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Reply #180 posted 04/11/11 1:43pm

sosgemini

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Oopsies, Fake=Hearsey album. giggle

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Reply #181 posted 04/11/11 2:04pm

Timmy84

MickyDolenz said:

^^^The Monkees Head soundtrack had interludes on it, and it came out in 1968.

Stand corrected lol

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Reply #182 posted 04/11/11 2:16pm

SEANMAN

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sosgemini said:

SEANMAN said:

I didn't see many albums (if any at all) with interludes on them before RN. Also, it helped further establish the New Jack Swing genre.

She had them on Control. They just weren't tracked. And didn't funk artist do the whole skit thing before that? Shoot, Alexander O'Neal had them on his Fake album which predated RN1814, too.

His "Fake" album lol . I guess you could consider the "Lately" skit an interlude, but if you say the "Gimmie A Beat!" command before "Nasty" is an interlude, imma smack u... lol

"Get up off that grey line"
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Reply #183 posted 04/11/11 2:52pm

sosgemini

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SEANMAN said:

sosgemini said:

She had them on Control. They just weren't tracked. And didn't funk artist do the whole skit thing before that? Shoot, Alexander O'Neal had them on his Fake album which predated RN1814, too.

His "Fake" album lol . I guess you could consider the "Lately" skit an interlude, but if you say the "Gimmie A Beat!" command before "Nasty" is an interlude, imma smack u... lol

Uhh, the begining of Control. The begining of What Have You Done For Me Lately. I'd also argue that, if released later in her career, the beginning and end of Funny How Time Flies would have been edited as interlude and closing. Janet's just that damn predictable. lol

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Reply #184 posted 04/11/11 3:12pm

SEANMAN

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sosgemini said:

SEANMAN said:

His "Fake" album lol . I guess you could consider the "Lately" skit an interlude, but if you say the "Gimmie A Beat!" command before "Nasty" is an interlude, imma smack u... lol

Uhh, the begining of Control. The begining of What Have You Done For Me Lately. I'd also argue that, if released later in her career, the beginning and end of Funny How Time Flies would have been edited as interlude and closing. Janet's just that damn predictable. lol

Ok, now you're reaching lol And i did say the "Lately" skit.

[Edited 4/11/11 15:13pm]

"Get up off that grey line"
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Reply #185 posted 04/11/11 3:14pm

Timmy84

sosgemini said:

SEANMAN said:

His "Fake" album lol . I guess you could consider the "Lately" skit an interlude, but if you say the "Gimmie A Beat!" command before "Nasty" is an interlude, imma smack u... lol

Uhh, the begining of Control. The begining of What Have You Done For Me Lately. I'd also argue that, if released later in her career, the beginning and end of Funny How Time Flies would have been edited as interlude and closing. Janet's just that damn predictable. lol

That interlude on WHYDFML was classic.

Melanie Andrews: What's up girl?

Janet: He stood me up...AGAIN.

Melanie: Again?

Janet: Mm-hmm.

Melanie: Well what's UP with this guy? Do you like him THAT much?

Janet: Yes honey I love him! He's fine! He does a lot of nice things for me.

Melanie: I know he USED to do nice stuff for you but what has he done for you LATELY?

evillol

[Edited 4/11/11 15:16pm]

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Reply #186 posted 04/11/11 3:15pm

Timmy84

But no Janet wasn't the first.

Cherrelle had an interlude in "High Priority" prior to "Saturday Love" which featured Alexander O'Neal looking over wondering if he should talk to her lol this was 1985 lol

[Edited 4/11/11 15:17pm]

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Reply #187 posted 04/11/11 3:18pm

SEANMAN

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Timmy84 said:

sosgemini said:

Uhh, the begining of Control. The begining of What Have You Done For Me Lately. I'd also argue that, if released later in her career, the beginning and end of Funny How Time Flies would have been edited as interlude and closing. Janet's just that damn predictable. lol

That interlude on WHYDFML was classic.

Melanie Andrews: What's up girl?

Janet: He stood me up...AGAIN.

Melanie: Again?

Janet: Mm-hmm.

Melanie: Well what is UP with this guy? Do you like him THAT much?

Janet: Yes honey I love him! He does a lot of nice things for me.

