Showing posts with label 1992. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1992. Show all posts

Saturday, December 12, 1992

The Bodyguard soundtrack hit #1 for the first of 20 weeks

The Bodyguard

Whitney Houston/Various Artists


Released: November 17, 1992


Peak: 120 US, 18 RB, 111 UK, 19 CN, 15 AU


Sales (in millions): 19.4 US, 2.14 UK, 45.0 world (includes US and UK), 55.72 EAS


Genre: pop/R&B


Tracks:

Song Title (PERFORMER) (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to charts.

  1. I Will Always Love You (WHITNEY HOUSTON) (10/23/92, 1 BB, 1 BA, 1 CB, 1 GR, 1 RR, 1 RB, 1 AC, 1 UK, 1 UK, 1 CN, 1 AU, 2 DF)
  2. I Have Nothing (WHITNEY HOUSTON) (2/19/93, 4 BB, 1 BA, 1 CB, 1 GR, 1 RR, 1 AC, 3 RB, 3 UK, 1 CN, 28 AU, 21 DF)
  3. I’m Every Woman (WHITNEY HOUSTON) (1/2/93, 4 BB, 2 BA, 1 CB, 2 GR, 1 RR, 26 AC, 4 RB, 4 UK, 11 AU, 20 DF)
  4. Run to You (WHITNEY HOUSTON) (6/6/93, 31 BB, 25 CB, 5 GR, 13 RR, 9 AC, 31 RB, 15 UK, 10 CN, 40 DF)
  5. Queen of the Night (WHITNEY HOUSTON) (11/6/93, 36 BB, 20 RR, 47 RB, 14 UK, 88 AU)
  6. Jesus Loves Me (WHITNEY HOUSTON)
  7. Even if My Heart Would Break (KENNY G/ AARON NEVILLE)
  8. Someday (I’m Coming Back) (LISA STANSFIELD)
  9. It’s Gonna Be a Lovely Day (S.O.U.L. S.Y.S.T.E.M.)
  10. What’s So Funny ‘Bout Peace, Love and Understanding (CURTIS STIGERS)
  11. Waiting for You (KENNY G) *
  12. Trust in Me (JOE COCKER/ SASS JORDAN)
  13. Theme from ‘The Bodyguard’ (ALAN SILVESTRI)
* not on U.S. album


Total Running Time: 57:44

Rating:

3.826 out of 5.00 (average of 22 ratings)


Awards:

(Click on award to learn more).

Whitney Houston’s Early Years

Whitney Houston was born in New Jersey in 1963. She became a backing vocalist while still in high school and signed to Arista Records at age 19. Her 1985 self-titled debut hit #1 and sold 14 million copies. Two years later, she sold ten million copies with Whitney. The two albums spawned seven consecutive chart-toppers on the Billboard Hot 100. 1990’s I’m Your Baby Tonight peaked at #3, sold another four million copies, and gave her two more #1 songs.

First Film Role

Clive Davis, the music mogul who signed Houston to Arista, said Houston really wanted to make a film. “’It was a very specific and determined decision on her part.’ I asked, ‘Well, can you afford to? You're making literally $20 to $50 million an album — a movie will probably take a year of your time. And can you get a part that you feel comfortable with that does justice to your talents?” GR “Houston met and exceeded Davis’ challenge to find a film role that could make her an even bigger star.” GR

She took a starring role in 1992 in The Bodyguard playing a famous – surprise, surprise – singer and actress who receives death threats from a stalker. Her manager hires a bodyguard (Kevin Costner) to protect her. They have an affair but go their separate ways in the end.

Costner, who co-produced the film, said Houston “was his first and only pick to portray his female co-lead.” GR He said, “We just needed a world-class voice, a world-class beauty in a sense and a world-class presence, and…I didn’t see anybody on the landscape that actually matched up with what we needed in a contemporary way and a musical way.’” GR “It would be difficult to argue with Costner's point. Houston, a stunning former model, was already a pop star of the magnitude of a fictional character.” GR

Commercially, the film “was a healthy success, due not only to Houston, but to her co-star Kevin Costner’s drawing power.” AM It earned $411 million in 1992, making it the year’s second highest-earning film globally. GR

Houston’s performance received praise from Robert Ebert, who said she was “at home in the role, she photographs wonderfully, and has a warm smile, and yet is able to suggest selfish and egotistical dimensions in the character.” GR However, the movie was generally panned by critics and received seven nominations for the Golden Raspberry Awards, including Worst Picture, Worst Actor, and Worst Actress. Not surprisingly, “Houston’s singing is much better than her acting.” AZ

The Soundtrack

The soundtrack, however, was a runaway success. It spent 20 weeks at #1 and sold more than 45 million copies worldwide to become the best-selling soundtrack of all time. GR It also won the Grammy for Album of the Year. “Like many phenomena of that magnitude, it’s hard to see, in retrospect, what triggered such a massive public response.” AM Of course, the album is “a testament to the production of Babyface who, through the mid-1990s, actually was the mainstream of contemporary hit music.” AZ There’s also the fact that the soundtrack is frontloaded with Whitney Houston songs.

