{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/695d4ed8d1ba84fb8f043f94/695d4f720c30a1408dc2b8bc?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"State of the World Edition","description":"<p>In the mid-1980s, Janet Jackson broke away from her world-famous, hit-making family and, with her <em>Control</em> album, rebooted both her career and pop style in the New Jack Swing era. The challenge was following it up—and Jackson and her producers, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, didn’t make it easy on themselves.</p><p>In 1989, they produced an ambitious album with a portentous title: <em>Janet Jackson’s</em> <em>Rhythm Nation 1814</em>. But what could have been <em>Control, Part 2</em> instead was a visionary LP that reinvented the socially conscious album from the era of Marvin Gaye for the ’90s, and envisioned what pop would eventually sound like in the 21st century. <em>Rhythm Nation</em> was a smash, generating more hits—and bigger hits—than any album in history. In fact, if Jackson and her label hadn’t pulled their punches with one final radio single, she could have set an all-time <em>Billboard</em> chart record that would have overshadowed any of the Jackson family’s historic achievements.</p><p>Podcast production by Chris Berube.</p><p><strong>Host</strong>Chris Molanphy</p><p><strong>Follow </strong>@cmolanphy on Twitter / <a href=\"https://www.twitter.com/cmolanphy\">https://www.twitter.com/cmolanphy</a> </p><p> </p>","author_name":"Slate Podcasts"}