Popjustice
  • Home
    • Briefing archive
  • Features
  • Playlists
  • Get Popjustice emails
  • About Popjustice
    • About
    • Popjustice: Est 2000
    • The Popjustice Twenty Quid Music Prize
  • Contact
    • General contact details
    • Submit music
  • Forum
Recent Posts
  • Congratulations to Charli XCX and Lorde: winners of the 2024 Popjustice Twenty Quid Music Prize
  • The 2024 Twenty Quid Music Prize: Shortlist
  • The 2023 Popjustice Twenty Quid Music Prize: Shortlist
  • Fine, let's do a Substack then.
  • The 2022 Popjustice Twenty Quid Music Prize: shortlist
Hello! In theory you should only be seeing this if you're using a mobile or tablet. How's the site looking? If anything's wonky click here and tell us so we can fix it. Thanks! x
Popjustice
  • Briefing
  • Features
  • Playlists
    • New Music Friday: The Popjustice Edit
    • Big Hit Energy
    • 21st Century Pop
    • 2018% Solid Pop Music
    • Full archive
  • About
    • About Popjustice
    • Contacting Popjustice
    • Send music
    • Popjustice: Est 2000
    • The Popjustice Twenty Quid Music Prize
  • Forum
  • PJ Gold
  • The Briefing

Ten features we want in the Lady Gaga iPad app

  • September 6, 2012
  • Popjustice

As you may have read, Lady Gaga's upcoming album 'ARTPOP' will be accom­pan­ied by some sort of app.

She's written quite an extensive note about it here. (We like the bit where she says digital music is over­priced then goes on to say she'd like to work with Apple.) Anyway she explains among other things that it'll work across various platforms, but it seems fair to assume that its natural home will be a touch­screen tablet.

So here are some features we have decided are vital to the success of the 'ARTPOP' app.

1. A song that never ends
Let's have a song — let's called it 'The Infinite' — which just goes on forever. It would be like our amazing 45-minute version of 'Alejandro', but would last a lifetime. Fans would stage events all around the world where they listened to 'The Infinite' for days, weeks, months on end. One fan, whose Twitter name would probably have 'HausOf' in it somewhere, would actually devote his entire life to listening to 'The Infinite'.

2. Angry Madonnas

3. Telephone
This is basically Skype-type func­tion­al­ity built into the app, but you can't call anyone with it. What's the point? Well, imagine browsing the 'ARTPOP' app one day, when the music suddenly drops out. A message appears on the screen. 'GAGA CALLING'. You press 'answer'. And on the other end of the line is Lady Gaga. She's called for a chat! After a few minutes she says her goodbyes. That would be pretty incred­ible. We suppose this feature has a bit of a 'golden ticket' element to it. We reckon Gaga would need to make one call a day for this feature to be useful. Maybe the audio from each call could instantly be published to the user's Littlemonsters.com page?

4. A song that changes every time you listen to it
What you'd be wanting here is something like this Gwilym Gold album, but confined to one song only because a whole album that didn't know if it was coming or going would probably get on your tits after a while. The important factor here is that Lady Gaga should never release 'her' version of the song — there should never be a defin­it­ive version. The song should be regarded as an organism.

5. A soundboard
A simple way to play out famous Lady Gaga phrases. "Paws up!" "I was born this way!" "I will look you in your eyes and tell you that I am not dumb enough or moronic enough to think that you are dumb enough or moronic enough not to see that I would have stolen a melody!"

6. The full album somehow bundled with the app
In her note about the app Lady Gaga said that it would have a similar price to an album. We'd be happy for this app to go for something like £9.99 as long as it included some sort of con­ven­tional download of the album's sound files, otherwise fans are going to effect­ively buy the album twice, and surely that's not what Gaga or her man­age­ment have in mind. SURELY.

7. A song that is com­pletely personal to each and every listener
Let's say the song is called 'I AM ARTPOP'. This is a bit like the sug­ges­tion in point four, except the random factor is removed. Instead, the listener inputs various inform­a­tion about them­selves — their date of birth, their house number, their lucky number, their eye colour, their shoe size or whatever. The app then uses this data to generate a com­pletely unique version of 'I AM ARTPOP' for every listener. It's their personal version of the song. The song can be exported to be used as ringtones, doorbell chimes and so on. It's offered to the world com­pletely copyright free; Gaga takes no ownership of the music as the music essen­tially belongs to the person whose life pro­grammed the song. Naturally there would be some sort of place probably on Littlemonsters.com where you could upload your song, download other versions and so on, but it would be important that there is no way to vote for a favourite, to click a 'Like' button or whatever, because all fans should be regarded as equals etc etc.

8. All the bits of all the songs
Acapellas, drums, synths, more synths, a deranged choir, the sound of a vacuum cleaner being thrown through a patio window, the whole lot. Play one bit, play everything except the lute solo, tinker to your heart's content. This is fairly standard we suppose but it would be good anyway.

9. The 'I don't speak German but I can if you like' trans­la­tion feature
This includes sound­files of various key phrases — "where is the train station?", "if you're a strong female you don't need per­mis­sion", "twelve frank­furters please, I wish to wear them as a hat"  trans­lated into German. Useful if traveling abroard. (Specifically to Germany.)

10. InstGagaram
Take a picture of someone and apply a series of filters — 'rendered in Word then pho­to­graphed on a laptop screen for texture', 'meat dress', 'Kermit shroud' and so on.

Look we know it's not reas­on­able to expect all of these features but if she could sort out six or seven we and she could have a 'Pad romance.

  • Lady Gaga
Previous Article
  • The Briefing

Who will be British pop's next Justin Timbalikes?

  • September 6, 2012
  • Popjustice
Have a read
Next Article
  • The News

Clips of every song on Mika's new album have 'surfaced'

  • September 6, 2012
  • Owen Myers
Have a read
Further listening
Greatest hits
  • Britney Spears interview: "You learn from everything that happens, good or bad"
  • Marina & The Diamonds interview: "Everyone’s vapid to a degree"
  • Max Martin interview: "I’ve begun to feel that, well, I kind of know how to write a song now"
Further reading
  • 1
    Congratulations to Charli XCX and Lorde: winners of the 2024 Popjustice Twenty Quid Music Prize
  • 2
    The 2024 Twenty Quid Music Prize: Shortlist
  • 3
    The 2023 Popjustice Twenty Quid Music Prize: Shortlist
  • 4
    Fine, let's do a Substack then.
  • 5
    The 2022 Popjustice Twenty Quid Music Prize: shortlist
  • 6
    2021 Popjustice Twenty Quid Music Prize: Laura Mvula wins
Est 2000. Still going.
Socials

 Spotify
 Facebook
 Twitter
 Instagram
 Soundcloud

'Quick links'

About Popjustice
Contact Popjustice
Sign up for the newsletter 
Submit music
Est 2000
Twenty Quid Music Prize 

Playlists

21st Century Pop 
New Music Friday: The Popjustice Edit 
2018% Solid Pop Music 
The Sound Of Popjustice 
Playlist archive

© 2020 Popjustice Ltd. Scrolled to the bottom now you're here
  • Privacy, Ts & Cs, cookies etc
  • Corrections

Input your search keywords and press Enter.