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Introduction: Many of us may have picked up hobbies during lockdown. I personally chose to start taking a look back at some of the Music, TV Shows and Movies that made my ‘noughties’ decade. In 2000 I would have been 13-Years Old just starting Junior High. Music played a big part into shaping who I am and taking a look back to all my favorite albums has been very interesting to say the least!

I am not some writer girl </housewives reference> however. I’ll be honest most of what I will be writing will not be when I’m sober - so stick with me.

 

Honestly, my taste hasn’t evolved very much since I was a child, as we take a look through my favorite Artists, Albums and Tracks I think you’ll see many are still around producing music or influencing what I listen to as an adult. I’m 34 (at the time of writing this) and music continues to be a big part of my life during some very difficult times.

My Experience With Music: I chuckle as I write this as I had zero influence with music growing up. My parents, specifically my Father would listen to the same four or five songs growing up, the loudest it could humanly be played. I used to dread Sunday Mornings as a child because my dad would always wake up early, blast some very questionable tunes and wake up the entire household. On the road, it was AM Talk Radio. I did not grow up in a musical household at all.

 

I was however very much influenced to find my niche when it came to music, my parents were very supportive of whatever I wanted to listen to. I had all the latest MP3 Players, Discman and Cassette Players. Anything I wanted to listen to music on - I had at my disposal. I was very fortunate to grow-up in the height of piracy and the start of music based Reality TV. Both heavily influenced where I am today in what I listen to.

 

Before the world of Spotify and Apple Music, we had Napster, MuzicMatters and Limewire. It was actually a fantastic time to be alive. Not only did we have what we wanted to listen to quickly at our disposal, we had access to Demos, Leaked Tracks, Radio Edits and the most random tracks that will probably never see the light of day on a streaming service (looking at you, Liberty X Discography, Velvet Ft. Linda Bengtzing, Scene23 ect.)

 

I would rip albums and tracks onto a CD-R and would take my discman with me everywhere. I used to have a leather CD wallet as well filled to the brim. I felt I had so much independence with the music I was listening to. Family trips, I’d sit in the back of the car and listen to album after album. I however never really felt I had a strong peer group of friends with the same taste in music as me however. Honestly, most of my friends grew up just re-listening to a lot of what their parents listened to. Lot’s more on this when I take a look back at a few of the albums below.

 

What To Expect: Honestly I’m going to be all over the place with this. It’s not a ranking, It’s not a countdown, I’m really not going in any specific order. Some memories and albums I will cover off quickly, some I will do a deeper dive into.

A few of the first few albums I will cover off carry very specific and memorable experiences in my life. They may or may not be albums I really listen to a lot today. Many are, many I’ve moved on from.

When I started down this venture 11 Months Ago I started categorizing my music my year (2000/01/02 ect) and some of that process will be followed through in this thread, however Spotify isn’t particularly all that reliable with release details on a lot of these albums, so if things seem out of order at times. Meh.

 

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A*Teens - Teen Spirit

Top Five Tracks: Upside Down, Halfway Around The World, Rockin’, Slammin’ Kinda Love, Back For More

 

I don’t think I’m actually ready to go through this album and my experience. There’s a lot here. Your patience as we review this masterpiece is appreciated.

A*Teens Background: This is actually not this group's first album, they released as ‘Abba Teens’ an album in 1999 called ‘The ABBA Generation’ filled to the brim with Abba tracks. Now if my parents grew up listening to Abba - I would have been ELATED. They didn’t even own ‘Gold’. The Abba Generation had a lot of success, even in Canada! I remember Much Music playing the Mamma Mia music video all the time. Dancing Queen also did very well here. The ‘Abba Teens’ opened up the world of Abba a bit more for me as well.

 

My Background with A*Teens: I can’t recall specifically when this all happened, but it likely was right after the release of Teen Spirit. I was actually one of the Forum Admins and Website Developers for the A*Teens. We had such an amazing community online. I remember the very visual esthetics that came with their third album as well.

I remember there became a point where I had :30 second clips of each of the songs on the album before they were released (by this time Upside Down and Halfway Around The World were released as singles). Me and my friends used to spend our lunch hours in the Art Room dancing along to the clips of all the songs and creating dance routines. I also remember throwing the snippets onto a CD-R, giving it to one of my friends and they HATED the whole thing.

