@WhatALovelyUvula @CocoaNut @Background Pony #7FBE
Guys , it means that the general public was first able to hear it (legally) on that date, so for a vast majority of people living at the time, it was a 2000s song. If a movie were filmed in 1939 but released in 1940, you’d still call it a 40s movie.
To be fair, there was a lot of good music in the ‘90’s, but let’s face it: Those that think the ‘90’s were the best time for music tend to forget what was actually played the most. The most popular music tended to be the music that just… wasn’t going to last. We the good music from the ‘90’s, just as people will the good music from the ‘00’s and the ‘10’s.
@CocoaNut
@Background Pony #7FBE
Guys , it means that the general public was first able to hear it (legally) on that date, so for a vast majority of people living at the time, it was a 2000s song. If a movie were filmed in 1939 but released in 1940, you’d still call it a 40s movie.
Released on January 11th 2000. So they had eleven days to write and record it. Unlikely? Perhaps.
Yes, and it was written and recorded on the day of its release. Your logic is unassailable.
Bye Bye Bye was released in 2000
To be fair, there was a lot of good music in the ‘90’s, but let’s face it: Those that think the ‘90’s were the best time for music tend to forget what was actually played the most. The most popular music tended to be the music that just… wasn’t going to last. We the good music from the ‘90’s, just as people will the good music from the ‘00’s and the ‘10’s.
Except video game music. That was fantastic back in the 90’s.