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Kidz Bop 17 |  | Artist: Kidz Bop Kids Label: Razor & Tie Category: Music
List Price: $18.98 Buy New: $11.36 as of 3/10/2010 11:11 CST details You Save: $7.62 (40%)
New (24) Used (2) from $11.36
Seller: deep_discount_dvd_cd Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 86
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4
MPN: 89214 UPC: 793018921428 EAN: 0793018921428 ASIN: B002ZXMZBM
Release Date: January 26, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Party In The U.S.A. | | • | I Gotta Feeling | | • | Paparazzi | | • | You Belong With Me | | • | Knocks You Down | | • | Fireflies | | • | Battlefield | | • | Use Somebody | | • | Already Gone | | • | One Time | | • | Say Hey (I Love You) | | • | Sweet Dreams | | • | Never Say Never | | • | Meet Me Halfway | | • | Replay | | • | Sounds Like a Hit by Sinai Rose | | • | Shine On by Mathias Anderle |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Description 2010 release, the 17th installment in this extremely popular kids music series. Celebrating the unique, authentic voice of every kid, the Kidz Bop brand has gained near universal awareness among 5-12 year olds: staying in-touch and on trend with today's kids. Kidz Bop 17 features many of today's chart topping hits sung by kids... for kids!
Album Description Get ready to party with Kidz Bop 17! Kidz Bop maximizes retail sell through with powerful marketing support from an extensive national television campaign, family-targeted promotions with major brands, a leading kids social networking website and an effective online campaign on the biggest children's websites. Kidz Bop 17 features many of today's biggest hits sung by kids, for kids. Our music experts have selected the best mix of current chart toppers and fast rising tracks, ensuring that Kidz Bop 17 will remain hot throughout 2010!
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| Customer Reviews: My kids love Kidz Bop Kids February 8, 2010 Y. Huang (Sunnyvale, VA, USA) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
My kids love several songs in this album. They will listen to them at home and on the road.
Other thoughts: We'd like to see the video version of this album.
Another 5 star product from Kidz Bop February 2, 2010 Mav (California) 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
The bottom line: My 5 year old loves it and yours will too!
Ignore the rant from the previous review. Everyone's entitled to their opinion, however, giving a product 1 star because you think artists have sold out - this is the wrong forum for voicing your opinions of the music industry, and should be reserved for a review of the product itself, not of your failed career.
Personally for me, I think Fireflies is the reason not to buy this CD, however, it's one of my kid's favorite songs.
For children and parents who are fed up with disgusting lyrics in songs. February 2, 2010 Mekaela T. Nelson (Washington, DC) 6 out of 8 found this review helpful
I LOVE the Kidz Bop releases. I can't even listen to the radio with or without my son because of the very offensive lyrics or comments by the radio personalities. Therefore, I choose to buy Kidz Bop so we can enjoy the songs we really like but in a cleaner version. Kidz Bop may not be for everyone but this parent loves them. And my 10 year old loves it too. He's an innocent child with child-like desires of wanting to be Spiderman to help fight crime and put bad guys in jail. I love his innocence. If your child is like mine, he or she will enjoy this clean cd. I even took my son to their concert and we had a GREAT time.
Kidz Bop: A Torching Essay On The Evil Corporate Musical Marketing Machine, or Oh God, Here We Go Again For Round 17 February 2, 2010 Flap Jackson (State Road, NC) 2 out of 12 found this review helpful
Note: While you may have heard the things said below a million times, I was particularly irked by this release of Kidz Bop and decided to voice my opinion of the album here. Take it or leave it, I felt it needed to be said. And don't worry, I have listened to the whole album and I display my opinions on the album & the series as a whole below. Don't hate me for hating, hate me if you think I'm wrong.
Now, while I still question the market for these increasingly popular HACK albums, it seems that the kids of America, raised on the the non-comedic fare of Hannah Montana and whatever Nick Jonas is putting out there nowadays, seems to like this Kidz Bop. Therefore, since their kids like it, the parents buy it.
Kidz Bop is essentially a glorified cover group that specializes in taking songs from Top 40 radio stations, and have them sung by kids, with maybe a little adult help on the chorus or verses. The songs are not only covered by children, but their lyrics are changed to the most non-offensive, PC word choices imaginable. So, essentially to make these clearly non-kid-friendly songs kid-friendly, the album essentially makes all these little changes to the songs to essentially strip all creativity and art in the original song.
These songs aren't only painful for anybody over the age of 5, but they're insulting and offensive on the basis of principles. It's not simply kid's music; it's a spitting upon the face of creative genius, and the artist that more often than not, poured their soul into it.
But it's more than spitting on the face of creative genius, it's stealing that creativity, running away with it, claiming it as your own, and taking the ensuing mountain of cash that rolls in. It's this very principle that musical artists preached for years. Most famously of these artists was Nirvana and Kurt Cobain. Kurt essentially started the anti-corporate movement that continues with much of alternative rock, and most of Indie music today.
Essentially, Kurt knew that the corporate system inherently wanted to use him and his band to make more money. By selling out, he would be forced to participate in superficial institutions he didn't want to participate in, and endorse products he wanted no part of. But worst of all, the music's message would be cluttered with all these other influences. If this happened, this would be considered "selling out." Or essentially selling your soul for the almighty dollar. Ladies and gentlemen, Kidz Bop traffics in artists that have "sold out." Think about it, Kidz Bop is the product of everything that people like Kurt feared. But hey, fame is so rare, do you really want the chance to get your name out there, even though it's being sung by a bunch of 6-year olds?
Kings of Leon recently said in an interview, that they wish they were less successful because they feel the corporate system grabbing a hold of them. Guess what, with this new release from Kidz Bop, Kings of Leon has been officially grabbed a hold of.
Owl City's Fireflies is my song of the year. It's a song that few people had heard of 6 months before, then rose of the charts to become the #1 song in America, despite the fact that Owl City's only driving force was word of mouth. But, what made the song good was its sense of magic and creative brilliance all created by Adam Young. But when Nick Jonas covers it, and everybody in his audience sings along as he butchers through the song with his so called "singing voice," as if it was his song. He didn't write it, Nick Jonas is only riding on the coat-tails of something he will never be able to achieve.
Now that doesn't mean covers are bad. It's entirely possible to add something new and different to Fireflies while still respecting the original work. Remember, it's not about the fame, it's about the artistry of it. Nick Jonas certainly doesn't have it, and when Kidz Bop covers it for their album, they certainly don't have anything other in their minds but fame and money.
Essentially, there is a middle ground where too few artists live in. It's the land where you have enough fans to support you to make a living off of, but not enough where the corporate system wants to turn your song into something it's not. But if you do become successful, protect your work at all costs, or whatever made it great will be ripped to shreds before your realize your career is over after your sophomore effort fails after failed profit-expectations. Personally, as soon as sign a contract with a label, I at least have the final word on who can officially use my song. If it's used in a proper manner on a TV show, or if it's respectfully covered, then it's fine. If not, then the work is being damaged. And under no circumstances would I allow Kidz Bop or any other group like it within fifty yards of my work.
That's where all the songs & artists on a Kidz Bop album has failed, and I hope they all learn a valuable lesson from it on fame, fortune, and protecting the magic.
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