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c71
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"The 30 Best ’90s R&B Songs - Spin swipe"


  

          

we've been doing the "not-so-popular R&B" for a minute here, so....


http://www.spin.com/featured/30-best-90s-rnb-songs/


The 30 Best ’90s R&B Songs

Written By Maura Johnston and Mosi Reeves August 8 2017, 1:12 PM


The ‘90s may be the last decade when R&B, not hip-hop, was the dominant force in black music. Innovation abounded, with New Jack Swing giving way to neo-soul as well as further experiments with studio technology’s fast-moving innovations. R&B crossover was a matter of course on the pop charts; there, ballads like Whitney Houston’s blockbuster “I Will Always Love You” and the stirring Boyz II Men-Mariah Carey team-up “One Sweet Day” had months-long reigns at No. 1, while upbeat tracks like Blackstreet’s swaggering “No Diggity” and Janet Jackson’s peppy “Together Again” also reached the summit.

Artists from every echelon and subgenre seemed to be laser-focused on honing and upping their game: ‘80s titans like Jackson and her brother Michael incorporated of-the-moment ideas into their platinum-plated ‘90s work; early-decade upstarts like Mariah Carey and TLC blossomed into megastars, forcing pop listeners to keep up their ever-evolving visions for the genre; and new acts like Maxwell and Lauryn Hill emerged in constant states of evolution, redrawing R&B’s boundaries so that the genre encompassed ever-greater territory. These 30 highlights from the decade collect some of R&B’s highest points.


30. Prince and the New Power Generation, ”Diamonds & Pearls” (1991)


Prince experienced a lot of transitions in the ‘90s—his name change to a symbol, his acrimonious departure from Warner Bros. Records, his transition to independence, his pioneering forays into online retail. But he opened the decade with this gorgeous, glittering expression of pure love, his restrained vocal given a counterpoint by New Power Generation member Rosie Gaines, whose unbridled performance crests on the track’s show-stopping bridge.

–Maura Johnston


29. Babyface, “When Can I See You” (1994)


Released in 1994 during the MTV Unplugged era, this acoustic gem revealed new depth for a songwriter who was often (unfairly) accused of being somewhat formulaic. Kenneth Edmonds’ forthright and unadorned ballad led to a brief spike in acoustic soul (see The Tony Rich Project’s “Nobody Knows”) and seemed to predict the rise of neo-soul as well.

–Mosi Reeves


28. Toni Braxton, “You’re Makin’ Me High” (1996)


The slinky lead single from Braxton’s 1996 mega-seller Secrets simmered, with Braxton’s vocal performance doubling as an exquisite lesson in self-control—which, it turned out, was right in line with the chart-topping track’s ethos. “That’s what ‘You’re Makin’ Me High’ was all about,” she told the London Independent in 1996, when they inquired after the Babyface/Bryce Wilson co-production’s subject matter. “Masturbation. It’s a very safe form of sex.” –MJ


27. Maxwell, “Luxury:Cococure” (1998)


Maxwell debuted in 1996 with a mix of D’Angelo’s enigmatic funk and Sade’s airy, slightly remote soul-jazz. But he soon evolved into a remarkably unique performer by stretching neo-soul to its ambient limits, and using abstract images to anchor his songs of love, faith, and heartbreak. Critics initially misinterpreted “Luxury: Cococure,” the first single from Embrya, as a pretentious mess rather than a soul analog to hypnagogic pop icons like Björk. Amidst lush sounds, Maxwell compares the newness of black love to submerging himself in deep waters. He feels cocooned by the sensation, even as the freezing water saps his energy, much like the protagonist in Kate Bush’s orchestral suite “The Ninth Wave” (from her Hounds of Love). It’s heady, intellectual fare for an audience used to savoring his ballads through Urban Adult Contemporary radio, and despite early trepidation, they embraced his conceits wholeheartedly. –MR


26. Whitney Houston, “Heartbreak Hotel” (1998)


By 1998 and My Love is Your Love, Whitney Houston was as well known for her tabloid exploits with Bobby Brown as she was for her legendary pop career. The great thing about “Heartbreak Hotel,” the lead single from her last great album, was that it reminded listeners that Houston’s musical art, not her Hollywood blockbusters and People magazine headlines, was most important. It marked a passing of the torch to a younger generation of black women, represented by Faith Evans and Kelly Price; the trio’s carefully restrained yet anguished vocals, set amidst a stutter-step bounce and cameos from Faith Evans and Kelly Price, felt like a remarkable achievement. –MR


25. Mark Morrison, “Return of the Mack” (1996)


Seemingly emerging from out of nowhere, this British one-hit wonder made one of the most memorable hooks of the decade. (Some have called it the best song ever, but we wouldn’t go that far.) It’s so killer, in fact, that it essentially overwhelms his lyric about going back on the market after his woman cheats on him. “Return of the Mack” is less about recovering from a breakup than reasserting your pride, no matter how damaged. Basically, it’s an excuse to harmonize “Return of the mack!” again and again. –MR


24. Mint Condition, “Breakin’ My Heart (Pretty Brown Eyes)” (1991)


The lush, sprawling ballad from Mint Condition’s 1991 debut Meant to be Mint isn’t only an exquisite expression of how love (or, at least, infatuation) can rip one’s heart in two; it showcases the sextet’s chemistry and talent for pacing, with its nearly six-minute length almost feeling a shade too short thanks to its smouldering build and Stokley Williams’ song-ending leave-it-in-the-booth ad-lib. –MJ


