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Spice World CD-ROM

4.3 out of 5 stars 267 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (Nov. 4 1997)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: CD-ROM
  • Label: Universal Music Canada
  • ASIN: B000000WFF
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars 267 customer reviews
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #13,594 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)
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1. Spice Up Your Life
2. Stop
3. Too Much
4. Saturday Night Divas
5. Never Give Up On The Good Times
6. Move Over
7. Do It
8. Denying
9. Viva Forever
10. The Lady Is A Vamp

Product Description

Product Description

Limited Edition Coupling of their First Two Albums Packaged in their Individual Size Jewel Cases which Are Housed in a Cardboard Box.

Amazon.ca

"Spice up your life", the Spice Girls advise on the first single from Spiceworld, their second album, which was made quickly to capitalise on the movie of the same name. If that sounds more like an advertising slogan than a call for variety, solidarity, and fun, it's not the only time the disc echoes the language of a carefully planned campaign: The chorus of "Move Over" is built around the phrase "Generation Next", the rallying cry of the their Pepsi advert. And if, in turn, you come to the conclusion that this record isn't nearly as much fun as its predecessor, you're right. Any question about the creative input of Scary, Posh, Baby, Ginger, and Sporty into their own music is moot; like "Candle in the Wind 1997", Spiceworld was made to be bought, not listened to. Sure, they trade vocals this time, leaning less on the Bananarama-style gang approach of their debut, and yeah, the Motown-lite confection "Stop" doesn't exactly hurt the ear, but this disc is ultimately a bigger insult than anything a bunch of diehard anarchists such as Chumbawamba could imagine--without the kick of "Tubthumping". It also ends on a note so jarring as to settle the group firmly in the avant-garde with the fake-lounge "Lady Is a Vamp", which unfortunately praises Jackie O and Marilyn Monroe in the same verse, then ups the ante with a shout-out to Sandy Denny(!) as a Spicy role model. All together now: Uh huh. --Rickey Wright


