Album Results

Power And Love 

Babyface & Manchild

Power And Love

Genre: R&B/SOUL
Label: Blues Interactions Inc

Album Reviews

A self-contained septet that included Kenneth Edmonds, before he was crowned with the nickname Babyface, and his close friend and collaborator Daryl Simmons. The group's sound touched on several formats. The uptempo numbers, like "Red Hot Daddy," "Power and Love," and "Funky Situation," are heavily rock-oriented. The latter has a jazzy improvisational sax solo, and is the only number that features Babyface on lead vocals. The socially conscious "We Need We" falls more in line with R&B with its appealing arrangement. The group comes full circle with its R&B sound on "Especially for You." The serene composition features an undeviating guitar solo, and was Manchild's only single to crack the Billboard R&B charts; it peaked at 70 inside of eight weeks, and features the lead vocals of Chuckie Bush. One other notable is the '70s classic "Takin' It to the Streets," originally recorded by the Doobie Brothers a year earlier. Flash Ferrell gives an ardent delivery supported by cohesive background vocals and a spirited sax solo by Reggie Griffin. ~ Craig Lytle, All Music Guide

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Track Listing


1.  Red Hot Daddy more
2.  Power And Love more
3.  Especially For You more
4.  These Are The Things That Are Special To Me more
5.  Funky Situation more
6.  The Phuff more
7.  If You Don't Tell No One more
8.  Joy more
9.  Our Message more
10.  One Tender Moment more
11.  One Tender Moment: (alt. take) more
Featured Review
Fairytale Of New York Fairytale Of New York
The Pogues Feat. Kirsty MacColl
Included in our selection of "Five Christmas records you can play without embarrassment", "Fairytale Of new York" is the perfect song for people who don't really like Christmas songs: despite lyrics that work as an antidote against the typical sugary feast of good intentions ("Happy Christmas your arse, I pray God it's our last"), this rude vocal fight between the booze-shaped voice of Shane McGowan and the late Kirsty McColl has become a season favourite. Based on the story of many Irish emigrants escaping from the potato famine to the US in hope to become entertainers but failing in their venture, it has been reissued regularly since its original release on The Pogues' 1987 album "If I should fall from grace with God" and has even inspired a documentary about how it was conceived. ©2008 Shazam Entertainment Limited. All rights reserved.
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