23. Groove Theory, “Tell Me” (1995)


Amel Larrieux and Bryce Wilson’s debut single arrived during a fortuitous moment. Though still a viable force, acid jazz and house music had waned in the black mainstream, and neo-soul authenticity had emerged as a potential new force. “Tell Me” alluded to all these sounds with its stride piano, a steadily pulsing beat, and Larrieux’s aching falsetto voice. It seemed to portend Groove Theory as a new innovator in R&B. Instead, the duo disbanded shortly after its release, leaving fans of the Billboard top 10 single to wonder what could have been. –MR


22. Michael Jackson, “Remember the Time” (1992)


When the second single from Michael Jackson’s New Jack-embracing Dangerous initially came out, most of the attention went to its audacious, cameo-studded video, which was directed by John Singleton and featured the Gloved One’s first on-screen kiss (with Iman, who played an ennui-ridden queen). But the song—co-written by New Jack Swing architect Teddy Riley and his collaborator Bernard Belle along with Jackson—hits the exact sweet spot of Jackson’s appeal, blending of-the-moment pop aesthetics with a feather-light funkiness and one of Jackson’s most unbridled vocal breakdowns. –MJ


21. Xscape, “Just Kickin’ It” (1993)


After the release of Dr. Dre’s The Chronic, R&B briefly swelled with acts that tried to replicate its unhurried lowrider tempo and neo-Blaxploitation funk. (Also see Color Me Badd’s “Time and Chance,” Janet Jackson’s “Any Time, Any Place (R. Kelly Mix),” and Sweet Sable’s “Old Times Sake.”) But Xscape’s debut single was arguably the best. The four Atlanta women brought lovely multi-part harmony to their vision of teenage love, a home-cooked meal and chilling on the avenue. Despite a brief interlude that this was “strictly for the niggas,” it sounded as universal as anything on the charts in 1994. –MR


20. SWV, “Right Here (Human Nature)” (1992)


In its original form on SWV’s 1992 debut It’s About Time, “Right Here” was a sad-yet-upbeat New Jill Swing jam that recalled TLC’s “Aint 2 Proud 2 Beg” and other similarly feisty R&B, right down to the rapped bridge; the group’s first single, it hit No. 13 on the R&B chart. Megaproducer Teddy Riley decided to rework the track for the Free Willysoundtrack, front-loading the group’s silky harmonies and taking the tempo down a notch while—most crucially—adding a dreamy bit from Michael Jackson’s Quiet Storm smash “Human Nature” that gave the ladies a countermelody to push against vocally. (A young Pharrell Williams is also in the mix, careening around the track while spelling out the group’s acronym.) While the remix has become a touchstone for producers who want to incorporate old-school sounds into modern-day singles, SWV admitted in 2014 that they were initially cool on it: ”We hated that song! We thought it was going to mess up our career,” Coko said on Sway in the Morning in 2014. But, she added, “we were wrong many times.” –MJ


19. Brandy, “I Wanna Be Down” (1994)


Brandy Norwood was 15 when she released this ode to secret crushes. Produced by gospel legend Andrae Crouch’s nephew Keith Crouch with a soft funky worm melody, “I Wanna Be Down” was as innocent as dropping your schoolbooks in the hallway to attract a boy’s eye. Brandy sounded her age, even though she sang with a gentle tone that could rise to a sharp, gospel-trained gale in a matter of seconds. It was clear that Brandy was preternaturally talented, and “I Wanna Be Down” was the first of many hits to come. –MR


18. Ghost Town DJ’s, “My Boo” (1996)


Every so often, a pop artists will start and finish on top, and that’s exactly what the Atlanta hip-hop collective Ghost Town DJ’s did with their 1996 single “My Boo,” which combined the heavy yet fleet rhythms of Miami bass with a sweet street-corner vocal from Virgo Williams, whose giddy vocal performance embodies infatuation—and also makes “My Boo” a top-notch rollerskating jam, one that seems to float by even as it engages in fancy footwork. –MJ (Read SPIN’s oral history of “My Boo” here.)


17. Boyz II Men, “End of the Road” (1992)


If Boyz II Men’s debut single “Motownphilly” announced them as inheritors of the New Edition’s hot dance floor hits, then “End of the Road” showed they were more than a New Jack flash-in-the-pan. In those days, R&B acts proved their talent through ballads, and this expertly rendered tale of a breakup that shouldn’t, can’t happen demonstrated that the four men were incredible singers, and perhaps the best of their generation. Boyz II Men may have eventually been overshadowed by other male crews – as Andre Harrell once said, folks liked Boyz II Men, but they LOVED Jodeci. But as “End of the Road” became a signature song for a generation on the cusp of adulthood and leaving their teenage friendships behind, it was clear that folks have plenty of love for Boyz II Men, too. –MR


