And one or two doves really would suffice. The album’s most explicit breakup song, portraying a dude who siphons his own self-worth from celebrity adjacency exactly as it’s becoming agony for our protagonist. Chromatica reverses this effect. So much nu-house is producer-driven, its vocalists reduced to decorations if even credited; there is no risk of this with Gaga. But when I hear 34-year-old Gaga and 73-year-old Sir Elton John join on this very, very, very, very sincere song about sad childhoods being rescued by music, with its unhinged house music–meets–church choir cadences and its strange conceit in which sine waves are also like “The Sign” in the Ace of Base song—well, I can’t actually resist that. It takes a minute of cooler Euro-disco buildup to get there. Had Gaga decided to define her future path by the glint of her Oscar, that would be one answer. What happened next everybody knows. If bad, was that Gaga signing on to make fun of her own previous pop career? Lady Gaga has canceled Earth. It does a lot less for the album as such. Chromatica’s two strongest tracks are near-total opposites. She’s at her best, though, when taking musical risks, like on the New Wave-y “911,” which splits the difference between the Buggles and Kraftwerk, filtered through Gaga’s kaleidoscope, and on her duet with Elton John, “Sine From Above,” which has enough drama and funky synths to make it prog-pop. Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta sprang into the world as Lady Gaga from a self-fashioned, Fabergé-meets-Aliens, slimy-glam egg in the late 2000s, brandishing a glowstick battle ax and, before long, dancing in a dress made out of meat. First, an extra butt point for the way it segues out of the ominous, Spanish-accented strains of “Chromatica II” into an utterly unromantic motorik beat. By joining Slate Plus you support our work and get exclusive content. Chromatica loses the guitars but certainly handles heavy subject matter: PTSD triggers, antipsychotic meds, sexual assault. This more memoiristic track flashes back to Stefani Germanotta pre-Fame in New York: “I walk the downtown, hear my sound/ No one knows me yet, not right now.” Gaga’s said that the gender specificity, which she usually eschews, is a response to her memory of sexual assault by a record producer. It’s objectively not much of a song. Without Ariana Grande, I’m not sure this song would count as good. If anyone would write that, it’d be Gaga. That was the idea, back in 2013. It may not stick in your head. The emergency in “911” refers to olanzapine, a fast-acting antipsychotic that Gaga says saved her life. Here it feels like a commercial. Her goal may still be to just dance, but she seems more three-dimensional this time, more human than the “Fame Monster” title she gave herself all those years ago. Weighed down by lesser songs like "Alice", "Enigma", and the blissfully short BLACKPINK collaboration "Sour Candy", Chromatica isn't quite a full-bore masterwork. With incomparable flair, the pop diva returns to her dance-pop days with a fabulously fun and deeply personal album that is at turns bizarre, theatrical, and ambitious. Two years after the TV series Pose pushed the world of late-Eighties/early-Nineties ballroom culture back into the mainstream, the record finds Lady Gaga reveling in the worlds of club music and voguing. The counterpoint never quite resolves with the melody, and the most painful lines (“Wish I laughed and kept the good friendships”) are tossed off, almost missable. It’s why her albums hold up surprisingly well. A Whole Army of Skeletons Lined Up, Ready to Go, an epic conceptual collaboration with Beyoncé, began to fade in favor of more downbeat hip-hop and R&B, some bedeviling, category-defying mix of the two, The Rural Poverty That Created Dolly Parton. The art is often messy, the specific mess of art written from trauma. On planet Chromatica, “Enigma” is otherworldly: the atmospheres light up violet, dragon’s eyes and phantoms abounding. Lead single “Stupid Love” salvages the juddering sequencer of “Do What U Want,” kicks up the speed, and weaves Gaga’s past lead singles around it like Maypole streamers: the oncoming-juggernaut heft of “Bad Romance,” the melodic contour of “Born This Way,” the conceit of “Applause.”. She pivoted back to her theater-kid roots via duets with Tony Bennett, and then to 2016’s Joanne, a country-dance-rock-singer-songwriter hybrid that few listeners seemed to be clamoring for, with the possible exception of me. A subtle, clever thing about “Why Did You Do That?” was that while it referenced Gaga’s dance-pop reign, it actually skirted her own signature over-the-top moves. When she declares “I’m still something if I don’t got a man,” on the single-ladies anthem “Free Woman,” it’s bold. Themes recur: fragmented identity, soldiers to emptiness, drinking tears, dying a little when being touched. © Copyright 2020 Rolling Stone, LLC, a subsidiary of Penske Business Media, LLC. The two singers’ voices blend so beautifully, as they sing about acoustical physics (punning sine waves with “sign”), that it could prompt a spike in sales of oscilloscopes. Why’d she do that to me? Gaga doesn’t