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I can't wait to talk about her LESBIAN DRAMA. We'll have to wait until 1992.I HATE AMY GRANT AND THAT SONG
I can't wait to talk about her LESBIAN DRAMA. We'll have to wait until 1992.I HATE AMY GRANT AND THAT SONG
Btw, I'm not gonna hide and I'm gonna stand for all these wonderful r&b ballads, The first time was great! There's another r&b #1 this year that I'll let you trash because it's so meh, but most of the r&b songs that are gonna chart these early 90s are the best of the best!THE FIRST TIME –•– Surface (2 weeks)
As a duo I can't think of any other one anywere close to their success these years. Obviously Babyface was the other big producer/artist. If I don't forget someone else, C&C first hits were with Michelle Visage's group Seduction just one year earlier.C&C Music Factory really were absolutely massive for a short time in the early 90s, and it all started with this global megasmash hit. Clivilles & Cole were one of the first "producer acts" to make it big, illustrative of a time when dance music was starting to shift the norms. It wasn't without its backlash however, as the industry rejected faceless acts in fear of what it might do to the business, which on one hand is strange based on today's standards but in this case they have only themselves to blame for the backlash, as they were also caught up in the lawsuits scandal of uncredited performers. Martha Wash's voice was again chopped up and sampled without permission, and she won a lengthy court case to get her payday and her credit. To be fair the lack of rules or precedent at the time probably meant that everyone thought it would be okay - until common sense prevailed. Sony took the unusual step of giving two separate credits on the track - vocals for Martha and "visualisations" for video model Zelma Davis. The group were also guilty of relying on the successful sound of the original to rehash it into various alternatives to release more singles, similar to the likes of Technotronic, which probably stifled their success in the long run. Despite all this they managed 4 chart hits from the debut - three Top 10. In 1995 David Cole sadly died but in those 5 years, C&C had a big impact on American (and global) dance music, and pop music - producing songs for a number of artists not least Mariah Carey, as well as countless remixes.
I just Googled “Amy Grant Lesbian"
Didn't she go for different singles in America and Europe for the 3rd one? Also I have to say that even when the US remix of I'm your baby tonight is nice, the European version (I was gonna say the album version, but I think the remix was the one in the US album) was so much stronger, I guess they went for the remix in the US as it sounds more r&b, after the backlash for being too pop. They even released some singles only to r&b radio, like the duet with Stevie Wonder, that will be her 6th top 20 from the album. Not bad. And still to come this year a suprise hit for Whitney, literally out of nowhere.At this point Whitney Houston was still the all-conquering megastar, following her second album's four #1s with a second #1 single from ther third album I'm Your Baby Tonight. I LOVE this song, and has always been in my Whitney Top 5. I still maintain that the album lost legs after this release, as the following 3 singles - while successful - struggled to maintain the world beating momentum she had achieved thus far. The album had major highs but lacked depth. If only she could find herself a movie project in the coming months to turn that back around again.
Btw, Just another dream was her first solo hit, but we forgot to mention in 1990 her actual first US hit; in March she hit the top 10 as the vocalist of D Mob's C'mon on and get my love, the first of 4 top 10 hits from her debut album, quite impressive.Cathy Dennis ending up peaking at #9 in early February, a huge smash for this little know British pop singer.
He did the guitar for Like A Prayer and didn't have a credit!Same with Prince on Love Song with Madonna. As big as his ego was I’m shocked he didn’t demand a credit
FUN NON-FACT that completely unrelated to this topic- I used to think it was Amy Grant singing in this scene from Twins. It’s not. It’s Nicolette Larson who died in 1997.
Didn't she go for different singles in America and Europe for the 3rd one? Also I have to say that even when the US remix of I'm your baby tonight is nice, the European version (I was gonna say the album version, but I think the remix was the one in the US album) was so much stronger, I guess they went for the remix in the US as it sounds more r&b, after the backlash for being too pop. They even released some singles only to r&b radio, like the duet with Stevie Wonder, that will be her 6th top 20 from the album. Not bad. And still to come this year a suprise hit for Whitney, literally out of nowhere.
Btw, Just another dream was her first solo hit, but we forgot to mention in 1990 her actual first US hit; in March she hit the top 10 as the vocalist of D Mob's C'mon on and get my love, the first of 4 top 10 hits from her debut album, quite impressive.
That INXS album "Welcome To Wherever You Are" in 1992 is amongst their career best work, but it wasn't a commercial sound at all. It topped the UK charts but signified the end for them as a commercial force.
I always forget that Quartz song is the first time we heard of Dina Carroll. Even the music to it is none-more-1991.
AGOG at Jellybean hitting the charts in 1991. I thought he disappeared with the 80sWhat DID happen to him? He went from producing everyone & releasing his own stuff to nothing.
I think I know the Dina song you mean, it's her other Quartz collaboration right? I've always liked it & thought it a pity it flopped.I don’t recall that INXS album even though it did have a number of singles according to Wiki so I’m looking forward to reviewing them
On Dina, there’s another pre-So Close deep cut coming up soon which knew nothing about until doing this (very minor UK hit), can’t remember it just yet but I think it was a cover. It’s good! I’ll be sure to feature it.
Does anyone have any info on Jellybean? There must have been a reason for his decline, unless it was just a simple case of his sound becoming passé and the demand for his services dropping completely.
The biggest oddity about Amy Grant is the fact that, after how successful that album was, and looking at the stats REALLY successful, she basically decided to go straight back to Christian pop and killed her megastar status stone dead with it! The label must have been fuming![]()
Not really, the follow up to her multiplatinum album was Lucky one, a very pop song that didn't follow the success of her previous album, and she never had another proper pop hit. I think Lucky one and other small radio hits like Takes a little time was probably the record label pushing for a wider market and trying to sell records, she was never interested in charts and megahits. In that Billboard book of #1s there's a story about Amy driving with her husband (I think) in the 80s and casually telling him:The biggest oddity about Amy Grant is the fact that, after how successful that album was, and looking at the stats REALLY successful, she basically decided to go straight back to Christian pop and killed her megastar status stone dead with it! The label must have been fuming![]()
Concrete blonde - Joey
I love this song! Another one hit wonder. I know this son was a big hit in Australia (@Marilyn to confirm if this became a classic over there) and it barelay made the top 20 in USA.
Being Boring is one of their finest moments in the 90s. But even when they were still selling albums, their last proper hit in the US was in the 80s, I'm afraid.
Btw, I love this cover that it's included in the album of an Australian singer that will be a one hit wonder in the US a few years later. I played this album to death, I wonder what happened to her. Moopy's correspondent in OZ @Marilyn to give me some update from the last 30 years please
Oh dearOne of her last chart entries was a pretty unpleasant cover of I Got You Babe featuring Shaggy
Does it really matter?I loved that song Elisa Fiorillo did with Jellybean. I saw her performing it on an old TOTP & she was bubbly & full of STAR QUALITY.
D'Wayne from Tony! Toni! Toné! just died. I truly love their first pop hit, Feels good; everything they released after that wasn't even close, but I still play Feels good a lot, fantastic. R.I.P.Tony Toni Tone were an R&B group I just couldn't get into, but they had MAJOR success in the US and might actually be the second or third biggest male group of the time (after Boyz II Men and perhaps Jodeci). Strange because I LOVE lead singer Raphael Saadiq, who went on to have great success as a solo artist and produce for some major artists.
It was the other way around, Whitney replaced Mariah last year. Obviously the media needed drama and a rivarly that didn't exist, but it was a constant Mariah vs. Whitney in the media.Not Mariah replacing Whitney at the top again! I wonder if the media will pick up on that and consider them rivals, or something???!!??
Timmy T is another one of those really, REALLY bad ballads that just don't make any sense as a megahit.
The voice, the production, the lyrics... everything about it is cheap. Apologies to Timmy T fans everywhere.
There's an explanation for that. As there were only 2 new tracks in TIC, radio stations had been playing Rescue me for weeks before it was released as a single (and therefore eligible for the Hot 100). When it was released, it was already peaking on airplay, that's why it debuted so high but it fell of the charts very fast. It spent only 6 weeks in the top 40; you have to go back to the 60s to find a top 10 single that spent less weeks there, and it was because some controversy with said single. Anyway, the chart run for Rescue me is very unique for the pre-Soundscan era.That's a MASSIVE new entry for Madonna there, so it's even more surprising that she didn't get higher than #9. Songs that enter high but don't stick around long are usually a sign that they are fan-driven, so for whatever reason (and again probably because everyone owned this song on TIC at this point) this song did not cross over the way other Madonna songs did.
Nah, this single got little to none airplay so it didn't really interfere with the album. It was basically sales points what took it to the chart, it peaked at #3 on sales (or close, still not at home to check), sold zillions of copies and gone in 3 or 4 weeks.Whitney peaked at #20 with Star Spangled Banner, which was not really an official release and probably prompted on the back of it being such a legendary live vocal that had everyone talking at the time. It probably helped her profile during the I'm Your Baby Tonight campaign, but was probably a distraction on the radio from the two other singles that were still charting and so it didn't stick around very long.