|
Post by Emerald City on Jul 5, 2005 19:32:51 GMT -5
Due for release on 08/01/2005:
Various - Motown 70's Disco (2CD)
Disc 1 1.Law Of The Land (The Temptations) 2.Keep On Trucking (Eddie Kendricks) 3.Love Hangover (12' Version) (Diana Ross) 4.Down To Love Town (Original 12' Promo Version)(The Originals) 5.High Energy (Original 12' Mix (Supremes) ! 6.Date With The Rain (Eddie Kendricks) 7.Saturday Night, Sunday Morning (Extended Version) (Thelma Houston) 8.Got To Give It Up (Marvin Gaye) 9.You & I (12' Mix) (Rick James) (The Stone City Band) 10.Standing On The Verge (12' Mix) (Platinum Hook) 11.Get It Up For Love (Original 12' Mix) (Tata Vega)
Disc 2 1.Need To Know You Better (Original 12' Mix) (Finished Touch) 2.Don't Leave Me This Way (12' Mix) (Thelma Houston) 3.Nowhere To Run (Dynamic Superiors) 4.(I Love To See You) Dancin' (Jerry Butler) 5.Tailgate (Original 12' Mix) (21st Creation) 6.The Boss (Extended Version) (Diana Ross) 7.I Was Born This Way (Original 12' Mix) (Carl Bean) 8.Behind The Groove (12' Mix) (Teena Marie) 9.Big Time (12' Mix) (Rick James) 10.You Pulled A Switch (Switch) 11.In & Out (Original 12' Mix) (Willie Hutch)
|
|
|
Post by Motown Honey on Jul 5, 2005 19:34:09 GMT -5
Finally, something I won't be heart broken for missing out on :teehee:
|
|
|
Post by Emerald City on Jul 5, 2005 19:36:33 GMT -5
Some nice choices there but my faves are probably Got To Give It Up, Keep On Trucking, Don't Leave Me This Way, High Energy and without a shadow of a doubt Big Time! What a jam :rockon: :woo: :singanddance:
|
|
|
Post by Emerald City on Jul 20, 2005 16:20:32 GMT -5
:movethecrowd: When people talk about the `Motown sound' they usually mean the golden period of the 1960s, the mighty pop soul ballads of Smokey Robinson, or jive-perfect dancers by the likes of the Supremes or Martha Reeves & The Vandellas. It's often forgotten that, along with many of its artists, Motown adapted well to the 70s disco boom and the new sounds coming out of labels such as Salsoul, Philadelphia International and TK. And, ironically, that it produced many of the 70s and early 80s disco classics on which today's dance sound is more genuinely based.
In the late 70s, with the demise of their Invictus label, the legendary Holland brothers (who had written so many of Motown's 60s classics with their partner Lamont Dozier) returned to the Motown camp to join multi-talented song writing teams such as Ashford & Simpson, Sawyer & McLeod and Mike & Brenda Sutton who were all able to perfectly capture the essence of the disco era. And the soulful vocalists and stellar musicians already in house at Motown were able to carry it all off with the sort of performances the material deserved.
Of course, Motown's two biggest hitters, Stevie Wonder and Marvin Gaye, also both made their very best records in the 70s, and both dabbled successfully in disco from time to time. Add funky new acts like Rick James, Stone City Band and Teena Marie and Motown pretty much had all soulful dancefloor bases covered during the disco era. They were also the first to `eye cue' their 12" disco discs, giving DJs the track's BPM and info on the exact length of the various sections of the song - one of the earliest examples of a record company recognising how important the DJ was to become.
By `79, and very much with the DJ in mind, 12"s such as Diana Ross' `The Boss' were being purposely intro'd with mix-friendly drum beats, something that's become par for the course these days for most dance tracks released. But, as this compilation demonstrates, those disco beats were already infiltrating the Motown sound as early as 1972.
|
|
|
Post by Diamond Girl on Jul 21, 2005 19:28:09 GMT -5
Now, this could be interesting :cheezy:
|
|
|
Post by Motown Honey on Jul 29, 2005 19:46:21 GMT -5
Pretty cover
|
|