98 Degrees_240412
Give Me Just One Night
Background:
American adult contemporary boy band 98 Degrees was formed in Los
Angeles, California by four former Ohio residents: brothers Nick
and Drew Lachey, Jeff Timmons and Justin Jeffre. The group's 1997 debut
album went gold in the US and spawned their first hit on the Billboard
Hot 100 with “Invisible Man” (#12). After establishing
popularity with their appearance on the Disney “Mulan”
soundtrack, and singing “True to Your Heart” (a duet with
labelmate Stevie Wonder), the group garnered massive victory with the
sophomore effort “98 Degrees and Rising” (1998), which
received 4x platinum certification from the RIAA. The album generated
two top 10 singles on the Billboard Hot 100 with “Because of
You” (#3) and “The Hardest Thing” (#5). The third and
final studio album “Revelation” (2000) debuted and peaked
at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 and scored their highest charting US
single to date, “Give Me Just One Night (Una Noche)”
(#2).
Just Us
Childhood and Family:
The story of 98 Degrees began in 1995 when Canton, Ohio native Jeff
Timmons (born April 30, 1973) performed at a college party with three
friends and garnered a good response from female audience for his
voice. The following day, he decided to leave Kent State University,
where he was a psychology major, and headed to Los Angeles, California
to pursue a singing career. In L.A., Timmons called former
classmates at the Cincinnati School for Creative and Performing Artists
Justin Jeffre and Nick Lachey (born November 9, 1973) and formed 98
Degrees. Lachey's younger brother, Drew (born August 8, 1976), became
the final member to join the group. Originally named themselves Just
Us, the group changed their name to 98 Degrees after the suggestion of
their manager Paris Djon.
True to Your Heart
Career:
Members of 98 Degrees took various odd jobs like landscaping, becoming
club security officers, and delivering take-out food to finance their
their talent show appearances, while continuing to improve their
harmonies and presentation. The boys' luck started to change when they
were asked to sing during a radio broadcast of a Boys II Men. After the
appearance, they met Paris D'Jon, the co-manager of hip hop singer
Montell Jordan, and helped the group score an opening gig for Jordan in
his national tour. D'Jon also became the group's manager, along with
Johnny Camisa. By the time the group finished the tour, they were
signed to Motown Records.
98 Degrees launched a debut single called “Invisible Man”
on June 24, 1997. The song peaked at No. 12 on the Billboard Hot 100
and received gold status on October 22, 1997. Their eponymous debut
album followed on July 29 of that year. It peaked at No. 145 in
the the Billboard 200 and No. 88 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums. The
second single “Was It Something I Didn't Say” did not enjoy
the success of the former single, but it did help the album reach gold
certification. The group supported the album by touring extensively,
including concert dates in Asia. The group left Motown for its parent
company, Universal Records, after the first album.
The quartet's career started to take off after they performed
“True to Your Heart,” a duet sung with labelmate Stevie
Wonder, for the soundtrack of the Disney animated film
“Mulan” (1998). They gained popularity through the song,
and released the second studio album “98° and Rising”
in late 1998. The album went on to become the group's breakthrough hit
and was certified 4x platinum by the RIAA . It reached No. 14 on the
Billboard 200 and No. 28 on the Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums.
Released on September 22, 1998, the single “Because of You”
reached No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 15 on the Billboard Top
40 Mainstream, and also charted at No. 36 on the UK Singles Chart. The
sing was certified platinum by the RIAA. The next single “The
Hardest Thing” (released on June 8, 1999) peaked at No. 5 on the
Billboard Hot 100 and No. 2 on the Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary
Tracks. The song also enjoyed average success in Oceania, peaking at
No. 24 on the Australian ARIA Singles Chart and No. 5 on the New
Zealand RIANZ Singles Chart.
On October 19, 1999, 98 Degrees released their Christmas album,
“This Christmas.” The album produced the top 40 single
“This Gift.” Within a month after its release the album
went platinum. The group appeared as featured guests on Amy
Grant's 1999 CBS Christmas special, “A Christmas to
Remember.”
98 Degrees returned with a new studio album in September 2000 called
“Revelation.” The album debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard
200, making it their highest debut on the chart. The first single
“Give Me Just One Night (Una Noche)” (released: July 24,
2000) was a huge success for the group, having reached No. 2 on the
Billboard Hot 100, and remains their highest charting US single to
date. The song also charted in other countries like the Netherlands
(#40), Sweden (#33), Swiss (#58) and the Uk (#61). The follow up single
“My Everything” (released: 6 November 2000) peaked at No.
17 on the Billboard Hot 100.
On May 7, 2002, 98 Degrees released a greatest hist album, “The
Collection.” It contains some songs from their old albums, and
the smash Mariah Carey hit “Thank God I Found You,” on
which the group collaborated with Joe alongside Carey. The song
“Why (Are We Still Friends)” was released as the single
from the album.
98 Degrees has since been on hiatus. Rumors of a reunion show for the
second half of 2012 were denied by frontman Nick Lachey.
Awards:
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