However, the “second half is filled with the flotsam and jetsam typical for a big-budget soundtrack – an excerpt from Alan Silverstri’s score, some flavorless but pleasant Kenny G instrumentals, dated pop and dance numbers, and a cover (Curtis Stigers’ take on What’s So Funny ‘Bout Peace, Love and Understanding, which is notable in some circles as the recording that made the song’s author, Nick Lowe, a millionaire).” AM “Nothing unpleasant…but not what you would expect to find at the top end of a list of all-time big-selling albums.” TB

“I Will Always Love You”

Then again, Houston’s “jaw-dropping version” GR of Dolly Parton’s 1974 ballad I Will Always Love You that opens the album and serves as the lead single became one of the most iconic songs of all time. It was “a lighting-in-a-bottle pairing of the right song with the right voice .” GR It spent a record-shattering 14 weeks atop the Billboard Hot 100 and ranks as one of the top-10 songs of the rock era, according to the DMDB book The Top 100 Songs of the Rock Era, 1954-1999. Grammy.com’s Billy Johnson Jr. goes so far as to say it is “arguably the best female pop vocal performance of all time.” GR

Interestingly, the song wasn’t the first choice as “the soundtrack’s pivotal song.” GR Costner wanted a cover of “What Becomes of the Broken Hearted” by Jimmy Ruffin but a cover of the song was featured in the movie Fried Green Tomatoes, which was released while The Bodyguard was in production. GR Costner then pitched “I Will Always Love You” to Houston, Davis, and producer David Foster, using Linda Ronstadt’s 1975 version as a reference. They loved it. GR

The Other Whitney Songs

The other Whitney songs “rank among Houston’s best efforts…It’s not startling enough to justify the phenomenon, but…[they] are all first-rate urban pop songs that skillfully capture Houston at her best. In a sense, the album is no different than any other album Houston recorded.” AM I Have Nothing and Run to You were “power pop ballads” GR in the same vein as “I Will Always Love You.” There’s also “an R&B dance cover of Chaka Khan’s I’m Every Woman, a rock-fueled crossover hit in Queen of the Night, and the pop/gospel offering Jesus Loves Me.” GR

“It may seem odd that a soundtrack is Houston's biggest-selling album to date but consider this – even her best records had five or six great songs surrounded by well-constructed filler; the same is true here, only the filler is recorded by other artists.” AM

Resources and Related Links:


Other Related DMDB Pages:


First posted 3/25/2008; last updated 11/29/2024.

Tuesday, December 1, 1992

Life Magazine "40 Years of Rock & Roll": The Songs

Life Magazine:

40 Years of Rock & Roll: The Songs

In 1992, Life magazine devoted a special issue to celebrate rock & roll, using the Moondog Coronation Ball held on March 21, 1952 in Cleveland as their starting point for rock & roll. They picked five songs to represent each year from 1952 to 1991. They also picked one album for each year from 1955 to 1991.

Click here to see other lists from publications and/or organizations. 1952:

  • The Dominoes “Have Mercy, Baby”
  • Lloyd Price “Lawdy Miss Clawdy”
  • Johnny Ace “My Song”
  • The Clovers “One Mint Julep”
  • Jimmy Forrest “Night Train”

1953:

  • Willie Mae Thornton ““Hound Dog
  • The Clovers “Money Honey”
  • The Orioles “Crying in the Chapel”
  • Ruth Brown “Mama, He Treats Your Daughter Mean”
  • Bill Haley & His Comets “Crazy Man Crazy”

1954:

  • The Chords “Sh-Boom
  • Johnny Ace “Pledging My Love”
  • Hank Ballard & the Midnighters “Work with Me Annie”
  • The Drifters “Honey Love”
  • Big Joe Turner “Shake, Rattle and Roll”

1955:

1956:

1957:

1958:

  • Dion & the Belmonts “I Wonder Why”
  • Little Anthony & the Imperials “Tears on My Pillow”
  • Chuck Berry “Johnny B. Goode
  • Jackie Wilson “Lonely Teardrops”
  • Eddie Cochran “Summertime Blues”

