Mansion, Devil Woman

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IN STOCK
1LP - PMG
2017

20,00 € 20.0 EUR 20,00 € hors TVA

20,00 € hors TVA

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Statut: IN STOCK

TRACKLIST 

A1 The Love Song

A2 Devil Woman

A3 Don't Take That Love Away From Me

B1 Heaven Is Here On Earth

B2 You Can't Stop Us

B3 The Great Question


DESCRIPTION

Originally released in: 1976


* A hot blooded Nigerian afro beat gem

* For fans of Ofege, Akwassa, Witch, James Brown, Funkadelic, Skatelites

* Filled to the last groove with catchy tunes that feature awesome soulful harmonies

* An original affair for fans of groovy black music

* Excellent sound and performance by high class professional musicians

* First ever 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 classic afro beat


The eastern Nigerian city of Calabar in Cross River State was colloquially known as Canaan City ‘ a place of lush landscapes, alluring women and delicious cooking. When the Biafra War ended it became a land of milk and honey for bands as well, with jumping venues like the Taj Mahal and Luna Nite Club and a label called Clover, set up local entrepreneur Ben Okonkwo, releasing albums by bands like The Doves, The Visitors, Aktion and The Apostles. The youngest band on the Clover roster was Mansion, a teenage highlife group, led by singer and bassist John ‘Holy Mountain’ Ebiong. Okonkwo decked them out in flares, repackaged them as a funk band and put them in the studio with EMI super-producer, Kayode Salami. The result was Devil Woman, an astoundingly assured funk/rock album. The title track revels in a ’60s psychedelic vibe. ‘The Love Song’ is a direct appeal to teenage hearts. ‘Heaven Here On Earth’ has an irresistible shuffling groove while ‘You Can’t Stop Us’ is what James Brown would have sounded like if he’d been born in the Cross River State. Devil Woman is an album designed to set young hearts aflutter and draw approving nods from seasoned musicians. It succeeds in both. – Peter Moore