Showing posts with label FUNK SOUL DISCO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FUNK SOUL DISCO. Show all posts

Roy Ayers: The Vibesman Tribute (plus exclusive free edit for download)

Amongst all the incredible soul-jazz-funk US musicians of the 1970s Roy Ayers was a one-of-a-kind legend, producing some of the most perfect, wouldn't-change-a-note music the world has ever seen. I think what I love about his attitude to music is that despite being a jazzman who can solo and play as complex as the next cat he chose to go down the path of making effortless grooves, choosing minimalist perfection over overly busy workouts. I think this is much harder to do than many people realise... Some jazz heads at the time were upset by this turn...they were of course wrong...the most profound truths have a simplicity to them and his music at its best rings with truth.

Roy was originally from California and even though he was based in New York in the 70s I think it makes sense to think of his music next to that of fellow Californian's George Clinton and Sly Stone, who all in their unique ways share that LSD-enlightened kicked-back sunshine conscious grooving mentality. I love this state of mind and the music that captures it....I've done tributes to both George and Sly on the blog (click on names to go to those). What a time.

On to the mix: kicking things off with my own exclusive edit which brings together two early Roy Ayers classics, Life Is A Moment and We Live In Brooklyn Baby. I think the messages of both these tunes fit together neatly. If you like this one I'm offering this as a free download: click here to grab it. 

Next the Ubiquity classic Searching, the first RA tune I fell in love with, sentiment and music coming together in perfect sweet-melancholy harmony, followed by two back to back tunes from the seminal RAMP (Roy Ayers Music Project), Come Into Knowledge…so gentle and sublime this one, slays me, psychedelic spiritual soul at its best followed by the incredible and somehow only recently released Paint Me Any Color - colours! colours! colours! haha yes!! I wish there was more acid-soul out there...we need reminders how beautiful reality is despite all the horrors.

From there slipping into the first synth groover of the mix,  Roy's restrained use of synths was one of his trademarks...It's Your Love is a Roy Ayers production fronted by vocalist Ethel Beatty... chord progression on this one is nailed on, love the slightly tense mood. Sticking with the tense-love theme for a minute, One Sweet Love is some great off-beat funk, brilliant drums on this and love the vocal attitude. 

Next smoothing things out with the instrumental Lifeline, showing off some of Roy's beautiful vibraphone playing skills, then on to a possible contender for my all time RA favourite, Together, a p-funk groover in a 6/8 time signature (count 6 not 4), and the killer lyrics have that unity message which will never get old. Sticking with straight grooving dancefloor boogie for the next few, the pure sunshine and togetherness of Everybody followed by the groundbreaking proto-house genius of Chicago - look for the full length mix on the UK-only Silver Vibrations LP for this one, the versions elsewhere are a shortened edit...though I also had to fade a little early for the mix...could listen to that groove all day.

Sticking on the dancefloor with Happy Music, another RA production/arrangement, deceptively innocent and simple but you cant change a thing about it, which came out on Roy's Uno Melodic label where a lot of his classic productions can be found, including planet-conquering tunes like Eighties Ladies' Turned On To You and Sylvia Striplin's You Can't Turn Me Away. There's a good comp called The Best of Uno Melodic that came out in 2018 worth checking. Last in this section the blistering jazz-funk dancefloor bomb Time Is Coming - possibly the most rip-roaring Roy Ayers tune of all time.

As the 70s turned into the early 80s Roy recorded and toured with Fela Kuti which inspired some classic afro-centric black-consciousness tunes, a couple of which here - first up the clearly Fela-inspired Black Family - serious - credit to Roy Ayers for taking on the pidgin-English style of Fela and making it work so powerfully - followed by the much earlier record 2000 Black, a tune reworked with Roy Ayers by 4Hero in 2001 and which gave its name to their broken beat label 2000 Black. Got to shout Marc Mac and Dego here, in the days before the internet it was Marc Mac who first introduced me to some deeper Roy Ayers tunes like Love From The Sun from playing them on the radio. Really wanted to include that in the mix but ran out of space and I've played that on the blog before on a previous Spring Sun Soul mix here. There's an amazing Dee Dee Bridgewater version of Love From The Sun thats well worth seeking out too.

Finishing with what seemed a fitting message Thank You Thank You for the music Roy and for making life much better! An antidote to the insanity of the world. 

As spring is here I'm including this mix as part of the annual Sun Spring Soul series - beautiful soul-inspired music that suits the season - check out all the previous editions of that here.


