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throwback: rap or pop? (www.youtube.com)
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This is way back when but kinda cool ... During my Oops Tour, I got a knock at my door. My good friend at the time was the assistant to my manager who was trying to become a manager himself. There was a knock, and then he said, “I have a girl named Taylor who wants to come in and sing for you.” I was like of course !!! He walks in, and she sings a beautiful song with her guitar 🎸 I was like wow wow she's unbelievable !!! We took a picture, and she then became the most iconic pop woman of our generation. Kinda cool she plays stadiums, and I prefer her videos over movies any day. She's stunning !!! Girl crush 💄 💄 💄 Ps mom I love you so so much, but there were 3 dolls in the cabinets when I went home 2 years ago … kinda really weird you would take them out and then put them back in … so messed up. Nope, I don't want them. Keep it all. I honestly don't care anymore … honestly though.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CzhxT_NgpRD/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

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Amazing cover of Jenny Silver's Melodifestivalen entry. I like the "modern ABBA" sound they went for rather than going full electro house synths like the original, it makes it sound timeless in a way.

~~could I get away with posting this on the Eurovision communities~~

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[FRESH] Dua Lipa - Houdini (open.spotify.com)
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every so often someone posts a link and someone else asks, where can i get a link that's on a different service? songwhip is an aggregator that provides a page with links to multiple services. obviously if you want to post the exact video or the exact remix, a direct link is what you need. but it's quite useful for 'joe bob says check it out' scenarios.

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Kim Petras live (lemmy.world)

All I can say is wow! I saw her on the Clarity tour in 2019 and while she was really good then, she's even better now! Vocals are powerful and stage presence is absolutely there!

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Just saw this and it's the first short concert I've seen! Worth a save

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katy perry 'play' (poptalk.scrubbles.tech)

just saw katy's vegas residency. i was expecting decent, with a back-of-mind fear of cringe, but it was really an amazing show. she said she's been battling a cold and one could hear that, but the staging and production values were top-notch.

a couple of sections meant to provide her a breather were a little too long and not that engaging. her voice (barring the cold), her dance moves, and that face of a silent film star added up to a great show, a good deal better than i had expected and light years away from what i had feared as worst case.

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Other platforms:

Spotify - https://spotify.link/3bpLBYEvuDb

Youtube - https://youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_npOgWBD3eCid6p5Bdn81fZwl3sfTwOR0Q&si=chU-SUsxzwO9qYj_


I like this version little more than its original. I prefer its more mellowness to its previous much pop; they're both good to me anyway.

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Other platforms:

Spotify - https://spotify.link/aw0aAzh1tDb

Youtube - https://youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nWf2vqD6007ReAE6B2LaP_J1fyivT8lgQ&si=69-f11udhKudR8iw


Ed Sheeran's new album is magically pleasant to my first hearing because of his endearing guitar gimmicks as always.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by ajsadauskas@aus.social to c/popheads@poptalk.scrubbles.tech

The issue with Jann Wenner goes far deeper than a sexist, racist old fossil thinking women and black people aren't articulate enough to be considered masters of rock in his new book.

Long before this book, and this latest scandal, Wenner was a co-founder of both Rolling Stone magazine and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

For the Boomer generation, Wenner and critics like him — straight, white men — set the criteria for what constitutes good music, and whose music was worthy of being celebrated as the greatest in Western music.

And, almost inevitably, they chose the artists they related to most closely — straight white men.

What were the criteria they set for what makes music great? The things that their favourite straight white male rock stars were particularly good at.

Such as playing drums, bass, and guitar in a rock style.

The greatest lyrics were those depicting the thoughts and feelings of straight white men.

Lyrics dealing with topics of interest to women or black people — including police brutality — were deemed shallow and vacuous.

Elements that were typically outside the realm of the music their favourite straight white men performed — funky bass lines, sampling, keyboards, soulful ballads, rapping, dance — were deemed frivolous and unimportant.

They created whole hierarchies of the greatest musicians of all time, consisting entirely of straight white men, based on their criteria.

