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Sold Date:
February 6, 2023
Start Date:
March 6, 2017
Final Price:
$70.15
(AUD)
Seller Feedback:
450830
Buyer Feedback:
0
This item is not for sale. Gripsweat is an archive of past sales and auctions, none of the items are available for purchase.
Lovin Mighty Fire: Nippon Funk/Soul/Disco 73-83 [New Vinyl LP] UK - Import
Artist: Lovin Mighty Fire: Nippon Funk/Soul/Disco 73-83
Title: Lovin Mighty Fire: Nippon Funk/Soul/Disco 73-83
Format: Vinyl LP
Genre: Soul/R & B
UPC: 029667004916
Release Date: 2017
Record Label: BGP
Album Tracks
1. Bye Bye Session Band - Lily
2. Sentimental Hotel - Rie Nakahara
3. Bara to Yajyu - Haruomi Hosono
4. Why Don't You Move in with Me - Yasuko Agawa
5. Jiken Ga Okitara Beru Ga Neru - Pink Lady
6. Summer Champion - Yuko Asano
7. Dancin' - Junko Ohashi
8. Rainbow Paradise - Masayoshi Takanaka
9. Uragiri - Mari Natsuki
10. Maboroshi No Hito - Miyako Chaki
11. Tornado - Minako Yoshida
12. Banana - Kay Ishiguro
13. Funky Miyo-Chan - Masaaki Hirao
14. Yashow MacAshow - Ebonee Webb
15. Lovin' Mighty Fire - Naoya Matsuoka & Minako Yoshida
Double vinyl LP pressing. UK collection. Lovin' Mighty Fire is Howard Williams' third Japanese music compilation for the Ace Records house of labels - this time, for BGP International. Assembled in between his job as a record distributor and his monthly Japan Blues show for NTS radio, the first two have taken a look at the late '50s for a blast of Japanese rockabilly (Nippon Rock 'n' Roll), then the '60s and '70s for a romp in Japanese surf music (Nippon Guitars). This new outing searches for the soul music of Japan, from the early '70s to the early '80s. Japan has long been known as the final destination for many a collectible soul record. Yet, who suspected that some fine soul grooves were recorded for the domestic market, from ballads, to funk and disco? Strangely enough, some of the busiest writers and producers in this field came from a late '60s rock band, Happy End, but on listening to their collaborations, their rhythmic, soulful feel is immediately apparent. This album finally plants a Japanese flag firmly on the global map of soul.
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