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The Isley Brothers' final album under their six-member lineup, Between the Sheets (1983), sold more than two million copies. By then, financial struggles, creative difficulties, and other issues affected the group. Shortly after the success of Between the Sheets, Ernie, Marvin, and Chris left the Isley Brothers and formed Isley-Jasper-Isley.
The Isley Brothers Story, Vol. 1: Rockin' Soul (1959-68) — — — Rhino: The Isley Brothers Story, Vol. 2: The T-Neck Years (1969-85) — — — 1994 Beautiful Ballads — 67 — RIAA: Gold [6] Legacy: 1997 Greatest Hits — — — BPI: Silver [7] Epic: 1999 It's Your Thing: The Story of the Isley Brothers — — — Legacy 2000 Ultimate ...
The American R&B group the Isley Brothers wrote a song titled "Love Is a Wonderful Thing" and recorded it for United Artists Records in January 1964. The song was released as a single on a 45 rpm vinyl record on United Artists' Veep label in June 1966, and it reached number 110 on Billboard's Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart.
Aaliyah respectfully remakes The Isley Brothers classic with soothing vocals". [16] In his weekly UK chart commentary, James Masterton wrote, "Her second hit is in essence a beauty, a sparse but haunting rendition of an old Isley Brothers track, first written and recorded before she was even born."
The Isleys Live is a live album released by The Isley Brothers on March 24, 1973 on T-Neck Records as a double album with the catalog number TNS 3010-2. [3] Recorded at the Bitter End in New York City, the band are introduced as T-Neck recording artists before they take the stage.
The Isley Brothers in 1978, from left, O'Kelly Isley Jr., Ernie Isley, Chris Jasper, Rudolph Isley, Ronald Isley and Marvin Isley. (Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images) The Isleys’ hot streak ...
"Work to Do" is a 1972 funk song by the Isley Brothers, released on their T-Neck imprint. The song, written and produced by the group, was issued on their 1972 album, Brother, Brother, Brother, and charted at #51 pop and #11 R&B upon its initial charting.
The song is notable for being one of the few disco-based songs the Isley Brothers released. Beforehand, the group were known for their mixture of funk, rhythm and blues and rock. The song was led by brother Ronald Isley [1] while his brothers Kelly and Rudolph Isley chanted "rock don't stop" in the background.