Mooris Day – Color Of Success (1985)

delantera-morrisdayColor Of Success (1985)
Here’s Morris Day solo, with zoot suit and cane, but not quite on target. Color of Success reveals a strong talent still coming into focus, but it’s largely the same synth-dominated funk that primed the Time, Prince’s erstwhile opening act. In order to attract a crossover audience, however, Day has cut back the humor, cleaned up the lyrics and mostly replaced drums with drum machine. The result is a lighter, smoother sound that doesn’t stick with you, except for the visceral guitar solos and the pleasures of Day’s intimate baritone. Nonetheless, Day’s talent for creating moods and nuances shows through. Less buoyant than its predecessors, this album communicates a poignant, restless loneliness, and the wailing, minor-key hooks of the title song effectively complement Day’s reedy, melancholy voice.
Although Success is tinged with the subtle, emotive colorations that intensified the Time’s “Gigolos Get Lonely Too,” these songs would have been better if Day had loosened up. When he was Prince’s protégé, his message was style, but now he’s at the stage where he’s expected to move on to substance. Here he’s sticking to very tight forms: whenever any richness of texture develops or there’s an interesting musical exchange – for example, the blistering guitar passage by Tony Berg in “The Oak Tree” – it’s truncated or left dangling. The only cut on which Day approaches the vocal excitement of his soul-singer heritage is “Don’t Wait for Me,” in which his doo-wop vocal dips over a drag-step instrumental. (Day’s jivey insouciance surfaces when he sings, “I’m a bad influence on the word love.”) He should sing more than his customary one ballad per album; this vivid performance suggests that inside Day there’s a frustrated crooner trying to get out. (Rollingstone)
Tracks:
1. Color Of Success
2. The Character
3. The Oak Tree
4. Love Sign
5. Don’t Wait For Me
6. Love / Addiction
**Listen**

The Spinners – The Definitive Soul Collection (2006)

delantera-spinnersThe Definitive Soul Collection (2006)
The Spinners edition of Rhino’s Definitive Soul Collection series amounts to a redo of One of a Kind Love Affair — another two-disc set from Atlantic, released in 1991. Apart from improved sound and better packaging, there isn’t a great deal that separates the releases from one another. Beginners won’t see a tremendous amount of difference by glancing at the track lists, but weighing the releases against one another doesn’t make a whole lot of sense, since the earlier compilation will be harder to come by as the years pass. Everything a casual fan could possibly want is here, including “It’s a Shame,” “I’ll Be Around,” “Could It Be I’m Falling in Love,” “The Rubberband Man,” “Then Came You,” “Mighty Love,” “Ghetto Child,” and even a handful of well-selected album cuts that have never been given enough attention. (AMG)
Tracks:

Disc: 1
1. It’s A Shame
2. I’ll Be Around
3. How Could I Let You Get Away
4. Could It Be I’m Falling In Love
5. I Could Never (Repay Your Love)
6. One Of A Kind (Love Affair)
7. Don’t Let The Freen Grass Fool You
8. Ghetto Child
9. Mighty Love
10. I’m Coming Home
11. Then Came You (With Dionne Warwicke)
12. Love Don’t Love Nobody
13. Since I Been Gone
14. I’ve Got To Make It On My Own
15. Living A Little, Laughing A Little

Disc: 2
1. They Just Can’t Stop It (The Games People Play)
2. Sadie
3. I Don’t Want To Lose You
4. Love Or Leave
5. Honest I Do
6. Wake Up Susan
7. The Rubberband Man
8. You’re Throwing A Good Love Away
9. Me And My Music
10. Heaven On Earth (So Fine)
11. Easy Come, Easy Go
12. If You Wanna Do A Dance (All Night)
13. Are You Ready For Love
14. Working My Way Back To You/Forgive Me, Girl
15. Cupid, I’ve Loved You For A Long Time
**Listen**

L.T.D Featuring Jeffrey Osborne – L.T.D Classics Vol. 27 (1987)

delantera-ltd-classics-vol-27L.T.D Classics Vol. 27 (1987)
According to conventional wisdom, soul artists who didn’t jump on the disco bandwagon couldn’t get arrested in the late ’70s. The problem with this theory is that many soulsters who really weren’t very disco-minded (everyone from Cameo to the Isley Bros. to Maze & Frankie Beverly) had no problem going gold at the time. And let’s not forget LTD, a monster of a soul band that was highly visible on Black radio from 1976 to about 1981. This Compilation illustrates what a jewel of a singer LTD had in Jeffrey Osborne, who sounds as comfortable on gutbucket, down-and-dirty funk like “Back In Love Again,” “We Party Hearty” and “Jam” as he does on the gospel-drenched ballads “Where Did We Go Wrong,” “Love Ballad” and “Share My Love.” Classics also reminds us that while Osborne’s departure was a tremendous loss for LTD, the band still delivered some five-star material after his departure — including the sweaty “Kickin’ Back” and the poignant “April Love.” (AMG)
Tracks:
1. April Love
2. Holding On (When Love Is Gone)
3. We Party Hearty
4. Back In Love Again (Every Time I Turn Around)
5. Lady Love
6. Kickin’ Back
7. Stay With Me (Won’t Cha’)
8. Share My Love
9. Stranger
10. Shine On
11. Dance N’ Sing N’
12. Love Ballad
13. Make Someone Smile, Today!
14. Love To The World
15. Where Did We Go Wrong
**Listen**