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Tag: boy bands

  • Infatueighties: #80: “Can You Stand the Rain”

    Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, along with their mentor/former boss Prince, brought funk into the 1980s. With angular synthesized rhythms and large heapings of attitude, they hit their stride around mid-decade, scoring hits for Cheryl Lynn, The.S.O.S. Band, Alexander O’ Neal, and of course, Janet Jackson. 1986’s “Control” turned Janet from Michael’s cute little sister who starred on TV to Janet-Miss Jackson if you’re nasty, and set the standard for kid stars looking for a quick and safe jump into adulthood.

    Somewhere in Boston, the members of New Edition were watching and listening. Around the time the “Control” campaign wound down in 1987, the boy group had lost/kicked out founding member Bobby Brown, were in danger of losing lead singer Ralph Tresvant to a solo career and had hired vocally talented Johnny Gill as a potential replacement. After Tresvant reconsidered and decided to stay, the gentlemen hooked up with Jam & Lewis in Minneapolis to begin work on the product that would transform them from boys to men (the name of the resulting album, “Heart Break”‘s final track and also the name of a group that NE member Mike Bivins would discover just a few short years later).

    While “If It Isn’t Love” was the album’s biggest hit (charting at #7 pop), it was “Can You Stand the Rain” that proved to be the album’s most lasting song. An anthemic ballad with a mature lyric, it was the first NE track to successfully combine Tresvant’s boyish tenor with Gill’s chesty baritone. All the candy girls finally had a grown and sexy song to get down to. Like most of Jam & Lewis’ ballads (there are at least two more in this countdown), the song features a touch of melancholy as well. Despite narrowly missing the pop Top 40, this song spent 3 weeks at #1 on the R&B charts at the top of 1989 and sealed the deal on the longevity of New Edition’s career, a career that is now in its’ 25th year. Slow jams from the decade of excess don’t get much better than this…

  • NKOTB + NE = Hit Single?!?

    It’s the boy band equivalent of a supergroup.

    New Kids on the Block have joined forces with their predecessors New Edition for a song called “Full Service” that will appear on NKOTB’s upcoming September release. Both groups are celebrating anniversaries this year: the New Kids are celebrating twenty years since the release of their breakthrough album “Hangin’ Tough”, and New Edition is celebrating their 25th anniversary as a group.

    New Edition\'s 1984 hit single \"Cool it Now\"

    These groups share a lot of history. Both were formed in Boston, with the New Kids coming about only after New Edition had left writer/producer Maurice Starr’s camp in search of major label money. There’s been a bit of (rightful) bitterness on New Edition’s part because the New Kids were afforded opportunities that the significantly more talented NE guys weren’t- and we can probably correctly surmise that the ethnic make up of the two groups was responsible for that.

    NKOTB\'s #1 smash \"Step By Step\" from 1990

    Anyway, I’m definitely looking forward to what Ronnie, Ricky, Mike, Ralph, Johnny, Donnie, Danny, Joe, Jon and Jordan will come up with (sometime N.E. member Bobby Brown did not participate in the recording session). If the New Kids and New Edition can settle their differences and work together, does that mean there’s hope for the Middle East?