Tuesday, 9 May 2017

Original: 5 Flop Pop Albums That Deserved Way More Love

In a follow up to my previous post, 5 Flop Albums From Big Name Acts, I now present 5 Flop albums that should not have flopped:

1. Mariah Carey - Glitter (2001)

-Glitter is the ill-fated and often mocked soundtrack to Carey's 2001 film of the same name (the soundtrack was released September 11, 2001).
-Glitter was a disco-influenced album (something everyone now wants from Gaga).
-While it is not Mariah's worst performing album, it was considered such a critical and commercial failure at the time that it led to her being dropped from Virgin Records xbox one games.
-The infamous TRL incident, the appearance of strange messages on her website, and subsequent hospitalization also preceded the release of Glitter.
-"Loverboy", the album's first single, was to feature a sample by the Yellow Magic Orchestra, which J.Lo eventually ended up using on her track "I'm Real". Despite the fact that Carey had licensed usage for the sample first, J.Lo's album was released earlier, forcing Mariah to change "Loverboy" last minute.

Why it deserved better:
-The album is far from flawless and certainly has some tracks that need to be skipped ("If We" is a mess of a track and the vocals on "Want You" are not her best). However, the ballads are beautiful and the throwback disco sound works well in tracks like "All My Life", "I Didn't Mean To Turn You On", and "Last Night A DJ Saved My Life".

2. Carly Rae Jepsen - Emotion (2015)

-One of ONTD's fave flop albums (buy Emotions on iTunes!), Carly Rae's follow up to her breakout smash hit "Call Me Maybe" was a critical success but a commercial flop (outside of Japan, where it went Gold).
-In it's first week it sold a little over 16 000 copies in the states and just 2 600 in Canada (because Canadians are apathetic af) unblocked games.

Why it deserved better:
Because it's a great pop record with very little filler (I only ever skip "LA Hallucinations").

Kelly Rowland - Talk A Good Game (2013)

-While the album made it into the top 10, it has gone on to sell about 215 000 copies worldwide (Rowland's lowest performing solo album) and nobody talks about it anymore.

Why it deserved better:
-If you listen to the album today, it holds up well. It's cohesive, melodic, and honest. Rowland addresses personal issues like domestic violence and her jealousy towards Beyonce on the emotionally raw track "Dirty Laundry". The entire album is filled with pop bops and smooth R&B jams. Do yourself a favour and revisit it.

4. Christina Aguilera - Bionic (2010)

-Christina released 2 back to back flops - 2010's Bionic and 2012's Lotus - and while Lotus sounds dated today, Bionic not only holds up well, but it might have been ahead of its time.
-Bionic had critics divided (making both worst-of and best-of year end lists) and commercially it failed to live up to expectations.

Why it deserved better:
-Aguilera embraces female empowerment and celebrates sexual desire throughout the album (like on tracks "Prima Donna", "Sex For Breakfast", and "Woohoo").
-Her vocals are great (with very little of the over-singing she's famously mocked for).
-The album is cohesive yet diverse sonically and is still listenable 7 years after it's release.
-"Birds of Prey" is a smooth and haunting track that is undeservedly overlooked (and features a great subtle vocal performance from Aguilera).

Britney Spears - Glory (2016)

-The album did well critically and is not her worst performing album, however it failed to really make an impact with none of the singles breaking into the top 10 ("Slumber Party" debuted at number 86).

Why it deserved better:
-Glory is fun, catchy, fits in with the music trends of 2016, and features much better vocals and production than her previous album, Britney Jean. It's a major step in the right direction for Spears.

Monday, 14 March 2016

Mariah Carey’s Brother Slams The 'Evil' Singer For Not Stepping In To Help Their Dying Sister




Mariah Carey's brother is calling out the pop queen

In a new interview with The Sun, Morgan Carey claimed that the 45-year-old isn't stepping up to help out while their sister, Alison, is struggling to survive.

It's previously been reported that the Infinity songstress' sis is HIV-positive.

