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Incredible Songs: 1990s, Vol. 1 features music courtesy of Alice In Chains, Boyz II Men, Lauryn Hill, Mariah Carey, and Whitney Houston.
![Incredible Songs: 1990s, Vol. 1 [📷: Brent Faulkner / The Musical Hype; Billy Van Tran via Pexels; AlexAntropov86, Victoria Regen via Pixabay]](https://themusicalhype.com/wp-content/plugins/accelerated-mobile-pages/images/SD-default-image.png)
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Ah, to be a 1990s kid! Sure, born in the late 1980s, much of the early music I experienced beyond the oldies played by my parents hailed from the 90s. Continuing a playlist series that examines various musical decades/eras, 🎧 Incredible Songs: 1990s, Vol. 1 marks the first of many anticipated volumes of some surefire musical highlights from the 90s. Will every big hit and every important song be covered? Nope – far too much ground! That said, you’re sure to find some bops and gems over the span of how many volumes of Incredible Songs: 1990s ultimately arrive. 🎧 Incredible Songs: 1990s, Vol. 1 features music courtesy of 🎙 Alice In Chains, 🎙 Boyz II Men, 🎙 Lauryn Hill, 🎙 Mariah Carey, and 🎙 Whitney Houston among others. Remember, each volume only scratches the musical surface!
1. Mariah Carey, “Vision of Love”
💿 Mariah Carey • 🏷 Columbia • 🗓 1990
The brilliant “Vision of Love” was written by Carey and 🎼✍ Ben Margulies. The record finds Carey singing about an infatuated heart that is ultimately fulfilled. “I’m so thankful that I’ve received / The answer that heaven / Has sent down to me,” she proclaims. Woo, that’s deep Mariah! Also, divinely romantic! Carey sings angelically, flaunting her anointed pipes. Her tone! Those runs! The famous whistle tones! Producing this utterly sublime, big-voiced, high-flying ballad are 🎛 Rhett Lawrence and Narada Michael Walden. Given the time (again, 1990), “Vision of Love” sounds slick.
Appears in 🔻:
2. Reba McEntire, “Fancy”
💿 Rumor Has It • 🏷 MCA • 🗓 1990
Even in the 2020s, songs about sex work still raise eyebrows, though arguably less so compared to ‘back in the day.’ Still, where country music’s biggest vice often seems to be an exorbitant amount of alcohol, prostitution obviously raises the bar. The lyrics never cross the line, mind you, but the innuendo is loud and clear. Furthermore, the fact that Fancy’s mother encourages her 18-year-old daughter to become a prostitute is shocking: “She looked at the pitiful shack / And then she looked at me and took a ragged breath / She said, ‘Your Pa’s runned off and I’m real sick / And the baby’s gonna starve to death.’” Desperate times call for desperate measures, exemplified by this record, where Fancy’s mother goes on to say, “‘Just be nice to the gentlemen, Fancy / They’ll be nice to you.’” Damn! It is worth noting that Fancy ends up on top: “I charmed a king, congressman / And an occasional aristocrat.” She also addresses the pushback: “There’s a lot of self-righteous hypocrites that call me bad / They criticize mama for turning me out.” Even by the time the Reba version of 🎵 “Fancy” arrived, there was still C-O-N-T-R-O-V-E-R-S-Y! Later, 🎙 Orville Peck covered it, transforming the record to a queer male perspective, opening another can of worms.
