the charts next week. But once the hype and craziness calms down then what? Will it stay in the top 10 or sink like a lead balloon? People saying the music aint that great and doesnt live up to the hype. She will probably sell at least a million copies but how is this album gonna do in the long run? Time will tell.

Agree. She is no different from the Rihanna's, Katy Perry's etc and the fact that she has a "descent" voice does not change that. Beyonce is a brand. She is not an artist and definitly not an Icon. It would not have been an hysteria if an artist like Pink had of done it because Pink is an ARTIST and NOT a brand. She does not have the corporate backing and marketing as Beyonce. Once the hype dies (because it will die), I don't see it staying at number one. A pop star needs at least one major hit to keep the general public interested and to keep the momentum going on the album. There are no Top 10 hits from this album which is why her team released all the songs with the videos all at once. Since some people brought the album already, they will be sharing it, copying it, uploading it etc. So when the actual physical CD drops, I don't see it moving that many units. Its clear the only reason why the album is number one now on itunes is because of the way she released it not necessarily because of the quality of the songs/videos. I know some people who brought it and said they regretted buying it because the songs were not that good or they only liked two songs.

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Reply #126 posted 12/15/13 9:50pm

MendesCity

avatar

After listening the whole way trough, it's definitely a big E for Effort, but doesn't really pull it it off. She's trying really hard to push the boundaries of pop music, but she gets stuck somewhere in the middle. It's not catchy or fun enough to work as great pop, and not weird enough to work as something more interesting.

[Edited 12/16/13 6:59am]

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Reply #127 posted 12/16/13 3:55am

katamari

avatar

No other major star has ever put out an album without warning let alone attached videos to every song. That's what's unique about it and that's what's garnering attention So y'all can stop whining about Michael like he hasn't been dead as fuck for damn near five years. And clearly nobody else ALIVE could do it either. Britney Spears barely promoted the lead balloon she just put out, and look what happened.

DEAD @ that whiny, unfocused, irrelevant review being from a no-name site.

mjscarousal said:

I know some people who brought it and said they regretted buying it because the songs were not that good or they only liked two songs.

of course you do. Just like how crackheads know SO MANY PEOPLE who are always smoking crack. Mm.

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Reply #128 posted 12/16/13 4:51am

cindymay

the reviews which gave her nine were done like a minute after they heard the album for the first time they should have waited a little..because no way that this product is a 9 are they crazy? did they listen to the lyrics? a bunch of uninspired lyrics mostly about her fucking jay z..something not really interesting tbh.. confused

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Reply #129 posted 12/16/13 5:01am

cindymay

G3000 said:

and the reviews are in...

Why ‘Beyoncé’ Makes Me Want to Die

Look, I’ll be honest: I can’t stand Beyoncé. There’s something about her that has always stirred a sort of visceral loathing in me, something I’ve tried hard to articulate over the years. It’s a combination of the narcissism, the materialism, the arrogance, the faux feminism, and the awful, awful songs. And the fact that it seems I am the literal only person who feels this way (well, just about), while everyone else is writing articles like this. Beyoncé is not an avatar of perfection; she is a cashed-up diva with a temperature-controlled personal archive and a penchant for making propaganda films (and trampling people in her way). BUT! I am a professional. And I listened to Beyoncé with an open mind. I tried. I really did. This is what happened.

“Pretty Hurts”
So. The album opens with a song about the pervasiveness of the beauty myth, which sounds somewhat promising until you remember who’s singing it. Sample lyrics: “Just another stage/ Pageant the pain away/ This time I’m gonna take the crown/ Without falling down.” Look, America’s obsession with physical appearance and general superficiality is definitely a subject worth addressing in song. But sorry, you’ll excuse me for not taking you entirely seriously for singing “Perfection is the disease of a nation” when elsewhere on the album you devote an entire song to how perfect you are. (Oh yes, of course she does.) Or singing “Blonder hair, flat chest/ TV says bigger is better… Vogue says thinner is better,” because:

gq beyonce

“Haunted”
If you can make it through this album, you’ll notice a theme: samples from Beyoncé’s past. This song starts with the precocious little Knowles on stage at a talent show, thanking judges, her parents and the city of Houston for giving her some sort of award. Huzzah. But wait, this shit ishard, don’t you know? “All the shit I do is boring/ All these record labels boring/ I don’t trust these record labels/ I’m touring/ All these people on the planet/ Working 9 to 5, just to stay alive.” Yeah, all those funny little people, eh? Must be weird for them, right?

