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Pop 'Til You Drop

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Download links and information about Pop 'Til You Drop by The A - Teens. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to Electronica, Dancefloor, World Music, Pop, Dance Pop, Teen Pop genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 40:26 minutes.

Artist: The A - Teens
Release date: 2002
Genre: Electronica, Dancefloor, World Music, Pop, Dance Pop, Teen Pop
Tracks: 12
Duration: 40:26
Buy on iTunes $4.99
Buy on Amazon $4.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Floorfiller 3:13
2. Can't Help Falling in Love 3:04
3. Let Your Heart Do All the Talking 3:24
4. Closer to Perfection 3:11
5. Hi and Goodbye 4:13
6. This Year 2:52
7. Slam 3:04
8. Cross My Heart 3:35
9. Singled Out 4:13
10. Oh, Oh...Yeah 3:04
11. In the Blink of an Eye 3:30
12. School's Out 3:03

Details

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When the A-Teens paid tribute to ABBA on 1999's The ABBA Generation, it was obvious that none of the group's members had great voices. But they had great material to work with; "Dancing Queen," "S.O.S.," and other ABBA hits are Europop classics. So, despite their limitations as vocalists, the A-Teens were able to provide a pleasant, if unremarkable, tribute to Sweden's most famous Euro-popsters. But Pop 'Til You Drop, the A-Teens' third album, is another matter; this time, they are saddled with a lot of pedestrian material. While The ABBA Generation had more of a Hi-NRG/Euro-dance outlook, Pop 'Til You Drop isn't as consistently European-sounding. The ABBA influence has not disappeared altogether — "Closer to Perfection," for example, is full of ABBA-isms — but overall, this bubblegum CD favors more of an American teen pop approach along the lines of Britney Spears, *NSYNC and the Backstreet Boys. And more often than not, Pop 'Til You Drop has a mechanical, assembly-line quality. Nonetheless, the CD has its moments. The A-Teens' dance-pop remake of Alice Cooper's "School's Out" (which features Cooper himself) may offend some '70s rock devotees — some Cooper fans may be horrified that the influential shock-rocker would have anything to do with a teen pop act. Regardless, the A-Teens' "School's Out" cover is fun and is arguably Pop 'Til You Drop's best track. And the mildly funky "Floorfiller" (one of the album's more European-sounding tunes) has a somewhat Silver Convention-ish charm — the high-tech production is early 2000s, although the hook has a "Get Up and Boogie"/"Funky Party" type of Euro-disco vibe. But the memorable tracks are the exception instead of the rule. The ABBA Generation is still the A-Teens' best album, and Pop 'Til You Drop is, for the most part, a forgettable exercise in Britney Spears/*NSYNC/Backstreet Boys worship.