Sweet Taste Of Sin

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BIS => 2 / 3 WEEKS
1LP - BGP
2001

26,00 € 26.0 EUR 26,00 € Hors TVA

26,00 € Hors TVA

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  • Statut
  • Genre
  • Format
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Statut: BACK IN STOCK
Genre: FUNK
Format: 1 LP
Date de parution: 2001
Label: BGP

TRACKLIST


Side 1
01  A Sweet Taste Of Sin - Dennis Coffey
02  I'll See You In Hell First - Phillip Mitchell
03  Keep It Up - Betty Everett
04  Backed Up Against The Wall - The 3 Pieces
Side 2
01  Don't Risk Your Happiness On Foolishness - Fantastic Four
02  Set It Out - A.C. Tilmon & The Detroit Emeralds
03  Baby, Get Down - Eddie McLoyd
04  Killing Time - Natural Essence
Side 3
01  Love Starved - Shirley Brown
02  Sweet Music, Soft Lights And You - Millie Jackson & Isaac Hayes
03  Your Love Is My Desire - Eramus Hall
04  It Hurts So Good - Millie Jackson
Side 4
01  I'm Gonna Have To Tell Her - Isaac Hayes
02  If I Had The Power - Johnny "Guitar" Watson
03  I Got To Have Your Love - Caesar Frazier
04  Do It To Me Now - Fatback


DESCRIPTION


In the 1970s black music took on a different edge. Although soul had always been about love, heartbreak, loss and cheating, men and women doing what men and women do, it had also been down home or at least raw. Even the big city soul of the 60s kept this feeling. As the 70s dawned it brought on a different aspect. Whether it was through an increasing sense of affluence among a substantial chunk of black America, or an escapism foisted on the whole nation through television's ability to bring the consumerist ideal into anyone's home, is anyone's guess. But it was undoubtedly helped by an increasingly sophisticated set of production values and studio technology.

Isaac Hayes and, later, Barry White, were the most obvious manifestations of this phenomenon - all furs, Rolls Royces and champagne - but even records such as Stevie Wonder's greatest albums, or Marvin Gaye's I Want You could not have happened even five years previously. Motown's 60s attempts at elegance had a distinctly white feel to them-.-what happened next was on different terms.

This compilation takes this change to heart - even the most traditional record here, It Hurts So Good, has a distinct sheen - and appreciates these records for what they are. And that is some of the mightiest slices of soul ever recorded, allied to a sense of production - big drums, plenty of space, lots of strings - that makes them an essential hunting ground for today's producers.

By Dean Rudland