Posts Tagged ‘Disney

24
Dec
11

Covered: The Tom Tom Club

A perk to becoming a feminist media scholar is encountering two different books that argue Barbie’s queer merits. For class, I recently re-read the introduction to Erica Rand’s Barbie’s Queer Accessories. It begins with Rand putting together a lecture and debating whether to include a cover photo from On Our Backs of a woman inserting the doll into her vagina (side note: I especially like that her lesbian colleagues advised her to consult her horoscope). While proctoring an exam, I read a portion of Alice Bag’s memoir Violence Girl where the author recollects using the iconic figurine as a masturbatory aid. I love my job.

One of Rand’s major points–which Bag reinforces–is that in the process of recollection, adults reshape their childhood experiences. At some point, I plan on diving into ethnographic research. One thing I’m especially interested in sussing out is how race and gender shape generic affiliations, something I’ve encountered time and again as a music history instructor for Girls Rock Camp. I’m particularly interested in how non-fan and anti-fan practices around pop music and riot grrrl are informed by race and gender. But I wonder how much of myself I’m putting into such a project and whether I’m interfering. I keep thinking about the unreliability of memory and how people often embellish or exaggerate their childhood fan practices to make themselves appear intelligent or subversive, either for themselves or for a researcher.

But these recollections are also in the service of developing a larger set of truths we puzzle through as we get older. I don’t know why I took my Ariel doll on a date to see her own movie as a kid. But my intense fan identification with The Little Mermaid so informed my fantasy world that I put together a children’s book that staged mermaids in various tableaux to form all 26 letters of the English alphabet (mom’s Erté books helped too). I also spent multiple summers flitting around the deep end of the neighborhood swimming pool. As a preteen, I couldn’t quite articulate why I felt compelled to rescue a bundle of discarded Barbies and Disney princesses from my closet and put them in various sexual positions, nor could I explain why I reproduced mermaids and Fantasia‘s naked fairies and topless centaurettes in countless drawings. One year, I drew a mural of these unadorned mythological female creatures and gave it to my mother for Christmas. I thought I was honoring the nude form. Now I think I just wanted to see some breasts.

Of course, I didn’t just draw sex scenes and lagoons. I often drew outfits because I imagined I’d grow up to be a famous designer (pity I never learned to sew). But I especially loved creating panoramas that took weeks, if not months, to complete. They were filled with various characters and involved every crayon, map pencil, and marker in the box. I’m sure part of this was the result of being a shy only child. I often drew myself some friends who were cruising the mall, gossiping between classes, living in the Old West, or hanging in a spaceship. Usually I talked to them as I formed them into being. It’s weird to me now that whenever I encounter a blank canvas, I want to fill it with saturated color planes and abstract geometric shapes. As a kid, I was obsessed with drawing people. They all had V-shaped heads, most of them were girls, and sometimes they had purple skin. But I was equally interested in placing them in painstakingly-detailed settings. If I put a group of schoolgirls in a library, it was just as important to establish each girl’s individual characteristics as it was to realistically depict the room’s layout and the spine and cover of each book. I was an indoor kid for sure.

Tom Tom Club (Sire/Island, 1981)

The colors and character detail in artist James Rizzi’s cover for the Tom Tom Club’s self-titled debut are what resonate most with me. In the sixth grade, I happened on “Genius of Love” while listening to 104.1 KRBE some Saturday night. Houston’s top 40 station ran a dance program called “The Beat” which they’d broadcast live from a local night club. Though I wasn’t comfortable dancing in public until college, I was obsessed with the show and would often shimmy and shake alone behind closed doors, pretending I was older and in some place far away from my childhood bedroom in Alvin, Texas. I immediately connected with the hook and was fascinated by the singer’s breathy soprano. I also wondered what all the business about cocaine and James Brown was about. The song seemed kind of novel and a little bit dangerous, like I shouldn’t be up dancing to it. I’d find out soon after that the Tom Tom Club was a side project of that band that wrote that song about arson my parents kind of liked. Then Mariah Carey sampled “Genius of Love”, but by then I was totally over her and listening to Björk.