Roy Ayers: The Vibesman Tribute
(A Spring Sun Soul Mix)

Roy Ayers - Life Is A Moment, Mikus's Brooklyn Baby Edit [1972-75/2025]
Roy Ayers Ubiquity - Searching [1976]
RAMP - Come Into Knowledge [1977]
RAMP - Paint Me Any Color [1977]
Ethel Beatty - It's Your Love [1981]
Roy Ayers Ubiquity - One Sweet Love To Remember [1976]
Roy Ayers Ubiquity - Lifeline [1977]
Roy Ayers Ubiquity - Together [1977]
Roy Ayers - Everybody [1983]
Roy Ayers - Chicago (Silver Vibrations Mix) [1983]
Jaymz Beford - Happy Music [1981]
Roy Ayers - Our Time Is Coming [1982]
< Roy Ayers - Africa, Center Of The World> [1981]
Roy Ayers -Black Family [1983]
Roy Ayers - 2000 Black [1975]
Roy Ayers & Wayne Henderson - Thank You Thank You [1980]


YesYesTV - Weekly Shows and Archive


YesYesTV is our new live streaming DJ channel. At this moment we're doing two weekly shows - 5 hours of mixes a week!

On the Dance With Power show I play the best in DnB, Jungle, Hardcore, Techno, All flavours of House Music, Roots Rock Reggae, and Stepping Dub. Streams every Wednesday 9-11pm GMT

                       

Then on Sundays 4-7pm GMT join us for the Nice and Easy show, with me Mikus joined by Rutita playing some cool out Sunday selection: Funk, Soul, Jazz, Disco, Rocksteady, Reggae and a whole lot more.


                       

The best thing about streaming live is interaction, so do please log in and send a message in the chat boxes.

To tune in live go to YesYesTV:
www.twitch.tv/yesyestv and also streaming at www.youtube.com/mikusmusik

To keep in touch with upcoming shows and so on please follow at:
Twitter https://twitter.com/yesyesldn and https://twitter.com/mikusmusik
Facebook www.facebook.com/YesYesLDN and www.facebook.com/mikusmusik/
Insta www.instagram.com/yesyesldn  + www.instagram.com/mikus_musik/

As much as possible I'll be archiving the shows here on the blog, with YouTube, Mixcloud and Download links. Check the YesYesTV Archive page linked at the top of the page.


If at all possible video from the sets will remain archived on Youtube, but some shows get blocked because of audio copyright. In those cases I hope to at least have the audio available for download and also on Mixcloud.

Hope you can tune in!

Fight The Power Funk Mixtape

I was invited to do a 30 minute funk mix for Mike Walkden's Chrome Funk & Soul Show on Future Radio, and this is it! - a selection of cuts dealing with struggle, rebellion and revolution. The music here may be some 50 years old but its still as relevant, as moving, as kicking as ever...the fight continues....

Fight The Power Funk Mixtape 

> Chuck D <
 Isley Brothers - Fight The Power 
> Ernie Isley <
The JBs - The Grunt  
> James Brown and Bobby Byrd <
Sir Joe Quarterman  -  So Much Trouble In My Mind
> Jesse Jackson <
Stovall Sisters - Hang On In There 
> Malcolm X <
Mark Dimmond - A Change Had Better Come
Baby Huey & The Baby Sitters - Hard Times
Bobby Byrd - Hang Ups We Don't Need 
Johnny King & The Fatback Band -  Peace Love Not War (K Dope Edit)
> Martin Luther King Jr <
Sandi And Matues - The World 
> Malcolm X <
Mop Mop feat. Fred Wesley & Anthony Joseph - Run Around 

Download link

Prince 17 Days Remixes

Prince's estate are planning to make a number of releases over the coming years from his infamous Vault. Who knows what wonders are in there. I'm hoping for another jazz album, a la Madhouse - 8.

The first release has just come out: Piano & A Microphone 1983. Here are three little remixes I've done of the title track from that, 17 Days, laying down some very Prince-in-the-80s drum machine beats by way of a backing track. Not a massive difference between them, the HEAD MIX is just a little sparser than the NEW POWER MIX and MY BABY's TAMBORINE MIX is an instrumental version. Just in case Prince Estate are reading, this is for strictly non-commercial, pure-love purposes! Please allow it :)


MY BABYS TAMBORINE MIX is currently getting blocked on Soundcloud but you can hopefully play it by clicking here.

