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View Poll Results: Best Gaga Album...?!?!
The Fame 5 41.67%
The Fame Monster 3 25.00%
Born This Way 4 33.33%
Voters: 12. You may not vote on this poll

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Old 06-30-2010, 05:30 AM   #1381 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by gunnels View Post
I don't mean to derail, but...
Priestofsyrinx’s Music Profile – Users at Last.fm
This guy blows everyone else away.
That's a carefully constructed profile rather than a person's real taste and listening habits, I'm sure.
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Old 06-30-2010, 09:21 AM   #1382 (permalink)
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Or he seriously found what he considers to be the greatest song in the world and has no urge to listen to anything else ever again. It could happen...
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Old 06-30-2010, 10:03 AM   #1383 (permalink)
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Or he seriously found what he considers to be the greatest song in the world and has no urge to listen to anything else ever again. It could happen...
It's a possibility..
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Old 06-30-2010, 05:37 PM   #1384 (permalink)
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Lady Gaga is such a character. She's quite inspiring, and I agree with almost everything she says in interviews. I mean, she's an opinionated activist, but I like out-spoken people. I almost prefer the idol Gaga to the singer Gaga. Her music is quite cool, and a lot of her songs are really energetic and quirky for dance-pop. In my opinion Fame Monster is a more solid album than The Fame. Basically all the songs on Fame Monster are at least pretty good, while on The Fame there are a few sinkers. I think Fame Monster has a clearer theme too, if you like a concept album. I think the future is bright for Gaga. She already has a gaggle of devoted groupies *fans*, and I think her creativity is just gonna take her to higher and higher places. I imagine her next album will outdo both her previous.
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Old 07-01-2010, 10:03 AM   #1385 (permalink)
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^^^
So does she by the sound of things!

Quote:
Lady Gaga's third album is "finished", the singer has revealed, but won't be released until early next year. The "odd couture" pop star will reportedly issue the album in March or April 2011, making it her third record in as many years.

"It came so quickly," Gaga told Rolling Stone. "I've been working on it for months, and I feel very strongly that it's finished right now. Some artists take years. I don't. I write music every day." As ever, Gaga's bravado is matched by her theatricality. She plans to announce the album title at midnight on New Year's Eve – by inking it permanently on to her body. "I'm gonna get the album title tattooed on me and put out the photo," she said. Perhaps it will be called I [heart] Mum.
Whereas The Fame and its expanded follow-up The Fame Monster consisted mostly of "soulless electronic pop", at least according to their author, Gaga said her new songs are a little more ambitious. "I have been for three years baking cakes. Now I'm going to bake a cake that has a bitter jelly," she said. "The message of the new music is now more bitter than it was before. Because the sweeter the cake, the more bitter the jelly can be."

The last time Lady Gaga spoke about her forthcoming album, she was mostly mumbling platitudes. "It [will be] the anthem for our generation," she wrote in March. Her recording sessions in Liverpool included "the greatest music I've ever written", she insisted. "I've already written the first single for the new album and I promise you, that this album is the greatest of my career." That is, until the next one.

Source: Rollingstone
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Old 07-01-2010, 12:58 PM   #1386 (permalink)
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That is the asslickiest thing I have ever read.
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Old 07-01-2010, 01:54 PM   #1387 (permalink)
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Okay, a trip to the Lady GaGa forums revealed this essay that GaGa wrote in school.

Quote:
Stefani Germanotta
November 1, 2004
Assignment # 4: Reckoning of Evidence

The terms of the human body, some might say, are determined through a theoretical dissection of both the private environments and public atmospheres in which we live. By terms, the rules and evaluations of bodily condition, I mean to establish a division of perception. The first divide is that of the social body, the perception of our bodies in relation to a larger intellectual and sexual community, one that views each other in groups. The second divide is the condition of our nature, a perception of the body without relation or comparison, a singular entity that is independent, formless, and free. This segregation of seeing is general and yet universal because it capitalizes our differences. By examining these seeming generalizations, we break them down. It is through a demolition and reconstruction of these concepts that we can assign specificity and reason to these ways in which we look.

