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The Now Yearbook series continues both forwards, with Now Yearbook 1985 issued in November 2022, and backwards, with the release of Now Yearbook 1979 in September 2022 (an Extra followed in October). The latter contains a new retro-70s Now logo design and artwork which complements its 80s sister Yearbook series.
The original Now Yearbook 1983 [25] could be initially ordered as a special book-style CD boxset, with the title joined a few months later by a standard CD boxset called Now Yearbook Extra 1983 which promised '60 more essential hits from 1983', and tracks like Kenny Everett's "Snot Rap", Roman Holliday's "Don’t Try to Stop It" and "Friday ...
Now That's What I Call the 1990s is a special edition compilation album from the (U.S.) Now! series released on November 9, 2010. [ 1 ] It entered the Billboard 200 albums chart at No. 173 in the issue dated November 27, 2010.
The channel has also created a number of programmes to tie-in with the release of the Now Yearbook series of 4-CD and 3-LP vinyl sets. Each album release represents a year of music, with the Now Yearbook programme following suit and featuring a month by month video playlist of tracks, from the year featured on the Now Yearbook album, with Bruno ...
The re-release of her album "1989" comes as Swift has another accomplishment to add to her growing list of accolades: Billionaire. Taylor Swift is now a billionaire, releases '1989 (Taylor's Version)'
Now That's What I Call Music! (simply titled NOW) was released on October 27, 1998.Modeled after the highly successful Now That's What I Call Music! series in the United Kingdom, which compiles a number of songs that are popular around the time of its release, this album is the first edition of the Now! series in the United States.
Taylor Swift has proved that she can cross musical genres and still come out on top — and she wouldn’t have it any other way. “I got to make real leaps [in] 1989, Reputation and Folklore ...
Taylor slammed critics who criticize her for singing about relationships and her exes as "sexist," and we agree. Going one step further, we love that she sings about her exes and puts them on ...