Kelly Clarkson – All I Ever Wanted


Posted April 3, 2009 in Music Reviews

Boland Mills 2025 – desktop

Did you hear the one about the time Kelly Clarkson took a personality test? She got an F.

The stars of end-of-noughties femme-pop have succeeded thanks, predominantly, to an almost cartoonish emphasis on contrived personality quirks (Katy Perry’s political incorrectness chic, Duffy’s Dusty Springfield pastiche, Lady Gaga’s lamé slag-glam). Clarkson sticks out like a banjaxed metatarsal as a pre-Internet 2.0 hangover the management company really ought to get bandaged up as soon as possible.

That giggling girl-kisser Katy Perry is the most relevant benchmark for how far off the 2009 popgeist the Texan American Idol victor is – not only do they occupy the same post-Liz Phair niche of I’m-a-guitar-chick-and-I’m-SO-over-you pop-rock, but Perry has contributed songs to All I Ever Wanted’s uninspiring stadium pop-fest. Where KP and her production team has mastered the craft of melding rock dynamics with neon-pink electro melody (her songs stick to the same four chords throughout, but somehow escape the snare trap of over-repetition), KC and crew take the hair metal approach: start loud, get louder, end loudest. What comes out of the hit machine is a hookless conglomerate for Clarkson to holler over. Thank Christ she was born with a pair of pipes a plumber couldn’t unscrew – just refer to music-box ballad I Want You.

The content of Kelly’s broad almost-husk is, however, disappointingly asinine. Even attempts to break the thematic mold (lead singles My Life Would Suck Without You and I Do Not Hook Up) err on the nafftastic side of tacky. Tacky, indeed is the operative word for this most trailer-trash of power-pop albums. Like a Power City ad, or a box of Eurosaver condoms, these songs are cheap and in-your-face, but have massive, fun-spoiling holes in it. Go kiss a girl and get back to us, Kelly.

 

NEWSLETTER

The key to the city. Straight to your inbox. Sign up for our newsletter.

SEARCH

Cirillo’s

NEWSLETTER

The key to the city. Straight to your inbox. Sign up for our newsletter.