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Thread started 11/28/20 12:46pm

alphastreet

Madonna vs. Janet: 80s catalogue

Each one had 4 albums in the 80s, who do you prefer from the two in that decade? It’s undecided for me which one I enjoy more, but 80s Madonna is really something special, and rhythm nation is a perfect record
[Edited 11/28/20 12:54pm]
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Reply #1 posted 11/28/20 7:50pm

TrivialPursuit

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I love both of these women. They are part of my life's soundtrack. I usually rank Janet a bit higher than Madonna, because Janet just says what she thinks. Madonna seems to go for a trick or a gimmick sometimes. All that said...

Janet's 80's catalog, while 4 albums in, doesn't compare to Madonna's. While RN1814 was released in mid 1989, it feels more like a 90s record. Still 80s, though. Control was the only other huge record for her. We can talk about the simple pop appeal of Janet Jackson or Dream Street, but those songs will never hold a candle to even Madonna's cheaper sounding songs like "Shoo-Bee-Doo" or "Jimmy Jimmy."

All of M's records were spectacular, hit after hit after hit. The only slightly weaker album would be Like A Virgin. While the title track was a banger and raised a few eyebrows, the last three - "Shoo-Bee-Doo," "Pretender," and "Stay" - are throwaways, in my opinion. There had to be a better song to put on there, somewhere. Even You Can Dance was a biggie, with a new song on it. Plus she had movie after movie, putting herself out there. Desperately Seeking Susan, Shanghai Surprise (YIKES), Who's That Girl, and dipped into Broadway for a hot second.

So Madonna, just cuz she got an earlier start and skipped doing things like TV shows or Vegas acts, hit the ground running and wins the 80s. Madonna is unarguably the biggest female 80s star. Janet fumbled a bit at her starting line (she hated doing Fame) but boy what a recovery by the time of Control.

Janet ruled the 90s, though.

"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
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Reply #2 posted 11/28/20 7:58pm

alphastreet

Fully agree that Janet ruled the 90s. For the longest time I ranked Janet over Madonna but my Madonna fandom has been lifelong and Janet fandom since the 90s. Madonna was definitely queen of the 80s and I could play her music from then on repeat without getting sick of it. For years like a Virgin was my favourite album of hers from then, but now it’s her self titled debut though the non singles were kind of filler and not as ambitious as the five singles released. I think I sense the excitement and energy she got from New York City put into that album.
[Edited 11/28/20 19:59pm]
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Reply #3 posted 11/29/20 5:22am

Hudson

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Janet and Madonna? I didn’t know people here liked them.

I don’t consider JJ and Dreamstreet Janet albums anymore than I consider Alanis’ two teen pop albums as Alanis albums. Though Control and RN are more special to me than every M album. I would say that every 80s Madonna album is near perfect, minus one song, or two on LAP where Express Yourself should have been remixed before release. Why the hell did they omit Promise to Try on LAP’s 30th anniversary edition?
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Reply #4 posted 11/29/20 10:15am

TrivialPursuit

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Hudson said:

Janet and Madonna? I didn’t know people here liked them.

I don’t consider JJ and Dreamstreet Janet albums anymore than I consider Alanis’ two teen pop albums as Alanis albums. Though Control and RN are more special to me than every M album. I would say that every 80s Madonna album is near perfect, minus one song, or two on LAP where Express Yourself should have been remixed before release. Why the hell did they omit Promise to Try on LAP’s 30th anniversary edition?


I can only surprise you're being obtuse with that first paragraph. The plethora of Janet and M threads on here cannot go unnoticed.

Back to LAP, I saw a playlist on Spotify or something that omitted "Promise to Try." I figured it was a boo boo. I didn't much care for the playlist, though. Random remixes and singles peppered in to create some new steroid version. Also a weird change to "Pray for Spanish Eyes." "Pray for" was necessary? Also, "Act of Contrition" is omitted and "Supernatural" is added to the playlist. It's very jumbled and feels like something fan-made (and not even well, I would add).

I love the original "Express Yourself." I think we've gotten so used to that remix she used in concert and that dominated radio sometimes, that we forget the bop of the original. However, the video seems to use a hybrid of both. I'd have to go back and listen to Shep's remix to know.

I'd agree there's probably one song on each album that could be ditched. Except on LAP. That's perfect as is.

"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
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Reply #5 posted 11/29/20 10:17am

TrivialPursuit

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By the way, her male counterpart in "Express Yourself" is still a snack. This is from 2014.


"eye don’t really care so much what people say about me because it is a reflection of who they r."
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Reply #6 posted 11/29/20 11:45am

MotownSubdivis
ion

Madonna overall. RN1814 was a landmark but is an 80s album solely based on release; its impact was in the 90s which as someone else stated, Janet ruled. However, Control was a massive statement as well and I think people are just coming around to recognize it for what it was.