Melanie: I know he USED to do nice stuff for you but what has he done for you LATELY?

evillol

U forgot the "He is fine" part after "Yes honey, I love him!" lol

[Edited 4/11/11 15:22pm]

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Reply #188 posted 04/11/11 3:18pm

Timmy84

SEANMAN said:

Timmy84 said:

That interlude on WHYDFML was classic.

Melanie Andrews: What's up girl?

Janet: He stood me up...AGAIN.

Melanie: Again?

Janet: Mm-hmm.

Melanie: Well what is UP with this guy? Do you like him THAT much?

Janet: Yes honey I love him! He does a lot of nice things for me.

Melanie: I know he USED to do nice stuff for you but what has he done for you LATELY?

evillol

U forgot the "He is fine" part after "Yes honey, I love him!" lol I just remembered that Vanessa Williams used a snippet of that interlude in "The Right Stuff".

I edited lol

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Reply #189 posted 04/11/11 4:57pm

sosgemini

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SEANMAN said:

sosgemini said:

Uhh, the begining of Control. The begining of What Have You Done For Me Lately. I'd also argue that, if released later in her career, the beginning and end of Funny How Time Flies would have been edited as interlude and closing. Janet's just that damn predictable. lol

Ok, now you're reaching lol And i did say the "Lately" skit.

She's got tons of 5 second interludes. You know she would have. lol Re: Lately: I didn't know what you were talking about so I just ignored it. I thought there was a song somewhere titled "Lately". lol

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Reply #190 posted 04/11/11 5:02pm

DirtyChris

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I love that WHYDFML interlude!!! lol

"be who you are and say what you feel
because those who mind don't matter
and those who matter don't mind."
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Reply #191 posted 04/11/11 5:36pm

SEANMAN

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sosgemini said:

SEANMAN said:

Ok, now you're reaching lol And i did say the "Lately" skit.

She's got tons of 5 second interludes. You know she would have. lol Re: Lately: I didn't know what you were talking about so I just ignored it. I thought there was a song somewhere titled "Lately". lol

Lawd lol

"Get up off that grey line"
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Reply #192 posted 04/11/11 8:19pm

DiscoFunkChick

.

[Edited 5/8/18 13:00pm]

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Reply #193 posted 04/11/11 9:07pm

sosgemini

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DiscoFunkChick said:

sosgemini said:

Seriously? Arachnoid? Rythm Nation? How did those change the landscapes of music? Arachnoid can't event change the tragectory of Janelle's career. lol

Try saying that 20-30 years down the road. biggrin

This ain't the "Albums that will change music" thread. shrug

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Reply #194 posted 04/11/11 10:03pm

SagsWay2low

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NDRU said:

no I know they did not invent this style of music, they sure changed what everyone was doing! To this day, people are still copying it.

I remember the day this thing knocked Micheal Jackson's album off it's lofty perch.

It came from nowhere and just changed the landscape of popular music for years.

Oddly, Nirvana offered nothing new. If you strip away the 'grunge' label, it's really

just basic rock n roll, a bit punk influenced and such, but rock and roll none-the-less.

But what seemed like for ages, groups started to emulate them. I got sick of all of these

baratone metal singers trying to over emphasize their 'r's in songs and such.

But then again, Alanis Morisset's Jagged Little Pill had the same affect on female pop acts

during the 90s.

I remember for a stretch of years, only female singers where topping the charts.



You're a real fucker. You act like you own this place--ParanoidAndroid <-- about as witty as this princess gets! lol
I hope everyone pays more attention to Sags posts--sweething mushy

Jesus weeps disbelief
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Reply #195 posted 04/11/11 10:08pm

SagsWay2low

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Unholyalliance said:

[img:$uid]http://i.imgur.com/h5jMh.jpg[/img:$uid]

This one completely changed the course of r&b back in the mid to late 80s. As you can hear the difference from everything that came before and afterwards I think that this one is a much better example of albums that have changed music as opposed to being just influential...if that is possible.

no



You're a real fucker. You act like you own this place--ParanoidAndroid <-- about as witty as this princess gets! lol
I hope everyone pays more attention to Sags posts--sweething mushy

Jesus weeps disbelief
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Reply #196 posted 04/11/11 10:15pm

SagsWay2low

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IMO, :

1. Thriller - Michael Jackson

2. Prince - Purple Rain

3. Sex Pistols - Nevermind blah blah

4. Run DMC - Raising Hell

5. Pink Floyd - The Wall

6. Nirvana - Nevermind

7. NKOTB - Sure there were boy bands forever, but they were the blueprint for the resurgence in the 90s with Take That, Backstreet Boys, NYSYNC, etc.

