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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/887730_phonogramcover1.jpg]]
2
3->''"Has a song ever changed your life?''
4->''Did you ever wonder how?"''
5
6''Phonogram'' is a series of comic book miniseries by Creator/KieronGillen and Creator/JamieMcKelvie that takes MagicMusic into the 21st century. In this universe, pop songs have power and the people who can use it are known as "phonomancers". The first miniseries, ''Rue Britannia'', serialised in 2006-7, follows phonomancer David Kohl's attempts to discover who is trying to resurrect the dead goddess of {{Britpop}}. The second series, ''The Singles Club'', serialised in 2008-10, takes place over one evening in a club, each issue viewing the events through the perspective of a different character. Gillen and [=McKelvie=] then announced a third series, ''The Immaterial Girl'', which follows the character Emily Aster; thanks to both creators' work for Creator/MarvelComics, it spent several years in DevelopmentHell, but was finally published starting in August 2015. A collection of the entire series has been released.
7
8Each issue is so [[ReferenceOverdosed jam-packed with references]] to bands and music that a 'crib sheet' is included in the back. This is often one of the most entertaining bits of the comic, as its tone is very personal and informal.
9
10----
11!!Tropes:
12* AnachronismStew: Invoked and lampshaded in "The Immaterial Girl": at an important point in the fifth issue, David Kohl summons and uses [[spoiler: Music/JayZ and Music/AliciaKeys's "Empire State of Mind"]] for phonomancy-reasons despite the fact that it hasn't been written or recorded at the time the story takes place. How? It's magic.
13* AmbiguouslyBi: Basically the whole younger generation, though it's mostly subtext [[spoiler: except for Laura]].
14* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Britannia, mod-goddess of Britpop; herself an aspect of The Goddess (also called The Feminine Principle), who embodies femininity in general.
15* ArcWords: "Behind the screen, sometime during forever" in ''The Immaterial Girl''.
16* ArtImitatesArt: As in the page image, many of the covers reference famous album covers or, in ''The Immaterial Girl'', pop videos.
17* ArtShift: In issue #2 of ''Immaterial Girl'', which takes place mostly in the video for "Take On Me" by Music/{{aha}}.
18* AscendedExtra: The Libertines fan David Kohl encountered in ''Rue Britannia'' returns in ''The Immaterial Girl'' as Emily Aster's "apprentice-cum-serf."
19* BathSuicide: Claire attempts this as Emily battles the King behind the Screen and in extension herself. It doesn't take as Claire and Emily come to a truce.
20* BerserkButton:
21** Seth Bingo has several: Do ''not'' do magic at his club night. Do not request records with male vocals. Also, don't say Music/GirlsAloud aren't a real band, or he will destroy every thought you've ever had.
22** David Kohl has Music/TheLibertines, but manages to keep his rage in interior monologue form.
23* BritainIsOnlyLondon: Averted. It's actually mostly set in Bristol.
24* UsefulNotes/BritishEnglish: Well, it's written by two Brits and takes place in Bristol, Bath and UsefulNotes/{{London}}.
25* CallBack: [[spoiler: Claire]] taking over [[spoiler: Emily's]] body at the beginning of ''Immaterial Girl #2'' matches the opening scene of ''The Singles Club'' with Penny B panel to panel.
26* CameBackWrong: The goddess Britannia's resurrection doesn't change the fact that she's been rotting since Britpop died.
27* DeadpanSnarker: Almost all of the main cast of The Singles Club. Special mention goes to Laura, however, as she manages to be a DeadpanSnarker while speaking almost ''exclusively'' via quotes from songs and writers.
28* DiscoDan: The Retromancers.
29* DoNotCallMePaul: Lloyd, who would much rather be known as Mr. Logos. Inverted with his friend Marc, whom everyone calls the Marquis despite his protests.
30* EndOfAnEra: ''The Immaterial Girl'' deals with this among the London Phonomancer community. Everyone starts to realize that they've been wasting their time and haven't done anything worthwhile. The coven is disbanded, David decides to use all the power he got from killing Brittannia to [[spoiler: send Kid-With-Knife to New York]], and Emily and Claire make peace with one another. The finality is cemented when Emily wakes up in her bathroom and finds a text from David telling her about [[spoiler: Music/MichaelJackson's death]].
31* EvilTwin: Played with in "The Immaterial Girl". [[spoiler: Claire initially seems set up to be this to Emily, but the point is clearly made that Claire is merely an alternative side of Emily's personality (specifically, the side of her that is inclined to be a Goth Chick rather than a Material Girl) rather than being evil and, while she spitefully sets out to destroy Emily's life, her vindictiveness is far from unjustified. In fact, given how cruel, aloof and callous we've seen Emily be, ''she'' arguably has as much if not more claim to be the 'evil' side of the personality than Claire does.]]
