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Abba´s "maturity" phase coincided with their lowest chart sucess. The same goes for Madonna, Kylie, and any other big "fun pop" act that once decided to make a mature/experimental album. You can hardly say they owe their career longevity to these "mature" eras, when those eras coincided exactly with their lower point in sales, and they only became huge again after they went back to the "fun pop" songs. Their Greatest Hits album still sells today because of the fun cheesy pop commercial tracks, not because of the "mature/experimental" songs that are known only to their die-hard fans...NothingFails wrote:Jimmypages has a good point. ABBA had nearly a decade of consistency that has made them remembered as one of the premier pop bands of all time. AOB had one huge album and they were already on their way out with their second album. Not even comparable. Plus ABBA matured past their Waterloo/Mamma Mia initial impressions, AOB didn't.
ABBA basically invented Europop.
"Thriller" was a ultimate crossover album, mixing numerous genres and styles, pop (Thriller), r&b (Human Nature), r&b/funk (P.Y.T.), r&b/funk/dance (Billie Jean), rock (Beat It), soul (The Lady in My Life), dance/funk (Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'), soul/funk (Baby Be Mine)...joao wrote:If Michael and Madonna had not remained popular after their 80´s peak, Thriller and Like A Virgin would be remembered today as "fun pop that I used to hear when I was an 80´s kid" and not as "defining pop classics". They are fun pop too. I don´t think a record like The Sign is inferior to Madonna´s and Michael´s 80´s releases (that´s a subjective things, I know), but the reason that album has entered the list of "fun pop from the past that people do not take seriously today" instead of "defining pop classics" has nothing to do with the quality of the album itself, but with the fact that the band members are not celebrities today and they are not exposed in the media.
joao, maybe I lived in a different world because since the late 80s that "media spotlight" you are talking about was writing lies about Michael Jackson. According to media every album after "Thriller" was flop. You never heard for 'Wacko Jacko' crap, 'skin bleaching to become white' crap, 'child molestation' crap... He was constantly ridiculed. Yeah sure, that was a great advertising.joao wrote:Do you think Thriller would remain selling in such numbers until 2012 if it was Michael´s last release, of if the follow up "Bad" ended up being a disastrous flop? Do you really think the fact the artist has remained popular for several years and remained in the media spotlight for decades has nothing to do with its neverending sales, and it´s all due to the exceptional quality of the material released?
Both "Bad" and "Dangerous" were massive sellers crossing 20 million mark in a year/year and half. Both albums were huge all over the world. 14 months after release of the "BAD" album its 7th single "Smooth Criminal" was released. 14 months after release, "Dangerous" also produced its 7th single "Give In to Me". Both albums had a massive promotional tours, the biggest ever at that time. Eventually both albums crossed 30 million mark, producing 9 singles.nibblet wrote:I know it appears that I am going off topic here but I am curious to open debate as to whether or not any album has had as much success as '21' in one year/14months of release, with the obvious exception of 'Thriller'?
.Guys, I don´t know if you noticed it, but you are replyng me with exactly the same things I have said.
Abba´s music remained relevant for decades, Ace Of Base was a novelty act that lasted for only 1 album. That´s not like you discovered something new
How can my argument be circular, when I was not even arguing about this point? For the record “classic” in my eyes is not defined by sales, but by reaction, acclaim and critique. Some “classic” albums are poor sellers, while other “Non Classic” albums are great sellers. Album such as The Velvet Underground or Blonde on Blonde or Never Mind The Bolloxs, do not exactly fly of the shelves, but are still regarded as “classic”. To me it becomes “Classic” usually through the importance placed on it and the status it attains, not through the sales it achieves, although I am not saying that critical “classic” acclaim does not help shift albums.Do you fail to see how your argument is circular? An album is recognized as a classic because it becomes a perennial seller... or it becomes a perennial seller because it is recognized as a classic?
Agree with all of that. I even pointed earlier on that there are many "classics" that were poor sellers (like you mentioned, Velvet Underground And Nico being one of the biggies in that field). Albums like Thriller, Rumours, Purple Rain, Born In The U.S.A., Abbey Road, Tapestry, The Joshua Tree, Dark Side Of The Moon to name a few are examples of albums that were huge sellers and also regarded as classics and essential albums today. Yet on another shoe, Lionel Richie's "Can't Slow Down" (a good album mind you, but a very safe album) and Phil Collins' "No Jacket Required" (which personally I enjoy, but does anyone consider this album as important or essential today as they do "Face Value"?) were two massively successful 80's albums that even won AOTY Grammys, but don't generally show up on "1001 Albums" sorts of lists, they were good albums for their time and still hold up for the nostalgia factor, but they lack "classic" stature. And with the shoe on yet another foot, we have albums like "Let It Be" by The Replacements, "Daydream Nation" by Sonic Youth, "Pet Sounds" by The Beach Boys (which actually was a top 10 album, but it was initially a very poor selling album compared to the Beach Boys albums that preceded it), "Murmur" by R.E.M. and many others that didn't light the charts on fire, and even to this day might not be big selling albums (Pet Sounds has sold 200k in the Soundscan era, and this is after making all these "greatest albums ever" list usually ranked as high as the greatest Beatles works) yet are all regarded as classic and important albums.jimmypages59 wrote:How can my argument be circular, when I was not even arguing about this point? For the record “classic” in my eyes is not defined by sales, but by reaction, acclaim and critique. Some “classic” albums are poor sellers, while other “Non Classic” albums are great sellers. Album such as The Velvet Underground or Blonde on Blonde or Never Mind The Bolloxs, do not exactly fly of the shelves, but are still regarded as “classic”. To me it becomes “Classic” usually through the importance placed on it and the status it attains, not through the sales it achieves, although I am not saying that critical “classic” acclaim does not help shift albums.