Since this post has been all detour at this point, let me issue a corrective. First of all, the chubby girl dancing in the “Fantasy” video is better than an army of Bee Girls. Actually, I wore out my Music Box cassette and was so totally not over Mariah Carey by seventh grade. It’s just how I wanted to be perceived. Even though I prided myself on being smart enough to locate the sample, I didn’t know that “Genius of Love” was (and remains) one of the most sampled tracks in pop history. I also had no idea who Ol’ Dirty Bastard was at the time, but I’d learn. I couldn’t admit it at the time, because I was reading Rolling Stone and claiming to hate pop music, but I was secretly thrilled that Carey loved “Genius of Love” enough to sample it. This is why I didn’t protest when the girls in my junior high P.E. class insisted on using “Always Be My Baby” for our aerobic routine, why I perform “Honey” and “Shake It Off” at karaoke, why I just belted “All I Want For Christmas” in my car the other day while running errands, why I wish I were young enough to have my heart broken by some eighth grade scrub when “We Belong Together” comes on, and why I’ll always defend “Vision of Love” and “Someday.” The woman is responsible for “Anytime You Need a Friend”. Let’s take it to church.

As I grew older, my love of the Talking Heads and the Tom Tom Club would develop simultaneously. In part, this is because I ultimately think you can’t have one without the other. I know David Byrne and Brian Eno so dominated the studio process that it necessitated bassist Tina Weymouth and drummer Chris Frantz forming the Tom Tom Club to have another creative outlet. But it’s hard not to hear the interplay between punk, reggae, soul, and dance music on tracks like “Cities” that so defines each member’s omnivorous approach to pop music.

I’m also aware that their cerebral, global-minded pop music is not without its problems. White privilege and class privilege are often twined and embedded within musical eclecticism. Often the same folks who can afford a richly diverse record collection or are given the opportunity to record in the Bahamas or attend art school occupy ascendant class positions. This is certainly true of both bands. Yet I like that both groups attempted to do absorb and endorse popular music from various parts of Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean. The first Tom Tom Club record was co-produced and engineered by Talking Heads’ contributor Steven Stanley, and also boasted Uziah “Sticky” Thompson on the drums and former Wailer Tyrone Downie on the keys. Borrowing from Don Letts’ recollection in his documentary Punk: Attitude it is also upsetting to me how the video to “Wordy Rappinghood”–a song about the malleability and seismic impact of language–was once denied airplay on MTV because, even though the clip was a cartoon based on Rizzi’s design, the network assumed the hip hop-influenced track “sounded too black”.

What I appreciate most about the Tom Tom Club’s first record is that it attempted to be inclusive and made that seem fun to all involved parties. The Talking Heads’ rhythm section played alongside a few reggae greats, King Crimson guitarist Adrian Belew, and Weymouth’s sisters. Their debut album may have been recorded in the Bahamas but the album–which still sounds contemporary–feels like it’s unfolding in your basement with you providing backup vocals. The Tom Tom Club made it seem like you could cut a similar record that was just as much fun to make with your friends. That doesn’t mean the results weren’t as problematic as the band’s name, which simultaneously references Frantz’s kit and recalls colonial appropriation. Appropriation is problematic, but it’s also messy and not necessarily one-sided. Tom Tom Club may have originally been pitched to the gallery crowd. But “Genius of Love” has been incorporated and reassembled so often that it doesn’t belong to anybody. Good art can do that, especially when it uses every crayon in the box.

03
Nov
11

Kelsi Nielsen, composer

I recently watched the first installment of High School Musical for my media franchising class. I was somewhat familiar with the series. I evaluated a colleague’s term paper on it for a class I took on dance and film. I figured South Park nailed their musical parody, which I now believe they did. I also watched two supremely awesome little girls grow up next door to me for three years. A friend once used Ashley Tisdale’s name as her blogger handle. And I have some chores for a shirtless Zac “Lt. Dangle” Efron to do around my house.

Despite compelling arguments in favor of HSM‘s merits as a franchise or media text, as well as a firm belief that Daft Punk could do a sweet remix of “Bet On It“, I wouldn’t consider myself a fan. Overall, the cloying wholesomeness gets on my nerves. For me, the stakes are so low. Will Gabriella (Vanessa Hudgens, who I recently saw in the so-problematic-it-must-be-blogged-about Sucker Punch) end up with Troy (Efron)? Of course they will–at least on screen. I think I would be a fan of a variety show hosted by Evans and his sister Sharpay (Tisdale). Glee very much tries to provide the archetypes it mines from High School Musical with depth and grit (Kurt Hummel is basically an out Ryan Evans).

I also don’t know what to do with colorblindness, conflict-free inclusivity, and the politics of positive representation, particularly with the girls of color on the show. On the one hand, I think it’s cool that Gabriella is a smart girl who excels in math and science and attends Stanford after graduation. On the other hand, I’m very troubled by how little the series seems invested in her academic pursuits or her ethnic identity. She and her friend Taylor (Monique Coleman) are both beautiful, brainy girls of color, but their presence often veers toward tokenism to me. I don’t want them to be defined by their racial or ethnic identity any more than they’d want to be thought of as nerds. But such attention toward respectability doesn’t give their characters much conflict. However, the white characters are also less-than-compelling for these reasons as well. Although I wish Glee wouldn’t relegate Mercedes to the role of the sassy black girl, at least there are instances within the show where she resists or defies such categorization.

