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Whatever: The 90s Pop & Culture Box
 
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Whatever: The 90s Pop & Culture Box [Box set, Original recording remastered]

Various Artists Audio CD
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (35 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (July 26, 2005)
  • Original Release Date: 2005
  • Number of Discs: 7
  • Format: Box set, Original recording remastered
  • Note on Boxed Sets: During shipping, discs in boxed sets occasionally become dislodged without damage. Please examine and play these discs. If you are not completely satisfied, we'll refund or replace your purchase.
  • Label: Rhino
  • ASIN: B0009YA4EO
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (35 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #83,436 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

You'd be right to be excited about Rhino Records' voluminous compilation, Whatever: The '90s Pop and Culture Box. After all, they did such a great job with their 1980s comps, not to mention all their various approaches to prior decades, from the original Nice Day series to the expanded and brilliant Nuggets collections. Whatever is a seven-disc set that comes with a bag of stale coffee inside it. This US-centric collection has a lot of great tracks on it, from throwaway songs ("Sunscreen," "Sex And Candy") to absolute classics ("Baby Got Back," "Under the Bridge"). But ultimately, it's a complete and utter mess. A lot happened in the '90s of course; hip-hop went pop, rock got funky and weird, grunge broke open and imploded, Moby sampled the Lomax archives for a surprise hit, even the weirdest indie bands had cash thrown at them by major labels, the daisy age morphed into the chronic age, and dance music was quite nearly the next big thing. Rather than provide a narrative of underground and mainstream movements, this set smacks of the sort of lowest common denominator, novelty-centric approach that makes lowbrow VH1 programs only fleetingly satisfying. Sheesh. Hip-hop, metal, and dance music are barely covered here. And the lack of "Smells Like Teen Spirit" alone is enough to make the listener want to return the set with the words "try again" scrawled into the cover. --Mike McGonigal

Product Description

Remember the 1990s? Dot-com booms and stock market pinnacles? The fall of the Wall, the rise of Desert Storm, Presidential impeachment, and Beavis & Butt-head? The decade of grunge power, alt-rock diversity, and hip-hop evolution? The decade of grunge power, alt-rock diversity, and hip-hop evolution? It's an era that's oh-so-close, yet already so far away. If you're pining for those '90s, and we know you are-our monlithic new 7-disc box takes you back to the good old days in style.

 

Customer Reviews

35 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (9)
3 star:
 (11)
2 star:
 (8)
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Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (35 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

90 of 96 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The weakest of the three Pop Culture box sets., August 10, 2005
By 
M J Heilbron Jr. "Dr. Mo" (Long Beach, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
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This review is from: Whatever: The 90s Pop & Culture Box (Audio CD)
As the proud owner of all three of Rhino's fantastic Pop Culture box sets (70's, 80's and now 90's), this is by far the worst.

These boxes attempt to encapsulate ten years of music in seven CD's. They do so by selecting some of the biggest hits of the era, along with representative examples of important trends (disco, New Wave, punk) and those singular songs that could only have existed during that time, and sound positively atrocious now. Songs so bad yet so popular they're now "good".

Like "U Can't Touch This" by M.C. Hammer. You cannot deny that song's "hugeness" during it's radio/video reign, no matter HOW dated it now sounds.

The reasons for this specific set's weakness are manifold.
It may be too early to survey the 90's. We don't have decent perspective yet. Too many of the decade's major artists were unwilling to allow their songs to be on the compilation. There were too many small musical "movements" or themes, few all-encompassing trends (remember, The Rolling Stones and Kiss went disco), and those "so bad they're good" songs haven't become evident yet, especially when looking at the end of the 90's.

There still is a lot of good stuff here. Songs that in all likelihood will be considered "classic" in the future include: Sinead O'Connor's frail but powerful reading of Prince's "Nothing Compares 2 U", the dance floor anthem "Gonna Make You Sweat", "Under The Bridge" by Red Hot Chili Peppers, the underappreciated Gin Blossoms "Hey Jealousy", Sarah McLachlan's eerie "Possession", Weezer's goofy "Buddy Holly", the Britpop representative Oasis with "Wonderwall"...
...I think many of those songs will stand the test of time.

Then there are those songs which exemplify genres, and do so in one song. Pop-rap's "Jump" (Kris Kross) or blissfully politically incorrect "Baby Got Back"; ethereal folk-pop like Jewel, The Sundays and Sixpence None The Richer; sports stadium anthems like "Jump Around", "Whoomp! (There It Is)" and "Tubthumping"; the Sneaker Pimps' trip-hop "6 Underground", indie rock's Pavement and Sleater-Kinney, punk-pop Supergrass and Sublime.

