SPECTRUM TALENT AGENCY
  • HOME
  • TALENT
    • TALENT
    • DRAG QUEENS
    • HOSTS & COMEDIANS
  • News
  • Contact

CLIENT NEWS

Review: Lady Gaga takes a ride on her disco stick back to the fantastic planet ‘Chromatica’

5/29/2020

 
Picture
Lady Gaga has officially left her Joanne phase — and her Ally Maine phase, for that matter. While the shapeshifting multi-hyphenate for the most part abandoned her Monster-Balling, meat-dressing persona while focusing on her recent musical projects (the Tony Bennett jazz collaboration Cheek to Cheek, the stripped singer-songwriter vibe of Joanne and A Star Is Born), her absolute banger of a sixth studio album, Chromatica, marks her triumphant and trippy return to disco-stick-wielding, poker-faced, bad-romancing electropop.
​
But Chromatica isn’t exactly a flashback to Gaga’s The Fame era — it goes deeper and flashes farther back than that. In the lead-up to Chromatica’s release, Gaga posted a “Welcome to Chromatica” playlist on Spotify, a seven-hour virtual rave with remixes of her new floor-fillers, “Stupid Love” and “Rain on Me,” sliding right in between inspo cuts by house music and techno icons like Frankie Knuckles, Moby, Tiësto, Basement Jaxx, Bob Sinclair, Todd Terry, Roger Sanchez, Cassius, Axwell, and Tchami (the latter two have production credits on her album). And while Chromatica leans more pop than those tracks, it’s still a glorious exercise in future-nostalgia; in particular, the ebullient opening opus “Alice” and a slinky collab with K-pop girl group Blackpink, “Sour Candy,” wouldn’t sound out of place on a playlist next to ‘90s club queens like Crystal Waters, Deee-Lite, or CeCe Peniston.

The lyrics to Chromatica’s confessions on a dance floor, however, still tap into the raw, keening pain of Gaga’s more recent heart-on-fringed-sleeve ballads like “Million Reasons” and the Oscar-winning “Shallow.” The aforementioned edge-of-glory empowerment anthem with Ariana Grande, “Rain on Me,” was inspired by their friendship forged from shared trauma; another remix-ready track, “Sine From Above,” pairs its glitchy bonkers beats with the unexpectedly gut-punching line “When I was young, I felt immortal,” stoically delivered by her 73-year-old duet partner and another dear friend, Sir Elton John. Elsewhere, Gaga fembotically raps about self-sabotage and medication dependence on “911,” while “Free Woman” reflects on her survival of a sexual assault by an unnamed music producer.

Reposted from: Yahoo News: Click here

For Booking information for Crystal Waters and CeCe Peniston
Spectrum Talent Agency, Inc
PH: 212-268-0404
marc@spectrumtalentagency.com
www.spectrumtalentagency.com

     

    Formed in 2003, we are a finely honed group of entertainment executives representing a roster of today's most in-demand talent and award winning entertainers.

    Contact: Spectrum Talent Agency, Inc
    PH 212-268-0404
    ​www.spectrumtalentagency.com

    Archives

    June 2020
    May 2020

    Categories

    All
    Alfa
    All 4 One
    Aquaria
    Bruce Vilanch
    Carson Kressley
    CeCe Peniston
    Crystal Waters
    Deborah Cox
    Diana King
    Inaya Day
    Jai Rodriquez
    Jake Zyrus
    Lady Bunny
    Lance Bass
    Laura Bell Bundy
    Michelle Visage
    Pia Zadora
    TT The Artist

    RSS Feed

Spectrum Talent Agency, Inc  © 2020 All Rights Reserved
Site designed by BlackByrd Designs
  • HOME
  • TALENT
    • TALENT
    • DRAG QUEENS
    • HOSTS & COMEDIANS
  • News
  • Contact