Sunday, January 2, 2011

Is she 'Avin a laugh?

The new Avril Lavigne song has been "leaked" and as a teenager who grew up on the angsty vocals of the Canadian rocker's first album, I can't help but feel a little let down by her latest offering, 'What The Hell'.

Avril Lavigne debuted back in 2002 with her "smash-hit", 'Complicated'. At the time, the music industry was becoming slightly monotonous. With Britney releasing a cover of, 'I Love Rock N' Roll' and, thanks to likes of Eminem and Nelly, rap music was well and truly mainstream and started to feel as manufactured as, as some argued, pop was.

Although she was, and still very much is, considered a popstar, Avril offered an alternative to the norm. Snobs argued, "she plays her own instruments" and "writes her own songs", but they weren't the reasons why I liked her. Avril had an edge, and although I love my pop music in all it's forms, to me, Avril was different. Avril was special.

Christmas 2002 I received two albums in my stocking, Coldplay's depressing, 'A Rush Of Blood To The Head' and Lavigne's 'Let Go'.
To this day, other than the singles that were released off it, I couldn't name you one song from that Coldplay album. However, I could recite all the lyrics of each song from that Avril album.
'Let Go' was my first proper album. The first album where I listened to all the songs rather than just the singles. The first album I actually loved. The first album, without sounding utterly pretentious, actually made sense to me.

Avril's second album, was again another alternative pop masterpiece, darker than her first and probably not as good, it was a solid effort from a girl who was proud of being a little bit edgier than her pop rivals.

By 2007, Avril released her third album, the lead single from it was the pop anthem, 'Girlfriend'. Don't get me wrong, the track was good, but at the time it suddenly occurred to me that I, a seventeen-year old male, was no longer in Avril's target audience. That same year, I went to the Irish music festival, Oxegen, in which Avril happened to be playing. I went to see her, and was not let down. My faith was slightly restored as she played the songs I once loved her for.

2011 brought new hope for me. A new Avril album. A new chance for her to regain her position atop of my CD collection. I've just listened to the first single from her fourth album, 'Goodbye Lullaby'.


Above is the new single in question. The first lyric of that single, 'What The Hell' is, "You say that I'm messing with your head, all 'cause I was making out with your friend". Oh dear, Avril. Why'd you have to and make things so complicated?

As we reach the chorus, Avril screams, "All my life I've been good, but now, I'm thinking, what the hell?!"
As an Avril historian, I can't help but point out the clear contradictions this chorus poses on her previous body of work. Avril has never been "good", she's always been a bold, bad-ass, rebel for her legions of followers.
If however, these lyrics actually mean, "All my life I've been (a) good (musician), but now, I'm thinking what the hell (I may as well release this radio-friendly pop-rock garbage to cash in now that Pink is up the duff and will probably take a few years off)" I agree with them completely.

If I'm going to be harsh the song is, at best, a filler-track from a Miley Cyrus album.
If I'm going to be a bit nicer, it's clear that Avril and I have gone in different directions.

I realise for me to enjoy Avril's new stuff I have stop looking at her as the legend I once viewed her as, and take her as a popstar, who isn't as good as Pink, but probably a little better than Pixie Lott.

If 'Girlfriend' was our separation, 'What The Hell' is well and truly our divorce.

Thank you Avril, it was fun while it lasted but now I must, wait for it, 'Let Go'.


5/10

6 comments:

  1. I agree 'let go' was such a good album, I especially liked 'my world'
    I also liked the last album with 'innocence' and 'runaway'. Didnt like all the peppy 'i can do better' type songs. A bit bratty. I really am hoping the new album is not as bad as you are predecting.
    Here's hoping. I enjoyed your blog, will be following from now on. :-)

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  2. Well I agree with u..I grew up rebelling with her song n sang my heart out to them.. . But now, she sounds like a grown up who refuses to grow up n sings about the same thing that she was singing 8 years ago..

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  4. I used like her songs, but now I do not like the proposal in this new album, if there is any... Hey, I like your criticism, I really like!
    Karen

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  5. I never really respected Avril as an artist, so I'm glad she opened your eyes, Adam.:)
    Very weak lyrics and music. Not to mention my sister used to blast her first DVD around the house and burst my eardrums. I don't know about the progress up to when you saw her live, but, ohmy, did she ever heard of tone?
    So, what, anyone can write their lyrics and play an instrument. The reason we love Westlife, for instance, is their nail what they propose themselves do.
    Let's hope your next post actually introduces us to a really good pop tune :)
    xx

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  6. Hi Adam! It's Emily here! Another great post, well done!
    Although I didn't listen do her new single until now, Avril's always told me what it means to be an outsider teenage girl who WANTS to have different taste in music, lifestyle, boys and such things... But as she became famous and popstarish and got married and then divorced, all at a really young age, the message I've been getting from her is that yes, outsiders can get in and, once they do, they're likely to follow those same standards they once so despised... Since her 3rd album, most songs sounded more like coming from a cheerleader with a fondness for rebellion, rather than a girl who had a true personality - and let's face it, should have evolved in another and way better direction. Considering how great Let Go and Under my Skin were, and how she wrote her own songs and played her guitar and made her own thing, it's a shame how she let her music cave to the "industry" and lose the quality we so admired her for.

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