The Stormmers, Lovers Song

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1LP - PMG
2016
BACK IN STOCK => 2021 10 15

20,00 € 20.0 EUR 20,00 € hors TVA

20,00 € hors TVA

Not Available For Sale

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    TRACKLIST

    A1 Lover's Song

    A2 Love Or Money

    A3 Super D. Jay

    B1 Sexy Woman

    B2 Atlantic Breeze

    B3 Be A Lover


    DESCRIPTION

    Originally released in: 1981


    * A beautiful Nigerian afro funk and disco funk album

    * Another milestone of the African pop music in the 70s

    * For fans of Paul Zaza, Geraldo Pino, Herbie Hancock, Gibson Brothers, Earth Wind & Fire

    * A legendary crown jewel of the Nigerian disco funk scene of the late 70s

    * An album filled to the last groove with steaming hot dancefloor sweepers

    * Excellent sound and performance by high class professional musicians

    * First ever official rerelease on vinyl and CD

    * Fully licensed

    * Remastered audio

    * LP housed in a superheavy 430g art carton cover

    * CD housed in a rock solid jewel case

    * Ultimate collectors item for fans of 1970s afro beat and funk rock


    The Stormmers were led by Renny Pearl, former bandleader and bass player with AKTION (The Aktions/Aktion 13), an Afro Funk band from Warri that burned brightly and briefly in the mid 70s. With the help of Jake Sollo, an ex-Funkee and recently reconstituted disco dandy, they created Lovers Song, an album of frantically musical bass lines, skittery high hats and an irresistible urge to get onto the dancefloor. ‘Love and Money’ has the swagger of John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever. ‘Super DJ’ has the sure-footedness of a well-selected playlist. ‘Sexy Woman’, with its refrain of ‘I need you, I want you, you turn me on, you’re beautiful’ is sound of a clubber desperately trying to find someone, anyone, so they don’t have to go home alone. The album was recorded in Nigeria and the UK and released in 1981, a time in Nigeria when oil prices were falling, beats-per-minute were rising and clubbers wanted to party like there was no tomorrow. The urgent, salacious sounds of The Stormmers suited the mood perfectly. – Peter Moore