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Diva may look
like a 'Heartbreaker,' but show is bland
By Steve Knopper, Special To The News
Mariah Carey is very good at her job, which is to look
ridiculously sexy and sing like a battering ram. In a series of
low-cut, one-piece dresses, the 33-year-old diva used her
seven-octave voice to beat the heck out of every song. Her modus
operandi: Start slow and seductive, then explode into
glass-shattering histrionics.
And that's pretty much all she had. She didn't really dance so
much as wiggle in a fixed hand- on-hip position - five-inch heels
will do that to you - and she didn't have much to say, lyrically
or between the songs. "I'm reveling in the splendor of you!" she
said at one point, spreading her hands in salute to the majesty
of Red Rocks. At times she resembled a mannequin, set to a
permanent flashy smile.
Striding through the fans from a plateau halfway through the
crowd, Carey arrived on stage in a dazzling silver-and-pink mini-
dress for Heartbreaker, her 1999 No. 1 hit.
Barely moving, she nailed every high note, transitioning into
1993's Dreamlover with impressive squeaks and moans. After that
she relaxed onto one of several on-stage couches, singing last
year's Through the Rain to shimmering chimes.
Carey's show is standard diva formula, with plenty of costume
changes, ballads and dancers. On One Sweet Day, she sang along to
her original video, so she could duet with R&B superstars Boyz II
Men without actually having to drag them on tour. The novelty
effect of watching Mariah 2003 sing the lines of Mariah 1995 wore
off after a few seconds, leaving fans with the disconcerting
feeling they'd just shelled out $75 per ticket to watch VH1.
Her best performance was My Saving Grace, introduced as "the
story of my life set to music." While the gospel lyrics were more
universal than personal, it was easy to read Carey's
well-publicized traumas into the line, "I've loved a lot/learned
a lot/been burned a lot."
She didn't mention her 2001 breakdown or near-career-killing
movie Glitter, of course, but her autobiography seemed a
plausible interpretation.
Throughout her career, which began in 1990 with four straight No.
1 hits, Carey has sung the kind of heartbreak clichés that great
soul singers can turn into classics.
("I need a lover to give me/the kind of love/that will last
always/I need somebody uplifting/to take me away," goes
Dreamlover.) But Carey turns them into aggressively bland
mixtures of upbeat, hip-hop-tinged R&B.
She's pretty creative, though, with choreography and set design.
Her dancers transformed into funky circus performers during the
otherwise-uneventful My Own, and one of the entire night's
highlights was a Day-Glo tug of war between men on stilts and
clowns.
At other times, the dancers were, inexplicably, cheerleaders,
basketball players and karate masters. If only Carey's
performances were as adventurous.
Source: Rocky
Mountains
Mariah Carey
revels in show at Red Rocks
She gives fans vocal fireworks, bump, grind on comeback tour
Knight Ridder Tribune
By G. Brown, Denver Post Popular Music Writer
Mariah Carey has experienced dreamlike success and painful
reality.
At the turn of the millennium, the best-selling female singer of
the '90s put her career on the line as never before with a new
movie, a new record and a new contract estimated at $100 million.
Unfortunately, her personal anguish - a skittish and strange
appearance on MTV's "TRL," and her subsequent hospitalization for
an emotional and physical breakdown - made all the news. The
frightening meltdown coincided with the disastrous releases of
her film "Glitter" and the titular album. She took a nearly $30
million buyout to part with Virgin Records.
Now, Carey has returned in an earnest comeback bid. She visited
Red Rocks Amphitheatre on Sunday night.
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"I've never performed in Colorado before, but I spend every
Christmas in Aspen," the 33-year-old Long Islander said prior to
the show, at once candid and coy. "I'm a very festive person, so
I love being in the snow for the holidays ... although I don't
know how you put up with it all winter!"