16. R. Kelly, “Bump ‘N Grind” (1994)


These days, it’s hard to separate the onetime king of R&B from numerous allegations of him preying on young and underage women. R. Kelly’s reputation may be at justifiably low ebb, but as the defining male vocalist of ‘90s black music, it’s impossible to not include him here. In retrospect, “Bump ‘N Grind” predicted many of the problems that he now faces: it equates the power of lust as an overwhelming, unstoppable force that neither society nor morality can stop. “My mind is telling me no, but my body’s telling me yes!” he cries with gospel fervor. Coupled with a remarkable talent for writing and producing songs, Kelly’s raw and unrepentant sexual persona once seemed modern and something to embrace, instead of a dangerous illusion to be questioned and ultimately rejected. –MR


15. Sade, “No Ordinary Love” (1992)


The smooth-operator gloss of Sade Adu and her namesake band get mussed on this intense, winding single from 1992’s Love Deluxe. Adu’s ruptured cool gives this glowering track’s brokenhearted lyrics a desperate edge, while the churning guitars submerged in the song’s middle add to the overall emotional turmoil, which barely subsides even as the song fades out. A crushing portrait of trying to keep it together and almost succeeding. –MJ


14. Brandy & Monica, “The Boy is Mine” (1998)


While this R&B megahit originally grew out of Brandy being inspired by The Jerry Springer Show’s furniture-flinging fights, what set it apart from the era’s more clamorous pop was the minor-key seethe of Monica incredibly tense vocal performances and the sumptuous, string-laden production by Rodney “Darkchild” Jerkins. Its bubbling synths and sinewy vocal melodies made it the No. 1 song for 1998’s almost-entire summer, an appropriate season for a song that sounds milliseconds away from boiling over. –MJ


13. Mariah Carey, “Fantasy” (1995)


Mariah Carey’s foray into hip-hop on her 1995 album Daydream peaked with this giddy track. “Fantasy” amps up the romantic bliss of Tom Tom Club’s 1981 hybridized underground hit “Genius of Love,” flipping that track’s squiggle-synths into a bubblegum pop track that could double as a launching pad for Carey’s skyscraping voice—and a verse by the Wu-Tang Clan firebrand Ol’ Dirty Bastard, who popped up on the song’s remix and in the amusement-park-themed video. Carey would return to the “surprising old-school sample + Mariah = pop gold” formula a few times in the ensuing years, but “Fantasy” set the standard. –MJ


12. Blackstreet, “No Diggity” (1996)


East Coast met West Coast on this collaboration between Teddy Riley’s crew and post-Death Row Dr. Dre, and “No Diggity” sounds like a goofy, funky romp. It’s essentially an appreciation of how a woman “works it,” and that’s it. The group members initially resisted recording it because the premise is so slight. But that’s what makes it great. It has a sticky chorus that nudges in your memory even if you don’t want it there, and Riley and Skylz Stewart’s slick, piano-laden rhythm (inspired in part by the RZA’s Wu-Tang Clan ethos) sounds like money. True, “No Diggity” is kinda annoying, too – that’s what happens when a hit single is made into a Hanes underwear commercial. Yet who hasn’t bopped along to this one? No diggity. –MR


11. Ginuwine, “Pony” (1996)


Zapp and Roger’s “Computer Love,” Ginuwine’s “Pony,” and T-Pain’s “I’m Sprung”: These are the moments that shocked listeners and musicians alike into a new way of thinking about soul music. Timbaland’s first major hit sounded like a junkyard of electronic bleeps and thumps, and he weaved his baritone vocalese into the rhythm as if he was an instrument himself. Ginuwine rode the beat with a grinding, brazenly sexual performance; it’s hard not to miss the metaphor at the heart of this. Timbaland would arguably reach greater heights with Aaliyah and Missy Elliott, but for those who remember hearing “Pony” for the first time in 1996, it’s an experience they’ll never forget. –MR


10. Jodeci, “Forever My Lady” (1991)


When Jodeci debuted in 1991, it still seemed possible to reconcile vocal ensembles with hip-hop machismo. Today, it appears that effort has failed – save for aging troupes like After 7 and Jagged Edge, R&B male groups are virtually extinct. But there was a time when every singer modeled himself after K-Ci Hailey, the Southern bad boy whose rough, Bobby Womack-inspired growl (along with his talented but less iconoclastic brother JoJo Hailey) turned Jodeci into the prototypical black group of the ‘90s. He adds so much heat to “Forever My Lady” that it threatens to boil; it feels like a bedroom jam of the most sensational kind, even though it’s about becoming a father for the first time. Admirably, Jodeci could sing about monogamous relationships with as much passion as they do with sex-drenched late nights. Few R&B men have lived up to their example. –MR


9. Erykah Badu, “On & On” (1996)


It may have been her presence more than her music that startled in 1997. Badu was a black woman clothed in a sarong and a head wrap, singing Five Percent Nation quotes in a style reminiscent of Billie Holiday over a sticky, churning neo-soul rhythm. That last element wasn’t so new – Anita Baker is just one of many modern R&B singers who thrived in a jazz element – but Badu’s approach seemed fresh and groundbreaking. “On & On” sounds like she’s exploring the mysteries of life, which isn’t the usual fodder for pop radio, and as she heads into the unknown, we want to follow her. –MR


