Madonna vs. Janet concert
LA Times article on how Madonna's concert was so much better than Ms.
Janet's... pales in comparison!
My favorite quote from the article:
"Madonna knows how to dig beneath the surface; Jackson lives on it."
http://www.calendarlive.com/top/1,1419,L-LATimes-Music-X!ArticleDetail-44540,00.html
POP MUSIC REVIEW
Jackson's 'All for You' Concert Misses the Beat
The singer's tightly scripted and precisely executed but seemingly
adolescent show at Arrowhead Pond pales in comparison with Madonna's recent
tour.
By ROBERT HILBURN, Times Pop Music Critic
Timing is (almost) everything in pop, and Janet Jackson's timing feels
way off in her new tour—on several levels.
Though you'd never know it from the cheering of the audience in
the packed Arrowhead Pond in Anaheim on Saturday, Jackson's show felt
dated and irrelevant.
Michael Jackson's younger sister had timing on her side in the
'80s, a decade when audiences lowered their standards dramatically by
prizing flashy videos, stage spectacle and other grand gestures over
songwriting craft, vocal skills and intimate reflection.
In light of the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, those traditional
values suddenly seem enticing again. That doesn't mean every performer
has to challenge us intellectually, but it would be nice if they could
find new ways to touch us emotionally.
Jackson's limitations were magnified by another piece of bad
timing: Her tour arrives on the heels of the far more satisfying and
forward-thinking Madonna tour.
Madonna, of course, benefited as much as Jackson when it came to
videos and other image-building devices in the '80s and '90s. But the
Material Mom has matured significantly as a singer and songwriter in ways
that Jackson hasn't.
Though her writing remains uneven, Madonna filled her shows in
L.A. last month with enough absorbing elements to make you feel you were
in the presence of a genuine artist, and someone who could surprise you
at any moment.
There were times during Jackson's two-hour set when you felt you
could leave for a half-hour without missing anything. Indeed, you may
have wished you were in the lobby during a wearisome moment when Jackson
called a volunteer on stage for what was meant to be a steamy
interlude.
She tied the man to a rack so he couldn't move, then tormented him
with a lap dance. It was an elaborate version of the same gimmick she
has used for three tours now, and it's time to move on.
In fact, Jackson needs to move on in many ways. Where Madonna
focused almost exclusively on material from her last two albums, Jackson
clung to the past, doing all or parts of most of her hits, including such
proven items as "Nasty," "What Have You Done for Me Lately" and "Got
'Til It's Gone."
Like Madonna's, Jackson's "All for You" concert is tightly
scripted and executed with the precision of a Broadway show—complete with
flashy sets, video footage (including a probably inadvertent glimpse of the
World Trade Center in one), eight dancers and even more costume
changes.
Jackson is personable, but there's an unsettling, almost
adolescent quality about the show. At 35, Jackson is only eight years younger
than Madonna, but her presentation feels more akin to Britney Spears'.
Madonna knows how to dig beneath the surface; Jackson lives on it.
As on her records, Jackson's musical foundation on the upbeat
numbers was so catchy and hard-edged that they all seem to have been
dance-floor tested in a fitness center. And they were delivered sharply by a
band that has the firmness and muscle of Jackson's always on-display
abs.
Record producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis have helped keep her up
with the times sonically with settings that help downplay her vocal and
songwriting weaknesses. And her themes in various albums have provided
a dramatic sense of personal statement: the struggle for career
independence in 1986's "Control," the sexual awakening in 1993's "janet.," the
self-affirmation of 1997's "The Velvet Rope."
But there is little sense of overriding drama in the new "All for
You" album, and it leaves Jackson vulnerable as an artist.
One hopeful sign Saturday came during the encore, when she stepped
away from the razzle-dazzle for some intimacy with a pair of songs from
the new album, including "Someone to Call My Lover."
It's no deeper than most of her songs, but it was winning to hear
her in the raw, so to speak. Without racing around, she could just
sing—not rely on the apparent vocal enhancements that help carry her
through strenuous numbers.
In that moment, you had the sense that Jackson, whose career has
been marked by determination and hard work, is better than what she is
giving us in this show. The burden for her at this turning point in her
career is to prove it.
Janet Jackson plays Tuesday and Wednesday at Staples Center, 1111
S. Figueroa St., L.A., 8 p.m. $37.75 to $87.75. (213) 624-3100.
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※ Origin: 交大機械工廠 ◆ From: racon.iii.org.tw
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