Even Beavis and Butt-Head like Jill Sobule
Transcription
Even Beavis and Butt-Head like Jill Sobule
« Alt-‐rock favorites complete Allentown Fair lineup | Back to Main Page | Local Soundtrack: New disc by 'Eighteenth Hour' melodic and propulsive » May 14, 2010 Even Beavis and Bu,-‐Head like Jill Sobule Total People in Discussion: 2 Categories: Music, Music News ABOUT THIS BLOG From Musikfest to Riverfusion ... Croc Rock to Godfrey Daniels ... Mayfair to the Allentown Fair — welcome to the Lehigh Valley Music Blog! Check in regularly for Hps on worthwhile nocturnal acHviHes and one-‐of-‐a-‐kind concert and record reviews from our resident pop music aficionados. Posted by John J. Moser at 09:21:05 AM on May 14, 2010 My first awareness of Jill Sobule – who tonight plays at Listen Live! Music in Zionsville -‐-‐ came in 1995, when the video of her song “I Kissed a Girl” appeared on an episode of “Beavis + BuQ-‐Head,” and the two cartoon slackers missed the tune’s whole meaning in their crude commentary. Or maybe they got it right – singer Katy Perry more than dozen years later had a huge hit with the same Xtle and preQy much Beavis + BuQ-‐Head’s senXments. My next awareness of Sobule came soon aZer that, when her song “Supermodel” appeared in the hit movie “Clueless.” My daughter, then a ‘tween, was preQy much the perfect target audience for that film and – despite her age – very much understood the snarky lyrics: “I wish I was like Tori Spelling/With a car like hers and a dad like hers.” By that Xme, unbeknownst to me, Sobule already had her albums produced by music luminaries such as Todd Rundgren and Joe Jackson (for whom she opened during 1991). But beyond those mid-‐‘90s brushes with mass appeal, Sobule never really caught on with the masses. She was dropped from two major labels, but remained at the edges of popularity and criXcal acclaim. I can’t help but think that’s because the masses so thoughtlessly consume pablum like Perry’s song that they’ll never understand true source arXstry like Sobule’s. Sobule entered my consciousness again in 2005, when she opened for Cyndi Lauper’s “ The Body AcousXc” tour, and was funny, smart, engaging and entertaining – both with pop sensibiliXes and thoughdulness the masses will never understand. My wife even bought me couple of her CDs. As I was wriXng about Sobule’s appearance tonight, I ran across an interview in which she very openly – and delighdully crudely -‐-‐ criXcized Perry for stealing her idea for “I Kissed a Girl.” Her candor reminded me of the things I like about Jill Sobule. http://blogs.mcall.com/lehighvalleymusic/2010/05/even-beavis-... Beavis and BuQ-‐Head would have liked it, too. JILL SOBULE, 8 p.m. today, with Jay Lapp, Listen Live! Music, Upper Milford Township Municipal Center (formerly King’s Highway School), 5671 Chestnut St., Zionsville. Tickets $22, door. 610-‐966-‐6419, www.listenlivemusic.org. ABOUT THE WRITERS GARY BLOCKUS He bought his first album at age 14: Bread's "Baby I'm A Want You." The next day, he bought Black Sabbath's "Paranoid" and Deep Purple's "Machine Head." He's covered everything in the metal/hard rock genre, from Motley Crue to Papa Roach to Ted Nugent and Aerosmith to the soYer side like Bon Jovi. JODI DUCKETT As The Morning Call's assistant features editor responsible for entertainment, she spends a lot of Hme surveying the music landscape and sizing up the Valley's fesHvals and club scene. She's no expert, but enjoys it all — especially arHsts who resonated in her younger years, such as Crosby, SHlls, Nash, Young, Tracy Chapman, Santana and Joni Mitchell. KEITH GROLLER Our local sports editor strays from his post on Groller's Corner for another of his passions. He's a^racted to the sights (Shania, Faith, Carrie, MarHna) and sounds (Paisley, Strait, Adkins, Keith) of today's country music scene and likes to add a li^le twang to the conversaHon. ARLENE MARTINEZ Her music was influenced by her mom, who hasn't turned the radio off since Arlene came home from the hospital. She's a top-‐40 kinda girl with a special place in her heart for hip-‐hop, R&B, rancheros and musical soundtracks. Favorites include the Bee Gees, Jill Sco^, Neil Diamond, Q-‐Tip, Juan Gabriel, T.I., Britney Spears and all of "Les Miserables." She is used to people making fun of her taste. JOHN L. MICEK caught the rock bug young. The TMC Harrisburg Correspondent bought his first record, U2's "Under a Blood Red Sky," at age 13 and hasn't looked back. Besides listening to arHsts ranging from The Ramones 2/20/11 7:50 PM http://blogs.mcall.com/lehighvalleymusic/2010/05/even-beavis-... 2/20/11 7:50 PM