01. Incognito - Parisienne Girl [12" Version] 02. Hi-Tension - British Hustle 03. Team - We Are the Team [7" Version] 04. Second Image - Can't Keep Holding On 05. Ray Carless - Ray Carless-Tarantula Walk 06. Morrisey Mullen - Morrisey Mullen-Come And Get Me 07. Shakatak - Night Birds 08. Light of the World - Time [12" Remix] 09. Freeez - Keep In Touch 10. The Inversions - Mr.Mac 11. The Warriors - Destination 12. Paul Hardcastle - rainforest (remix) 13. Heatwave - Slip Your Disc To This 14. Surface Noise - Surface Noise-Dancin' On The Wire 15. Lessons In Love (Shep Pettibone Remix)
Hola amigos!!! Necesito
vuestra ayuda para ganar este concurso en el que estoy disputandome una
plaza para pinchar en la apertura de esta temporada de Rockers Club de
Alicante. Sólo teneis que entrar en el enlace de arriba y votar por mi video. Muchísimas gracias a todos por vuestra ayuda!!!!!!
Hello friends!!!!! I need your help to win this contest I'm dispute a place to play at the opening of this season Rockers Club of Alicante. You only have to enter this link and vote for my video. Thank you all for your help!!!!!
D-Vine Soul show with Anthony D on DanceGrooveRadio.com every 2nd and
4th Monday of each month between 2100hrs -2300hrs (GMT+1). I will be
selecting and blending those 70s and 80s soul, funk and boogie tunes.
Also thrown in for good measure will be a few ‘street soul’ gems from
the late 80s and very early 90s plus a few other musical surprises.
Only one "x" this time. If you came from side A, get to know each other, talk about how strange this tape got, is he really playing Chicago? Whose idea was this? Who are you? Get out of my bed. What was I thinking.
1. Don't Look Back - Deepjack2. Sleazy Promise - Trav & Volta3. Nonstop! - Sharam Jey, Kolombo4. Hands - Saarid, KLP5. Walking to the Night - J&M Brothers, Vic Moren6. Salsa De Gala (All Good Funk Alliance Remix) - All Good Funk Alliance, Empresarios7. So Deep in My Heart feat. Katie Kboom - Memo Isua, Yeray Herrera, The Wize Guys8. You Should Know - Monte9. Aye Aye Aye Aye - Sanny X, Joanna, Albert Candy, Bruno Croft10. Pepe Was Here - Dansoul11. One Day in the Sun (Teenage Mutants Remix) - Stee Downes, Teenage Mutants, Final DJS12. On Your Name feat. Slick Beats - Agent Greg, Dino MFU13. Sidejacked - Jem K, Ron Kushty14. Understand Me - Sharam Jey, Teenage Mutants
Disco Music" - the music of a generation (including my own) made popular by the Latino, gay and Psychedelic communities of the late 1960's and early 1970's. The disco sound was soaring with often reverberated vocals over a familiar and steady "four-on-the-floor" beat.
Disco Nights III - A Night To Remember (A Digitally recorded mix for you listening pleasure)
This is my final installment of my Disco Nights series and unlike Disco Nights - Legends Of The Dance Floor - which was about the artists that made a special mark on the genre of Disco Music, or Disco Nights II - A Touch Of Philadelphia - which was about a style of music - this set is all about fun and dancing. So have fun listening to it!
The mix opens with an introduction I mixed in tribute to both the Disco Era and the great summer season and clubs of the New Jersey shore resort areas from back in the day - where I live. Many of these great clubs were either severely damaged or washed away by Hurricane Sandy on October 28, 2012 - as well as the towns which they reside. It's in some of these clubs that my DJ career began and I have the best memories when thinking about them. Featured in this mix are the musical talents of: GQ GQ was an American group, formed in The Bronx, New York, primarily noted for its success in disco music and R&B. The core membership of
the group commenced playing professionally, under different group names, as of 1968. GQ became quite successful playing music representative of the period'sdisco influenced sound. They had several highly-ranked singles in multiple markets (US Pop, US Black, US Disco/Club). Their biggest hit was 1979's "Disco Nights (Rock-Freak)" Jackie Moore: Jackie Moore is an American R&B singer best known for her 1979 disco hit "This Time Baby. Gino Soccio
Gino Soccio (born in September of 1955, Westmount, Quebec) is a Canadian disco record producer. His heritage is Italian. His only US Billboard Hot 100 entry was the #48 hit single "Dancer" in 1979, but he did hit #1 on the US Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart twice("Dancer" "Dance to Dance" in 1979, and "Try It Out" / "Hold Tight" in 1981, six weeks each). "Dancer peaked at #46 in the UK Singles Chart in May 1979. Soccio's third biggest hit, "It's Alright" Suzi Lane: suzi Lane (real name Suziliene McDonald) is an American female singer who had a number-one track on the Billboard Hot Dance Music/Club Play
chart in 1979 with the Giorgio Moroder-produced tracks, "Harmony"/"Ooh,La, La". The dance hit was number one for one week while remaining on
the chart for six months. At the time the tracks charted some thought it was recorded by Donna Summer because they thought that "Harmony" sounded like Summers' 1977
hit "I Feel Love." That confusion alone may have fueled the song's climb to the top of the Dance chart. It was Lane's
lone charting hit. Gary's Gang: Gary's Gang was an American funk/soul/R&B/disco group who just missed having a U.S. Top 40 hit, when their lone Billboard Hot 100 entry,
"Keep on Dancin'", reached #41 in 1978. The song climbed to #8 in the UK Singles Chart,[1] #14 on the Hot Soul Singles chart in 1978 and also