32* ExactWords: When [[spoiler: Claire takes Emily's place, the King tells Emily that the deal is still good because Emily never specified ''which'' half of her had to stay in the TV.]]
33* FutureMeScaresMe: In "The Immaterial Girl" #3 [[spoiler: both Claire and Emily end up in front of their childhood self demanding that when she make her deal she include terms that will ensure the existence of one or the other. Unfortunately for them, Young Claire isn't particularly impressed with either of them...]]
34--> '''Young Claire''' I'm not going to end up like '''either''' of you. I'm not going to be a slapper or a silly goth girl. [[BadassBoast I'm going to be better than that. I'm going to be]] ''[[BadassBoast amazing.]]'' *Young Claire's [[UhOhEyes eyes glow white]] and speech bubbles turn black with white text* [[GetOut I BANISH YOU! BEGONE! RETURN TO WHENCE YOU CAME!]]
35* GenerationXerox: The end of ''The Immaterial Girl'' [[spoiler:reveals that the younger phonomancers are planning to start their own coven to replace the one that's just dissolved, with the implication that they'll probably go through the exact same kind of things as their elders.]]
36* GeorgeLucasAlteredVersion: The original series was black and white, whereas the sequels had colour art. When all three were collected in a single hardback, the first series was coloured as well. All subsequent reprints of the first series have used the colour version.
37* HollywoodHomely: Invoked and lampshaded by Gillen when it comes to Laura Heaven, who is meant to be shorter, slightly fuller-figured and not quite as attractive as Penny B or Emily Aster. Only as Gillen points out, this is a world drawn by Jamie [=McKelvie=], so 'less attractive is relative'.
38* {{Homage}}: ''The Immaterial Girl'' takes place in several 80s music videos. As such, Emily finds herself running through scenes from [[Music/{{Aha}} "Take On Me"]], [[Music/MichaelJackson "Thriller"]], [[Music/{{Madonna}} Material Girl]], and [[Music/BonnieTyler Total Eclipse of the Heart]].
39* ImpliedLoveInterest: Several, [[spoiler: Seth/Silent Girl, Marc/Penny, Laura/Lloyd and possible David/Silent Girl]], most were either confirmed or dismissed by [[WordOfGod Word of God]] but some are still unclear.
40* ItsPopularNowItSucks: Used InUniverse. Since the cast is made up primarily of people who are essentially indie music snobs with magic powers who draw their power from their indie music snobbery, this trope can appear from time to time. The crib sheets suggest that the authors aren't entirely free of this trope either. They do, however, at least demonstrate a bit of self-awareness about this, and in the first volume Kohl's CharacterDevelopment centres around his, if not exactly abandoning this mindset, then at least deciding to be a bit less of a dick about it.
41** Deconstructed in the third volume: After [[spoiler: Claire-as-Emily dissolves the coven]] David begins to wonder what to do next, coming to the gradual realization that always being a pretentious music snob is maybe not an entirely productive or mature way to live your life, even if it does come with magic powers. The final issues feature several other characters realizing the same thing.
42* {{Irony}}: Used to demonstrate CharacterDevelopment. Music snob David Kohl, who spends his younger years preening over his superior music tastes and dismissing anyone who doesn't share them, eventually falls in love with and marries a woman who, it is heavily implied, isn't particularly interested in music whatsoever.
43* {{Jerkass}}:
44** As he gleefully says in the first few pages of ''Rue Britannia'', David Kohl is ''such a cock''. (This leads to him being tricked and then beat down by The Goddess, just on principle, before she informs him someone's trying to resurrect Britannia and makes him try and stop it.) He gradually progresses to the outer fringes of JerkWithAHeartOfGold, however.
45** Emily Aster isn't incredibly nice either. This is made a plot point in "The Immaterial Girl" concerning her overall lack of CharacterDevelopment over the years; while in her younger years her more cutting nature made her seem bold and confident to her peers, by 2009 people are clearly starting to disapprove of and get sick of her thoughtlessness and cruelty.
46** Let us be blunt; a large percentage of the cast arguably falls here, being that they are mostly just as insufferably music-snobby as David and Emily (and this gives them magic powers).
47* LaserGuidedKarma: In the first issue of "The Immaterial Girl", when cruelly demolishing a proposal made by one of her underlings about the relationship between magic and music videos, Emily uses the video for Music/{{Aha}}'s "Take On Me" as a counter-example. Guess which music video she finds herself trapped in by the end of the issue.
48* LiteralSplitPersonality: Claire sold half of her personality to a being inside the TV when she was younger, becoming Emily Aster. The Claire portion has been simmering just behind mirrors, waiting for her chance to retake her body - a chance she gets at the end of Immaterial Girl #1.
