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Color Me Badd - Best of Color Me Badd (CD)

Best of Color Me Badd
$6.36 - $6.99
3 out of 5.0 stars 2 Ratings (3 Reviews)

Album Details: Best of Color Me Badd

Release Date:08/22/2000
Label:Warner Bros / Wea
UPC:075992474924

User Reviews: Best of Color Me Badd

  • Overall:

    Even lesbians hate this

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Jun 12, 2001

    it's horrible

  • Overall:

    Re: ALL 4 LOVE

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Mar 10, 2001

    Honey, They have been here since 1991.
    They are wonderful!First album was success. The others didnt make it.

Pro Reviews: Best of Color Me Badd

  • All Music Guide

    Two years after Color Me Badd broke up in the wake of the commercial failure of Awakening, Giant Records assembled this compilation. The title The Best of Color Me Badd instead of Greatest Hits, signals that it is not a simple collection of the group's chart singles. In fact, of their nine Top 40 pop hits, six are included, among them the major hits "I Wanna Sex You Up," "I Adore Mi Amor," and "All 4 Love." (The missing titles are "Slow Motion," "Forever Love," and "Time and Chance.") The other half of the disc consists of B-sides (the RB chart entry "Color Me Badd"), album tracks (among them a cover of the 1973 Skylark hit "Wildflower" produced and arranged by David Foster, who was in Skylark), and rarities ("Got 2 Have U" from the Beverly Hills 90210 TV soundtrack and "Where Lovers Go," previously available only as a Japanese bonus track). The result is a reasonable sampler of Color Me Badd's work. "We're not a fad," they sang on "Color Me Badd," but they were, breaking five top 20 h...its off their 1991 debut album, the triple-platinum C.M.B., and going straight downhill from there. Picking up from New Edition and especially New Kids on the Block, who were subsiding just as they emerged, Color Me Badd, along with Boyz II Men, was the teen-oriented male vocal group of their day, complete with hype, videos, silly haircuts, and four interweaving mediocre tenor voices. It is no coincidence that, just as they themselves were slipping below the radar, descendants like Backstreet Boys and N'Sync were just coming on. But unlike the so-called "boy bands" that came after them (how can they be bands if they don't play instruments?), they were RB-influenced rather than Euro-centric, even to the point of being an integrated group, and they incorporated a broader range of musical styles into their sound. They were also more overtly sexual ("I Wanna Sex You Up"), even if "Sexual Capacity," one of the album tracks included here, proves to be a confession of limited capacity when you examine the lyrics. The characteristic they shared with both their predecessors and followers, however, is that they were essentially image-based, a bunch of reasonably attractive, modestly talented young men more important for their pinup value than their musical accomplishments, and so they remain on this compilation. That means the likely audience for The Best of Color Me Badd is women in their mid-20s at the turn of the century who are already looking back nostalgically on junior high school. - William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Color Me Badd

This vocal quartet formed as high school students in Oklahoma City before relocating to New York. They proved adept at both churning dance tunes and sincere ballads. Signing to Giant Records, they broke through in 1991 with their performance of "I Wanna Sex You Up" on the soundtrack of New Jack City. Released as a single, the song topped the RB charts, went Top Five pop... Read more