Kelsi Nielsen (Oleysa Rulin)

Taylor is joined by another female character I wish was better incorporated into HSM‘s story world. Kelsi Nielsen (Olesya Rulin) is the shy, nerdy white girl at East High who provides piano accompaniment for the school’s musical productions. She also serves as the productions’ chief composer. Something tells me that if Nielsen wrote a musical that centralized Gabriella and Sharpay and brought in Taylor, it would be far more compelling. Maybe she could get all Max Fischer with it and cast them in a musical remake of Robert Altman’s 3 Women. She could follow it up with Věra Chytilová’s Daisies starring Demi Lovato and Selena Gomez. Or she could come up with something original. I’m sure if she were really given the spotlight, she could share it with the other girls and create something better than a rehash of Romeo and Juliet without any actual romantic conflict.

03
Nov
09

Music Videos: Live-action animation

I still haven’t adjusted to daylight savings, so I’m too tired to get elbow-deep into theory tonight. That said, I always like sharing with ya’ll, so let’s look at some more music videos. We can watch TV and have a couple of brews too.

I’ve written on animation in music videos elsewhere. I keep thinking about animation’s relationship to the voice, the body, and the potentially gendered dynamics of all of this. One form of animation I haven’t read anything on and would love to explore further is live-action animation, which depicts “real” filmic bodies interacting with “unreal” animated ones. Think Gene Kelly dancing with Jerry from Tom and Jerry in Anchors Aweigh or key portions of Mary Poppins, otherwise known as the movie that got me through chicken pox.

Now let’s look at a couple of more contemporary examples of live-action animation.


She & Him
“Why Do You Let Me Stay Here?”
Volume One
Directed by Ace Norton

I think this clip does a good job of simulating the idyllic look of Disney’s early days, if only to exacerbate how creepy and scary those movies could be. Remember the “Pink Elephants on Parade” sequence in Dumbo? How about the “Night On Bald Mountain” segment in Fantasia, which I still cannot watch without covering my eyes. I can’t help but wonder if Alfred Hitchcock was inspired by Mickey Mouse’s shadow-projected broom-smashing sequence in ”The Sorcerer’s Apprentice“ when shooting Psycho‘s shower scene. Scary shit, yo. So are the homicidal ghosts and animals in “Why Do You Let Me Stay Here?,” warping a sweet song about unrequited love into something disturbing.

Since I can’t post the video without mentioning the violence inflicted against Zooey Deschanel, I’ll admit that I cannot decide what to make of it. Is it misogynistic? If so, is it pointed or making a commentary, perhaps gesturing toward Disney’s regressive politics or undercutting the lead singer’s sweet image? Is it simply pointlessly violent and anti-female? Does the presence of multiple Deschanels and the singer’s own self-inflicted murderous actions complicate matters?

I find the second clip easier to process. No need to worry about adorable critters and ghouls disemboweling you. 


Kaki King
“Pull Me Out Alive”
Dreaming Of Revenge
Directed by Doug Karr and Edward Boyce
Lead Animator: Patrick Jasin

I really love this music video (and if you’re an avid reader here, you might guess that my friend Kristen pointed me in its direction). For one, Sara Quin of Tegan and Sara makes a sweet cameo. It’s also formally interesting – great use of stop motion and I love Jasin’s laser-based animation. Also, I think the animation wonderfully visualizes what King yearns for in the song — for something to pull her up, push her forward, or keep her together. I reason that the lasers symbolize the intangible, internal qualities of personal strength. Thus, the animation extends from the live-action figure, blurring the boundaries within and outside of the female body in the process.

26
Aug
09

Previews: “Bandslam” and “An Education” showcase girl musicians

Two movies are coming out that feature, to varying degrees of prominence, girl musicians. The first is Bandslam, a movie that opened earlier this month and Nikki Finke noted is plagued with misguided marketing decisions. While the material’s quirky charm seems to line up more closely with Juno, the movie is being marketed as an extension of the Disney machine.

No doubt this is cruel irony for leads Vanessa Hudgens and Aly Michalka who, along with Demi Lovato, are trying to distance themselves from the mouse as they get older. I’m not bowled over by the trailer, but am interested in it and hope it finds an audience despite its botched marketing campaign. I saw Juno with a lot of 13-year-olds. I think they’d see this movie too.