49* MagicMusic: A very postmodern example.
50* ManicPixieDreamGirl: The Girl (a Polish phonomancer) seems to be like this for Marc.
51-->'''WordOfGod''': Her role is to be every model of the strange, exotic, brilliant, life-affirming, sexy, tempestuous, slightly insane girl who you can't believe you're with all the time you were with her.
52* MediumAwareness: A side-effect of Emily being TrappedInTVLand. Her meeting with the King Behind The Screen is cut short when the mechanics from "Take On Me" find her, heralded by their own synth rift.
53* MindScrew: The sequences in the Memory Kingdom in the first volume are somewhat difficult to wrap your head around.
54* MonochromaticEyes: The telltale sign that someone is doing magic.
55** UhOhEyes: David suddenly realizes how much trouble he's in at the beginning of ''Rue Britannia'' when The Goddess' eyes turn black.
56* NostalgiaAintLikeItUsedToBe[=/=]NostalgiaFilter: The whole point of ''Rue Britannia''; the retromancers are driven by their inability to let go of the music they love and the false youth it gives them, [[spoiler: but in the climax David makes the not-invalid point to the Goddess of Britpop that she's better off being a much-loved relic of the past who accepts that her time has been and gone and she's not relevant any more, rather than a decaying relic who just keeps on going because she doesn't know how to stop and can't accept that she's irrelevant now.]]
57* OneSteveLimit: Averted. David Kohl is a major character in all three arcs, but Indie Dave also appears in important roles.
58** When she's making up her deal with The King Behind The Screen, Claire flips a coin to decide which of the above Davids to sacrifice her relationship with.
59* PerspectiveFlip: ''The Singles Club'', where every issue takes place from the point of view of a different character attending an event over the course of a single night, features a few of these. For example, one issue involves a girl building up to ask a guy to dance, at which point he brushes her off in a way that makes him seem quite cruel and rude. A later issue takes place from his perspective, which reveals that from ''his'' point of view he's distracted and depressed about something else when she asks, and doesn't intend to be malicious to her.
60* PostModernMagik: With pop music as its vessel.
61* PunctuatedForEmphasis: "I! FUCKING! HATE! KULA! FUCKING! SHAKER!"
62* ShoutOut: No ''duh''. Pretty much any obscure indie act or any British act you can think of is referenced in ''some'' capacity, from the Music/ManicStreetPreachers to Elastica to the Long Blondes and beyond. Fortunately, there's an index at the end of each issue (and at the back of the collected editions) to help explain every reference made in the event it goes over the head of the uninformed reader.
63* ShownTheirWork: Kieron Gillen knows quite a lot about music.
64* SpeaksInShoutOuts: Half of Laura's dialogue in Singles Club is a quote from the Long Blondes' "Someone to Drive You Home".
65* SplitPersonalityTakeover: By Emily's LiteralSplitPersonality Claire at the end of Immaterial Girl #1, by way of trapping Emily [[TrappedInTVLand in 80s music videos]].
66* TakeThat: No not ''them'', but David is very vocal about his disdain for Kula Shaker and Ocean Colour Scene
67* ThirdPersonPerson: Seth Bingo has been known to do this, according to WordOfGod.
68* TrappedInTVLand: Emily Aster gets trapped in several 80s music videos in "Immaterial Girl".
69* UnreliableNarrator: A back-up strip in "The Singles Club" tells the story of "Rue Britannia" from the point of one of Kohl's mates, a minor character in the earlier work. It's mostly a faithful retelling, if a bit vague as if to suggest that the other character didn't quite know what was going on at the time, but his story goes completely off the rails when it ends with him shooting what he presumes to be the bad guy with a huge gun and then going off to have sex with two beautiful women. Kohl is not particularly impressed with this addition to the narrative.
70* UpdatedRerelease: The entire 3 volumes have been collected in a single book with the art in Rue Britannia changed from black and white to colour.
71* VitriolicBestBuds: Seth Bingo and Silent Girl; David Kohl and Emily Aster.
72* WaxingLyrical: Happens quite often, with the index usually having to explain where the lyrics are from and the context they're being used in.
73* WhamLine: In ''The Immaterial Girl'', cementing the EndOfAnEra theme for the comic and reminding readers that the whole comic was set several years back.
74-->'''David (texting Emily):''' [[spoiler: [[Music/MichaelJackson Jackson's]] dead.]]
75* {{Whatevermancy}}:
76** Phonomancy - sound magic, but not the control of the physical vibrations, instead, they draw power from music to do whatever they set their minds to.
77** "Retromancers", a subset of phonomancers, who wish to reshape the cultural memetics of Britain just so that they can clutch on to their Britpop youth.

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