Carey admitted that the lack of live appearances in the past
might have hurt her. Critics labeled her lightweight and vaguely
thought of her as the bubble-gum pop star with the diva voice,
controlled by a behind-the-scenes mastermind. (She famously
married Sony Music CEO Tommy Mottola in 1993 and famously
divorced him in '97.)
"I never used to perform. That was management's choice, but I
understood it. I wasn't raised in the 'Mickey Mouse Club.' I
started out as a background singer; I wasn't the one out front
with all that pizazz. I was standing there flat-footed. It took
me a long time to feel confident.
"I look at this tour as 'MTV Unplugged' meets 'Cabaret.' We've
got a big production in terms of dancing and the atmosphere, but
its not like I'm taking myself too seriously here."
But Carey has felt the effects of a spiritless summer touring
market. After booking a tour of 15,000-seat arenas across the
U.S., her reps said she would instead play smaller venues to
guarantee more "intimate" performances. At Red Rocks, only a
reported 3,500 tickets were sold.
Yet it didn't seem to bother Carey. She was excited to be at the
famed outdoor amphitheater, and she ingratiated herself to the
Denver-area devotees, returning to what she does best, showcasing
her stratospheric vocal pyrotechnics.
The sultry singer entered the stage from the middle rows of the
Rocks, surrounded by screaming fans while singing the exuberant
"Heartbreaker." She then loaded up on hits during the night. With
singer Trey Lorenz, she led the audience in a sing-along to "I'll
Be There," and gamely attempted a little bump-and-grind dance
number for "Fantasy."
Carey is asking fans - or "lambs," as she calls them - to help
her decide each night's set list via her official website, and
the vote at Red Rocks was for "One Sweet Day," her hit with Boyz
II Men. The encores were "Vision Of Love" and "Hero."
Carey also performed songs from 2002's "Charmbracelet," her first
release for Island. She writhed during the Busta Rhymes parts of
"I Know What You Want" and offered an over-the-top cover of Def
Leppard's power ballad "Bringin' On the Heartbreak."
It was a lot more fun than, say, a Whitney Houston concert. Too
bad the theatrical element of the performance was uneven. "The
Marionette Show" vignette was a takeoff on "The Eminem Show,"
Carey's opportunity for payback after Eminem dissed her on his
track "Superman." She sang "Clown" while masked men on stilts
tugged a female dancer/human puppet wearing a blond wig and
Detroit Pistons jersey. The crowd's response was a collective
"Huh?"
And the 1-hour, 45-minute set was interrupted by Carey's eight
costume changes - ranging from sequined body suits to evening
gowns to Hooters-style short, tight clothing - during which her
dance ensemble and backing singers tried in vain to hold the
audience's attention.
Voyeurs may have hoped Carey's post-breakdown tour would express
recriminations and tantrums, but it was all rainbows and stars.
She announced "Through The Rain" as being about perseverance, and
as she sang the gospel-tinged ballad "My Saving Grace," a giant
video screen flashed images of her as a wide-eyed school girl, a
superstar and a fallen diva-in-distress before giving way to her
beaming visage.
"Two years ago, I was touring and promoting and sleeping one hour
a night, if that. I was going through troubles with Sony. It was
more than any human could possibly endure," Carey said.
"I just had to learn to say no, to take care of myself, that I
was important, not just this image that everyone had of me on TV
doing 'Oprah.' I just went to therapy and did things that were
healing. I think a lot of celebrities go through stuff like that
and their 'people' keep it quiet. But I'm comfortable enough to
say, 'Yeah, I'm human."'
Did the "Glitter" fiasco scare off some of her fans?
"The movie came out on 9/11, remember.
"I would have been soured on doing another movie if it wasn't for
'Wise Girls.' It's an independent film that won an award at
Sundance," she said of her turn as a saucy Mafia restaurant
waitress. "Now I'm doing another one in the fall for the same
company."
Carey admitted she's had a lot of emotional baggage to sift
through.
"Now I just rest during the day. I sit with my little humidifier,
pampering and babying my voice."
