Marina and the Diamonds: “Oh No!”

22 Jul

This is the perfect pop song. It is not the first perfect pop song that I have come across, it won’t be the perfect pop song in about a week from now, but for now it is and you must know about it.

Start at the beginning and watch the video. Firstly, it is a great music video and secondly it lets us discuss the surface of the song. This is unapologetic pop. The singer is a very pretty girl in her young twenties, which is a good thing, in case you suspect me of more hipster-ness than good sense. You can hear the Lady Gaga and Gwen Stefani influences and there is more upbeat energy in three seconds of this song than I have managed in my entire life. Good, solid, unapologetic pop all the way though.

Now though, go a level deeper and listen to the lyrics. You don’t have to. This is a pretty good pop song even without them and you are free to enjoy the song however you like. However, take a moment and hear what she is actually saying. There are plenty of rip currents of depression running through this pink sea of happy pop. She may be singing that she’s going to fail and she’s going to die with the same smile that she has when singing she’s going to live and she’s going to fly, but you know that she is as earnest about the one as the other.

This is also a pretty intelligent record. The chorus of “I know exactly what I want and who I want to be” speaks layers about who she is and “The nod and a wink of TV told me how to feel, now real life has no appeal” followed by the repeated “No appeal” is easy to empathize with. More than that though, every time you watch the video (and I have watched the video many times indeed, did I mention how pretty she is?) you can validate a completely new interpretation of the song when you pair it with who the singer is. That for me is the borderline that separates intelligent art from the rest, when you can argue the nuances of its meaning.

 

Verdict: This is the perfect pop song. For now, everything should be this song. One week from now, I may be listening to something else, but as of now, this is what all pop should be.

– Nikhil

One Response to “Marina and the Diamonds: “Oh No!””

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Bela Fleck and the Marcus Roberts Trio at Yoshi’s « Nikwin writes… - September 3, 2012

    […] There is a rather large hole in my knowledge of jazz and pretty much everything made after the 1960s resides in it. However, I know Bela Fleck. So, when I saw that he was performing with the Marcus Roberts Trio, getting tickets was a no-brainer. The fact that they were playing at Yoshi’s, which I had yet to visit was just added confectionery. On that note though, Yoshi’s discouraged photos and I complied. Anyway, if you want eye candy there are better people to look at. […]

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.