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Posts Tagged ‘rihanna’

  

Ok, so here’s a reminder of the Top 20 that led us to this point:

20. Gossip – Move in the Right Direction 

19. M.I.A – Bad Girls

18. A-Trak, Mark Foster & Kimbra – Warrior

17. Ellie Goulding – Lights

16. Ed Sheeran – Small Bump

15. Goldfrapp – Melancholy Sky / Yellow Halo

14. Rudimental – Feel the Love

13. Major Lazer – Get Free

12. Calvin Harris – Feel So Close

11. Nicola Roberts – Memory of You

10. Fun. – We Are Young

9. Nicki Minaj – Starships

8. Santigold – Disparate Youth

7. Florence & The Machine – Never Let Me Go

6. Icona Pop – I Love It


So let’s get back to it…Because I know that absolutely noone everyone is dying to know what the Top 5 are!

5. Hot Chip – Flutes

Hot Chip are like that amazingly hot boyfriend/girlfriend that all your mates love, is a demon in the sack and cooks you a shit hot brekky in the morning. One day, like that partner, Hot Chip won’t be around and everyone will realise what fuckwits they’ve been for neglecting them.

It took me a while to comprehend the brilliance of Flutes. Unconventional and chaotic yet utterly clever, it’s a challenging mind-fuck of modern dance. It’s also an exceptional piece of work and more exciting than anything else on radio right now.

Unfortunately, the vision hasn’t transferred to the video clip – the camera literally spins for a full minute like it was attached to Regan’s head from The Exorcist. Five spews out of five.

4. Drake & Rihanna – Take Care

More people have worked on this song than Joan Rivers’ face.

Originally a track by the late and great Gil Scott-Heron, Jamie xx of The xx remixed the shit out of it. Drake then picked it up and rapped over it, ultimately inviting Rihanna to sing the chorus.

I’m a big believer in both Drake and Rihanna’s talents, but the pair have generally made public defence quite difficult in the past. Rihanna’s had some scorching tracks (Umbrella being a milestone) but this is the best thing either have, or probable ever will do.

It’s a dark and downtempo R&B/hip-hop affair, with Rihanna’s vocals never sounding better and lyrics that actually involve a thought process, “I know you’ve been hurt by someone else, I can tell by the way you carry yourself, if you let me, here’s what I’ll do, I’ll take care of you.”

Oh…and check out the Florence & The Machine version. No words.

3. Rebecca Ferguson – Glitter & Gold

The most obvious single choice on Ferguson’s sensational album Heaven, Glitter & Gold comes across as Sade’s honey vocals covering Amy Winehouse’s motown pop.

Effortlessly memorable and unique, the track is a prime example of why Ferguson took the UK’s pop crown in 2011. What makes listening to Rebecca Ferguson so amazing, beyond her one-of-a-kind voice and reinvention of classic genres, is that she clearly writes the music herself. When Ferguson sings, it is unquestionable that she sings from experience, “All that glitter and gold won’t buy you happy when you’ve been bought and sold.”

A fitting statement from someone who stuck her middle finger up at the music exes so she could write her own CD. In countless syndications of infinite reality shows, second place X-Factor contestant Rebecca did the impossible last year, she made reality TV credible.

2. Michael Kiwanuka – Home Again

What an exceptionally moving piece of music. I want this song to be played at my funeral, which at the current rate of alcohol consumption, should be in September. It’s BYO by the way…

1. Lana Del Rey – Blue Jeans

When I leave voicemails on a guy’s phone after one date, “I will love til the end of time,” it doesn’t go down well. When Lana Del Rey swoons over a gorgeous indie pop ballad, it’s grandiose and epically romantic.

People lost their shit over Video Games, but if you ask me, it’s all about Blue Jeans. There’s also the ambitious Azealia Banks remix from Smims & Belle) but whatever you do, don’t watch her performance on Saturday Night Live. It sounds like Chewbecca passing a kidney stone.

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15. Goldfrapp – Melancholy Sky / Yellow Halo

Sure, they’re technically two different songs BUT one was a single without a video, the other has a video without a release, so for the sake of my writing and Spice Girls methodology, 2 become 1.

Realistically, Goldfrapp is probably my favourite artist of all time. Controversial to throw it out there on the table, but she has provided four stunning albums (Felt Mountain, Black Cherry, Supernature and Seventh Tree) that touch on everything from disco to folk and ambient to electronica. Head First was a disappointment of sorts, for while its 80s glam feel was fun, it was camper than Project Runway: The Musical.

