One Liner: Raunchy, but funny in lyrical realism, British pop star
Wikipedia Genre: Electropop, reggae, R&BHome: London
Poster Position: 8
Day: Friday at 4:45
Weekend Two Only.
Allen is kind of the British answer to Katy Perry. She came up right as Amy Winehouse did, and the two of them created a good bit of buzz about the new, strong female British singer. Part of her mystique was all about how she had been repeatedly kicked out of schools for smoking and drinking, she was like Winehouse with the whole bad girl persona. But she played and sang and gained some notoriety as a kid, and later used connections (her dad is an actor named Keith Allen) to score a record deal (well, she went through a few before her first album), and then get famous through MySpace.
Personally, I think her first album is the most interesting. Just a more original sound on there than you get on the new discs. Its like a dancehall sound, a little bit reggae or dub or something. The top track from that album is "Smile," which has 59.3 million streams.
After that one, she went slightly more mainstream pop with 2009's It's Not Me, It's You, which includes her rudely titled most popular track. "Fuck You" has 109.9 million streams. Here is a clean version.
The third album seems to cater more closely to what everyone else is doing, further leaving behind the originality and new sound. And some of it tries really freaking hard, like "Sheezus," the album opener (and the album title), from 2014. She name drops several other lady pop stars, in declaring that she's ready to take the throne and become the top dog. Feels hollow. And then the auto-tune assisted weirdness of "L8 CMMR" is not great. "Air Balloon" sounds like a nursery song or something, treacly cute while still stealing some sounds from MIA. After that cover mentioned up above, the top track on this album is the final tune, "Hard Out Here," with 60.9 million streams.
Then the new album, 2018's No Shame, stays with that electronic pop thing, with a little more nod back to the reggae on some of the tracks. The top track features a rapper - "Trigger Bang," featuring Giggs - has 10.7 million streams.
"My One" mentions her waking up in Austin, Texas, which perked up my ears as I listened through this album. But I won't say that the tune itself is very interesting. More like a generic Beiber tune based on a very simple synth beat.
I'd say that, overall, I kind of like her. She's brash and raunchy and good with lyrics (even if they are usually pretty sad observations about her shortcomings, made to seem funny). Some of this suffers from a generic pop-ness, but other portions of it are refreshingly different and kinda fun.
But, she's up against a tough lineup in that 4:45 slot. Manchester Orchestra are legit good. Jungle seems like a really fun live band. The Arkells are interesting (although they'd still rank fourth in this time slot to me). So I likely won't see her, but I get the appeal.
1 comment:
I've always irrationally loved Lily Allen. She drops f bombs. nice.
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