T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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352.1 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Here all life abounds | Mon Jan 18 1993 17:28 | 12 |
| I'm a big fan of hers.
I've heard a joke that says that Mariah is "god's personal project".
She's got everything: great voice, songwriting talent, good looks,
youth, fame, fortune, etc.
In fact, for awhile my personal name was "Mariah Carey's Fiance" ;-)
But seriously, I really love the two albums she's done. She's a very
complete singer - not only can she do all those incredible technical
things, but she also puts more emotion into her vocals than any other
female pop star I can think of.
|
352.2 | | SOLANA::BROWN_RO | It always rains in Southern California | Mon Jan 18 1993 19:06 | 24 |
| I was originally very enchanted with her; her first single "Vision of
Love" knocked me out, I bought the album, said to myself "this is full
of hit singles" which it proved to be, I did a basenote on her in the
previous version of this file.
She has remarkable skills. That said, she has always been on the edge
of overly slick, to me, and has wandered over that border too much.
Too much production, and what I heard of the second album, which had
much fewer hits, too much in a certain groove.
I also enjoyed her on Saturday Night Live way back when.....by the time
she appeared on MTV Unplugged, that was turned into a major production
as well, with about 40 people backing her up, or so it seemed.
She is a commercial pro with a good voice; she reminds me a lot of
Whitney Houston, and works similar musical turf. I think the excessive
commercialism hurts them both, though both are undeniably quite
talented.
And, both will probably be on the scene for a long time. I don't expect
artistic breakthroughs, or daring, from either one.
-roger
|
352.3 | | LEDS::BURATI | This side up | Mon Jan 18 1993 21:58 | 7 |
| I too am a fan. Her vocals are a knock out. When my wife bought her
first album I was floored. I opened the jacket to see who was behind
this production. HER! Amazing talent. The few times I've seen her on the
tube really convinced me that she is indeed as good as she seems on her
records. Unplugged performance is good too.
(Hi, rog, fancy meeting you here. Pssst, I was at Woodstock too.)
|
352.4 | | PINION::STONE | | Tue Jan 19 1993 13:19 | 12 |
| a radio station in the Boston area (94.5) did a thing with her voice.
They took all the times that she hits THAT REAL HIGH PITCH, ran them
together and wanted to see if they could open a garage door with it.
A woman called in, took her cordless phone and boom box and went
outside. The radio station played their tune and then you heard
thegarage door open and the woman start laughing. Whether this really
worked or not, I still found it rather funny
Peg
|
352.5 | | LEDS::BURATI | This side up | Tue Jan 19 1993 15:21 | 5 |
| That IS funny, Peg. She can hit the notes and she has the dexterity in
that range to actually sing up there, but I wish she wouldn't. It's a
bit gimmicky. BTW, was this BCN? Sounds like something they'd do.
--Ron
|
352.6 | ok, who's gonna tell her? | EZ2GET::STEWART | Fight fire with marshmallows! | Tue Jan 19 1993 15:58 | 8 |
|
Agreed - it's like a lot of technique-oriented things, her ultrasonics
are impressive, but are tiring to listen to when overdone, which seems
to be most of the time I hear her on VH-1.
|
352.7 | Scre-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-c-c-c-c-c-h-h-h | SAHQ::LUBER | Atlanta Braves: 1993 World Champions | Tue Jan 19 1993 16:02 | 1 |
| To me, it sounds worse than nails raked across a blackboard.
|
352.8 | | LEDS::BURATI | This side up | Tue Jan 19 1993 16:11 | 2 |
| As much as I could do without it, I'd hardly call it screeching. She
hit's them perfectly.
|
352.9 | Mariah at the Grammies | RICKS::CALCAGNI | L'Angelo Minestronio | Tue Jan 19 1993 16:33 | 7 |
| Can anyone help with some Mariah trivia? What was the tune she sang at
last year's (I think) Grammies? Slow burn gospel type number with
a great, powerful climax. I liked her singing on this, although at
times it seemed the song really needed even more power than she could
deliver; I remember wondering what Aretha would have done with it.
/rick
|
352.10 | . . . trivia . . . | NEMAIL::CARROLLJ | The Bright-Eyed Boy | Tue Jan 19 1993 19:03 | 6 |
| Re - her voice . . .
The only person in my household who reacts to her songs is my dog,
Alberto. He runs and hides under the bed, whimpering.
-Jimbo
|
352.11 | | SAHQ::LUBER | Atlanta Braves: 1993 World Champions | Wed Jan 20 1993 08:30 | 1 |
| That's funny -- I do the same thing, and I don't even know your dog.
|
352.12 | I like onions, but then the liver gets added .. | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Java-Man | Wed Jan 20 1993 08:51 | 9 |
|
Like others have said, I can appreciate Mariah's talent, however I'm
really put off by her excursions into the high registers. I find
myself wanting to like her singing at times, then comes the high
shrill vocals which cause me to immediately find something else to
listen to. If she could get over this or learn to control it more,
I think she'd be great.
