Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

View All

Super Hits

261.5M streams

261,532,194

Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance ...

227M streams

227,004,471

Anything Goes!

16.3M streams

16,325,552

Bang That Beat "The Best Of"

3.6M streams

3,598,269

Gonna Make You Sweat

1.1M streams

1,120,042

C&C Music Factory vs. RMD Dance: Every...

273.8K streams

273,782

SWEAT 1 (The Remixes) Feat. FREEDOM WI...

199.4K streams

199,352

Here We Go (feat. Freedom Williams & Z...

166.8K streams

166,799

C & C Music Factory

120.8K streams

120,767

SWEAT 2 (The Remixes) Feat. FREEDOM WI...

100.1K streams

100,098

Biography

C+C Music Factory wasn't really a group -- it was the product of Robert Clivillés and David Cole, two pop-savvy dance producers. In 1989, Clivillés and Cole hired all the singers and created all the tracks for Gonna Make You Sweat, C+C Music Factory's first album. While it was prepackaged, it wasn't necessarily faceless; in Freedom Williams, the producers had a solid, if not original or distinctive, rapper. What was really important to the success of the album was how Clivillés and Cole assembled the tracks, melding hip-hop and club sensibilities to mindlessly catchy pop songs. The three hit singles -- "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)," "Here We Go," "Things That Make You Go Hmmmm..." -- were very good pop singles, and all of them were massive hits in early 1991. After their moment in the sun, Williams left for an unsuccessful solo career and Clivillés and Cole released Greatest Remixes, Vol. 1, a collection of their work with C+C Music Factory as well as other artists; the album had a hit single with their re-recording of U2's "Pride." C+C Music Factory released their second album, Anything Goes!, in the summer of 1994; it was a moderate hit, spending nine weeks on the charts. Unfortunately, it was the last album the duo ever made -- David Cole died of spinal meningitis in early 1995. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi