 See Larger Image | Rainbow Artist : Mariah Carey List Price : $11.98 USD ProductGroup: Music Release Date : 1999-11-02 Studio : Sony Label : Sony Avg. Customer Rating : (780 reviews)
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Reviews Customer Reviews for Rainbow Taste The Rainbow....... STOP! it's poison! Rating: If you were to line up all of mariah's albums side by side, "Rainbow" is truely Mariah's worst cd of all time. I hate saying that, because I'm a huge fan but it's a non-biased oppinion. Ironically, amazon's review says "Against All Odds" is the weakest track on the cd and that happens to be one of my faves! This album is all over the place, some of the interludes are better than some of the actual songs if that tells you anything. 'Rainbow" also includes one of the worst mariah songs of all time in my oppinion, which is "Thank God I Found You". What was she thinking, oh wait, SHE WASN'T THINKING, when she did a duet with 98 degrees. Where are they now? who cares. You can't even pick off 5 songs off this cd that you absolutely love, like on other Mariah albums. "After 2Nite" is ok, "Heartbreaker" is ok, and that's the problem, it's all just ok. "Thank God I Found" other mariah carey albums to listen to.
Customer Reviews for Rainbow Cd medicore Rating: The album cover alone looks so freakin' stupid. And her behind is airbrushed with the rainbow logo. Stupid. As she gets older she looks and acts younger. Also, her songs don't have any meaning unlike Madonna's music. Mariah's music sounds the same. Oh I'm in love and than I'm out of love. And then songs about shaking your booty. I'll lean toward Madonna anyday cuz her sound is always changing and Madonna can dance, she can play the guitar, she writes her own music, and there's a lot of artistic meaning in her songs.
Editorial Reviews for Rainbow Audio Cd Amazon.com Rainbow, Mariah Carey's seventh studio long-player, is something like a concept album. Its theme is the various stages of the "emotional roller coaster," as she puts it, of her divorce and subsequent rebound. Carey continues to walk the line between streetwise hip-hop soul and adult-contemporary acceptability, with the former not surprisingly offering most of the disc's high points. "Heartbreaker," the first single, is a likeable piece of bubble-gum R&B with grit borrowed from guest Jay-Z; the remix, with Missy Elliott, Da Brat, and DJ Clue on board, is a different enough piece of work that its appearance only a few cuts after the original version doesn't jar. Another groove-intensive track, the Snoop Dogg duet "Crybaby," is so sly that one hopes the two collaborate again. Of course, it wouldn't be a Mariah record without at least one major lapse in taste; here that bill is filled with a cover of Phil Collins's melodramatic "Against All Odds." --Rickey Wright
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