It is in the freeing of both natural and artificial bodies that art is created. For while some artist’s depend on the predisposition of their subjects to provide the work with it’s primary message and meaning, other artists rely on a temporal and physical freedom„an ability to use objects while also freeing them of their social significance and thus endowing them with endless possibilities of form. Spencer Tunick, an installations artist and photographer, struggled to achieve this freedom as a working artist in New York City. This artist is most famous for his installations, often characterized by masses of naked people arranged together in domestic locations, and in countries from every continent of the world. Removed of sexual implication or intention, the nudes are used primarily and only as intended by the artist, as an exploration of the shape, contour, and texture of the naked body. Spencer is fascinated by the metamorphosis of the human body into a form, and the effect that his chosen locations have on this new shape (and vice versa) . In this way, the naked bodies are Spencer’s clay, and he uses them in the same manner that a painter uses oils or a sculptor uses marble.

This way that the artist looks at the body, is a radical contradiction to Western society’s view of the nakedness. In the eyes of some of his critics, Spencer’s work invades social privacy not only through the art, which to them degrades the sacredness of the body by exposing it in mass nudity, but also in the making of his art which requires an abnormal amount of public nudity, indecent exposure. Tunick challenges traditional ideas of intimacy, and asks us to free the body of sexuality and view it aesthetically for the purpose of his art. The social body cannot exist, most specifically in the nude, as anything other then a sexual thing. This is our naked condition.

The analysis of form, while an engaging arc to follow, can also reveal an inverse exploration of the body. An examination of the deformed. This word, Michel de Montaigne addresses in his essay Of A Monstrous Child, suggesting that the existence of a social body is formless, but far from free. He describes the figure of a boy, below the breast he was fastened and stuck to another child, without a head, and with his spinal canal stopped up, the rest of his body being entire ( Lopate 57). Montaigne paints for us, a portrait of the boy’s physical form, or rather his de-form. With fastened, stuck, and stopped as his verbal interpretation of a Siamese twin, he illustrates how a human body, or form, can possess a lack of freedom in that it is harnessed to its disabilities in a physical way. For the deformed, there is an ownership of one’s difference, an ownership that is visible and undisputable. Through a scenic description of a deformed child, Montaigne uses the different shapes and contours of the child’s deformed body in order to create a visual contrast between what is ordinary and what is unordinary.

The perceptions of the nude and the deformed both manifest out of a concept of the social body, and the ideological contrast and visible conflict that is created in their presence. In Of A Monstrous Child, Montaigne asks us to consider the way we look at the body, and at each other. Montaigne suggests:
What we call monsters are not so to God, who sees in the immensity of his work the infinity of forms that he has comprised in it; and it is for us to believe that this figure that astonishes us is related and linked to some other figure of the same kind unknown to man. (58)

When we view something contrary to custom we assign them a monstrous quality. We infer based on something’s lack of ordinariness that it is disgusting or somehow linked to something inhumane, in some cases one might say uncivilized. In light of Montaigne’s theory, that we assign the unordinary with a monstrous condition, we can see the viewpoint from which art critics, the government, and the public, condemn Spencer Tunick’s work with naked bodies. Because it is not socially ordinary; it is irregular to see that many nudes amassed at one time„the art possesses a grotesque quality for the viewer.

This assigned foreignness can be designated as a kind of artistic racism, a public perception that handicaps from seeing and experiencing different forms, whether artistic or natural. There is an error in our perception„that our perception of the human body is somehow flawed. We call contrary to nature what we call contrary to custom (Lopate 58) We are trained only to be accepting of the regular, and it is this blindness that prevents us from seeing the prodigy in that which we have never seen before.

It is possible that in our naked form, in our deformed, that we are not only exposing our vulnerability, our skin, our scars, our flaws, and our genitals. But we also are exposing our secrets.

In spite of Montaigne’s great idealism, this perspective that allows us to choose the way in which we view the body, there is still an unavoidable clause that needs analyses. Sexuality manifests most physically.
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Old 07-01-2010, 02:03 PM   #1388 (permalink)
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She totally copied at least 1/4 of that from a book. Love her, bet she got an A.
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Old 07-01-2010, 02:11 PM   #1389 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by TumorAttitude View Post
She totally copied at least 1/4 of that from a book. Love her, bet she got an A.
It definitely relates to her Fame Monster work...guess she had an interest in monsters even then.
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Old 07-03-2010, 01:33 PM   #1390 (permalink)
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Can someone please explain this whole area restriction bullshit youtube is pulling as of late?
I think if you're in a country where they're not exposed to the music, they will allow it to be played and viewed. If you're in a country where the song is prevalent, they want you to go buy it or something. They want the song to get enough exposure before making you go buy it. I would check out dailymotion also since they don't seem to have any restriction.
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