“Sine from Above” by Lady Gaga ft. Elton John, Thursday, May 26, 2022
We've been through several emanations of Lady Gaga. Her debut album, The Fame, was both a satire and a full embrace of the decadence of pop music. Critics were quick to draw comparisons to Madonna: both singers celebrate female sexuality and both artists are of Catholic Italian-American families which cause several similarities in themes throughout their discographies, and hence, both singers faced a hell of a lot of controversy. But just when critics said "enough" to Gaga's avant-garde Artpop, the singer switched things up. She recorded a Country-inspired album Joanne. She recorded with musical legend Tony Bennett, singing mid-twentieth century standards. She won an Oscar for the song "Shallow" from the movie she also received a nomination for her acting, A Star Is Born.
I LOST MY LOVE AND NO ONE CARED. Lady Gaga's 2020 record, Chromatica, was originally planned for April, but delayed due to the pandemic. It is the return to Lady Gaga house music that her earliest fans had been waiting for. The album was well reviewed, holding a 79% on Metacritic. It debuted at #1 on Billboard's 200 album charts. While the album did release singles, Gaga's intention was to make a cohesive collection of songs that were meant to be listened to in the sequence they were released. The three "Chromatica" interludes divide the album into three distinctive parts. The album was received by many LGBTQ+ fans as the album they hoped to hear in the clubs and at Pride, though lockdowns made gathering impossible. The podcast Switched On Pop points out the lyrical content of the record hinting at Gaga's personal life, dancing to distract herself from the tears. The album also makes allusions to earlier Lady Gaga albums, but the critics at Switched On Pop argue that Chromatica is in stark contrast to The Fame in that early in Gaga's career, the singer merely wanted fame but now she is craving "Stupid Love" from someone special. Fame now means little without love.
Sine wavelength measurement source: Wikipedia Commons. |
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