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I Kissed A Girl

I Kissed A Girl
Manufacturer: Capitol
Category: Digital Music Track

Buy New: $0.89

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Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 36 reviews
Sales Rank: 12

Genre: pop-music
Media: MP3 Download
Running Time: 179

ASIN: B001AAE9N8

Publication Date: June 17, 2008
Promotion: Data not available Terms and Conditions
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Customer Reviews:   Read 31 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Catchy pop song   October 9, 2008
Don't expect this to be more than a catchy pop dance tune, and you won't be disappointed. There are other venues for discourse on gender relations which do much more a service to their serious consideration. This song is just about having fun, feeling attracted to someone, and acting on that feeling in an "innocent" way. Determining just how innocent is left as an exercise for the listener.


1 out of 5 stars Brain-Washing..   October 9, 2008
I'll give the song props for being catchy, but lyrics have a way of being overlooked by the young-people targeted by this song. These lyrics are fowl, inappropriate, and should not be on a top-40 radio station where my children have heard it both in the school bus, and the classroom.


2 out of 5 stars Ugh   October 1, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

So my sister sent me a link to this song. The first listen through, I thought it was kind of catchy and meant to be titillating. Then, I paid attention to the lyrics the next few times it went on rotation, and UGH - pretty much sums up my feelings. It's about as shallow and gimmicky as Madonna kissing Britney and Christina onstage at the VMAs. I mean, yeah, it'll make the guys smirk, but that's about all the lasting value it has. What makes it worse is trying to listen to her 'explain' the meaning behind the song.

200 Km/H in the Wrong Lane did it first and did it better.



1 out of 5 stars Good choice, America! Keep it up!   September 25, 2008
 2 out of 4 found this review helpful

Jesus H. God, this song is horrible - blunt, blatant lipstick lesbianism coming from the same craven attention whore who gave us "Ur So Gay", (a sledgehammer attempt to traffic in the sort of casual homophobia common in high school locker rooms), paired with worn-out electro beats that not even the most desperate drag queen would consider lipsyncing over.

If anything this girl's ever made comes within a mile of flirting with the idea of sincerity, it's by accident. That Christian-music phase she went through didn't pay as big as she thought it would, so the secular world got this spit-polished turd unceremoniously shoved in its face, and lapped it up. Maybe they're putting something weird in the water, but it's selling. Which means I'll not only have to deal with this ugly, insulting, condescending excuse for a song for another few months, but a few more down the road, there'll be another album.

And if that one sells, we the people can look forward to the looming possibility, like a big, fat, fecal cloud on the horizon, that Perry might spawn imitators. Ripoffs of a fabrication. Imitations of an imitation of an imitation of something that might have brushed substance at some point.

Katy Perry, stop. For God's sake (God, remember? That guy you used to be so keen on before He, in His infinite wisdom, gently tried to give you a hint by preventing your records from selling?), for the children's sake, for Susan Sontag's sake, for Patti Smith's sake, stop. You're not a lesbian, you're not a musician, you're not a Christian, you're just embarrassing.



5 out of 5 stars Stop Me If You've Heard This Before   September 9, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

While the song title caught my attention when first hearing this song (hey, that's a girl singing!), it was the power-pop production that held the singer-songwriter part of me in. Crunchy guitar, piercing sexy vocal, solid back-beat and a fun melody. But there was something about the song that I couldn't identify so I picked up my acoustic guitar and started playing along with the song. Sure enough, I had heard this song, at least the main chord progression, before. It was from the song, Heartbreaker, released by Pat Benatar in 1979 (the progression is actually a fairly standard pop/rock one, although IKaG has left out a passing chord). While sharing the same main chord progression and tight rhythm guitar, the slower tempo and different melody make IKaG more pop than rock. Re-listening to Heartbreaker, it doesn't have the same sound quality that IKaG has (high compression and crystal-clear, digital recording), but you know that the vocals are all Benatar's, no need for pitch correction or excessive vocal processing (think warbly vocals), thank you very much. Still, I like both songs a lot for different reasons.

Mmmm, cherry Chapstick!


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