“Drunk in Love”
But look, this song is actually so awful that it’s kinda hilarious: a song about Beyoncé and Jay-Z having sex! Because that’s exactly what the world needed to hear! Clearly, the whole being-pretty-is-oh-so-difficult thing has long since been forgotten by now, since Beyoncé spends plenty of time talking about how hot she is (“No complaints for my body… Last thing I remember is our beautiful bodies grinding off in that club”). But honestly, it all pales in comparison to Jay-Z’s rap, which may be the actual worst thing ever recorded that does not involve will.i.am. It starts with bit of product placement and a “joke” that Jay-Z is so pleased with he repeats it three times (“That D’Ussé is the shit/ If I do say so myself” — GEDDIT?!), and then descends into what must surely be self-parody — ”Foreplay in the foyer/ Fucked up my Warhol.” OH, BOO FUCKING HOO. Also “foyer” and “Warhol” don’t even vaguely rhyme. Even that’s trumped, though, by the immortal line that finishes Jay’s verse: “Your breasteses is my breakfast.” This is like hearing about your parents having sex. Make it stop.

“Blow”
Oh dear god, they’re still at it. “Can you lick my skittles?/ That’s the sweetest in the middle/ Pink that’s the flavor/ Solve the riddle.” What is it with people comparing vaginas to candy this year?

“No Angel”
Meh.

“Partition”
Not, sadly, about the 1947 division of the subcontinent and the creation of Pakistan, nor about the innovation of including a recovery partition with every standard install of OS X 10.7 and later. No, it’s about how hot Beyoncé is. Surprise. “Every boy in here with me got that smoke/ Every girl in here got to look me up and down… Ya man ain’t ever seen a booty like this.” And, oh, wait: THEY’RE FUCKING AGAIN. “Driver roll up the partition please/ I don’t need you seeing ‘yoncé on her knees… Oh he so horny, he want to fuck/ He bucked all my buttons, he ripped my blouse/ He Monica Lewinski all on my gown.” Disappointing product placement opportunity missed there, mind: surely it was a Versace gown or something?

“Jealous”
Wait! Trouble in paradise! They’re not fucking because Jay-Z’s out on the town somewhere! THE DRAMA! “I’m in my penthouse half naked/ I cooked this meal for you naked/ So where the hell you at?” Hey, we’ve all been there, right? The whole naked cooking thing? What? Oh.

“Rocket”
Normal service restored: they’re fucking again. “Rock right up to the side of my mountain/ Climb until you reach my peak babe, my peak, the peak/ And reach right into the bottom of my fountain.” #splash. (Also, it’s somewhat disturbing how she keeps calling him “daddy.” As in: “You ain’t right for doing that to me, daddy/ Even though I’ve been a bad, bad, bad, bad, bad, bad, bad, bad, bad, bad, bad girl/ Tell me what you’re gonna do about that/ Punish me, please.” Um.)

“Mine”
Wait! Trouble in paradise again! “I’ve been watching for the signs/ Took a trip to clear my mind/ Now I’m even more lost/ And you’re still so fine, oh my, oh my/ Been having conversations about breakups and separations/ I’m not feeling like myself since the baby.” Actually, there’s something pleasantly relatable about this: a hint of humanity beneath the gold-plated, airbrushed veneer. It turns out that even this is carefully contrived, though, because the rest of the song is devoted to a narrative that, yes, brings her back to her dear husband. Reviewers are already falling over themselves to call this “a revealing look at Beyoncé,” and all such things, but it’s not, of course. You only ever see exactly what she wants you to see.

“XO”
I mean, what do you want me to say? It’s a big ol’ power ballad with a fucking choir on it.

“Flawless”
This is the compulsory pseudofeminist anthem on this record, the successor to “Independent Women” and “Single Ladies,” and it’s a load of utter fucking codswallop. You’ll have heard part of this before, as “Bow Down,” but now the “Bow down bitches” refrain is counterpointed by a long monologue from Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, who speaks eloquently about how the world sets women in competition against one another and how they’re taught to “shrink themselves… to make themselves smaller.” And LITERALLY A MINUTE LATER, Beyoncé is singing “This diamond, flawless/ My diamond, flawless… God damn, say I, I look so good tonight.” These boasts are interspersed by some sort of woolly cheerleading for girlz in general (“We flawless, ladies, tell ‘em”), but as a demonstration of how hollow Beyoncé’s patented brand of “modern day feminism” is, you couldn’t do much better: her version of empowerment, such as it is, is based on a sort of inherent conservatism, rooted not in compassion and generosity, but instead in materialism, braggadocio, and inescapable narcissism. Feminism is actually caring about people who are oppressed — women, minorities, the poor. It is not spending 99% of your time talking about how great you are and how much hotter you are than other women and how rich you are, and occasionally inserting some sort of nebulous piffle about “girls running the world” or whatever else. The empress isn’t naked; she’s dressed in shit you could never, ever afford, and she’s laughing at you. Bow down, bitches. (Also, the production is fucking dreadful.)