sound that invested in what she’s singing, but Blackpink’s Rosé and friends are giving it their all. An ode to a literal sine wave, dropping decibels from the heavens? You’ve run out of free articles. But when the commercial dominance of the dance-floor divas began to fade in favor of more downbeat hip-hop and R&B, Gaga’s 2013 Artpop album was met with blank stares outside of the ranks of her ever-loyal Little Monsters, and she began restlessly seeking reinvention. So it seems a good gauge for how well Gaga and crew manage the balance between revival and relevance. Second, I can’t help being affected by knowing that this is a song about getting prescribed an antipsychotic after a breakdown—“pop a 911” is a reference to emergency medication. Elton John with two-thirds of Swedish House Mafia? Did you know Gaga is the godmother to both of Elton’s kids? But Gaga’s lyrics are plainspoken, mostly free of religious metaphors and pretense; of the two high-concept songs on Chromatica, one is deliberately silly (“Babylon”) and the other (“Alice”) immediately yanks the metaphor back into reality: The first words are “my name isn’t Alice” and the song is inhabited not with white rabbits but the more terrifying creatures inside one’s mind. Correction, May 29, 2020: This piece originally misspelled Ace of Base. It’s the wistfulness, and the little bit of musical theater in it, that make it more than a rote empowerment anthem. Chopping everything up for a drum-and-bass tangent at the end? (Pitchfork earns a commission from purchases made through affiliate links on our site.). “Rain on Me,” a duet with Ariana Grande about surviving a rough patch, echoes Nineties R&B with a stronger beat, “Sour Candy” mixes house with hip-hop yelps and K-pop bubblegum, thanks to an assist from the girl group Blackpink, and “Replay” bridges disco and deep house with time-warping beats as Gaga sings “The scars on my mind are on replay.”. And, crucially, it nails the desire of meeting someone in all its urgency. Lana Del Rey Returns With Tender New Song 'Let Me Love You Like a Woman', NBC’s Trump Town Hall Was Pointless and Shameful, ‘$400 Million Is a Peanut’: Trump Admits to, Downplays Massive Debt During Town Hall, Preview ‘Austin City Limits’ Special Celebrating Stevie Ray Vaughan, This Supercut Shows Just How Bizarre a Single Trump Fox Interview Can Be, Watch the Osbournes Go Ghost Hunting in ‘Night of Terror’ Trailer, Bruce Springsteen Confronts His Ghosts on the Rousing ‘Letter to You’, Metallica Will Unplug for Charity Livestream. The string interludes, composed with Morgan Kibby (M83, White Sea), separate the albums into three acts, each with its own filler. Conceived as a missive from a realm that coexists with our own—sometimes a zone of pure love and kindness, sometimes (as in the video for “Stupid Love”) a Mad Max war zone—Chromatica is nothing if not an album with a deep appreciation for the ass inside the pants and the gyrations that it can make. But in this plague season, the nostalgic comfort and anguished undercurrents of its energies—channeled by primary collaborator BloodPop (who also shepherded Joanne) as well as Matthew Burns, Max Martin, Benjamin Rice, and Skrillex—might make it all the more appealing for dancing around your apartment in your underwear, alone or in virtual meeting places like Club Quarantine. And when she serenely tells herself “I’m not perfect yet, but I’ll keep trying” on “1000 Doves,” it’s like a breakthrough. Nope, “I’m not having fun tonight.” Naturally, it’s constructed of equal parts ABBA and Robyn. Slate relies on advertising to support our journalism. One point for the lines, “Who’s that girl, Malibu Gaga?/ Looks so sad, what is this saga?” Otherwise the album’s second-least-redemptive moment. The pun of “babble on” and “Babylon,” as used by a million hack poets and songwriters before her. Slate is published by The Slate Group, a Graham Holdings Company. You can cancel anytime. With incomparable flair, the pop diva returns to her dance-pop days with a fabulously fun and deeply personal album that is at turns bizarre, theatrical, and ambitious. All rights reserved. But it sets the mood. There is what I guess might be a Prince tribute in the line “We can party like it’s B.C.,” which I might not have heard the same way had there not been a “doves” song before it. And you'll never see this message again. It slots right into Gaga canon: Enigma is the name of her recent Vegas residency, and the snippets of sax that crest above the choruses recall the late E Street Band member Clarence Clemons on Born This Way. https://slate.com/culture/2020/05/lady-gaga-chromatica-review-butt-song.html It’s as if all the drama around “Born This Way” never happened. The most uninspired Madge rip-off moment of the whole record, a hard-voiced recitative that sounds exactly like the famous “Vogue” rap. Released just a day before Chromatica, “Sour Candy” will be huge and I’m into that. “Sour Candy,” the break-the-internet collaboration with K-pop superstars BLACKPINK, is sassy enough, but on a Lady Gaga album, and particularly this album, it feels out of place.
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