Well, he shared about the newly engaged starlet:

"She probably spends more on dog food than it would cost to make sure her sister gets properly cared for."

And continued

"Your sister is dying and she is struggling and where are you? You think you are so fabulous, but you are a witch."

Morgan also seems to hope MC can help foot Alison's medical bills, in her time of need.

The Mimi reality show

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again – when you email or tweet at me because Mimi’s in the news and I come to mind, thank you so much. It might be my greatest career achievement. To somehow, in some small way, be associated with our Glitter Butterfly, the Elusive Chanteuse…who, apparently, will be elusive no more because…

She’s working on a reality show?

Let’s just all lie down for a moment and process this before we continue. I cried tears of joy when I first heard. According to US Weekly Mimi’s been shooting a “docu-series” (can we just f-cking call it a reality show?!?) about her Vegas residency and her upcoming European tour and it’s supposed to feature her entourage and she wants to call it “Mariah’s Squad”. We’ll also see Mimi with Dembabies. And she was allowed to bring cameras into Elton John’s Oscar party. The deal is with E! and Page Six reports that although her manager, Stella Bulochnikov, is the one who negotiated it for her, other members of her team aren’t happy with the decision.

“Someone of Mariah’s stature should not be doing this. Whitney Houston did a reality show and that was the real end of it. We hope that it doesn’t end up being like when Whitney did ‘Being Bobby Brown,’” a Carey insider told Page Six.

The singer’s manager Stella Bulochnikov is the mastermind behind the project and our source says Carey’s so in love with fiancé James Packer that she’s oblivious to what’s happening in her professional life. The show is based around Mariah and her entourage.

“Mariah’s amazing and treats people with the utmost respect and kindness and Stella is the total opposite. She comes from producing reality TV and calls herself the Russian dictator,” said the source, who added, “I guess Mariah is just in love and not paying attention to what’s happening around her.”

Hilariously when Page Six reached out to Stella for comment, she basically threw a bag of dicks at them:

“If you’re trying to get into my good graces, you’re doing a wonderful job. Feel free to write whatever the f - ck you want, so all three of your readers can be amused . . . F - ck off and lose my number. You are an idiot. Mariah is on fire.”

You know what? She’s right?

I don’t know who Page Six’s sources are but the Whitney Houston comparison is idiotic. Part of Whitney’s problem was that she couldn’t reconcile the image that was created for her by Clive Davis and who she really wanted to be. But there is no “public” version of Mimi that doesn’t complement the “private” one. There is no one operating under the illusion that the “public” version of Mimi is able to walk, independently, from one end of a room to the other without having to be carried but not be able to in “private”. EVERYBODY F-CKING KNOWS SHE’S TOO MUCH.
And…

WE LOVE HER BECAUSE SHE’S TOO GODDAMN MUCH.

Mariah Carey is one of the most iconic vocalists of all time. Her talent is indisputable. But you cannot argue that one of her most significant – and I mean SIGNIFICANT, with no snark, no sarcasm – career  moments came not when she was singing but when she invited us into her home for hands-down THE GREATEST episode of Cribs of All.Time.

I have it memorised. And if you have not seen it, hear me now, talking to you in your eyes – I am disappointed in you. You have failed yourself. Because you cannot call yourself a citizen of pop culture if you do not know Mimi’s Cribs. I could write 10,000 words on Mimi’s Cribs and it still wouldn’t be enough. She opens the door for the cameras and within 30 seconds, maybe less, she’s already sitting down on a couch because it was too exhausting to simply let someone into her home and wave them inside. There are at least 8 wardrobe changes. EIGHT WARDROBE CHANGES.
And it’s 20 minutes long! During one of those wardrobe changes, there’s a woman trailing after her, putting on her dress. Later on, that woman is on her knees, in the “shoe room”, getting her heels on her for. One the best highlights in a piece that’s basically just a highlight package? When we see that there’s a chaise lounge in the middle of the kitchen. Because, as she tells you in that moment, she makes it a point to “avoid being upright as much as possible”. She gets into the bathtub, ON CAMERA, but says she can’t show us her bedroom because she has to keep some things for herself. And. And! The fish in her aquarium? They were recast, because the first ones that they had in there didn’t sleep according to her schedule.