“Superpower”
Features Frank Ocean. More pseudoromantic bilge. I’m tired. My head hurts.

“Heaven”
An understated ballad for a loved one who’s died. And, hey, it’s really quite beautiful, actually.

“Blue”
And, finally, a song about the world’s most famous baby. Say whatever else you like about Beyoncé, she obviously loves her daughter. Good for her. And anyway, the album’s over. I need a drink.

[Edited 12/15/13 17:24pm]

LOOOOOOOOOOOOOL he's not wrong at all..I have the same feeling for the major part about her.. she never seems sincere..now with all these rumours about her husband cheating on her a lot she made this album to say hey everybody is all ok we're like 2 horny teenagers.. confused

and he's also right about the pretty hurt song the concept is nice even though already done a lot in pop..but when you think about who sing this.. seriously? this said by a woman who control every single picture taken of hers because if she doesn't look a goddess in it she wants to have it deleted immediately?? confused and also her fake feminism I can't stand it sorry it makes me want to puke..the only good part in that song is the speech by the real activist..if only beyonce wasn't singing in the rest of the song I'm better than you to the other women with that bow down bitches shit

[Edited 12/16/13 5:14am]

[Edited 12/16/13 5:19am]

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Reply #130 posted 12/16/13 5:13am

cindymay

this comment: biggrin Her version of empowerment, such as it is, is based on a sort of inherent conservatism, rooted not in compassion and generosity, but instead in materialism, braggadocio, and inescapable narcissism. Feminism is actually caring about people who are oppressed — women, minorities, the poor. It is not spending 99% of your time talking about how great you are and how much hotter you are than other women and how rich you are, and occasionally inserting some sort of nebulous piffle about “girls running the world” or whatever else. The empress isn't naked; she’s dressed in shit you could never, ever afford, and she’s laughing at you. Bow down, bitches. (Also, the production is fucking dreadful.)" Straight up truth, right there.

he's right too..that's why the electric lady was a real feminist album not this bullshit.. cool

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Reply #131 posted 12/16/13 5:31am

specialkad

cindymay said:

the reviews which gave her nine were done like a minute after they heard the album for the first time they should have waited a little..because no way that this product is a 9 are they crazy? did they listen to the lyrics? a bunch of uninspired lyrics mostly about her fucking jay z..something not really interesting tbh.. confused

Oh from SPIN today...

Beyoncé Outdoes Herself (and Everyone Else) With the Humanizing, Superhuman 'Beyoncé'


uLqAB.jpg

Pop stars can be divisive. There are super-fans and super-haters, poptimists and rock-hardened cynics, Beliebers and… non-Beliebers. In 2013, "mainstream" itself is still a dirty word in certain circles; its antagonist (in seemingly every circle) is the "hipster," usually defined as “a young-ish person who likes stuff.” There are few artists who can unite our fragmented, disparate listening cultures on a mass scale; Lady Gaga succeeded for a while, and Kanye West has been trying for years, but one artist has got them — and everyone else — beat.

It has been a joyful 80 hours and counting since Beyoncé released her self-titled fifth album at midnight on Friday morning, with no advance warning or traditional promo. The "visual album" — 14 new songs, 17 videos — just showed up on iTunes for $15.99, and you probably bought it immediately, because this sort of unannounced, airtight drop provided no free way to join the conversation. The move preyed on our addiction to immediacy. By Friday afternoon, it was the top-selling album on iTunes in 82 countries. By Saturday, we'd all captioned selfies with the album’s most crucial, damn-girl-ya-look-good lyric: “I woke up like this.” By Sunday, sales reached more than 400,000. To doubt it is delusion: With all due respect to the competition, Beyoncé is the biggest pop star on the planet.