Source: Denver
Post
Serial triller Mariah Carey's
musical crime: leading the growing trend toward overblown,
roller-coaster vocals
Post / Jonathan Moreno
By G. Brown, Denver Post Popular Music Writer
Mariah Carey's voice is her not-at-all-secret weapon. Trilling
through five octaves, from the gut to that fantastic whistle
that's at the high end of her jaw-dropping range, she dominated
video and radio in the '90s - the best-selling female singer of
that decade, the only artist to top the charts in each year. And
she reaped rewards of ubiquity, celebrity and ample financial
security along the way.
Unfortunately, all that exposure came at a cost. And not just a
messy divorce from Sony chief Tommy Mottola, a notorious nervous
breakdown, a stillborn career as a film actress and finally being
unceremoniously bought out of her lucrative recording contract
with Virgin Records.
No, Carey's crime is against the art of American popular singing.
She is a technical virtuoso, but her NutraSweet style of soul -
sugary and artificial songs, crammed with hundreds of gratuitous
notes - imparts nothing but self-interest.
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"You have to maintain some level of control to sing my songs,"
Carey insisted recently in her low and throaty speaking voice.
She's touring behind her December 2000 release "Charmbracelet,"
and she'll perform tonight at Red Rocks Amphitheatre - her
first-ever show in Colorado.
But to others, Carey's overblown vocals have the emotional
resonance of asphalt.
"I'm opinionated because I'm old," Denver blues and soul singer
Hazel Miller said with a laugh. "Mariah Carey does not make you
feel that she believes in what she's singing. So I can't deal
with it ...
"God love her, she has an incredible gift. But to sing that
mindless 4/4-beat, R&B simply to make money and never use that
amazing voice God blessed her with for anything worthy of it - to
me, I'm sorry, that's a sin."
Yet Carey's influence is glaringly apparent on the Top 40
airwaves and TV's "American Idol" and its spate of imitators.
Young singers follow a tactic of violent Carey emulation - don't
hold back from trilling eight notes where one would be enough.
That particular vocal mannerism is called melisma.
"In the popular music sense, it's a series or group of notes
surrounding the original pitch, usually maintained by one
syllable, that's used in a decorative fashion," said Celeste
Delgado, professor of vocal jazz and commercial music at the
University of Denver's Lamont School of Music.
"A lot of people think that melismatic singing, as in Mariah
Carey's case, originated a few years ago. In actuality, it
started back in Europe in the days of classical music - there are
numerous improvised cadences at the ends of compositions that
were very melismatic and have been through many generations of
musicians.
"But it morphed into many different styles. There was the music
of slaves, where it was entirely improvised. They say some of the
different melismas they used in songs would be secret signals
giving directions to the underground railroads."
Such singers as Ray Charles and Aretha Franklin carried the
gospel music tradition out of black churches and recast it as
secular soul and R&B. But the expressive power of those singers
has been undermined. Melisma has been largely reduced to an
identifiable artifice.
"Mariah Carey almost single-handedly brought that sheer overuse
to the forefront," Delgado said. "She became a role model for pop
singers of the current generation."
Indeed, Carey is the godmother of every derivative diva with a
multi-octave range. Christina Aguilera catapults across octaves
with masterful control. R&B stars like Destiny's Child stack
trills and melismas on beats and backing vocals. And fans love
this type of ornate, vocal-sandblast approach - it now defines
quality for an entire generation.
"There's definitely a talent to it that can be appreciated,"
Delgado said. "I have a huge respect for Beyonce Knowles of
Destiny's Child - the melismatic runs that she uses are
incredibly precise, almost perfect in a classical sense. But at
the same time, I think they've taken away from the original
melodies."
"All these little girls are trying very hard now to cram as many
trills as possible in one note," Miller said. "Unfortunately,
they think that's soulful, that it sounds black. And that makes
me very sad. It is not pleasant to the ear. It is simply a bad
imitation of something that was once ... unique, that you only
heard in black gospel or down-home soul singers. But it has been
subverted into something that is so commonplace and unnecessary -
how many notes you can put into one word when one note sung
gracefully will do."