 

This was the first album I ever bought. Memories hey?

 

Honestly I was embarrassed by my fandom! None of my friends even came close to liking the sugary-pop goodness, but I couldn’t get enough. I remember my mom driving me to the mall the day the album was released in Canada. I had one stop - the HMV. Of course I was bound to run into two of the most popular girls in school on the hunt for ‘Teen Spirit’. I was always disappointed I never really had friends with the same taste in music as me.

 

The Album: Upside Down was the first song released from the album. I actually think Upside Down was the first song I ever fell in love with. The breath-in at the beginning of the song is absolutely euphoric and hits the same way as it did when it was released 20 years ago. No word of a lie - I probably listened to this song 100 times in the first 24 hours.

I’ve actually never been a huge music video person, but the music video they released I remember absolutely loving that as well. Upside Down absolutely turned my life Upside Down when it was released. It started my absolute obsession with this group.

 

Halfway Around The World came next and I was floored. Not only is the song absolute top pop, the music video they produced, the paint by numbers choreography and all, was simply divine. This routine that they duplicated in their live performance was what I danced to in that Art Class during my lunch break. Halfway Around The World was absolutely the follow up single that Upside Down deserved.

 

The album had three released singles including Sugar Rush (it is as sweet as it sounds), it was a post-album released single but came with a lot of discussion online as it was also released by Boyband ‘Dream Street’ as a single as well! I didn’t pay much attention back in the day but it looks as if Dream Street beat A*Teens to the punch with this track, but there was a point in time where both A*Teens and Dream Street were at a music festival and both sang ‘Sugar Rush’ back to back, with a lot of confusion (random music memory!!)

 

I do recall rumours that ‘...To The Music” was supposed to be a single as well, but I guess that never ended up happening. The rest of the album is pure pop heaven for me. The run of sugary pop between Upside Down to Sugar Rush, only to be stopped in our tracks by ‘Rockin’’ gives consideration to the tracklisting they’ve provided.

We return to pure pop heaven with ‘Slammin’ Kinda Love’ - this track for me is absolutely one of their most visual tracks. In my mind I’ve created the perfect music video for this track, set at my Junior High during Basketball Practice. The three key changes to a lower key at 2:05 and 2:20 and 2:40 are absolutely everything to me.

 

I always need to end myself on another sugary-pop rush, For All That I Am and Back For More remain two of A*Teens top album tracks for me. Picking between the two to add into my Top 5 Tracks is literally impossible. I will say I do alternate Rockin’/For All That I Am and Back For More in my Top 5.

 

This album had it’s 20-Year Anniversary in 2021, but it’s an album I’ve always revisited. It has so many nostalgic memories for me. I have no doubt if Last.FM existed back in 2001 and I used it, Teen Spirit would be my most played album of all times.

 

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Britney Spears - Oops!... I Did It Again

Top 5 Tracks: Oops!... I Did It Again, Stronger, Lucky, What U See (Is What U Get), Can’t Make You Love Me

 

As I referenced above, A*Teens was the first album I ever purchased, well this was actually my first Cassette. Eek. I guess my parents moved me into the CD era quite quickly, but I do have memories of a kid having a little Sony boombox which required approximately 6 huge batteries to operate. I definitely know I was a spoiled child growing up, but I remember buying this cassette at Wal-Mart and was super excited to give it a spin.

 

One of the earliest memories of this album was the release of the ‘Oops!...’ single. I remember hearing some mixed bitrate awful quality recording of Britney performing the song before the single was released. Someone in my Grade 7 or 8 French Class was singing ‘Oops!...’ randomly and it was the first time I knew someone in my age group that actually listened to the same music as I did.

 

The Album: One of my favorite, most played Britney albums by far.

Oops!... being the first song I heard from the album, but from what I recall I don’t think I heard a single other track before actually buying the cassette. Oops!... absolutely never gets old. A Britney classic. I have so many other memories from this album - but my experience with Lucky probably stands out the most in my mind.

 

Lucky for me was one of the album's standout tracks, it felt like a personal treasure to me because amongst friends and peers there was gravitation towards ‘Stronger’ being the superior song. I remember when Lucky was announced as the next single after the album dropped and I was overjoyed. I remember the day the music video dropped, waking up and having Much Music on ALL. DAY to catch the debut of the music video. Fast forward to mid-day. Still nothing.

