Now,
before I begin, I’m going to preface this article by saying that this is good
for a POP song. I know you’re going to forget this by the time
you’re done reading, because your goldfish brain can’t keep a thought in it for
more than 3 seconds (nothing like starting out an article with an insult), but
I’m only looking at this as a pop song. I’m not comparing it to Neil Young or
Led Zeppelin or Nirvana or whoever; I’m comparing it to Britney Spears and
Lady Gaga and Katy Perry. So when I say that I like the song, don’t take it as
me saying it saying that it deserves to be canonized.
Now
that I’m done defending myself, let’s get started with this very late article
on one of the biggest pop songs that took it’s time climbing to the top.
Originally it was released in September of 2011, which is practically an eternity
in pop music. However, with a single tweet from Justin Bieber (who heard it on
the radio in his hometown of Canada) in January made this song go from a
footnote in music history to what critics are calling the “Song of the Summer”.
The song peaked at #1 on the Billboard charts in mid-June, after spending the
previous 16 weeks slowly being engrained into the minds of every human that owns
a radio or using the internet, like a parasite. However, this parasite isn’t
bad, kind of like that bacteria that makes you poop good.
The Activia of pop music (poop music?) |
The
song itself is actually pretty good. The most surprising fact in what little
research I did was that it was originally written as a folk song, but then got
popified, and, when you listen to it with that in mind, you can see a lot of the
folk influences in the lyrics and composition. And that’s really why it’s such
a good pop song; it doesn’t rely on the conventions of pop music to carry it.
Rather, it takes the tolerable qualities of folk and adds in the funness of pop
to make it. I’m not the first think this, but this eerily similar to
what Taylor Swift did for country music. While Taylor is a lot country than
pop, and Carly Rae Jepsen is more pop than folk, there is a lot of overlap in
their styles.
What
first caught my ear was the synth part during the chorus. Technically, it’s
violins, however musicians that are only big in Canada can’t afford to hire a
string quartet, so they just use a guy on a synthesizer to play that part. Either
way, I had never heard a pop song instrumental that really centered itself around violins.
Sure, there are pop songs out there that use violins to show that the singer is
deep and artsy, but never as something that was meant to be fun and to carry
the weight of the song. And while it’s really the same 3 or 4 chords, it’s just
so infectious. On top of that, you have the wailing, up key guitar flitting
around in the background and big bass kicks, adding to the addictiveness of the
song, along with the subtly of its perfection.
But
most importantly, at least to me, you have the lyrics. Carly Rae Jepsen doesn’t
do what most pop artists do, and talk about how sexy she is and how you totally
want to bang. I mean, I do, but that’s not what the song is about. Ironically,
it’s about how insecure she is, and the nervous approach to a hot guy (which is
me, by the way. I tend to make women nervous whenever one of us approaches the
other. But that may just be the fact that she’s tied down). But it’s such an innocent
song that plays to the 14 year old girl in all of us; how many times have you
been nervous about walking up to a sexy guy/girl to give them your number?
Which totally explains the chorus; she’s stumbling over her words and trying to
be non-committal with the “call me maybe” part. But the biggest part of her
lyrics is the simple ABCB rhyme scheme of the chorus; it allows it to easily be adapted to any number of jokes, as the internet has shown us. This of course
only adds to the popularity of the song, both because of the simplicity, catchiness,
and meme-ability of the lyrics.
Now,
like I said at the top, this isn’t the greatest song to ever grace my ears. But
it is one of the best pop songs out there right now, and definitely a top pop
track of the past few decades. So don’t be afraid to put it on your iPod and
sing along with it when you’re driving down the beach; we’re all doing. Some of
us are only singing in our heads (so that the voices up there have a little
company).
Hey, I just met you, and this is crazy, but if you thought this was funny, like Frogs on a Log on Facebook maybe?
HOT!
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