The creation of Lady Gaga: 30% Madonna

Publié le par madonnafansworld

La création de Lady Gaga: 30% de Madonna.


The creation of Lady Gaga
By Carla Meyer
Published: Monday, Mar. 21, 2011 - 12:00 am | Page 1D
Last Modified: Monday, Mar. 21, 2011 - 12:22 am

Lady Gaga wasn't born this way.
The pop superstar, performing Wednesday night in Sacramento, owes a clear debt to other artists, especially Madonna. To hear a few bars of "Born This Way" is to want to hum "Express Yourself."
Wearing her influences on her meat sleeve, Gaga last month told Jay Leno, "There is really no one that is a more adoring and loving Madonna fan than me." Gaga looked relieved while reporting to Leno that Madonna's camp gave its blessing to "Born This Way."
Madonna showed plenty of influences herself, arriving in the 1980s as a amalgam of Debbie Harry, Marilyn Monroe, the downtown New York club scene and Motown's synchronized dance moves.
Gaga, by extension, taps those same influences as well as 1970s glam and punk rockers (see accompanying chart) whose aesthetics shaped her combination of high theatricality and appearing as if she always has dirt under her fingernails.
Yet Gaga has distinguished herself as a pop icon, through a musical background more extensive than those of most pop divas, her boundary-pushing public image and her ardent support of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender fans – and of anyone else who sometimes feels left out or bullied.
"She represents the outsider perspective," said Carla DeSantis Black, an advocate for women in rock music who for 10 years published a magazine called Rockrgrl.
Though much of Gaga's music is mainstream, her videos are ambitious, wild, subversive.
"Her whole image is a blending of punk rock and performance art with music that is 100 percent pop," Black said.
Gaga's pop confections share radio airtime with songs by Britney Spears and Katy Perry. But the visuals differ sharply. Though barely clothed in her videos, Gaga also sports pointy, unsexy shoulder prosthetics.
"Her come-hither look is scary," Black said with a laugh.
The pop star plays "Mother Monster" to "little monster" followers who, over two days last week, raised $250,000 toward Japanese earthquake/ tsunami relief. The fans heeded Gaga's Twitter call to buy $5 bracelets she designed for the cause.
Gaga's primary cause is gay rights. She frequently voiced her opposition to "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" and continues her call to legalize same-sex marriage. She wrote her No. 1 hit "Born This Way" as a gay anthem.
"Other songs have become gay anthems, but this might be the first time" a big star has written a song for that purpose, said Michael Jensen, editor of AfterElton.com, a website covering pop culture for gay and bisexual men. Gaga reached out to his site well before anyone knew who she was, Jensen said.
"It was like she made the gay community and gay rights her mission."
Gaga's constant, outspoken support of gay rights is unusual at her level of stardom, Jensen said, and her ability to be so political without alienating her broader fan base is reflective of changing attitudes.
Straight people under 30 "don't view the gay community as being separate from themselves anymore," Jensen said. "They have gay friends, and they don't look at Lady Gaga as this gay fringe figure."
Nor do Gaga's young fans likely sit around comparing early Gaga with early Madonna.
"Her audience is probably not big Madonna fans," Black said. "That was two generations ago."

•ALL GAGA
Madonna, punk, sci-fi - the pop star plucks from myriad influences to push boundaries at every level.

15% DAVID BOWIE
Gaga's name was lifted from Queen's "Radio Gaga," but her otherworldly bent derives from Ziggy Stardust.

10% ELTON JOHN
Like John, Gaga plays piano and combines outlandish get-ups with conventional pop songs.

30% MADONNA
The '80s envelope-pusher influenced her 21st century counterpart's fashion, music and sexual bravado. We could go on ...

10% IGGY POP
They share a compulsion to go shirtless.

10% THE FILM 'ALIEN'
Where Bowie was freakishly elegant, Gaga is sci-fi gross-out. See: Grammy egg, "Born This Way" video.

25% ALL GAGA (ORIGINAL)
She writes her own songs, considers fans at every juncture and constantly promotes gay rights.

•LADY GAGA
When: 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Scissor Sisters opens.
Where: Power Balance Pavilion (formerly Arco Arena), One Sports Parkway, Sacramento
Cost: $52-$177.50 (ticket availability is very limited)
Information: www.ticketmaster.com or (800) 745-3000

Source: Sacramento Bee.

The creation of Lady Gaga: 30% Madonna
Lady Gaga made a dramatic entrance coming out of an egg during the 53rd Annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles in February.
Photo: Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times.

Publié dans Music

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