I turned to one of the Britney fan pages - FINALLY. The Music Video was uploaded by someone.

Now. This is 2000 yall. My parents had a dial-up 52.8 K internet connection. Estimated download time, probably 5 hours.

At least there was an option on the table, as the download progresses, I come to the realization that I probably won’t be seeing the video on TV anytime soon. I creep out of my parents basement, only to return a few moments later to the Lucky video nearing a close on Much Music. I was DEVASTATED. I had the worst luck as a child. Classic Aaron.

 

The remainder of the album is significantly strong and has brilliant single choices. Stronger is one of Britney’s best tracks ever, there are a few tracks on the album I do have a hard time revisiting (call me a bad Britney fan…). Don’t Go Knockin’ On My Door, (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction and Where Are You Now I definitely don’t shortlist on a relisten of the album. But, even listening to Where Are You Now and re-visiting this album during my write up, I have so many memories just laying in bed and giving this cassette a lot of attention.

 

Honestly, I had bigger albums lined up for a review with a lot more detail, but this album really does represent one of my earliest music memories and how privileged I was to have a lot of these experiences with music and how amazing my parents were supporting me.

 

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K-Otic - Bullet Proof

Top 5 Songs: I Can’t Explain, When The Heart Is Connected, No Perfect World, Call For Me, I Was Made To Love You

 

Phew, I toyed with putting K-Otic and their influence on my music first instead of A*Teens, but A*Teens won because of a more tangible relationship. I’ve never seen K-Otic in person, I’ve never owned anything of theirs, but they were a huge find for me and one of the biggest influences for me musically.

The Discovery - I Really Don’t Think So

 

2001 was the height of music based Reality TV. 2001, Hear’Say won Popstars. Honestly not on a lot of peoples radar, including my own. But Popstars started a chain of Reality Based Music Competitions. Popstars and Pop/American Idol really started coming to the front of mainstream TV, including the 2nd Season of American Popstars, creating Scene23.

I’ve always been a fan of mixed gender pop groups and watching Scene23 be created before my eyes was amazing. Their first single was released called ‘I Really Don’t Think So’. A great pop earworm, but nothing really materialized for Scene23 (minus Josh Henderson’s career). I did discover ‘I Really Don’t Think So’ was a cover, initially on the album Bullet Proof by K-Otic.

 

I didn’t know it yet, but I had made one of the biggest musical discoveries personally for myself.

 

K-Otic The Background: I discovered K-Otic right after the release of their first album, shortly before the release of their second album. All I really had for reference was good old Pop Forum research. I learned quickly that K-Otic was formed on a Dutch Reality TV show, the irony! ‘Starmaker’ started airing in March 2001 and was a mixture between Popstars and Big Brother. I forget a bit of the premise, but it seems like they just wrote and sang songs all day. I think a few people may have been voted out in a public vote, but ultimately K-Otic was formed with 7 Members. The more I listened to the album and their story and the videos I could watch online, I became a sponge and tried to absorb as much information on K-Otic as I could.

Their music videos were always fun and poppy. Their story was so interesting for me to research, I always had a dream that me and my besties would form a mixed gender pop group and take over the world. K-Otic’s music fed a lot of my dreams.

The Album: I Really Don’t Think So is a great place for us to start, it was their fourth single and what really put K-Otic on my radar. Controversy - the K-Otic version of ‘I Really Don’t Think So’ is not my favorite. Scene23’s is. K-Otic’s version is much more folk-sy. Honestly, it’s not even the best song on their album, but it is the most versatile and really allows an opportunity for a mixed group to have their members shine on the tracks.

 

Their second single and the story that goes behind it really cemented my obsession for K-Otic. The second single was ‘I Was Made To Love You’ sung only by Bart and Sita during filming for Star Maker. It’s a slow song, at this point in time I hate all slow songs and ballads. Give me the corkers. I Was Made To Love You absolutely changed all of that. It was the first slow song I ever fell in love with. There is so much imagery for me with this song, it’s a perfect song to take a long walk in the winter after it’s snowed. It’s the perfect slow song for the first dance at a wedding. It’s a song that I still love, adore and cherish to this day.