Goldfrapp’s next step was to release an incredible Best Of, which showcased (with a few missed exceptions) a solid body of work…but not without two impossibly brilliant singles. Melancholy Sky and Yellow Halo are back-to-basics Goldfrapp. Minimalist, acoustic and gorgeous, it meant that the Best Of has more favourites than my Grindr profile in a Turkish prison.

14. Rudimental – Feel the Love

When a song comes out with more musical genres than I have friends on Facebook, the result should be a hot mess.

Instead, Feel the Love is like rocky road ice-cream or dessert pizza – all your favourite things together to make an ultra-favourite thing. Somehow, the best elements of jazzy horns, soul vocals, drum n bass and (I can’t believe I’m saying this) even dupstep, fuse into one of the most uplifting tracks of the English Summer.

Despite being the antithesis of pop, Feel The Love has peaked at no.1 on the UK Singles Chart and is likely to celebrate similar success in Australia.  If Rudimental can make dubstep sound good, I hope they have nothing to do with Tony Abbot’s political campaign.

13. Major Lazer – Get Free

The thing about parading that I know more about music than ANYONE ELSE IN THE HISTORY OF ANYTHING, is that I hate it when people put me on to something that ends up being my favourite song.

Sometimes pop, sometimes calypso, sometimes electronic but always amazing, Get Free is scarily good. The anti-establishment lyrics make me want to burn down my apartment, change my name to Rain and become one of those freaks that only eat things that die naturally.

Major Lazer may have not released hit after hit, but Get Free proves that Hold the Line wasn’t a fluke.

12. Calvin Harris – Feel So Close

While I loved both, the Kelis duet Bounce and Rihanna’s We Found Love rubbed a lot of Calvinites the wrong way. Personally I love a dance song sung by a diva, but I must admit, this track feels so close to the sound of Calvin.

His almost clumsy vocals fit perfectly with the breezy piano chords but it’s the synthy lyric-less chorus that’s so epic, that if you play this at a party and people aren’t dancing – you need new friends.

A career peak for Calvin.

11. Nicola Roberts – Memory of You

There are four things that I know about Memory of You.

1. It is technically not a new song. Girls Aloud (of which Nicola originates) sang the original four years ago.

2. It technically wasn’t a single, but rather a B-side to the lacklustre Nicola single Yo-Yo.

3. The song is the only one in the Top 20 without a video. It is actually so amazing, that it breaks all the rules. It also only has 6,894 views on YouTube, which means more people have slept with me than watched this video…and neither lasts more than four minutes.

Memory of You is almost the perfect pop song. Synthy, dreamy and with that chorus, Nicola seduces us assuredly. This is a pretty remarkable feat for someone that looks like a Cabbage Patch Doll.

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Chris Brown – Turn Up The Music

If it wasn’t bad enough that this year’s Grammy Awards almost entirely neglected multiple winner Amy Winehouse’s death because of Whitney Houston’s, I also discovered that a young man can make mistakes and be forgiven. Right? Wrong.

The slick beats, synthesisers and Chris Brown’s lightning feet  aren’t enough to distract me from the fact that he violently beat Rihanna. The song is rubbish enough to be played on commercial radio every four minutes, I’m just hoping that it only goes to no.1 in countries where it’s ok to hit women.

As for the Grammys – shame on you for the invitation, performance and wins of Chris Brown. 1.5 stars.

M.I.A – Bad Girls

M.I.A has struggled with the balance of being a badass Bollywood bohemian and top-of-the-pops Timbaland tart. Her first album was groundbreaking, yet alienating, while her second proved to be surprise hit, with her Clash-sampling “Paper Planes” assaulting the US charts.  However her third album, Maya, received tepid reviews and failed to achieve airplay (because well, it was a giant wank.)

With “Bad Girls”, it appears M.I.A has nailed the happy medium. The Eastern influence is as undeniable in the tune as it is in the video, but the hip-hop percussion is Americanised enough to hear it in retail stores globally.

A welcome return to form. 3.5 stars.

Nneka – Shining Star

Nneka has been hovering around the lower parts of the UK charts for the last few years with her socially-conscious-for-the-masses, Michael Franti meets Neneh Cherry thing going on.

“Shining Star”, as twee as it could come across, is incredibly charming. Nneka’s vocals are sweet and infectious, the hip-hop-lite beat is accessible and the song could grace more cafes than a pretentious cafe blogger.

Nneka might never reach the top of the charts, but she’s at least of the top of the drab, dull mass heap of current radio. 3.5 stars.

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