The Dramatics – The Best Of The Dramatics
Label: |
Pye Records – STX.1047 |
---|---|
Format: |
Vinyl
, LP, Compilation
|
Country: |
UK |
Released: |
|
Genre: |
Funk / Soul |
Style: |
Funk |
Tracklist
A1 | Whatcha See Is Whatcha Get | |
A2 | In The Rain | |
A3 | The Devil Is Dope | |
A4 | And I Panicked | |
B1 | Hey You! Get Off My Mountain | |
B2 | Toast To The Fool | |
B3 | Now You Got Me Loving You | |
B4 | Highway To Heaven | |
B5 | Get Up And Get Down |
Credits
- Producer – Tony Hester
Notes
Text on Back cover:
Any experience possessing the power to stir the imagination or in some way stimulate one's emotions is said to be dramatic. Ron Banks, Larry Mayer, Willie Ford, Larry Demps, and L. J. Reynolds combine to form the mellow and melodious bunch we have come to know as The Dramatics. Quite appropriate, isn't it? How? Well, let's stop right here and backtrack momentarily.
Can you recall the first time that "new" record dropped from the spindle to the turntable and you immediatly found yourself "gettin' down" and singing "Whatcha See Is Whatcha Get"? Kinda stimulated that boogy emotion didn't it? The what about the dramatic and urgent warning in "Hey You. Get Of My Mountain" and the stirring mockery and satisfaction in a "Toast To The Fool".
when...
there was a time we sensed despair and
did feel so much pain, that made us think
than anywhere else we'd rather be
"In The Rain"?
In your hands you hold the best of the tunes and the times that The Dramatics stirred, stimulated or soothed something within you. You owe yourself a listen. After all, how many times can you recapture a feeling?
Any experience possessing the power to stir the imagination or in some way stimulate one's emotions is said to be dramatic. Ron Banks, Larry Mayer, Willie Ford, Larry Demps, and L. J. Reynolds combine to form the mellow and melodious bunch we have come to know as The Dramatics. Quite appropriate, isn't it? How? Well, let's stop right here and backtrack momentarily.
Can you recall the first time that "new" record dropped from the spindle to the turntable and you immediatly found yourself "gettin' down" and singing "Whatcha See Is Whatcha Get"? Kinda stimulated that boogy emotion didn't it? The what about the dramatic and urgent warning in "Hey You. Get Of My Mountain" and the stirring mockery and satisfaction in a "Toast To The Fool".
when...
there was a time we sensed despair and
did feel so much pain, that made us think
than anywhere else we'd rather be
"In The Rain"?
In your hands you hold the best of the tunes and the times that The Dramatics stirred, stimulated or soothed something within you. You owe yourself a listen. After all, how many times can you recapture a feeling?
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Matrix / Runout (Side A Stamped): STX 1047 A-1Δ6
- Matrix / Runout (Side B Stamped): STX 1047 B-1Δ6
Other Versions (5 of 9)
View AllTitle (Format) | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Recently Edited
|
The Best Of The Dramatics (LP, Compilation) | Volt | VOS-9506 | US | 1974 | ||
New Submission
|
The Best Of The Dramatics (LP, Compilation, Promo) | Volt | VOS-9506 | US | 1974 | ||
Recently Edited
|
The Best Of The Dramatics (LP, Compilation, Stereo) | Volt | VOS-9506 | US | 1974 | ||
New Submission
|
The Best Of The Dramatics (LP, Compilation, White Label) | Pye Records | STX.1047 | UK | 1974 | ||
New Submission
|
The Best Of The Dramatics (LP, Compilation) | Volt | VOS-9506 | US | 1974 |
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