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The Emotions - The Essential Emotions: The Columbia Years (2018)

The Emotions - The Essential Emotions: The Columbia Years (2018)

BAND/ARTIST: The Emotions

  • Title: The Essential Emotions: The Columbia Years
  • Year Of Release: 2018
  • Label: Legacy Recordings
  • Genre: Soul, Funk, Disco
  • Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:59:50
  • Total Size: 280 mb | 825 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Flowers
02. Best of My Love
03. How Can You Stop Loving Someone
04. Don't Ask My Neighbors
05. Love Vibes
06. Whole Lot of Shakin'
07. How'd I Know That Love Would Slip Away
08. Walking the Line
09. You're a Special Part of My Life
10. Where Is Your Love (Single Version)
11. Key to My Heart
12. Turn It Out
13. I Don't Wanna Lose Your Love
14. Now That I Know
15. We Go Through Changes
16. Boogie Wonderland feat. Earth, Wind & Fire
17. Smile
18. I Should Be Dancing (Single Version)
19. What's the Name of Your Love
20. Rejoice
21. Changes
22. All Night, Alright
23. Time Is Passing
24. Come Into My World
25. There'll Never Be Another Moment
26. Blessed
27. I Don't Wanna Lose Your Love (DJ Reverend P Edit)
28. Boogie Wonderland (12" Version) feat. Earth, Wind & Fire

A trio of sisters with a strong gospel base, the Emotions (based in Chicago) were one of the leading female R&B acts of the '70s. Lead singer Sheila Hutchinson and her sisters Wanda and Jeanette were only teenagers when they crashed the soul charts in 1969 with the engaging "So I Can Love You," but they sang gospel as children and enjoyed secular fame locally before signing with Memphis-based Volt and working with producers Isaac Hayes and David Porter. When Stax folded in 1975, the group hooked up with Maurice White of Earth, Wind & Fire, an association that led to the number one pop/R&B hit "Best of My Love" in 1977.

Two years after Best of My Love, Maurice White and the Emotions collaborated on "Boogie Wonderland," which was both a number two R&B and number six pop hit. They issued three more albums on White's ARC label from 1979 to 1981, but were unable to duplicate their earlier success. They moved to the Red label for the 1984 LP Sincerely, which included the single "All Things Come in Time." They issued three other singles from the album, but none made much impact, though each one charted. They then signed with Motown, but issued only one album, If I Only Knew. Sheila Hutchinson was a featured vocalist on Garry Glenn's "Feels Good to Feel Good" in 1987. Younger sister Pam (who temporarily joined the group in the late '70s and became a permanent member after the turn of the millennium) and Jeanette Hutchinson did background vocals on Helen Baylor's gospel song "There's No Greater Love" in 1990. Wanda Hutchinson and Jeanette sang on Earth, Wind & Fire's Heritage in 1990.


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  • User offline
  • qwes2000
  •  wrote in 18:00
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Thanks M8!! Appreciate U!!
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 01:11
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Many thanks for lossless.
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  • Almazz
  •  wrote in 05:48
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Thank you, very much appreciated