Appears in 🔻:
3. Boyz II Men, “End of the Road”
💿 Cooleyhighharmony • 🏷 Motown • 🗓 1991
What makes “End of the Road” special? Besides the vocals, which are automatic, the songwriting is on-point. Thank the team comprised of 🎼 ✍ 🎛 Daryl Simmons, Antonio “LA” Reid, and Babyface. With those juggernauts, is there any way that 🎙 Michael McCary, 🎙 Shawn Stockman, 🎙 Wanyá Morris and 🎙 Nathan Morris could possibly miss? NO 👏 POSSIBLE 👏 WAY 👏! With love, specifically heartbreak, being the topic, “End of the Road” is relatable through and through. Those ‘Boyz’ are struggling with the end, still desiring to be with their respective ex-lovers. In the pre-chorus, Wanya asks, “Will you love me again like you loved me before? / This time, I want you to love me much more / This time instead, just come to my bed / And baby, just don’t let me, don’t let me down.” Ultimately, 🎵 “End of the Road” is a once in a lifetime song, PERIOD. The vocals are high-flying, and the harmonies celestial. The Grammys took notice, awarding the R&B group 🏆 Best R&B Performance by a Duo/Group with Vocal in 1992 for this transcendent gem. Furthermore, this 13-week, no. 1 Billboard Hot 100 hit also won a Grammy for 🏆 Best R&B Song, awarded to Simmons, Reid, and Babyface. 30 years later, “End of the Road” remains potent.
Appears in 🔻:
- 11 Songs That Key in on The End (2019)
- Boyz II Men, “End of the Road”: Throwback Vibez 🕶️🎶 No. 4 (2021)
4. Michael Jackson, “Will You Be There? (Theme from Free Willy)”
💿 Dangerous • 🏷 MJJ Productions • 📅 1991
Michael Jackson sings incredibly here – period. Sure, he always sounds awesome but on “Will You Be There,” he takes that beloved tenor (and beyond) to another level. Serving as the lead, backed by a superb gospel choir, it’s hard to listen to this record and NOT feel something. No, “Will You Be There” never mentions God or a deity, and isn’t a contemporary gospel record, but it feels like a spiritual experience. Jackson seems to be seeking someone who can and will be there for him in a world filled with adversity and lofty expectations. “When weary, tell me will you hold me? When wrong, will you scold me? When lost will you find me?” he asks. Among the most memorable sections of “Will You Be There” arrives on the powerful bridge, which precedes a modulating breakdown section. Jackson proclaims:
“Everyone’s taking control of me
Seems that the world’s got a role for me
I’m so confused, will you show to me
You’ll be there for me and care enough to bear me?”
The ad-libs that follow in the breakdown section are some of Jackson’s finest of his illustrious career. Who doesn’t love to hear him welp (“Hoo”)! “Will You Be There’ is a must-hear throwback gem that never grows old.
Appears in 🔻:
- Michael Jackson, “Will You Be There”: Throwback Vibez 🕶️🎶 No. 6 (2022)
- 11 Thrilling Will or Wheel Songs (2022)
5. Whitney Houston, “I Will Always Love You”
💿 The Bodyguard – Original Soundtrack Album • 🏷 Arista • 📅 1992
Appears in 🔻:
- 11 Best R&B Songs: 1990 – 2000 (2018)
- 15 Ear Catching Covers (2021)
- Dolly Parton vs. Whitney Houston: Head 2 Head 🗣️ No. (2021)
- 15 More Soul Oldies That Tickle My Fancy (Vol. 2) (2021)
- 11 Thrilling Will or Wheel Songs (2022)
6. Alice In Chains, “Rooster”
💿 Dirt • 🏷 Sony Music Entertainment • 📅 1992
“Here they come to snuff the Rooster,” Staley harmonizes with Cantrell on the timeless chorus. He continues, singing expressively himself, “You know he ain’t gonna die / No, no, no, you know he ain’t gonna die.” Besides the dramatic chorus, the verses, performed solely by Staley, are epic, commencing with the statement, “Ain’t found a way to kill me yet / Eyes burn with stingin’ sweat” in the first verse. Obviously, “Rooster” is not about the animal itself, but rather, Cantrell’s father, a Vietnam war vet who was nicknamed Rooster. Besides war-driven lyrics, the music itself is heavy. One of the best moments of this 90s classic is the truly heavy ending of each chorus section, as well as the instrumental break between the first two choruses. Looking back, it is a shame that to date, only one song by AIC has charted on the Billboard Hot 100, sigh. Chart accolades don’t mean everything though. “Rooster” has been certified as a double platinum single by the RIAA while parent album, Dirt was certified quintuple platinum.
