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Various Artists
Pop Music: The Modern Era 1976-1999
RELEASE
October 12, 1999
LABEL
Sony Music Distribution
GENRES
Pop/Rock, Disco, Adult Contemporary, Alternative/Indie Rock, Singer/Songwriter, Soft Rock, Contemporary Pop/Rock, Adult Alternative Pop/Rock, Contemporary R&B, Soul, Urban, Rock & Roll, New Wave, Punk/New Wave, Album Rock
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Album Review
To commemorate the end of the century, Sony Music assembled the gargantuan 26-disc box set,
Sony Music 100 Years: Soundtrack for a Century
. The title was imposing, as was the idea behind it -- to chronicle the life of the oldest record label in the music industry. To be clear, Sony Music has not existed for 100 years, but the heart of its catalog, Columbia Records, was founded early in the 20th century. Sony acquired Columbia and its various subsidiaries in the late '80s, purchasing one of the richest catalogs in pop history, as the box set proves again and again. Sony realized that most consumers wouldn't invest in a 26-disc box, no matter how impressive it was, so they simultaneously released a series of 12 genre-specific double-disc sets that culled highlights from the set. That left two discs exclusive to the box, which was appropriate, since anyone who spends over $300 on an album deserves a little bonus. As it turns out, the double-disc sets are every bit as impressive as the big box, perhaps more so, because they're easily digestible. Even so, the scope of the 38-track
Pop Music: The Modern Era 1976-1999
is impressive. Beginning with
Aerosmith
's "Dream On" and ending with
Lauryn Hill
's "Doo Wop (That Thing)," the collection covers a huge amount of ground, featuring not just major artists, but era-defining one-hit wonders. Sure, it's easy to spot omissions or quibble about the featured selections, but it's amazing to think that all these songs came from one group of labels. Some selections don't hold up --
Michael Bolton
's "How Am I Supposed to Live Without You" actually sounds more dated than anything from the late '70s -- but that's fine, since this winds up being a representative snapshot of mainstream pop in the last 25 years of the 20th century. After all, any collection that has
Wild Cherry
("Play That Funky Music"),
James Taylor
("Your Smiling Face"),
Electric Light Orchestra
("Don't Bring Me Down"),
Journey
("Open Arms"),
Herbie Hancock
("Rockit"),
Willie Nelson
and
Julio Iglesias
("To All the Girls I've Loved Before"),
New Kids on the Block
("Step by Step"), and Will Smith ("Gettin' Jiggy Wit It"), to name but a few, goes a long way in capturing how ephemeral, weird, and wonderful the '70s, '80s, and '90s could be.
–
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi
Track Listing
Dream On
Play That Funky Music
Lowdown
Boogie Nights
Your Smiling Face
Just the Way You Are
Two Tickets to Paradise
Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground)
Don't Bring Me Down
Hungry Heart
Guilty
Keep on Loving You
Open Arms
Ebony and Ivory
Rosanna
Who Can It Be Now?
Heartlight
Rockit
Girls Just Want to Have Fun
Billie Jean
Careless Whisper
To All the Girls I've Loved Before
Smooth Operator
Wishing Well
Anything for You
Eternal Flame
We Didn't Start the Fire
How Am I Supposed to Live Without You
Step by Step
Black or White
You Gotta Be
Because You Loved Me
Sunny Came Home
Virtual Insanity
My All
Criminal
Gettin' Jiggy Wit It
Doo Wop (That Thing)
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