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18 Reviews
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
All your favorites,
By Mark Kolar (Dillon, Montana USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Best of the Village People: 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection (Audio CD)
This cd has all your favorite village people songs from the hits such as "YMCA" and "In the Navy" to other great songs like "Can't Stop the Music" These songs really showed what 70s music was about. If you are a fan of disco or pop music this is a must.
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good collection - But Missing "Go West",
By Tim Brough "author and music buff" (Springfield, PA United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE)
This review is from: The Best of the Village People: 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection (Audio CD)
If the Casablanca record label was the Monarchy of the Disco Nation, The Village People were their finest ambassadors. More than any of the prefabricated disco machines that the decade produced, it is the VP's cavity provoking bubble-gum dance records that made strobe lights and disco balls accessible and acceptable to party people of all stripes. Add in the undeniable fact that the innuendo laden singles and their stereotyped get-ups made gay subculture visible and you can actually add the term "culturally significant" to the Village People's list of accomplishments.But all that pales when placed next to the vibrancy of this brief but solid collection of 10 singles. Like all of the best radio confectionary creampuffs, the songs here convey a kooky innocence (the Navy had to let in on the joke before they backed off their decision to use "In The Navy" as a recruitment jingle) that remains timeless. And in the post-AIDS decades, the more obvious 70's call to the disenfranchised like "San Francisco" and "In Hollywood" are even poignant. Deny it if you dare, but secretly you know this stuff is great. Just see if your limbs don't start contorting into the alphabet next time "YMCA" gets played on some football arena PA or at your next company party. I double dog dare ya. PS: You may want to get the version of this from the Casablaca/Mercury release dated 1998. That CD contains "Go West" and drops the 12 mix of "YMCA."
17 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Quo Vadis, Baby?,
By Alberto (Italy) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Best of the Village People: 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection (Audio CD)
OK.
In order to understand how much a few reviews here knew about the Village People, and about this specific collection, and thus how much reliable a few of them they can be to craft your own guesswork and decide whether to purchase this cd or not, you may want to consider that some of these reviews complain that "Go West" is a track missing from the compilation. Well, it is not. It is only missing (arguably overlooked) by the Amazon list of tracks. But it is NOT missing from the actual, physical disk. Isn't it cute, to review a cd you didn't even purchase, in order to suggest whether the others should or shouldn't purchase it? Now, it happens I have purchased the cd indeed. So I do know "Go West" does is in it. And I am here to say: you should buy this cd too. Now, baby. Then, of course, many of these reviews are concerned with labeling the Village People as "homosexual" or as "a gay group". That's not a new one. The New Yorker was busy a few months ago assessing whether Gogol was gay, rather than one of the greatest Russian writers ever. Many critics were busy for decades trying to understand whether Shakespeare was gay - unsuccessfully busy, by the way. Many guys tried to claim Ernest Hemingway was gay - because also if you are not, who told you you could not be such all the same, very very very very secretly? Isn't it? I must say that if the Village People were gay, that's fine to me: because I am not, so I just couldn't care less about what they preferred sexually. In order to listen to their music, I am not required to share more than their music, and to judge them only after that. Because when I purchase a cd, I want to listen to the music, not to the gossip. And when I read a book, like a Gogol title, I want to cultivate my spirit, and learn how to fly at a higher level, not how to sink in the undergloom of the (very) small talk. The Village People didn't become famous insofar as gays. They did inasfar as they produced some of the best disco music ever. That's the reason. Because it is not enough to have some specific sexual preference, in order to be famous. Or just everybody could become very famous very fast and very cheaply. Now, disco music IS silly music. It WANTS, it MEANS to be silly. It is in the fact it means to be silly, that all its value resides. If it would have meant to be serious, it would have become ridiculous. The Village People does not MEAN to be the Pink Floyd! It never meant to be the Dire Straits! Its purpose wasn't of being esoteric or mysterious. It sounds silly, meaning to be it; it sounds FUN, meaning to BE fun. Just fun. Plain fun. Obnoxious fun, if you prefer. But fun. Disco music wants to be an hymn to the joy of being alive together. It wants to suggest incarnated fleshes that none the less dance together in the valley of death and in the wilderness. It wants to deliver the idea of joy. It wants to speak of the Homo Ludens by Huizinga (search Amazon books, to know more about this name...). Disco Music wants to be the apotheosis of a soul that decided that for a moment, maybe even for a few minutes, it is possible, maybe it's even worth while, being happy. Completely, absolutely, entirely happy. A thing they do not want you to be, you