After The Riot: Sly Stone Rarities, Productions and Admirers 1973-1982

There are two distinct but both golden ages in Sly Stone's career. First came the straight outa Haight, racism-busting, genre-defying, multi-octave harmony singing, high on hope, Family-Stone-with-the-emphasis-on-Family era of the 1960s. Then in 1970 everything changed: Sly hit the drugs harder, the Family started splitting, the mood became moodier, and the groove got heavier, both in music and in American society more generally. That trajectory through rnb to soul to funk to disco, from new innocence and hope to reality check and struggle wasn't unique.....that was the wider social trend and many artists who had the longevity rode that wave...but Sly didn't just ride it, he innovated it at every stage.

The landmark There's a Riot Going On dropped in 1971 after Sly took a two year break from releasing new music to retreat and reconfigure. In that time he cooked up a unique sound, one that has influenced generations of musicians, including the likes of no less than Prince, D'Angelo, Herbie Hancock, Miles Davis and Stevie Wonder.

I think there's a really interesting parallel and overlap with Lee Perry...I'm really curious if there was a conscious influence either way between them...Lee was always a big soul and jazz fan so its not impossible. Both were creating new hazy soundscapes, running the beat box from their organs, blowing smoke at the reel to reel as it turned, and bringing the drum and bass up on the mixer. Worth remembering that Sly is not only a great vocalist, musician, songwriter, arranger, but also a real innovator in production too. Genius basically.

Riot was a commercial and critical success (though it caught a fair few people off guard), but with every subsequent release interest in Sly's music progressively diminished. And while later albums were patchier, there is still a treasure trove of incredible music after Riot - without a doubt some of the best he ever made. This mix picks out not just some favourite moments, but also tries to highlight some lesser known tracks and previously unreleased early versions, many of which only became available much later thanks to CD release bonus tracks and the like.

Demo releases are often best left in the vault but I think the versions here all have their own charm and character, even if they are occasionally a little rough round the edges.  For example the funky off-beat drums on this proto version of Babies Makin Babies gives it a very different feel to the one that made it to official release, but its definitely no weaker a tune. The lack of the iconic De La Soul sampled horns on the version of Crossword Puzzle bring out the violin parts and again give the track a different, almost country, flavour.

It is said that the reworked dubplate mix of Little Sister's You're The One - a track Sly produced and originally released on his own Stone Flower label - literally had one single pressing, originally cut for Tom Moulton, but thankfully it's recently made its way onto a CD release thanks to the perseverance of Danny Krivit to track down the original acetate and lock it down before it got lost to the ether. Its a big disco version for sure.

This selection is also interspersed with a couple of tracks from fellow Californian contemporaries D.J. Rogers and Shuggie Otis, who lovingly captured some of Sly's 70s sound to great effect, and made tunes which sit happily side by side with his own work. Finishing the mix off with a Funkadelic track that Sly sat in on playing keys and adding vocals.....there ended up being a fair bit of crossover between the Family Stone and Funkadelic, with singers from the Family Stone joining the Brides of Funkenstein and Sly often touring alongside George Clinton throughout the 70s.

Photo here comes from this great studio session gallery by Warren Harris.


After The Riot: Sly Stone Rarities, Productions and Admirers 1973-1982

Sly Stone - Say You Will [1974]
Sly Stone - Loose Booty (Alt Version) [1974]
Sly Stone - Remember Who You Are [1979]
DJ Rogers - Its Good To Be Alive [1975]
Sly Stone - Crossword Puzzle (Alt Version) [1976]
Sly Stone - The Same Thing (Original LP Mix)[1979]
Sly Stone - Frisky (Alt Version) [1973]
Shuggie Otis - Sparkle City [1974]
Sly Stone - Babies Makin Babies (Alt Version) [1973]
Sly Stone - We Can Do It [1982]
Sly Stone - I Get High On You  (John Luongo Disco Version) [1979]
Little Sister - You're The One (Dubplate Mix) [1976]
Sly Stone - One Way [1982]
Funkadelic - Funk Gets Stronger (Killer Millimeter Version) [1981]



Youtube Link
Download link

Spring Sun Soul

The annual ritual Spring Sun Soul mix, celebrating life, new beginnings, possibilities...onwards and sunwards! Upfull music all the way... on a beats and bass vibe this year. Shout to Fez, Bolans, Dmnnfta and J Robinson for turning me on to some of the tunes and artists featured... If you want more spring soundtrack do check the previous Spring Sun Soul mixes from the last 6 years >>here<<.


Spring Sun Soul VI

Children of The Sun - The Sun Ra Arkestra
Skylights - Boxcutter & Defcon feat. Kaidi Tatham 
Balanzat - Talamanca System 
Sunrise - Origination
Phnxdwn - Vestige
Run To The Sun (Instrumental) - NERD
Green Sky - Moon B
Expressions - Linkwood
Back & Forth - The Insiders

Spring Sun Soul

The tradition of the annual Spring Sun Soul mix continues - a soundtrack to capture the change in seasons and the return of new life. As ever it's a cross-section of styles: jazz to deep house to drum & bass to soul - even a touch of Congolese rhumba, all with a spring-soul breeze blowing through them. Open your windows and play!

I always love putting mixes together but these spring ones always feel a little extra special.. Really hitting the spot after a long hard winter. This is the fourth episode, previous year's Spring Sun Souls can be found >>here<<

 

Spring Sun Soul

Lazer Sword - Sky Burial
Bennie Maupin - Quasar
Betty Carter - Sounds (Movin' On)
Erro - Don't Change
Mr Fingers - Children at Play
Lopez Walker - Jah Jah New Garden
Alpha and Omega - Jah is Calling
Alpha Omega - Envy
The Detroit Experiment - Think Twice
OK Jazz - Bolingo Ya Bouge
Ballake Sissoko and Vincent Segal - Wo Ye N'Gnougobine

Right click and save it

Spring Sun Soul

Welcoming in the change of seasons with the annual rite on here that is the Spring Sun Soul mix. This year's selection is in full sun worship mode. Setting off on the first few in solar jazz funk fashion before moving on to some sunblessed dub, dnb, broken beat and the like. Keep an ear out for the Alpha Omega track Sun People  - definitely in my all time top howevermany... incredible tune. For more vernal vibes Spring Sun Soul Pt1 is here, and Pt2 is here. Goes out to all the Brownswood crew.


Spring Sun Soul

Jim Morrison Intro
Weldon Irvine - Morning Sunrise
Sons and Daughters of Lite - Let the Sun Shine In
Roy Ayers Ubiquity - Love From The Sun
Herbie Hancock - Sun Touch
Leo's Sunshipp - Give me the Sunshine
Moodyman - Sunshine
Ramp - Everybody Loves the Sunshine
Ian O'Brien - Midday Sun
Manasseh - Shining Dub
Alpha Omega - Sun People (Nubian Minds Remix)
Mikuś - Heart of the Sun
Calibre - Second Sun


Dusty Tapes: R Solution - Marc Mac, Dego, Kirk Degiorgio, IG Culture, Phil Asher + Patrick Forge


Another batch of rescued radio tapes here, these from the now vintage 4 Hero R Solution shows. The first 12" I ever bought was 4 Hero's 'Kirk's Nightmare', and like a lot of devotees to their sound I followed everything related to them and the rest of the camp loyally ever after, so when they got their own show - on Sunday nights, 2am to 4am on London's Kiss 100 - I was all over it.

To my ears the 4 Hero sound, be it the old hardcore stuff or new future soul material, is all about deep roots drawing water from the springs of 60s free jazz and 70s funk and soul, giving flower to music always way ahead of its time. The R Solution shows captured that whole spectrum.

R Solution only ran from 1998 to 2001 (cut short by the tragic selling-out of Kiss by new owners Emap) - three short years - but in that time the show became the home of what came to be known as the broken beat scene. Marc Mac and Dego shared the hot seat with Phil Asher and Kirk Degiorgio on rotation, each bringing their own angle.

I've upped a load of old radio tapes now - I think what all these shows have in common is that they were each a focal point for a living, breathing scene, in which listeners tuned in because the shows felt essential, building a movement, providing a testing ground for new music, and schooling on what had gone before. Couldn't be more true for R Solution.

Listening back now I cant help but feel that the music played seems more relevant and fresh than ever - where's the soul gone? If anyone knows where the home of the broken beat scene is today please post - I'm all ears. Enough chat - enjoy:
________________________________________________________
4 Hero - World Wide - Sides A + B

I think this might be the very first 4 Hero show, in a guest spot given to them in Giles Peterson's Worldwide show (at that time also on Kiss). A warm up for what was to come.


________________________________________________________
Phil Asher - Original Texture - Side A
Phil busting soulful broken beat nuggets


Phil Asher - Modaji Interview - Side B
Interviewing Modaji and playing some of his twilight jazz jams


________________________________________________________
Kirk Degiorgio - Vintage Selection - Sides A+B
From disco to hip hop to jazz to afro to dub to heaven!

________________________________________________________
4 Hero - All Good, All Love - Side A
Deep in the beats


4 Hero - All Good, All Love - Side B
Deeper still

________________________________________________________
Kirk Degiorgio - The Mizell Brothers Special - Side A
Kirk plays a selection of strictly Mizell Brothers productions - pure quality 70s jazzfunksoul

Kirk Degiorgio - The Mizell Brothers Special - Side B 
The tribute continues - strictly Mizell Brothers; Sky High productions

________________________________________________________
4 Hero - On the One Double Zero, Lahvley! - Sides A+B
A friend of mine sent this one over, not my tape. Thanks KP.


________________________________________________________
IG Culture - Main Squeeze - Side A
Not strictly R Solution, this was recorded on BBC London (another once-great station now on the crimes-against-music-list), but definitely belongs here. IG digs deep in the bag...


IG Culture - Main Squeeze - Side B
Part two of IG's show, finishing up on a bit of JA music. BIG UP IG.

________________________________________________________
Patrick Forge - Forging Ahead - Sides A+B 
As with IG, Patrick Forge isn't technically part of the R Solution thing, but a tape of one of his shows definitely belongs here. With Kiss since pirate days, and finally cutting out in 2008, the man is a radio legend - jazz cadet of the highest order. Salute!

________________________________________________________
R Solution lives on in a different form on NuWave Radio - check it - i'm especially feeling Dez and Biz's Cybershow - definitely still solving the problem...

Make Mine the :P

I first heard snips of p-funk as hip-hop samples: tribe, jb's, de la, but especially digital underground, whose first album was verging on a homage, with George Clinton's mighty footprints on every track. Not long after, thanks to being given a great comp I got to ride on the mothership-proper for myself, and did so over and over and over.

I've had a great time going through the Parliament & Funkadelic discography for this mix: its fascinating hearing that unique sticky strain of funk first bud, grow, and then come to dominate over a sound that in the early years was primarily psych-rocking.

They were such a hardworking band - still are - non-stop gigging, countless albums, keeping on through thick and thin, the input of so many great musicians, commitment to pushing boundaries, a love for the audience, a love for each other - just some of the Clinton family secrets of funkcess.

On top of all that they're the original ravers - all about overcoming, understanding and having fun through dance music. Have to shout everyone who used to get down to Funkin' Pussy back in the day, with an extra special dedication to the living funky worm Arya!


Make Mine the :P

Transmissions from the Mothership
P Funk
Everything is on the One
Mothership Connection
Funketelechy
Placebo Syndrome
*-*
Nappy Dugout
Together
Big Footin'
Let's Take it to the People
Standing on the Verge of Getting it On
Uncle Jam
Get Off Your Ass and Jam
Foot Soldiers (Star-Spangled Funky)
*-*
Atomic Dog (Instrumental)
Let's Play House
Crush It
Aqua Boogie
Flash Light
Freak of the Week
Knee Deep
One Nation Under a Groove

Arlen – Live and Direct

Release #3 on my co-run netlabel Terra Incognita Recordings and this one's special. California soul meets dub meets breakbeat-bizniz meets jazz meets the blues meets a packed chalice! Arlen has hooked up with some wonderful live musicians to bring you five magical tracks that touch on all those great traditions and do each one proud.

Arlen cut his teeth as a jungle dj on London’s legendary Kool FM (under the moniker Fabrok) in the early nineties, before moving on to producing more breakbeat orientated material, as well as lots of cinematic soundtrack pieces for both film and television. He's currently working on a whole range of different projects, so keep your eyes peeled for those. In the meantime, check this out – big. As with all Terra Incognita releases this is free to download and share...

Why not pay the Terra Incognita Recordings site a visit, and while you're there get connected on the twitter,facebook,rss etc etc - we're here: www.terraincognita.co.uk

Arlen – Live and Direct [TERRA03]

1. Not Just Another Wednesday (4.32)
2. The Dub of Lamb (6.07)
3. Devon Dub (9.39)
4. The Drummer Lets Off (7.27)
5. Kombat Funk (3.24)


Spring Sun Soul

Even though it happens every year spring always feels like a miracle to me - a magical time that definitely deserves its own soundtrack, new beginnings, horizons move forward, all that good stuff, and all thanks to the sun. If this mix leaves you wanting more vernal vibes check out last years Spring Sun Soul. Have to pay my respects to Denz and Biz whose Cybershow on 4Hero's essential Nuwave Radio is a direct influence on this mix, love the way they juxtapose tracks.


