Posts Tagged ‘Bad Reputation

28
Feb
10

Opening Acts: Dessa opens for P.O.S.

Dessa in concert; image courtesy of last.fm

I had the pleasure of catching Dessa‘s set last Friday at Red 7. She went on second, after Astronautalis and before headliner and fellow Doomtree rapper P.O.S. Now P.O.S.’s set was electric, crackling with verve, wit, and high energy. If you haven’t listened to P.O.S.’s Never Better, it was one of the strongest releases of last year.

However, Dessa’s A Badly Broken Code is a strong contender for my album of the year, bringing continued attention to the Minneapolis-based hip hop collective and troubling the acclaim bestowed upon Spoon’s Transference and Joanna Newsom’s Have One On Me. If you haven’t listened to Dessa’s first full-length, get on that. Make sure you’re sitting down when you hear it, lest her flow fly at such a clip with such a force as to knock you over. The woman born Margret Wander has a way with words.

Women in American hip hop have always been an anomaly. Unfortunately, this is just as true for independent artists as those working in the mainstream. Some of these women have yet to cut an album despite doing incredible work on other (male) MCs’ albums, though I patiently await albums from Lionesque and Joyo Velarde. That said, those who are currently working underground are amongst my favorites: Jean Grae, Psalm One, Invincible, and Dessa. I like Kid Sister fine, but I want these women to run the game.

In many ways, Dessa reminds me of Grae. Both share an assured flow, pointed elocution, a deliberately casual look, and a hard-luck attitude toward love. But Dessa also brings a jazzy alto to her work, along with a poet’s ear for meter. This is much to her background as a spoken word artist, a term with a lot of cultural baggage. It’s hard for me to hear the words “spoken word artist” and not recall two characters from Medea’s Family Reunion improvising a mixed-media piece on a date or the hacky sack scene in She’s All That. Others have lampooned spoken word and its practitioners’ tendency toward self-important hackery, like Zadie Smith did in On Beauty or Dave Chappelle did in a rejected sketch for Chappelle’s Show that combined Def Comedy Jam with Def Poetry Jam.

But Dessa, much like Sarah Jones, The Last Poets, and Gil Scott-Heron before her, pulls off spoken word by incorporating it into her sound, thus expanding its aural possibilities. Dessa trades in words, which are conceptualized by some to be masculine and in contrast to a sung melody’s feminized, abject emotionality. But the way in which those words are delivered — whether as a rap, a vocal line, a verse, or some combination of all three — allow her to manipulate time signatures and rhyme schemes, giving her greater freedom to explore sound and verse. That her songs are often wry, smart, candid inner monologues about family, childhood, addiction, and relationships make me even happier that I’m hearing a female voice articulate them. Even when she threads cover songs into her own material, as she did with Freedy Johnston’s “Bad Reputation” and Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” (or perhaps Jeff Buckley covering John Cale covering Leonard Cohen), I need only hear the voice and see it coming out of the performer on stage to know where it’s really coming from.

As perhaps evidenced by the clip above, witnessing her performing this sort of word jazz live was really something to behold. Her set-up was spare — simply her microphone and deejay Plain Ole Bill‘s turntables. And yet, the minimalism showcased the immensity of her talent. She was also really funny and open on stage, which helps orient where those songs come from and only adds to her magnetic presence. I especially appreciated her recounting a story about being in the lady’s room at the gig and the lights turning off. She took pride in the other occupants checking in on each other instead of running for the exit. She has a lot of faith in women and girls’ capacity for survival should the apocalypse come. I have a lot of faith in her potential as an artist. Dessa’s mic sounds nice.

16
Nov
09

TV theme songs: Joan Jett and the Blackhearts and Freaks and Geeks

The other night at a friend’s birthday party, I was talking with some friends about what TV shows they’re watching. There’s so much good stuff on television these days that it’s hard to keep track. My friend Neesha’s Thursday night viewing schedule requires DVRing some shows that she catches up on during the weekend. But if you missed a show in its first run because you don’t have cable or it was cancelled before you had a chance to tune in, you can always catch up on DVD (well, at least if the show was released on DVD).

As a TV fan, I keep thinking about theme songs. How do they set the tone for the show? How do they convey characterization? What does song selection say about the show, its cast, and its creators? How is meaning changed if the song was written for the show or if it’s a popular song? How do legal processes intervene if popular songs were used and can’t get cleared? So I thought I’d start covering some of them here, and would greatly appreciate it if you fine readers threw out some suggestions.

The first theme song up for consideration pre-dates production, but very much fits the show’s early-1980s Michigan suburb setting. The song is a proud, snotty declaration about being an individual and not giving a damn about your bad reputation, which perfectly reflects the show’s unpopular teenaged ensemble.

It also gestures toward the show’s cult status. Though cancelled on NBC after barely a season, the show developed a rabid fan base. After jumping through several hoops to get all of the period-appropriate pop music cleared, the show was released on DVD, resulting in the widening of said fan base. Oh, and the song is by Joan Jett and the Blackhearts. Total bonus.   

BTW, if you haven’t watched Freaks and Geeks before, you really need to get on the stick.

freaksandgeeks

Top row: Ken Miller; second row: Neil Schweiber, Daniel Desario; bottom row: Bill Haverchuck, Sam Weir, Lindsay Weir, Kim Kelly, Nick Andopolis; image courtesy of rorylinnane.wordpress.com

There’s a lot to love about this show — its underdog cast, their attendant class baggage and/or compromised social standing, and the show’s expert balance of comedy with pathos are but few attributes.

I think the opening credits do an amazing job of distilling who and what the show is about. By using Joan Jett and the Blackhearts’ “Bad Reputation” to accompany picture day — that freak show day of hair gel, ugly sweaters, and constrictive suits – we immediately know who these kids are. Sam is the flustered late bloomer, Daniel is the hunky loser with mystique, Neil is the older-than-his-body dweeb showman, Ken is the tough guy who won’t smile, Nick is the doofy yet loveable stoner, and Bill is the gawky, aware kid who thinks all of this is nonsense. If only Daniel’s tough girlfriend Kim Kelly got her picture taken too. She could easily out-scowl Ken.

But my favorite picture-taker is Lindsay, who serves as the show’s protagonist. Now, I may be a little biased. I’m all about smart, bored, conflicted, proactive brunette characters and would like more of them to show up in Freaks and Geeks producer Judd Apatow’s subsequent film work. In the opening credits, I specifically love that Lindsay gives a guarded, toothless half-smile for the camera, only revealing her megawatt grin for a brief moment after the picture is taken. This brief moment perfectly captures the awkwardness of being a teenage girl growing up in public and wanting to defy expectations of what that might mean. Something tells me Joan understands, and isn’t afraid of any deviation.





 

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