Lv
|
352.13 | | LAGUNA::BROWN_RO | the nightmare is ending | Wed Jan 20 1993 18:25 | 7 |
| I like the high stuff.
She has a great voice.
I never met a dog that was a good music critic.
|
352.14 | | SAHQ::LUBER | Atlanta Braves: 1993 World Champions | Thu Jan 21 1993 08:36 | 2 |
| Obviously, you have never heard the singing dogs version of Jingle
Bells, which, IMHO, is easier to take than Mariah's screech.
|
352.16 | Can't stop laughing | SAHQ::LUBER | Atlanta Braves: 1993 World Champions | Thu Jan 21 1993 09:38 | 3 |
| Tom --
I really like the Yoko comparison
|
352.17 | They called the screech Mariah | OSLACT::HENRIKW | Good news is a bad omen | Thu Jan 21 1993 12:12 | 5 |
| Wasn't the the one-garage-opener-in-each-song also a trademark
for the late, great Minnie Riperton? I once caught myself
(under a sofa) wondering which of the two reaches the highest.
Henrik
|
352.18 | Makes you wonder who Chapman was actually aiming for | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Here all life abounds | Thu Jan 21 1993 13:25 | 5 |
| > "makes me long for Yoko"
There is nothing in this universe that would make me long for Yoko.
Listening to Yoko makes me long for death.
|
352.19 | Still can't stop laughing | SAHQ::LUBER | Atlanta Braves: 1993 World Champions | Thu Jan 21 1993 13:47 | 1 |
| >one-garage-opener-in-each-song
|
352.20 | a request | SOLANA::BROWN_RO | the nightmare is ending | Thu Jan 21 1993 18:20 | 31 |
| I would really appreciate it if those of you who dislike Mariah Carey's
high range would keep your complaints to yourself. I had thought that
the emphasis of this notes file was on what people liked or appreciated
about a particular artist, rather than to bash a particular artist.
If I am mistaken, I will be quite happy to bash away at a wide variety
of hard rock acts I consider essentially worthless, both heavy metal
and grunge. I, for instance, heard a hilarious tape on the radio
station that segued Axl Rose singing "Live or Let Die" with Ethel
Merman singing "No Business Like Show Business", and I tell you, the
vibratos of these two artists are acoustically identical. One of the
funniest things I've ever heard on radio, and an association that I
never would have made.
Falsetto singing is an old tradition in soul music, in both men's and
women's singing. Minnie Riperton was indeed the influence on Mariah
Carey's high vocal stylings. Eddie Kendricks sings "The Girl's Alright
With Me" and "Just My Imagination" for the Temptations entirely in
falsetto. "My Girl" too, come to think of it. Many classics were/are
done in the falsetto range.
And, Mariah Carey doesn't use it in every song; you simply are not
listening, obviously.
So please, if you don't like her, keep it to yourself.
Thanks.
|
352.21 | One... ROCK! Two... ROCKS! Three... ROCKS! Four... ROCKS! | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Associated w/drugs,gangs & infants | Thu Jan 21 1993 18:42 | 3 |
| And keep your filthy innuendos off of Jayne Mansfield, too.
"Lover Doll" Davis
|
352.22 | Hey, hey, hey!!! | EZ2GET::STEWART | Fight fire with marshmallows! | Thu Jan 21 1993 20:09 | 12 |
|
And while we're telling each other what to do, and imposing our own
narrow little perceptions of what a notes file is all about: lay off of
Yoko, please! And cut Linda McCartney some slack - she can't help it
if Daddy couldn't buy decent voice lessons!
I certainly hope we're all smiling! I am! See ??? *8')
|
352.23 | True or falsetto | OSLACT::HENRIKW | Good news is a bad omen | Fri Jan 22 1993 08:30 | 12 |
| re .20
There's a slight difference (at least 2 octaves) between
falsetto singing as a soul music tradition and the falsetto
tricks we were discussing here.
