Hues Corporation – Rockin’ Soul & Love Corporation (1974/1975) [Reissue 2018] [MCH SACD ISO + DSF DSD64 + Hi-Res FLAC]
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DST64 2.0 & 5.1 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 67:35 minutes | Scans included | 3,05 GB
or DSD64 Stereo (from SACD-ISO to Tracks.dsf) > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | Full Scans included | 2,68 GB
or FLAC 2.0 (carefully converted & encoded to tracks) 24bit/96 kHz | Full Scans included | 1,51 GB
2LP on 1SACD | Features Stereo & Quadrophonic Surround Sound | Vocalion # CDSML 8539
The Hues Corporation was an American pop and soul trio, formed in Santa Monica, California in 1969. This SACD release includes the #1 chart hit, “Rock The Boat”, and the hits “Rockin’ Soul”, and “Love Corporation”. The group named themselves after the business empire of Howard Hues and they recorded some excellent easy listening disco music in the mid-seventies, but they are remembered as a one-hit wonder. The group who may not have been among the most important disco groups, but whose music is definitely worth a listen and a definite addition to all soul lovers.Pop-soul trio The Hues Corporation are the subject of this month’s third disc, which pairs two of their most successful albums for RCA, 1974’s Rockin’ Soul and 1975’s Love Corporation. After honing their craft as a live act (primarily on the Tahoe-Vegas lounge circuit) for the better part of five years, the group found its way on to RCA’s radar after appearing in the 1972 Blaxploitation cult classic Blacula and featuring on its accompanying soundtrack. Seen by the label as something of a spiritual successor to another of its acts, The Friends of Distinction (who were in the process of breaking up at the time), RCA went as far as pairing the group with producer John Florez, who’d helmed the Friends’ hits Grazing in the Grass and Going in Circles. Their debut album, 1973’s Freedom for the Stallion, yielded a moderate hit with its eponymous title track, but when a follow-up single stiffed, the label was ready to give up on the album – and possibly the group. That is, until word filtered back to RCA from their A&R reps in New York that another track from the album, Rock the Boat, had become a sensation in the city’s underground dance clubs, or “discotheques” as they were increasingly becoming known. With this club success in mind (and anticipating radio play for the song), Florez went back into the studio and remixed Rock the Boat, enhancing the bass drum and bass guitar, and making the other rhythm instruments sound bigger and snappier – in the process creating one of the first of what would later become known as disco remixes. Released as a single with little fanfare in February 1974, the remix bubbled under for a couple of months, but the summer of 1974 saw disco music make its move from underground phenomenon to mainstream sensation, and Rock the Boat rode that wave right to the top of the pop charts in July. Selling a staggering two million copies before the year was halfway through, the song would become the first disco song ever to top the US pop charts.
In the aftermath of Rock the Boat’s worldwide success, RCA would issue The Hues Corporation’s sophomore LP, Rockin’ Soul. Released in November 1974, it would produce another Top 20 pop hit for the group with its dancefloor-oriented eponymous title track. The album also features New Orleans R&B legend Allen Toussaint’s I’ll Take a Melody, the swinging Barry White ballad How I Wish We Could Do It Again, and Ease on Down the Road (from the hit Broadway musical The Wiz), along with five other originals from group founder/manager (and Rock the Boat writer) Wally Holmes. RCA also wisely included John Florez’s remix of Rock the Boat on Rockin’ Soul – while it may have been unusual to have the same studio recording on two consecutive albums, Florez’s remix was the hit version that most listeners were familiar with, and from a commercial standpoint there was no reason not to include it.
1975’s Love Corporation found the group working with wunderkind producer David Kershenbaum, who’d go on to produce hits for Joan Baez, Joe Jackson and Duran Duran amongst others. The swirling strings and syncopated hi-hat of its Philadelphia soul-influenced title track would net the group another moderate hit, and much like that song, the influence of Philly soul (which was dominating the R&B charts at the time) is felt strongly throughout the rest of the album. Other standout tracks include the Holmes original When You Look Down the Road, which features a gorgeous three-part vocal harmony set against a slinky funk backdrop, and Danny Moore’s Follow the Spirit, which recalls some of the O’Jays work from the same period. Despite the breezy nature of some of the songs on these two albums, the musical accompaniment is top-notch. Immaculately produced and arranged, they feature a cadre of some of the decade’s finest studio talent, including Larry Carlton, Joe Sample and Wilton Felder of the Crusaders, future Toto keyboardist David Paich, drummers Jim Gordon and Ed Greene, as well as sax players Ernie Watts and Tom Scott.
Tracklist:
01. Rockin’ Soul
02. How I Wish We Could Do it Again
03. Were Keepin’ Our Business Together
04. Ease On Down the Road (from the musical The Wiz)
05. I Got Caught Dancing Again
06. Love’s There
07. Rock the Boat
08. I’ll Take a Melody
09. No End in Sight
10. Into My Music
11. One Good Night Together
12. Follow the Spirit
13. Long Road
14. Gold Rush
15. He’s My Home
16. When You Look Down the Road
17. You Showed Me What Love Is
18. Love Corporation
19. Sing to Your Song
20. Soul Sailin’
Download from FileJoker:
SACD ISO:
mqs.pw_HuesC0rp0rati0nR0ckinS0ulL0veC0rp0rati0n197475Reissue2018SACDIS0.part1.rar
mqs.pw_HuesC0rp0rati0nR0ckinS0ulL0veC0rp0rati0n197475Reissue2018SACDIS0.part2.rar
SACD DSF/DFF:
mqs.pw_HuesC0rp0rati0nR0ckinS0ulL0veC0rp0rati0n197475Reissue2018DSD64Stere0.part1.rar
mqs.pw_HuesC0rp0rati0nR0ckinS0ulL0veC0rp0rati0n197475Reissue2018DSD64Stere0.part2.rar
SACD FLAC 24bit:
mqs.pw_HuesC0rp0rati0nR0ckinS0ulL0veC0rp0rati0n197475Reissue2018FLACStere02496.rar