Mimi on Cribs was historic. When your episode wipes out every other celebrity’s episode, and you define a show all by yourself? It’s history. It is, as Mimi would say, a “moment”.

Now. Imagine this as a television series. Imagine a weekly appointment with this!

Tuesday, 1 December 2015

Who Is the Greatest Diva of the Last 25 Years? We Offer Scientific Proof!

DVIA!By way of eulogy to the dying animal that is the Diva, my crack team of consultants, statisticians and graphic designers have assembled DIVA-OFF 2010, a highly scientific (we used computers!) evaluation of the greatest divas of the past twenty-five years. A list of divas was evaluated on eleven levels of diva-ness, and, because each diva characteristic is not created equal, we scaled the values in the hopes of creating an aggregate diva number that will serve as a reference point for future generations.
Here is why we needed to do this. On April 14, 1998, at the Beacon Theater in New York City, VH1 put on a live show titled “Divas Live: An Honors Concert for VH1’s Save the Music.”
Despite the disastrous title, despite the VH1-ness, the organizers of the event managed to put together an impressive list of performers and presenters. When the last spangle had floated down off the last corseted dress, no less than the likes of Aretha, Gloria, Shania and Mariah had done their part to save the music. To close the show, the multi-culti dream collective of divas convened on stage and vocally gangbanged “Natural Woman.” It would have been the predictable, if thoroughly satisfying end, to a magical night and an appropriate closing night for a new franchise-but the Divas and VH1 were not interested in nice, easy endings. Just as the audience was getting ready to toss down their bouquets, Aretha took everyone to church, leading the ladies through a mindboggling ten-minute rendition of “Testimony.”


