iTunes

Der iTunes Store wird geöffnet.Falls iTunes nicht geöffnet wird, klicken Sie auf das iTunes Symbol im Dock oder auf dem Windows Desktop.Statusanzeige
iTunes

iTunes ist die einfachste Möglichkeit, digitale Medien in Ihre Sammlung aufzunehmen und zu verwalten.

iTunes wurde auf Ihrem Computer nicht gefunden. Jetzt iTunes laden, um Hörproben von It's Not Me, It's You von Lily Allen abzuspielen und diese Titel zu kaufen.

iTunes ist schon installiert? Klicken Sie auf „Ich habe iTunes“, um es jetzt zu öffnen.

Ich habe iTunes Gratis-Download
iTunes für Mac + PC

It's Not Me, It's You

Lily Allen

Öffnen Sie iTunes, um Hörproben zu wählen und Musik zu kaufen und zu laden.

Albenrezension

At the height of Pulp's fame, Jarvis Cocker channeled all his existential dread about celebrity into a chilling epic called "The Fear." Ten years later, Lily Allen — the funniest British pop star since Jarvis and perhaps the best — uses the same title to explore paralyzing fame, but instead of turning inward, Lily deflects, pushing all her anxiety into a Paris Hilton wannabe, a "weapon of massive consumption" that we know isn't Lily herself because this girl "doesn't care about clever." Lily, of course, cares very, very much about clever: it's how she defines herself as an artist and as a persona. Her quips are precise in her lyrics and savage in public, as evidenced when she drunkenly baited her co-presenter Elton John at a British awards show. Such displays tend to obscure her considerable skills as a storyteller, a gift that also gets buried beneath tabloid headlines that place her among pop tarts and princesses. Lily is attracted and repelled by fame, adoring the limelight but neither the company or how it forces personal problems to the forefront, and all these contradictions fuel her second album, It's Not Me, It's You.

Like many a bright pop star before her, Allen is feeling a little bit older than her 23 years, knowing that the landscape of her life is changing, and she's dreading her 30s, which still feel very far away. Lily doesn't state this outright, of course: she puts it into the character sketch of "22," just like how she deals with the blizzard of cocaine and pills on "Everyone's at It," registering her sneering disdain for a social scene she's outgrowing yet not quite ready to leave behind. Far from being a crutch, this narrative distancing is Lily's strength: unlike so many of her too-sensitive peers, she doesn't indiscriminately spill emotions onto the page, she picks her targets, choosing to reveal personal secrets we already know — tellingly, she never addresses her 2008 miscarriage, but happily serves up her dysfunctional relationships with her parents, something that has provided endless column inches in gossip rags. If there's an element of Lily picking low-hanging fruit here and on "The Fear" and on the George W. Bush kiss-off "F*** You" — or even "Not Fair," a cousin to "Not Big," where Allen laments a lover who is perfect in every way except his inability to make her scream — the key to any story is how it's told, and telling is Lily's strength, how she ferrets out bypassed details or delivers a well-worn punchline. It's Not Me pushes this talent to the forefront, in part because she works with only one collaborator here: Greg Kurstin, half of the Bird and the Bee and responsible for several cuts on Alright, Still but not the big hits "Smile" and "LDN," which were produced by Mark Ronson. Without Ronson, Lily isn't quite so glitzy or glammy, she even flirts with adult pop without succumbing to tedium. Kurstin doesn't avoid pop hooks or cheeky camp — "F*** You" galumphs by on a two-step, "He Wasn't There" is music hall pastiche, and "Never Gonna Happen" gives Lily plenty of room to be coyly disingenuous — but It's Not Me, It's You streamlines Allen's eccentricities and bad habits, holding together in a way the gloriously messy Alright, Still never quite managed. There's a slight drawback to this cohesion — It's Not Me never hits heights as blinding as "Smile" or "LDN" — but this approach does wind up spotlighting just how special a pop star Lily Allen is, how she captures all that's wretched and glorious about her time without falling into any of its traps, probably because she's clever enough to avoid them in the first place.

Kundenrezensionen

Tolles Album, tolle Frau

Ich muss wirklich sagen, dass sich der Kauf gelohnt hat. Es ist einfach mal eine andere Art von Musik und die Stimme passt perfekt dazu. Schon die Vorab-EP "The Fear" versprach viele weitere tolle Titel, und darum auch ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Sterne.

Nettes Album, auch wenn man sich über Lily Allen streiten kann!

Ich finde das Album eigentlich sehr gelungen auch wenn niemand weiß wer wirklich die Texte geschrieben hat. Aber das ändert nichts daran, dass Lieder wie The Fear, Not Fair, F**k you, Who'd have known und Him klasse sind. Auch die Texte sind super, wobei Him sicher nichts für Leute ist die keine Kritik an Religion/Gott ertragen können. Ich finde es auch gut, dass Lily Allen ihr Album auch auf ihre Myspace Seite gestellt hat, sodass man sich die Lieder dort in voller Länge anhören kann (von den Itunes exlusiven Acoustic Versionen einmal abgesehen). Man kann sich also selbst ein genaues Bild machen und dann entscheiden ob man nur einzelne Lieder oder doch das ganze Album kauft.

2009 mit neuen guten Liedern

Die ersten super guten Lieder aus 2009. Die Lieder bleiben im Ohr! Schon nach "The Fear" war ich den neuen Lily Allen verfallen und nach "F**k you" in der "The Fear EP", zählte ich die Tage bis zur Erscheinung von "It's not me, it's you". Das Album ist leicht und locker. Die perfekte Mischung für den Frühling! Nur leider ist die Accoustik-Version von "Womaizer" nicht auf dem Album, das Lied gefällt mir in ihrer Version fast besser. Dieses Album ist das Geld mehr als Wert!

Biografie

Geboren: 1985 in Hammersmith, London, England

Genre: Pop

Jahre aktiv: '00s, '10s

With her omnivorous musical tastes and cheeky attitude, London-based pop singer/songwriter Lily Allen made a name for herself almost as soon as she released her demos on the Internet. The daughter of comedian Keith Allen, Lily spent most of her childhood bouncing from one school to another — in fact, she attended 13 different schools between the ages of five and 15. This constant moving meant she didn't have much of a chance to make lasting friendships, so Allen entertained herself with books...
Komplette Biografie
It's Not Me, It's You, Lily Allen
In iTunes ansehen

Kundenbewertungen

Einflüsse

Zeitgenossen

Klicke auf den iTunes und App Store Facebook-Seiten auf „Gefällt mir“, um exklusive Sonderangebote, die aktuellsten Insider-Nachrichten zu neuen Apps und vieles mehr zu erhalten.