Cover of Spice Girls Spiceworld
tonycool

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For fans of pop music,critics of manufactured music,90s music enthusiasts,listeners questioning pop authenticity,readers interested in music industry critiques
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THE REVIEW

Group that like the Sex Pistols for example, is manufactured by a group of record producers and that is bad.

Disposable pop songs, an album that sells a lot worldwide, and I bought it myself back then (1997).. what a waste of money..

I don't even remember the main singles anymore, just as you could say for all the songs of the group. You all know the girls, no need for me to describe them.

They perfectly embody the concept of consumer music as if it were a supermarket product.. half a pound of salami, two kilos of spaghetti, and a jar of Spice..

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Summary by Bot

The review criticizes Spice Girls' Spiceworld album as a manufactured product by record producers leading to disposable pop songs. Despite its global sales success, the reviewer finds it forgettable and likens it to a supermarket product rather than genuine music.

Tracklist Lyrics Videos

01   Spice Up Your Life (02:53)

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03   Too Much (04:31)

04   Saturday Night Divas (04:25)

05   Never Give Up on the Good Times (04:30)

07   Do It (04:04)

09   Viva Forever (05:10)

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10   The Lady Is a Vamp (03:09)

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Spice Girls

British pop girl group formed in London in 1994: Melanie Brown, Melanie Chisholm, Emma Bunton, Geri Halliwell and Victoria Beckham. Breakthrough came with ‘Wannabe’ in 1996, followed by hit albums ‘Spice’ (1996), ‘Spiceworld’ (1997) and the quartet’s ‘Forever’ (2000). Their ‘Girl Power’ slogan became a global pop-culture marker; the group reunited for tours and a Greatest Hits release in 2007–08, with further appearances in 2012 and 2019.
06 Reviews