The pyrotechnics of “Divas Live” were impossible to follow, but VH1 still tried, gamely, for the next seven years. In 1999, they trotted out Brandy, Cher, Tina Turner, Chaka Khan, Faith Hill, LeAnn Rimes, Mary J and a fantastically manic, sweaty Whitney. (Much of Maya Rudolph’s SNL impersonation must be based on the footage from this concert.) Those girls had a nice moment, banding together to sing “Ain’t No Way,” but after that, the franchise fell apart and the word diva evolved to take on different connotations. By “Divas 2004,” the list had been distilled down to Sheila E, Ashanti and Jessica Simpson. Last year, the show attempted a comeback with this line-up: Adele, Miley Cyrus and Leona Lewis. 
The decline of “Divas Live” is, in many ways, the mark of a network that never quite knows when its shows have run their course, but it is also indicative of a change in the landscape of popular music. While the word diva has found its way into common usage, the actuality of the diva-a puffed-up, preternaturally gifted and hopelessly drama-filled songbird-has been sold off in favor of an endless line of talentless smut merchants (Katy Perry, Ke$ha, Justin Bieber) and boring moaners (everyone else). Consider this potential Divas 2010 lineup: Beyonce, Rihanna, Lady Gaga, Miley Cyrus, Carrie Underwood and the Autotune 5000. Sure, that might be an interesting show, but when those six girls convened on center stage to sing an old Aretha song, what could it sound like? Would you hold your breath the way you did when you saw Whitney stumble up on stage next to Mary J Blige and her fucked-up hairdo? Could RoboDivas 2010 pound out a ten-minute anything?
Almost all of this is Beyonce’s fault. After dumping Kelly Rowland and Michelle T, the BORG of Beyonce has gone on to swallow up everything diva, going as far as to portray former divas like Etta James in really shitty movies, thereby scrapping together whatever excuse she needs to cover songs and convert them into her own specific brand of catchy, alluring, but ultimately plasticine pop music. This Godzilla stomping act has made Mariah’s late years irrelevant and has marginalized Mary J. to the point where the Soul of the Ghetto now covers U2 and Led Zeppelin songs. Celine remains in exile in Las Vegas. (For some reason, every time I think about Celine’s cage underneath the Bellagio, I picture her sitting cross-legged in a pile of hay. A little rat sits in her hand, and, in her butchered pygmy French, Celine tells the rat that everything will be alright….) The Dixie Chicks are in negotiations with NBC for a five-part reality TV show in which they train to fight all five members of En Vogue. Aretha is now just a hat. Babs is just another joke about Jews on “Glee.” Shania Twain has been reduced to a shade of Canadian tan that is impossible to describe. Gloria Estefan is a pickle sandwich. Whitney is a fat, bow-tied Taiwanese boy.
All these dying divas presented the following questions.
  • In twenty years, when enough dirt has been kicked over Aretha’s grave for Beyonce to cover “Respect,” will we even be able to remember what life was like before Beyonce?
  • What precipitated Beyonce? How did we all become so lame?
  • Before the soft, interring dream of Beyonce becomes the new Tron, what can we do to show our children’s children that something real once existed?
  • From these questions came the following document.
    AN EXPLANATION OF THE LIST OF DIVAS
    After months of consultation, the crack team came up with the following list: Aretha, Barbra, Beyonce, Celine, Diana, Etta, Gladys, Mariah, Mary J, Whitney and Jordin Sparks. We included Jordin Sparks as a control, meaning, because Jordin Sparks sucks and sucks in a really boring way, she could provide a necessary context for how a really boring, shitty singer might rate out on the scale. We did not include Madonna because for a diva to really be a diva, the majority of her career must be built on the strength of her voice. Yes, it’s debatable whether or not everyone on our list fulfills this requirement, but none fail as disastrously as Madonna. Given the parameters we set up, there is simply no way to evaluate her without throwing off the entire system. Some others that would obviously have been included just a few years ago-Christina Aguilera, we’re looking at you!-have deemed themselves ineligible. (See also: outliers that seem like they are divas but are not, such as Grace Jones, Pink, etc.)
    THE RANKINGS
    We present the following categories and rankings. The parenthetical numbers are the relative weight of the characteristic to the overall greatness of the diva. Bear with us, please. This will make sense by the time you get to the end.
    TAKING THE LISTENER ON AN EMOTIONAL JOURNEY (300) 
    Were it up to only me, this would be weighted even more heavily, but the crack team of statisticians outvoted me 13-1. Here’s my argument: The diva’s role in society is to act as an emotional touchstone for her millions of listeners. To be a true diva, then, the singer must make us feel her pain. We have to care when she’s struggling, we have to believe the songs aren’t just bombed-out commercial jingles written by a team of 30 corporate songwriters. Many divas have attained their status without a great singing voice (Mary J), but only Beyonce has done it without the ability to take her listeners on an emotional journey. It is a sad reflection of what has happened to music, by the way, that the only diva left standing is also the one who can’t make anyone cry. (She came close with “Halo,” but I need to see a good live performance of that before I can count it.) Imagine if Jordin Sparks had sung “The Greatest Love of All” instead of Whitney. The history of music would be unalterably changed for the worse.
    Here’s the crack team’s argument: An emotional journey cannot happen without a great singing voice. The two are intertwined. Weighting TTLOAEJ higher than pure singing voice makes it possible for Fantasia to rate out higher than Celine Dion. We can’t have those sorts of insane inaccuracies in the system or else we’re going to look really stupid.
    My response: Exactly! Fantasia is exactly why the system works. Whatever the post-litigation, post-pills Fantasia puts out is going to be fucking huge. I mean, the girl already learned to read, raised a kid on her own and upstaged Oprah. She just needs to sing some good songs. If the system is good, it should also have some predictive power.
    Crack team: Dude, unlike you, I have a job. I can’t answer these insane emails all day. Go watch Beaches or something.
    EMOTIONAL JOURNEY
    Notes: Mary J. has built her career on this category-nobody emotes quite as well as she does. Mariah rates low here because she doesn’t quite emote as much as she just kinda arches her back and/or sticks her arm up in the air.
    PURE VOICE (300)
    Doesn’t need much explanation. Can you sing?
    CAN THEY SING?
    Notes: Beyonce is rated correctly here. If anything, she could be bumped down a bit. Why does the girl never show up in any live performances that aren’t her own? Why are all her shows lipsynched? Until she gets on stage with a real diva (again, the reason she can’t is because she ate all of them), we won’t really know. Even a battle with Kelly Clarkson might show us something. In her one diva-to-diva moment with Jennifer Hudson, she got smoked. And that’s Jennifer Hudson, not Etta James or Celine.
    ICONIC SONG/MOMENT (200)

