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I Hear Music, Partisan Music ( How the Grammys Contribute to Plummeting Record Sales )
National Review ^ | 02/13/2007 | Raymond Arroyo

Posted on 02/13/2007 11:16:30 AM PST by SirLinksalot

I Hear Music, Partisan Music

Watching the Grammys.

By Raymond Arroyo

The whole point of music is to transcend politics, grievances, and the differences that divide to help us reconnect to those essential human emotions we all share: love, loss, anger, regret. Unless, that is, you work for the music industry.

Like its wicked stepsister, Hollywood, the music business has become increasingly divorced from its purpose, estranged from its audience, and maliciously partisan. Not that they seem to care. Case in point: the 49th Annual Grammy Awards held at the Los Angeles Staples Center on Sunday night. Watching the proceedings, who could be blamed for wanting to staple some mouths shut?

For the Dixie Chicks, who won a total of five Grammys, the evening was a triumph. No big surprise. Natalie Maines, the lead singer for the group, all but insured this outcome in 2003, when, during a concert in London she announced, “Just so you know, we’re ashamed the president of the United States is from Texas.” Back on the mainland, a huge chunk of their fan base in red-state America stop whistling Dixie Chicks; the comments would eventually lead to dwindling record sales and a banishment from many country-radio stations. The Chicks were unrepentant, and decided to court a more urbane crowd, shaking off the “rednecks” that had made them stars.

On Sunday, they communed with their new fan base: Grammy voters. For the tune “Not Ready to Make Nice,” the Chicks snagged Best Song and Best Record of the Year Grammys, despite the fact that it never broke the top 20 on any chart. And to prove the power of an offhanded comment against a beleaguered president, the trio took home an Album of the Year Grammy as well.

Accepting the award Natalie Maines droned, “To quote the great Simpsons, ‘Heh, heh.’ A lot of people have turned off their TV sets now.” That’s assuming her performance earlier in the evening hadn’t already had viewers rushing for their remotes — for part of that live number, poor Natalie sounded flatter than her record sales. It was enough to tempt one to beg Laura Ingraham to retitle her book: “Shut up, And Don’t Sing Either.”

For an institution approaching its 50th year, and an industry hemorrhaging financially, one would have imagined that the Grammy telecast would have at least tried to reach as wide an audience as possible. No such luck. Save for the American Idol champion, Carrie Underwood, who picked up a pair of Grammys for her Jesus Take the Wheel, there was little for Middle America to revel in.

The aging Police opened the show to prove that they could still stand on stage together and pull off a reasonably good version of “Roxanne.” The Latin diva Shakira popped her pelvis and undulated her way through her summer hit, “Hips Don’t Lie,” wandering through a set that looked like a Bollywood strip club.

The rapper Ludacris, who won Best Rap Album honors for the “masterpiece” (his words) Release Therapy, gave a “shout out to Oprah and Bill O’Reilly” (both of whom have been critical of his lyrics). With a catalog that includes such hits as “Hoes in My Room” and “Girls Gone Wild,” how ludicrous that anyone would take umbrage at the Ludacris view of women in his music. The video for his latest work, broadcast in part at the Grammys, featured Ludacris surrounded by bikini-clad women writhing all over him. One clip featured he and “his employees” lying on a bed of cash. Oprah and O’Reilly seem to have this one right.

Finally, near the end of the of the torturous ceremony, as if the nerves could take any more, that musical giant Al Gore took the stage to announce the winner of the Best Rock Album. Why? I have no idea. But as evidence that global warming is wreaking some havoc, perhaps on what is left of good taste, Jimmy Carter won a spoken-word Grammy for his audio book, Our Endangered Values. If you’re very quiet you can still hear the cries of jubilation rising in Gaza.

Insignificant musical talents like Bob Dylan, John Williams, the San Francisco Symphony, Randy Newman, and more than 90 others were not of sufficient caliber to be featured on the Grammy telecast, though they all took home prizes. The airtime had to be saved for the real talent out there: Shakira, the Chicks, and Ludacris, and their scintillating performances. Ludicrous.

Given this one night’s collective assault on the ears, the eyes, and decency itself, is it any wonder that record sales have plummeted? If this is the best that the American recording industry has to offer the world, their future is very bleak indeed. While relatively cheap music downloads doubled last year, the industry’s bread and butter, CDs sales, continued to slide. In the year 2000, ’N Sync sold more than nine million copies of their album, No Strings Attached. This year’s bestseller, High School Musical sold a paltry 3.7 million. Big retailers like Musicland and Tower Records have called it quits for good. People will download a tune here and there, but their devotion to individual artists is slipping; their willingness to plop down 18 bucks to hear slickly packaged, homogenized drek is gone. As one record exec told a Canadian newspaper this week, “I think the fan is in control now… they have the power.” To quote those great Simpsons: “Heh, heh.”

