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The Way U Make Me Feel: UK Boogie & Street Soul, 1980-1994

  • Cat No: FSRLP154
  • Release: 2025-06-06
  • updated:2025-06-11

Format

2LP 6390 JPY

80-90年代のUK産ライトファンク・ディスコ&ブリットファンク、レゲエ・クロスオーバーな名復刻が続く好調Freestyle Recordsからの最新作は、1980-1994年の間にリリースされたUKストリート・ソウル&ブギーのレア&キラー・トラックを厳選コンパイル。限定ヴァイナル2LP全12アーティスト12トラックを収録。レコメンド。

80年代の幕開け、当時のUKストリートでは、ブラック・ポピュラー・ミュージックのサウンドの転換期で、オーケストラ・サウンドを交えた大所帯のバンド編成から、小規模なアンサンブルへ移行していき、サックス奏者、トランペット奏者、トロンボーン奏者の演奏はキーボード奏者に取って代わられた。プロフェットやコルグからローランドやヤマハに至るまで、シンセサイザーの数々が作り出す虹色の音色は、この時代のソウルに新たな艶やかさとフレッシュな輝きを与え、低めのテンポと重く弾むベース・ラインはブギーと呼ばれるようになった。この新しいサブジャンルは当時のイギリスで大流行した。そしてその後、レゲエ界にはラヴァーズ・ロックも登場しすることとなり、UKストリート・ソウルならではの80’sブラック・コンテンポラリー・ソウル&ファンク、ディスコ、レゲエ/ラヴァーズ/ダンスホールレゲエ、エレクトロ、ヒップホップ、ニューウェイヴ等々が独自に折衷クロスオーバーする様々なライトファンク・ディスコ&ブリットファンクがアンダーグラウンド・シーンでもたくさん生み出された。1980-1994年の間にリリースされたUKストリート・ソウル&エレクトロ・ディスコ・ブギーのレア&キラー・トラックを厳選コンパイルしたもので、2枚のレコードに全12アーティスト必殺の12トラックが収録されている。DJ プレイとしてはもちろん、リスニング・アルバムとしても最適。限定ヴァイナル。
Andrew Holliganによる貴重な写真とKevin Le Gendreによるライナーノーツ掲載。 (コンピューマ)

Track List

  • 1. La Famille & Caron Wheeler - Dancer (Vocal Mix)

    05:26
  • 2. Clarity - The Way U Make Me Feel

    06:07
  • 3. Distance - Just One More Kiss (feat. Janey Hallett)

    05:50
  • 4. Pause - It's Just Amazing

    05:14
  • 5. Roy Hamilton & Capiche - Turn up the Music

    05:53
  • 6. Rick Clarke - Gonna Make You Happy (feat. Jill Francis)

    03:44
  • 7. Candy McKenzie - Remind Me

    05:00
  • 8. Eddie Capone's Treatment - I Won't Give You Up (feat. Diane Jones)

    06:08
  • 9. T.J. Johnson Band - I Can Make It (Good for You)

    07:55
  • 10. Private Funk-Shun - All That I Wanted Was You

    03:46
  • 11. Purely Fizzycal - Make a Move

    05:40
  • 12. Gold In The Shade - I Really Love You So

    05:30

>> 0bit/44.1khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]

Freestyle Records compile a killer overview of rare & undersung UK street soul & boogie tracks from across the 80s and early 90s, selected from the creme of the label's recent 12" reissue programme. Features an exclusive mid-90s cut from Manchester street soul act Gold In The Shade, along with photography from Andrew Holligan and notes from Kevin Le Gendre.

"The sleeve of this album has faces that tell a thousand stories. In Hackney, east London, where photographer Andrew Holligan created a series of inspired pictures, every day people developed a vibrant culture, enlivening a part of the capital that was much maligned during the Thatcher years. The street was a lounge, a place to meet, talk, laugh, and, generally, hang. This was also the golden age of the house party.

At the dawn of the 80s the sound of black popular music that these good folk were listening to was in the grip of change. For the most part bands with horn sections were scaling down and the 8-10 piece unit gave way to much smaller ensembles with a less orchestral sound, as saxophonists, trumpeters and trombonists who provided finely shaded harmonies and counter-melodies were being replaced by keyboard players. Indeed the rainbow of colours fashioned by an arsenal of synthesizers, from Prophets and Korgs to Rolands and Yamahas, brought preen and sheen to soul, which, with a lower tempo and heavy bouncing bass lines, was being referred to as boogie. Needless to say the new sub-genre caught on in the UK and became another form of vocabulary for audiences to embrace in the slipstream of the Brit-funk movement of the mid '70s, which was spearheaded by groups of mostly young Britons of West Indian heritage.

During this transitional period, which also saw the emergence of lovers rock, there was a certain amount of movement between genres, and a cursory glance at the total output of black British music reveals the presence of female vocalists recording in several styles. Lines were crossed. Furthermore, there was an increase in the amount of one-off studio projects, in which a producer-composer wrote a track, played keys and called in a singer and some additional sessioneers to add finishing touches. This is one of the main reasons why the era is so fascinating, and is still the subject of the extensive research that has led to an album such as The Way U Make Me Feel. Rather than being a scene that was centred around several marquee bands, boogie Brit-Funk was more disparate and fragmented, and therefore far harder to pin down and document.

The other term that was coined for the slew of releases was Street Soul, which also resonated with a certain spirit of independence, as the bulk of the artists who stood under this umbrella were releasing their work on small labels that did not have the reach of the majors. It meant that they were often consigned to obscurity, for the most part. The story is all too familiar. But low key can be high grade. Big labels and large venues serve a purpose but the real good times are to be had at house parties on the street where people live. The Boogie is always funkier when it drops in the basement."

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