And if you can't get enough of Susan Boyle -- or at least her voice --
here she is again, singing "Cry Me a River."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9D2FuRhe4CE

And once again proving this part of the article below:

The reason Susan Boyle's performance has become such a worldwide
phenomenon is simple: she genuinely felt and understood the meaning of
what she was singing and demonstrated a kind of uncompromised honesty
that we rarely witness in popular culture.
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Trevor Trevor
Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2009 6:58 PM
To: Tv/NotTV
Subject: [TV orNotTV] What American Idol can learn from Susan Boyle


What American Idol can learn from Susan Boyle

http://www.cbc.ca/arts/media/blogs/popculture/2009/04/what_american_idol
_can_learn_f.html


Quentin Tarantino was the guest mentor on last night's episode of
American Idol. I know, you're thinking , What does a self-styled
renegade filmmaker have to do with a hackneyed television singing
competition? Well, it's not the first time Tarantino's made an Idol
appearance (he joined the judging panel back in Season 3), and he does
have an upcoming film to promote. (That would be the WWII actioner
Inglourious Basterds (sic), which received a substantial onscreen promo
during the show, though the AI team was careful not to mention the
flick's semi-controversial title.)

He may be a rabid pop culture junkie who's helped create some iconic
film soundtrack moments, but Tarantino's attempts to coach the Idol
wannabes through last night's song selections were... unconventional at
best. Unlike the pro pop stars who make a game effort to provide musical
feedback when they act as guest mentors, Tarantino had very few
constructive pointers when it came to the actual music. Rather, he
slipped into film director mode, focusing on the emotional content of
each contestant's tune -- the theme last night, appropriately, was
"Songs of the Cinema" -- as he tried to coax believable moments out of
the flailing singers.

I wasn't sold on Tarantino's brusque, self-satisfied manner, especially
since he seemed oblivious to musical factors like staying in key and
delivering a polished vocal. At times, it felt almost as though he was
directing thespians auditioning for the role of a wide-eyed rock star in
a rags-to-riches movie of the week. But in his attempts to get these
wobbly singers to communicate the actual meaning contained in their
songs, Tarantino hit on a key quality that most American Idol
competitors lack. Namely, the awareness that the pop nuggets they
perform aren't just some vehicle to show off their latent star quality,
but rather compositions that tell stories and convey emotions.

Tarantino's advice got me thinking about another televised reality
competition performance that's been making waves recently: Susan Boyle's
jaw-dropping, heart-tugging appearance on Britain's Got Talent. By now,
most of you are probably familiar with the unassuming bird from Scotland
who's become a sudden sensation. The video of 47-year-old Boyle singing
I Dreamed a Dream, from the musical Les Miserables, went viral over the
weekend; by now, the official clip on the Britain's So Talented YouTube
page has received close to six million views.

What's marvelous about Boyle is how she managed to completely challenge
not just our preconceived expectations (and those of the Britain's Got
Talent judges) but also the collective perception of what an
undiscovered star looks like. Watch the initial moments of the clip and
you can tell that the producers are salivating over Boyle's potential as
a wacky character who'll make great television fodder. An unemployed,
eccentric dowager from a small Scottish village who lives alone with her
cat, Pebbles? A 47-year-old clad in an unflattering taupe housedress who
claims not only that she's never been married, but that she's never been
kissed? "This?" they're silently guffawing, "This woman thinks she's got
a snowball's chance in hell of becoming a professional singer?"

The set-up is cruel: a collection of spliced-together clips of Boyle
making doddering, off-colour comments, snarky tween audience members
rolling their eyes and the Britain's Got Talent judges addressing the
self-proclaimed singer as though she's a recent escapee from a mental
institution. We've seen this character in similar competitions before,
most recently in the guise of delusional drama queen Tatiana del Toro on
this season of American Idol. This character is usually painfully
misguided and sorely lacking in skill. He or she is unattractive by
conventional standards and often given to grand proclamations about his
or her talent. Producers adore these figures because they make for
melodrama, because they're limitless sources of cheap jokes and surefire
targets for our own mean-spirited mockery. These shows revel in these
characters because laughing at the poor saps on television provides a
nice boost to our own self-esteem.

But Boyle screwed all of that up. When she opened her mouth to sing,
something exquisite and jarring came out, something that, as
Entertainment Weekly's Lisa Schwartzbaum describes it, "reordered the
measure of beauty." Boyle herself underestimated her incredible ability
and left us speechless. "In our pop-minded culture so slavishly obsessed
with packaging," says Schwartzbaum, "[with] the right face, the right
clothes, the right attitudes, the right Facebook posts -- the unpackaged
artistic power of the unstyled, un-hip, un-kissed Ms. Boyle let me feel,
for the duration of one blazing showstopping ballad, the meaning of
human grace."

I'd go even further. The reason Susan Boyle's performance has become
such a worldwide phenomenon is simple: she genuinely felt and understood
the meaning of what she was singing and demonstrated a kind of
uncompromised honesty that we rarely witness in popular culture.
And the facts of her biography -- she's alone and attached to an
impossible hope she's had since the age of 12 -- provided an affecting
context for her performance of a song about dreams deferred.

The detached, sheltered pipsqueaks on American Idol would do well to
follow Susan Boyle's lead. Who knows -- maybe she'll show up as a guest
mentor next season.

-- Sarah Liss



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