I don't actually think of albums like Gold, Queen's Greatest Hits or Beatles 1, as "classic" albums, but compilations, yet these still fly of the shelves. They do not sell on the basis of being "classic", their selling power comes from the fact, that they are collections of what is thought to be the best, extremely popular and successful songs, from extemely prolific artists.
+1jimmypages59 wrote:For the record “classic” in my eyes is not defined by sales, but by reaction, acclaim and critique. Some “classic” albums are poor sellers, while other “Non Classic” albums are great sellers. Album such as The Velvet Underground or Blonde on Blonde or Never Mind The Bolloxs, do not exactly fly of the shelves, but are still regarded as “classic”. To me it becomes “Classic” usually through the importance placed on it and the status it attains, not through the sales it achieves
I think "Like A Virgin" is generally regarded by Madonna fans as a fun 80's pop album but nothing especially amazing. Like A Prayer and Ray Of Light are the two that have generally been canonized as her most important and essential albums. LAV is precisely as you described it, a nice retro 80's album but nothing spectacular.joao wrote:My point is not about JLP being a discartable album, it´s about how thickle those concepts like a "classic album" or "albums to be ashamed of" are. If Michael and Madonna had not remained popular after their 80´s peak, Thriller and Like A Virgin would be remembered today as "fun pop that I used to hear when I was an 80´s kid" and not as "defining pop classics". They are fun pop too. I don´t think a record like The Sign is inferior to Madonna´s and Michael´s 80´s releases (that´s a subjective things, I know), but the reason that album has entered the list of "fun pop from the past that people do not take seriously today" instead of "defining pop classics" has nothing to do with the quality of the album itself, but with the fact that the band members are not celebrities today and they are not exposed in the media.
Yes, but according to some (rather pressed) individuals her success is down to having no competition, lol.jules25 wrote:Interesting points and analysis of Adele's "21".
What ever your take on it at least she has shown that an album can still achieve the unachievable, capture the worlds attention, sell bucket loads and spawn number 1 hits without compromising album sales or chart position.
Not the sales but chart performance yes.Euromillions wrote:Yes, but according to some (rather pressed) individuals her success is down to having no competition, lol.jules25 wrote:Interesting points and analysis of Adele's "21".
What ever your take on it at least she has shown that an album can still achieve the unachievable, capture the worlds attention, sell bucket loads and spawn number 1 hits without compromising album sales or chart position.
+1Play wrote:Not the sales but chart performance yes.Euromillions wrote:Yes, but according to some (rather pressed) individuals her success is down to having no competition, lol.jules25 wrote:Interesting points and analysis of Adele's "21".
What ever your take on it at least she has shown that an album can still achieve the unachievable, capture the worlds attention, sell bucket loads and spawn number 1 hits without compromising album sales or chart position.
OMG I love Adele too, please don't do that.
How many times has Euromillions been told to chill the "you guys are shaders!!!" argument?Play wrote:Not the sales but chart performance yes.Euromillions wrote:Yes, but according to some (rather pressed) individuals her success is down to having no competition, lol.jules25 wrote:Interesting points and analysis of Adele's "21".
What ever your take on it at least she has shown that an album can still achieve the unachievable, capture the worlds attention, sell bucket loads and spawn number 1 hits without compromising album sales or chart position.
OMG I love Adele too, please don't do that.
We are *ALL* haters in his eyesHUR wrote:As I was the the first one who started with the 'non competition' argument (and I still maintain it), I have to say that I don't feel offended by his words at all.
