10.9.10

How The Music We Listen To Shapes the Men Of Our Dreams

Think back to the frontmen you idolized as a teenager, the crooners who lulled you to sleep as a little girl. Chances are, if you're anything like me, they were great romantics. Did you grow up wanting to fall in love with Jim Morrison? I don't think any girl can say there wasn't at least one frontman she hoped to find a real life replica of, and we're not talking just for looks.

As far back as I can remember, I was listening to The Who, with Roger Daltrey belting out Townshend's and Entwhistle's heartbreaks. Perhaps the biggest sap of all time is Bono himself, a key piece in my childhood, and womanhood. He always seemed to have such a big heart - not just for Africa and the starving babies, but for the women in his life. I thought that, surely, all men are capable of loving so much.

You can run from love
And if it's really love it will find you
Catch you by the heel
But you can't be numb for love
The only pain is to feel nothing at all
How can I hurt when I'm holding you?
-A Man And A Woman (2004)

One of my close friends used to be able to sleep as a child only if her grandad played Chris Isaak. As an adult, she still listens to him, and in fact turned me on to the man's soulful words. You can feel his guitar weeping, but what brings on the tears in your own eyes is his sadness, his pleading, how in love he always is with a girl who won't love him back in the same way. What kills you inside is how you know he'll fall in love again, despite how bad it hurts. He'll let another one torture him, because the payoff is worth the pain.

Give me a sign and let me know we're through
If you don't love me like I love you
But if you cry at night the way I do I'll know that somebody's lying
-Somebody's Crying (1995)

The ones who say "baby" always got to me the most. Jon Bon Jovi created entire songs around this concept, and knowing the weakness it is in women. You'd think a woman was singing the song below, but it's not. It's a guy at the end of his chain, willing to do anything to keep his girl. I guess he's really turned that way - the softest songs are the ones about his wife. But is the world filled with Jon Bon Jovis? No, and most men would be ashamed to be caught dead listening to such drivel, let alone acting that way. I have a few select guy friends who have no shame in admitting it. I also know how they're as connected to those songs through the hard times as I have been.

If you don't love me - lie to me
'Cause baby you're the one thing I believe
Let it all fall down around us, if that's what's meant to be
Right now if you don't love me baby - lie to me
-Lie To Me (1995)

My teenage years were the most detrimental to my perception. I fell into Depeche Mode, Interpol, The Arcade Fire, HIM, the overall new insurgence of guys who weren't afraid to put their masculinity on the line and even sound like queers to write and sing about the deeper stirrings of their hearts. Those were also the years I started to learn that real men aren't like my British psuedo-idols, they aren't that passionate, that soft, that open. They generally really do care more about sex, status, and good times than anything emotional. Surely there are exceptions, but they are few and far between, and they're often hurt and turned bitter by the uncaring girls along the way who give womankind a bad name.

I submit my incentive is romance
I watched the pole dance of the stars
We rejoice because the hurting is so painless
From the distance of passing cars
But I am married to your charms & grace
I just go crazy like the good old days
You make me want to pick up a guitar
And celebrate the myriad ways that I love you

Can you see what you've done to my heart
And soul?
This is a wasteland now
-Slow Hands (2005)

I often wonder how this shapes the men. Do they become the songs they listen to, grow up seeing them as words to live by? Does the subject matter inundating our society now affect that? When my older brother was a teenager, times had changed. Romance, even just the mere acceptance of men singing about it, had died. George Michael, Simon Le Bon and many of the other greats of the '80s had come out of the closet and changed the perception of what was "straight." Nirvana and the deep grunge phase of self-loathing and pity were in. For the first time, songs about abusing women, slapping them around, dirty rap about sex on the dance floor and life as a pimp, were going mainstream. What happened to the days when America wouldn't show Elvis below the waist, in fear his shaking hips would stir up the yearning loins of teenage girls?

I'm not saying you should base a guy's personality and inclination towards treatment of women on the music he listens to. I've known perfectly good guys who listened to Slipknot, and rather wretched ones who had a fetish for Five For Fighting. I'm probably not even hitting the nail on the head with this one. It's just a theory, that if what a woman expects, or sees men as being, can be affected by her exposure to lyrical material… surely a guy's behavior can be too? Or is this another chicken-before-the-egg type deal, where we just don't know - do they listen to what the do, because they're already turned a certain way and that's what they connect to? I'm sure the people who want to blame Marilyn Manson for strings of suicides and school shootings are still trying to figure that one out. Any of the lads want to give me their 2 cents? Try opening up and talking about it. I know you can do it.

24.6.10

Female Rock Stars I'd Rather Be

Here I am, wasting valuable time I should be studying for the Virginia State Board test on compiling a list of those I'd rather be. Surely, this says something about myself that I should recognize...


25. Carah Faye Charnow (Shiny Toy Guns)
Listen to: "Le Disko" (2005)
Photobucket

Life must've been great for Carah, up until Shiny Toy Guns released her from their sinking ship. Oh well, she's living it up in Sweden now with new band Versant.


24. Hayley Williams (Paramore)
Listen to: "crushcrushcrush" (2007)
Photobucket

All the teenage girls want to be Hayley, and all their boyfriends want to bang her. Why shouldn't I jump on the bandwagon too? Hey, I wouldn't turn down her paycheck, either.



