Britney Spears’ “Femme Fatale” plays something like this:

<html><a href= “Cyber$exXx-dreamz.html” alt=”nept00n-strip-club-fantasy”> CLIKK HERE 4 MAD LuLZZ!!11! </a> <img src=“starburst-kiss.gif” alt=“lazr-girlz”> <style>{color: erotik-bubblegum; display: #getKrUNKd;}</style><///htmLOL>

Everything about “Femme Fatale” warrants the “hyper-” prefix – the lyrics are hyper-moronic, the vocals hyper-processed, the music a hyper-insult to the listener’s intelligence. This is what makes the album so brilliant – it absurdly exaggerates everything that makes pop music profane, and in doing so turns modern pabulum into an art piece of Michaelangelo-sized proportions.

Admittedly, “Femme Fatale”’s charm lies entirely in its production, which surely can be credited to an exhaustive list of engineers, producers, songwriters, co-songwriters and co-co-songwriters. Yes, Britney had minimal hand in the album’s creative direction, but good music is good music even if its goodness comes from a faceless, omnipotent cloud of high-level executives.

Texturally, “Femme Fatale” pops, bounces, and rumbles. On the track “How I Roll”, miniHOmalist 808 beats, OutKast-esque blips and beeps, computerized vocals, and neon synths mesh into a neo-primal, interplanetary ritual for the gods that somehow complements the lyric, “I got nine lives like a kitty cat.”

Literally every track on the album is a party for the synapses. The synthesizers you can touch, taste, and see. It’s just really, really fun to listen to – trust me.

Howard is a member of the class of 2017.

 



UR Baseball beats Hamilton and RIT

Yellowjackets baseball beat Hamilton College on Tuesday and RIT on Friday to the scores of 11–4 and 7–4, respectively.

UR Softball continues dominance with sweeps of Alfred University and Ithaca College

The Yellowjackets swept Alfred University on the road Thursday, winning both games by a score of 5–4.

The Clothesline Project gives a voice to the unheard

The Clothesline Project was started in 1990 when founder Carol Chichetto hung a clothesline with 31 shirts designed by survivors of domestic abuse, rape, and childhood sexual assault.