If "American Idol" is any barometer, few of today's young vocal
artists are aware of such dissimilarities. The most frightening
aspect of the show is that contestants don't sing songs so much
as tackle them, the difference between a musical performance and
an exhibition of vocal acrobatics.
During the winning renditions by Kelly Clarkson and male
divas-in-training Ruben Studdard and Clay Aiken, they didn't
explore the nuances and emotions of a lyric - their intention was
to buffet it into submission.
"It used to be that the standard was how you interpreted the
lyrics," Miller said with a sigh. "But that's not the standard
anymore."
Carey's take?
"I don't watch 'American Idol' - I never get a chance to watch TV
- but it's a great venue for someone with talent to make a name
for themselves," she said. "Unfortunately, the show drives the
industry. It assures that you're going to sell a million records.
"But you know, after the show is over and you make a record,
that's when the real crunch time starts. You have to make
something with substance. Songwriting is what makes you an
artist. Just being able to sing the notes doesn't mean anything."
And Carey co-writes and co-produces nearly all her songs. Pat
Monahan of the rock band Train, whose full-throated vocals
(currently heard on the hit "Calling All Angels") may be a sign
that a melisma backlash is rallying, is in her corner.
"The 'American Idol' kids sound kind of same-y ... there's a lot
of imitation," he said. "But Mariah Carey, in her defense, had
quality songs at one point - 'Hero' is an incredibly good lyric.
That's what I'm drawn to, what a person is about."
Ironically, Carey's musical director and bassist is Randy
Jackson, one of the judges on "American Idol."
"Now he's famous - we have to call him 'Randy Jackson of
"American Idol,"' but he's been my 'dawg' for years," Carey said.
"It's so funny, because I used to introduce him as Michael
Jackson's brother on tour. And now people actually think he is!
"What's important is that Randy really cares about those
'American Idol' contestants. They can learn a lot from his
advice."
Jackson can look forward to another season of celebri-wannabes
who rely not on melody and artful performing but trite,
prefabricated trifles with zero melodic or emotional punch.
"I'm teaching at a jazz camp this summer, 75 high school
students," Delgado said. "Extremely melismatic singing doesn't
have a place here. And the influence of shows like 'American
Idol' and those singers on these kids is surprising.
"The other day, we were trying out a small group for solos, and a
girl had a totally pop, melismatic solo - and everyone went, 'Oh,
wow, she's going to get it - she's great!' And I had to go, 'No,
that's not really appropriate or tasteful.' But that's the
mentality that kids of this generation have."
For that evolution of pop vocalizing, we can blame Carey - she
paved the way for over-singing.
"I would gladly give up 10 years of my life just to hear Aretha
Franklin sing a John Lennon song," Miller said. "But to hear
Mariah Carey continue to churn out this same stuff over and over,
it's such a waste of this amazing voice that most of us would
give our eyeteeth for. To sing with it and never really reach her
soul - that's a shame."
Source: Denver Post
Mariah May Need to Slow Pace
Industry insiders are beginning to wonder whether Mariah Carey
may need to slow down her infamously grueling work pace.
The 32-year-old multi-platinum selling songstress suffered a
physical and emotional breakdown back in 2001 due to exhaustion
from overworking herself while preparing the soundtrack and
marketing campaign for her debut feature film, “Glitter.” And
while we commend Mariah for stepping back into the feature film
ring by starring as a female boxer in the romantic comedy “The
Sweet Science,” we just hope and pray she’s pacing herself.
After all, she is committed to providing a soundtrack for the
film as well. And on top of that, since the role is so physically
demanding, Mariah has been working out in the boxing ring while
touring the country with her current "Charmbracelet" tour,
according Anthony Esposito, one of the film’s producers.
