Archive

Archive for the ‘Cyndi Lauper’ Category

Pazz & Jop 2010 – 38th Annual Village Voice Critics’ Poll

January 24, 2011 Leave a comment


This year I was (again) honored to be asked to contribute to the annual Village Voice critics’ poll. Here’s the info and the results.

Pazz & Jop 2010
38th Annual Village Voice Critics’ Poll

About Pazz + Jop:

The Pazz & Jop critics’ poll is a highly influential poll of music critics run by The Village Voice newspaper. It is compiled every year from the top ten lists of hundreds of music critics (roughly 800 in the 2004 poll). Albums have been voted upon every year since 1974 (voting also took place in 1971), and votes for singles have been tabulated since 1979.

Since the poll’s inception, critics have been invited to award their ten albums a total of 100 points, with each album receiving a maximum of 30 points and a minimum of 5. Lists submitted without points are given 10 points per album by the poll’s editors. Singles lists have always been unweighted.

Music critic Robert Christgau was in charge of the poll for 33 years, and wrote an essay every year that accompanied and framed the list. Christgau was dismissed from the Village Voice in August 2006, but the paper intends to continue the feature. Christgau continues to submit his Top Ten list and to encourage other eligible critics to do so.

The poll was jokingly given the spoonerism name “Pazz & Jop” rather than the more obvious “Jazz & Pop” because, inevitably, some detractor will claim that a nominated work is ineligible or undeserving on the grounds that it isn’t “really” jazz or pop. Since there are no formal definitions for the made-up terms “pazz” and “jop”, voters will concentrate on the actual merits of a work rather than arguing over whether it fits into this or that genre.

Cyndi Lauper

June 27, 2007 Comments off

Cyndi Lauper
8 p.m. Wednesday, July 4. Budweiser Main Stage, on the Arch grounds, as part of Live on the Levee.
By Jaime Lees
Published: June 27, 2007

Cyndi Lauper has played many roles during her 25 years in the spotlight. She’s been the quirky music-video new-waver, Madonna’s early rival, the girl who just wants to have fun, the undercover singer of the Pee-Wee’s Playhouse theme song, and (most recently) a crooner of jazz standards and gorgeous, delicate originals. Through all of the years and all the hats she’s worn, one priority has remained: Lauper has always been friend of the outcast, queer, misfit or oppressed. She’s just finished headlining the True Colors tour (a highly successful venture to benefit the Human Rights Campaign that featured gay-friendly artists and comics), and this Independence Day Lauper is performing on the riverfront downtown. Expect crazy outfits, prideful parading and the kind of magic that can only be achieved by a true diva.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.