My beautiful dark twisted hope for 2011

snoop_dogFine, fresh, fierce?
The top 40 radio hits of 2010 were anything but.
When Katy Perry and the anachronism that is Snoop Dog (pictured) sang about California girls last year, a catchy beat couldnt make up for the tired lyrics. California girls

Excuse me while I bring up my lunch.

Lets face it; much of American pop music has always been bad. Funny, though, how the world loves to embrace it, unquestioningly, even in a region like southern Africa, with a rich history of music actually worth listening to.

Whats worse is that Western pop music continues to be one of the main conduits for sexism and misogynistic and stereotypical attitudes, an extra little gift to the world.

And yes, popular music has also always been sexist, from Tammy Wynette, who reminded women to stand by their man, to Jack Jones who made sure women knew their role when he sang: Hey! Little girl. Comb your hair, fix your makeup, soon he will open the door. Dont think because theres a ring on your finger you neednt try anymore.

Yet here we are at the beginning of 2011 and it only seems to get worse, dangerously so.

This year Eminem, Americas crazy white boy, made a comeback with a song that didnt make me love him better. No stranger to sexist, homophobic and downright dreadful lyrics, the rude rapper managed to rope Rihanna, pop cultures poster girl for gender-based violence, into singing about just that.

Rihannas haunting voice in Eminems chart-topping 2010 hit Love the way you lie, was a standard on our radio this year. The 20-something chanteuse who was herself violently beaten and bruised by ex-boyfriend and R&B singer Chris Brown in 2009, seemed to be advocating, or at least excusing, such violence by teaming up with the grand marshal of violent mainstream male chauvinism.

Just gonna stand there and watch me burn, but thats alright because I like the way it hurts, sang Rihanna from my car radio this year, so often and on so many stations I eventually switched it off.

To which Eminem ultimately replies: Im tired of the games, I just want her back, I know Im a liar, if she ever tries to leave again Im going to tie her to the bed and set the house on fire.

And then there was Kanye West, another charming American celebrity known for drunken award-show outbursts and equally sexist lyrics.

Every time I hear bout other niggas stroking you, might say I hit you, sings Kanye in the song Blame game from his 2010 album My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. You should be grateful a nigga like me ever noticed you.

Ah yes, such a creative flair with words, Kanye, a real golden tongue.

It would be easy enough to dismiss these songs as poor quality, mass-produced rubbish, which they most surely are. The trouble is, for some reason this seems to be what the masses crave and what makes it to the top of todays Billboard charts.

And if I listened to Eminems tedious new hit so many times I instead chose to tune into the blare of Johannesburg traffic, then there arent many who escaped his irritating bluster. Even when we find something worthwhile to listen to on our radios or iPods, we often cant escape the tacky, salacious and dangerously misogynistic music videos used to promote these songs.

In a world with so many choices, channels, websites, stations and artists, we somehow keep aiming for the lowest common denominator.

If there wasnt such a clear cause-effect relationship, it wouldnt really matter, but whats unfortunate is the idea that this music is taken seriously, and even worse, used to justify criminal behaviour by its listeners and fans.

A gender-based violence indicators study conducted last year in South Africa by Gender Links found that more than three quarters of men in South Africa admitted to having perpetrated violence against women at some point in their lifetime. Interestingly, fewer women (51%) said they had been victims of violence.

What this says is that men are not scared to admit to perpetrating violence against women. It is not taboo or embarrassing. It is widespread, normal and can be found almost everywhere in popular culture, most notably in the trashy music brought to us by the American people, more often associated with their attempts to export more useful products such as democracy and freedom.

In this context, Kanyes beautiful dark twisted fantasy becomes very dark and twisted indeed. For it is a nudge and a wink from an encouraging, rich and powerful celebrity. If Kanye and Eminem sing about hitting women, then whats the problem?

The problem is more than the terrible music; its the dangerous offshoot of these songs. For as long as fans have been tuning into pop music, theyve also been trying to emulate their favourite pop artists. So just as Katy Perrys caterwauling likely brought Daisy Dukes back into style this year, so too the women-hating lyrics of Eminem have ensured violence against women stays in fashion.

My hope for the year ahead beautiful, dark and twisted as it may be is that we can come to our senses and start demanding music worthy of our times, music from artists who take the word art seriously, music that advocates the positive rather than enables the negative.

Danny Glenwright is a Canadian journalist. This article is part of the Gender Links Opinion and Commentary Service. For the research quoted above, please go to www.genderlinks.org.za

Post published in: Music

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