8. Bell Biv DeVoe, “Poison” (1990)


By 1990, Bell Biv DeVoe evolved into a prototype for Wu-Tang Clan, with all past and present members enjoying wildly successful solo albums. But only one track from that era can still set off any dance floor like a Christmas tree. “Poison” is a burst of energy, from DJ Freeze’s staccato keyboards (which he later said was his version of Kraftwerk mixed with Latin salsa) to a sample of Kool G Rap being punched in like a shot across the bow. The lyrics are purely louche, three guys so mad at a former girl that they dog her out on wax. “Yeah, Cool used to do her,” drawls Ronnie Devoe in apparent reference to Bobby “Cool” Brown. Is this what hip-hop on the R&B tip with a pop appeal to it means – an exercise in slut-shaming? Who cares? The song is hot. –MR


7. Lauryn Hill, “Ex-Factor” (1998)


Lauryn Hill’s solo debut The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill sent shockwaves through the industry, its exquisitely produced fusions of hip-hop, R&B, reggae, and whatever other genres captured the former Fugee’s fancy, breaking sales records and uniting critics with lay listeners. The brutal close-up of relationships’ mutual failings “Ex-Factor” was reportedly written for a girl group of the same name, but Hill kept it for herself after deeming its lyrics (allegedly aimed at her former bandmate Wyclef Jean) too personal; her wrenching performance makes it clear that her decision was absolutely correct. –MJ


6. Janet Jackson, “That’s the Way Love Goes” (1993)


The lead single from 1993’s janet. sampled James Brown and “Impeach the President,” but its funk was of a more laid-back variety; with her longtime collaborators Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, Janet Jackson created a stretched-out tableau of flinty guitars and laconic rhythms, over which she matter-of-factly murmured double-entendre come-ons. It existed in a place far from the rhythm nation she’d commandeered on her previous album, but it was no less exciting. –MJ


5. TLC, “No Scrubs” (1999)


TLC’s trajectory over their first decade—a hot debut accompanied by hotter gossip, and followed up by a second full-length that spawned massive singles while being accompanied by a bankruptcy filing and other industry woes—peaked with this 1999 broadside against men who can’t hold up their end of the relationship bargain. The song itself was impossibly chill, with Rozonda “Chilli” Thomas’ pointed evisceration of broke-ass dudes serving as a counterpoint to its glittery guitars and satisfying most of the song’s burn quotient (Lisa “Left Eye” Lopes’ rejection of those who “can’t spatially expand my horizon” filled out the rest). “No Scrubs” was so potent that it spawned a rare-for-the-’90s reaction single, “No Pigeonz,” from the New York duo Sporty Theivz; that its lumbering sneers hardly measured up to the original proved T-Boz, Chilli, and Left Eye’s point twice over. –MJ


4. En Vogue, “Hold On” (1990)


En Vogue is the modern girl group, the ones who inspired Total, Destiny’s Child, Brownstone, and the last great wave of sisters with voices in the ‘90s. (Credit is also due to ‘80s Latin freestyle groups like Exposé and The Cover Girls.) The Oakland quartet’s classic debut alludes to The Miracles (by way of The Jackson 5) chestnut “Who’s Lovin’ You,” then flashes the same rich four-part melodies during a tale of love squandered and lost. “Ooh, my first mistake was, I wanted too much time/I had to have him morning, noon, and night,” sings Cindy Herron. Producers Foster & McElroy deliver a slow-burning rhythm with a James Brown drum kick, but “Hold On’s” greatest element is Herron, Terry Ellis, Dawn Robinson, and Maxine Jones blending their voices into a sound that shifts the culture. –MR


3. D’Angelo, “Brown Sugar” (1995)


Neo-soul has many mothers and fathers, including Meshell Ndegeocello, Brand New Heavies, and Joi Gilliam. But the first time the audience knew that a new form of soul music had emerged was when D’Angelo’s debut single crept into BET’s video shows in the spring of 1995. The song is all Rhodes organ and soul-jazz vibes, and D’Angelo sings in a low, muted drawl that sounds heavily medicated. He could be singing about chocolate thai, or a fine woman that makes him “don’t know how to behave.” Basically, he sounds cool as shit, as if Snoop Dogg was doing a set with Cannonball Adderley. D’Angelo’s emergence as the baddest player in R&B masked his deep knowledge of black music idioms, which he’d reveal on his debut album and other works to come. We’d soon realize that it takes a lot of ingredients to make a song as deep as “Brown Sugar.” –MR


2. Mary J. Blige, “Be Happy” (1994)


Much of Mary J Blige’s best work blends the bitter and sweet notes of love and life, but none with as much pain and much-needed catharsis as “Be Happy.” The opening track from My Life begins with one of the great opening lines in contemporary R&B: “How can I love somebody else/If I can’t love myself to know/When it’s time/Time to let go?” Critics at the time unfavorably contrasted her melancholy tone with the hopeful sound of her equally memorable debut What’s the 411?, resulting in the “sad Mary” stereotype that has stuck with her to this day. But the uneasy quality resonated with audiences, and today it’s considered her most essential work. From Sean “Puffy” Combs and Poke’s Curtis Mayfield loop, to the yearning in Blige’s voice, “Be Happy” epitomizes soul music as personal and spiritual epiphany. When she sings, “All I really want is for me to be happy,” she could be talking about all of us. –MR


