You're correct. | |
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I think their reach was pretty global. I actually just came back from the NKOTB cruise and they had a theme night wherein all the fans dressed to represent there hometown/country. The diversity represented onboard was quite impressive--a group of girls came from friggin' Uganda.
My group of friends hailed from: UK, South Africa, Belgium, Phillipines, Brazil, Japan and Haiti. I was one of only 4-5 North Americans in our group. | |
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My cousin who was a year younger than me. Was beyond obsessed. She was 12 in mid 1989 when she got into them after she went off Bros. I always found her musical tastes weird, although we did at least agree on Madonna and Kylie Minogue.
She had all four walls of her room covered in NKOTB posters, had all the albums and singles on record and tape, picture discs (She didn't get a CD player until 1992). She had a Joey McIntryre doll and wrote journals about how she would marry them and draw stories about them. She was hooked.
From 1989 through 1990, 1991 and into 1992. In early 1992 she went to their concert in Auckland, but by late 92 she was 15 and had outgrown them. It probably helped too that by 1992 they were falling off a bit. I think by reading about them, they did not really become huge until Hanging Tough in mid 1989, did well with Step by Step in 1990 and lasted into 1991, but by 1992 they were falling off.
So for most of the 80s, not that big at all, their 1986 album was initially a flop and di not really hit until very late in 1988 and by early 1989 they were on the ascendant. I know they have had comebacks, but they will probably never shake their kiddie pop/Kiddie rap image. They were lightweight fluff aimed mostly at 8 -14 year old girly girls.
It was the One Dorcetion/Justin Bieber type crowd. Not sure about their appeal to gays, as I was unsure of my sexuality back then. I thought they sucked and were girls music then and even now I think their songs were forgettable kiddie fluff. Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name | |
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I worked at a record store (insert obligatory "remember those" line..) when Hangin Tough was released. They were absolutely huge. This is what you want...This is what you get. | |
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Well my cousin and I (Aged 7 and 8) got into Madonna when "like a virgin" came out. We knew the lyrics and sang them, yet we had no idea what a virgin was. We just loved the songs and her look, like most kiddie fans of Madonna probably did back in the 80s.
It helped too that I was a big Cyndi Lauper fan back then too. Great music and interesting artists can transcend any boundary including age. Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name | |
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My first album on cassette was Like A Virgin. Five years old. | |
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Cinny said:
My first album on cassette was Like A Virgin. Five years old. Wow mine too at 5, but on record! Though it was several years old by then and I thought Virgin was referring to the lion in the video [Edited 6/6/13 16:30pm] | |
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Me too, my extended family still go on about that song, because we sang it at a Christmas do in 1984 and the parents were having kittens when we singing about being made feeling brand new and having touch for the very first time. I thought "virgin" at the time meant the record label as I had some Culture club records with the virgin label on them. The greatest irony was that by 1984, Madonna was anything but a virgin.
I had no understanding of record labels then, and thought maybe Madonna wanted to be on Virgin as it was cooler because Boy George was on it. Of course the fact she stayed with Warners/Sire was probably better for her career.
Yes my first musical memories were liking the song "Fashion" by David Bowie at 4, but not as much as my mother who played it to death while we were sleeping. Then at 6 I remember all that 82 - 83 pop stuff like Dexy's Midnight runners, Culture club (Apparently I wanted to dress up like Boy George when I was 7 and tried on a bra and some lipstick to look like him (My brother embellishes the story to this day). And of course Michael Jackson and Cyndi Lauper when I was 7.
Its great whenyou rediscover a song from your childhood after years. Some forgettable early 80s novelty that rose and faded. Recent rediscoveries for me. Shiny Shiny by Hayzie Fantasee i think, Feels like Heaven by the Eurogliders and Send me an angel by reel life. (NZOZ1983 on Youtube has a lot of my gratitude).
But never NKOTB, I loved pop but never went for true fluffy bubblegum. The closest I got was kind of liking Roxette, Martika and Milli Vanilli, but never Bros or New Kids.