The charts got unabashedly black after that album came out. The pop charts were the blackest they had been since the 70s and they continued to be for the next 20+ years before streaming took over.
[Edited 11/29/20 11:46am]
[Edited 11/30/20 8:23am]
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Reply #7 posted 11/29/20 12:13pm

alphastreet

TrivialPursuit said:

By the way, her male counterpart in "Express Yourself" is still a snack. This is from 2014.




Yes he’s very cute!
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Reply #8 posted 11/30/20 7:16am

namepeace

MotownSubdivision said:

Madonna overall. RN1814 was a landmark but is an 80s album solely based on release although. It's impact was in the 90s which as someone else stated, Janet ruled. However, Control was a massive statement as well and I think people are just coming around to recognize it for what it was. The charts got unabashedly black after that album came out. The pop charts were the blackest they had been since the 70s and they continued to be for the next 20+ years before streaming took over. [Edited 11/29/20 11:46am]


Well said. Though I still consider RN1814 an 80's album that set the tone for the next decade, I agree with you that Madge's catalogue in the 80's gets the edge, even tho I think Janet's last 2 of the decade are better than any of Madge's 80's records.

Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #9 posted 11/30/20 1:21pm

alphastreet

Totally agree, cause I love every single song on control and rn and with Madonna, she has few fillers on the albums though the singles and videos more than make up for it
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Reply #10 posted 12/01/20 6:36am

Sukiyaki

Madonna(1983)and Control are my all time favorite

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Reply #11 posted 12/01/20 6:56pm

datdude

ok, this might be presumptuous and even controversial. did/do straight men, particularly black men BUY Madonna records? i know the world is morphing and labels are changing, but without judgement, i'm just saying heterosexual males are still a thing. and while i don't ascribe or prescribe any stereotypical TROPES about what that means for what one might like, buy, or do, i just don't know any (blk) men who have Madonna records. i have not seen their collections in totality or anything like that, so unbeknown to me, they might, but for my friends who are into music, that i've known for decades, Madonna was a peripheral pop phenomenon that you knew of, heard, and saw because of her ubiquity, especially in the 80s.

So non-singles to me/them would be unknown and play like brand new music. Janet on the other hand was many dudes celebrity crush and we knew her music more intimately. We bought her stuff (again, i'm speaking in generalities, sort of). We tracked with her, especially her "baby making ballads", with thoughts of "damn, Janet." So I can't do an album to album comparison but I recall the 80s clearly and Madonna was massive, so if that means her catalogue "wins", I won't argue that. but we weren't checkin' for her like that. I love the person who alluded to Alanis' two pop records vis a vis, Janet's so it's not apples to apples per se self-expression/creatively speaking, its just 4 albums each.

i hope the earlier part of this isn't "off topic." shut me down if so. no offense intended

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Reply #12 posted 12/01/20 8:49pm

alphastreet

At the time, some of Madonna’s work also charted in the r&b chart so she probably got some airplay on urban radio. I once talked to a Jamaican guy on an mj board who said he went to her Virgin tour back then cause she was so huge and he didn’t want to miss a good show. I always thought that Madonna had a diverse fan base
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Reply #13 posted 12/01/20 9:31pm

datdude

those who appreciate a good show, including my male cousin included have seen her. he doesn't have her music though. again, the ubiquity creates familiarity. i trust she does have a diverse fanbase, the "sociologist" in me would be curious to gather some data regarding WHO actually COLLECTS her music vs. just go to a good show. i do recall her getting some "urban" radio airplay back in the day, specifically Holiday and maybe Justify My Love later on.

[Edited 12/1/20 21:33pm]

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Reply #14 posted 12/01/20 10:19pm

wilmer

datdude said:

ok, this might be presumptuous and even controversial. did/do straight men, particularly black men BUY Madonna records? i know the world is morphing and labels are changing, but without judgement, i'm just saying heterosexual males are still a thing. and while i don't ascribe or prescribe any stereotypical TROPES about what that means for what one might like, buy, or do, i just don't know any (blk) men who have Madonna records. i have not seen their collections in totality or anything like that, so unbeknown to me, they might, but for my friends who are into music, that i've known for decades, Madonna was a peripheral pop phenomenon that you knew of, heard, and saw because of her ubiquity, especially in the 80s.



