I can kind of understand where they are coming from, but considering most classical and broadway singers don't write their own music, it kind of angered me, so I wrote a reply - not something I ever do off the board.
Here's their post and my reply:
And here is my reply:
American Idol Critic wrote: American Idol
Posted Thu Apr 24 12:32pm PDT by Bob Lefsetz in The Lefsetz Letter
I saw Paul Stanley in the audience of American Idol.
What can I say, Felice is addicted, I heard the rumble from afar and when I went to retrieve her from the bedroom, I got hooked by the show too. I guess it's just instinct, we're all judges, we want to evaluate talent...and just maybe we want to be a member of the club. American Idol has the highest ratings of any weekly series, it's the most talked about show, its stars go on to have hit records...
Well, not so much anymore. Sure, Kelly Clarkson had some hits, but she was the first. And "Since U Been Gone" was a product of the Max Martin machine. Carrie Underwood is a star in the country world, she's the beneficiary of the best material in Nash Vegas...
Wait a minute here... Is this two-dimensional stardom, are these performers no more than cardboard?
The classic rockers were built on their own material. There were no song doctors. It was directly from their heart to yours. And this has delivered audiences in some cases 40 years after their debut. If you're just singing someone else's song, you're driving the BMW. Someone else can get inside and take the wheel instantly. Which is what happens in the evanescent pop world. Everybody today may not be a one hit wonder, but few have more than two or three hit tracks, and almost none of these acts can do respectable live business.
And we learned that TV exposure shortens careers. That was the lesson of MTV. If you're on, you're in everybody's household for a brief window, then you're discarded like a candy wrapper, the chocolate having been savored for an instant and then forgotten.
And what about the runners-up?
Sure, Daughtry has had hits. Interesting that he's a rocker, when so many of the winners are diva-wannabes... But can you name the other contestants who almost won? How about some of those who DID win, like Fantasia and Ruben Studdard?
It's a house of cards. A TV show. And TV is the number one mass medium in the history of the world. It can sell anything. Just ask Procter & Gamble. But even TV is faltering, in this permission marketing, multi-channel, Internet world. In other words, are we just mesmerized that ANYTHING can get this many eyeballs, this much traction in today's diverse cultural landscape?
It's not like these are artists. Hell, Carly Hennessy/Smithson already failed once. These are voices, doing the best karaoke job of all time. And in many cases, not that good.
Carly Smithson murdered "Superstar" on Tuesday night. I remember when I heard the original on the radio in the spring of 1970, before Webber and Rice went all Broadway on us, when they still employed rock singers and had credibility. The track was joyous, infectious. Carly evidenced none of these attractions. There was no CONTEXT!
Simon is a star. You just wait to hear what he says. Paula rivets you because you're waiting to see if she implodes on camera. Randy is sacrificing what credibility he had for a paycheck.
But it's not like Paula and Randy can have any success off this show. No one cares. It's just about the show.
Simon's smart enough to know it's not about his fame, it's about the dough. That TV delivers momentary record sales, that he can profit from.
Is this the game you're in? Earning a golden ticket to instant fame that will be taken away from you on your way to the 7-11, transforming you from a customer to an employee?
If you want to have a long career, write your own material. Be different, not the same. And don't go on television, it will shorten your tenure.
If you can't write, if you've got nothing to say, try out for American Idol. You might get a shot at momentary fame, but that's all it is, momentary.
As for Mr. Stanley... The people watching are not KISS fans, this is not bringing in dollars to your enterprise. People lose sight of the truth. The truth is that American Idol has got nothing to do with rock and roll, nothing to do with careers. Anybody can get on television, haven't you watched Survivor, or MTV or VH1? The PROGRAM is the star, not the talent. Never forget this.
My Reply wrote: So someone who is only a singer doesn't count as an artist? Tell that to people like Maria Callas, Renée Fleming or Ruthie Henshall. You say " If you're just singing someone else's song, you're driving the BMW. Someone else can get inside and take the wheel instantly" but that's completely untrue. A singer is as much of an artist as a songwriter, simply with a different art. It's only within the last 40 years that that perception has changed.
Would a composer or songwriter who couldn't sing be considered any less? I don't think so. American Idol isn't ruining music. The lack of effort from people sitting back and complaining is what is doing it. Now, out of any time in music history, is when it is easy and possible to find an amazing array and amazing quality of music. All you have to do is get off your high horse, get on the computer and make an actual effort. There are some amazing singer-songwriters out there who have made the effort to put their stuff online. If you're willing to look for it, rather than sit back and accept what major record labels are giving you, then you'll find it. By taking what the major labels give you, you have to accept that you're taking what is considered to be acceptable to the majority.
Sometimes the commercial-pop-rock community can be such snobs that they can make the classical-opera community look like friendly puppies. Anyone in the music industry itself that complains about the quality of music going down is someone who is simply not doing their job. Get used to the new world - a place where people get become well known without a record label and you have to get online and find them.
Who knows what will be popular and well known in the future. I remember speaking to an older English man touring the U.S. on a harley who said that when he was a teenager, he listened to The Rolling Stones and The Who, and The Beatles were looked at by that type a listener the same way that people nowadays look at a boyband. Look where the Beatles have ended up. Look at Bach - a man known more as an organist in his time, who was buried in an unmarked grave even though he had worked for the Church as a composer for most of his life.
The same people always complain - there wasn't any good music in the 80's that will be remembered decades from then, yet know, there are recoginzed classic bands from that time like U2. There wasn't any good music the 90's, yet we're still listening to early Red Hot Chili Peppers and exclaiming what a classic that music has become.
By complaining about AI, saying that music is going downhill and talking about the people in the music industry that agree with you, you're not showing how well cultured you are about music and how much you know. You're just showing yourself for a snob who is too lazy to do some research and too full of yourself to admit that you're anything but a couch critic.
The singers on AI might not be the best, but they work hard - they deserve some respect.
I know I could've worded it better and made a stronger argument with less flaming language, but there was a limited amount of words I could use, and I'd already used them all with that post.
I have been thoroughly enjoying American Idol this year, and I was unhappy when Carly got kicked off simply because she was actually a little bit different. She had stage presence and looked as though she was having fun.
I'm not proud of it, but I do consider myself a bit of a music snob. Dismissing someone as an artist, however, simply because they don't actually write the music they're playing is something I can't stand. Under that thought process, people like Emmanuel Ax, Itzhak Perlman, Victoria de los Ãngeles, etc, could be dismissed because the majority of the time, they are "only" musicians.
Anyway - what are your thoughts on the whole thing?