— Raymond Arroyo is editor of the forthcoming, Mother Angelica’s Little Book of Life Lessons and Everyday Spirituality (Doubleday, March) and host of EWTN’s The World Over Live.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: dixiechicks; grammy; grammys; liberalagenda
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1 posted on 02/13/2007 11:16:33 AM PST by SirLinksalot
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To: SirLinksalot

Because the "music business" hates it customers.


2 posted on 02/13/2007 11:20:13 AM PST by xcamel (Press to Test, Release to Detonate)
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To: SirLinksalot
one would have imagined that the Grammy telecast would have at least tried to reach as wide an audience as possible. No such luck. Save for the American Idol champion, Carrie Underwood, who picked up a pair of Grammys for her Jesus Take the Wheel, there was little for Middle America to revel in.

Well there was also Mary J. Bleige saying the "J-word" several times. That had to make many in the audience really uncomfortable. Also most of them dressed classier. There weren't a bunch of see-thru blouses or the usual mega-clevage dresses just waiting for a wardrobe malfunction.

3 posted on 02/13/2007 11:23:17 AM PST by Always Right
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To: Always Right

Every show like that I deem a threat to my sanity. The popular songs from the summer, in my mind, have outlived their useful lives and it's time for something new (but not fresh or original) to take their places.

Did anybody watch to make sure Shakira's lips were perfectly synched with the voice?


4 posted on 02/13/2007 11:28:02 AM PST by wastedyears ( "Gun control is hitting your target accurately." - Richard Marcinko)
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To: SirLinksalot

I still buy CDs, mostly "oldies" compilations, real country music stars like Toby Keith and classical music.

Hey, Natalie, "HA ha!"


5 posted on 02/13/2007 11:30:33 AM PST by Theresawithanh (Don't be rediki... riducke...rudicki...stoopid!)
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To: SirLinksalot

Is the Dixie Chicks new music played on ANY Country music stations? I listen to country music all day in work and have yet to hear anything from their post "Insult Bush" era.


6 posted on 02/13/2007 11:34:17 AM PST by heylady
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To: SirLinksalot
that musical giant Al Gore took the stage to announce the winner of the Best Rock Album. Why? I have no idea. But as evidence that global warming is wreaking some havoc, perhaps on what is left of good taste, Jimmy Carter won a spoken-word Grammy for his audio book, Our Endangered Values.

Just in case there was any doubt left that the Grammys have jumped the shark...

7 posted on 02/13/2007 11:35:32 AM PST by workerbee (Ladies do not start fights, but they can finish them.)
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To: SirLinksalot

Geez...sounds like i didn't miss much.As far as Natalie"airhead"Maines is concerned,she's cute as a button unless she's in a "bulking up" phase.Any pics?


8 posted on 02/13/2007 11:39:25 AM PST by Thombo2
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To: SirLinksalot

Was that the Grammys or the DNC Convention? I couldn't tell.


9 posted on 02/13/2007 11:39:39 AM PST by jackieaxe (Unsourced reporting is not reporting but a lie or a manipulation)
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To: SirLinksalot
From W. Cleon Skousen's list of communist goals published in 1951:

25. Break down cultural standards of morality by promoting pornography and obscenity in books, magazines, motion pictures, radio, and TV.

America is like a healthy body and its resistance is threefold: its patriotism, its morality, and its spiritual life. If we can undermine these three areas, America will collapse from within. --Josef Stalin

10 posted on 02/13/2007 11:41:01 AM PST by Carry_Okie (Grovelnator Schwarzenkaiser: Making fascism fashionable in Kaleefornia, one charade at a time.)
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To: SirLinksalot

Buy only what floats your boat. http://allofmp3.com


11 posted on 02/13/2007 11:42:52 AM PST by upchuck (Wanted: Conservatives to go read this: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1771175/posts)
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To: heylady

I gave up listening to "Country" radio a couple of years ago, primarily because FM stations no longer play what I would consider to be Country Music (and that includes the Ditsy Twits). Sorry, but when 90% of the playlist seems to be composed of Rascal Flatts, Lonestar, Keith Urban or Faith Hill, interspersed with 22 minutes of commercials per hour, I ain't listenin'.


12 posted on 02/13/2007 11:43:55 AM PST by andy58-in-nh
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To: Carry_Okie

Get a load of this :

http://blogcritics.org/archives/2007/02/13/085303.php

THE 5 WORST RECORDS OF 2006... COUNTDOWN

On Sunday evening, the Grammys celebrated what was supposedly the best in music over the past five years. Now, it is time to celebrate the worst. Here are the five worst records of 2006:

5. Beyonce (ft. Jay Z) - "Déjà Vu"

What the hell was Daddy Knowles thinking by letting this become the first single from Beyonce’s other decent collection of songs on the B’day album. Everything from Jay Z’s rap to Beyonce’s screeching vocal performance make this song sound like a b-side to a Britney Spears single. You have to give Beyonce credit though: this song would have killed any other artist’s career. For Beyonce, who has spent the last ten weeks at number 1 with “Irreplaceable,” it was barely a blip on the meter.

