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===1990s=== Tiffany's career suffered as musical tastes changed in the early 1990s, moving away from dance-pop and towards harder-edged rock and rap. Tiffany's popularity, however, remained strong in Asia, especially Hong Kong and Southeast Asia; in Hong Kong, her ballads received cover versions in [[Cantonese]] from [[Cantopop]] artists.<ref name="Billboard11271993">{{cite magazine |last=Duffy |first=Thom |date=November 27, 1993|title=Tiffany's Still Big in Asia; Tape Rolling for Stones Set |magazine=Billboard |page=88}}</ref> Her third studio album, the [[Urban contemporary music|urban]]-influenced ''[[New Inside]]'' (1990), received mixed reviews from music critics,<ref>Album review, ''Billboard'', October 27, 1990</ref> and failed to chart, despite several TV appearances to promote it, including on the fantasy sitcom ''[[Out of This World (American TV series)|Out of This World]]''. In 1991, Tiffany participated in the recording of the song "[[Voices That Care]]", which peaked at No. 11 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bCgEAAAAMBAJ&q=Voices+That+Care+billboard+top+100+1991&pg=RA1-PA79|title=Billboard|date=October 12, 1991|publisher=|via=Google Books}}</ref> During a brief early 1990s comeback attempt, Tiffany reunited with Tobin on the album ''[[Dreams Never Die]]'' (1993), which spawned the singles "If Love is Blind" and "Can't You See". The album, mostly containing ballads, was released on Asian markets and was accompanied by a six-week tour of clubs, shopping malls and radio stations in Hong Kong, Singapore, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Malaysia;<ref name="Billboard11271993" /> a US release was planned, but it never materialized. She headlined her own show at the [[Westgate Las Vegas|Las Vegas Hilton]] in the summer of 1993, before breaking with Tobin once again.<ref>Lutz, Natalie. "Tiffany Changes Her Style for Third Album", ''Showbiz'' (Las Vegas), July 25β31, 1993; article title is erroneous, since it is actually discusses her fourth album.</ref> In 1995, Tiffany moved to [[Nashville, Tennessee|Nashville]] to develop her career as a songwriter, and to attempt a return as a country music artist.<ref>Keel, Beverly, "Tiffany's starting all over again β in country", ''Country Weekly'', Vol. 3, No. 52, December 24, 1996, p. 17.</ref> In 1998, she appeared on the [[U2]] tribute album ''[[We Will Follow: A Tribute to U2]]'' in a collaboration with Canadian [[industrial music|industrial]] act [[Front Line Assembly]] performing "[[New Year's Day (U2 song)|New Year's Day]]".
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