 

On the slow song bandwagon, I’d be doing a disservice not stopping by ‘Call For Me’. It’s a song that gets bounced around the group a few times, but it’s not as lovey dovey as I Was Made To Love You, so for me it gives off a very ‘friendship’ vibe. In a good way. The song in reality is a break-up song, but I see it more as a song about friends that maybe haven’t seen each other in a long time.

 

The single run they produced next was pretty flawless. I Can’t Explain, I Really Don’t Think So and No Perfect World really took the opportunity to showcase the group's true talents. I Can’t Explain is one of my favorites on the album, it’s a great mixture of Pop-Rock/Country. No Perfect World follows with the same impact as well, it’s got a very catchy Pop/Rock chorus.

 

The song I glazed over was actually their first single Damn (I Think I Love You). The song is a heavy hitter much like ‘I Can’t Explain’ and ‘No Perfect World’ but I think what lets it down was the awful music video they produced, they stepped up with their later singles and videos however.

 

The final album track that really grips me is ‘When The Heart Is Connected’. There is cohesion between the first four tracks (all singles, all very communal pop/rock/country songs) but ‘When The Heart Is Connected’ comes out of absolutely nowhere. It’s got a very dark and moody start. There are guitars. Bells. 30 seconds in and not a word has been sung. 4:15 is long for a pop song, but I adore the whole 4:15 this song breathes. It’s the first song that came as a surprise for me, the group wasn’t as poppy and uplifting as I was to believe they were.

 

The Album went to #1 in The Netherlands and is pretty close to being #1 in my heart. I spent hours upon hours with this album. Researching, listening. My mind was completely open to doing these amazing pop discoveries (ie. the internet came to my household). This was the first big musical find for me. This was the album I sang into my hairbrush.

 

This won’t be the last write up for K-Otic, or one of its members.

K-Otic reunited a few years ago for a crowdfunded concert, one of my biggest regrets was not going. A fan also posted a reunion documentary which covered off a lot of things I had no idea about. I’ll be revisiting this tonight.

 

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Sita - Happy

Top 5 Songs: Happy, The World Goes Round, I Surrender, You Make Me Feel (Like Myself), Strong Winds

 

I outlined in my last post the influence K-Otic had with my childhood and what really began my journey into Music discovery. But, you can’t talk about K-Otic without talking about their standout artist, Sita.

Taking ourselves back to when K-Otic had released their first album ‘Bullet Proof’, Sita was the absolute standout of the group. Although my memory on all of this is likely very fuzzy (and answered in the video clips above), I believe Sita technically may have won ‘Starmaker’ and given a solo career of her own. I may be totally wrong with this and she may have decided to go solo on her own. Either way, Sita delivered 2 primo solo albums. One in 2001 and another in 2003. Both had a very profound influence on my childhood - so let’s take a look back!

The Discovery - Happy

Sita had already released her solo album, and her hit single ‘Happy’ before my discovery of K-Otic. The problem with K-Otic’s success and the band itself was the music wasn’t really in their realm of interest. I’m not too sure if this would be the same case for Sita - but you definitely got the sense very early in this album that she had her own sound compared to K-Otic.

Happy itself is a Country-Pop-Rock song. It’s infectious. It’s more mature compared to K-Otic’s work. Happy was such a smash single for me. It was followed up by the equally punchy ‘Hello’.

 

I remember being 15 and thought this entire album was amazing. It definitely hasn’t aged all that well for me. You could definitely tell this album was geared towards a younger demographic, but I burned a hole in this album. I remember taking summer trips, driving around the mountains and this album was the soundtrack to most of this. It felt to me like such an evolution to what I had been listening to up to this point.

 

The Rest Of The Album

I can almost split this album in two. You have your punchy songs like Happy, Hello, Selfish and Jerk. But you also have your moments of lyrical brilliance and a deep dive into Country Music that influenced some of the early music in the 2000s.

When this album came out I absolutely championed the songs released as singles and the more instant songs, but I’ve found with time I’ve gravitated towards the other songs on this album. The ones that aren’t as out there as the lead singles.

The World Goes Round is just one of those tracks I can listen to over and over. There’s a story here that was completely lost on me when I was a kid. “While the homeless man with a handful of change drinks his dinner down on main… and the world goes round” still slaps. The song continues with other stories, but at the end of the day “The world goes round, spinning to the beat of different drums, and different dreams”. This was one of the first songs I ever heard that had a great level of storytelling for me.

