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Switched on Pop

Listening 2 Britney: Toxic

Switched on Pop

Vox Media Podcast Network

Music Interviews, Music History, Music, Music Commentary

4.6 • 2.7K Ratings

🗓️ 22 March 2022

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In 2003 Britney Spears released “Toxic,” a song that would make converts out of pop skeptics, be named one of the greatest tracks of the 21st century by multiple publications, and become a personal favorite of Switched on Pop. Despite its success, when “Toxic” was released as the second single from Spears’s fourth album, In the Zone, even the song’s writers thought it was too “weird” to become a hit. But thanks to the new iTunes platform, which was just gaining traction in 2013, audiences kept buying the track and helped push it to the top of the charts. For many listeners, your hosts included, hearing “Toxic” for the first time was a moment of epiphany, an opportunity to rethink one’s views on the expressive power and musical invention of Top 40 pop. And almost twenty years after its release, “Toxic” is still rippling through the culture. It’s been covered as a jazz-noir ballad by Yael Naim, a screamo anthem by A Static Lullaby, and a bluegrass burner by Nickel Creek. In 2022, the song enjoyed yet another revival in the form of DJ duo Altego’s viral TikTok mash-up of the song with Ginuwine’s “Pony.” What makes “Toxic” so enduring? For one, it’s the pull of Spears’ voice, as she moves from her chest voice in the verse to an eloquent falsetto in the pre-chorus, then combines the two techniques in the chorus. It’s the way the song’s producers, Bloodshy and Avant, combine a matrix of sounds that should not go together—a 1981 Bollywood love song, electric surf guitar, and funky synthesized bass—into an unforgettable melange. And it’s the lasting power of Cathy Dennis’s lyrics, which spins a universal tale of trying to resist temptation…and ultimately failing. Songs Discussed Britney Spears - Toxic Lata Mangeshkar and S. P. Balasubrahmanyam - Tere Mere Beech Mein Kylie Minogue - Can’t Get You Out of My Head Katy Perry - I Kissed A Girl Yael Naim - Toxic A Static Lullaby - Toxic Nickel Creek - Toxic Mark Ronson - Toxic Altego - Toxic/Pony Mashup Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

This episode is brought to you by Slack. With Slack, you can bring all your people and

0:05.9

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0:11.1

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0:16.7

like huddles for quick check-ins or Slack Connect, which helps you connect with partners

0:20.9

inside and outside of your company. Slack, where the future works. Get started at

0:26.9

Slack.com slash DHQ.

0:42.9

Welcome to Switched on Pop. I'm a musicologist and a Sloan.

0:46.2

I'm a songwriter, Charlie Harding, and this is episode three of Listening to Brittany

0:51.9

where we strip away everything you think you know about Brittany Spears and just focus

0:56.9

on her music. I feel like Nate, last time you left me with a cliffhanger saying that we

1:03.3

were going to be moving to the apex of Brittany's music, you're producing today's episode.

1:10.8

What's happening? We have arrived, Chuck. It's the apex. It's the zenest. It's the

1:15.9

apogee. It is the Halcyon moment in Brittany Spears career in my humble opinion. I thought

1:25.1

you were out of your vocab words. But I'm not the only one. The song we're going to talk

1:28.7

about today has been named by someone of the greatest songs of the 21st century. The

1:35.3

song has been covered by everyone and their mother. Charlie, the song we're going to talk

1:41.3

about today is toxic. My mom has not covered toxic.

2:01.1

I think for many people, myself included hearing toxic for the first time was a moment of

2:07.8

epiphany. Oh, yeah. A revelation. I think this is actually the song that converted me

2:13.3

to loving top 40 pop music. Really? A conversion? Yeah. Like Constantine

2:19.7

seeing the cross. Yeah, Charlie hearing the surf guitar. I guess so. I think I had a similar

2:26.7

experience. It was a moment when I had to confront some of the biases I had about pop

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