There are signs that Carey has learned from overworking herself.
The tour she’s mounted is only taking places in intimate concert
halls and club settings, cutting down on much of the exhaustive
tour process. And the tour is to end at September’s end, giving
Carey nearly a whole month before “The Sweet Science,” is to roll
in November.
Source: Netscape Network
Mariah Carey isn't taking rabbits on tour with her
It is truly inspiring to see Mariah Carey, 33, bounce back so
brilliantly after all the hard times. Just a few months ago, she
downsized her arena tour to give fans a chance to see her in a
more intimate environment. And even though her latest album, "Charmbracelet,"
has already sold 1 million copies since its December release, she
just rereleased it, making it even better than before with more
songs and pictures and everything. And what about her amazing new
single? A cover of Def Leppard's "Bringin' On the Heartbreak."
That's right. Mariah Carey is pretty much totally 100 percent
back. She plays the Paramount in Oakland on Wednesday and Friday.
Q: How was your vacation?
A: My vacation was good, thank you. I was in St. Bart's working
out, torturing myself with my trainer. The cool thing is we do
water aerobics, and I love the water. I'm like a mermaid,
basically, so it doesn't even feel like working out.
Q: I wondered what you did to entertain yourself after you
already jet- skied, scuba dived and dangled out of a helicopter.
A: Exactly. Clearly, I love the water, and I'm no stranger to a
water toy.
Q: How does that work out on tour?
A: It's not that easy. It's not like I can bring a baby pool and
do my water aerobics in there.
Q: Sure you can.
A: You think? Don't tempt me because I have to do it.
Q: You can put a pool right next to the rabbits.
A: Oh yeah, the rabbits, of course. What is this about rabbits? I
heard about that. Somebody said I had rabbits with me somewhere
or something?
Q: That's right.
A: Yeah, that would be not true. That would be one of those lies
like I don't walk on carpeting.
Q: Everyone makes up the best lies about you.
A: I know. I think it's the thing to do.
Q: If there really was a person like what you're supposed to be
that would be awesome.
A: Wouldn't that person be incredible? But I'm just not her.
Q: What's your favorite late-night television?
A: I don't know because I barely have time to watch TV. I think
it's the "Nick at Night" type things.
Q: Like "Gilligan's Island"?
A: Yeah.
Q: On your Web site it said that if you ever had a daughter you
would name her Ginger.
A: My dog's name is Ginger, so I'm going to have to rethink that.
Q: Because your daughter probably wouldn't really appreciate
having the same name as your dog.
A: Exactly. I can just picture her growing up being, "She named
me after a dog!"
Q: Do you ever watch the Home Shopping Network?
A: Yeah, but I'll be buying everything. The other day they had
this food processor on there, and I was like, that looks really
amazing. But then I was, like, this is such nonsense. They're
just trapping me with this infomercial. But I was telling my
housekeeper, "Order this food processor!" Like I'm ever in the
kitchen processing food myself.
Q: When was the last time you made dinner?
A: I have lived in this (New York) apartment for two years now,
and I still haven't cooked myself. When I go away, like at
Christmastime, then I cook. You know what's funny? I am a good
cook, though. I got it from my father.
Q: What's your specialty?
A: Linguine with white clam sauce.
Q: You're not afraid the clams will bite you?
A: Well, usually I'm a little lazy, so I have somebody else shuck
the clams for me because you can't use canned clams. That would
not be stellar. But, yeah, we do that. And I also do a really
good red sauce, a marinara sauce.
Q: What do all the people that follow you around day to day do,
anyway?
A: It's not day to day. If I had that when I wasn't working, that
would not be a cute moment.
Q: I probably shouldn't believe all the crazy things I always
read about you.
A: Please don't. I mean, you can if it's entertaining to you.
This one is entertaining to me.
Q: This interview is going to set the record straight on
everything, including the rabbits.
A: OK, cool. I like that.
Source: San Francisco Chronicle
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