    The weighting of this was extremely difficult, especially in differentiating it from overall commercial success. But every diva must have one, preferably two. If she’s wearing some inexplicable headpiece during that moment, all the better.
    MOMENT
    Notes: Barring some unforeseen war which will necessitate a greater performance, Whitney’s National Anthem at the Super Bowl will always be the greatest diva moment of all time. Consider the context: the country has entered the first Gulf War and the soldiers are watching the game, thinking of home. And here comes Whitney in a nylon tracksuit and a cleaning lady headband to belt out the most rousing, incredible rendition of the National Anthem ever. Aretha never had a moment like that, but has strung together enough semi-moments to be on a similar stage.
    OVERALL COMMERCIAL SUCCESS (180)
    Eh, this bores me, but it has to be counted. Mariah has the most #1s of all time. What the hell does that mean? Are you happy, crack team?
    COMMERCE
    Notes: none. This category is necessary, but boring.
    UPSTAGING PRESENCE (100)

    Watch the first minute of the video above. That’s how it’s done. Poor Carole King. She really had no chance-even if this had been “Divas Live: An Honors Concert for VH1’s Save the Ku Klux Klan,” she wouldn’t have been able to get in a single bar over Aretha. These sorts of moments are why “Divas Live” was such a good idea. “Divas Live: Battle Royale” would have been even better. Simply put, if you are on the stage with another diva, how badly do you blow that other bitch away?
    UPSTAGING
    Notes: This category was determined by the following computer simulation. We took each diva, put them all on a stage and programmed them all to sing “The Weight.” Each time a diva was out-sung or out-volumed by another diva, she was disappeared. At the end, the stage was Aretha, Celine, Barbra, Etta James and Whitney. Any of these divas could have won, but because it was Aretha’s song, she ended up blowing out a game Whitney at the end to claim the crown. Celine’s promoter would like us to point out that if the song had been “I Drove All Night,” that Celine would have won. This is true.
    HAND GESTURES (80)

    Turn the sound off on this video and watch from 0:38 to 1:07
    Of all the diva characteristics, Hand Gestures is the most open to personal preference. I certainly don’t like Celine’s slow-motion-deodorant-commercial hand gestures, but who am I to tell your mom that they aren’t cool? And while I always liked how Mariah would point out the notes in her runs, I can also see why your mother might find this to be a bit show-offy. One thing your mother and I can agree on, though: Carrie Underwood will never ascend to diva status because of her awful, awful work in this category.
    HAND GESTURES
    Notes: The real divider here was Mariah. Some in the community seem to not enjoy her habit of pointing out the notes of her runs. Here’s my argument-it would be annoying if the notes in the run weren’t so impressively distinct. For example, if Maya was going on one of her mushy, pointless runs and pointing out notes that weren’t there, this would be annoying. But that’s not the case with Mariah-she is simply pointing out her greatness, which is the whole point of hand gestures anyway. Also, nobody ever did the block-your-earhole-with-your-finger-and-squeal move better than Mariah. Diana Ross rates so high here because she invented and perfected the float-around-and-wave-slowly maneuver that inspired Celine.
    HAIR (40)
    Maybe we should call it the “personal hair evolution of said diva.” To score highly in this category, there must be at least one, preferably two fucked-up periods. Ideally, the fucked-upness of the hair will reflect the fucked-upness of the diva’s personal life.
    HAIR
    Notes: Some would argue that Etta doesn’t deserve the top spot here because her hair didn’t change much. But more than any of the other ladies, Etta understood the possibility of hair as a branding mechanism. Hair was simply more important to her than the others. Mary J is just entering her fucked-up hair stage and should rate even higher in a few years.
    STANK (30)