How about one-hit wonders? Here we have terrific singles by Jesus Jones ("Right Here Right Now"), the Divinyls ("I Touch Myself"), The Mighty Mighty Bosstones ("The Impression That I Get"), EMF ("Unbelievable"), Marc Cohn ("Walking In Memphis") and the theme song to "Friends". I still enjoy "MmmBop" and am only slightly embarrassed to admit it.

Wince-inducing pop touchstones? How about "I'm Too Sexy", Queensryche, "Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm", "Breakfast at Tiffany's", Joan Osborne's "One of Us" and the afore-mentioned M.C. Hammer? "Lovefool" by The Cardigans?

Terrific examples of pop and rock like: The Black Crowes, Matthew Sweet, dada, En Vogue...

Personal faves and nice surprises include songs by The Juliana Hatfield Three, Sugar, Barenaked Ladies, Better Then Ezra, Naughty By Nature...

All essential.

Now for the bad.

The biggest artists of the decade apparently want nothing to do with this. No Madonna, no Janet Jackson, no Mariah Carey, no U2. Who was bigger, for a year or two, than Alanis Morissette?

Major artists like TLC, Green Day and The Offspring are absent. 2Pac? What about Ricky Martin and the Latin pop explosion?

Pop country is totally ignored, but I don't really like pop-country stuff, so that's not really a check in the "bad" column for me personally.

Def Leppard, Seal and the Cure had some good singles in the decade. What about PM Dawn? Sheryl Crow? Beck?

Grunge, arguably the single most important musical trend, is represented by Mother Love Bone and Mudhoney, instead of the absent Nirvana and Pearl Jam.

Certain artists are represented by curious song selections. REM gets "What's the Frequency Kenneth?" when "Losing My Religion" or all the amazing songs off "Automatic For The People" are candidates? . The Verve Pipe's huge hit "The Freshmen" is passed over for "Photograph". Candlebox's "Far Behind" instead of "You."

Great one-hit wonders like "Ice Ice Baby" are missing (they couldn't get Vanilla Ice?). What about the so bad-so good "(Everything I Do) I Do It For You" by Bryan Adams? Meat Loaf's comeback single? Ace of Base "All That She Wants". Blind Melon's "No Rain". "I Love You Always Forever" by Donna Lewis?

No Spice Girls? No Britney? No Backstreet Boys? Where is all the awful teen pop that deserves some sort of mention?

Mysteriously selected for inclusion, however, are: The Gits, Supersuckers, Fastbacks, Guru, Muffs, Tad, 7 Year Bitch, Grant Lee Buffalo, Spacehog, Stereolab...

Overall, I like the set. I like the book that comes with it...I like the kitschy coffee-bean filled cover (just like my avocado carpeted 70's box and my rubber Day-Glo 80's box.)...I like it's irreverence...and I admire the effort that went into this collection.

It's just the final product that comes up a little short.
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28 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Perfect for the 90s connoisseur, December 25, 2005
By 
Daniel Maltzman (Arlington, MA, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Whatever: The 90s Pop & Culture Box (Audio CD)
The great Rhino Records has released excellent compilations over the years which chronicle various decades. For the 60s, there is the classic "Nuggets" series and for the 70s there is the "Have a nice Decade" box set. For the 80s, Rhino set out tackling different genres with different sets. For hair metal there is the "Youth Gone Wild" series and for new wave there is the "Just Can't Get Enough" Series. The thing that all these sets have in common is that the each not only summed up a decade, but an entire genre.

For their 1990s box set "Whatever: The 90s Pop and Culture Box," Rhino has a difficult task of defining the decade. The 90s were really a melting pop in terms of sounds and styles. The early 90s were basically and obviously a continuation of the 1980s. Then, with the release of Nirvana's "Nevermind" (1991) there was the Seattle Grunge and Alternative movements. Then there was post-grunge (Seven Mary Three, Collective Soul), followed by rap-metal or Nu-Metal (Korn, Limp Bizkit). Then in concurrence with rock's changing styles there was hip-hop, pop, and the odd-ball anomalies (Crash Test Dummies). Also, don't forget punk, R&B, retro jam bands, metal, industrial metal, riot grrrl, funk-metal, and techno! Rhino would have had an easier time if they released a few box sets, each focusing on a particular genre. But instead, they have decided to tackle everything with one box set.

With so many genres, and sub-genres (many bands were just labeled "alternative") it's going to be very, very hard to make an all encompassing, definitive box set of the eclectic 90s that is going to please everyone. Still, Rhino does a fabulous job with "Whatever: The 90s Pop and Culture Box." The set really captures the essence, the ambiance of the 1990s. Almost every aforementioned style is represented here (thankfully nu-metal was left off) as the set takes its listener through the decade. When you listen to these discs, it's as though you were re-living moments of your life. For example, when I listen to "Jump" (Kris Kross) I think back to the summer of '92, when I was twelve. Or when I hear "Cumbersome" (Seven Mary Three) or "Waterfall," (Oasis) it takes me right back to high school. Most of these songs evoke a lot of memories for me, and bring back a lot of good (and bad) times from my formative (10-20) years.