And this is her best album, more textured than its predecessors in both sound and content. Big-hook message pop (“Pretty Hurts,” “XO”); multi-directional, mood-shifting suites (“Haunted,” “Partition”); and delicately resonant R&B ballads (“Rocket,” “Superpower”) share space on an unquestionably personal tour de force that’s as much about love and motherhood as it is about sex. Timbaland and Pharrell are mighty, combining forces and tapping into their proven genius on the nimble and funky “Blow.” There is a gorgeous, cascading chillwave song, “No Angel,” co-written by Caroline Polachek of Chairlift — evidence of sister Solange’s influence. And rounding things out are a couple of elbows-up boom-trap anthems (“Drunk in Love,” “***Flawless”) ready to soundtrack both dive-bar antics and bottle-service quasi-sophistication.

But what’s most interesting about Beyoncé is hearing (and watching) a performer so tied to a singular trope (diva-pop R& B)move into a different lane, albeit subtly and gracefully. Her last record, 2011's relatively mellow 4, hinted at a change with more mature themes and a more pronounced Motown influence, but unlike Madonna or Rihanna or Gaga, Beyoncé’s never needed to completely reinvent herself: She’s the pageant queen of pop, and here she triggers a seismic shift simply by letting her hair down — just a little, and totes flawlessly — in order to be just a touch more relatable. And it’s so fun. On “Haunted,” she lifts Kendrick Lamar’s alien-robot cadence and sings in a pinched choral croon that recalls Bat for Lashes’ Natasha Khan. Her wacky, liquored-up 2 Chainz flow enlivens “Drunk In Love,” and she’s cool with being pitchy and imperfect on “No Angel.” On “Mine,” written by Drake and Noah “40” Shebib, she does her best Drizzy; he features (and continues to make a case for himself as a better singer than rapper), but is obviously outperformed.

And then there’s the relentlessly perfect succession of videos, 17 impossibly detailed vignettes of expensive, fashionable, highly GIF-able Tumblr fodder that makes for a multi-sensory listening experience. There are elaborately choreographed set pieces, flagrant stripteases, abstract oddities. Jonas Akerlund fills a bright manse with freaks and weirdos to better channel ’90s Madge erotica on “Haunted.” Hype Williams references his own work (Faith Evans’ roller-rink boogie “Love Like This” and Belly’s blacklighting) for “Blow.” And Bey’s unafraid to get a little ugly in “***Flawless” or stand among other beautiful women (and have one of them lick her breast) in the model-saturated pose-off “Yonce.”

Vintage footage of Beyoncé as a young performer is spliced throughout the collection, culminating in the adorable VHS-art video for the Afrobeat-indebted “Grown Woman.” And even when these videos are relatively mundane — like the hokey faux protest in “Superpower” or the Coney Island-shot “XO” — they’re feats of production value and styling, right down to the lingerie. Throughout, there are allusions to motherhood, and near the very end — after the moving story of a miscarriage on “Heaven” — we get a glimpse of Bey in mom mode with the toddling, babbling Blue Ivy herself on “Blue.”

Earlier this year, Beyoncé released a laptop-filmed HBO doc and allowed a GQ writer to report on her personal archive. For someone so visible, she's fiercely hands-on with her material and personal image; in a man, that might be seen as shrewd and private, but critics seemed to brand her as some kind of Vaseline-teethed control freak. Perhaps her particular brand of feminism isn't the genteel faux-humility of Lean In — it's a bit more brashly capitalist — but isn’t that just good practice and brilliant logic for someone who is an industry unto herself?

Launching an album’s worth of music and video — and making us pay for it, or at least coming closer to making us pay for it than anyone else — is just another way of staying visible on her own terms. If we want the details of her sex life with Jay Z (eeeeew) or her childhood (her mother may have been more overbearing than we know, sez “Pretty Hurts”), it has to come from Beyoncé herself. And not only is Bey helming the churn, she has a team expert in listening to the feeds. This is how we get the direct lob at snarky feminists in the form of a sampled treatise from writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, a variety of fresh and vibrant sonics that truly reflect contemporary pop music, and even things like that pizza outfit. Beyoncé’s creative handlers have managed to collate the relentless feeds of our Tumblr dashes and Twitter pages into a vivid, banging pop opus. The result is artistic click bait, and its genius and connective power is that it doesn’t treat music fans as factions. This one is for everyone, all at once.

RATING: 9/10; 90/100 on MetaCritic

http://www.spin.com/revie...essential/

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Reply #132 posted 12/16/13 5:50am

ADC

lol lol lol lol

[Edited 12/16/13 5:55am]

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Reply #133 posted 12/16/13 5:54am

cindymay

specialkad said:

cindymay said:

the reviews which gave her nine were done like a minute after they heard the album for the first time they should have waited a little..because no way that this product is a 9 are they crazy? did they listen to the lyrics? a bunch of uninspired lyrics mostly about her fucking jay z..something not really interesting tbh.. confused

Oh from SPIN today...

