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'80s Soul - Gold
Various Artists:  '80s Soul - Gold

$13.98 2-CD Set
Listen Greatest Hits

Album Review

Released: 2006
Label: Hip-O Records
Selection #: 215549
Rick James: Super Freak; Diana Ross: I’m Coming Out; Commodores: Night Shift; plus Kool & The Gang, Stephanie Mills, New Edition, Bobby Brown, DeBarge, many more.
Listen RM WM
1 I'm Coming Out - Ross, Diana
2 She's a Bad Mama Jama (She's Built, She's Stacked) - Carlton, Carl
3 Super Freak - James, Rick
4 Being with You - Robinson, Smokey
5 With You I'm Born Again - Syreeta
6 When She Was My Girl - Four Tops
7 Let It Whip - Dazz Band
8 Early in the Morning - Gap Band
9 Cutie Pie - One Way
10 All This Love - Debarge
11 Don't Look Any Further - Edwards, Dennis
12 Treat Her Like a Lady - Temptations
13 Mr. Telephone Man - New Edition
14 Somebody's Watching Me - Rockwell
15 Meeting in the Ladies Room - Klymaxx
16 Nightshift - Commodores
17 Cherish - Kool & The Gang
18 Oh Sheila - Ready For The World
19 Secret Lovers - Atlantic Starr
20 Your Smile - René & Angela
21 I Have Learned to Respect the Power of Love - Mills, Stephanie
22 You Should Be Mine (The Woo Woo Song) - Osborne, Jeffrey
23 Ain't Nothin' Going on But the Rent - Guthrie, Gwen
24 Candy - Cameo [1]
25 Looking for a New Love - Watley, Jody
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Album Review

Hip-O Records, the reissue arm of the major label Universal, often licenses tracks from other record companies to broaden the selections on its compilation albums. But in assembling "'80s Soul Gold", an entry in Hip-O's discount-priced series of double-CD collections, compilation producer Harry Weinger must have felt that such borrowings were unnecessary. After all, Universal, a company formed by the merger of MCA and PolyGram, already has deep holdings in soul music, starting with the Motown catalog and including MCA itself, which was a big player on the R&B scene in the '80s. The 30-track album Weinger has compiled cannot be called a greatest soul hits of the decade exactly. It contains only three songs that were among Billboard magazine's 25 biggest R&B records of the '80s -- the Dazz Band's "Let It Whip," Smokey Robinson's "Being With You," and Rockwell's "Somebody'S Watching Me." But it is hardly lacking in hits. Every track but one reached the R&B Top Ten (the exception, Billy Preston and Syreeta's "With You I'M Born Again," hit the Top Ten of the pop and adult contemporary charts), and 16 -- more than half -- went to number one. As such, the album provides a good sense of what R&B music sounded like in the decade. That sense is enhanced by Weinger's wise decision to sequence the album in roughly chronological order. The '80s was a transitional decade for R&B (as is every decade, come to think of it), and the beats that were moving listeners early on were replaced by other ones as time went on. By the end of the second disc, one can hear hip-hop coming on with the cutups and James Brown sampling of Vanessa Williams' "The Right Stuff" and the very '90s-like sound of Guy's "I Like," the final track. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

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