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The Biggest New Hits on One Album 26 (Canadian series) Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Now That's What I Call Music! 26 .
Now That's What I Call Musicals 2012 (26 November 2012) 2-CD; Now That's What I Call 30 Years (27 May 2013) 3-CD. Released to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Now. Now That's What I Call Disco (26 August 2013) 3-CD; Now That's What I Call 80s Dance (14 October 2013) 3-CD; Now That's What I Call Music! USA (21 October 2013) 3-CD
Amidst the conception of the series, the name found its roots in a distinctive source. An old 1920s Danish Bacon poster featuring a pig saying "Now, That's What I Call Music" as it listened to a chicken singing, [3] discovered by Branson in an antiques shop not far from their Vernon yard office, where a woman he liked named Joan Templeman was working.
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.
Now That's What I Call Music! 27 was released on March 11, 2008. The album is the 27th edition of the Now! series in the United States. It debuted at number two on the Billboard 200, although, with opening week sales at 169,000 units, it was the lowest opening week for a Now! album from the main series since the first volume.
It includes 20 tracks that were released on previous editions of the Now! series. Now! #1's reached number six on the Billboard 200 albums chart and was certified Gold by the RIAA . On May 4, 2015, an updated version of the compilation was released, featuring hits from 2006–2015.
The album is the fourth edition of the Now! series released in the United States. It debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 albums chart. [2] This was the first album in the American series to reach number one and marked "the first time ever that an album of previously released hits has debuted at number one in the U.S." [3]
Andy Kellman in his review for AllMusic recognizes that a lot of top artists contribute to Now! 20 but those artists "deliver songs that are either tepid retreads or safe compounds of past hits", but it's the songs by the newer artists of the time "that keeps the compilation from being disposable", pointing out tracks by the Pussycat Dolls, Fall Out Boy, and Rihanna as standouts from this volume.