Next up, we have An Education, which is British novelist Nick Horby’s first screenplay about a cello-playing British schoolgirl falling for an older man in the Swingin’ Sixties. While I wouldn’t necessarily take a junior high kid to this movie, I know I would’ve loved this movie in high school and made my girlfriends go with me to see it.

In fact, 26-year-old me is still plenty interested, despite a very “for your consideration” trailer that brings to mind The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, a stodgy coming-of-age British drama from the 1960s that was saved for me only by Maggie Smith’s performance and wardrobe. To review.

1. Cello-playing precocious schoolgirl, played by Carey Mulligan.
2. Peter Sarsgaard being in the movie (though I have more of a couple crush on him and his wife Maggie Gyllenhaal than a stand-alone crush).
3. A bunch of bad-ass British actresses (Emma Thompson, Olivia Williams, Cara Seymour, Sally Hawkins) are together in one movie based on a woman’s memoirs and directed by a lady, ya’ll.
4. Many of the aforementioned British actresses are playing characters who don’t want the girl with potential to give up herself for a dude. Some may be worried about scandal, but others (like Williams, who is also smashing on Dollhouse) are hoping she chooses her talents and goals over his interests.

Most importantly, I wanna see how music figures into these girls’ lives, as musicians and as fans.

11
May
09

Belated Allison Iraheta love

Allison brings down the house, takes a bow; image taken from tunedin.com

Allison brings down the house, takes a bow; image taken from tunedin.com

Last week was a bit of a whirlwind (literally, a whirl of wind), so I didn’t get a chance to properly eulogize Allison Iraheta, my pick for this season’s American Idol, who I feel had more in her.

So, there’s plenty to be sad about. In my opinion, Allison simply has the best vocals in the competition. But to add to her raw talent, she’s only 17 (something I often forget when I hear her whiskey-throated voice), one of the few girls who’s had a real shot at winning (Jordin Sparks won season six at 16, Paris Bennett was 17 when she placed 5th in season five). Also, in a season as white as this one has been, Allison was one of the few people of color left in the competition (she’s of Salvadorean descent). But I also loved her unpolishedness. She wasn’t slick, was a bit loopy, and a bit of a mumbler. And she’d always roll her eyes at Ryan Seacrest — indeed, I think I would too. Oh, and she wasn’t stick-thin and didn’t slim down like some of the other contestants (Megan Joy, I’m looking at you). I appreciated that.

Allisons elimination; photo taken from New York Daily News

Allison's elimination; photo taken from New York Daily News

And the real tragedy is that she lost after killing Janis Joplin’s “Cry Baby.” And who was spared, you may ask? Danny fucking Gokey. Ugh, the worst. Apart from the fact that he sounds just like Michael Bolton, he butchered “Dream On,” the blandest song by Aerosmith, the blandest band that still endures for some reason. And if you can get through that last note, you’re made of thicker stuff than I.

I have other problems with Gokey too. If you’re watching the show, doesn’t he seem like the most self-serious, humorless, uncool, egotistical guy to you too? He cannot laugh at himself or take criticism. Seriously, anyone that concerned with having a coordinated designer pair of eyeglasses for each outfit has gotta be a jerk. He was pretty much done for me in auditions, when he seemed to using the recent death of his wife as a means with which to frame himself and set himself apart in the competition. The only joy I’ve ever really derived from his presence on the show is making his song selections be about dead wives. For example, take Motown week, when he did “Get Ready” by The Temptations. Take the opening line “Never met a girl who makes me feel the way that you do” and sub out “you’re all right” with “but you died.” Instant funny.

But, at the same time, I have high hopes for Iraheta. The AV Club’s Claire Zulkey hopes that Iraheta gets to show up Disney tween sensations like Miley Cyrus and Demi Lovato and show them how to really rock without the mouse (though, sadly, still within a major label system). I do too.

My kind of prom queen, yall; photo taken from evilbeetgossip.com

My kind of prom queen, ya'll; photo taken from evilbeetgossip.com

So, we’re down to three contestants, all of whom are adult white dudes. We’ve got the inoffensive Christian hottie-next-door (Kris), the high camp rocker that I hope kisses one of his fellow competitors on stage (Adam), and the offensive Christian d-bag (Danny). At this point, I don’t really care who wins (theoretically, I’m backing Adam, but in terms of actual preference, meh). Just please don’t let Bolton Light win. Otherwise, I might have to make like Iraheta and punch him in the chest.





 

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