De wekelijkse single-hitparade is niet vaak stof voor discussies, maar deze week is er veel ophef gaande in Groot-Brittannië waar de felbegeerde "Christmas Number One"-positie weer in het spel is.
De laatste jaren is die "hoofdprijs" een prooi voor de jaarlijkse winnaars van programma's als X Factor. Niet zelden is er ook een tegenbeweging. Vorig jaar bracht X Factor-winnares Alexandra Burke een cover van Leonard Cohen's nummer "Hallelujah" uit. Ze scoorde daarmee uiteindelijk de felbegeerde #1-hit, maar tegenstanders kochten massaal de versie van Jeff Buckley, die op #2 binnenkwam.
Dit jaar is er weer zo'n strijd, die veel stof doet opwaaien. De gebruikelijke X Factor-winnaar (ene Joe McElderry) neemt het op tegen "Killing In The Name Of" van Rage Against The Machine. Ja, dat oude nummer uit 1992. En nog frappanter: op dit moment staat RATM loopt licht voor qua verkoopcijfers.
Zie:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blog(...)cs_say_x_factor.htmlquote:
The campaign to stop X Factor winner Joe McElderry from claiming the Christmas number one has divided music critics and fans alike. At the time of writing, Rage Against The Machine's expletive-laden 1992 single Killing In The Name, is ahead by several thousand sales.
But Fraser McAlpine, writing on the BBC Chart Blog, takes issue with the motives behind the campaign, launched on Facebook three weeks ago:
"It strikes me that there is a nasty streak of snobbery to the Rage Against The Machine campaign, because essentially the people behind it not only don't approve of the song the X Factor has made - before they have even heard it, which is always lovely - but they don't like the people who DO like it. They think these people are easily-led. They may use words like 'sheep' or 'masses' or 'plebs' or 'chavs', and they believe themselves to be above such obvious mind-control."
There are better singles to back if you want to strike a blow against Simon Cowell and his record label, SyCo, says Peter Robinson on the Popjustice website. In particular, Fifty Grand For Christmas, a song by former X Factor auditionee Paul Holt: "In case you've forgotten, when Paul Holt auditioned for the first series of The X Factor Simon Cowell told him that if Holt managed to get a Number One single, he'd hand over fifty thousand pounds. So Holt made a song, 'Fifty Grand For Christmas', about the bet. As the lyrics - and this is one of the greatest opening lines in the history of popular song - explain: 'Simon says he'll pay the sum of fifty thousand pounds if I get to Number One.'"
The Guardian's Tim Jonze disagrees. He says a number one for Rage Against The Machine's 20-year-old protest anthem would be a "triumph for pop: "The song might be old, but having a fan-powered campaign propel it to the chart summit against the might of an entertainment powerhouse like SyCo would tell you more about the democratised, downloadable and downright free-for-all nature of the pop charts in 2009 than anything else."
En dit zijn slechts een paar reacties van iets dat muziekminnend Engeland wekenlang in z'n greep houdt. Ik ben wel benieuwd wat jullie van dit fenomeen vinden en van de acties om X Factor-winnaars van #1 af te houden...
Achtergrondhttp://en.wikipedia.org/w(...)ne_singles_in_the_UKhttp://en.wikipedia.org/w(...)ber_one_singles_(UK)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_number_two[ Bericht 6% gewijzigd door #ANONIEM op 16-12-2009 16:24:35 ]