I would only like Euromillions to be honest and come clean about the members whi he is referring to when he talks about such things as 'MJ stans', 'Anti-Adele camp', and 'pressed individuals' and similar futile words. But he doesn't respond.
lovely from start to finish.NothingFails wrote:
I've f***ing said that even if f***ing Adele had five f***ing stronger competitors, it wouldn't affect Adele's f***ing sales (by your uberdefensive logic, shouldn't Thriller have sold less because of Springsteen, Prince, Def Lep and The Police. Huh? No? Then stop pulling this out of nowhere that competition would hurt Adele). How many times have we analyzed in the past when multiple diamond albums came out? Serious f***ing cut the f***ing "shading" and f***ing "haters" comments. Nobody is being negative or shading except you because you're such a f***ing defensive stan who thinks everything is against your icon. NOBODY IS! Deal with it. WTF.![]()
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haha thanks. I honestly wasn't that pissed, just figured maybe colorful language might actually get his attention since he keeps spinning everything to "Adele shade" as if she is some long-shot that nobody is supporting.stevyy wrote:lovely from start to finish.NothingFails wrote:
I've f***ing said that even if f***ing Adele had five f***ing stronger competitors, it wouldn't affect Adele's f***ing sales (by your uberdefensive logic, shouldn't Thriller have sold less because of Springsteen, Prince, Def Lep and The Police. Huh? No? Then stop pulling this out of nowhere that competition would hurt Adele). How many times have we analyzed in the past when multiple diamond albums came out? Serious f***ing cut the f***ing "shading" and f***ing "haters" comments. Nobody is being negative or shading except you because you're such a f***ing defensive stan who thinks everything is against your icon. NOBODY IS! Deal with it. WTF.![]()
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Well for one thing AOB were around for like two albums and Abba were around for 8 yrs producing pop classic after pop classic. Outside the US, Abba are infinitely bigger than AOB ever were.joao wrote:
So why did Abba music became "classic" while AOB´s has fallen into "90´s eurotrash" category? I don´t see any qualitative difference between those acts. They have many things in common: both are nordic, boy-girl mixed group, and made pure fun pop music without any pretension to be serious or political.
I didn't say it was a bad song, but it is VERY 1982 in sounding. Much of Thriller still would've sounded current if released in 1989, but that song (largely due to the Toto influence, as they wrote and played on the song) really sets it to its time.phoenix83 wrote:Human Nature's one of the best MJ songs of all!NothingFails wrote: True it has its moments that come off dated in 2012 (The Girl Is Mine and Human Nature)
I grew up in the 90´s, when Thriller was already old and MJ had already become an "abomination". And I remember growing up seeing him in the news (usually bad news), but everytime they mentioned something about her a little part of one of his classic songs were played.HAL9000 wrote:"Thriller" was a ultimate crossover album, mixing numerous genres and styles, pop (Thriller), r&b (Human Nature), r&b/funk (P.Y.T.), r&b/funk/dance (Billie Jean), rock (Beat It), soul (The Lady in My Life), dance/funk (Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'), soul/funk (Baby Be Mine)...joao wrote:If Michael and Madonna had not remained popular after their 80´s peak, Thriller and Like A Virgin would be remembered today as "fun pop that I used to hear when I was an 80´s kid" and not as "defining pop classics". They are fun pop too. I don´t think a record like The Sign is inferior to Madonna´s and Michael´s 80´s releases (that´s a subjective things, I know), but the reason that album has entered the list of "fun pop from the past that people do not take seriously today" instead of "defining pop classics" has nothing to do with the quality of the album itself, but with the fact that the band members are not celebrities today and they are not exposed in the media.
Analyze structure of each song, composition, listen to the lyrics of songs, diversity of the themes, numerous singing styles, oh man I do not know how can you be so shallow in judging work of art.
Thriller's socio-cultural impact is immense, with videos MJ revolutionized the music video industry, video become an art form not solely promotional tool. With "Thriller" MJ broke down so many barriers and changed the music industry forever.joao, maybe I lived in a different world because since the late 80s that "media spotlight" you are talking about was writing lies about Michael Jackson. According to media every album after "Thriller" was flop. You never heard for 'Wacko Jacko' crap, 'skin bleaching to become white' crap, 'child molestation' crap... He was constantly ridiculed. Yeah sure, that was a great advertising.joao wrote:Do you think Thriller would remain selling in such numbers until 2012 if it was Michael´s last release, of if the follow up "Bad" ended up being a disastrous flop? Do you really think the fact the artist has remained popular for several years and remained in the media spotlight for decades has nothing to do with its neverending sales, and it´s all due to the exceptional quality of the material released?
By the way read the article in my signature!
I didn´t say AoB had more impact then Abba overall. I did say that, on their big, they were having more impact in the USA then Abba did on theirs. They had a number one album, went x9 platinum with it, had 3 top 5 singles, etc. They were big, even if for just one year. Abba had never been big in the USA in the 70´s.jimmypages59 wrote:
You did not just say what I said! You questioned the relative success of AOB against ABBA and asked why ABBA are more “universally regarded”, while inferring (incorrectly) that AOB “had more impact”, Revivals and Mama Mia are the probably reasons for ABBA’s enduring appeal, ABBA never had a Top 20 studio Album, AOB 2nd Album was more successful than any ABBA album.