@ZenGiraffe CHANGE THE OPTIONS TO ONE! I will not have you YOUNG SCAMPS ruining my thread.
BOO!@ZenGiraffe CHANGE THE OPTIONS TO ONE! I will not have you YOUNG SCAMPS ruining my thread.
BOO!
I’m not Nowoco!Don’t START. Not in MY WHITNEY THREAD. If you have BEEF take it to the Adele thread. GOT IT?
Exactly my thought, and probably the reason why underperformed. I would even say it was a moderate flop given that we are talking about miss Houston.Would be a 10, but there's something just a bit CLEAN about it.
It charted higher in the UK than 'Didn't We Almost Have It All', 'Where Do Broken Hearts Go', 'Run To You' and 'Queen of the Night'. It was on a par with Whitney's chart positions from mid 1993 to 1997. I'd hardly call it a flop. Surely that honour belongs to 'My Name Is Not Susan'?I would even say it was a moderate flop given that we are talking about miss Houston.
Well My name is not Susan was the forth single from that album, so hardly the same. #15 in the US for Step by Step, second single and first uptempo, was surely seen as a flop.It charted higher in the UK than 'Didn't We Almost Have It All', 'Where Do Broken Hearts Go', 'Run To You' and 'Queen of the Night'. It was on a par with Whitney's chart positions from mid 1993 to 1997. I'd hardly call it a flop. Surely that honour belongs to 'My Name Is Not Susan'?
Anything released those days was a hit in the chart, given than they hardly released ANY single here. I mean, 99% of the commercial singles weren't released here anymore, the singles market was dead by then.#2 in Spain was a huge slump for female artists in the 90s.
Wasn't your original point that the single could be considered as being a "moderate flop" by Whitney standards? I'm merely just pointing out that in the UK it charted higher than several other singles she had previously released. She's had bigger 'flops' than this one.Well My name is not Susan was the forth single from that album, so hardly the same. #15 in the US for Step by Step, second single and first uptempo, was surely seen as a flop.
Anything released those days was a hit in the chart, given than they hardly released ANY single here. I mean, 99% of the commercial singles weren't released here anymore, the singles market was dead by then.
The singles chart (and the #1 songs in particular) in the 90s is the most random and horryfing thing you can imagine. I mean, this was #1 for months. See if you can recognise the tune (the chorus basically)Alla, anytime you want to write about the Spanish charts in the 90s I am all but a dry sponge ready to absorb the knowledge.
The singles chart (and the #1 songs in particular) in the 90s is the most random and horryfing thing you can imagine. I mean, this was #1 for months. See if you can recognise the tune (the chorus basically)