Anything Is Possible is the third studio album by American singer-songwriter Debbie Gibson, released on November 20, 1990, by Atlantic Records.
Billboard praised the album, stating that "much will be made about Gibson's more adult image and vocal style.
"[9] Entertainment Weekly also praised the album, noting that "it shouldn't come as any surprise that Debbie Gibson's third record, Anything Is Possible, is a more polished work than her vibrant debut, Out of the Blue, or her brasher follow-up, Electric Youth.
What she's lost in raw teen energy she's gained in musical assurance," however conceding that "clearly Gibson means well; her advice just isn't very meaningful.
"[10] The Los Angeles Times were more critical of the record, calling it a "redundant, overproduced, 72 minute sprawl," yet also stating that "Gibson does display a good knack with a melodic hook and a credible mastery of contemporary pop craft.
When she combines those qualities with some sass and spunk on the deliciously catty, unabashedly adolescent "It Must've Been My Boy," the results are vibrant.
"[11] AllMusic were also mixed in their review, commenting that "though some of the material is fairly decent (including "Another Brick Fall" and the Madonna-ish "It Must've Been My Boy"), most of it is pedestrian, homogenized and quite forgettable.