After Control and Rhythm Nation 1814, Janet Jackson had quite a lot to live up to.
Anyone who expected Jackson to top Rhythm Nation -- her crowning achievement
and an incredibly tough act to follow -- was being unrealistic. But with janet., she delivered a respectable offering
that, although not as strong as either Control or Nation, has many strong points. As before, Jackson is joined by the prolific Jimmy Jam/Terry Lewis team, and their input is
valuable on everything from the angry "This Time" and the hypnotic
"That's the Way Love Goes" to the '60s-flavored "What'll I
Do" and the sociopolitical "The New Agenda" (which
features Public Enemy leader Chuck D). But perhaps the CD's most exciting
track is "Funky Big Band," which samples jazz legend Lionel Hampton's 1938 big-band classic "I'm
in the Mood for Swing" with thrilling results. There are a few throwaways
(including the lightweight ballad "Again"), but despite its
shortcomings, janet. is a welcome addition to her catalog.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Janet (stylized as janet.)
is the fifth studio album by American singer Janet Jackson, released on May 18, 1993,
by Virgin Records
America. Prior to its release, Jackson was at the center of a
high-profile bidding war over her recording contract. In 1991, her original
label A&M sought
to renew her contract, while others, such as Atlantic, Capitol, and Virgin all vied to sign her.
After meeting with Virgin owner Richard Branson, she signed with the label.
The contract was worth an estimated $40 million, making her the world's
then-highest paid musical act.
Criticism
that her success in the music industry was attributed to being a member of
the Jackson family and
a producer-dependent artist led her to write all lyrics for the album, in
addition to co-producing every song and co-writing each of their arrangements
with Jimmy Jam and
Terry Lewis. Its title, read "Janet, period.", is meant to
disassociate her public image from her family, dropping her surname. A pop and R&B record, Janet incorporated hip hop, opera, house and jazz,
eliminating the rigid, industrial sound of her previous records.
Lyrically, the theme of Janet is sexual intimacy—an abrupt
departure from her conservative image. Much of her lyrics emphasize a woman's
perspective on sexuality and the demand for practicing safe sex.
In
the United States, Janet became the singer's third consecutive
album to top the Billboard 200 and her first to debut at
number one. Selling 350,000 copies in its first week, it set a record for the
highest first week sales for a female artist at that time.[1] Certified sixfold
platinum by the Recording
Industry Association of America (RIAA), it has sold over seven
million copies in the US according to Nielsen SoundScan. Internationally, Janet topped
the record charts in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, South Africa and the
United Kingdom, and has sold an estimated 14 million copies worldwide.[2]
Janet remains one of only seven albums in history to produce six
top-ten hits on the US Billboard Hot
100 chart, including the number-one singles "That's
the Way Love Goes" and "Again".
The MTV-sponsored Janet World Tour supporting the album
received critical acclaim for Jackson's elaborate stage performances,
reinforcing her reputation as one of the preeminent artists of the MTV generation. Janet cemented
her as an international icon and sex symbol, and is listed by the National Association of Recording Merchandisers and
the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame as one of the 200 Definitive Albums of All Time.
Academics argued the erotic imagery in her music videos have contributed to a
higher degree of sexual freedom among women.
Rumors
of a multimillion-dollar bidding war over Jackson's recording contract began to
circulate in spring 1991. Jet magazine reported: "A recording
company has offered in excess of $50 million to sign superstar Janet Jackson to
a recording contract, making the 24-year-old singer/songwriter/dancer/actress
the key player in one of the hottest bidding wars among today's major record
companies."[3] Reports indicated that Capitol, Virgin and Atlantic were all bidding for Jackson's
contract, as her ties to A&M would soon expire; by March, she had
signed with Virgin. The New York Times declared
"Janet Jackson has signed what is believed to be the most lucrative
contract in the history of recording. The 24-year-old singer, songwriter and
actress signed an exclusive contract with Virgin Records it was announced
yesterday."[4] Her new contract guaranteed a
twenty-two percent royalty payment, in addition to her then-historic signing
bonus.[5] Chuck Philips of the Los Angeles Times reported that it had been
the largest bidding war in recent memory and that "[o]ne reason the
bidding was so heavy, various industry observers have noted, was that
Jackson-at just 24-is still a relatively fresh face on the pop scene and that
her dance-pop style is ideal for today's pop/video climate."[6] In addition, her potential as an
international superstar proved to be the primary motivation for the label's
investment. Jeff Ayeroff,
co-managing director of Virgin in the US stated: "Janet is a world-class
artist and we expect her growth to be enormous."[6] Chairman Richard Branson spoke with Jackson privately to
seal the deal. He commented: "A Rembrandt rarely becomes available... When
it does, there are many people who are determined to get it. I was determined."[6]
Stephen
Holden of The New York Times criticized the contract amount,
considering it a gamble for Virgin. He stated that Jackson "is a producer-dependent
artist—i.e., someone who relies on others to make her sound interesting and
trendy. She also lacks a sharply defined personality, both as an artist and
celebrity. Where singers like Ms. Houston and Mariah Carey have commanding vocal power, Ms.
Jackson's is a relatively indistinguishable studio voice."[7] Richard Branson rebutted this argument
stating "Ms. Jackson has met with great success working with the
production team of Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis,
just as her brother Michael Jackson has experienced his greatest successes with
the producer Quincy Jones. It
is interesting that Mr. Holden doesn't mention this similar 'liability' when
discussing Michael Jackson. To say that Ms. Jackson is 'dependent' on her
producer is a shortsighted observation. She is a formidable talent who stands
on her own."[8] Michael Jackson would break his
sister's record only days later, when he signed a $60 million contract
with Sony Music Entertainment.
Both sibling's contracts garnered considerable criticism. Los Angeles
Times reported that "A&M Records President Al Cafaro, whose
company lost the fierce bidding battle over Janet Jackson to Virgin Records,
said record companies may be vesting too much importance in individual
performers" as the funds used as advances to the Jacksons could have
launched recording careers for numerous unknown talents.[9] Cliff Burnstein of Q-Prime management
commented that recording artists demands for advances upon signing would begin
to escalate from that point forward.[5]
Prior
to her first release with Virgin, Jackson was asked by Jam and Lewis to record
a song for the sound track to
the feature film Mo' Money,
released in 1992 by their label Perspective Records.
Jon Bream of the Star Tribune reported:
"For most movie soundtracks, producers negotiate with record companies,
managers and lawyers for the services of big-name singers. Like the Hollywood
outsiders that they are, Edina-based Jam and Lewis went directly to such stars
as Janet Jackson, Michael Jackson, Luther Vandross, Bell Biv Devoe, Color Me Badd and Johnny Gill."[10] Jackson, Jackson and Vandross
recorded the duet or trio "The Best
Things in Life Are Free", which peaked at number 10 on
the Billboard Hot 100 and topped the Hot R&B Singles chart.[a] Shortly afterward, Jackson began
filming for her first feature length role in John Singleton's Poetic Justice.
Although she was encouraged by a major studio executive to take on a film in
which she could portray a singer, she insisted on finding a different role. She
explained: "About that same time John Singleton asked me to read his new
script. John and I became buddies—I loved Boyz n the Hood—so I thought he was just asking my
advice. I was shocked and honored to learn the screenplay had been written with
me in mind. 'Would you play Justice?' he wanted to know. Yes! I'd finally found
a role—a dramatic nonsinging role—that was right."[11] Released in July 1993, Poetic
Justice debuted at number one at the box office, grossing $11,728,455;
it grossed a grand total of $27,515,786.[12]
After writing songs with
themes of independence for Control and social injustice for Rhythm Nation 1814, Jackson desired
to devote her new album to love and relationships, describing the theme of her
new album as "intimacy" and that "[s]exual communication is the
name of the game."[13] She stated in an interview with David Wild for Rolling Stone that "[w]hile I was doing Rhythm Nation, I was
thinking about how things were so hard, so regimented and so black and
white ... I thought I'd do something on the sexy side—which is hard for me
since I grew up as a tomboy and don't really think of myself that way. But I
think this album is more on the feminine tip."[14] She also commented on how her experience acting in Poetic Justice played a role
in taking a new direction with her music. Speaking with biographer David Ritz,
she stated that "Rhythm Nation was a heavy record, and Poetic Justice was a heavy
movie. I wanted to do something lighter but also daring ... When I wrote
the album, I was still in a poetic frame of mind, inspired by Maya's beautiful language. You can hear that inspiration or
the interludes and especially on the song "New Agenda". This time I
felt much freer expressing myself."[13]
Despite
the critical and commercial success of her two previous albums, Jackson
continued to receive numerous comparisons to her brother Michael, often with
doubts that she held staying power in the music industry. When Edna Gundersen of USA Today questioned her about the subject,
she responded: "Certain people feel I'm just riding on my last
name ... That's why I just put my first name on janet. and why I never
asked my brothers to write or produce music for me."[15] Virgin Records expressed the album
title "punctuates the declaration of strength the singer, songwriter and
producer boldly expresses on this moving collection of songs which explore
love, sensuality, the power of sisterhood and her own evolving self-identity."[16] Thomas Harrison, author of Music
of the 1990s (2011) wrote that "[t]he conscious decision was
made, by the company and/or Jackson, to put her into the same league as other
one-named artists, such as Madonna, Bono, Beyonce and Prince, or at least to put her on the same standing
as others in the industry who are often called by one name, such as Whitney, Mariah, Britney, Diana, Dolly, and Garth among others. Jackson could now, in a
sense, stand on her own and not be seen as a product of the family
entertainment machine."[17] Sal Cinquemani of Slant magazine recounted the title of the
album ultimately "announced the singer as completely independent of her
male-dominated family [and] it positioned her as the person in charge of her
sound."[18][19]
The
album was recorded at Flyte Tyme Studios in Edina, Minnesota, from September 1992 to February
1993.[20][21] Songs on the album, with the
exception of "What'll I Do", were written by Janet Jackson, Jimmy Jam
and Terry Lewis, and mixed by Steve Hodge and Dave Rideau; "What'll I
Do" was written and produced by Jackson and Jellybean Johnson. Jackson
took a larger role in songwriting and production than she did on her previous
albums. She explained that "[a]ll my records are personal, and janet, is
the most personal of them all. That's why this time around it was important for
me to write all the lyrics and half of the melodies."[13] Jam described the record as being
"a more mature album musically."[22] David Ritz noted that Jackson and her
producers took risks by experimenting with musical influences that had not
appeared in their previous work. He explained: "She asked Kathleen Battle and Public Enemy's Chuck D to contribute—an opera diva and a
hardcore rapper, two artists one would not associate with Janet—and somehow
pulled if off. Beyond Jam and Lewis, there's now a recognizable Janet Jackson
production style that's gutsy and, in some cases, even eccentric."[13]
"That's
The Way Love Goes" contains a sample loop of "Papa Don't Take No Mess"
written by James Brown, Fred Wesley, Charles Bobbit, and John Starks.[23] The song "Again", was
originally just an experimental sound the production duo was considering.[24] While Jackson found its melody
compelling, the trio did not give the song serious contemplation until the film
producers from Poetic Justice requested a ballad for the
film's soundtrack.[24] Jackson subsequently wrote the lyrics
for "Again" and adapted them to Jam's melody.[24] The song was arranged by Lee Blaskey
and accompanied by members of the Minnesota Orchestra and
the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra.[24]
janet. features eclectic production choices. The record
incorporates R&B ("That's the Way Love Goes", "Where Are You
Now", "The Body That Loves You", "Any Time, Any
Place"), new jack swing ("You Want This", "Because of
Love"), rock ("If", "What'll I Do"), opera ("This
Time"), house ("Throb"), jazz ("Funky Big Band"), hip
hop ("New Agenda"), and pop ("Again", "Whoops
Now").[25] The album expanded Jackson's musical
endeavors from the more electronic-based soundscapes of her prior albums.[26] Like its immediate
predecessor, janet. also features a number of
interludes between songs that vary from short conversations, instrumentals, and
ambient-based tracks.
In
September 1993, Jackson appeared topless on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine
with the hands of her then-husband René Elizondo, Jr. covering
her breasts. The photograph is the original full-length version of the cropped
image used on the cover of the Janet album, shot by Patrick Demarchelier.[27] In the cover story, "Sexual
Healing" by David Ritz, Jackson explained, "sex has been an important
part of me for several years. But it just hasn't blossomed publicly until now.
I've had to go through some changes and shed some old attitudes before feeling
completely comfortable with my body. Listening to my new record, people
intuitively understand the change in me".[13] Ritz likened Jackson's transformation
to Marvin Gaye as he stated, "just as Gaye
moved from What's
Going On to Let's Get It On, from the austere to the
ecstatic, Janet, every bit as serious-minded as Marvin, moved from Rhythm
Nation to Janet, her statement of sexual liberation".[13]
The
image was cropped to show only Jackson's face on the album cover, and midriff
in the interior booklet. The full version appears as the cover of the limited
edition double-disc edition of the album, as well as the video
compilation Janet released
later that year. Sonia Murray of The Vancouver Sun later reported,
"Jackson, 27, remains clearly established as both role model and sex
symbol; the Rolling Stone photo of Jackson ... became one of the most
recognizable, and most lampooned, magazine covers of the year".[28]
"That's
the Way Love Goes", the album's lead single entered the Billboard Hot
100 at number fourteen and peaked at number one.[29][30] The single was certified gold by the
RIAA on November 12, 1993.[31] Virgin records intended for
"If" to be the lead single for the album, but Jackson, Jam and Lewis
disagreed.[23] "That's the Way Love Goes"
remained at number one for eight weeks—the most successful chart performance of
any member of the Jackson family.[23] The single earned a Grammy Award for
Best R&B Song.[32] "If" was released as the
album's second single and peaked at number four on the Hot 100, receiving gold
certification on September 28, 1993.[30][33] To promote the album, Jackson
performed a medley of the first two singles at the 1993 MTV Video Music Awards.
"Again", peaked at number one on the Hot 100 on December 11, 1993 and
topped the chart for two weeks.[24][30] The single was certified gold and
then doubled to platinum by the RIAA on December 17, 1993.[34] The single earned a nomination at
the 66th Academy Awards for
Best Original Song, and she also performed the track at the ceremony.[35] "Because of Love" reached
number ten, but was not certified by the RIAA.[30] "Any Time, Any Place"
peaked at number two on the Hot 100 and was certified gold on July 11, 1994.[30][36] "You Want This", the
album's final commercial single for the United States, peaked at number eight
on the Hot 100 and was awarded gold certification on December 6, 1994.[30][37] The album's hidden track "Whoops Now"
was released as a single in selected territories in 1995.
The
album's massive popularity at the time of its release made it one of the first
instances in which an album's songs would chart prior to them being released as
proper singles. "Throb,"
which would eventually be released as a B-side to "Any Time, Any Place"
in June 1994, charted an entire year before due to unsolicited radio airplay,
reaching number 66 on the Radio
Songs Chart. Similarly, the album cut "Where Are You Now'
reached number 30 on the same chart, being present on the chart for 37 weeks[38][39].
Jackson's
music video for "If" was staged as a futuristic Asian nightclub, with
spy cameras monitoring the intimate interactions of patrons within their
private boudoirs.[40] The video is an elaborate metaphor
for the single's message of sexual fantasy, desire and voyeurism.[40] The video was directed by Dominic
Sena, who previously worked with Jackson on music videos for Rhythm
Nation 1814. René Elizondo, Jr. directed the videos for "That's The
Way Love Goes", and "Again". Videos for "Any Time, Any
Place" and "You Want This" were directed by Keir McFarlane.
Jackson embarked on her second world tour in support of her
debut album with the Virgin Records label. Costumes and wardrobe for the tour
were designed by stylist Tanya Gill, with outfits "rang[ing] from pipebone
vests with high-heeled moccasin boots to zoot suits top-hats to
circus-ringmaster bustiers."[41] With
a show encompassing over 100 costumes, a team of over 50 costume makers was led
by wardrobe supervisor, Helen Hiatt.[41] The
tour's debut concert was held on November 24, 1993 in Cincinnati, Ohio.[42] Jackson
held a four show engagement at Madison Square Garden which began on
December 17, 1993, with the final performance held on New Year's Eve.[43] Michael
Snyder of the San Francisco Chronicle described
Jackson's stage performance at the San Jose Arena in
February 1994, as what erased the line between "stadium-size pop music
concerts and full-scale theatrical extravaganzas".[44]
The
one-hour-and-45-minute performance was so tightly choreographed—down to two
built-in pauses for "tears" at overwhelming waves of crowd adoration
and a contrived bit of seductive repartee with a handsome, buffed hunk plucked
from the front row for the ode to lust, "Any Time, Any Place"—that it
breezed by like a glitzy Vegas revue or a television variety show.[44]
— Michael Snyder, San Francisco
Chronicle
Her performances also garnered criticism. Renee Graham of The Boston Globe commented
that her stage show at Great Woods Center for the Performing Arts on June 20,
1994, proved her limited vocal range as "[t]he numerous costume changes,
pyrotechnics and the dancing all but overshadowed her razor-sharp seven-piece
band and three back-up singers", asserting Jackson was a better performer
and entertainer than she was a vocalist.[45] However,
the St. Louis Post-Dispatch's Steve Pick
observed Jackson's stage show at the Riverport Amphitheatre on July 12, 1994,
made the Janet album's numerous hit singles more effective
with her "larger-than-life stage persona".[46]
Rolling Stone magazine declared
"[a]s princess of America's black royal family, everything Janet Jackson
does is important. Whether proclaiming herself in charge of her life, as she
did on Control (1986), or commander in chief of a rhythm army
dancing to fight society's problems (Rhythm Nation 1814, from 1989),
she's influential. And when she announces her sexual maturity, as she does on
her new album, Janet, it's a cultural moment."[54] Claiming the album should
bring her critical praise, the magazine concludes its review with the statement
"[t]he princess of America's black royal family has announced herself
sexually mature and surrendered none of her crown's luster in the process. Black
women and their friends, lovers and children have a victory in Janet."[54] Robert Christgau originally gave the
album an "honorable mention" in his consumer guide for The Village Voice, wherein he complimented
its erotic songs and cited "Funky Big Band", "Throb", and
"Be a Good Boy" as highlights.[57] Billboard magazine
gave a positive review, stating "[d]estined to be an instant smash, Ms.
Jackson's latest is a glamorous assortment of styles—pop, dance, R&B, rock,
jazz, rap—each delivered with consummate skill and passion.[58] Janet is described
as "a career-defining record earning Janet the right to operate on a
first-name basis."[58]
Michael
Snyder of the San Francisco
Chronicle lauded the album's content, stating "[t]his
75-minute opus, her first effort under a megabuck contract with the Virgin
label, could be the make-out album of the '90s ... a silken soul odyssey,
charting one woman's journey to emotional and sexual fulfillment through 10
songs and a series of spoken-word and ambient snippets."[59] Caroline Sullivan of The Guardian declared the album's
"luxuriant collection of house, soul and pop is her best yet. Cod-Madonna
throwaways like Throb aside, there are surprises all over the place. Public Enemy's Chuck D counterweights Jackson's sugared
vocal to stunning effect on a black-pride anthem, New Agenda; soprano Kathleen Battle turns the heavyweight
funk of This Time into something eerie and beautiful."[60]
Robert
Johnson of San Antonio
Express-News praised Jackson and her producers for taking a
chance on a new sound. He wrote: "Under the enormous pressure of her $40
million deal with Virgin Records, Jackson had to deliver something big enough
to put her on a first-name basis with the world ... 'janet.' isn't
perfect, but it should be enough to make her the Queen
of Pop."[61] "Dammit, Janet!," marveled Melody Maker. "The last Jackson
hero(ine) has carried peacock feathers to the dance. Holier than Mahalia."[62] "Janet will
please most people," remarked The Daily Telegraph,
"because it is crammed with the sort of tender, joyous pop music that
lingers long after smarter records have been forgotten."[63]
Steve
Pick of St. Louis
Post-Dispatch stated that although Jackson may not be the
greatest singer or songwriter, but she has nonetheless "created and
projected a persona that is irresistible. Part of it is a sexual allure, but
more of it is the way she demands and receives attention."[64] John Mackie with The Vancouver Sun reported the album
gives Jackson an "incredible style", proclaiming Janet as
"the best commercial album so far this year, an album that could well
vault her past the stumbling Madonna as Queen of the charts. Heck, she might
even outsell Michael with this one."[65] "While her brother loops
the loop on Planet Pepsi, it's hard to imagine
the spotlight ever shifting to his sassy sis," remarked NME,
"but this modern hunk of an album should redress some of the balance."[52]
Jay
Cocks of TIME magazine
offered a mixed review, stating "[f]or all its sass, there is something a
little too careful about this album: the rhythms are too studied and
studiobound, the sexiness slightly forced. It's as if Jackson, aware that this
was her premier effort under a new, $40 million record deal, felt weighed down
by the burden of proving herself. When, however, she kicks loose on What'll I
Do, a nifty, '60s-style soul stirrer, it's clear that Jackson's got nothing to
prove to anyone, including herself."[66] Jon Pareles of The New York Times compares
Jackson to her brother Michael and Madonna, stating "Jackson's real
strength, abetted by Jam and Lewis, is the way she tops dance-club rhythms with
pop melodies. Less up-to-the-second than Madonna but still effective, the
Jackson team has obviously been listening to the competition. Madonna's 'Justify My Love' echoes in 'That's the Way
Love Goes,' and 'If' resembles Michael Jackson's 'Why You Wanna Trip
on Me,' starting with screaming guitar and a chanted verse, rising
to a sweet melody."[67] He also comments that despite
its shortcomings, "[t]he album's not about being real; it's about
seamlessness and ingenuity, about giving the public something it can use. For a
superstar, Jackson is downright selfless, but she gets the job done."[67]
Chris
Willman of the Los Angeles Times gave
an unfavorable review. Although sex in popular music is considered a standard
concept, Willman states the only reason the album would cause a reaction is
because of Jackson's well-known conservative nature. He comments: "So be
it. Jackson's first album in four years is destined for a long ride at No. 1,
not because it's any great piece of work, but largely for its aphrodisiacal
aspirations."[51] David Browne of Entertainment Weekly stated
that "[i]f musical variety and daring lyrics were all that mattered, Janet would
make the grade. But the album has a lot to prove. It is the first delivery
under her $40 million contract with Virgin, and its title—which translates as
'Janet, period'—is meant as a declaration of independence from her oddball
siblings ... She still sounds like a young woman from a male-dominated
family who is searching for her identity and voice. Mostly, though, Janet sounds
like a mess—period."[50] David Sinclair of The Times wrote: "In the steamy,
post-Madonna climate of the 1990s, Jackson is not about to let thoughts of love
get in the way of the mechanics of lust, and like many of her superstar
contemporaries she tends to confuse sex with soul."[68]
Jackson
performing the album's third single, "Again",
during her Number
Ones, Up Close and Personal tour (2011).
Jackson
received five nominations for the 1994 American Music Awards:
Favorite Pop/Rock Female Artist, Favorite Soul/R&B Female Artist, Favorite
Pop/Rock Album and Favorite Soul/R&B Album for Janet, and
Favorite Soul/R&B Single for "That's the Way Love Goes".[69] The same year she received
two Grammy Award nominations—Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female and Best
R&B Song for "That's The Way Love Goes"—winning
Best R&B Song. Several critics asserted she was unjustly overlooked in the
Grammy's three major categories: Record
of the Year, Song of
the Year and Album of
the Year.[70] Greg Kot of the Chicago Tribune stated, "Jackson
again was denied a nomination for album of the year, even though 'janet'
(Virgin) has remained in the Top 10 since its release last summer and has been
critically acclaimed."[71] He adds that "the
oversight is doubly vexing, because [Jackson]—in a songwriting and production
partnership with Jimmy Jam (aka James Harris III) and Terry Lewis—is not just a
multiplatinum pop act but an artist who has reshaped the sound and image of
rhythm and blues over the last decade."[71] Kot laid blame to the
oversight on the fact that many believed her to be a producer-dependent
artist—an opinion he found to be in error. Similarly, producer Jimmy Jam
stated: "It's easy to say that the two albums she did before she met us
weren't successful and when she got with us she became successful ...
'Control' was the first album she actually had input. I think that's just as
significant as the fact we (Jam and Lewis) did the record."[71]
|
Organization |
Country |
Accolade |
Year |
|
United States |
Grammy
Award for Best R&B Song ("That's The Way Love
Goes") |
1994[71] |
|
|
United States |
Dance Clip of the Year
("If") |
1994[71] |
|
|
United States |
Best Female Video ("If") |
1994[71] |
|
|
United States |
Video of the Year
("If") |
1994[71] |
|
|
United States |
"The Definitive 200: Top
200 Albums of All-Time" (ranked 86) |
2007[72] |
|
|
United States |
"100 Greatest Albums of
the Nineties" (ranked 58) |
2010[73] |
|
|
United States |
"Best Albums of the
'90s" (ranked 78) |
2011[74] |
|
|
United States |
"The 300 Best Albums of
the Past 30 Years (1985–2014)" (ranked 164) |
2014[75] |
Later
reviews were generally positive. In a retrospective review, Christgau
gave Janet an "A–" and said that although the costly
production by Jam & Lewis makes the music sound "more pornographic
than obscene", "this achievement is Janet's, period ... Better nose
than Michael, better navel than Madonna, better sex than either."[48] Laura Sinagra wrote in The
Rolling Stone Album Guide (2004) that with janet,
Jackson "took more risks" lyrically than on her previous albums.[55] Sal Cinquemani of Slant
Magazine notes that the album "was at the forefront of the
increasingly popular sampling trend in the '90s, with one song even
employing three different samples as its foundation. Some make perfect sense on
a thematic as well as sonic level, like Kool & the Gang's "Kool It (Here Comes the
Fuzz)" and Stevie Wonder's
"Superwoman,
Where Were You When I Needed You" on "New Agenda," or
the orchestral flourish from Diana
Ross & the Supremes' "Someday We'll Be Together"
on "If," which seems to exist for the sole purpose of providing the
impetus behind one of the greatest dance-break routines in music video history."[56] Commenting on the album's broad
range, he states: "The mother of eclectic, genre-hopping records by Christina Aguilera, Gwen Stefani, and Fergie, janet. incorporates new jack swing, house,
pop, rock, hip-hop, jazz, and even opera, but the album's range of styles isn't
jarring in the least ... Janet has never been one thing and janet. is a
feminist statement, to be sure."[56] Alex Henderson of AllMusic offered a positive review, saying
"[a]nyone who expected Jackson to top Rhythm Nation—her crowning
achievement and an incredibly tough act to follow—was being unrealistic. But
with janet., she delivered a respectable offering that, although not as strong
as either Control or Nation, has many strong points."[47]
Janet debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 and
the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums charts.
It was the first time in history a female artist debuted at number one in the
SoundScan era; with the largest first week sales in history for a female artist
at the time with 350,000 units sold in its first week. The album also earned
worldwide success, debuting at number one in the United Kingdom,[76] New Zealand,[77] and Australia.[78] It also debuted in the top 10 in
Sweden,[79] The Netherlands,[80] Canada (with 65,000 copies sold at
the first week[81])[82] and Switzerland.[83] In Germany the album peaked at number five and
charted for 36 weeks.[84]
Janet was first certified gold by the RIAA on
August 8, 1993 denoting 500,000 units shipped within the United States.[85] The same day, the album's
certification was raised to 3× platinum, denoting 3,000,000 units shipped.[85] On November 17, 1993, Janet received
4× platinum certification and was later awarded 5× platinum on December 17,
1993.[85] The following year on April 12, 1994,
the album was certified 6× platinum.[85] It was the second best selling album
of 1993 in United States with 4.3 million copies sold, behind The Bodyguard Soundtrack and
was the biggest selling album by a solo artist.[86] Within seven months of release the
album had sold over ten million copies worldwide.[87] Other certifications include a Double
Gold certification in Finland,[88] a 2× Platinum certification in the UK
And Australia,[89][90] a Platinum in New Zealand[91] and a Gold certification in Norway.[92]
According
to Nielsen SoundScan,
the album has sold 7,040,000 million copies in the United States since its
release,[93][94] and also sold an additional 860,000
copies through BMG Music Club.[95] With estimated worldwide sales of
over 14 million copies, it is Janet's best selling album.[2]
Although Jackson had reached superstar status in the United
States, she had yet to achieve the same level of response internationally.
According to Nacy Berry, vice chairman of Virgin Records, Janet marked
the first time the label "had centrally coordinated and strategized a
campaign on a worldwide basis" which ultimately brought her to a plateau
of global recognition.[96] Her historic
multimillion-dollar contract made her the highest-paid artist in history, until
brother Michael renegotiated his contract with Sony Music
Entertainment only days later. Sonia Murry noted that she
remained "the highest-paid female in pop ... a whirlwind of fashion,
personality and slick musical packaging rivaled only by Madonna and Whitney
Houston in today's pop pantheon."[28] James Robert Parish, author
of Today's Black Hollywood (1995) wrote: "She confirmed
her status as today's Queen of Pop when, not long ago, she signed a $35-$40
million recording contract with Virgin Records."[97] Music critic Nelson George
noted that while surpassing Michael would be next to impossible, Janet had
assuredly reached iconic status. He explained: "What worked for Michael 10
years ago is working for her now ... Michael was clearly the voice of the
'80s, those that grew up with him since Motown. And with the themes
(independence, social consciousness and up-front yet responsible sexuality)
that she's addressing in her albums and the popularity she's enjoying, she
could very well be the voice of the '90s."[28]
Rolling Stone's The '90s: The Inside
Stories from the Decade That Rocked (2010) documented that she had
achieved some level of growth with each of her records, and that with Janet,
"[u]sing soul, rock and dance elements, as well as opera diva Kathleen
Battle, [she] unleashed her most musically ambitious record, guided as always,
by producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis."[98] Richard J. Ripani author
of The New Blue Music: Changes in Rhythm & Blues, 1950–1999 (2006)
noted that she had led the incorporation of rap into
mainstream R&B with a select group of artists, in that "rap music no
longer sounded so musically distant to many R&B listeners because many of
its traits were commonly heard in songs by mainstream artists such as Janet
Jackson, Mary J. Blige, Keith Sweat, and others."[99] Vibe magazine observed that
"R&B was omnipresent in 1993. It was a year in which Janet Jackson, at
27, topped the Billboard pop album charts for six straight
summer weeks, with her critically lauded, six-times-platinum Janet"[100] It became one of only five
albums in the history of the Billboard 200—along with Whitney Houston's Whitney (1987), Norah Jones's Feels
Like Home (2004), Taylor Swift's Fearless (2008),
and Susan Boyle's I Dreamed a Dream (2009)—to debut at
number one and remain at the top of the chart for a minimum of six consecutive
weeks.[101] It is also only one of seven
albums—including Michael Jackson's Thriller (1982)
and Bad (1987), Bruce Springsteen, Born in the U.S.A. (1984), George Michael's, Faith (1987), Janet
Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814 (1989) and Katy Perry's, Teenage
Dream (2010) to yield a minimum of six top ten hit singles
on the Hot 100.[102]
The
release of Janet signaled the singer's transformation from
conservative teen role model to adult sex symbol. In You've Come A Long Way,
Baby: Women, Politics, and Popular Culture (1996), Lilly J. Goren observed that "[Her]
1993 album Janet moved away from politically driven lyrics to
songs about love and sex-lyrics that could capitalize on her new sexy, more
scantily clad image in MTV music videos. Jackson's evolution from politically
aware musician to sexy diva marked the direction that society and the music
industry were encouraging the dance-rock divas to pursue."[103] Reporter Edna Gunderson
commented: "The woman whose hourglass torso and sensual gyrating have made
her MTV's reigning sex kitten is today a vision of wholesome beauty."[104] Professor and social
critic Camille Paglia expressed:
"Janet's unique persona combines bold, brash power with quiet sensitively
and womanly mystery. Her latest music is lightning and moonglow."[13]
Her
music videos contributed to a higher degree of sexual freedom among young
women, as Jean M. Twenge, author of Generation Me: Why Today's Young
Americans are More Confident, Assertive, Entitled—and More Miserable Than Ever
Before (2007) wrote: "In Alfred Kinsey's studies in the 1950s, only 3%
of the young women had received oral sex from a man. By the mid-1990s, however,
75% of women aged 18-24 had experienced cunnilingus. Music videos by female artists
have contributed to the trend, with both Mary J. Blige and Janet Jackson
heavily implying male-on-female oral sex in music videos by pushing down on a
man's head until he's in exactly the right position."[105] Similarly, Paula Kamen
in Her Way: Young Women Remake the Sexual Revolution (2000)
states that "[i]n the early to mid-1990s, oral sex even reached mainstream
music as politically charged demand of truly liberated women,"
citing TLC, Mary J. Blige
and Janet Jackson as examples of female artists simulating cunnilingus in their
videos.[106] Rolling Stone wrote
that "she celebrated becoming an erotic being ... [showing] young
women a way to have their sexual freedom and their dignity, to have their cake
and eat it too."[98] She was named Best Female
Singer and Female Sex Symbol by Rolling Stone for the year
1993 in pop music.[107] Goren adds that later pop
stars such as Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera and Pink would rely on image, sex appeal and
choreography as much as musical talent.[103]
Track listing[edit]
All tracks written and produced by Janet Jackson, James Harris III and Terry Lewis, except where noted.
|
No. |
Title |
Length |
|
1. |
"Morning" |
0:31 |
|
2. |
4:24 |
|
|
3. |
"You
Know..." |
0:12 |
|
4. |
5:05 |
|
|
5. |
"Be a Good
Boy..." |
0:07 |
|
6. |
"If" |
4:31 |
|
7. |
"Back" |
0:04 |
|
8. |
"This
Time" |
6:58 |
|
9. |
"Go on Miss
Janet" |
0:05 |
|
10. |
"Throb" |
4:33 |
|
11. |
"What'll I Do" (writers:
Jackson, Steve Cropper, Joe Shamwell; producers:
Jackson, Jellybean Johnson) |
4:05 |
|
12. |
"The
Lounge" |
0:15 |
|
13. |
"Funky Big
Band" |
5:22 |
|
14. |
"Racism" |
0:08 |
|
15. |
"New
Agenda" (writers: Jackson, Harris III, Lewis, Chuck D) |
4:00 |
|
16. |
"Love Pt.
2" |
0:11 |
|
17. |
4:20 |
|
|
18. |
"Wind" |
0:11 |
|
19. |
"Again" |
3:46 |
|
20. |
"Another
Lover" |
0:11 |
|
21. |
"Where Are You
Now" |
5:47 |
|
22. |
"Hold on
Baby" |
0:12 |
|
23. |
"The Body That
Loves You" |
5:32 |
|
24. |
"Rain" |
0:18 |
|
25. |
7:08 |
|
|
26. |
"Are You Still
Up" |
1:36 |
|
27. |
"Sweet
Dreams" |
0:14 |
|
28. |
"Whoops Now" (hidden track;
writer: Jackson) |
4:59 |
|
Total
length: |
75:23 |
|
Notes
·
"That's the Way
Love Goes" contains:
o samples from "Papa Don't Take No Mess", written
by James Brown, Fred Wesley,
Charles Bobbit and John Starks and performed by J. Brown.
o an interpolation from "Georgy Porgy", performed by Toto and
written by member David Paich.
·
"You Want
This" contains samples from:
o "Love Child",
written by R. Dean Taylor, Frank Wilson, Pam Sawyer, Deke Richards and
performed by Diana Ross & the Supremes.
o "Jungle Boogie",
written by Robert Bell, Ronald Bell, Claydes Smith, Robert Mickens, Donald Boyce, Richard Allen
Westfield, Dennis Thomas and George Brown and
performed by Kool & the Gang.
·
"If"
contains samples from:
o "Someday We'll Be Together", written
by Johnny Bristol, Harvey Fuqua and Jackey Beavers and
performed by Diana Ross & the Supremes.
o "Honky-Tonk Haven", performed
by John McLaughlin
·
"New Agenda"
contains samples from:
o "School Boy Crush",
written by Hamish Stuart, Onnie McIntyre, Alan Gorrie, Steve Ferrone, Molly Duncan and Roger Bell and performed by Average White Band.
o "Kool It (Here Comes the Fuzz)",
written by Gene Redd, Woodrow Sparrow, Robert Bell, Ronald Bell, Westfield,
Mickens, G. Brown, Thomas and Smith and performed by Kool & the Gang.
o "Superwoman (Where Were You When I
Needed You)", written and performed by Stevie Wonder.
·
(Ex) Cat Heads – rap
·
Alice Preves – viola
·
Ann Nesby – background vocals
·
Bernie Edstrom – horn arrangements, trumpet
·
Carolyn Daws – violin
·
Celine Leathead – violin
·
Chuck D – rap
·
Core Cotton –
background vocals
·
Daria Tedeschi – violin
·
Dave Karr – flute
·
David Barry – guitar
·
David Bullock – violin
·
David Carr – flute
·
David Eiland –
sax (alto)
·
David Rideau – mixing
·
Frank Stribbling – guitar
·
Gary
Raynor – bass
·
Hanley Daws – violin
·
Jamecia Bennett –
background vocals
·
Janet Jackson –
main performer, record producer, vocals, background vocals
·
Jean Krikorian – design
·
Jeff Gottwig – clarinet, trumpet
·
Jeff Taylor – bass, vocals
·
Jellybean Johnson –
producer
·
Jimmy Jam – keyboards,
producer, vocals
·
James "Big
Jim" Wright – keyboards, vocals
·
Jossie Harris – talking
·
Kathleen Battle –
vocals
·
Ken Holman – clarinet, sax (tenor)
·
Laura Preves – bassoon
·
Lawrence Waddell – organ (hammond)
·
Lee Blaskey – orchestration
·
Len Peltier – art direction, design
·
Marie Graham –
background vocals
·
Mark Haynes – bass, drum programming, programming
·
Merilee Klemp – oboe
·
Mike Sobieski – violin
·
Patrick Demarchelier – photography
·
Robert Hallgrimson – sax (alto), trumpet
·
Steve Hodge – mixing
·
Steve Wright – trumpet
·
Steven Pikal – trombone
·
Tamas Strasser – viola
·
Terry Lewis –
producer
·
Tina Landon –
talking
·
Tom Kornacker – violin