Appears in 🔻:
- Alice In Chains, “Rooster”: FIERCE Pop + Rock 🔥🤘 No. 1 (2022)
- 13 Intriguing Songs That Reference Animals (2023)
7. TOOL, “Prison Sex”
💿 Undertow • 🏷 Tool Dissectional / Volcano Entertainment II • 📅 1993
Look no further than the song title: “Prison Sex.” ‘Prison’ opens a can of worms, and add sex to it, and a flurry of filthy, troubling thoughts come to mind. The abuse that occurs while inmates are incarcerated is unspeakable. Even if you forget literal prison, what about metaphorical imprisonment from sexual abuse? For good reason, the 💿 Undertow gem raised eyebrows in 1993 and still does so today.
“My lamb and martyr, you look so precious
Won’t you, won’t you come on a bit closer
Close enough so I can smell you
I need you to feel this
I can’t stand to burn too long
Release in sodomy
For one sweet moment I am whole.”
“Prison Sex” encompasses sexual abuse, specifically child sexual abuse. Besides the disturbing tone of the song, the music video, which uses stop motion, is more disturbing than the song itself. What TOOL creates is disturbing, even with good intentions to speak against abuse. Of course, censorship reared its ugly head. The vicious cycle is masterfully captured in the excerpted lyrics, as well as the chilling closing lyrics, “My lamb and martyr, this will be over soon / You look so precious, you look so precious.” Anytime you tackle tough subject matter, be prepared for backlash, controversy, and censorship.
Appears in 🔻:
- 13 Totally Locked Up, Prison Songs (2021)
- TOOL, “Prison Sex”: Controversial Tunes 😈🎶 No. 1 (2021)
- 13 Unapologetic, Controversial Tunes (2021)
8. Nas, “The World Is Yours”
💿 Illmatic • 🏷 Columbia • 📅 1994
Pete Rock plays a pivotal role on “The World Is Yours.” Still, the star of the show is the young don himself, Nas. Nas has been serving up those bars for years, all the while deserving more credit than he’s received. There are endless bars, delivered with a conscious mentality, that catch the ear. An entire essay could be written analyzing and deciphering his rhymes. Honestly, he starts off fast, asserting at the beginning of the first verse, “I sip the Dom P, watchin’ Ghandi ‘til I’m changed, then / Writin’ in my book of rhymes, all the words past the margin / To hold the mic I’m throbbin’, mechanical movement / Understandable smooth shit that murderers move with.” Woo! He closes the verse, spitting, “I’m out for dead presidents to represent me” [INSERTS show me the money GIF here]. There are some intriguing spiritual lines in the second verse, which seem to reference the MC’s son: “My strength, my son, the star will be my resurrection / Born in correction, all the wrong shit I did, he’ll lead in right direction.” In the third verse, in the line, “Picturin’ my peeps not eatin’ can make my heartbeat skip” is a prime example of social consciousness. It does hit differently, doesn’t it? The big takeaway is, 🎵 “The World Is Yours” is one of the greatest hip-hop songs of all time. It never, NEVER grows old.
Appears in 🔻:
9. Seal, “Kiss from a Rose”
💿 Seal • 🏷 Warner • 📅 1994
“Ba-ya-ya, ba-da-da-da-da-da, ba-ya-ya.” One of my very favorite ‘kiss’ songs is none other than 🎵 “Kiss from a Rose” by 🏆 Grammy-winning pop singer, 🎙 Seal. Once upon a time, Seal was a force in pop music, especially in the 90s and even with his well-rounded 💿 Seal IV in 2003. No moment was bigger for him than “Kiss from a Rose,” which earned him three of his four Grammys (Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Best Male Pop Vocal Performance).