The music made by queer, female, and non-white artists was deemed by them, through their arbitrary criteria, to be frivolous and unimportant.

The music enjoyed by queer, female, and non-white communities was deemed by them, through their arbitrary criteria, to be frivolous and unimportant

Oh, and they seemed to have a bad habit of "accidentally" leaving out the black artists that their favourite straight white men copied from — Chuck Berry and Big Mama Thornton didn't make the cut for greatest rock stars, but Elvis did.

https://www.npr.org/2023/09/23/1201121174/jann-wenner-rock-hall-crumbling

@popheads @music #music #PopMusic

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Other platforms:

Spotify - https://spotify.link/JXsKC8F0iDb

Youtube - https://youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kXH8y3sAlYq93kfl3dMgxru6M2LTBK0pM&si=QYicD6_L9m12WpGk


Celebrate still and rediscover the 30th anniversary album from a legendary and highly acclaimed "Hero" singer, Mariah Carey, including unreleased tracks before and her 1993 concert at Proctor's Theatre, NY. An amazing and favorite album to me.

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Other platforms:

Spotify - https://spotify.link/SyV61ofPiDb

Youtube - https://youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_ka3GCLGa04mw6AAWok9hbEDOTmG13Bg84&si=uHvFy-fZU4byXmgj


I just find Stephen Sanchez' first ever awaited album enchanting because of certain instruments and a mystical one and a peculiar production/format that I mostly distinguish in 50s–early 60s songs despite of more advanced music technologies typical nowadays (not the old-imitating noise/clipping which I hate why include it?). Nonetheless, let's time travel to the oldies' hops and nifty serenades.

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Other platforms:

Spotify - https://spotify.link/ylJCuNoNiDb

Youtube - https://youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_n0mdmXvtFPUpPZvBOCdRTltJSPDwqDF44&si=g6IpvEbadE3wx1nk


I enjoy first-time listening this album for the first time from Doja Cat 🐈 despite I'd never delved into her discography quite thoroughly. So Impressive.

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time out's article on sugababes, their one-night-only reunion concert and new single 'when the rain comes', and reclaiming their music and their name in modern times.

it's an uplifting mix of nostalgia and hope for all of us who remember them fondly.

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Signed CDs - Olivia Rodrigo (www.oliviarodrigo.com)

Signed CDs may be at your local record store!

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Any I Think You Should Leave fans? (poptalk.scrubbles.tech)
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i was cruising the music site looking for backfill songs i might buy, and was rudely reminded of the state of music criticism in the 80s (to be fair, this was from a zine, but was put in front of me by qobuz, so it had some staying power).

this hatchet job on the blink-and-you-missed-it "don't you (forget about me)" by some scottish dudes called simple minds, for the soundtrack of a very niche and forgotten film, reminds me of everything i escaped. it's probably from "the big takeover" issue #17 from 1984.

i closed the tab. no sale.

For six years this was a creative and interesting Scottish band that used synths in artistic ways to go with Jim Kerr's Roxy Music-like yearning, poetic vocals to forge lovely, danceable, moody soundscapes full of promise, enchantment, and sinewy shadows. So now they get to do a hit song for a bad movie, and they suddenly turn into every cliché you've ever heard, complete with Kerr doing what he said only last year he never would: singing the word "baby" in a pop song (repeatedly at that!). They didn't write this song, but it's their name on it and they recorded it, and sure enough this awful garbage is heard everywhere after no one in the U.S. ever played one of the band's great songs outside of nightclubs. Sorry Jim, this is obviously the most forgettable thing you've done so far. Hopefully the next LP will make this look as asinine as it is, a bad one-off, but experience tells us that once you open Pandora's box, you can't close it again, especially if it yields sales instead of ridicule.

© Jack Rabid, The Big Takeover /TiVo

n.b. all good pop songs have "baby" in them. repeatedly. sorry, jack

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I'm getting some Robyn Body Talk vibes with this news!

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100 Popheads - 13 Jun 2023

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