I found out on Wikipedia, Perfect Gentleman was a Maurice starr group, one of the singers was Maurice star Junior, They had one big hit with Oh la la which peaked at #10 in early 1990, but recorded from 1988 to 1993 and had one album that got to #39. Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name | |
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The Remix is still better than the album version! . Donnie in a Bobby Brown type role! . Enough said.
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He really was the Bobby in the group. I remember he got in some trouble for starting a fire in a hotel back in NKOTB's heyday. Marky Mark was originally supposed to be in the New Kids but dropped out. 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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I don't think it was even a fire. He let off a fire extingusher but was charged under some kind of "criminal mischief" misdemeanor. The original arrest was for arson because someone saw smoke and called 911. He was just a kid dicking around with an extinguisher!
I love these stories in this thread about being 7 year old Madonna/Culture Club fans. It's so true! In retrospect hearing about all the supposed outrage that our favourite acts caused from parents believing they were bad influences. We didn't even know what that stuff was about. They just looked and sounded cool and that was all that mattered. I sincerely doubt Madonna's fanbase of kids even knew about the nude photos in the media.
I was still only 9/10 when Prince released Gett Off and loved it. At that age I couldn't even make out the real lyrics anyway, but who cares? It was funky and the dancing in the video was great. The next year the girls in our school netball team were singing Madonna's Erotica in the minibus on the way to a game. | |
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Man I don't remember hearing this version ANYWHERE (other than the single) | |
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Agree totally, people sometimes forget how much popular culture they absorb and take in as little children. Some of my best music meories are from the period when my age was just a single digit and I am sure most of us have too.
By the time Justify my love, the Blonde Ambition Tour and the Sex/Erotica thing rolled around, I was in my early to mid teens, a tiime when sex was to me funny, dirty, cheeky and a source of endless fascination./ It seemed Madonna was lifting the bar at how much sex could be emotted by one person.
I am sure the netball team were singing the whole lyrics too, "I'll give you love, I'll hit you like a truck, I'll give you love, I'll teach you how to... (Instead of uh uh, Fuck!).
The fact I was obsessed with sex as a 14 and 15 year old was probably why I got into Prince and ignored sexless fluff like NKOTB. I just wanted to hear the dirtiest and most graphic records around, 2 Live Crew, Madonna, Ice T the stroking song and all the rest and when a guy who sung a song obviously about semen came along, it probably launched me into Prince, my obsession with teenage humpa humpa. It seems a little sick now.
But the child hood memories of music are much more innocent, Madonna's sexuality did not even enter my mind until "Justify my love" came out and I was 14 and a half. Even the sex in the Like a Prayer video was lost on me. I was still 12 I didn't care, I just loved the song and Madonna's sense of melodrama, any of that in a NKOTB video, no way, it was playschool and the wiggles set to a cheesy hip hop beat. Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name | |
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Yeah, and they've sold 80 million albums worldwide in total. Nearly all of which came from their peak period. They were on MTV non-stop, too. They were big. | |
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i was never big into the music, though as a young teen i was attracted to a few of em. Power tends to corrupt; absolute power corrupts absolutely. - Lord Acton | |
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And now the million dollar question, and cause I wasn't familiar with these artists at the time
Who was bigger? Nkotb or Janet? Don't be biased cause I'm really curious. I was more familiar with early 80s and 70s (including madonna) and for present music then, cultural stuff and just a few mainstream songs scattered For bubblegum, I looooved locomotion I agree with a previous poster about pop culture when under 10. Madonna was so popular and I had a poster, plus mj was such a megastar and I remember some merchandise and mentions everywhere and people dancing to him at shows Lolll at the story about the kittens and like a virgin [Edited 6/8/13 4:57am] | |
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Janet bigger in the USA, NKOTB worldwide. Janet only really got a taste of the superstar status globally in '93. | |
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You should have been in New Orleans in 1988 because WQUE (Q-93 FM, a r&b radio station at the time) used to play that remix version of The Right Stuff all the time. | |