made #1 on the Hot Dance Club Play chart, as did two of the group's other songs: "Do It At the Disco" and "Let's Lovedance Tonight". The
latter was later used as the sampling background track to Soulsearcher's 1999 #20 Club Play hit, "Can't Get Enough". Edwin Starr: Edwin Starr (January 21, 1942 – April 2, 2003) was an American soul music singer. Starr is most famous for his Norman Whitfield produced
Motown singles of the 1970s, most notably the number one hit "War".The biggest hit of his career, which cemented his reputation, was the
Vietnam War protest song "War" (1970). In 1979, Starr reappeared on the charts with a pair of disco hits, "(Eye-to-Eye) Contact" and "H.A.P.P.Y. Radio". "Contact" was the more successful of the two, peaking at #65 on the US pop charts, #13 on he R&B chart, #1 on the dance chart, and #6 on the UK Singles Chart. Sylvester: Sylvester James (Los Angeles, September 6, 1947 – San Francisco, December 16, 1988), better known as Sylvester, was an American disco
and soul singer-songwriter. Known for his flamboyant and androgynous appearance, he was often described as the drag queen of disco, although repeatedly
rejected such a description. He was responsible for a string of hit singles in the late 1970s. His first solo album, Sylvester (1977), was a moderate success, and was followed by acclaimed disco album Step II (1978), which spawned the hit singles "You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)" and "Dance (Disco Heat)". He produced three more albums with Fantasy Records before signing to Megatone Records, the dance-orientated label founded by friend and
collaborator Patrick Cowley, with whom he produced four albums and the hit Hi-NRG track "Do Ya Wanna Funk". An activist who campaigned against
the spread of HIV/AIDS, Sylvester died from complications arising from the virus in 1988. Debbie Jaccobs: Debbie Jacobs is a female Black American singer born in Baltimore, Maryland who had several Disco hits.[1] Her biggest chart hit was "High
on Your Love," which climbed to #70 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1980. The song, along with "Hot Hot (Give It All You Got)" went to #1 on the
Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart. Other '70s hits included, "Don't You Want My Love" and "Undercover Lover", which are her best known hit
singles. She enjoyed a second #1 dance hit in 2000 in a new version of her 70s club hit song "Don't You Want My Love" (as Debbie Jacobs-Rock),
produced by Rosabel. Cheryl Lynn: Lynda Cheryl Smith (born March 11, 1957), known better by her professional name Cheryl Lynn, is an American disco, R&B and soul
singer known best for her 1978 disco song, "Got to Be Real". After her performance on The Gong Show, Ahmed Ertegun of Atlantic
Records company couldn't come to an initial meeting with Lynn, with the result that she was contracted with Columbia Records company. Lynn
released her first and best-known song, "Got to Be Real," which was composed by keyboardist David Paich (of the band Toto), David Foster
and Lynn. The song scored #12 on the Billboard Hot 100 record chart and #1 on the Rhythm & Blues chart. The success of the single album
prompted a full scale debut album. Named Cheryl Lynn, it was produced by Paich. The album sold more than a million copies and scored #5 on
Billboard magazine's R&B albums chart and #23 on Billboard's top 200 album charts. The next single album, "Star Love"', also became a
success. Evelyn Champagne King: Evelyn "Champagne" King (born July 1, 1960) is an American R&B, disco and post-disco singer. Some of her best-known songs are "Shame", "Love
Come Down," and "I'm in Love." Evelyn King was born in the Bronx, New York, and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Her uncle Avon Long had played the part of
Sportin' Life in the first Broadway revival of Porgy and Bess and worked with Lena Horne at the Cotton Club. Her father sang back-up for
groups at Harlem's Apollo Theater. Voyage: Voyage was a French disco (1977-1979) and pop-funk (1980-1982) group, with the French musicians recording studio like André "Slim" Pezin
(guitar/vocals), Marc Chantereau (keyboards/vocals), Pierre-Alain Dahan (drums/vocals) and Sauveur Mallia (bass), by the significant and
important participation of the British lead vocalist Sylvia Mason-James during the first two albums in 1977 with Voyage and in 1978 with Let's
Fly Away. Their lone Billboard Hot 100 entry was "Souvenirs," which hit number forty-one in 1979.[1] They had more success on the U.S. Hot Dance Club
Play chart, where two of their albums, Voyage (1978) and Fly Away (1979), hit number one. A Taste Of Honey: "Boogie Oogie Oogie" is the name of a popular song by disco/R&B group A Taste of Honey. Released from their self-titled album in 1978, it
became an extremely popular "crossover" song. The lyrics urge listeners to "boogie oogie oogie till you just can't boogie no more." It topped
the Billboard Hot 100 chart, the Hot Soul Singles chart,[1] and the Hot Dance Club Play chart.[2] It would eventually sell over two million
copies and has become one of the most recognizable songs from the late 1970s disco era. It would also help the group win the Grammy Award for
Best New Artist of 1978. It also reached #3 on the UK Singles Chart.
If you haven't had the chance - check our my Disco Nights - Legends Of The Dance Floor and Disco Nights II - A Touch Of Philadelphia" Coming Soon The 80's are back Request me on Facebook using my name: Ciro Polese