As for appreciation and understanding, I was reminded of Ravi Shankar's
comment to the audience after the first applause during his set at the
Concert for Bangladesh:
"If you appreciate our tuning that much, I hope you will enjoy
our music, too".
|
352.26 | my name is not yoko | OTOOA::ESKICIOGLU | My other piano is a Steinway | Fri Jan 22 1993 10:06 | 22 |
|
ref: .22
hi john, we met again. i thought you said that you didn't care for
yoko's singing ?
and i have always meant to ask, what is this marshmallow fire fighting ?
lale
ps: i know when i say this
i will be stepping on pins and needles
but i don't like people
slagging her for breaking up the beatles
i mean, if i was john and you were yoko,
i'd gladly give up musical genious
just to have you
for my very own personal venus
did you write these lyrics ? afterall your name is john.
|
352.27 | | LEDS::BURATI | STOP ALBINO WARTHOG ABUSE! | Fri Jan 22 1993 12:51 | 11 |
| As I said, I personally would rather that she leave the high range stuff
out, but I think I can only recall two songs that she does that in. So I
don't know what everyone's so excited about. And besides, isn't she only
like 20 years old. She'll mature a lot more musically and with the
talent she has now that's saying a lot.
re: screeching
Axl Rose screeches. You have your terminolgy mixed up.
--Ron
|
352.28 | Why we have that policy | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Here all life abounds | Fri Jan 22 1993 13:28 | 30 |
| > I don't see that we need to have one note where people say, "Oh her
> range is marvelous. I love the way she hits that high note," and a
> completely separate note where other people say, "Well, her range is
> technically impressive, but it makes my fillings hurt when she hits
> that high note."
That's because you haven't been in MUSIC long enough.
I was the moderator when that policy was instituted (by popular
demand). We wanted it because people who like "uncool-to-like"
artist found they couldn't hold a reasonable discussion. The topics
rapidly became filled with put-downs, ratholes, etc.
I mean, look at this topic and it's hardly a day old!
I want to emphasize that my impression was that motivation was NOT
to stop people from putting down artists, but rather to ALLOW people
who appreciate a particular artist to conduct a reasonable topic.
People who want to bash artists are perfectly able to do so, they
just have to do it in a separate note.
If you don't see the value in this, all I can think to do is ask
you to put yourself in the situation where you like a particular
artist, and want to have a conversation with other fans, but hordes
of people chime in with "Why I hate ___" notes, and ridicule you
for liking the artist, and such.
If you can do that, I'd like to think you would understand why
that policy is there.
|
352.29 | | SOLANA::BROWN_RO | the nightmare is ending | Fri Jan 22 1993 13:53 | 15 |
| > <<< Note 352.23 by OSLACT::HENRIKW "Good news is a bad omen" >>>
-< True or falsetto >-
>re .20
>There's a slight difference (at least 2 octaves) between
>falsetto singing as a soul music tradition and the falsetto
>tricks we were discussing here.
Falsetto singing for a soprano is going to be 2 octaves higher, and
Minnie Ripperton was also in that range. No trick. Whether or not
you like it is your own personal taste.
|
352.30 | Maybe I've been in here too long | RAGMOP::T_PARMENTER | Bronca total | Fri Jan 22 1993 13:57 | 3 |
| Not in MUSIC long enough? August 1988 (re)start date. And I didn't
like that policy then, either.
|
352.31 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Here all life abounds | Fri Jan 22 1993 14:29 | 3 |
| > And I didn't like that policy then, either.
Can/will you tell me why you don't like the policy Tom?
|
352.32 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Here all life abounds | Fri Jan 22 1993 15:41 | 4 |
| OK, Tom has created a "Why I hate Mariah" topic (354).
Let's move all the trashing to that topic and return this topic to
being the "Mariah Carey" topic for fans.
|
352.33 | | LEDS::BURATI | | Fri Jan 22 1993 17:37 | 1 |
| Mariah's a godess.
|
352.34 | | PINION::STONE | | Mon Jan 25 1993 10:53 | 6 |
| re - many back
the radio station to do the garge opening trick was 94.5, JR in the
morning....Wish I could have been there to see it!
Peg
|
352.35 | | LEDS::BURATI | | Mon Jan 25 1993 11:36 | 1 |
| Yeah, I'm sure it actually worked.
|
352.36 | | LAGUNA::BROWN_RO | the nightmare is ending | Tue Jan 26 1993 15:44 | 6 |
| Does anyone have a garage door opener that makes an audible noise,
no matter how high?
This sounds like an apochryphal story to me.
|
352.37 | M.C. is HUGE ! | SUBSYS::GODIN | | Tue Jun 22 1993 17:14 | 29 |
| I *hope* there isn't anyone out there that actually believes that
garage doors work that way. I once had an (almost) ultrasonic TV remote
that had "chimes" in the transmitter. Nowadays, they're either RF or
IR, & often modulated with "tone codes" so that one transmitter can
only talk to one door.
Anyway, I don't (yet) own any of MC's CDs, but she's on the list. I dod
get to listen to one of them (probably the newer one) while busy with
other things & people, & I recall that her visits to the ultra high
falsetto range got a bit tedious. However, I attribute this mostly to
the low grade sound system (a tape in a boom box) & other distractions.