1959:

  • Dion & the Belmonts “A Teenager in Love”
  • Wilbert Harrison “Kansas City”
  • The Drifters “There Goes My Baby”
  • Ritchie Valens “Donna” / “La Bamba
  • The Crests “Sixteen Candles”

1960:

  • Brenda Lee “I’m Sorry”
  • Mark Dinning “Teen Angel”
  • Percy Faith “Theme from ‘A Summer Place’”
  • Roy Orbison “Only the Lonely”
  • Maurice Williams & the Zodiacs “Stay”

1961:

1962:

  • The Four Seasons “Big Girls Don’t Cry
  • The Crystals “He’s a Rebel”
  • The Miracles “You’ve Really Got a Hold on Me”
  • Gene Chandler “Duke of Earl
  • The Isley Brothers “Twist and Shout”

1963:

1964:

1965:

1966:

1967:

1968:

1969:

1970:

  • The Kinks “Lola”
  • The Miracles “The Tears of a Clown”
  • James Taylor “Fire and Rain”
  • Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young “Woodstock”
  • Van Morrison “Moondance”

1971:

1972:

1973:

  • Edgar Winter Group “Frankenstein”
  • Lou Reed “Walk on the Wild Side
  • Gladys Knight & the Pips “Midnight Train to Georgia”
  • The Rolling Stones “Angie”
  • The O’Jays “Love Train”

1974:

  • Lynyrd Skynyrd “Sweet Home Alabama
  • Bachman-Turner Overdrive “Takin’ Care of Business”
  • Steely Dan “Rikki Don’t Lose That Number”
  • Eagles “Best of My Love”
  • Joni Mitchell “Help Me”

1975:

  • Eagles “One of These Nights”
  • Linda Ronstadt “You’re No Good”
  • Queen “Bohemian Rhapsody
  • David Bowie “Fame”
  • Bob Marley & the Wailers “No Woman, No Cry”

1976:

  • Peter Frampton “Show Me the Way”
  • Paul Simon “50 Ways to Leave Your Lover”
  • Heart “Crazy on You”
  • Daryl Hall & John Oates “She’s Gone”
  • Boz Scaggs “Lowdown”

1977:

1978:

  • Talking Heads “Psycho Killer”
  • Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers “Breakdown”
  • Billy Joel “Just the Way You Are
  • Elvis Costello “Watching the Detectives”
  • Meat Loaf “Paradise by the Dashboard Light”

1979:

  • The Police “Roxanne
  • Dire Straits “Sultans of Swing”
  • Donna Summer “Bad Girls”
  • The Doobie Brothers “What a Fool Believes”
  • Joe Jackson “Is She Really Going Out with Him?”

1980:

  • Blondie “Call Me
  • The Pretenders “Brass in Pocket (I’m Special)”
  • Pink Floyd “Another Brick in the Wall Part II
  • Bruce Springsteen “Hungry Heart”
  • Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band “Against the Wind”

1981:

  • Kim Carnes “Bette Davis Eyes
  • The Cars “Shake It Up”
  • The Go-Go’s “Our Lips Are Sealed”
  • The Pointer Sisters “Slow Hand”
  • REO Speedwagon “Keep on Loving You”

1982:

  • Joan Jett & the Blackhearts “I Love Rock and Roll
  • Joe Cocker & Jennifer Warnes “Up Where We Belong”
  • The Clash “Rock the Casbah”
  • Human League “Don’t You Want Me?
  • Men at Work “Who Can It Be Now?”

1983:

1984:

1985:

1986:

  • Bruce Hornsby & the Range “The Way It Is”
  • Robert Palmer “Addicted to Love”
  • Prince “Kiss
  • Whitney Houston “How Will I Know”
  • Steve Winwood “Higher Love”

1987:

1988:

  • Tracy Chapman “Fast Car
  • INXS “New Sensation”
  • Terence Trent D’Arby “Wishing Well”
  • Guns N’ Roses “Sweet Child O’ Mine
  • Def Leppard “Love Bites”

1989:

  • Paula Abdul “Straight Up”
  • Public Enemy “Fight the Power”
  • Bonnie Raitt “Thing Called Love”
  • Fine Young Cannibals “She Drives Me Crazy”
  • Tone Loc “Wild Thing”

1990:

  • Sinéad O’Connor “Nothing Compares 2 U
  • Faith No More “Epic”
  • Mariah Carey “Vision of Love”
  • Chris Isaak “Wicked Game”
  • Technotronic “Pump Up the Jam”

1991:


Resources/Related Links:

First posted 4/9/2021.