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It's Not Me, It's You

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语种:英语

唱片公司:Regal Recordings

发行时间:2009-02-04

类别:录音室专辑

It's Not Me, It's You专辑介绍
风格偶像、搞怪性感、时尚流行、不羁前卫、特例独行 … 音乐就是有态度!
四首排行单曲、五项大奖提名、六白金认证、全球250万 张销售,全英「排行呛辣公主」2009全新呛辣猛碟。
全美音乐鬼才Greg Kurstin再度合作,解剖荒诞两性政治与社会现实、激荡全新节奏风格!
收录空降全英单曲榜冠军、从自身经验出发的首支讽世单曲 〈The Fear〉及〈Fuck You〉、〈Not Fair〉、〈22〉等。

从流行旋风、女生代言人、时尚设计与风格偶像、限制级的性感搞怪、MySpace部落格女王,再到狗仔队猎物与排行小公主等等,这些都是莉莉艾伦(Lily Allen)的称号。

2006年开始,莉莉艾伦以〈Smile〉(UK#1)、〈LDN〉(UK#6)、〈Littlest Things〉(UK#21)、〈Alfie / Shame for You〉(UK#15)等单曲,震撼英国流行乐坛。在她光鲜亮丽与天真无邪的外表下,莉莉艾伦却将个人自传与对社会病态的写实观察,大喇喇地化为歌词与旋律,不断挑战每个保守世代的感官神经。率真却又刻薄、元气十足中又带点冷嘲热讽,让她首张专辑《Alright, Still》光在英国便勇破六白金销售、并勇夺全英音乐奖五项提名!此外,首张专辑更勇闯大西洋另一岸,高挂全美告示牌Billboard流行专辑榜前 20名。就在首张专辑全球累计销售大破250万张之际,却也为排行小公主,引来无数的后辈抄袭和狗仔中伤。

然而,这两年多来的恶意中伤与仇恨攻击,却也成为莉莉艾伦新辑《It’s Not Me, It’s You》(干我屁事)制作的最佳灵感,她说:「我发现要写些无所事事的歌曲还真难!」「我试着写一些跟我的人生有关的东西,而我的人生偏偏就是很奇怪与荒诞不经。但我 也相信这些人生遭遇,也普遍存在每个人的生活里。」在这张耗时一年多创作录制的全新专辑里,莉莉艾伦再度和全美音乐鬼才葛瑞格克斯汀Greg Kurstin合作,激荡出更跳与更加成熟的全新节奏风格!

新专辑《It’s Not Me, It’s You》延续莉莉艾伦引人发噱的歌词特质与颠覆观点,再度解剖玩味现今社会里的荒诞不经!在听似跳跃快乐的节奏旋律里,莉莉艾伦将她的笔触扩及诸多议题, 包括:讽刺上流社会中、狗仔传媒与名人间交互消费的首支单曲〈The Fear〉,大赏种族主义与性别保守者两大耳光的爆笑作品〈Fuck You〉,大书特书社会黑暗现实与性别失衡的作品〈22〉、火辣直言毒品「普及」各世代的作品〈Everyone’s At It〉、好奇上帝每日无事作为的作品〈Him〉、探讨钥匙儿童与电视晚餐的作品〈Chinese〉,讽刺男人自大却又早泄、遭逢情变却又拒绝认清的两首话题作品〈Not Fair〉与〈Never Gonna Happen〉,以及讨论少女过早浪漫情怀的作品〈Who’d Have Known〉等。

天使的歌声、活力的节奏、鲜明的色彩,却传递出更为深层辛辣的社会评论、刻画出写实人生的生活百态,如此强而有力的结合,只有莉莉艾伦做得到。

(by 博客来)

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It's Not Me, It's You is the second studio album by English recording artist Lily Allen, released on 4 February 2009 by Regal Recordings and Parlophone. It was certified triple platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) on 5 February 2010, denoting shipments in excess of 900,000 copies in the United Kingdom. It was also certified four times platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) in March 2010 for shipments of over 280,000 copies in Australia and spent a full year on the ARIA Albums Chart. By December 2009, the album had sold over two million copies worldwide. (wiki)

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by Stephen Thomas Erlewine

At the height of Pulp's fame, Jarvis Cocker channeled all his existential dread about celebrity into a chilling epic called "The Fear." Ten years later, Lily Allen -- the funniest British pop star since Jarvis and perhaps the best -- uses the same title to explore paralyzing fame, but instead of turning inward, Lily deflects, pushing all her anxiety into a Paris Hilton wannabe, a "weapon of massive consumption" that we know isn't Lily herself because this girl "doesn't care about clever." Lily, of course, cares very, very much about clever: it's how she defines herself as an artist and as a persona. Her quips are precise in her lyrics and savage in public, as evidenced when she drunkenly baited her co-presenter Elton John at a British awards show. Such displays tend to obscure her considerable skills as a storyteller, a gift that also gets buried beneath tabloid headlines that place her among pop tarts and princesses. Lily is attracted and repelled by fame, adoring the limelight but neither the company or how it forces personal problems to the forefront, and all these contradictions fuel her second album, It's Not Me, It's You.

Like many a bright pop star before her, Allen is feeling a little bit older than her 23 years, knowing that the landscape of her life is changing, and she's dreading her 30s, which still feel very far away. Lily doesn't state this outright, of course: she puts it into the character sketch of "22," just like how she deals with the blizzard of cocaine and pills on "Everyone's at It," registering her sneering disdain for a social scene she's outgrowing yet not quite ready to leave behind. Far from being a crutch, this narrative distancing is Lily's strength: unlike so many of her too-sensitive peers, she doesn't indiscriminately spill emotions onto the page, she picks her targets, choosing to reveal personal secrets we already know -- tellingly, she never addresses her 2008 miscarriage, but happily serves up her dysfunctional relationships with her parents, something that has provided endless column inches in gossip rags. If there's an element of Lily picking low-hanging fruit here and on "The Fear" and on the George W. Bush kiss-off "F*** You" -- or even "Not Fair," a cousin to "Not Big," where Allen laments a lover who is perfect in every way except his inability to make her scream -- the key to any story is how it's told, and telling is Lily's strength, how she ferrets out bypassed details or delivers a well-worn punchline. It's Not Me pushes this talent to the forefront, in part because she works with only one collaborator here: Greg Kurstin, half of the Bird and the Bee and responsible for several cuts on Alright, Still but not the big hits "Smile" and "LDN," which were produced by Mark Ronson. Without Ronson, Lily isn't quite so glitzy or glammy, she even flirts with adult pop without succumbing to tedium. Kurstin doesn't avoid pop hooks or cheeky camp -- "F*** You" galumphs by on a two-step, "He Wasn't There" is music hall pastiche, and "Never Gonna Happen" gives Lily plenty of room to be coyly disingenuous -- but It's Not Me, It's You streamlines Allen's eccentricities and bad habits, holding together in a way the gloriously messy Alright, Still never quite managed. There's a slight drawback to this cohesion -- It's Not Me never hits heights as blinding as "Smile" or "LDN" -- but this approach does wind up spotlighting just how special a pop star Lily Allen is, how she captures all that's wretched and glorious about her time without falling into any of its traps, probably because she's clever enough to avoid them in the first place.