Britney Spears vs Lady Gaga: What kind of gay man are you?
MUSIC / Do you have impeccable or abhorrent taste in music?
Shane Percy / Toronto / Thursday, November 19, 2009
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FLASH IN THE PAN. Is Lady Gaga the beginning of the end for Britney Spears?
I’ve often thought that gay men fall into two camps: those with impeccable taste in music and those who have abhorrent taste. There are those who know who Edith Piaf or Nina Simone were, and there are those who have the same taste in music as teenage girls at their most annoying (ahem Miley Cyrus). If I meet one more gay guy who really believes that Britney Spears is a rare talent, I’m gonna lose it. I’m not saying Homo A is better than Homo B for knowing the works of Piaf and Simone, Homo A is just fortunate enough to have been properly educated about music. There is a marked difference in the way I perceive someone when I find out what moves him musically.

Being the unabashed musical snob that I am (depends on my mood, really), I was delighted to hear about the recent shaming of Britney Spears in Australia where, according to reports, people walked out of her show en masse, protesting the lack of anything resembling a true performance. The Spears camp essentially said it was all made up and it didn’t really happen. But unless you were there, who can really know? I wouldn’t be the least bit surprised if it’s happened countless times before, in Australia or any other given country. Often paying hundreds of dollars for good seats to watch a white trash girl from Louisiana parading around in a lion tamer costume, lip-synching to songs she had no hand in writing, it’s no wonder people are fed up, regardless of whether the Aussie-revolt rumours are true.

Britney Spears, bless her heart, has little talent. Her songs are overproduced and same-y. Sure, “Toxic” was brilliant, but she just lucked out in selecting it. It could have been sung by anybody. She’s essentially good at stripping and pole dancing and, sorry to say, she comes off dumb as a sack of hammers. If you’re gonna lip-synch, at least try to put some effort into it.

Enter Lady Gaga. I’ll admit when I first heard Gaga (real name Stefani Germanotta) I pegged her for just the latest in the assembly line of overproduced, American skanks who can’t lay off the auto-tune button. How wrong I was. I finally came around when I heard the Cherrytree Sessions EP issued earlier this year. Her latest single, “Bad Romance,” is so anthemic; its video so utterly crisp and clean yet dirty and bizarre (check out the last five seconds of it. Genius.) It’s clear that there is far more to this woman than the vast majority of her peers (if you can call them peers).

A recent Youtube clip of Gaga on a French TV show saw her chatting to the audience (in French), improvising French lyrics to her music (which she writes, by the way) and generally enthralling the crowd who were clapping along with her at the grand piano, in happy amazement that America has finally (once again) produced a true entertainer.

Gaga’s talent is matched by her flair for the creative — we, as a society, have don’t expect that anymore. What a sad reality. But that’s what makes the current Gaga craze so exciting and inevitable. There’s something afoot that’s long overdue. How great it is to get excited over a performer who deserves the spotlight! Why is this such a foreign concept?

As a music connoisseur, DJ and writer, it restores my faith somewhat because the major labels have been profiting off the force-feeding of derivative, brainless garbage to the masses for far too long. Could the stupendous rise of Gaga spell the beginning end for Spears? It could, and I hope it does because if Spears doesn’t show some depth of artistry, depth of character and maybe some skill, people are going to really tire of her and her ilk very quickly. I already sense it happening. By the way, I am absolutely certain that Stefani Germanotta knows who Piaf and Simone were. Vive La Gaga!


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Reader Comments


 
I have abhorrent taste, I'm Homo B.
What a deliciously pretentious gay boy rant. For the record, when you're going to cite "respected musicians" to make it appear as though you have some refined taste or authority on the subject of "music as art," it is generally pretty unimpressive to go for the obvious and rattle off names like Nina Simone or Edith Piaf. The only thing that could have made this even more generic would have been a mention of Ella Fitzgerald. It's even more embarrassing to throw around sweeping generalizations that the so-called "Britney gays" are too banal and unrefined to have ever heard of Simone or Piaf. I have no appreciation for Simone or for Piaf because I find their voices grating and their talents over-exaggerated (much as this guy finds Britney's appeal over-exaggerated), not because I haven't been exposed to them or because I'm some insipid little gay boy who has no appreciation for materials that are meant to make me cultured. There's a danger in assuming that just because someone does not have an appreciation for Edith Piaf or Nina Simone means they have not been "fortunate enough to have been properly educated about music," but you openly admit to being an unabashed music snob, so it's obvious that you will never be apologetic for your douchebaggery or see the errors in your pretentious ways. I won't bother commenting in great depth on the rest of your column, because as someone who adores both Britney and GaGa it's difficult for me to take a side. Your intentions were quite clear from the get-go. This was going to be post where you make a few "oooh gurrl" jabs at Britney as only a bitchy queen could do. While your delivery was a little stale and your points... well, beaten-to-death, I'm sure you're satisfied with yourself and that's all that matters.
Patrick, Cape Girardeau Missouri
11/19/09 1:00 PM EST
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Patrick is the Man
What a stupendously well written comment on a lame article.
Mike, Dallas Texas
11/19/09 8:17 PM EST
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Hey, it's just an opinion.
Thanks for the reaction. Good or bad, I appreciate it and take it in stride. I feel no need to insult as you did, and I don't take random internet comments personally. But I have to say, as the writer of this article which you so vehemently dislike, I would have been more bothered had there been no reaction to my point of view. Writing should be conducive to dialogue, and I certainly accomplished that.
Shane Percy, Toronto ON
11/20/09 2:33 AM EST
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Offensive and lazy
Wow, this article was offensive on so many levels. First but certainly not least, was the sweeping generalisations and assumptions that I found to be completely ignorant and arrogant. If your going to write such a petty article, at least try and go beyond simple and unfounded stereotypes. Journalism at it's laziest... I am a Britney fan, but I am also a fan of many fine artists and musicians, across many diverse genres. However, if I'm to go by the advice of this so called 'music snob' (can anybody be so pretentious?), then I should be labelled as vapid and uncultured for my casual liking for pop music,
Alex, Sydney Australia
11/20/09 7:19 PM EST
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Duh!
the truth hurts. now why is britney still relevant. Oh yes! MARKETING. (you can sell shit in jar and it will sell like hot cakes as long as its marketed right!)
Jason Marroni, Bronx, NY USA
11/22/09 5:58 PM EST
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Chill out, America
I think there was a tongue-in-cheek aspect to this that might have been missed. I relate - I love Nina Simone and to even mention Britney in the same article as Nina is hilarious. I don't think less of my Britney-loving friends, but I certainly don't let them near the CD player. And yes, taste in music is a relationship deal breaker for me. You're allowed to be snobby about some stuff, just don't be snobby about everything. That's just annoying and nobody will want to hang out with you. As for my boyfriend/s and their taste, well, don't have to like what I do necessarily, but you must have a convincing case and some passion for your music selection or things just aren't going to work out. A hot young thing once turned me onto trance, which up 'til then I hadn't gotten. Passion is infectious. This writer certainly doesn't merit this kind of abuse and more than all the other snobs that populate gay villages everywhere. Being discerning and elitist about aesthetics is our birthright, at least he has a sense of humour about it. (Note: people who self-identify as snobs aren't the ones you need to watch out for in my experience.) "Offensive on so many levels"? Really? All what levels, pray tell? Chill the fuck out, boys. He doesn't advocate ethnic cleansing or death to puppies, he thinks Britney is a talentless hack, which she is. Hardly a knickers-twisting observation. And Shane, please do ignore it and keep speaking your mind.
Alex, Toronto ON
12/02/09 9:08 AM EST
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