Spring Sun Soul

Little Sunflower - Dorothy Ashby
Concrete Jungle - Silkie
Dolly Unit - The Orb
Mode 2 - Future Beat Alliance
Earth - Meshell Ndegeocello
Eclipse - Talisman
Closer - Goapele
Last Time - Domu feat. Nicola Kramer
Skylark - Aretha Franklin
Aye Yafama - Ramata Diakite

Hottest Day of the Year

Some heatwave music, taking you to the balearic mediterranean, passing through south america and on to the carribean and harlem.



Hottest Day of the Year

1. Loco Dice - Minia Brasiliera
2. Maxence Syric -Sueno Latino
3. Sueno Latino - Sueno Latino
4. Tullio de Piscopo - Stop Bajon (Primavera)
5. Azymuth - Free as a Bird
6. Bitty McLean & The Supersonics - Cruisin'
7. Deodato - Superstrut
8. The Main Ingerdient - Happiness is Just Around the Bend
9. Burning Spear - We Are Free


Weya!

One more on an african flex, this time checking out the funk and jazz side of things. If you want to check out some more amazing and most often ultra-rare afro-funk, this blog is your mecca: http://voodoofunk.blogspot.com.


Weya!

Fela Kuti - Equalisation of Trouser and Pant
Antibalas Afrobeat Orchestra - Si, Se Puede
Tony Allen - The Same Blood
Lekan Babalola - Kabioye
Manu Dibango - Weya
Babatunde Olantunji - Takuta
Mulatu Astataque - Yegelle Tezeta
Bantous Jazz Watchi Wara
Wali and the Afro Caravan - Hail the King

Spring Sun Soul

Sweet spring breeze selection... get the windows open and give it a listen...have a great spring everyone 


Spring Sun Soul

Osunlade - Glide
John Coltrane - Giant Steps
Visioneers - It's Simple
Burning Spear - Zion Higher
Bobby Bland - Let's Get Together
Hugh Masekela - Grazing In The Grass
The Wailers - Put It On
Ebaahi Soundz - Oshit
4Hero feat. Bembe Segue & Kaidi Taitham - Something In The Way
Aphex Twin - Ptolemy
Derrick May - Strings of the Strings of Life
Sonar Kollektiv Orchester - Universal Love

DiscoNections

Disco has had a rough time of it. The connotations with gold medallions and hairy chests are hard to shake. The anger it provoked in the USA, leading to a public lynching of disco records at the Disco Demolition Night is quite stunning. Public Enemy's Chuck D, in his more militant youth, raged against disco, berating it for its lack of politics and general hedonism - he thought it was anti-revolutionary and a set back for black america (a view he's softened on since).

Getting on for thirty odd years later disco can be seen more importantly as the beginning of what we call dance culture. Disco gave us the 12 inch. It put the DJ and the mix at the centre. It cemented the heaven-bound combination of drugs and dancefloors. The remix and the re-edit. The original four to the floor. It took studio production techniques to a new level. Yeah, there are a lot of bad disco records out there, but that's true in any genre. Overall I think disco is owed an apology. For all its subsequent excesses we owe disco a lot.

This little 50 minute mix picks up on some of the different flavours and interpretations of disco, from straight up party grooves through to love songs, boogie bizzniss, detroit-style deepness, social consciousness, and jazz-funked work outs. The selection is rooted in that 78-80 window when disco was flying highest, but there are a couple of excursions into the future to see how the spirit has remained. Even if your initial reaction to disco is negative - and count me in that camp - try and give this a go with an open mind, and think what the world might be like had disco never come along... a worse place I'm sure.

Special dedi on this  to soulboy number one Nick Carn - lots of love and congratulations due!
(pic: Darryl Pandy in full effect - check videos out to see the force of nature in action!)
DiscoNections

Chic - Chic Cheer (1978)
Faze Action - In The Trees (1996)
Chaka Khan - Clouds (1980)
Farley Jackmaster Funk & Darryl Pandy - Love Can't Turn Around (1986)
Patrice Rushen - What's The Story (1980)
Clyde Alexander - Got to Get Your Love (1978)
Moodyman - Forevernevermore (2000)
Stevie Wonder - Race Babbling (1979)
Azymuth - Avenida Das Mangueiras (1979)