janet. by janet

janet.

janet

1993

janet. is a Soul & Funk album by janet, originally released in 1993. On Gatefold: 130 pressings tracked, owned by 10 collectors.

Sound DNA

  • Soul & Funk
  • Contemporary R&B
  • polished
  • euphoric
  • groovy

About

The sex- and body-positive beginnings of <i>janet.</i>— Janet Jackson’s first album under a then-record-setting $40 million contract with Virgin Records—can be traced back to the video for “Love Will Never Do (Without You),” the seventh and final single from her blockbuster 1989 album <i>Janet Jackson’s Rhythm Nation 1814</i>. After being buttoned all the way up in military fashion for most of the <i>Rhythm Nation</i> era, Jackson served up midriff and cleavage in the “Love Will Never Do (Without You)” video, directed by Herb Ritts. And by the time of the release of <i>janet.</i>, with its provocative album cover, Jackson’s transformation from soldier to sexpot was complete. In the same way that Marvin Gaye had followed up his conscious-raising <i>What’s Going On</i> with the temperature-raising <i>Let’s Get It On</i>, Jackson traded social salvation for libido liberation on <i>janet.</i> She wanted to make it clear that she was a 27-year-old woman, and no longer Michael’s little sister. And you can sense that desire in the sensual, moth-to-a-flame seduction of the album’s first single, the chart-topping “That’s the Way Love Goes,” which sounded unlike anything Jackson had ever done before—and introduced a whole new vibe to R&B, bridging the gap between new jack swing and neo-soul. Gone were the hard-edged beats of <i>Rhythm Nation</i>—although some new jack grooves remained (see “You Want This” and “Because of Love”)—as the industrial sound gave way to the intimate, as evidenced by the horned-up house of “Throb” and the slow bump-and-grind of “Any Time, Any Place.” But <i>janet.</i>—which again dream-teamed the singer with producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis to make her best-selling LP—isn’t all about her erotic awakening. Jackson’s leading role opposite Tupac Shakur in 1993’s <i>Poetic Justice</i> inspired not only the Oscar-nominated love ballad “Again”—the album’s other chart-topper, and one of six hit singles—but the Black female power anthem “New Agenda,” featuring Public Enemy’s Chuck D. The latter includes a Stevie Wonder sample—from 1972’s “Superwoman (Where Were You When I Needed You)”—that connects Jackson to her family’s Motown legacy. But while <i>janet.</i> digs into her roots, it’s more notable for setting the blueprint for Jackson’s future—and leading the sexual revolution for generations of R&B divas to come.

via Apple Music

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Tracklist

  1. 1Morning0:31
  2. 2That's The Way Love Goes4:24
  3. 3You Know...0:12
  4. 4You Want This5:05
  5. 5Be A Good Boy...0:07
  6. 6If4:31
  7. 7Back0:04
  8. 8This Time6:58
  9. 9Go On Miss Janet0:05
  10. 10Throb4:33
  11. 11What'll I Do4:05
  12. 12The Lounge0:15
  13. 13Funky Big Band5:22
  14. 14Racism0:08
  15. 15New Agenda4:00
  16. 16Love Pt. 20:11
  17. 17Because Of Love4:20
  18. 18Wind0:11
  19. 19Again3:46
  20. 20Another Lover0:11
  21. 21Where Are You Now5:47
  22. 22Hold On Baby0:12
  23. 23The Body That Loves You5:32
  24. 24Rain0:18
  25. 25Any Time, Any Place7:08
  26. 26Are You Still Up1:36
  27. 27.1Sweet Dreams0:14
  28. 27.2(silence)0:21
  29. 27.3Whoops Now4:59

Credits

Performers

10 collectors on Gatefold own this · 130 pressings tracked on Gatefold