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During that time period, I'd say NKOTB. In the US, Hangin' Tough sold more than Rhythm Nation. Plus, NKOTB had a few other albums selling at the same time: the debut, a Christmas album, and Step By Step. Around the same time, Milli Vanilli's, MC Hammer's, & Vanilla Ice's albums sold more than RN too, although she had higher charting singles. [Edited 6/8/13 9:58am] 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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if i remember correctly, the things were so big they had a built in stand in the back, for when you wanted to display them on a shelf Power tends to corrupt; absolute power corrupts absolutely. - Lord Acton | |
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TonyVanDam said:
You should have been in New Orleans in 1988 because WQUE (Q-93 FM, a r&b radio station at the time) used to play that remix version of The Right Stuff all the time. Even though it sounds like "What Have You Done For Me Lately", it is their best single. | |
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MickyDolenz said:
During that time period, I'd say NKOTB. In the US, Hangin' Tough sold more than Rhythm Nation. Plus, NKOTB had a few other albums selling at the same time: the debut, a Christmas album, and Step By Step. Around the same time, Milli Vanilli's, MC Hammer's, & Vanilla Ice's albums sold more than RN too, although she had higher charting singles. [Edited 6/8/13 9:58am] Exactly, I knew of nkotb through seeing merchandise even if not music yet, Janet I did not know. I also knew the others outsold rn though its my favourite, which is why I don't understand why it's called best selling of 1990. I wish it was, but if it isn't and people are saying, that's a lie. | |
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Cinny said: TonyVanDam said:
You should have been in New Orleans in 1988 because WQUE (Q-93 FM, a r&b radio station at the time) used to play that remix version of The Right Stuff all the time. Even though it sounds like "What Have You Done For Me Lately", it is their best single. With a vid like miss you much before miss you much haha | |
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I would assume Madonna's The Immaculate Collection was the biggest thing in 1990. | |
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Yes! There's a ton of them described that way for sale on ebay and all over the internet. I just couldn't find a picture of anybody wearing one. I do remember the silly thing, though. | |
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It's not like there are many options. I might have to give it to "Hangin' Tough" actually. Never been a big NKOTB fan though; I'll gladly take Jordan's "Give It to You" over any of the group's songs. "Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis | |
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It probably was, but many people may have overlooked it as it was a greatest hits album (Albeit a very good one) and it only had new songs. NKOTB only captured a large part of a huge market.
1990 was also the year of "Please Hammer Don't Hurt em" and "Rythmn Nation 1814" - although released in 89 its old more copies in 1990 as hit after hit came off it. Milli Vanilli was also huge in the 90s and of course before the IC, Madonna had a huge hit with Vogue.
It was a strange year as Prince and MJ weren't really on peak form there, MJ was taking a break/ recording Dangerous and Prince gave us the mediocre Graffiti Bridge, os it was a good year for the bubble gum acts and established stars like Madonna to burst through.
And remember that pap rapper Vanilla Ice had his 15 seconds of fame with Ice Ice Baby. But 1990 at least introduced us all to Mariah Carey and in my opinion, that first album was strong, the year saw the first two singles become huge hits and gave us one the superstars of the 1990s. Seriously that first album was pure gold. [Edited 6/8/13 21:51pm] Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name | |
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NKOTB were bigger than huge in 1989 and 1990; no one was outselling them at their peak, although a few (MC Hammer, Paula Abdul, Milli Vanilli, Bobby Brown) came close enough to be in the same neighborhood. They topped the Forbes list of richest celebrities in 1990 - coming ahead of both MJ and Madonna. BSB and Nsync matched and surpassed their success a decade late in 2000…but NKOTB were the template/bar for them.
None of the recent teenybopper stars of today have come close to their impact. Not Bieber. Not Jonas Bros. Not One Direction. Teen pop acts of today can't even push albums past platinum and don't even half a third of the success of those that came 10-20 yrs before them. New Kids went nearly Diamond with Hangin' Tough...and Backstreet Boys debut album is 14x platinum. By comparison teen stars of today are a *serious* joke. | |
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