1. Aaliyah, “Are You That Somebody?” (1998)


The greatest R&B song of the ‘90s was the result of incredible urgency: In 1998 Timbaland and Steve “Static Major” Garrett got the call to craft a track for R&B thrush Aaliyah, who’d been asked to sing a track for Eddie Murphy’s big-screen Dr. Doolittleadaptation. To hear Timbaland tell it, the track came together quickly: Tim crafted the booming, stuttering beat, Static unearthed the hook, and Tim added the cherry on top: a sample of a cooing baby (from crate-digging that came up with “Countdown to 6,” a 1968 track by analog synth wizards Jean-Jacques Perrey and Gershon Kingsley). Aaliyah’s expressive vocal—which shows off the might of her powerful instrument and ability to not only keep up with, but dart around, Timbaland and Static’s start-stop rhythms schemes—remains cucumber-cool throughout, with the baby’s delight serving as a tell for the thrill offered by the song’s futuristic visions. –MJ

  

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Topic Outline
Subject Author Message Date ID
RE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEbl-umsFOM
Aug 09th 2017
1
I totally disagree with the order and songs, BUT I enjoyed reading each
Aug 09th 2017
2
they did a pretty good job. Braxton's "making me high" should have
Aug 09th 2017
3
      I mean, there's not a single list of a Top 30 that even 30% of us would ...
Aug 09th 2017
4
      I don't think that song should even be on the list
Aug 16th 2017
36
           It's her best song - one of the best songs of the 90's
Aug 16th 2017
38
where is 'Don't Walk Away' by Jade?
Aug 10th 2017
5
RE: where is 'Don't Walk Away' by Jade?
Aug 10th 2017
19
MAAAN! I was just talking about how underrated that track is!!!!!
Aug 14th 2017
23
BTW - 'Poison' should be #1.
Aug 10th 2017
6
As a club song, yea it surely is. I might prefer having a true R&B track
Aug 14th 2017
24
      that song is 90s R&B though.
Aug 14th 2017
27
One's they got right for picking - c71 version
Aug 10th 2017
7
for a quick "off the top" - they should have had
Aug 10th 2017
8
You Used to Love Me still bangs.
Aug 10th 2017
10
yeah, she really came off with that song
Aug 10th 2017
11
I agree, but what 5 should be taken off? n/m
Aug 14th 2017
29
      spark that trend in this post with your choices
Aug 15th 2017
35
RE: No Tony! Toni! Toné! But 'Return of the Mack'?
Aug 10th 2017
9
Return of the Mack belongs. But you're right. TTT...
Aug 10th 2017
13
Anniversary. Let's Get Down.
Aug 10th 2017
14
      those were my first two thoughts.
Aug 10th 2017
17
YO!!!!!!! Yeah man, that part alone makes this a joke
Aug 14th 2017
25
not mad at these picks, but they lean very commercial.
Aug 10th 2017
12
of course. you won't see any Joi on this list.
Aug 10th 2017
15
Bump n grind is #16
Aug 10th 2017
16
      my bad. reading is hard, yo.
Aug 10th 2017
18
haha, dude turned the "poison" capsule into a slut-shaming diatribe.
Aug 10th 2017
20
LMAO seriously.
Aug 14th 2017
26
Cool used to do her?
Aug 11th 2017
21
I always thought that was the line
Aug 16th 2017
37
I am almost sure it's "me and the crew"
Aug 17th 2017
45
ARRUh should have been number 1 and they got the wrong aaliyah cut
Aug 13th 2017
22
Hey Mr. DJ - Zhane.
Aug 14th 2017
28
RE: Hell and yes.
Aug 14th 2017
30
Luxury really doesn't have any business on this list
Aug 14th 2017
31
RE: Max needs a spot on this list, but not with that song.
Aug 14th 2017
32
      Fortunate should be top 3.
Aug 15th 2017
33
Fun list. Only choice I hated was End of the Road.
Aug 15th 2017
34
No Scrubs as the TLC song? Nah
Aug 16th 2017
39
my list
Aug 17th 2017
40
thanks for sparking this - I gave a few suggestions in
Aug 17th 2017
42
they forgot the #1 songs
Aug 17th 2017
41
my list
Aug 17th 2017
43
and stop frontin on Portrait's 'Honey Dip'
Aug 17th 2017
44
Oh it's still a baaaaaaaaaaanger
Aug 17th 2017
46

Austin
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Wed Aug-09-17 02:04 PM

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1. "RE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEbl-umsFOM"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEbl-umsFOM


os·ti·na·to
/ˌästəˈnädō/
noun
a continually repeated musical phrase or rhythm

http://austinato.bandcamp.com

https://www.discogs.com/lists/Favorites-of-2017/332378

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
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Wed Aug-09-17 02:55 PM

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2. "I totally disagree with the order and songs, BUT I enjoyed reading each"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

description.

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c71
Member since Jan 15th 2008
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Wed Aug-09-17 02:58 PM

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3. "they did a pretty good job. Braxton's "making me high" should have "
In response to Reply # 2


  

          

been higher.


A lot of the picks seemed like the iconic songs of the time like "bump n grind" and "end of the road" and "the boy is mine" and "no scrubs" - those seem iffy on the "quality" scale.

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
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Wed Aug-09-17 04:26 PM

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4. "I mean, there's not a single list of a Top 30 that even 30% of us would ..."
In response to Reply # 3


  

          

on, so I'm not mad. But yeah, seeings No scrubs and The boy is mine soooooooooo high up, or even listed period is just....eh, I guess.

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13Rose
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Wed Aug-16-17 02:32 PM

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36. "I don't think that song should even be on the list"
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It's not better than ANY of the singles from her debut album.

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c71
Member since Jan 15th 2008
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Wed Aug-16-17 02:34 PM

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38. "It's her best song - one of the best songs of the 90's"
In response to Reply # 36


  

          

it should probably be #1 on the list.

yes

  

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SoWhat
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5. "where is 'Don't Walk Away' by Jade?"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

that song is the SHIT.

i agree w/R-tistic - each of us would make a different list.

fuck you.

  

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spidey
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19. "RE: where is 'Don't Walk Away' by Jade?"
In response to Reply # 5


  

          

GREAT track, great point...

Integrity is the Cornerstone of Artistry...

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
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23. "MAAAN! I was just talking about how underrated that track is!!!!!"
In response to Reply # 5


  

          

I saw it peaked high on Billboard, but feels like it disappeared for a while, and now I hear it all the time at throwback events

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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SoWhat
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6. "BTW - 'Poison' should be #1."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

fuck you.

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
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Mon Aug-14-17 12:32 PM

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24. "As a club song, yea it surely is. I might prefer having a true R&B track"
In response to Reply # 6


  

          

or even slow jam as #1, though

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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SoWhat
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Mon Aug-14-17 03:29 PM

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27. "that song is 90s R&B though."
In response to Reply # 24


  

          

sure it bangs in the club and gets a party started just about anywhere.

so did/does 'Dancin in the Streets'. so did/does 'Good Times'. so did/does 'Wanna Be Startin Somethin'.

fuck you.

  

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c71
Member since Jan 15th 2008
13962 posts
Thu Aug-10-17 01:25 PM

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7. "One's they got right for picking - c71 version"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Toni Braxton - you're making me high

Mint Condition - breaking my heart - pretty brown eyes

X-scape - just kick it

Brandy - I wanna be down

Whitney Houston/Faith Evans/Kelly Price - Heartbreak hotel

Jodeci - Forever my lady

Ghosttown DJ's - my boo

  

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c71
Member since Jan 15th 2008
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Thu Aug-10-17 01:32 PM

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8. "for a quick "off the top" - they should have had"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Faith Evans - you used to love me

Raphael Saadiq - ask of you

Portrait - here we go

Shai - baby I'm yours

Kut Klose - I like

SWV - use your heart

  

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SoWhat
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10. "You Used to Love Me still bangs."
In response to Reply # 8


  

          

i love that song.

fuck you.

  

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c71
Member since Jan 15th 2008
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Thu Aug-10-17 03:37 PM

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11. "yeah, she really came off with that song"
In response to Reply # 10


  

          

yes

  

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phemom
Member since Oct 22nd 2004
5129 posts
Mon Aug-14-17 06:50 PM

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29. "I agree, but what 5 should be taken off? n/m"
In response to Reply # 8


          

phemom's the name, all-star writer/
searching 4 journalistic fame, mindframe igniter....www.twitter.com/hayabusaage

  

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c71
Member since Jan 15th 2008
13962 posts
Tue Aug-15-17 01:09 PM

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35. "spark that trend in this post with your choices"
In response to Reply # 29


  

          

yes

  

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Austin
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9. "RE: No Tony! Toni! Toné! But 'Return of the Mack'?"
In response to Reply # 0
Thu Aug-10-17 02:32 PM by Austin

  

          

So, nothing by one of the most influential groups of the 90s, but a totally milquetoast pop one hit wonder gets in?

I've had enough of this "poptimist" bullshit.

Fuck this list.


os·ti·na·to
/ˌästəˈnädō/
noun
a continually repeated musical phrase or rhythm

http://austinato.bandcamp.com

https://www.discogs.com/lists/Favorites-of-2017/332378

  

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PROMO
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Thu Aug-10-17 03:40 PM

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13. "Return of the Mack belongs. But you're right. TTT..."
In response to Reply # 9


  

          

gotta have SOMETHING charting in a list like this.

  

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SoWhat
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14. "Anniversary. Let's Get Down."
In response to Reply # 13


  

          

fuck you.

  

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PROMO
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17. "those were my first two thoughts."
In response to Reply # 14


  

          

and Let's Get Down was a huge radio hit if they were leaning that way.

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Mon Aug-14-17 12:33 PM

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25. "YO!!!!!!! Yeah man, that part alone makes this a joke"
In response to Reply # 9


  

          

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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PROMO
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12. "not mad at these picks, but they lean very commercial."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

i would say about half this list i could agree with. then again, i will say this would be a hard list for me to sit down and really come up with. there'd be a lot of inner turmoil, lol.

also, whether you love him or hate him, i see they probably PURPOSELY left off Kellz. you could argue which song(s) to choose, but he DEFINITELY has at least one song that should be on that list.

finally, i love the Maxwell pick but if you're gonna have that song in that position then i should be seeing Ascension somewhere higher up on that list.

so yeah, we could poke holes in this thing all day.