    Mostly used in live performances, stank is how all the great divas differentiate themselves from the chaff-how much attitude can you throw out there for your adoring fans? How heh is your heh? For an example of stank, go to 0:32 and listen to how Gladys Knight pronounces the word “business.”
    STANK
    Notes: Whitney’s chronic inability to muster up much stank was her Achilles heel. She could always blow away the other diva, but was always vulnerable to the other diva just getting nasty and out-stanking her. Imagine her and Etta James-Whitney blows her away with a run, but Etta just smiles and pours out a bucket of stank on the stage. The crowd gravitates to the personality, not the technical expertise.
    MAKING INSANE DEMANDS/GOING TO REHAB/OVERALL DRAMA (40)
    Because we can only evaluate the diva within her own historical context, the approximate value of making insane demands/going to rehab/overall drama must be proportional to the average levels of those things during the diva’s time.
    DRAMA
    Notes: We almost put Liza on this list because of this.
    WEIGHT FLUCTUATIONS (30)
    The wilder the better. Kelly Clarkson, who, at this current trajectory, will approach diva status in 2016, certainly seems to understand the need to plump up every once in a while. Getting big, like getting fucked-up hair, creates a bond with the listening audience.
    WEIGHT
    Notes: Another point of contention between myself and the crack-team: I said that Mariah should rate way higher here because her weight fluctuation, while not as dramatic as the Disco Aretha to Post-Disco Aretha swing, was certainly more shocking and concerning. The crack team pointed out that Mariah’s weight gain was too short-lived to compete with the four or five different versions of Aretha. This was our darkest hour in the process. I quit and broke a computer. The crack team shook their heads, sadly, and told me to grow up. Numbers are numbers.
    AGING INTO A DRAG QUEEN/WEARING INSANE HATS (30)

    It happens to every single one of them, so there must be some connection. Yes, some of the women on the list are a bit young to be anointed into the “Age into Drag Queen” Hall of Fame with Donna Summer and Celine Dion, so all values were generated in the crack team’s time machine. The insane hat phenomenon seems to trail closely behind the drag queen look. Aretha, of course, brought the hat issue to the national forefront at the inauguration, but really, that hat was the last chapter in a long, long story. As crack-team member Wally Johnson said, “That woman cannot resist the urge to find weird shit and put it on her head.”
    DRAG QUEENNESS
    Notes: Poor Celine. At least her underarms still look good.
    RESULTS
    Each Diva’s stats were compiled and graphed out in scaled circles. These circles were then clustered together to give a visual approximation of the diva’s overall greatness. Each circle’s color corresponds with the characteristic shown in the graph above.
    RESULTS!
    CONCLUSION
    Nostalgia is always the first casualty of hard science. While we would like to conclude that Aretha was the greatest diva of the past thirty years, the numbers showed a slight edge to Whitney Houston. Exploring deeper, the crack team discovered that the edge was mostly culled from the incalculable importance of Whitney’s Super Bowl performance. While Aretha pretty much broke every song she ever performed, leaving it smoking on the stage, never to be touched again, Whitney broke our goddamn National Anthem. On a slightly lesser scale, Whitney’s version of “And I Will Always Love You” slightly edged out any of Aretha’s recordings, not only because it spawned the entire really-famous-song-you-forgot-was-in-a-terrible-movie phenomenon, most recently evidenced by Michael Jackson’s “Free Willy” footage, but also because it created its own YouTube phenomenon. Again, it can be argued that Aretha cannot be blamed for missing out on the YouTube and music video stage, but a diva’s greatness is, in part, a result of her place in time.
    Within her context, there was never a singing star who shone as brightly as Whitney Houston. The run was shorter than almost every one of her competitors, but diva greatness is not a marathon, but rather, a shining example of the possibility of the human being. There will probably never be another Aretha-certainly, the Beyonce BORG and the militias of teenybopper chart-toppers seem to indicate the end of her era-but it’s probable that the never-to-be-famous next Aretha is singing in some church, somewhere. She exists but she simply will never be. Whitney, on the other hand, stretches what we can reasonably comprehend-how could we ever expect to see another with those pipes, that face, that knack for the moment, that personal drama, that incandescent potential?

