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Tag Archives: The Gap Band

Aalon Butler

Although singer/guitarist/songwriter Aalon Butler is definately not a significant name in either soul or rock, significant connoisseurs of ’70s music may remember him for backing United kingdom singer Eric Burdon as well as for briefly leading his very own band, Aalon. Butler can be a citizen of LA, where he …

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Prince Charles

Joined up with by his City Defeat Bandand playing a distinctive wind synthesizer known as the Lyricon, Charles “Prince Charles” Alexander released a small number of wild synth-funk albums — 1981’s Gang Battle, 1982’s Rock Killers, and 1984’s Battle Zone — that attained more recognition in the U.K. than in …

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Cameo

An outlandish, in-your-face stage existence, a strange love of life, and a hard-driving funk audio that criss-crossed several musical limitations earned Cameo countless evaluations to Parliament/Funkadelic within their early days. Nevertheless, Cameo eventually used off accusations to be derivative by transcending their affects and outlasting nearly every single one of …

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Morris Day

Along with his dynamic dancing and smooth yet gutsy vocals, Morris Day performed an important role in the introduction of the Twin City dance/club sound from the 1980s. A founding person in Prince’s band, enough time, he remained using the group from 1981 until 1984, when he released his single …

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Dyke & the Blazers

Dyke & the Blazers were among the initial acts — most likely the initial notable work — to try out funk apart from James Brown. Certainly, they often times sounded just like a type of junior edition of Brown as well as the JB’s, playing tunes where the rhythms and …

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Sho-Nuff

A Mississippi funk music group, Sho-Nuff hasn’t attained much business success saving for Malaco. The Jackson ensemble started in 1975. Its primary members were business lead vocalist Frederick Teen, guitarist Lawrence Lewis, keyboardist Adam Lewis, bassist Sky Chambers, drummer Bruce Means, conga participant Albert Bell, and Jerod Minnis.

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Brick

Brick was an Atlanta music group that created an effective merger of disco and jazz within the ’70s they called “dazz.” Brick’s roster included business lead vocalist/saxophonist/flutist Jimmy Brownish; guitarist/bassist/vocalist Regi Hargis Hickman; lead vocalist Ray Ransom, who doubled like a bassist/keyboardist/percussionist, and Eddie Irons, who sang lead vocals and …

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Yarbrough & Peoples

Yarbrough & Individuals burst onto the music scene using the million-selling single “Don’t End the Music,” a sinewy slab of synth-based R&B/funk which was before its time and had a far-reaching influence within the a long time. The sizzling monitor held down the main R&B place for five weeks and …

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The Strikers

This NY group had some disco/club hits in the first ’80s for Prelude. Drummer Milton Dark brown, bassist Willie Slaughter, keyboardist Howie Adolescent, guitarist Robert Gilliom, saxophonist Darryl Gibbs, and lead vocalist Ruben Faison got their first achievement with “Body Music” in 1981. It reached the R&B Best 30. The …

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Archie Bell & the Drells

Vocal group Archie Bell & the Drells are known many for the cool, handclap-happy soul solitary “SHRINK,” popular that reached number 1 about Billboard’s R&B and Sizzling 100 charts in 1968. Bell and his Houston, Texas-based support — which presented, at varying instances, Archie’s sibling Lee Bell, Billy Butler, Joe …

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