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Worst Songs Of The 90s


Rhapsody Feature

 Taylor Swift
Taylor Swift is a young country starlet with a honeyed voice who started writing songs when she was 10.

Top 10 Tracks In Rhapsody

Album: My Life Would Suck Without You
Artist: Kelly Clarkson

Album: 808s & Heartbreak
Artist: Kanye West

Album: The Fame
Artist: Lady GaGa

Album: I Am... Sasha Fierce
Artist: Beyoncé

Album: 808s & Heartbreak
Artist: Kanye West

Album: Circus
Artist: Britney Spears

Album: Viva La Vida Or Death And All His Friends
Artist: Coldplay

Album: Paper Trail
Artist: T.I.

Album: We Sing. We Dance. We Steal Things.
Artist: Jason Mraz

Album: Dark Horse
Artist: Nickelback

New Releases In Rhapsody

 My Life Would Suck Without You
America's first Idol is back with lollipop in hand on her new electro-powered single, "My Life Would Suck Without You."
Editor:

 Kind Of Blue (Legacy Edition)
The best selling jazz album in history, Kind of Blue sounds better with each passing year. Miles explores modal improvisation with pianist Bill Evans, saxophonists John Coltrane and Cannonball Adderley and other top-flight talents. This musical voyage proves that "relaxing" music can also possess incredible depth. This 50th Anniversary edition comes with alternate takes and studio chatter plus an entire disc of other material the group performed together. You can't get any better than this.
Editor: Nick Dedina

 Blood Bank
After receiving copious accolades for his beautifully stark debut, Justin Vernon's solitary sound gets a boost with a little help from friends. Even with a full band supporting him now, the Wisconsin troubadour still recognizes the power of a heartbreaking falsetto and an acoustic guitar. His minimalist touch is amplified with feather-light beats, slide guitar, abrupt piano plucks and layered vocals on the first three tracks. But "Woods" is where Vernon proves traditional folk can be modernly hip, juxtaposing nature-themed lyrics with the most unnatural of instruments...Auto-Tune.
Editor: Stephanie Benson

Rhapsody Staff Picks

 Slumdog Millionaire - Music From The Motion Picture
Danny Boyle's Slumdog Milionaire, about a scrappy Bombay street urchin, makes a perfect fit for M.I.A., a South Asian musical rabble-rouser who highlights the world's have-nots in unconventional club tracks. In addition to dropping "Paper Planes" here, she also appears on the opening "O...Saya," a rush of percussion and voices raised high. A.R. Rahman, the celebrated Bombay soundtrack composer, is the real star here, with an album score that ranges from hynoptic trip-hop ("Riots") to unusual crunk ("Gangsta Blues") to wide-screen immersion in strings and tribal drums.
Editor: Philip Sherburne

 The River
This double-disc finds Springsteen mixing the dour disillusionment that permeated Darkness On the Edge of Town with confident, light-hearted stabs at love, and one style is just as winning as the other. Songs such as "Hungry Heart," "Fade Away" and "The River" are timeless classics that remain live favorites. The River is required listening for any fan.
Editor: Linda Ryan

 Punch
For as virtuosic as Nickel Creek could be, the band's mandolin player and singer, Chris Thile, is stylistically unshackled with the Punch Brothers, a group made up of some of the best young progressive pickers around. The through-composed, mostly improvised three-song suite, "The Blind Leaving the Blind," is the centerpiece. A heartbreaking take on self-destructive love, the tracks ramble between delicate songwriter fare, 20th century atonality, jazz and bluegrass; and it's all recorded live. It requires full attention and some big ears, but those who take the time will be well rewarded.
Editor: Nate Cavalieri

There are pop stars and then, there are pop superstars. Michael Jackson was the kind of iconic figure whose status, success and influence might be unimaginable and likely unrepeatable in the iPod era. Full Story ››