8. Blondie

9. AC/DC - Back in Black



You're a real fucker. You act like you own this place--ParanoidAndroid <-- about as witty as this princess gets! lol
I hope everyone pays more attention to Sags posts--sweething mushy

Jesus weeps disbelief
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Reply #197 posted 04/11/11 10:44pm

sosgemini

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SagsWay2low said:

Unholyalliance said:

[img:$uid]http://i.imgur.com/h5jMh.jpg[/img:$uid]

This one completely changed the course of r&b back in the mid to late 80s. As you can hear the difference from everything that came before and afterwards I think that this one is a much better example of albums that have changed music as opposed to being just influential...if that is possible.

no

Again, before Janet, radio would not play two female artist on the radio back to back. The influence of this album lead to the successes of Jody's solo debut, Vanessa Williams, Shanice, Karyn White, Nia Peebles, Tracy Spencer and Paula Adbul. So, uhh, YES!!!

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Reply #198 posted 04/11/11 10:57pm

Timmy84

SagsWay2low said:

NDRU said:

no I know they did not invent this style of music, they sure changed what everyone was doing! To this day, people are still copying it.

I remember the day this thing knocked Micheal Jackson's album off it's lofty perch.

It came from nowhere and just changed the landscape of popular music for years.

Oddly, Nirvana offered nothing new. If you strip away the 'grunge' label, it's really

just basic rock n roll, a bit punk influenced and such, but rock and roll none-the-less.

But what seemed like for ages, groups started to emulate them. I got sick of all of these

baratone metal singers trying to over emphasize their 'r's in songs and such.

The oddest thing is the band itself HATED the grunge title they were being tagged. They truly only saw themselves as a rock act. A punk-influenced act. When this album became a success, they became a brand and that went against everything they stood for.

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Reply #199 posted 04/12/11 4:18am

daPrettyman

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SagsWay2low said:

IMO, :

1. Thriller - Michael Jackson

2. Prince - Purple Rain

3. Sex Pistols - Nevermind blah blah

4. Run DMC - Raising Hell

5. Pink Floyd - The Wall

6. Nirvana - Nevermind

7. NKOTB - Sure there were boy bands forever, but they were the blueprint for the resurgence in the 90s with Take That, Backstreet Boys, NYSYNC, etc.

8. Blondie

9. AC/DC - Back in Black

No. NKOTB was nothing but a white version of New Edition (which was a new version of the J5 and Temptations). They were a predecessor to all of those you mentioned, but they didn't change anything.

**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••-
U 'gon make me shake my doo loose!
http://www.twitter.com/nivlekbrad
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Reply #200 posted 04/12/11 4:19am

daPrettyman

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I just thought of another one:

**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••-
U 'gon make me shake my doo loose!
http://www.twitter.com/nivlekbrad
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Reply #201 posted 04/12/11 4:41am

SEANMAN

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sosgemini said:

SagsWay2low said:

no

Again, before Janet, radio would not play two female artist on the radio back to back. The influence of this album lead to the successes of Jody's solo debut, Vanessa Williams, Shanice, Karyn White, Nia Peebles, Tracy Spencer and Paula Adbul. So, uhh, YES!!!

Thank you. Control made the industry stand up and take notice of the dance-diva of color, and spaked the success of all of these albums

[Edited 4/12/11 5:16am]

"Get up off that grey line"
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Reply #202 posted 04/12/11 6:47am

Unholyalliance

SagsWay2low said:

Unholyalliance said:

[img:$uid]http://i.imgur.com/h5jMh.jpg[/img:$uid]

This one completely changed the course of r&b back in the mid to late 80s. As you can hear the difference from everything that came before and afterwards I think that this one is a much better example of albums that have changed music as opposed to being just influential...if that is possible.

no

Are you familair with any r&b/dance-pop from the mid 1980s-present?