Beyoncé Outdoes Herself (and Everyone Else) With the Humanizing, Superhuman 'Beyoncé'


uLqAB.jpg

Pop stars can be divisive. There are super-fans and super-haters, poptimists and rock-hardened cynics, Beliebers and… non-Beliebers. In 2013, "mainstream" itself is still a dirty word in certain circles; its antagonist (in seemingly every circle) is the "hipster," usually defined as “a young-ish person who likes stuff.” There are few artists who can unite our fragmented, disparate listening cultures on a mass scale; Lady Gaga succeeded for a while, and Kanye West has been trying for years, but one artist has got them — and everyone else — beat.

It has been a joyful 80 hours and counting since Beyoncé released her self-titled fifth album at midnight on Friday morning, with no advance warning or traditional promo. The "visual album" — 14 new songs, 17 videos — just showed up on iTunes for $15.99, and you probably bought it immediately, because this sort of unannounced, airtight drop provided no free way to join the conversation. The move preyed on our addiction to immediacy. By Friday afternoon, it was the top-selling album on iTunes in 82 countries. By Saturday, we'd all captioned selfies with the album’s most crucial, damn-girl-ya-look-good lyric: “I woke up like this.” By Sunday, sales reached more than 400,000. To doubt it is delusion: With all due respect to the competition, Beyoncé is the biggest pop star on the planet.

And this is her best album, more textured than its predecessors in both sound and content. Big-hook message pop (“Pretty Hurts,” “XO”); multi-directional, mood-shifting suites (“Haunted,” “Partition”); and delicately resonant R&B ballads (“Rocket,” “Superpower”) share space on an unquestionably personal tour de force that’s as much about love and motherhood as it is about sex. Timbaland and Pharrell are mighty, combining forces and tapping into their proven genius on the nimble and funky “Blow.” There is a gorgeous, cascading chillwave song, “No Angel,” co-written by Caroline Polachek of Chairlift — evidence of sister Solange’s influence. And rounding things out are a couple of elbows-up boom-trap anthems (“Drunk in Love,” “***Flawless”) ready to soundtrack both dive-bar antics and bottle-service quasi-sophistication.

But what’s most interesting about Beyoncé is hearing (and watching) a performer so tied to a singular trope (diva-pop R& B)move into a different lane, albeit subtly and gracefully. Her last record, 2011's relatively mellow 4, hinted at a change with more mature themes and a more pronounced Motown influence, but unlike Madonna or Rihanna or Gaga, Beyoncé’s never needed to completely reinvent herself: She’s the pageant queen of pop, and here she triggers a seismic shift simply by letting her hair down — just a little, and totes flawlessly — in order to be just a touch more relatable. And it’s so fun. On “Haunted,” she lifts Kendrick Lamar’s alien-robot cadence and sings in a pinched choral croon that recalls Bat for Lashes’ Natasha Khan. Her wacky, liquored-up 2 Chainz flow enlivens “Drunk In Love,” and she’s cool with being pitchy and imperfect on “No Angel.” On “Mine,” written by Drake and Noah “40” Shebib, she does her best Drizzy; he features (and continues to make a case for himself as a better singer than rapper), but is obviously outperformed.

And then there’s the relentlessly perfect succession of videos, 17 impossibly detailed vignettes of expensive, fashionable, highly GIF-able Tumblr fodder that makes for a multi-sensory listening experience. There are elaborately choreographed set pieces, flagrant stripteases, abstract oddities. Jonas Akerlund fills a bright manse with freaks and weirdos to better channel ’90s Madge erotica on “Haunted.” Hype Williams references his own work (Faith Evans’ roller-rink boogie “Love Like This” and Belly’s blacklighting) for “Blow.” And Bey’s unafraid to get a little ugly in “***Flawless” or stand among other beautiful women (and have one of them lick her breast) in the model-saturated pose-off “Yonce.”

Vintage footage of Beyoncé as a young performer is spliced throughout the collection, culminating in the adorable VHS-art video for the Afrobeat-indebted “Grown Woman.” And even when these videos are relatively mundane — like the hokey faux protest in “Superpower” or the Coney Island-shot “XO” — they’re feats of production value and styling, right down to the lingerie. Throughout, there are allusions to motherhood, and near the very end — after the moving story of a miscarriage on “Heaven” — we get a glimpse of Bey in mom mode with the toddling, babbling Blue Ivy herself on “Blue.”