“Kiss from a Rose” is truly a ‘once in a lifetime’ song. Perfect songs are hard to come by, but this is one of them. As far as genre, the safest bet is pop, yet “Kiss from a Rose” dabbles in folk, rock, R&B – it exemplifies crossover. As far as the musicianship, it’s elite, including the unique harmonic progression, plenty of less predictable moments, a sublime vocal performance that ranges from tender to more overt, and the arrangement/orchestration and production. The songwriting (lyrics) is stunning, further accentuated by the nuanced vocals of Seal. The centerpiece, of course, is that epic chorus:
“Baby, I compare you to a kiss from a rose on the gray
Ooh, the more I get of you, the stranger it feels, yeah
And now that your rose is in bloom
A light hits the gloom on the gray.”
Beyond the chorus, the verses have no shortage of lyrical highlights. “There used to be a graying tower alone on the sea,” he sings quietly but expressively on the first verse, continuing, “You became the light of the dark side of me.” On the second, Seal asserts, “To me, you’re like a growing addiction that I can’t deny / Won’t you tell me is that healthy, baby?” Nearly three decades old, there’s nothing unhealthy about this ‘kiss’ classic.
Appears in 🔻:
10. Mariah Carey & Boyz II Men, “One Sweet Day
💿 Daydream • 🏷 Sony BMG • 📅 1995
“And I know you’re shining down on me from heaven
Like so many friends we’ve lost along the way
And I know eventually we’ll be together
One sweet day.”
Shockingly, “One Sweet Day” won no 🏆 Grammys 🤯 but was nominated for Record Of The Year. Ultimately, it lost to another classic: 🎵 “Kiss From A Rose” by 🎙 Seal.
11. Fugees, “Killing Me Softly With His Song”
💿 The Score • 🏷 Columbia • 📅 1996
Being a millennial, I’m naturally more familiar with the 1996 cover by Fugees – blame on being an 80s baby! Essentially, Hill and 🎙 🎛 Wyclef Jean update the 1973 version for the 90s, which is R-A-D. The beat is indicative of the hip-hop soul sound prevalent at the time. It naturally infuses freshness – there’s a new swagger. Furthermore, add in a robust bass line, ad-libs (Hill and Jean), and “Killing Me Softly” has a new identity for a new generation. Of course, the person who ‘brings it on home’ for us 80s babies and 90s kids is Hill, period. Her voice is distinct – starkly different from Flack’s. She’d go on to make one of the greatest albums of all-time in the timeless 💿 The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill. Here, she prefaces the brilliance of her sole solo studio album, and it’s awesome. Her nuance, the runs – it’s glorious over that dusty beat. “Killing Me Softly With His Song” is in great hands with Fugees too. Like Flack, they won a Grammy specifically for this song.
Appears in 🔻:
12. Elton John, “Something About The Way You Look Tonight”
💿 The Big Picture • 🏷 Universal Music • 📅 1997
Appears in 🔻:
13. Lauryn Hill, “Ex-Factor”
💿 The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill • 🏷 Ruffhouse • 📅 1998
At one point, Lauryn Hill sings, “And when I try to walk away / You’d hurt yourself to make me stay / This is crazy.” Crazy indeed Ms. Lauryn Hill, but, again, exes and broken-off relationship serve among the preeminent topics in music regardless of genre. Yes, 🎵 “Doo Wop (That Thing)” remains the crowning achievement (and number one hit) from The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, but you can totally feel Hill’s struggle with love – it’s so relatable on “Ex-Factor.” My favorite section of the song is the ‘breakdown’:
“(Care) Care for me, care for me
I know you care for me
(There) There for me, there for me
Said you’d be there for me
(Cry) Cry for me, cry for me
You said you’d die for me
(Give) Give to me, give to me
Why won’t you live for me?”
Appears in 🔻:
- Throwback Thursday No. 3 (2020)
- Weekly Gems No. 3 (2020)
- 13 E Songs Selected with No Rhyme or Reason (2021)
- Ex-: 5ive Songs No. 94 (2021)
Incredible Songs: 1990s, Vol. 1 [📷: Brent Faulkner / The Musical Hype; Arista, Columbia, MCA, MJJ Productions, Motown, Ruffhouse, Sony BMG, Sony Music Entertainment, Tool Dissectional / Volcano Entertainment II, Universal Music; ]
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