Thursday, 26 March 2015
Ciccone
In 1988 Sonic Youth put out The Whitey Album, not very well disguised as Ciccone Youth and in tribute to Madonna Louise Ciccone. Most of the attention was on the record's cover versions. These had been put out as a single on New Alliance in 1986 and were expanded out for the album. Coming at a time when Sonic Youth were being praised to the heavens for Daydream Nation this was possibly an effective way of defusing some of the hype- some noise, contributions from Mike Watt, jokey covers plus a hip reference to krautrock with the song Two Cool Rock Chicks Listening To Neu! The cover of the album was a photocopied close up of Madonna's face. Madonna apparently gave her blessing to it, remembering the band from her clubbing and Danceteria days. Ciccone Youth did their Madonna thing on Into The Groove(y) and Burnin' Up. Someone on Youtube has done the decent thing and set the music to clips of Desperately Seeking Susan (the only Madonna film that is actually watchable).
Better still though was their version of Robert Palmer's Addicted To Love. The video and vocal were recorded in a karaoke booth for $25- D.I.Y. punk rock in attitude, style and cost. It was also a very effective way of sending up Palmer's video with Kim Gordon singing the song deadpan and dancing with images from the Vietnam War flashing over the top.
This is the standard setter and last word in ironic cover versions. And still sounds great.
Hey Adam. I have this album. Addicted to Love actually got a fair bit of play over here on MTV at the time... at least as much as Sonic Youth did during that time period. Thanks for bringing it back.
ReplyDeleteGreat album filled with Downtown NYC irony.
ReplyDeleteThis photo album cover of tape recorder
ReplyDeleteIt is young Madonna in downtown?
https://plus.google.com/photos/photo/107042305857693493770/6383198568945158626?icm=false&authkey=CNeB1_GuufehfQ