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Nothin' But Trouble (album)

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Recorded
  
1987–88

Nothin' But Trouble (1988)
  
Nia Peeples (1991)

Release date
  
30 August 1988

Length
  
50:12

Artist
  
Nia Peeples

Label
  
Mercury Records

Nothin' But Trouble (album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbe

Released
  
August 30, 1988 (1988-08-30)

Genres
  
Contemporary R&B, Dance-pop

Producers
  
Steve Harvey, Howard Hewett, Doc Powell

Nothin' But Trouble is the debut studio album by American singer and actress Nia Peeples. It was released on August 30, 1988 by Mercury Records. Peeples decided to venture into the music industry after she came to recognition as a regular cast in the musical television series Fame. She worked with Steve Harvey, Howard Hewett, Doc Powell and Tony Prendatt on the album. Musically, Nothin' But Trouble is a dance-pop and R&B album with influence of other popular genres at the time, such as freestyle and new jack swing.

Contents

Nothin' But Trouble received positive reviews from music critics who compared Peeples' style to Paula Abdul and Janet Jackson. The album noted a moderate commercial success. It peaked at number ninety-seven on the Billboard 200.

Three singles were released from the album. The lead single "Trouble" peaked at number thirty-five on the Billboard Hot 100 and topped the Billboard Hot Dance Club Songs chart. The album's following singles "High Time" and "I Know How (to Make You Love Me)" were less successful but managed to peak into the Hot Dance Club Songs chart at number ten and twenty-eight respectively.

Background

Another singer and Peeples' labelmate Vanessa Williams was also working on her debut album The Right Stuff (1988) at that time. She later commented that the label's focus was on Peeples because of her high-profile role on the television series Fame, so they invested their sales and marketing efforts in her album.

Critical reception

Ron Wynn from AllMusic gave the album four and a half out of five stars and wrote: "Operating on the premise that they could make Peeples a second-level Paula Abdul, the producers gave her the same type of dance-pop bubblegum fodder, but didn't make it as hook-laden or catchy as Abdul's songs."

Songs

1Trouble6:28
2High Time4:27
3Star Crossed Lovers5:46

References

Nothin' But Trouble (album) Wikipedia