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Soundwaves: Kim English, Cyndi Lauper, Jody Watley, Goldfrapp: Metro Weekly magazine: New music / CD reviews: Washington DC guide to lesbian / gay dance music, bars, dance clubs and party.
Finding the Bridge - Darlene Nipper ponders the end of her appointment as the mayor's liaison the GLBT community, her call to God, and the state of gay D.C.
GAUGE
Richmond in the Pink - 'The Pink Party' event to focus support on gay issues in Viginia
Sister Schism - Trans debate continues at Michigan Womyn's Music Festival
Historic Record - Commentary: OutRight: Excerpts from the Archives of Frank Kameny
BAD
ENGLISH... To this day it still gets club play. Kim English's
eight-year-old bombastic hit ''Unspeakable Joy'' still appeals to
gays, as do many of her follow-up club hits, including ''Higher
Things,'' ''Everyday'' and ''It Makes a Difference.'' Oh sure, anyone
who pays half a mind knows she's nearly always singing about God. And
yes, there is serious irony in such churchy music getting shouted
sing-alongs and dancing ovations at very secular, not to mention gay,
spaces where nearly anything goes at all hours of the night, from
Saturday on into Sunday. It makes churchgoing a difficult
proposition, to say the least. But it's a paradox we've grown used
to, ever since the days of Deity-devoted disco divas.
Still,
English obviously hasn't gotten used to it, and she hasn't learned to
get out or put up with it either -- unlike, say, Donna Summer
and Gloria Gaynor, both of whom these days generally stay away
from dance or stay quiet about the gays. Not English. In promoting
her latest collection of dance remixes, My Destiny, English
cited the Bible in casting aspersion on our way of being. In an
interview with New York's gay Next magazine, English says of
homosexuality: ''I don't believe it's a lifestyle God agrees with.
''From
my understanding of what I've been taught,'' she continues -- after
attempting to soften her unspeakable blow by saying, you know, she
doesn't know for sure and that anyway we're all sinners --
homosexuality ''is not God['s design]; it's a personal choice.''
Well. That presents gay English fans with a whole other choice, now
doesn't it? On her latest chart-topping dance single, ''C'est La
Vie,'' English sings, ''When you're hot, you're hot. When you're not,
you're not.'' Am I the only one who doesn't feel so hot for English
anymore?....
Cyndi Lauper
CYNDI'S
COLORS, EVER-TRUE... Cyndi Lauper's true colors on gay rights,
on the other hand, have always been beautiful like a rainbow, to
quote a phrase. The long-standing performer at gay and AIDS benefits
has also made a big deal of publicly supporting her lesbian sister.
Next year she'll co-headline a tour with Erasure that will
include other gay and gay-friendly artists. The tour, dubbed the
''True Colors'' tour, will make stops around the country during June
2007, otherwise known as Gay Pride Month.
By
the time of the tour Lauper may be ready to release her next album,
or at least preview tracks from it, since she plans to begin
recording in November. She's aiming to go back to her dance-pop roots
for this one, according to a press release. Meanwhile, she's launched
a second leg of touring in support of last year's remarkable album of
acoustic reinterpretations of her biggest hits, The Body Acoustic.
Baltimore is the closest she'll get to us this time around, appearing
Oct. 17 at Ramshead Live....
WATLEY'S
MAKEOVER... Jody Watley is another dance-pop diva who has
repeatedly stood up for gay rights. Another regular at Gay Prides,
Watley also performed at this year's Gay Games, and the Los Angeles
resident trekked up to San Francisco early last year of her own
accord to serenade the thousands of city-sanctioned gay newlyweds.
Like Lauper before her, Watley has reinterpreted some of her classics
for a new album, Makeover, which actually features more covers
of other people's songs than it does her own. Watley sticks to the
dance/electronica genre, though these days her sound is more
soul-house or chill-out, more mid-tempo and leisurely. Makeover
isn't nearly as accomplished as Lauper's set, in part because
Watley sounds bored too often, uninspired by her own work -- or more
precisely, the work of others. She zaps the life completely out of
Diana Ross's ''Love Hangover'' and Madonna's
''Borderline,'' refashioning both as bland, emotionless smooth jazz
ballads.
And
yet, when Watley reinterprets her own work, or offers new songs of
her own, she wakes up and shines. The new ''A Bed of Roses,''
featuring 4Hero, is a plush and uplifting neo-soul jam to make
Jill Scott jealous. The remodeled version of her 1989 hit
''Friends'' -- originally with Eric B. and Rakim -- respelled
''Friendz,'' bangs with an updated hard staccato beat and a sassy rap
from Voshaun Gotti. Just don't go ''Looking for A New Love.''
The remix EP of that song released last summer and featuring her
re-recorded vocals may have reportedly inspired this Makeover
collection. But either she wanted to make consumers buy both sets, or
she had trouble deciding on which ''Love'' remix to include: Chus
& Ceballos' percussive and emotional popper, Chris Joss's
chunky funky Remix 1 or Heinrich Z's robotic electro-soul.
There's no wrong answer. Yeah, yeah, yeah....
GLITTERING
GOLDFRAPP... Alison Goldfrapp and Will Gregory, known
together as Goldfrapp, have remixed their own 2003 hit
''Strict Machine.'' It will appear as part of a full-length album of
remixes in October. Goldfrapp's music is mainstream in its home
country of the U.K. and increasingly prominent in U.S. advertising.
And now, on We Are Glitter, Goldfrapp's music provides the
duo's European electro-pop contemporaries, including Benny Benassi
and Alan Braxe & Fred Falke,with luscious
material to remix. Except for ''Strict Machine,'' all of the songs
are drawn from Supernature, the duo's third album, released
earlier this year and including the dance hits ''Number 1'' and ''Ooh
La La''....