
Hosted by Joe Kams · EN

Looking at the way Billie Eilish came swinging with her very first album, you’d think the whole thing was just beginner’s luck. What most people don’t necessarily know is that a lot of her domination out of the gate had to do with a meticulously calculated strategy that started YEARS before she dropped her debut. --- The audio clips included in this episode are used for critical analysis purposes under the quotation exception provided for in Article L122-5 of the Intellectual Property Code. They are short, contextualized, non-monetized, and are not subject to any claim to rights. This podcast is distributed free of charge with no commercial intent. If you are a rights holder and wish to contact us: louiseguillaume23@gmail.com

All things considered, Pop has always been about MORE. Bigger hooks. Bigger stages. Bigger videos. So how does an artist relying on soft vocals and whispers… end up headlining arenas? How does quietness become this loud? Matter of fact: « When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? » Today, we give you a story about scale, or more precisely how to break it. --- The audio clips included in this episode are used for critical analysis purposes under the quotation exception provided for in Article L122-5 of the Intellectual Property Code. They are short, contextualized, non-monetized, and are not subject to any claim to rights. This podcast is distributed free of charge with no commercial intent. If you are a rights holder and wish to contact us: louiseguillaume23@gmail.com

Entertainment in 1993 only had so many slots. One network could shape how a band was remembered. So when MTV contacted Nirvana for a stripped-back set, that signaled big things ahead for the band... or not depending on the reception the project would get. What no one knew though was it would soon stop being a performance and start being an artifact. How did a TV show become a weapon of legacy? Let’s explore what happens when a moment passes through a system powerful enough to preserve it. --- The audio clips included in this episode are used for critical analysis purposes under the quotation exception provided for in Article L122-5 of the Intellectual Property Code. They are short, contextualized, non-monetized, and are not subject to any claim to rights. This podcast is distributed free of charge with no commercial intent. If you are a rights holder and wish to contact us: louiseguillaume23@gmail.com

In 1993, Nirvana was the gravitational center of the entire alternative rock moment. The band that had dragged the underground into the mainstream whether they liked it or not. That’s where they were, that’s who they were, when MTV Unplugged invited them. Smells like a classic in the making, wouldn’t you say? Let’s dig in! --- The audio clips included in this episode are used for critical analysis purposes under the quotation exception provided for in Article L122-5 of the Intellectual Property Code. They are short, contextualized, non-monetized, and are not subject to any claim to rights. This podcast is distributed free of charge with no commercial intent. If you are a rights holder and wish to contact us: louiseguillaume23@gmail.com

In 1997, Janet Jackson released The Velvet Rope. It debuted at number one. The singles travelled worldwide. The tour sold out. This was yet another major, late-90s pop event. The rollout proved something very simple: when the vision is clear, you don’t need excess noise. You need alignment, the right infrastructure, and then let the work speaks. --- The audio clips included in this episode are used for critical analysis purposes under the quotation exception provided for in Article L122-5 of the Intellectual Property Code. They are short, contextualized, non-monetized, and are not subject to any claim to rights. This podcast is distributed free of charge with no commercial intent. If you are a rights holder and wish to contact us: louiseguillaume23@gmail.com

From surface to interior, The Velvet Rope documents a difficult road to redefinition of self. A record that looked inward, it carried a lot of weight from the past. It felt private in a way pop rarely allows itself to be. The album comes after a period of emotional collapse. Janet spoke before about depression, self-hatred, and the strain of living inside an image that left little room for fracture. Those experiences shaped the album itself. --- The audio clips included in this episode are used for critical analysis purposes under the quotation exception provided for in Article L122-5 of the Intellectual Property Code. They are short, contextualized, non-monetized, and are not subject to any claim to rights. This podcast is distributed free of charge with no commercial intent. If you are a rights holder and wish to contact us: louiseguillaume23@gmail.com

December 13, 2013. Midnight on the East Coast. A new Beyoncé album. Fourteen songs. Seventeen videos. No promo. No warning. A roll out strategy that would set new standards for the music industry. ---- The audio clips included in this episode are used for critical analysis purposes under the quotation exception provided for in Article L122-5 of the Intellectual Property Code. They are short, contextualized, non-monetized, and are not subject to any claim to rights. This podcast is distributed free of charge with no commercial intent. If you are a rights holder and wish to contact us: louiseguillaume23@gmail.com

In her documentary Life Is But a Dream, Beyoncé could be heard saying: “I want to sing from my heart.” A simple sentence that, in retrospect, explains the rupture that followed. Fewer interviews, fewer red carpets, fewer public moments. The silence was anything but absence though. For Beyoncé, the industry lost its ability to dictate her timing. And this state of mind was the catalyst and foundation for her highly-praised, highly anticipated, soon-to-be classic fifth album. Boys, girls, gays and theys, THIS is BEYONCÉ. --- The audio clips included in this episode are used for critical analysis purposes under the quotation exception provided for in Article L122-5 of the Intellectual Property Code. They are short, contextualized, non-monetized, and are not subject to any claim to rights. This podcast is distributed free of charge with no commercial intent. If you are a rights holder and wish to contact us: louiseguillaume23@gmail.com

In 2000, The Marshall Mathers LP entered a pop industry built on purity, colorful imagery and synchronized choreography. Eminem arrived through the same doors but played a different game at the time of release of his breakthrough album. His rollout used spectacle and provocation as strategy. The singles, the videos, the press were all calculated to test how far a rapper could go inside a system built for pop.

When Eminem dropped The Marshall Mathers LP, he went from being the loudest newcomer in rap to one of its defining figures. The album sold millions, but its impact ran deeper. Hip-Hop in the mainstream world, what a white rapper could represent inside a Black art form, controversy used as power… this record which was built on skill, rage, and contradiction made the world argue about rap, art, and who gets to belong in both. Take a seat, because the Real Slim Shady is about to stand up!