23. Hoku

Listen to: "Another Dumb Blonde" (2000)
Photobucket

Despite having disappeared off the face of the world these days, it wouldn't have been bad to be Hoku in the early part of this decade. Anyone still remember the Legally Blonde soundtrack?


22. Amy Lee (Evanescence)

Listen to: "Call Me When You're Sober" (2006)
Photobucket

Amy is the gothic princess of this decade, and many other musicians and emotionally disturbed teenage girls have tried walking in her footsteps. Now if only she can stop sleeping with her bandmates and get on with this career.


21. Alison Mosshart (Dead Weather, The Kills)
Listen to: "Treat Me Like Your Mother" (2009)
Photobucket

Anyone who can hold their own in a band with Jack White gets bonus points from me.


20. Brandi Carlile
Listen to: "Follow" (2005)
Photobucket

What a way to escape Seattle... get found singing in a bar, sent on tour opening for Jamie Cullum, and next thing you know your songs are on Grey's Anatomy.


19. Feist
Listen to: "1234" (2007)
Photobucket

I think Feist's biggest claim to fame is being featured in an Apple commercial. Oh well, she's still hot.


18. KT Tunstall
Listen to: "Black Horse and the Cherry Tree" (2004)
Photobucket

I'd like to be KT just to play with all of her cool musical toys and have license to run around in leggings.


17. Aimee Mann
Listen to: "Pavlov's Bell" (2002)
Photobucket

The less-dike, more talented version of Melissa Etheridge. I love her.


16. Dolores O'Riordan (The Cranberries)
Listen to: "Zombie" (1994)
Photobucket

The voice just can't match the beauty of this Irish post-grunge goddess, who's managed to hold up a decent solo career as well.


15. Deborah Harry (Blondie)
Listen to: "Call Me" (1980)
Photobucket

Few beauties rivaled Debbie in the late 70s and 80s, and few still can. Suck it, Lady Gaga.


14. Eleanor Jackson (La Roux)
Listen to: "I'm Not Your Toy" (2009)
Photobucket

Proof that one CAN grow up in Brixton and live to tell the tale.


13. Imogen Heap (Frou Frou)
Listen to: "Let Go" (2002)
Photobucket

Haunting voice, talented lyricist, and a fashion sense almost rivaling Bjork. It's almost perfection, and she can thank her discovery to way more than Zach Braff featuring her in a movie.


12. Annie Lennox (Eurythmics)
Listen to: "A Whiter Shade Of Pale" (1995)
Photobucket

With an illustrious and long career, including such awards as an Oscar, AMA, Golden Globe and various BRITs and Grammys, Annie reigns in as worth twice her weight in gold. And who wouldn't give to age so well?


11. Katie White (The Ting Tings)
Listen to: "Shut Up And Let Me Go" (2009)
Photobucket

Being half the talent of a two-piece act and playing multiple instruments is no small feat, nor is pulling off her style.


10. Beth Gibbons (Portishead)
Listen to: "Roads" (1998)
Photobucket

To me, Beth Gibbons has always been the female Kurt Cobain... with a little less drama.


9. Neko Case (The New Pornographers)
Listen to: "People Got A Lot Of Nerve" (2009)
Photobucket

Gorgeous and versatile, with a beautiful voice.


8. Pink
Listen to: "So What" (2008)
Photobucket

Pink as a strong chick with a firm sense of self and no qualms about telling anyone off (especially through her music), even her scorned ex-husband. You go girl.


7. Nico (Velvet Underground)
Listen to: "Venus In Furs" (1960s)
Photobucket

An Andy Warhol star, model, and actress - the biggest downside to being Nico would be the final bicycle accident.


6. Fiona Apple
Listen to: "Criminal"
Photobucket

Seductress at heart, her voice moves slow like honey, her words wrapping around you and casting a spell that envelops the senses. She isn't half bad at the piano either.


5. Alice Glass (Crystal Castles)
Listen to: "Crimewave"
Photobucket

Ah, how fabulous it would be to look like her, to be that crazy and not get locked up...


4. Florence Welch (Florence & The Machine)
Listen to: "You've Got The Love" (2009)
Photobucket

How can she be so beautiful and yet look like a drag queen at the same time? Simply fabulous, darling. Simply fabulous.


3. Maja Ivaarson (The Sounds)
Listen to: "No One Sleeps When I'm Awake"
Maja Ivarsson Pictures, Images and Photos

Men and women alike want this Swedish beauty. Her bandmates are hot, and her legs are hotter. Ugh. And did I mention her voice?


2. Lily Allen
Listen to: "Not Fair" (2008)
Photobucket

Ok, so she's not really a rock star, but she can sing - and really, who doesn't want to be (or in the case of the boys, be in bed with) Lily? Even Matthew Bellamy seems to have fallen for her charm. Probably the only woman alive who can make cursing like a sailor be deemed adorable, rip you apart yet make you think she's flirting with you, and start blogging wars with people more famous than her and get away with it. Ah, to live life as Lily Allen. Someone teach me how.



1. Karen O (Yeah Yeah Yeahs)

Listen to: "Zero" (2009)
Photobucket

I have a kink for leather jackets. Getting one with my name embossed on the back would just be radical. Beyond that, my list of pros in being Karen O goes on and on. She's my hero.