I love the lyrics but have to wait for the song.and I love that she's the only songwriter ..gaga knows what she is doing and this is def going to be a dance track..
and at some guys,.I'm straight and I'm going to dance my ass on this..and I'm pretty sure if the beat is amazing you will too
I love the lyrics but have to wait for the song.and I love that she's the only songwriter ..gaga knows what she is doing and this is def going to be a dance track..
and at some guys,.I'm straight and I'm going to dance my ass on this..and I'm pretty sure if the beat is amazing you will too
They feel a bit contrived, not because I doubt her intentions or feel that she's being disingenuous with what she's saying, but because I think there's an inherent cheesiness to all of this and the whole thing sort of reads as a cliched "we're here and we're queer" type statement.
For me the most perplexing part of the song comes during the bridge where she suddenly opens her arms to embrace not only gays, but basically every other ethnic group or social minority in the world. I applaud the action, but in a track as gay-centric as this one it seems slightly off-point and comes off as a bit of a desperate act to get others to buy into the inspirational message. Given the ten million references to activities and behaviors that are attributed primarily to gay males, I don't see anyone besides gay males buying into this. That's absolutely fine, gay men need inspirational music. Write an anthem for gay men, but don't expect a short-lived "Oh, this is for you too!" moment to rope anyone else in. If tolerance for everyone is the ultimate message, I think a less specific track with less emphasis on sexual orientation would have communicated the point more effectively.