=The Act=
Kool & The Gang a New Jersey-based Funk and Disco band, who often went into Soul and Jazz at times. The band found fame from the point when they dropped their debut in 1970, but it wasn’t really until later (by about their sixth album in 1973) when they really made an impact as ... Read review
The acid-jazzers of the 1990s could learn a thing or five from the pre-"Ladies Night" Kool ... more
and the Gang. They were one of the tightest funk acts around, and this best-of finds them leaping from highlight to highlight. While their lyrics are sometimes j...
Postage & Packaging: Free! Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours...
The acid-jazzers of the 1990s could learn a thing or five from the pre-"Ladies Night" Kool ... more
and the Gang. They were one of the tightest funk acts around, and this best-of finds them leaping from highlight to highlight. While their lyrics are sometimes just (admittedly sage) chants like "Love the Life You Live", the Gang also earn top marks for brashness ("Jungle Boogie", "Spirit of the Boogie"), tongue-in-cheek self-aggrandisement ("Hollywood Swinging"), and surreal anti-heroin ranting ("Rhyme Tyme People"). --Rickey Wright
Postage & Packaging:Free! Availability:Usually dispatched within 24 hours...
The acid-jazzers of the 1990s could learn a thing or five from the pre-"Ladies Night" Kool ... more
and the Gang. They were one of the tightest funk acts around, and this best-of finds them leaping from highlight to highlight. While their lyrics are sometimes just (admittedly sage) chants like "Love the Life You Live", the Gang also earn top marks for brashness ("Jungle Boogie", "Spirit of the Boogie"), tongue-in-cheek self-aggrandisement ("Hollywood Swinging"), and surreal anti-heroin ranting ("Rhyme Tyme People").--Rickey Wright
Postage & Packaging:£1.21 Availability:Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
The acid-jazzers of the 1990s could learn a thing or five from the pre-"Ladies Night" Kool ... more
and the Gang. They were one of the tightest funk acts around, and this best-of finds them leaping from highlight to highlight. While their lyrics are sometimes just (admittedly sage) chants like "Love the Life You Live", the Gang also earn top marks for brashness ("Jungle Boogie", "Spirit of the Boogie"), tongue-in-cheek self-aggrandisement ("Hollywood Swinging"), and surreal anti-heroin ranting ("Rhyme Tyme People").--Rickey Wright
Postage & Packaging:£1.21 Availability:Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Advantages: Bangers throughout Disadvantages: Nothing specific
...to assist it in the best way he can. It is a fly groove and does its job well.
**Five Stars**
14. “Pneumonia”
Album: “Live At The Sex Machine” Year: 1971
I have to say that this was a pretty unmemorable one here and one which needs a little more time to get into as although it sees the band getting down to the same sorts of stuff which made them so big in the game, it wasn’t really until ... ...did the music in a pure manner (before choosing to move towards the Disco style) then you are bound to enjoy what you get here as all of the best work is brought together to the point where you question whether they could have made a weak one at all. ... more
=The Act
=
Kool & The Gang a New Jersey-based Funk and Disco band, who often went into Soul and Jazz at times. The band found fame from the point when they dropped their debut in 1970, but it wasn’t really until later (by about their sixth album in 1973) when they really made an impact as the Funk sound had really formed itself and they were able to come up with material to act as anthems of the time. The height of success for them was in fact once they had watered-down the Funk later on as Kool led the band to more Disco-sounding by the eighties. Their last album came as recently as 2007.
=The Album
= This is a 1993 compilation release for Kool & The Gang. It was one of many which they brought, but in this case they chose to break down their material and rather than picking a few from over 20 years of music, they brought together music which spans from their debut, self-entitled 1970 album, up to “Open Sesame” from 1976.
====Track listing====
1. “Funky Stuff”
Album: “Wild And Peaceful” Year: 1973
This is a fly cut from the album and it sees that they get right down to things in an extremely funky manner by throwing down one which has them just jamming with it and showing what exactly their instruments are able to come out with as Koo is seen to led the pack by chanting initially (with a call of “Paaaaar-taaaaay”, before he lays down a few raps about how he can’t do without with kind of material. It is a banger and does it job of hyping up the listeners and representing what they have to offer.
**Five Stars**
2. “Who’s Gonna Take The Weight”
Album: "Live At The Sex Machine" Year: 1971
With this, you get the band showing the variety that they have to offer in their music by calming the pace somewhat and getting into a much more gentle one where they address big issues and talk about who needs to take responsibilities for all the wrongs which are occurring in society at the time. It is a fly groove and the funky drumming and accompanying bass riff pulls out the energy of a tune which starts as if it is to be a Soul recording.
**Five Stars**
3. “Rhyme-Tyme People”
Album: "Light Of Worlds" Year 1974
This is killer jam from them and it shows them pulling out a recording which you are bound to enjoy if you are familiar with “Hollywood Swingin” as it takes on a very similar structure and gets them laying down some of the most engaging material to get people moving to their killer compositions. There is lots of brass and percussion used here and I felt that was constructed in the perfect way to support the freakiness of the guitaring which is brought through with extensive wah-wah usage to make it such a fun tune.
**Five Stars**
4. “Hollywood Swinging”
Album: “Wild And Peaceful” Year: 1973
Sampled by the likes of Puff Daddy (for a breakthrough tune for Mase), as well as DJ Kool, this is a song which assisted in the big mainstream break for this band as you get them pulling out a tune where they show what they can come up with as they take it towards the West Coast and get down to the funky Swing sound for out there to come out with one of the most impressive displays you could have possibly heard back then.
**Five Stars**
5. “Love The Life You Live”
Album: “Music Is The Message” Year: 1972
Opening to wah-wahs which made the seventies what is was, you get a tune which seems to be perfectly on-trend for the time as you find that in this one they pull together all of the most exciting elements of their music to come up with what you have here. it is a fast-paced one, and with such an energetic drumming display from George Born, you simply cannot help but feel the band as they blaze out a killer feel-good jam.
**Five Stars**
6. “Give It Up”
Album: “Kool & The Gang” Year: 1970
This is one which really takes things to another place as you find that with it they get into one where they show that in spite of the fact the pace is prevented from getting overly-excited, they can ‘give up the Funk’ by keeping the most engaging elements to the drummer’s breaks and the seductive sounds of the Brass work to hold the thing together as they do a vocal-less track which is filled with energy. This one was sampled extensive for Eric B. & Rakim’s “Juice” (Know The Ledge) and is bound to have improved my enjoyment for it. **Five Stars**
7. “Chocolate Buttermilk”
Album: “Kool & The Gang” Year: 1970
With this one they show that although many Funk band at the time were still taking from the Psychedelic years which had just preceded them (acts such as Sly & The Family Stone, Funkadelic, and Parliament), these Jersey boys were ready to take the Funk and push it forward by advancing with alternative jazzy influences to come up with a banger of a tune such as this one where you can help but feel each and every turn in the music.
**Five Stars**
8. “Jungle Boogie”
Album: “Wild And Peaceful” Year: 1973
This was another which acted as a major influence upon them making it big in the game at the time as for this one they show exactly what the music of the time should be concentrated on as they come up with their own themed music to rival the sort of things which big Funk forces were bringing as they kept to the Psychedelic sounds which had managed to seep their way through from the sixties.
**Five Stars**
9. “Let The Music Take Your Mind”
Album: “Kool & The Gang” Year: 1970
Here you have a track which really does reflect what the title first puts across to you as you actually get taken over by the complexities of this song and feel all of what went into making the fly composition were they just have fun with it. You here people in the background calling out to the instrumentalists to lay down their own improvisational offerings, such as a heavy bass lick form Kool and freaky percussion form George Brown.
**Five Stars**
10. “Open Sesame” (Part 2)
Album: “Open Sesame” Year: 1976
The energy which you get from this track is something which really takes you by complete surprise as it seems to come out of nowhere as you go from calm, directly into a blaze of exciting music where they all come together to get into a tune which reflects the time where everyone was experimenting on what the music could use to take as inspiration, and in this case you get Kool leading them into a mystical atmosphere filled with lots of mythical references.
**Five Stars**
11. “Kool It”
Album: “Live At The Sex Machine” Year: 1971
This is a track on here which forces you to really calm down in a way which you probably don’t expect to be with their music as they actually take things down to a very gentle place and concentrate on just mellowing things out without having to make much of an effort to really get you moving (as it comes naturally through the bass which they lay down n spite of the general pace or mood of the music). The quality remains high here, and I can’t see how you can be put off by this change.
**Five Stars**
12. “Summer Madness”
Album: “Light Of Worlds” Year: 1974
Used extensive for DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince’s “Summertime”, this is a Jazz composition from the band which has them moving away from the expected music from them in order to lay down a calming song which reflect the laid-back atmosphere which you would tend to associate with the Summer as they light grooves are lifted by an ascending synthesizer to show how they were experimenting further, and were able to come up with great results whilst trying out new things.
**Five Stars**
13. “N.T.”
Album: “Live At The PJ’s” Year: 1971
This is one of the most sampled works in the Hip Hop world, and I felt that with such a funky offering, it would be hard to resist this early Kool & The Gang work as they show how they can build up tunes up on some the most exciting drum creations, which is complemented by the way that Kool gets down to the deep bass work to assist it in the best way he can. It is a fly groove and does its job well.
**Five Stars**
14. “Pneumonia”
Album: “Live At The Sex Machine” Year: 1971
I have to say that this was a pretty unmemorable one here and one which needs a little more time to get into as although it sees the band getting down to the same sorts of stuff which made them so big in the game, it wasn’t really until I heard the funky George Brown breaks in the drumming where I really took notice and once that fell into place, the rest of the track seemed to make more sense as they make a song which takes from the Funk of the late sixties.
**Four Stars**
15. “Love & Understanding”
Album: “Love & Understanding” Year: 1976
With this epic (near eight minute-long) track you have the band getting down to one where they attempt to bring much more of the up-beat and attractive music where they attempt to bring people together with music which seems to range a fair bit in the sort of key genres which is based upon. Although the lyrics to it may be rather repetitive and pointless, the rest of what you get from it makes up for this.
**Five Stars**
16. “Spirit Of The Boogie”
Album: “Spirit Of The Boogie” Year: 1975
Here you have them getting down to a track which you would have to liken to the sort of music which you get in “Jungle Boogie” as they get down to one where the thing seems to take on a very similar structure as they feel the Funk through the deep, mid-tempo grooves in the melodies in the bass and Brass work as they take on clear inspiration from what George Clinton was bringing for Parliament and Funkadelic at this time.
**Five Stars**
=Conclusion
=
This is a big album from the band, and for anyone who liked the band as they did the music in a pure manner (before choosing to move towards the Disco style) then you are bound to enjoy what you get here as all of the best work is brought together to the point where you question whether they could have made a weak one at all.
Product Information for "Best Of Kool & The Gang 1969-1976, The - Kool & The Gang" »
Product details
Title
Best Of Kool & The Gang 1969-1976, The
Performer
Kool & The Gang
Genre
R&B
Sub Genre
Funk
Release Date
06/1993
Recomended Retail Price
8.99 GBP
Original Release Year
1993
Label / Distributor
Mercury / Universal Music
Pieces in Set
1
Studio / Live
Mixed
Stereo
Stereo
Format
Performer
EAN
731451482229
Catalogue Number
5148222
Additional notes
Album Notes
Kool & The Gang: Robert "Kool" Bell (vocals, bass); Amir Abdul-Salaam Bayyan (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Charles Smith (vocals, guitar); Khalis "Ronald Bell" Bayyan (vocals, flute, soprano & tenor saxophones, keyboards, percussion); Dennis "Dee Tee" Thomas (vocals, flute, alto saxophone); Robert "Spike" Mikens (vocals, trumpet, flugelhorn, percussion); Larry Gittens (vocals, trumpet, flugelhorn); Clifford Adams (vocals, trombone); Ricky "Richard Westfield" West, Caldwell MacMillan, Kevin "Ice" Lassiter (vocals, keyboards); George "Funky George" Brown (vocals, drums, precussion); Donal Boyce (vocals, sound effects); Woodrow "Woody" Sparrow (guitar); Otha Nash (trombone). Producer: Kool & The Gang. Compilation producer: Harry Weinger. Recorded between 1969 and 1976. Includes liner notes by Cleveland Brown. THE BEST OF KOOL & THE GANG, 1969-1976 culls highlights from the band's creatively rich, pre-"Celebration" years. Given the album's concentration of intricate horn melodies and catchy synth lines, it's hardly surprise that 1969-1976 occasionally plays like an encyclopedia of contemporary hip-hop samples. The party whistle that sounds just seconds into the opening "Funky Stuff" sets a celebratory tone that rarely lets up during the 74 minutes that follow. The 1976 B-side "Open Sesame, Pt. 2" is rife with frenetic horn colorings. On "Who's Gonna Take the Weight, Pts. 1 & 2," a short sample of crowd noise played in a loop throughout the song gives the track a carnival-esque feel. "Kool It (Here Comes the Fuzz)" is another studio track that features ersatz crowd noise, and the effect only adds to the festivities. The cooled-out and synthesizer-rich "Summer Madness" and the deeply grooved "N.T., Pts. 1 & 2" are downright infectious. Also included is the classic "Jungle Boogie," a song given new life as part of the PULP FICTION soundtrack. This essential collection makes clear how Kool & the Gang left its indelible imprint on the spirit of the boogie.
Album Reviews
Q (8/93, p.113) - 4 Stars - Excellent - "...a carefully selected cross-section of one of the most exciting New York bands of the early '70s..." NME (7/31/93, p.27) - 7 - Very Good - "...the Koolsters still strike timeless poses here...." Entertainment Weekly (5/28/93, p.65) - "...endlessly booty-shakable..." - Rating: B
Titles on disc 1
1.
Funky Stuff
2.
Who's Gonna Take The Weight
3.
Rhyme Tyme People
4.
Hollywood Swinging
5.
Love The Life You Live
6.
Give It Up
7.
Chocolate Buttermilk
8.
Jungle Boogie
9.
Let The Music Take Your Mind
10.
Open Sesame
11.
Kool It (Here Comes The Fuzz)
12.
Summer Madness
13.
NT
14.
Pneumonia
15.
Love And Understanding (Come Together)
16.
Spirit Of The Boogie
Ciao
Listed on Ciao since
04/04/2005
Compare Best Of Kool & The Gang 1969-1976, The - Kool & The Gang to other similar House, R&B, Soul & Rap »
Similar products and search queries by other users »
Best 19691976, Best Of 19691976, Best Kool 19691976, Best The 19691976, Best Gang 19691976, Best Of Kool 19691976, Best Of The 19691976, Best Of Gang 19691976, Best Kool The 19691976, Best Kool Gang 19691976, Best The Gang 19691976, Best Of Kool The 19691976, Best Of Kool Gang 19691976, Best Of The Gang 19691976, Best Kool The Gang 19691976
Are you the manufacturer / provider of Best Of Kool & The Gang 1969-1976, The - Kool & The Gang? Click here