Earlier this year, Beyoncé released a laptop-filmed HBO doc and allowed a GQ writer to report on her personal archive. For someone so visible, she's fiercely hands-on with her material and personal image; in a man, that might be seen as shrewd and private, but critics seemed to brand her as some kind of Vaseline-teethed control freak. Perhaps her particular brand of feminism isn't the genteel faux-humility of Lean In — it's a bit more brashly capitalist — but isn’t that just good practice and brilliant logic for someone who is an industry unto herself?

Launching an album’s worth of music and video — and making us pay for it, or at least coming closer to making us pay for it than anyone else — is just another way of staying visible on her own terms. If we want the details of her sex life with Jay Z (eeeeew) or her childhood (her mother may have been more overbearing than we know, sez “Pretty Hurts”), it has to come from Beyoncé herself. And not only is Bey helming the churn, she has a team expert in listening to the feeds. This is how we get the direct lob at snarky feminists in the form of a sampled treatise from writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, a variety of fresh and vibrant sonics that truly reflect contemporary pop music, and even things like that pizza outfit. Beyoncé’s creative handlers have managed to collate the relentless feeds of our Tumblr dashes and Twitter pages into a vivid, banging pop opus. The result is artistic click bait, and its genius and connective power is that it doesn’t treat music fans as factions. This one is for everyone, all at once.

RATING: 9/10; 90/100 on MetaCritic

http://www.spin.com/revie...essential/

no comment

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Reply #134 posted 12/16/13 6:03am

ADC

Look at them seethe! cool


All the bitter, cynical, jaded, "I just don't get it" remarks won't change the bottom line: that in 48 hrs., she sold 550k, and topped the charts in 106 countries, which was previously unheard of. And in the meantime, the album is being critically raved about.

I think it's safe to say that BEYONCE (album and singer) is winning and virtually owning the world of music right now. Expect to see Bey sweeping ALL the major award shows in 2014, being handed awards just for showing up! Heh!

Love it.

[Edited 12/16/13 6:06am]

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Reply #135 posted 12/16/13 6:06am

cindymay

ADC said:

Look at them seethe! cool


All the bitter, cynical, jaded, "I just don't get it" remarks won't change the bottom line: that in 48 hrs., she sold 550k, and topped the charts in 106 countries, which was previously unheard of. And in the meantime, the album is being critically raved about.



I think it's safe to say that BEYONCE (album and singer) are winning. Expect to see Bey sweeping ALL the major award shows in 2014, being handed awards just for showing up! Heh!

Love it.

[Edited 12/16/13 6:04am]

good for her and for her fans..but it's still not a nine.. 8-)and they are still impulsive reviews comparing to the other records out this year becauseusually music critics get the albums at least a week before the regular public for writing the reviews ..this time it didn't happen with her album..because they heard it the first time with the rest of the world so only 3 days ago..

[Edited 12/16/13 6:42am]

[Edited 12/16/13 12:37pm]

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Reply #136 posted 12/16/13 6:24am

nd33

ADC said:

Look at them seethe! cool


All the bitter, cynical, jaded, "I just don't get it" remarks won't change the bottom line: that in 48 hrs., she sold 550k, and topped the charts in 106 countries, which was previously unheard of. And in the meantime, the album is being critically raved about.

I think it's safe to say that BEYONCE (album and singer) is winning and virtually owning the world of music right now. Expect to see Bey sweeping ALL the major award shows in 2014, being handed awards just for showing up! Heh!

Love it.

[Edited 12/16/13 6:06am]

Just as likely, is that once the buzz dies down, people will lose interest because of the seemingly samey, mediocre material on the album.

This will be valid for the 2015 Grammys (the 2014 nominees were announced last week). Time will tell if this is still critically acclaimed in a years time when the nominees are announced...

Music, sweet music, I wish I could caress and...kiss, kiss...
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Reply #137 posted 12/16/13 9:45am

Empress

SoulAlive said:

KCOOLMUZIQ said:

This whole thing is reminiscent of & turning into dare I say "Thriller"! Hasn't been this type of excitement in the muziq industry for quite some time..I'm not even a fan of hers..... eek

falloff falloff falloff falloff

Nothing that Beyonce,or any other artist,does will ever surpass Thriller and the Michaelmania of 1983.None of her songs will have that type of longtime impact.She's already made dozens of music videos and not a single one of them can compare to the landmark "Thriller" video.I'm gonna assume that you were high or drunk when you made that comment,lol.

Totally agree SoulAlive - I watched grown men who never listened to anything other than hard rock tune into Thriller and love just about every song on the album. Very similar to Elvis and the Beatles. These things don't come around often.