You Make Me Feel (Like Myself) is a jump right back on the Pop Bandwagon and is another standout track to me. I always felt like this track could have been a fantastic single, it has a great message while still staying on the Pop Track, but I find this track is perhaps less polarizing compared to Jerk and Hello.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sita - Come With Me

Top Five Tracks: Come With Me, Even As Your Friend, Gravity, Weak, With You

 

Sita’s second album release from 2003. This was a completely different feeling from her first album. She moved from a very Pop/Country/Rock sound to a pure ethereal pop. This album is so dreamy it’s unbelievable.

This album for me came completely out of nowhere. We hardly ever get surprise releases or drops, but back in 2003 it was very difficult following artists online, especially with a smaller fanbase like Sita. I just completely stumbled on this randomly one day and fell in love with this album. Perhaps even more-so than her first album.

 

The Album

Come With Me being one of the first releases, it definitely does tie back to her first album unlike any other track on the album. As a song, it’s alright. It wasn’t one of my instant favorite tracks from her, I felt it lacked a bit of a punch and didn’t have as much storytelling as her previous album. Track #2 definitely sets the tone for the rest of the album as well. HOW DO YOU TELL YOUR FANS YOUR A POPSTAR?! Release a song called ‘Popstar’, reference Jay Leno and you’re done. Popstar is pretty much a pop song, painted by numbers. It’s not one of Sita’s best - but it sets the tone very well for the adventure we are about to take.

 

The album continues with pure pop brilliance. Even As Your Friend was one of the standout tracks for me. As a 17-ish year old when this came out it was perhaps a little lost on me lyrically. I never really faced any personal issues with friendships until my mid-20s, but this song is always a good one to revisit to check-in with your friendships.

Gravity and Weak still have me floored to this day. The two tracks are so absolutely dreamy and shimmering with Pop goodness. Weak just explodes into this magical chorus. I never really found a firm K-Otic or Sita fanbase to chat with, but I still remember to this day someone on my Last.FM comments commenting ‘Weak’ was their favorite track.

 

These two albums had such a huge impact to me growing up.

Happy the album I have strong memories of Summer when I was a kid… just driving around with the family or family trips. I remember driving down long and winding roads giving this album a few listens over and over.

 

Come With Me serves another purpose. I don’t have specific memories of listening to the album as much, but it’s an album I always had on the background. I specifically remember with the release of the ‘Come With Me’ album, I was part of an online forum where you essentially create a ‘Popstar’ or ‘Band’ with Fake Songs, Singles and Albums and the others on the forum ‘Buy’ the singles on a weekly basis. My artist WAS Sita. I remember releasing a Double-A Side of ‘Popstar/Rockstar’. OH THE MEMORIES!!

 

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K-Otic - Indestructible

Top Five Tracks: Falling, I Surrender, Don’t Make Me Wait, Scream and Bleed, Cryin’

 

Alright, this ends the K-Otic and Sita quad-album spectacular. Indestructible was the second and final album from K-Otic. The song produced two top singles and a final single that didn’t end up making it on the album ‘Tears Won’t Dry’.

The Album: They didn’t hold back on releasing this album as quickly as they could. 13 Months following their smash album, K-Otic released Indestructible and the massive hit single ‘Falling’. The track was punchy and on brand for K-Otic. Their biggest and most well known single by far.

The following single was equally as punchy, penned later as the original inspiration for Emmelie de Forest’s ‘Only Teardrops’, K-Otic’s track ‘I Surrender’ was a beast of a track with an amazing video. Listening to the first two tracks on Indestructible you start to get the sense that K-Otic wasn’t just a one off, but a true Pop Powerhouse Group that could continue to deliver amazing pop goodness.

 

The rest of the album however I found a bit lackluster? With their first album I found so many amazing Album Tracks that for me over the years surpassed some of the singles they chose to release. Indestructible is a bit different however, the Singles were definitely the standout tracks. Each member was also given a solo track on the album as well. Many ended up being covers. These tracks I almost compare to the sugary pop goodness that was A*Teens ‘Teen Spirit’.

Never Gonna Get My Love and Weightless will leave you in a sugar induced coma by the end of the album.