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Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Audio CD
Hell, I already praised a Britney album, so this next step is only natural.
Besides, who can deny that the once fearsome-fivesome (quintet?) are probably the most undoubtedly fun group ever to come roaring out of the 90's?
...Anyone?
Okay, then. But back on track - pure sugary confectionary pop perfection all for us. Woohoo! Fast-paced furious latin-vibing Spice Up Your Life (built around a dancey piano line and godknows what else), the calming, watery, crammed-to-bursting-with-pretty-strings Motown vibes of Too Much (The Supreme Spices? Hmm...), the slinky sexy TLC-esque 90's R&B; of Denying, the chilling Latin-tinged (there's that phrase again) ballad Viva Forever...
And the rest of the good stuff: The loud, energetic Pepsi anthem Move Over, the jazzy loungey ender built around a swingin' bunch-o-brass (The Lady Is A Vamp), and my personal favorite:
Stop. Frighteningly perky and sunny. And brassy - horns out the wazoo. Cheesy claptrack, check. Beeps, check. But good lord I love it. Anyone up for being in a good mood?
Then enter Spice World, and please check to make sure you are not allergic to any of the following:
Ginger
Posh people
Sporty people
Scary people
Babies
Enjoy.
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Format: Audio CD
This is the Spice Girls second album, that was released November 4, 1997. Selling more that 10 million albums, this is another great album.
When I got "Spice", their debut, I thought it was a great album and had to have been my favorite....ever! For your information, "Spice" sold a whoping 22 million copies!
"Spiceworld", is better in my opinion! Like "Spice", it contains 10 songs. Half of the songs on both albums hit #1. This album is also classified as a soundtrack, to their huge worldwide blockbuster, "Spiceworld". This album has a lot of flavor, from great #1 ballads like "Viva Forever" and their 2nd Christmas hit "Too Much", to their #1 3-D hit, "Spice Up Your Life" and the #1 hit for Pepsi, "Move Over", this album is definately something for everyone. Anyone, but punk rockers will enjoy this album. It has something for everyone.
The Spice Girls fought off their critics by not caring, and that is what made them....THEMSELVES! The hits on this album consist of five #1 chart toppers, including the U.K.'s Pepsi song and their 2nd Christmas hit! A review for their five #1 hits is below.
1) Spice Up Your Life: Fall 1997. Them for their hit movie,
"Spiceworld"
2) Too Much: Winter 1997. Their 2nd Christmas hit.
3) Move Over: Released Winter 1997 into 1998. The U.K.'s million
dollar Pepsi song.
4) Stop: Spring 1998. Only single that didn't hit #1 in it's
first week, but went to #1 the second week!
5) Viva Forever: This song, in a way, was dedicated to Ginger
Spice, Geri Halliwell, after her departure.
She, went on as a solo artist and continued
to do great!
All in all, this is a great album and I would advise anyone who does not own it, to go out and buy it immediately!
-Pisces
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Format: Audio CD
Okay, okay, we all know what to expect from the Spice Girls. Ever since the vinyl-, leopard print-, and lip gloss-clad quintet popped onto our screens and into our ears last January with "Wannabe," we haven't been able to shake them. Well, I'd like to take the opportunity to say I don't wanna shake them. Sure, their style falls somewhere on the depth chart a few notches below the Archies, but come on - it's the Spice Girls! Now that I've laid the groundwork, I'll get to the matter at hand. I listen to the Spice Girls for one reason and one reason only - their music, hate it though you may, is catchy. Capital C, captial a-t-c-h-y. It's been years since I could listen to a group without caring about their causes, their backstory, the hotel rooms they trashed, etc. So the existence of "Spice World" represents a refreshingly fun presence in the world of music. While their debut album, "Spice" offered several individually good singles (e.g. "Say You'll Be There," "2 Become 1," etc.), pound for pound, I'd have to enumerate "Spice World" as a better album. The recently-scaled-down-to-four English group acquits themselves admirably, showing a diversity not suggested by the dance-heavy "Spice." The variety of styles on "Spice World" manifests itself in Latin rhythms ("Spice Up Your Life"), Phil Spectorian girl groupishness ("Stop"), sleek R&B ("Too Much"), soul ("Do It"), and of all genres to be represented on a Spice Girls album, swing ("The Lady is a Vamp"). Granted, even as a devotee, I could have lived without the extended version of "Move Over," the Girls' Pepsi jingle.Read more ›
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Format: Audio CD
When this cd and the other Spice Girls cd first came out I hated them with all my might. This was mainly due to the fact that it was all that my sister played it non-stop and obsessed over the movie and everything. I thought if I see one more thing Spice related I would scream. Then she moved on to new horrors: N'Sync and The Backstreet Boys. I thought to myself , "the Spice Girls were better than this, and they were hot." That was the beginning of my reform.
Recently, one day on our way home from school, my sister was feeling nostalgic and begged me to let her listen to Spiceworld. After listening to the cd the whole way through I realized that it wasn't that bad. There were some good songs such as "Stop" and "Spice Up Your Life".
Nothing could have prepared me, however, for the pure pop magic that is "Never Give Up on the Good Times." Don't get me wrong, I am generally not any big fan of pop (my favorite cd's this year were Wilco's "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot", Beck's "Sea Change" and The Flaming Lips' "Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots") but when it is done right a pop song can be a beautiful thing. "Never Give Up on the Good Times" is exactly that. It has an extremely catchy and fun tune, fun and upbeat lyrics, and above all, it never gets old. I have been listening to this song again and again and again and I have not gotten sick of it.
"Never Give Up on the Good Times" is a sublime example of a great pop song that unfortunately does come around too often. It helped me wise up to the point of the Spice Girls and the reason why their music succeeds. They were never about artistry in music, they were only about sheer fun and that is what this cd (the other one is a little hit and miss) and their hysterically random movie provide to their listeners and viewers respectively. N'Sync and the Backstreet Boys could never ever do that. (In addition to not being able to pull off the miniskirts that also contribute to the fun of the Spice Girls)
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