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Earl Young's Trammps - What Happened To The Music FLAC album

Tracklist

What Happened To The Music 5:15
What Happened To The Music (Dub Mix) 5:49
Trammp A Pella To The Music 2:45

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
PSW 778 Earl Young's Trammps* What Happened To The Music ‎(12") Philly Sound Works PSW 778 US 1983
PSW 778 Earl Young's Trammps* What Happened To The Music ‎(12", Promo) Philly Sound Works PSW 778 US 1983


Earl Young's Trammps - What Happened To The Music FLAC album

Musician performer: Earl Young's Trammps

Title: What Happened To The Music

Country: US

Date of release: 1983

Style: Soul, Disco

Genre: Electronic / Funk & Soul

Size FLAC: 1290 mb

Rating: 4.7 / 5

Votes: 796

Other Formats: APE MPC VOC MIDI AAC MP3 AUD

Related to Earl Young's Trammps - What Happened To The Music FLAC Albums

Marad
kinda sounds like a funky jazzy remix of Heavy vibes (1982) https://www.discogs.com/Montana-Sextet-Heavy-Vibes/release/245886
Marad
kinda sounds like a funky jazzy remix of Heavy vibes (1982) https://www.discogs.com/Montana-Sextet-Heavy-Vibes/release/245886
Kage
'Realised, computerised, synthesised- freeze-dried'. The lyrics sum up the record, as it perfectly captures the transition from the live musicianship of the 1970's to the sampled, edited extended breaks of the 1980's championed by DJ's playing a crucial role in the development of US club sounds. Paul Simpson (the man) brings a meeting of Phily Disco & the New York Dub sound he hugely contributed to (along with echo lovers Patrick & Peter ''you know who', Arthur Russell, Steven Stanley, Sly & Robbie e.t.c). Its a beauty. This 12" has everything...
Kage
'Realised, computerised, synthesised- freeze-dried'. The lyrics sum up the record, as it perfectly captures the transition from the live musicianship of the 1970's to the sampled, edited extended breaks of the 1980's championed by DJ's playing a crucial role in the development of US club sounds. Paul Simpson (the man) brings a meeting of Phily Disco & the New York Dub sound he hugely contributed to (along with echo lovers Patrick & Peter ''you know who', Arthur Russell, Steven Stanley, Sly & Robbie e.t.c). Its a beauty. This 12" has everything...
Anarius
Imagine The Trammps singing over a stripped-down dub-remix breakdown of the basic tracks to MFSB's "Love Is The Message" and/or various permutations of "Ooh, I Love It (Love Break) by the Salsoul Orchestra and that's exactly what this is, albeit the tracks are re-recorded by Vince Montana and his crack session players, so it sounds as if it had been recorded in the 1972-1974 timeframe. The B-side Dub mix by Paul Simpson is the best mix here: by stripping away some of the cheesier basic tracks on the A-side mix, Paul made this much more funky, underground, and Classic-sounding.
Anarius
Imagine The Trammps singing over a stripped-down dub-remix breakdown of the basic tracks to MFSB's "Love Is The Message" and/or various permutations of "Ooh, I Love It (Love Break) by the Salsoul Orchestra and that's exactly what this is, albeit the tracks are re-recorded by Vince Montana and his crack session players, so it sounds as if it had been recorded in the 1972-1974 timeframe. The B-side Dub mix by Paul Simpson is the best mix here: by stripping away some of the cheesier basic tracks on the A-side mix, Paul made this much more funky, underground, and Classic-sounding.