  

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SoWhat
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15. "of course. you won't see any Joi on this list."
In response to Reply # 12


  

          

or Lewis Taylor. they won't go that deep.

fuck you.

  

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c71
Member since Jan 15th 2008
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Thu Aug-10-17 03:49 PM

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16. "Bump n grind is #16"
In response to Reply # 12


  

          

I even mentioned it in one of my replies

  

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PROMO
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18. "my bad. reading is hard, yo."
In response to Reply # 16


  

          

  

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dula dibiasi
Member since Apr 05th 2004
21925 posts
Thu Aug-10-17 05:13 PM

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20. "haha, dude turned the "poison" capsule into a slut-shaming diatribe."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

what a dweeb.

___

it is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data. insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit theories, instead of theories to suit facts. - sherlock holmes

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
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Mon Aug-14-17 12:33 PM

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26. "LMAO seriously."
In response to Reply # 20


  

          

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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JtothaI
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Fri Aug-11-17 03:54 PM

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21. "Cool used to do her?"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Never once, heard, read or thought that was what was being said. "Me and the crew used to her" is the line....right?!

>8. Bell Biv DeVoe, “Poison” (1990)
>
>
>By 1990, Bell Biv DeVoe evolved into a prototype for Wu-Tang
>Clan, with all past and present members enjoying wildly
>successful solo albums. But only one track from that era can
>still set off any dance floor like a Christmas tree.
>“Poison” is a burst of energy, from DJ Freeze’s staccato
>keyboards (which he later said was his version of Kraftwerk
>mixed with Latin salsa) to a sample of Kool G Rap being
>punched in like a shot across the bow. The lyrics are purely
>louche, three guys so mad at a former girl that they dog her
>out on wax. “Yeah, Cool used to do her,” drawls Ronnie
>Devoe in apparent reference to Bobby “Cool” Brown. Is this
>what hip-hop on the R&B tip with a pop appeal to it means –
>an exercise in slut-shaming? Who cares? The song is hot.

  

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13Rose
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Wed Aug-16-17 02:33 PM

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37. "I always thought that was the line"
In response to Reply # 21


  

          

This "Cool" stuff is news to me.

This post was paid for by the following.

www.twitter.com/13Rose
www.debunkthemyth.org
http://dashaunworld.wordpress.com/
www.mothergreen.com

Remember MJ The Great!
PSN: ThirteenRose

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Thu Aug-17-17 02:45 PM

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45. "I am almost sure it's "me and the crew""
In response to Reply # 21


  

          

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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mistermaxxx08
Member since Dec 31st 2010
16076 posts
Sun Aug-13-17 09:17 PM

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22. "ARRUh should have been number 1 and they got the wrong aaliyah cut"
In response to Reply # 0


          

alot of them songs don't belong. great on MJ remember the time and it should have been higher.


Obviously Mary J, D'angelo, the wrong Maxwell cut

babyface for the cool in you should have been there

BBD yep, TLC, keith sweat twisted should be up there,Joe should be on there, Brian MCknight, El Debarge after the dance should be on there

toni,tony,tone, mint condition yep, jodeci, boyz 11 men,janet jackson thats the way love goes should be higher.

tevin Campbell needs to be there. Brand new Heavies should be there,

after 7 nights like this, toni braxton as well.

alot of them turkeys don't know nothing about 90's R&B. they need to ask the Mister.

mistermaxxx R.Kelly, Michael Jackson,Stevie wonder,Rick James,Marvin Gaye,El Debarge, Barry WHite Lionel RIchie,Isleys EWF,Lady T.,Kid creole and coconuts,the crusaders,kc sunshine band,bee gees,jW,sd,NE,JB

Miami Heat, New York Yankees,buffalo bills

  

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SoWhat
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Mon Aug-14-17 04:00 PM

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28. "Hey Mr. DJ - Zhane."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

ok.

for real though.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q19x4Ggiptk

quit playin - this is STILL a jam.

fuck you.

  

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Austin
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Mon Aug-14-17 07:37 PM

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30. "RE: Hell and yes."
In response to Reply # 28


  

          

Even though 'Groove Thang' was my preferred jam, Zhane is definitely entitled to a spot on this list.


os·ti·na·to
/ˌästəˈnädō/
noun
a continually repeated musical phrase or rhythm

http://austinato.bandcamp.com

https://www.discogs.com/lists/Favorites-of-2017/332378

  

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Sleepy
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Mon Aug-14-17 08:18 PM

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31. "Luxury really doesn't have any business on this list"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

I'm not against it as a song, but there are a bunch of songs I would have on this list before that one.

I honestly think that Whitney's "I Will Always Love You" needs to be listed.

also, I think Poison and Return of the Mack are too low. This may be nostalgia, but I hear these songs at least once a week.

The Xscape song...I don't get that one either.

You're such pests...now, what is it you want? In your depths of your ignorance, what is it you want? Well, whatever it is you want, I can't deliver because I just don't see it. - Orson Welles


Never Tired, Always Sleepy

  

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Austin
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Mon Aug-14-17 10:01 PM

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32. "RE: Max needs a spot on this list, but not with that song."
In response to Reply # 31


  

          


os·ti·na·to
/ˌästəˈnädō/
noun
a continually repeated musical phrase or rhythm

http://austinato.bandcamp.com

https://www.discogs.com/lists/Favorites-of-2017/332378

  

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SoWhat
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154163 posts
Tue Aug-15-17 07:52 AM

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33. "Fortunate should be top 3."
In response to Reply # 32


  

          

fuck you.

  

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Buddy_Gilapagos
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Tue Aug-15-17 12:27 PM

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34. "Fun list. Only choice I hated was End of the Road. "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          


**********
"Everyone has a plan until you punch them in the face. Then they don't have a plan anymore." (c) Mike Tyson

"what's a leader if he isn't reluctant"

  

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DJR
Member since Jan 01st 2005
18637 posts
Wed Aug-16-17 05:36 PM

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39. "No Scrubs as the TLC song? Nah"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Waterfalls was the bigger and better song.

  

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NoFuture4Us
Member since Jan 11th 2017
313 posts
Thu Aug-17-17 02:22 AM

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40. "my list"
In response to Reply # 0


          

Montell Jordan - This Is How We Do It
Shai - Comforter
Jade - Don't Walk Away
Mariah Carey & BoyzIIMen - One Sweet Day
Ralph Tresvant - Sensitivity
Color Me Badd - I Adore Mi Amor
TLC - What About Your Friends
Aaron Hall - Don't Be Afraid
Karyn White - Romantic
Eternal - Stay
Hi-5 - The Kissing Game
Soul IV Real - Candy Rain
Jodeci - Lately
Joe Public - Live & Learn
Tony Rich Project - Nobody Knows
SWV - Right Here
Case - Touch Me Tease Me
Tony! Tone! Toni! - Feels Good
Portrait - Here We Go Again
Silk - Freak Me
ABC - Iesha
BBD - Poison
Xscape - Just Kick It
Mint Condition - Breaking My Heart
Donell Jones - You Know What's Up
Aaliyah - One In A Million
GInuwine - Pony
Soul Decision - Faded
Shanice - I Love Your Smile
Zhane - Sending My Love
Brandy - I Wanna Be Down
Destiny's Child - Say My Name
Prince - The Most Beautiful Girl In The World
D'Angelo - Devils Pie
Mariah Carey - Emotion
Next - Too Close
Tevin Campbell - Can We Talk
Brian McKnight - Anytime
Janet Jackson - That's The Way Love Goes
Michael Jackson - Keep It In The Closet
R Kelly - Your Body's Calling Me
Toni Braxton - Another Sad Love Song


https://www.instagram.com/christiancgarrido/

Hussein ibn Malik "if he escaped on a horse he might be realest nigga ever, EVER..2013 Nat Turner with the burner"
MaxPtah "Django is real homie.."
PoppaGeorge "If you're a child of the 70's, Ye looks like a p

  

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c71
Member since Jan 15th 2008
13962 posts
Thu Aug-17-17 06:33 AM

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42. "thanks for sparking this - I gave a few suggestions in"
In response to Reply # 40


  

          

reply #8, but I will do a full list.

Your list has some really good choices (Hi 5, Portrait, Zhané) but some.....

  

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organix
Member since Jul 10th 2002
855 posts
Thu Aug-17-17 02:47 AM

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41. "they forgot the #1 songs"
In response to Reply # 0


          

mary - real love

AND

monica - don't take it personal

agree that everybody's list will be different, but here are some notable (personal) omissions:

tamia - so into you
swv - i'm so into you
aaliyah - i'm so into you

....lol.

adina howard - freak like me
brandy - baby
cece pennison - keep on walking
shaggy - boombastic

plenty more to list but i'll just stop there. here's a collection of "lesser known" (and some not) 90s rnb songs i've put together on youtube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLH8mQuQ490xAuiqRY-VMqR_VHwTc4azjL

  

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c71
Member since Jan 15th 2008
13962 posts
Thu Aug-17-17 07:35 AM

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43. "my list"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          



30. En Vogue - give it up turn it loose
29. Caron Wheeler - living in the light
28. Intro - let me be
27. Aaliyah - if your girl only knew
26. Erykah Badu - next lifetime
25. Mary J Blige - love is all we need
24. Tyrese - lately
23. Deborah Cox - sentimental
22. Hi-5 - the kissing game
21. Monica - why I love you so much
20. Ghosttown DJ's - my boo
19. Montell Jordan - falling
18. Shai - baby I'm yours
17. Chanté Moore - love's taken over
16. Christopher Williams - I'm dreaming
15. Chaka Khan - love you all my lifetime
14. R.Kelly - seems like you're ready
13. CeCe Peniston - crazy love
12. Brandy - I wanna be down
11. Sade - kiss of life
10. Kut Klose - I like
9. SWV - use yourheart
8. Mint Condition - pretty brown eyes
7. Anita Baker - body and soul
6. Jodeci - forever my lady
5. Raphael Saadiq - ask of you
4. Portrait - here we go
3. Zhané - sending my love
2. Toni Braxton - you're making me high
1. Faith Evans - You used to love me

  

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SoWhat
Charter member
154163 posts
Thu Aug-17-17 08:11 AM

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44. "and stop frontin on Portrait's 'Honey Dip'"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iBwYjJbjWuI

fuck you.

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Thu Aug-17-17 02:45 PM

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46. "Oh it's still a baaaaaaaaaaanger"
In response to Reply # 44


  

          

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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