Tampilkan postingan dengan label Giorgio Moroder. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Giorgio Moroder. Tampilkan semua postingan

Selasa, 11 Mei 2010

bad girls



Donna Summer is well-known for her overplayed hits on her epic album Bad Girls (the title track and "Dim All the Lights"). The modern audience may be a bit tired of her. We've seen and heard it enough. We watched her in a black pantsuit on a well-performed but calculated VH1 performance that lacked any of the gloss or excess of the Studio 54 era. "Hot Stuff" conjures the image of Pizza Hut stuffed crust pizza. And too, disco still gets a bad rap from some music snobs. This excellent article by Simon Price points out how disco has inspired many acclaimed indie and alternative music acts.



Donna Summer's Bad Girls still sounds great today, especially in an era of a lot mindless pop, and the album's influence is everywhere. New Order's "Blue Monday" riffs off of the stuttering beat of "Our Love." It's a long record for the period (over 70 minutes and 2 LP's) and a varied one to boot. Aided by the skilled production and songwriting of Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte, the songs blend seamlessly into each other. Besides the singles, which were played on many radio formats including rock, the album is a bit sparser on orchestrations than one would expect of a disco record. Harold Faltermeyer provides some memorable tunes including the country ballad "On My Honor." And then there's Summer's voice, which has remarkable moments of height and some quiet restraint. On one of her own penned songs, "My Baby Understands," she seems to blur the line between assurance and fear. It's a late night album (the streetgirl image, which inspired the title song, of the album art is quite appropriate). My favorites are the final trilogy of songs: "Our Love," the shimmering "Lucky," and the rhythmic finale of "Sunset People" which makes me think of a bygone era.


Selasa, 13 April 2010

pow pow




















LCD Soundsystem at Webster Hall last night was electrifying. There were J-Lo "Waiting for Tonight" video lazer beams and cowbells. Nancy Whang was amazing on the keyboards and synths and Pat Mahoney on drums. There were also four new and very skilled members: Tyler Pope (bass), Gavin Russom (keyboards), David Scott Stone (guitar) and Matt Thornley (percussion). And then of course there's the tireless James Murphy with a big voice wearing a tight white Oxford and navy pants, and for the encore, a YSL t-shirt (they debuted a song at a fashion show).

We have to wait until May 17th for the new album (Murphy pleaded not to leak the record early). It will be difficult to live up to the first two but I was a fan of the new track "Pow Pow," of which they opened, a fun Giorgio Moroder-punk song reminiscent of their debut. They also played their single "Drunk Girls" and another new track, the mid-tempo, and very 80s electro popped "Change." Everyone was feeling the older stuff and it played well in a small venue, especially the epic "All My Friends." For "Tribulations," it was if long player disco music had been revived for a bit. And the slow build of "Someone's Great" sounded gorgeous. The band appropriately closed with the plaintive "New York, I Love You But You Bringing Me Down." Murphy joked that he was covering a Jay-Z song (a la "Empire State of Mind").


Playlist:
Pow Pow
Yr City's A Sucker
Us vs Them
Drunk Girls
Losing My Edge
All My Friends
Change
Tribulations
Movement
Yeah
Someone Great
Daft Punk Is Playing At My House
New York, I Love You But You're Bringing Me Down