I remember the day this thing knocked Micheal Jackson's album off it's lofty perch.

It came from nowhere and just changed the landscape of popular music for years.

I thought that this was kinda confined to America and not the rest of the world.

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Reply #203 posted 04/12/11 6:59am

MickyDolenz

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sosgemini said:

Again, before Janet, radio would not play two female artist on the radio back to back.

The Go-Gos, Pat Benetar, Cyndi Lauper, Heart, Stevie Nicks/Fleetwood Mac, Linda Ronstadt, Donna Summer, Banarama, Aretha Franklin, Natalie Cole, The Jones Girls, Melissa Manchester, Emotions, Deniece Williams, etc. were pre-Control and I heard more than one of them played back to back various times. A lot of disco was female singers too. Then there were the many girl groups popular in the 1960's.

[Edited 4/12/11 7:02am]

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #204 posted 04/12/11 7:06am

SEANMAN

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MickyDolenz said:

sosgemini said:

Again, before Janet, radio would not play two female artist on the radio back to back.

The Go-Gos, Pat Benetar, Cyndi Lauper, Heart, Stevie Nicks/Fleetwood Mac, Linda Ronstadt, Donna Summer, Banarama, Aretha Franklin, Natalie Cole, The Jones Girls, Melissa Manchester, Emotions, Deniece Williams, etc. were pre-Control and I heard them played back to back various times. A lot of disco was female singers too. Then there were the many girl groups popular in the 1960's.

Control made the post-disco-era dance diva of color a commodity. Before it, there were no black, hispanic, mixed-race what-have-you full-on dance divas out in the forefront. After Control, record companies wanted the next Janet, that is why we got Vanessa, Karyn, Jody, Paula etc. shaking their moneymakers in lively, choreography-heavy videos to pulsing dance tracks. Look at Vanessa's "The Right Stuff" video, or Karyn White's "Secret Rendezvous", and you can see it.

"Get up off that grey line"
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Reply #205 posted 04/12/11 7:24am

MickyDolenz

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SEANMAN said:

MickyDolenz said:

The Go-Gos, Pat Benetar, Cyndi Lauper, Heart, Stevie Nicks/Fleetwood Mac, Linda Ronstadt, Donna Summer, Banarama, Aretha Franklin, Natalie Cole, The Jones Girls, Melissa Manchester, Emotions, Deniece Williams, etc. were pre-Control and I heard them played back to back various times. A lot of disco was female singers too. Then there were the many girl groups popular in the 1960's.

Control made the post-disco-era dance diva of color a commodity. Before it, there were no black, hispanic, mixed-race what-have-you full-on dance divas out in the forefront. After Control, record companies wanted the next Janet, that is why we got Vanessa, Karyn, Jody, Paula etc. shaking their moneymakers in lively, choreography-heavy videos to pulsing dance tracks. Look at Vanessa's "The Right Stuff" video, or Karyn White's "Secret Rendezvous", and you can see it.

That post didn't say anything about race, nor dance diva. It said radio did not play two female acts in a row, which is not true.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #206 posted 04/12/11 7:27am

sosgemini

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^^^Yes it is, Casie Kassam said it himself. So there! lol

People be tripping, seriously!

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Reply #207 posted 04/12/11 7:37am

sosgemini

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Micky, first off, I just woke up and could be oversensitive but how about before calling someone a liar you ask them for further clarification. I know this is the internet and all but try to remember their are actual people behind these typed words and avis because calling someone a lair real dickish thing to wake up to. neutral

Why Cassie Kassam made the statement during his top 40 radioshow is beyond me but the statement was made. And being that the dude was in radio during the 80s and your ass wasn't, well, take it what you may.

Fucking people. Seriously!

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Reply #208 posted 04/12/11 9:41am

DiscoFunkChick

.

[Edited 5/8/18 13:48pm]

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Reply #209 posted 04/12/11 10:33am

Timmy84

Sosgemini and SEANMAN does have a point considering there weren't that many dance-pop divas before Janet (and Madonna). The both of them made a way for the other women to emerge. So I can see how "Control" changed that part of music in that regard. It definitely was a music changer.

[Edited 4/12/11 10:33am]

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