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Refusing Glee — really?

Emily is currently a student, nervously approaching her entrance into the real world, which she off-sets by escaping into a lot of TV. When not singing along to 'Glee', you can find her enveloped in all things design related and who knows, maybe one day you'll see her on HGTV or 'Project Runway'!

It seems not everyone is a fan of Glee, the Fox mega-hit that has been winning awards left and right, and causing controversy, too. The musical show does not include any original music. Every song sung is a cover of a hit by an actual artist. The Glee kids have sung songs by Journey, Cristina Aguilera, Rihanna, MC Hammer, and a very long list of others. Their first artist-themed episode came about when Madonna gave producers access to her entire catalog, and was followed by a not-as-good Britney Spears-themed show. With so many great songs originally done by so many well known bands and individual artists, and with the tremendous success the show is enjoying, it’s difficult to understand why anyone would turn Glee down. Yet a handful of artists has done just that.

Coldplay made news last year when they flat out refused to let Glee producers use even just one of their songs for the series pilot. Never mind that the year prior, they not only allowed Apple to use one of their songs in a commercial for iTunes, the band members actually appeared in the commercial themselves. Apparently, Chris Martin, the band’s frontman, didn’t want the band’s music featured on an unproven, unknown show. He later ate his words. Once Glee exploded out of the gate, Martin called the show’s creator and executive producer, Ryan Murphy, to apologize for his previous stinginess, and offer up the band’s entire catalog.

The other famous holdout whose Glee refusal generated a lot of buzz is Canadian rocker Bryan Adams. Murphy has said on more than one occasion, in several interviews, that Adams turned them down flat, and has even insinuated that it was a money issue, as in Adams wanting more than the show was willing to pay. To date, no Bryan Adams song has been featured on the hit show. But one news source reported Adams as saying that he never turned them down, and that he doesn’t even know what Glee is. With as much fanfare as the show has generated, that’s a little hard to believe. Sounds like maybe another apology might be coming Murphy’s way pretty soon.

The latest snub Glee has received is from Slash, former guitarist for Guns N’ Roses, current guitarist for Velvet Revolver. His reason isn’t because he isn’t familiar with Glee, though. It’s because he is—and he hates it. He likens the show to Grease, which he says is bad enough, but calls Grease a “work of art” compared to Glee. That’s at least an honest reason not motivated by money. Definitely not, because nearly every song featured on the show becomes an instant download hit on iTunes, generating a lot of income for the songs’ writers and performers.

Watching Glee, with its mix of contemporary and classic hits, is simultaneously a lesson for older viewers in what’s popular now, and for younger viewers in the music that paved the way for everything done today. Without Madonna, there would be no Britney or Cristina. If somehow you’ve missed the show up to now, you can watch Glee online and start at the beginning. Just don’t be surprised when it makes you want to not only listen to all that music you remember from high school, but download the Glee versions as well.

Photo Credit: FOX

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5 Responses to “Refusing Glee — really?”

February 4, 2011 at 1:34 PM

Because Glee has become such a commercial success, I’m sure there are some artists that see it as “selling out” if they let their music on the show. I can’t get upset, it’s their art, they should have some say on how it is used by others.

Based on the incredibly inflammatory comments that creator Ryan Murphy made towards Slash and Kings of Leon, I can’t help but hope that more artists refuse.

February 4, 2011 at 1:41 PM

. . . . .

I love “cheese” just as much as the next guy. And I tried … I really did … to get through more than one episode of Glee. (I did a post on it, matter’n fact.) But I felt my brain melting … honestly.

And I can state with solidity and the greatest degree of confidence: There is no possible way I could ever, under any circumstances, be seduced into downloading Glee versions of tunes I know and love.

I hereby respectfully exercise the right to snub and refuse …

April 1, 2011 at 3:31 AM

Of course and it has to be because of your refined musical palate and understanding of the nature of rarefied music, not to be touched or understood by malingerers.
You music snobs really take the cake, jesus, you would have thought that y’all wrote the songs instead of just listened to them. That’s a real collaborative element.

February 4, 2011 at 2:32 PM

A co-worker came into work one day and rushed to my computer and put in the url for a Glee music video for Madonna’s Vogue (and really, how meta is that… a music video of the cast doing a music video of madonna doing a music video.) As it played, my co-worker was clapping and laughing but all I could think about was that a) they didn’t sing it as well as or bring anything unique to the original and b) they changed the words slightly to make it reference the show….the exact same things cheesy cover bands do when they perform in casinos.

Whatever… I like musicals… so I tried to get through an episode late in season 1 and I couldn’t do it. I guess it’s cool that it brings out such feelings of joy in people but I just felt no connection to the kids. I am extremely surprised at all of the adults that are fans of the show.

April 14, 2011 at 11:18 PM

Here’s Damon Albarn’s take on the subject:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-AXO6qH04fA

1. Write your own songs
2. Have your own identity and quit being the slaves of TV producers who don’t give a _____ about you.

If the show was something like this…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeGLqYIrvVQ
I could understand. But the cast of Glee… isn’t even made up of High School Students.

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