Spice Up Your Life

align="center" bgcolor="red" colspan="3"|Spice Up Your Life by Spice Girls
lign="center" colspan="3"|Album cover
lign="center" bgcolor="red" colspan="3"|Single Information
lign="left" valign="top"|Released colspan="2" valign="top"|September 1997 (Internationally)
lign="left" valign="top"|Found on colspan="2" valign="top"|Spiceworld
lign="center" bgcolor="red" colspan="3"|Charts
lign="left" valign="top"|US Hot 100 colspan="2" valign="top"|#18
lign="left" valign="top"|US Airplay colspan="2" valign="top"|#26
lign="left" valign="top"|US Sales colspan="2" valign="top"|#3
lign="left" valign="top"|US Clubplay colspan="2" valign="top"|#1
lign="left" valign="top"|UK Top 40 colspan="2" valign="top"|#1
gcolor="red" colspan="3"|Video
lign="left" valign="top"|Q valign="top"|4 stars out of 5 valign="top"|November 2000
lign="left" valign="top"|AMG valign="top"|5 stars out of 5 valign="top"|link
Spice Up Your Life is a song released by the Spice Girls. Like much of their second album, Spiceworld, was premiered during the girls' first-ever live concert in Istanbul, Turkey. After debuting on UK radio, the song had an overwhelmingly positive initial reaction and, just a week after its first spin, entered the singles chart at #19 on airplay alone. The original release-date of "Spice Up Your Life" was delayed for seven days to allow Elton John's "Candle In The Wind" to reach the top of the charts. The tribute to Diana, Princess of Wales, who had died the month before, subsequently went on to become the world's biggest-selling single of all time. "'Life" hit the top-spot the following week, a feat echoed in the major music markets of Canada, Australia and Spain, and became the Spice Girls' fifth consecutive UK number one. The chart trajectory of "Spice Up Your Life" in the United States, however, was somewhat less successful. Due to the song's idiosyncratic sound- a hybrid of pop and samba- it was unable to fit into a particular musical mould. Hence, the song was seldom played on US radio, resulting in it stalling at a lowly #18 on the Billboard 100. Some would argue that it would have been wise for Virgin to release the more US-friendly tracks from Spiceworld to radio instead, namely "Saturday Night Divas" or "Denying". Despite it's disappointing chart position Stateside, the track added another US Top 20 to the groups' already impressive list. "Life" also helped the LP Spiceworld debut on the Billboard Album Charts at an impressive #8 (it would eventually climb to a peak of #3 after the release of the group's first film, the appropriately titled, Spiceworld: The Movie). The video is considered by many to rank among the Spice Girls' best. With a multi-million dollar budget, the ironic promo sees the group in a futuristic setting, controlling every aspect of society. The group stated that the video was a reaction to the press who criticized the group for "selling out" to a number of worldwide brands in the summer of 1997, including Pepsi, Walkers, Cadbury's, ASDA and Polaroid.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
william nuschler clark
henry r. jackson
francesco bianchini
trllaskagi
network service provider
datatecture
skoj
simcopter
wharram percy
riism
paul klebnikov
harvard kyoto
chorea
oikoumene
chorea (disease)
chorea (dance)
bert jansch
guildford four
lewis lichtenstein strauss
robert schwarz strauss
ernst wollweber
robert strausz hupe
reichsrat (germany)
spice mix
national power unity
ernst streeruwitz
history of technology
chili powder
robert william wilcox
crustation
fritz theilen
say you'll be there
reichsrat (austria)
john barnes (computer scientist)
national order of quebec
john brashear
that's incredible!
taro hakase
cecrops ii
sandpainting
wolfgang schmieder
viva forever
haminoeoidea
pandion i