4. Justin Timberlake – "Sexy Back"

The mega success of this single has shown just how low the music world has gone. Everybody’s fake ghetto Michael Jackson pre-molestation wannabe tells us how he wants to bring “sexy” back. But the song is just about as sexy as the thought of Laura Bush in a bikini. Justin Timberlake has apparently found a huge audience by appealing to the lowest denominator of music listeners.

3. Shakira Featuring Wyclef Jean - "Hips Don't Lie"

If you want to hear a goat cry, you can easily go to the zoo. But it became easier in 2006 because all you had to do was turn on the radio. Even Wyclef Jean, who was obviously paraded by music moguls, sounds like he doesn’t want to be on this record. Shakira has had other great singles. After many flops, however, Shakira and her record company apparently decided that she had to lower and degrade herself into singing this mess in order to score a hit single.


2. Janet Jackson - "Call on Me"

Apparently, nobody decided to call on Ms. Jackson, who made a desperate comeback attempt with this lame and ultra pathetic single. While the uproar over her "wardrobe malfunction" might have been hypocritical, she did herself no favors by singing this typical R & B fluff produced by her no-talent boy toy, Jermaine Dupri. Nelly does the song no favors with his robotic vocal performance either.

1. Mariah Carey - "Fly Like a Bird"

2006 certainly wasn’t a good year for everybody's favorite overweight human dog whistle: she was a sore loser at the Grammy awards; several of her concerts were cancelled due to poor ticket sales, and she released two singles that completely bombed: “Say Something,” and this absolute mess, where Mariah sounds like an alley cat being beheaded. The chorus at the end sounds produced by a choir from the gates of Hell. Mariah further punishes the listeners with her high pitched signature pig squeal at the end of the song. It used to be that Mariah could disguise her flops as “hits” by severely deep discounting them to 49 cents. Unfortunately, singles don’t sell like they used to and Mariah has to face a fact: a flop is a flop! Now, Mariah, either go to the gym or stop wearing those tight sleazebag outfits that you barely fit into!


13 posted on 02/13/2007 11:46:23 AM PST by SirLinksalot
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To: SirLinksalot

Goes to show that the best music is often not on the radio or "popular". It was patenly obvious about the DC's win. Shame that they get credit for "performing" songs written by other, far more talented people.


14 posted on 02/13/2007 11:48:21 AM PST by Wyatt's Torch (I can explain it to you. I can't understand it for you.)
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To: SirLinksalot
Given this one night’s collective assault on the ears, the eyes, and decency itself, is it any wonder that record sales have plummeted?

Hmm... I was told the record business is in dire straits because of the billions of illegal music downloaders out there. Could that be misleading?

15 posted on 02/13/2007 11:48:31 AM PST by TChris (The Democrat Party: A sewer into which is emptied treason, inhumanity and barbarism - O. Morton)
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To: SirLinksalot

Although the Chicks did have me grabbing the remote, I watched nearly all of the show. I wouldn't be too quick to write off the whole show.

As stated, Carrie Underwood REALLY kicked ass, and was wonderful. The trio of John Mayer, Corrine Bailey Rae, and the other guy (sorry, can't remember his name, not intentional) put together quite a nice medley. And say what you will, but you had to be impressed with Christine Aguillera and her singing abilities. Awesome.

Beyonce is quite striking and talented, as well.

Personnally, I don't think conservatives have to give up on the entire event, even though there are insufferable moments. Maybe putting together a Christian Music Award show would be nice. There are some REALLY good artists in this field these days.


16 posted on 02/13/2007 11:49:05 AM PST by RightResponse (It depends on what the defamation of Islam is .....)
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To: andy58-in-nh

Lee Ann Womack, Rex Hobart, Mike Ireland, Hayes Carll, Slaid Cleaves...I think of artists such as these being "real country"


17 posted on 02/13/2007 11:50:56 AM PST by GSWarrior
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To: SirLinksalot

Sad thing is that Timberlake was nominated for album of the year.....wow. And the Pussy Cat Dolls also received a nimination for something. Just shows that the Grammy's are not at all about artistic merit.

At least Dylan won a couple for Modern Times. That's how you write songs. 99.9% of the stuff on "popular" is pure crap. That included pop country. Pure crap. Same crap that makes American Idol coronation songs...;-)


18 posted on 02/13/2007 11:52:27 AM PST by Wyatt's Torch (I can explain it to you. I can't understand it for you.)
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To: RightResponse
"Maybe putting together a Christian Music Award show would be nice. There are some REALLY good artists in this field these days."

There already is one: Dove Awards

19 posted on 02/13/2007 11:53:50 AM PST by Wyatt's Torch (I can explain it to you. I can't understand it for you.)
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To: SirLinksalot

The Grammys, Oscars, et al have become vehicles for the promotion of the Left's political agenda. I avoid them.


20 posted on 02/13/2007 11:55:09 AM PST by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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