MomoAdachi (post: 1216087) wrote:Of course, as people, I didn't expect either star to be very popular on a Christian site, although I think Janet might consider herself a Christian, albeit an extremely liberal one, not that I want to start a debate there. ]
I just wanted to clarify one thing: When I meant I couldn't stand either artist it wasn't because of what they stood for in belief or morals or what not. I just didn't particularly like their music. When I'm listening to secular artists I don't try and sway from what I like even if they are not Christians because if the music is good than I'll most certainly listen it. I know that sounds terribly contradictory but that's just where I stand... music-wise. I suppose I am just confident in my morals and faith as a Christian that when it comes to the music I listen too I can pick and choose since I know another's outlook on life won't sway me to their beliefs when I have my own.
And yes, I forgot about those Janet Jackson songs. So, I suppose The Velvet Rope would be another o.k. album from that artist! ^__^GhostontheNet (post: 1216106) wrote:Madonna has a remarkable ability to both irritate me and offend every ethical system I have ever thought to be worthwhile (basically a fusion of Christian, Socialist, and Punk/Goth Do-It-Yourself ethics). She started her career by stealing her image from the Punk band The Slits. Not content to merely copy and commercialize their image, she took a cue from their phrase "We ain't no material girls" to release her smash hit single "Material Girl", which was designed to glorify the worst kind of crass materialism. The end result after its 1985 release was "the mainstream tyranny of nouveau riche pop" (Simon Reynolds, Rip It Up and Start Again: Postpunk 1978-1984 p. 390). Since then, it would appear that Pop musicians have mastered the art of sugar-coating their poison pills to feed listeners eager for sweet candy. Certainly, Madonna's career over the next twenty-some years is no exception to this rule.
There's a difference between the ordinary process of artistic influence and stealing one's style and persona outright. This is especially true when one intends not to pay tribute to their source, but instead to subvert it. The Slits were a Punk band heavily influenced by Reggae music who made it their project to "chant down Babylon" by assaulting the cultural expectation that women be placid and happy consumers. Madonna, by contrast, took their image and used it to encourage the ladies to be "The Richest Woman In Babylon" (to adapt the phrase of the Electronic Lounge band Thievery Corporation) and made gobs of filthy lucre by feeding those aspirations. Few things could be more niave, I think, than to listen to music without assenting to its underlying values on some level. I have more respect for the power of music than that.yukoxholic (post: 1216177) wrote:I'll I have to say is this: Everybody rips off somebody.
Though I have to say for Madonna she's made herself almost "megastar" quality. I mean she's what close to fifty years old and still going strong? It's just like Aerosmith, The Smashing Pumpkins, The Rolling Stones, KISS, Carley Simon, The Cure, even Cyndi Lauper made a comeback at some point though it was just a releasing of greatest hits. Older artists never want to give up and throw in the towel which is a good and bad thing: Good because than the youth of today can get a taste of the "classics" and bad because older artists are in competition with the younger mainstream. If young music listeners were given the option Oldie or Miley Cyrus, the majority will pick Miley because it's supposedly fresh, catchy, new, etc even if it is a "rip off" of some else's work.
People just like what they like, regardless of anything. ^__^
" wrote:RustyClaymore 11:27 - Ah yes, Socks is the single raindrop responsible for the flood. XD
Madonna is one of the reasons my parents raised me on country music. They just didn't think it was appropriate for a two-year-old to be singing those lyrics. I only heard the song "Like A Virgin" two years ago or so. I feel I didn't miss anything, and that applies to all the songs of hers I've heard.
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