New Edition
1978 –
They walked onto the stage in the early 1980s as five teenagers from Boston who could not dance as well as the Jackson 5 but could sing well enough to make the comparison irrelevant. New Edition was formed by Maurice Starr, who saw a group of kids harmonizing on a street corner in the Roxbury neighborhood of Boston and turned them into a polished act. Bobby Brown, Ricky Bell, Michael Bivins, Ronnie DeVoe, and Ralph Tresvant became the blueprint for the modern boy band with choreographed routines, matching outfits, and a blend of street energy and polished pop that had never been packaged quite that way before.
Candy Girl became their first hit, reaching number one on the R&B chart.

The cost was the money and the internal tension that came with unequal recognition. New Edition discovered early that Starr was paying them a fraction of what they earned, and they took him to court to gain control over their careers. The lawsuit became a landmark case for artist rights in the R&B industry. Bobby Brown's star rose faster than the others, and he left for a solo career with Don't Be Cruel that made him one of the biggest pop stars of the late 1980s. The remaining members continued as a quartet, releasing Heart Break in 1988.

Can You Stand the Rain is the one. The ballad showcased the group's maturity and remains the standard that every R&B group since has measured its slow songs against. Each member gets a solo moment that highlights their individual strength, but the whole is greater than the sum. The members went on to form Bell Biv DeVoe and launch successful solo careers.

New Edition (1984)

They reunited multiple times over the decades and proved that a boy band could grow up without embarrassment or diminishing returns.

Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

New Edition

1978 –
They walked onto the stage in the early 1980s as five teenagers from Boston who could not dance as well as the Jackson 5 but could sing well enough to make the comparison irrelevant. New Edition was formed by Maurice Starr, who saw a group of kids harmonizing on a street corner in the Roxbury neighborhood of Boston and turned them into a polished act. Bobby Brown, Ricky Bell, Michael Bivins, Ronnie DeVoe, and Ralph Tresvant became the blueprint for the modern boy band with choreographed routines, matching outfits, and a blend of street energy and polished pop that had never been packaged quite that way before.
Candy Girl became their first hit, reaching number one on the R&B chart.

The cost was the money and the internal tension that came with unequal recognition. New Edition discovered early that Starr was paying them a fraction of what they earned, and they took him to court to gain control over their careers. The lawsuit became a landmark case for artist rights in the R&B industry. Bobby Brown's star rose faster than the others, and he left for a solo career with Don't Be Cruel that made him one of the biggest pop stars of the late 1980s. The remaining members continued as a quartet, releasing Heart Break in 1988.

Can You Stand the Rain is the one. The ballad showcased the group's maturity and remains the standard that every R&B group since has measured its slow songs against. Each member gets a solo moment that highlights their individual strength, but the whole is greater than the sum. The members went on to form Bell Biv DeVoe and launch successful solo careers.

New Edition (1984)

They reunited multiple times over the decades and proved that a boy band could grow up without embarrassment or diminishing returns.

New Edition (1984) New Edition (1984)
Heart Break (1988) Heart Break (1988)
Home Again (1996) Home Again (1996)
Candy Girl (1983)
New Edition (1984)
All for Love (1985)
Under the Blue Moon (1986)
Heart Break (1988)
Home Again (1996)
One Love (2004)
r&bsoulpop
The Sunday Drop
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Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

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The Sunday Drop One song. One story. Every Sunday.