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Reply #138 posted 12/16/13 11:12am

GoldDolphin

avatar

cindymay said:

the reviews which gave her nine were done like a minute after they heard the album for the first time they should have waited a little..because no way that this product is a 9 are they crazy? did they listen to the lyrics? a bunch of uninspired lyrics mostly about her fucking jay z..something not really interesting tbh.. confused

Had you not known she was married to Jay-Z would you still say the same comment? I never quite understood why women can't sing about their sexuality while men can do it all the time, Prince is a perfect example of that (so many of his songs are about sex/sexuality). She is in control of her sexuality and is a grown woman that can allow herself to do what she pleases. She has a nigerian feminist on her album speaking just about this, which I thought was quite cool. Women are diverse and this album reflects that in some ways. She did something unexpected and she deserves cred for it, many people had said that the album was gonna be a fail and that she wouldn't come back after the baby. But I think building up your brand based on tours (which she sold out prior to an album), your fans and what matters to the artist is quite important. It's the new strategy of marketing and I think she def delivered whether you like the music or not.

When the power of love overcomes the love of power,the world will know peace -Jimi Hendrix
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Reply #139 posted 12/16/13 11:16am

cindymay

GoldDolphin said:

cindymay said:

the reviews which gave her nine were done like a minute after they heard the album for the first time they should have waited a little..because no way that this product is a 9 are they crazy? did they listen to the lyrics? a bunch of uninspired lyrics mostly about her fucking jay z..something not really interesting tbh.. confused

Had you not known she was married to Jay-Z would you still say the same comment? I never quite understood why women can't sing about their sexuality while men can do it all the time, Prince is a perfect example of that (so many of his songs are about sex/sexuality). She is in control of her sexuality and is a grown woman that can allow herself to do what she pleases. She has a nigerian feminist on her album speaking just about this, which I thought was quite cool. Women are diverse and this album reflects that in some ways. She did something unexpected and she deserves cred for it, many people had said that the album was gonna be a fail and that she wouldn't come back after the baby. But I think building up your brand based on tours (which she sold out prior to an album), your fans and what matters to the artist is quite important. It's the new strategy of marketing and I think she def delivered whether you like the music or not.

yes because the problem isn't what she's talking about for me..it's the quality of the lyrics..it wasn't very clear probably..one could talk about sex better than using basic lyrics..and about the nigerian feminist hers were the best lyrics in the song..if only B didn't ruin everything with her bow down bitches thing that is totally out of place in a song which is supposed to be for women support..proclaiming yeah I'm with u but bow down to me at the same time.. :-?the marketing stATEGY was great nothing to say..she has a great team behind her for sure...

[Edited 12/16/13 12:31pm]

[Edited 12/16/13 13:10pm]

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Reply #140 posted 12/16/13 12:55pm

Curtwill1975

nd33 said:

ADC said:

Look at them seethe! cool


All the bitter, cynical, jaded, "I just don't get it" remarks won't change the bottom line: that in 48 hrs., she sold 550k, and topped the charts in 106 countries, which was previously unheard of. And in the meantime, the album is being critically raved about.

I think it's safe to say that BEYONCE (album and singer) is winning and virtually owning the world of music right now. Expect to see Bey sweeping ALL the major award shows in 2014, being handed awards just for showing up! Heh!

Love it.

[Edited 12/16/13 6:06am]

Just as likely, is that once the buzz dies down, people will lose interest because of the seemingly samey, mediocre material on the album.

This will be valid for the 2015 Grammys (the 2014 nominees were announced last week). Time will tell if this is still critically acclaimed in a years time when the nominees are announced...

The only thing that would be a negative for her getting multiple nominations if she don't get a massive hit even on the Billboard 100 or Urban/R&B Charts(ala Love On Top), but she's getting at least an 80 from the critics with this album which means it will be her most critically acclaimed album.

So she will be fine from that standpoint.

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Reply #141 posted 12/16/13 12:56pm

Curtwill1975

GoldDolphin said:

cindymay said:

the reviews which gave her nine were done like a minute after they heard the album for the first time they should have waited a little..because no way that this product is a 9 are they crazy? did they listen to the lyrics? a bunch of uninspired lyrics mostly about her fucking jay z..something not really interesting tbh.. confused

Had you not known she was married to Jay-Z would you still say the same comment? I never quite understood why women can't sing about their sexuality while men can do it all the time, Prince is a perfect example of that (so many of his songs are about sex/sexuality). She is in control of her sexuality and is a grown woman that can allow herself to do what she pleases. She has a nigerian feminist on her album speaking just about this, which I thought was quite cool. Women are diverse and this album reflects that in some ways. She did something unexpected and she deserves cred for it, many people had said that the album was gonna be a fail and that she wouldn't come back after the baby. But I think building up your brand based on tours (which she sold out prior to an album), your fans and what matters to the artist is quite important. It's the new strategy of marketing and I think she def delivered whether you like the music or not.

