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The Fame
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The Fame
Current price: $11.89
Barnes and Noble
The Fame
Current price: $11.89
Size: CD
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The times were crying out for a pop star like
-- a self-styled, self-made shooting star, one who mocked the tabloid digital age while still wanting to wallow in it -- and one who's smart enough to pull it all off, too. That self-awareness and satire were absent in the pop of the new millennium, where even the best of the lot operated only on one level, which may be why
turned into such a sensation in 2009: everybody was thirsty for music like this, music for and about their lives, both real and virtual. To a certain extent, the reaction to
may have been a little too enthusiastic, with
turning inescapable sometime in the summer of 2009, when she appeared on countless magazine covers while both
and
covered
the rush to attention suggesting that she was the second coming of
, a comparison
cheerfully courts and one that's accurate if perhaps overextended. Like the marvelous
,
ushers the underground into the mainstream -- chiefly, a dose of diluted
delivered via a burbling cauldron of electro-disco -- by taming it just enough so it's given the form of pop yet remains titillating. Sure,
sings of disco sticks, bluffin' with her muffin, and rough sex, but her provocation doesn't derive solely from her words: this is music that sounds thickly sexy with its stainless steel synths and dark disco rhythms. Where
excels, and why she crossed over, is how she doesn't leave all this as a collection of hooks and rhythms, she shapes them into full-blown pop songs, taking the time to let the album breathe with chillout ballads and percolating new wave, like the title track that echoes
in dance diva mode. But where
simply celebrates celeb consumer culture,
bites, her litany of runway models, pornographic girls, and body plastic delivered with an undercurrent of disdain, even as she loves all the glitz. This dichotomy propels much of
, particularly on the clever
where she casts herself as the photographic parasite chasing after her crush, but none of this meta text would work if the songs didn't click, functioning simultaneously as glorious pop trash and a wicked parody of it. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine