The Velvet Rope by Janet

The Velvet Rope

Janet

1997

The Velvet Rope is a Soul & Funk album by Janet, originally released in 1997. On Gatefold: 83 pressings tracked, owned by 15 collectors.

Sound DNA

  • Soul & Funk
  • Contemporary R&B
  • polished
  • nocturnal
  • intimate

About

After the blockbuster trifecta of 1986’s <i>Control</i>, 1989’s <i>Janet Jackson’s Rhythm Nation 1814</i> and 1993’s <i>janet.</i>, Janet Jackson was arguably bigger than both the King of Pop (her older brother Michael) <i>and</i> the Queen of Pop (Madonna). In fact, before the release of 1997’s <i>The Velvet Rope</i>, Jackson had renegotiated her contract with Virgin Records for a then-record-setting $80 million. But rather than caving in under the weight of commercial expectations, Jackson used her newfound cultural clout as inspiration to level up her ambitions on her sixth album. With a bravery both in its adventurous musical spirit and its confessional, soul-baring lyrics, <i>The Velvet Rope</i> was a high-wire act of an artist at her creative peak. The album’s eclectic energy—bridging both genres and generations—can be felt on the album’s first single, “Got ’Til It’s Gone,” which brought together Joni Mitchell (via a “Big Yellow Taxi” sample) and Q-Tip for a head-bopping nod to the neo-soul movement. Elsewhere, Jackson and her longtime producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis turned to the 1970s for inspiration, borrowing from the prog rock of Mike Oldfield’s “Tubular Bells” on “Velvet Rope,” the Latin funk of War’s “The Cisco Kid” on “You,” and the soul-disco of Diana Ross’ “Love Hangover” on “My Need.” But if the music on <i>The Velvet Rope</i> looked to the past, the lyrics packed a forward-minded fearlessness that captured the pop superstar at her most progressive. Jackson took on LGBTQ issues on the anti-homophobia anthem “Free Xone,” as well as on the chart-topping “Together Again,” which imagines an afterlife party populated by loved ones lost to AIDS (she even flirted with bisexuality in her threesome spin on Rod Stewart’s “Tonight’s the Night”). Jackson saw into the future of internet isolation on “Empty,” and raged—and rocked—about the terrors of domestic abuse on “What About.” And on “Rope Burn,” she got tied up and tied down long before the era of <i>Fifty Shades of Grey</i>. But there were no restraints for Jackson as a woman, as an artist, as a provocateur on <i>The Velvet Rope</i>.

via Apple Music

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Tracklist

  1. 1Interlude - Twisted Elegance0:41
  2. 2Velvet Rope4:55
  3. 3You4:42
  4. 4Got 'Til It's Gone4:01
  5. 5Interlude - Speaker Phone0:54
  6. 6My Need3:44
  7. 7Interlude - Fasten Your Seatbelts0:19
  8. 8Go Deep4:42
  9. 9Free Xone4:57
  10. 10Interlude - Memory0:04
  11. 11Together Again5:01
  12. 12Interlude - Online0:19
  13. 13Empty4:32
  14. 14Interlude - Full0:12
  15. 15What About4:24
  16. 16Every Time4:17
  17. 17Tonight's The Night5:07
  18. 18I Get Lonely5:17
  19. 19Rope Burn4:15
  20. 20Anything4:54
  21. 21Interlude - Sad0:10
  22. 22.1Special3:20
  23. 22.2(silence)0:22
  24. 22.3Can't Be Stopped4:14

Credits

Performers

15 collectors on Gatefold own this · 83 pressings tracked on Gatefold