Sounds Of Blackness - You Are The One
Table of Contents
Download
Filename: sounds-of-blackness-you-are-the-one.rar- MP3 size: 34.2 mb
- FLAC size: 513 mb
Tracks
Track | Duration | Preview |
---|---|---|
You Are The One (Afro Latin Remix W/o Rap | 3:53 | |
Try (Mickey P Remix) | ||
You Are The One (Masterstepz Remix) | 3:55 | |
You Are The One (Album Version With Rap) | 4:44 | |
You Are The One (Mickey P Remix) | ||
You Are The One (Masterstepz Dub Mix) | ||
You Are The One (70's Soul Hiphop Remix With Rap) | 4:41 | |
You Are The One(Afro Latin Remix W/o Rap | 3:53 | |
You Are The One (70's Soul Hiphop Remix W/o Rap) | 3:43 |
Video
Sounds of Blackness - You Are The One (Masterstepz Dub Mix)
Sounds Of Blackness - You Are The One - HD
Sounds Of Blackness - You Are The One
Sounds Of Blackness - You Are The One (Masterstepz Remix)
Images
Catalog Numbers
CDPRO-2001Labels
- Zinc
- Not On Label
Listen online
- online luisteren
- escuchar en línea
- kuunnella verkossa
- ouvir online
- ascolta in linea
- lytte på nettet
- online anhören
- écouter en ligne
- lyssna på nätet
Formats
- CD
- Maxi-Single
- Promo
- Vinyl
- 12"
- White Label
Companies
Role | Company |
---|---|
Pressed By | Optimal Media Production |
Notes
Promotional OnlyBarcodes
Matrix / Runout: B039338-01About Sounds Of Blackness
A 40-person choir and ten-piece orchestra led by , combined traditional African music with urban soul to become one of the most distinctive and popular contemporary gospel groups. Over the course of their career, the group won many awards, from organizations as diverse as the Grammies and the NAACP.
Russel Knighton formed the group, The Macalester College Black Chores, that would prove to be the origins of Sounds of Blackness in 1969 at St. Paul, Minnesota's Macalester College. In 1971, was hired as their musical director and the group began developed its own identity. They opened the group up to the entire community and expanded their musical scope to concentrate on all aspects of black music. They designed the group as a way to embrace all manners of African-American music and create rich, diverse music to celebrate God and the human spirit, as well as make social statements. With their new direction in mind, the group renamed themselves Sounds of Blackness.
For the first decade and a half of the group's existence, Sounds of Blackness primarily played around Minneapolis, often opening for acts as diverse as The Jackson 5 and . They frequently released their own records, which helped them strengthen their local following.
Partially by choice, Sounds of Blackness remained a regional attraction until 1989, when , the hot Minneapolis-based production team, brought to one of their concerts. Jackson's enthusiastic response inspired Jam & Lewis, who were already in negotiations with Sounds of Blackness, to sign the group to / immediately. Before the Perspective deal, any major label interested in the Sounds Of Blackness asked the group to streamline their sound to include only gospel or R&B, or asked them to change their name to "Sounds Of Music"; it wasn't until Perspective that they were allowed to keep their style and sound intact.
The group's national debut album, "The Evolution Of Gospel
Name Vars
- (Sound Of Blackness)
- Gary Hines And The Sounds Of Blackness
- S.O.B.
- Sds Of Blackness
- Sound Of Blackness
- Sounds Of Blackness Band
- Sounds Of Blackness Orchestra
- The Sounds Of Blackness
- The Sounds Of Blackness Choir
Members
- Ann Nesby
- Latrice Verrett
- Gary Hines
- Cynthia Johnson
- James \"Big Jim\" Wright
- Carrie Harrington
- Core Cotton
- Marie Graham
- Jamecia Bennett
- Billy Steele
- Mark Haynes
- Libby Turner
- Patricia Lacy
- Terrence Frierson
- LaSalle Gabriel
- Daryl Boudreaux
- Deevo
Comments
This song still rocks
da hora
Who is the lady on lead vocals?
Nem parece gospel um alo do Brasil congonhas mg??