Whitney Houston and Mariah Carey compete in a beat-driven music landscape

Two of pop music's biggest voices are attempting to reignite their careers this fall. Whitney Houston and Mariah Carey, who have each sold millions of albums and set the standard for female vocalists in the 1980s and '90s, are releasing new albums within a month of each other. These divas are resurfacing, however, in a music industry more geared toward beats and instrumental hooks than dynamic singing.
Vocal-driven pop music is "not the most popular genre of music right now," says producer Harvey Mason Jr., who has worked with artists ranging from Aretha Franklin to Britney Spears. He also co-produced several songs on Ms. Houston's coming album. He says the goal was to capture vocal takes that would remind listeners of Ms. Houston's range, and to create tracks that sounded fresh but not trendy.
Anticipation for the new albums is high among the singers' fans, especially those of Ms. Houston. After six years since her last album and personal turmoil that included a divorce from singer Bobby Brown, she is angling for a comeback. But it will be a challenge for either diva to score beyond their core audience.
Their music arrives at a time when the Day-Glo synthesizers and brittle drum machines of the Reagan era have returned, often superseding the abilities of the singers who use them. Chugging dance rhythms—part Devo, part Euro disco—have spread across genres, driven by hits from newer artists such as Lady Gaga, a top-selling performer known for provocative interviews and outré fashions.
Whitney Houston is mounting a comeback.ENLARGE
Whitney Houston is mounting a comeback. GETTY IMAGES
Mr. Mason says that young singers are recording fewer ballads, which can serve as showcases for vocal flair. And in recent years labels have called on him to rev up his beats to please radio programmers. The tempo of music by female pop singers has increased in the aggregate over the last decade, according to the online music service Pandora. Last year the median hovered around 135 beats per minute, up from about 115 beats per minute in 2000. Ms. Houston's hit ballad from 1992, "I Will Always Love You," clocked in at about 68 bpm.
"The traditional vocalist has been pushed aside or left out by what we call Top 40 radio," says Clive Davis, chief creative officer, Sony Music Entertainment, who has worked with Ms. Houston since signing her to her first record deal in 1983. He led the three-year process of creating her new album, "I Look to You," due out Aug. 31.
The teams behind Ms. Carey and Ms. Houston argue that prevailing trends have only built demand for their sound. "Great doesn't get old," says Antonio "L.A." Reid, chairman of the Island Def Jam Music Group, who oversaw Ms. Carey's album, "Memoirs of an Imperfect Angel," scheduled for release Sept. 29.
Representatives said Ms. Carey, 39 years old, and Ms. Houston, 46, weren't available for comment.
Mariah Carey has a new album and an indie movie.ENLARG
Mariah Carey has a new album and an indie movie. GETTY IMAGES
The new music was produced primarily to flaunt their vocal chops. Ms. Carey is about to release a single, a version of a power ballad from 1984, "I Want to Know What Love Is," by the rock band Foreigner. But the veteran divas are making some moves to cater to new audiences. One song chosen to introduce Ms. Houston's album is "Million Dollar Bill," a disco-flavored track co-written by Alicia Keys.
Ms. Carey has kept the sex appeal high while promoting her album, which will contain a "mini-magazine" of glamour shots of the singer and real ads placed by companies such as Elizabeth Arden. But she'll soon appear in a less-flattering light on the big screen. Ms. Carey donned a prosthetic nose for her role as a dowdy social worker in the somber indie film "Precious," due out in November.
Music-industry veterans praise a handful of powerful voices among the current generation of female singers, including Jennifer Hudson and Beyoncé Knowles. And next month, VH1 plans to relaunch its "Divas" series of specials, which had been mothballed in 2004. The new iteration will emphasize the work ethic of featured stars, including the young Disney-sponsored performer Miley Cyrus, among others.
In terms of raw vocal talent, though, some industry veterans say there are few young successors to Ms. Houston and Ms. Carey. "How can I put this tactfully?" says Stephen Hill, president of music programming and specials at BET Networks, "The range between the high and low notes has shrunk greatly."