Basically, she has such amazing technique that I don't think the
marketing/promotion people aren't equipped to cope. At her age & with
that voice, she's got time to do just about anything she wants, & it'll
sound great. Often people will "critique" a technically superior artist
by resorting to such drivel as "good range, but lacks 'feeling'". This
reminds me of the scene in Amadeus when the emperor commented on the
young Motzart's playing by saying it had "too many notes". Mariah Carey
is on the frontier of human vocal ability. If it sounds "wierd" to you,
it probably means you're clouding your objectivity with expectations
based on overexposure to more conventionally equipped performers. IMHO,
neither Yoko (random non-specific screeching) nor Axl (cooked out ever
since "Sweet Child of Mine") has enough skill, range or control left to
be considered a vocalist.
Paul
(Is Minnie Ripperton "late" ?)
|
352.38 | RIP Minnie | MSBCS::ASHFORTH | | Tue Jun 22 1993 17:25 | 5 |
| > (Is Minnie Ripperton "late" ?)
Sadly, yes, for some time now...
Bob
|
352.39 | I Can't Let Go ;-) | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | DOS Boot | Wed Jun 23 1993 10:33 | 29 |
| I was doing my grocery shopping and managed to catch a quick glance
at the top line of "People" magazine and noticed a picture of Mariah.
Then my world ended when I read the caption which was something like
"exclusive photos of Mariah Carey's wedding".
I'm bummed - I thought I was the only one for Mariah. ;-)
re: .37
She's a talentless, unartistic musical freak show who oversings. ;-)
But one thing I agree with you on.
> Often people will "critique" a technically superior artist
> by resorting to such drivel as "good range, but lacks 'feeling'".
Yep, it's been said about all my favorites without exception (Keith
Emerson, Rick Wakeman, Steve Morse, Joe Satriani, Eric Johnson, etc.)
There are some people that feel that, as an example, all speed is at
the cost of "feeling". As if speed is not one method (among many) to
generate a particular kind of feeling.
> This reminds me of the scene in Amadeus when the emperor commented on
> the young Motzart's playing by saying it had "too many notes".
Steve Morse has had the same thing said of him so many times that he
even titled a tune about it called "Tumeni Notes" (and boy, does that
tune have a lot of notes!).
|
352.40 | Emotions my favorite album so far | USABLE::GOOD | Michael Good | Wed Jun 23 1993 10:52 | 13 |
| I finally got Mariah Carey's CDs earlier this year. What an amazing
artist she is! Of the 3 CDs out so far, "Emotions" is my favorite.
The songwriting is great - sort of like Motown updated for the 90s -
and the singing is fabulous. A song like "Can't Let Go" is one of
those that seems to have been around forever and you can't believe it
was just written a couple years ago.
Her debut album is good, but neither the songwriting nor the
performances are up to the consistent quality level of the second
album. For instance, some of the high notes on that album do feel
gratuitous, while they always seem to be at the expressively right spot
in the songs on "Emotions". The "Unplugged" CD is OK, featuring some
interesting alternate performances of the tunes on the first 2 CDs.
|
352.41 | I like how she infuses gospel | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | DOS Boot | Wed Jun 23 1993 15:04 | 19 |
| That's interesting - I kinda like the first album for many of the
reasons you gave for liking the second.
I think the first album had more of a gospel flavor. I'm a big fan
of the gospel-in-pop-music trend of the last few years.
Examples:
o Man in the Mirror - Michael Jackson
o Coming Out of the Dark - Gloria Estefan
o Like a Prayer - Madonna
o Lots of Mariah Carey
Actually, anyone with a burgeoning appreciation for gospel might want
to check out an original broadway cast album that recently (and to
my great surprise and pleasure) came out on CD. It's a show called
"Purlie" (adapted from "Purlie Victorius") and some of the gospel-ish
singing on that is so powerful that it just grabs you like no other
kind of music.
|
352.42 | They're jealous of her talent. | SUBSYS::GODIN | | Wed Jun 23 1993 17:27 | 18 |
| I think Madonna's "Like A Prayer" was intentionally marketed as a
"shocking sacreligious" piece of production. I didn't really start
liking it til I heard it done by some guy with only an acoustic guitar
as accompaniment. Now I like both versions, as long as I don't have
flashbacks to her MTV video of it.
RE .39: Eric Johnson ... no "feeling" There's a laugh. That guy can
play *anything*. Steve Morse is another one that's perennially
underappreciated. Look what Adrian Belew had to do to get
recognition ... Ooooh Daddy !
I also like Yingvie Malmsteen. Same story. His technique is so far out
there that people can't relate.
I'm hoping to net all 3 Mariah Carey CD's on my next binge. (I'll be
looking for the stickers that say "promotional copy" ... ;-)
Paul
|