know. No more harrowing dilemmas; no more death; no more wounds; with the twilight of the idols behind your shoulders, you may even decide to smile for a second before this unjust earth. When it comes to express this feeling, all the saints marchin' in, all the living souls dancing together, the Village People produced some of the best pieces ever. Simply. YMCA needs no introduction. You listen to it, and it justifies itself. Forget serious music for a moment. And you will enjoy YMCA in all its glory, like an exploding JS Bach fugue, like a Beethoven climax, like a dazzling set of fireworks, like the very same meaning Wolfgang Mozart at times voiced. And what's wrong, if this round it's expressed in a simpler tone? Once over with this cd, you're still on time to go back to the old bitterness. But once in your life you ought to listen to what the Disco truly meant, to its message; and then you need this cd, you need the Village People. And when you shall have understood the meaning of their message, you would not care a damn it any longer about whether they were gay or not. They were the Village People, and the made some of the best disco ever. And this is why you, me, and many others still listen to them today. They had something to say. Yes, they did. Occasionally, men and women can be absolutely happy, with no drama, with a serene gaze. Occasionally. In those occasions, your soundtrack is "YMCA" - or "San Francisco" by the Village People. At full volume, and with earphones (if at home). And forget all the rest. "Macho Man", "In The Navy": if you do not know how to smile, you won't like them. But the day you may decide it is a good day for smiling, you may truly regret not to have got at least one copy of the Village People's disco music in your shelves. So get it, also if today you're not happy. For at times, also the sun rises. At times, of course. But the Village People are for THOSE times exactly, and in THOSE times ONLY they can be understood.
3.0 out of 5 stars
VILLAGE PEEP-HOLE,
By Jukebox Dave (RECORD TOWN, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Best of the Village People: 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection (Audio CD)
VILLAGE PEOPLE-THE MILLENNIUM COLLECTION: Other than their CASABLANCA label-mates KISS, THE VILLAGE PEOPLE were the most famous costumed group of the 70s, outlasting the glut of faceless one hitters during disco's hey-day with a campy trio of "buddy" anthems that still fill dance floors several decades later. The humor-laced brainchild of flambouyant producer/songwriter JAQUES MORALI, gritty lead singer VICTOR WILLIS (the "cop") was backed by a struttin' chorus line of manly stereotypes including a cowpoke, an injun, a G.I., a biker, and a construction worker. MACHO MAN, YMCA, and IN THE NAVY were unabashed shout-along smashes reeking of sweat, brotherhood, and fist-pumpin' beats, while their lesser known odes to exotic locales SAN FRANCISCO, KEY WEST, and IN HOLLYWOOD held similar gleeful bombast. The party petered out quickly by the time new lead singer RAY SIMPSON joined the fray for the overconfident dud READY FOR THE 80s and the title theme to their much maligned cash-in flick CAN'T STOP THE MUSIC. But while it lasted, THE VILLAGE PEOPLE provided a swaggering, kitsch-encrusted, wink-wink nudge-nudge soundtrack to a non-stop party.
RATING: THREE COSTUMES
4.0 out of 5 stars
I Love It.,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Best of the Village People: 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection (Audio CD)
Just a must have for the your music collection. Good, cheesy fun. You just want dance and got the Castro.
5.0 out of 5 stars
wonderful,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Best of the Village People: 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection (Audio CD)
Ive always loved the Village People, but never had a chance to buy any of their songs until now and I am glad I had a chance to buy it at this time.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Brings back memories!,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Best of the Village People: 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection (Audio CD)
I bought this after hearing YMCA on an oldies station. It made me want to dance and longed for those disco days. So, I ordered this CD. Very glad I did, not only does it have the standard popular songs, but a few that I had forgotten about that are meaningful. You won't go wrong adding this to your CD collection.
5.0 out of 5 stars
My Guy Loves It,
By HDSpringerLady (Missouri) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Best of the Village People: 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection (Audio CD)
What can I say? My guy loves this cd and plays it all the time especially if he's feeling discouraged or upset. I actually have to get out of his car when he does it cause I can stand only so much
4.0 out of 5 stars
Wow...,
This review is from: The Best of the Village People: 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection (Audio CD)
Little did I know....I am a matcho man! yeah! This music makes me feel grate and im compleatly hetero with a girlfriend so ignore my comedic reviews in ths case, ui love this stuf man!
5.0 out of 5 stars
YMCA,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Best of the Village People: 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection (Audio CD)
The record met all expectations. We did not feel would be able to find it anywhere else as it is an old product.
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The Best of the Village People: 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection by The Village People (Audio CD - 2001)
$5.98 $4.99
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