Mariah Carey & Boyfriend James Packer Expecting First Baby Together — Report

Credit: SplashNews

James Packer and Mariah Carey holiday together in Italy as part of Mediterranean cruise

In news that has the tabloid and society watchers feeling emotions, James Packer has found love with singer Mariah Carey.
Packer, 47, had been pursuing the All I Want For Christmas Is You singer "aggressively" for months, according to entertainment website TMZ, and they are now set to cruise around the Mediterranean together on the Packer family yacht, Arctic P.
James Packer is dating American songstress Mariah Carey.
James Packer is dating American songstress Mariah Carey. Photo: TMZ.com / Splash News
Carey, a former judge on American Idol who quit the reality talent show saying it was "the worst experience of my life", arrived in Italy on Friday on board a private jet.The self-described diva will be one of the first guests to enjoy the luxury of the recently renovated 88-metre floating palace which includes its own "beach club". The complete refit of the converted icebreaker took seven months and now features a new glass bottom pool and Jacuzzi - the bottoms of which sink into the deck at the push of a button and fill with water. With his children's safety being paramount Packer had the new features fitted with removable railings.
Packer's first wife, designer Jodhi Meares, is also vacationing in Italy with her family, a mere two hours away on the Amalfi Coast. 

Despite being friends "for years", according to sources, it is believed the casino mogul and Carey, 45, reconnected through filmmaker Brett Ratner. Ratner is Packer's business partner; the pair founded entertainment company RatPac Entertainment in 2013. He is also the creative force behind Carey's film clip for her latest single Infinity.
The new couple were recently in Vegas, Carey for the commencement of her residency at Caesars Palace while Packer was up the strip at the MGM Grand in the A-list crowd to watch Floyd Mayweather defeat Manny Pacquiao.

This is Packer's first public relationship since divorcing from his second wife, and mother of his three children, Erica Packer in 2013.

Last year he was rumoured to have been cavorting with Australian supermodel Miranda Kerr with the former Victoria's Secret model spotted boarding his super yacht during the European summer.

Carey is also divorced from her latest husband America's Got Talent host Nick Cannon. They have 4-year-old twins together, Monroe and Moroccan. Like the Packers, the estranged couple have an amicable relationship, having spent Easter together this year.

She is no stranger to the high-flying business executive lifestyle. Her first husband was former Sony boss Tommy Mottola, who she met as a 19-year-old back up singer before he guided her to the top of the charts.

They married in 1993, when the then 23-year-old bride wore a $250,000 Vera Wang gown with an eight-metre train. 
They divorced in 1998 amid reports Mottola was controlling. Mottola denied the allegations in his 2013 book, Hitmaker: 
The Man and His Music and said his relationship with Carey was "absolutely wrong and inappropriate".

Tabloids in the United States have jumped on the news the singer has a new Hero.

"The entertainment mogul owns a bunch of hotels and casinos in a slew of different countries, so we're sure he's going to show MiMi a good time at the next stops on their world tour, Cannes and St. Tropez," Perez Hilton reported.
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