Scream and Bleed, Burnin’ and Amazed dial things down a bit, but I always found the tracklisting was the problem with the album. The singles at the top, the rockier album tracks followed by the sugary goodness, and of course ‘On t’ which was mislabeled on the album and on Spotify seemed to be a throwaway track that didn’t blend with the rest of the album.

 

Honestly, the album as a whole hasn’t aged as well as their first. But it’s still a critically important album in their discography even if it was just to give us Falling and I Surrender.

 

I do have fond memories of the album as well. The two lead singles were massive for me and appeared on almost every blended playlist I would make as a kid during this era. I ended up watching the K-Otic documentary over the holidays. It’s crazy to think it was really a blend of Big Brother and Idol. The group really had no idea what they were getting into and Producers seemed to just fly by the seat of their pants. K-Otic is and always will remain one of the most influential pop groups of my time.

 

  • 2 months later...
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A*Teens - Pop ‘Til You Drop

Top Five Tracks: Floorfiller, Closer To Perfection, Hi And Goodbye, Oh, Oh… Yeah, Cross My Heart

 

Time for a review of another pop classic, I’ve confessed my absolute obsession with A*Teens, it seems fitting to talk about this mammoth album.

 

Let’s Discuss The Memories: No doubt with Teen Spirit being an absolute smash their follow-up album was going to deliver something massive. People still talk about ‘Upside Down’ being a Pop Classic and they’re absolutely right. This album definitely continued down the track that A*Teens were going to become Pop Legends.

 

Although not included on the Pop ‘Til You Drop album, A*Teens had also released ‘Heartbreak Lullaby’ AND ‘Can’t Help Falling In Love’ by this point, they were massive in the Disney channel. This album was highly anticipated and I was still doing a lot of work with the A*Teens Website and Forum.

 

I remember being responsible for updating the main website as the album was about to be released, and again getting :30 Second Snippets of the songs for the fans to listen to. Everyone collectively gasped with the clip of Closer To Perfection.

 

Let’s Discuss The Album: I think I’ll probably start talking about what doesn’t work on this album for me and work my way up to utter Pop Perfection.

 

I could have sworn that Schools Out (feat. Alice Cooper) was a single at some point? My memories of these times are a bit hazy, but yes… this falls to the bottom of the list. Overproduced and just… silly? Perhaps this was a bit of a buzz single because I definitely remember being disappointed with this, it’s not really something I revisit.

 

This Year and Singled Out are the two other duds for me in this album. This Year could have been a good song but everyone just sounds so lackluster and generic on the song, if This Year came on shuffle I don’t think I could tell you who sings it. With a album only full of 11 songs, having 3 really stand out poorly is a disappointment, but I only really notice it now, definitely not at the time.

 

The rest of this album is pure pop perfection, I have my top 5 at the top… just missing out would be Let Your Heart Do All The Talking, Slam and In The Blink Of An Eye.

Slam to me always sounded like a continuation of ‘Slammin’ Kinda Love’ from Teen Spirit to me - I could almost see an identical vision for the music video as well. Slam honestly is probably track #6 for me on the album.

Let Your Heart Do All The Talking did absolutely nothing for me back in the day and does absolutely nothing for me now. It’s cute, it’s abrasive, it’s funky, but I always preferred other songs on this album. I didn’t really think LYHDATT deserved to be a single honestly.

 

Closer To Perfection and Floorfiller are the top 2 of the album for me.

Closer To Perfection is probably my favorite A*Teens song of ALL. TIME.

 

Closer To Perfection is unlike anything else in A*Teens discography.

Closer To Perfection is unlike anything in most people's discography.

Closer To Perfection is Perfection.

 

I’m blown away it was never a single. It does however seem like a small hidden gem, just for me to enjoy anytime I want. Closer To Perfection and Upside Down are two of the A*Teens finest.

 

The other track of course is Floorfiller.

Massive Song. Massive Music Video. Massive Remixes that went along with it as well - ever check out the Extended Mix? Do it. Do it now.

 

Floorfiller should have been a massive bridge for them to move away from some of the Sugary Pop with the two mentioned covers. It’s a bit bigger, but doesn’t leave you with that Pop hangover. Floorfiller should have been massive. Floorfiller should have been played in every club, ever. Floorfiller should be on everyone’s pre-game playlist.

 

There’s honestly so much to this album it really should have catapulted the A*Teens even further into the Pop atmosphere globally.

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