Czech Republic - Full Moon 31 - 04/30/99
Lucie Bílá
Hvezdy jako hvezdy
Monitor-EMI Records
News from Prague: The reigning diva of Czech pop produces an
utterly useless release!
Not much has changed since her 1997 release
Missariel. Once again producer Ondrej Soukup (this time
totally) misaligned Bílá's over-the-top vocal delivery
with
cold and unemotional accompaniment and once again the lyricist Gabriela
Osvaldová managed to come up with some pretty embarrassing
lyrics. So where did they get all the music? From the BeeGees, Neil
Sedaka and Roy Orbison among others - in other words, it's all proven
stuff that has already made money in the past, except then it was for
somebody else.
Thus we get Pískovec, a remake of You Don't
Have to Say You Love Me, which was originally written in the 50's,
popularized by Dusty Springfield in the 60's and ruined by Elvis in the
70's. Ms. Bílá gets through it by sighing, screaming,
screeching and breathing heavily while accompanied by musicians
sounding so mechanical that in comparison my refrigerator manages to
project more emotions.
In Release Me translated as Trouba (A Baking Oven),
it's the lyricist's turn to embarrass herself. Here she's provided the
short
monosyllabic Czech word plyn (gas) to extend over a whole note -
an equivalent of trying to sing the word "up" instead of "please" in
the
line "Please, Release Me, Let Me Go." And the rest of this hook is just
as
stupid (Plyn uz sycí z trouby ven - "gas is escaping from
the baking oven"), which the mixed vocal ensemble makes sound like a
Saturday Night Live parody.
The honor of the dumbest line however goes to Tichy
dést' (originally Rhythm of the Rain by Gary Lewis &
the Playboys), sang softly over a tingling celeste:
Chci ti
ríkat slova co te potesí |
I want to tell you
words that will please you |
i kdyz
vonís jako mokrej pes |
even if you smell like a wet dog |
(By the way, the album's title comes from the remake of The Mamas &
The Papas' hit Dream a Little Dream. The complete line goes
Hvezdy jako hvezdy svítí, which translates as
"Stars shine like stars". Pretty heady stuff, isn't it?)
The whole ordeal lasts barely 34 minutes. This would be good news -
unless of course you happen to be some adoring fan who had to shell out
434 Czech Crowns out of his or her own allowance. Hvezdy jako
hvezdy struck me as incredibly arrogant and cynical. All I can say
is
I hope Lucie Bílá & Company didn't 'forget' to pay
royalties to the copyright owners of the original music.
Copyright © 1999 Ivan Sever
|