Great post.....

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Reply #142 posted 12/16/13 1:13pm

cindymay

Curtwill1975 said:

GoldDolphin said:

Had you not known she was married to Jay-Z would you still say the same comment? I never quite understood why women can't sing about their sexuality while men can do it all the time, Prince is a perfect example of that (so many of his songs are about sex/sexuality). She is in control of her sexuality and is a grown woman that can allow herself to do what she pleases. She has a nigerian feminist on her album speaking just about this, which I thought was quite cool. Women are diverse and this album reflects that in some ways. She did something unexpected and she deserves cred for it, many people had said that the album was gonna be a fail and that she wouldn't come back after the baby. But I think building up your brand based on tours (which she sold out prior to an album), your fans and what matters to the artist is quite important. It's the new strategy of marketing and I think she def delivered whether you like the music or not.

Great post.....

and I gave my answer that it wasn't about that.. confused I'm the first against the slut shaming of women with multiple sexual partners and the opposite glorification of the men

[Edited 12/16/13 13:14pm]

[Edited 12/16/13 13:15pm]

[Edited 12/16/13 13:15pm]

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Reply #143 posted 12/16/13 1:42pm

kitbradley

avatar

In other words, business as usual.

ADC said:

Expect to see Bey sweeping ALL the major award shows in 2014, being handed awards just for showing up!

"It's not nice to fuck with K.B.! All you haters will see!" - Kitbradley
"The only true wisdom is knowing you know nothing." - Socrates
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Reply #144 posted 12/16/13 4:16pm

go2theMax

avatar

Despite the fact that the Black Album was withdrawn a week before its release date...if it had been released, it would be done the same way Bowie, Bey and whoever else did it recently, wouldn't it? I wasn't a fan back then, but that seemed 2 be the case, from what I've read about...

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Reply #145 posted 12/16/13 4:18pm

lowkey

better her than justin timberlake. the funny thing is everybody talking about this secret no hype album but the reason its selling and being talked about is because of the hype around it being secret.and dont all of beyonce albums go #1 the first week?

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Reply #146 posted 12/16/13 4:26pm

babybugz

avatar

I think it's the visuals that people are caught up on..because I don't hear any major changes with this album. lol I usually buy her music anyway, but I just don't hear this big change in her sound and content at all.

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Reply #147 posted 12/16/13 4:35pm

lowkey

the whole thing was a smart calculated gimmick,and its working for now.she didnt film all those videos on a whim,this was carefully planned out.now who knows whats gonna happen once the novelty wears off and the public's ADD kicks in,but be prepared for the onslaught of hype,dont believe for a minute the beyonce machine is not going into overdrive.

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Reply #148 posted 12/16/13 5:19pm

KCOOLMUZIQ

Beyonce' Fastest-Selling Album Ever In iTunes Store History: 828,773 In Three Days



By Keith Caulfield, Los Angeles | December 16, 2013 2:45 PM EST

'Beyonce' Fastest-Selling Album Ever In iTunes Store: 828,773 In Three Days

Beyonce performs at the United Center in Chicago, IL, December 13, 2013

Joshua Mellin

The label released the surprise album at 12 AM EST on the morning of Friday, Dec. 13, exclusively via iTunes.

Columbia reports that the set sold 828,773 copies in its first three days, through the close of business on Sunday night, Dec. 15. Of that sum, 617,000 were sold through the U.S. iTunes Store, which -- as previously reported -- also set a record for the largest week ever for an album.

iTunes is the sole retailer for "Beyoncé" through Dec. 20. According to industry sources, a physical version of the album will start arriving to some U.S.-based brick-and-mortar retailers by Wednesday, Dec. 18. Most physical retailers will receive it by Friday, Dec. 20.

She slayed!!!!

eye will ALWAYS think of prince like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. eye mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that prince wasn't of this earth, eye would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. prince
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Reply #149 posted 12/16/13 7:08pm

Identity

828,773 downloads in 3 days?!! Columbia Records execs must be so ecstatic over the sales figures they could do somersaults in the corporate hallways.

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