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Various - The Sound Of Funk Volume One mp3 album

Various - The Sound Of Funk Volume One

Musician: Various
Album title: The Sound Of Funk Volume One
Style: Funk
Released: 1993
Country: UK
Size MP3 version: 1228 mb
Size APE version: 1107 mb
Size WMA version: 1654 mb
Rating ✫: 4.6
Votes: 859
Format: VOC MP4 XM AA MIDI AUD ADX
Genre: Funk

Various - The Sound Of Funk Volume One mp3 album

Various - The Sound Of Funk Volume One mp3 album

Tracklist

A1 The Herb Johnson Settlement Damph F'aint 3:31
A2 Leroy & The Drivers The Sad Chicken 2:20
A3 James Lewis Fields How Long Shall I Wait 2:27
A4 The Village Callers Hector 2:37
A5 Gus 'The Groove' Lewis Let The Groove Move You 2:48
A6 Fabulous Caprices* Groovy World 3:40
A7 The Fabulous Counts Jan Jan 2:27
B1 Mickey & The Soul Generation Iron Leg 2:15
B2 Frank Williams You Got To Be A Man 2:40
B3 Jake Wade And The Soulsearchers* Searching For Soul 2:37
B4 Sons Of Slum The Push And Pull 2:38
B5 James Spencer Take This Woman Off The Corner 2:20
B6 Robert Moore Everything's Gonna Be All Right 2:39
B7 The Showmen Inc The Tramp Pt. 1 2:11
B8 Chris Jones I'm The Man 2:50

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
GSLP 7 Various The Sound Of Funk Volume 1 ‎(LP, Comp) Goldmine Soul Supply GSLP 7 UK 1992
GSLP 7 Various The Sound Of Funk Volume 1 ‎(LP, Comp, Promo, W/Lbl) Goldmine Soul Supply GSLP 7 UK 1992
GSLP 7 Various The Sound Of Funk Volume 1 ‎(LP, Comp) Goldmine Soul Supply GSLP 7 UK 2000
GSCD 7 Various The Sound Of Funk - One ‎(CD, Comp) Goldmine Soul Supply GSCD 7 UK Unknown
GSLP 7 Various The Sound Of Funk One ‎(LP, Comp) Goldmine Soul Supply GSLP 7 UK 2000



Cordabor
If you like uncut funk, you'll love this compilation of obscure '70s funk sounds from artists like Leroy & the Drivers, Sons of Slum, and Jake Wade & the Soul Searchers. Funny names aside this is good potent funk, not the self-contained funk band stuff that owned a piece of the charts in the '70s but harder, wicked tracks that would make James Brown and Dyke (of the Blazers) proud. You'll think you're listening to James Brown when "Let the Groove Move You" by Gus "the Groove" Lewis cues and starts spinning; you'll swear Bootsy Collins was playing the hyper basslines, and Lewis has Brown's grunts and groans down pat. Frank Williams must have been schooled at Dyke & the Blazers University because that's who he sounds like on "You Got to Be the Man," spirited horns signifying every line Williams sings. "Everything's Gonna Be Alright" by Robert Moore is straight from the Charles Wright & the Watts 103rd Street Band book of funk and is similar to "Express Yourself."