This box set has received a lot of condemnation from critics and Amazon reviewers alike. The common complaint is that many of the 90s best artists are left off and lesser-known artists, and one-hit-wonders are included instead. Personally, I see this as both a flaw and an asset of the box set, depending on how you look at it. If you don't already own the great works from the 90s and are expecting to get the cream of the crop with this box set, you are going to be disappointed. However, if you already lived throughout the 90s and collected all the classics over the years, this box set could be just what you're looking for. As someone that already owns the complete works of Nine Inch Nails, Rage Against the Machine, Garbage, the Seattle "big four:" Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Alice In Chains, and Soundgarden, I don't want a box set with all the usual suspects. Do I really need a seven-disc anthology with songs that I already own? "Whatever" really rounds out my collection by giving me the singles of the decade's best one-hit wonders, without having to spend $15.00 on any given artist's entire album. For example, I like "Baby's got Back," but I just want the song, not the entire Sir Mix a Lot CD. This set is packed with tons of songs that I liked when I heard them on the radio back in the day; but haven't heard in years, i.e., "Right Here, Right Now," (Jesus Jones) "I Touch Myself," (Divinlys) "OPP" (Naughty By Nature) "Three Little Pigs," (Green Jelly) "Breakfast at Tiffany's" and so on.

Another criticism this set has received is that the best of a given genre is not represented. For example, when it comes to grunge, why is Mudhoney included instead of Pearl Jam or Nirvana? Well, this is in part due to copyrights and what Rhino had access to. But even if Rhino was denied use of a genres best known song, it ultimately works to the sets advantage. As much as I love "Smells like Teen Spirit" or "Jeremy," I rather listen to "into the drink." Even though I own that song already, I haven't listened to it ten thousand times, simply because Mudhoney hasn't received the airplay of Nirvana or Pearl Jam. A similar complaint is that the artists that are represented are not represented by their best work. For example, why is L7 represented with "Sh.tlist" instead of "Pretend that we're dead?" To that I would offer a similar response. It's more refreshing to listen to any given artist's lesser known songs, as opposed to just having a box set of what you would expect, lest "Whatever: The 90s Pop and Culture Box," be just seven CD's of clichés, great songs they may be. Plus due to the absence of the decade's best known artists, many great bands from the 90s that are underappreciated are represented here, like My Bloody Valentine, Mudhoney, and Screaming Trees.

While some people may not be satisfied with this set, I feel as though it were custom made for me personally. It collects many songs that I know and love, but just want the single, not the entire album. While many of the decade's best known artists are left off, in-lieu of lesser known artists, I personally feel that untimely works to the sets advantage, as it is refreshing to hear songs that haven't been played to death.

I would recommend this set with caution. If you were born in or after the 90s, be warned, this box set is not a definitive collection of the 90s essential artists. Or if you don't already own albums like "Ten," (1991) "Nevermind," and "Garbage" (1995), start there first. However, if you grew up in the 90s and want all those one-hit wonders, and a great collection of lesser known songs that you may already own but aren't sick of, this set is for you. The packaging is really, really, cool, with coffee beans attached to the set. Just be careful to keep in it one place, as it can wear easily. The accompanying booklet is also excellent, with funny detailed accounts of all the music, political, cultural, and world events of the times.

To reiterate the sets biggest asset: "Whatever" really captures the heart and the atmosphere of the 1990s, as it is an eclectic stew of so many different styles.

Bravo Rhino.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars This has got to be a joke..., June 21, 2008
By 
John Froberg "jfro" (West Central Florida) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Whatever: The 90s Pop & Culture Box (Audio CD)
From January 1, 1990 through December 31, 1999 My radios were blaring both pop and college stations 24/7 while I subscribed yearly to Rolling Stone and SPIN. I also spent most of my free time and money at the local Indie CD shop collecting well over 300 discs of the decade's most interesting and enjoyable music.

All of this to say folks... I have NEVER! even heard of over a third of the songs in this so-called collection. Instead of a fun filled trip down "Memory Lane", RHINO has instead sent me spiraling into a "Land of Confusion"... I didn't recognize a lot of the titles on the back of the box but hoped that once the set started playing they would quickly ring a bell or two... No such luck... Discs 1 and 7 bookend nicely but the fillers 2-6 are sorta weak even though they do contain a scattering of "OMG" cheesy one hit wonders that have worn rather well. Most of this mess seems to be deep tracks off the producer's personal promo CD rack and not at all a true reflection of the pop culture era that was the 90's...

1 star for some really cool coffee bean packaging. Too bad though that what's actually brewed inside is rather bitter . A waste...
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