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Now That's What I Call Music! 18

CD - 2005 CD Pop Now 2005A 2 On Shelf No requests on this item Community Rating: 3.3 out of 5

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Locations
Call Number: CD Pop Now 2005A
On Shelf At: Downtown Library

Location & Checkout Length Call Number Checkout Length Item Status
Downtown 3rd Floor, CDs
2-week checkout
CD Pop Now 2005A 2-week checkout On Shelf
Downtown 3rd Floor, CDs
2-week checkout
CD Pop Now 2005A 2-week checkout On Shelf

Compact disc.
Vertigo (U2) -- What you waiting for? (Gwen Stefani) -- Rumors (Lindsay Lohan) -- Drop like it's hot (Snoop Dogg, featuring Pharrell) -- Soldier (Destiny's Child featauring T.I. and Lil Wayne) -- Only U (Ashanta) -- Balla baby (Chingy) -- Used to love you (John Legend) -- Over & over (Nelly, featuring Tim McGraw) -- Obsession (No es amor) (Frankie J featuring Baby Bash) -- O (Omarion) -- Collide (Howie Day) -- Disappear (Hoobastank) -- Vitamin R (Leading us along) (Chevelle) -- Home (Three Days Grace) -- Lady (Lenny Kravitz) -- I just wanna live (Good Charlotte) -- Jessie's girl (Frickin' A) -- Tangled up in me (SKye Sweetnam) -- You're my better half (Keith Urban).
Various performers.

COMMUNITY REVIEWS

Good submitted by Chris82 on July 31, 2011, 2:42pm This album contains of many of the best and most memorable pop songs of the era. Worth listening to for anyone, has a lot of great songs.

Now That's What I Call Music! 18 submitted by Varshini on July 16, 2019, 12:50pm Pop songs from 2005. I didn't recognize many of these songs, so they aren't really that great.

Low Tide for Top-40 submitted by Meginator on August 26, 2020, 4:21pm I don’t know if the core problem here is that the period covered by this compilation was unusually weak for pop radio or that I was apparently listening to other stuff at the time (these are, of course, not mutually exclusive options), but this installment of the usually formidable Now That’s What I Call Music! series feels dull and dated to me. The album is strikingly bereft of lasting hits (Snoop Dogg’s “Drop It Like It’s Hot” is probably the song heard most often on throwback radio today, with U2’s “Vertigo” the only other likely contender) and huge artists are represented by minor songs that are far from their best work. Lindsay Lohan’s track isn’t even the weakest of the bunch! Even the alt-rock songs fail to make an impact on the modern listener, and that genre is generally fairly impervious to the ravages of time. This is definitely one to skip unless the track listing specifically appeals to you.