So non-singles to me/them would be unknown and play like brand new music. Janet on the other hand was many dudes celebrity crush and we knew her music more intimately. We bought her stuff (again, i'm speaking in generalities, sort of). We tracked with her, especially her "baby making ballads", with thoughts of "damn, Janet." So I can't do an album to album comparison but I recall the 80s clearly and Madonna was massive, so if that means her catalogue "wins", I won't argue that. but we weren't checkin' for her like that. I love the person who alluded to Alanis' two pop records vis a vis, Janet's so it's not apples to apples per se self-expression/creatively speaking, its just 4 albums each.



i hope the earlier part of this isn't "off topic." shut me down if so. no offense intended



I totally see where you're coming from. Back in high school, I used to hang out with a bunch of dudes who shared my passion for hard-core rap. I'm talking stereotypical macho dudes. But I happened to like a lot of music that they considered soft. For these guys, Keith Sweat and R. Kelly were soft. When they found out I listened to Madonna, they were like wtf. They ribbed me for months. So yeah in my culture it is also unusual to find black males who like Madonna or own any of her music. At least in my experience.
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Reply #15 posted 12/02/20 5:49am

datdude

thanks for that reply Wilmer. I concur. Dudes were AWARE of LOTS of stuff. u couldn't help but be but what u spent your MONEY on was another thing altogether. I guess the "bright side" if there is one to this narrow trope of "perceived masculinity" is knowing that at least in MY circles, the "hardcore" rap was NOT king. we were big into the other stuff like DeLa, ATCQ. P.E. Fat Boys,classic pioneers like Run DMC, etc but "hardcore" and gangsta were not the same, the latter emerged late and was more of a 90s thing. Speaking of "soft" it was interesting to see the "dancing rapper" and their squads emerge. Such a fun era and quite a counter narrative to the hypermasculine, crotch grabbing bravado
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Reply #16 posted 12/02/20 7:12am

MotownSubdivis
ion

datdude said:

ok, this might be presumptuous and even controversial. did/do straight men, particularly black men BUY Madonna records? i know the world is morphing and labels are changing, but without judgement, i'm just saying heterosexual males are still a thing. and while i don't ascribe or prescribe any stereotypical TROPES about what that means for what one might like, buy, or do, i just don't know any (blk) men who have Madonna records. i have not seen their collections in totality or anything like that, so unbeknown to me, they might, but for my friends who are into music, that i've known for decades, Madonna was a peripheral pop phenomenon that you knew of, heard, and saw because of her ubiquity, especially in the 80s.



So non-singles to me/them would be unknown and play like brand new music. Janet on the other hand was many dudes celebrity crush and we knew her music more intimately. We bought her stuff (again, i'm speaking in generalities, sort of). We tracked with her, especially her "baby making ballads", with thoughts of "damn, Janet." So I can't do an album to album comparison but I recall the 80s clearly and Madonna was massive, so if that means her catalogue "wins", I won't argue that. but we weren't checkin' for her like that. I love the person who alluded to Alanis' two pop records vis a vis, Janet's so it's not apples to apples per se self-expression/creatively speaking, its just 4 albums each.



i hope the earlier part of this isn't "off topic." shut me down if so. no offense intended

I can't speak for the majority but I buy Madonna records, I say that as a straight black man.
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Reply #17 posted 12/02/20 8:19am

alphastreet

MotownSubdivision said:

datdude said:

ok, this might be presumptuous and even controversial. did/do straight men, particularly black men BUY Madonna records? i know the world is morphing and labels are changing, but without judgement, i'm just saying heterosexual males are still a thing. and while i don't ascribe or prescribe any stereotypical TROPES about what that means for what one might like, buy, or do, i just don't know any (blk) men who have Madonna records. i have not seen their collections in totality or anything like that, so unbeknown to me, they might, but for my friends who are into music, that i've known for decades, Madonna was a peripheral pop phenomenon that you knew of, heard, and saw because of her ubiquity, especially in the 80s.



So non-singles to me/them would be unknown and play like brand new music. Janet on the other hand was many dudes celebrity crush and we knew her music more intimately. We bought her stuff (again, i'm speaking in generalities, sort of). We tracked with her, especially her "baby making ballads", with thoughts of "damn, Janet." So I can't do an album to album comparison but I recall the 80s clearly and Madonna was massive, so if that means her catalogue "wins", I won't argue that. but we weren't checkin' for her like that. I love the person who alluded to Alanis' two pop records vis a vis, Janet's so it's not apples to apples per se self-expression/creatively speaking, its just 4 albums each.



i hope the earlier part of this isn't "off topic." shut me down if so. no offense intended

I can't speak for the majority but I buy Madonna records, I say that as a straight black man.


Awesome!
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Reply #18 posted 12/02/20 11:47am

namepeace

MotownSubdivision said:

datdude said:

ok, this might be presumptuous and even controversial. did/do straight men, particularly black men BUY Madonna records? i know the world is morphing and labels are changing, but without judgement, i'm just saying heterosexual males are still a thing. and while i don't ascribe or prescribe any stereotypical TROPES about what that means for what one might like, buy, or do, i just don't know any (blk) men who have Madonna records. i have not seen their collections in totality or anything like that, so unbeknown to me, they might, but for my friends who are into music, that i've known for decades, Madonna was a peripheral pop phenomenon that you knew of, heard, and saw because of her ubiquity, especially in the 80s.

So non-singles to me/them would be unknown and play like brand new music. Janet on the other hand was many dudes celebrity crush and we knew her music more intimately. We bought her stuff (again, i'm speaking in generalities, sort of). We tracked with her, especially her "baby making ballads", with thoughts of "damn, Janet." So I can't do an album to album comparison but I recall the 80s clearly and Madonna was massive, so if that means her catalogue "wins", I won't argue that. but we weren't checkin' for her like that. I love the person who alluded to Alanis' two pop records vis a vis, Janet's so it's not apples to apples per se self-expression/creatively speaking, its just 4 albums each.

i hope the earlier part of this isn't "off topic." shut me down if so. no offense intended

I can't speak for the majority but I buy Madonna records, I say that as a straight black man.


When Madonna was coming up, her pre-Virgin songs were played on local black radio at least as much as they were on the pop stations. Being a pre-teen/teen during her 80's heyday, hell, she led all the girls to wearing lace and see-through blouses, so I was on Madonna's side for that.

Plus she had some jams in the 80's.

I'll take Janet -- Any Time, Any Place -- but this straight black male X'er has bought a lot of Madge's old songs before and after release, and I respect her hustle.

Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #19 posted 12/02/20 11:52am

alphastreet

When everybody was on radio, it was assumed she was a black artist cause she didn’t appear on the single cover
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Reply #20 posted 12/02/20 1:08pm

namepeace

alphastreet said:

When everybody was on radio, it was assumed she was a black artist cause she didn’t appear on the single cover

IKR?

Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #21 posted 12/02/20 1:23pm

alphastreet

namepeace said:



alphastreet said:


When everybody was on radio, it was assumed she was a black artist cause she didn’t appear on the single cover


IKR?



Yeah read about it, cause I wasn’t born yet lol but lately have been in love with the song
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Reply #22 posted 12/02/20 1:28pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

I've heard of Madge's anonymity back in her early days and her getting good play on black stations; I can hear why in the music.

Statistically, I think she's only ever had one big hit on the black side of the charts with "Like a Virgin" which hit #9 with the album itself managing to hit #10.
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Reply #23 posted 12/02/20 1:35pm

alphastreet

MotownSubdivision said:

I've heard of Madge's anonymity back in her early days and her getting good play on black stations; I can hear why in the music.

Statistically, I think she's only ever had one big hit on the black side of the charts with "Like a Virgin" which hit #9 with the album itself managing to hit #10.


Probably cause like a virgin resembles Billie Jean
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Reply #24 posted 12/02/20 2:06pm

MotownSubdivis
ion

alphastreet said:

MotownSubdivision said:

I've heard of Madge's anonymity back in her early days and her getting good play on black stations; I can hear why in the music.

Statistically, I think she's only ever had one big hit on the black side of the charts with "Like a Virgin" which hit #9 with the album itself managing to hit #10.


Probably cause like a virgin resembles Billie Jean
Hahaha true..

And "Material Girl" resembles "Can You Feel It".
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Reply #25 posted 12/02/20 2:07pm

alphastreet

MotownSubdivision said:

alphastreet said:



Probably cause like a virgin resembles Billie Jean
Hahaha true..

And "Material Girl" resembles "Can You Feel It".


Yeah I definitely hear the can you feel it influence!
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Reply #26 posted 12/02/20 2:27pm

namepeace

alphastreet said:

namepeace said:

IKR?

Yeah read about it, cause I wasn’t born yet lol but lately have been in love with the song


lol

Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #27 posted 12/02/20 2:32pm

alphastreet

namepeace said:



alphastreet said:


namepeace said:



IKR?



Yeah read about it, cause I wasn’t born yet lol but lately have been in love with the song


lol



I was born by the time the later singles on the first album were released and got into her in about 85/86 through her music videos
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Reply #28 posted 12/03/20 8:27am

namepeace

alphastreet said:

namepeace said:


lol

I was born by the time the later singles on the first album were released and got into her in about 85/86 through her music videos


Oh, okay, I thought you were joking. peace

Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #29 posted 12/10/20 7:05am

JayCrawford

alphastreet said:

namepeace said:



alphastreet said:


namepeace said:



IKR?



Yeah read about it, cause I wasn’t born yet lol but lately have been in love with the song


lol



I was born by the time the later singles on the first album were released and got into her in about 85/86 through her music videos


I'm surprised an 83 baby like yourself even remembers anything from the ages of 2 in 85... But I highly doubt you're even telling the truth there.
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