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  2. We Are One (Maze album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We_Are_One_(Maze_album)

    Maze chronology; Live in New Orleans ... All songs written by Frankie Beverly. "Love Is the Key" 4:26 ... "Love Is the Key" 80 5 88

  3. Maze (band) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maze_(band)

    Maze, also known as Maze Featuring Frankie Beverly and Frankie Beverly & Maze, is an American soul band founded by Frankie Beverly in Philadelphia in 1970. [1] Under its original name Raw Soul, the band moved to San Francisco and was introduced to Marvin Gaye .

  4. Maze Featuring Frankie Beverly (album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maze_featuring_Frankie...

    Signed to a recording contract with Capitol Records in 1976, Maze would release their debut album, Maze featuring Frankie Beverly in 1977. From that album, Maze would earn a devoted fan base with classic tracks "Happy Feelin's", "While I'm Alone" and "Lady of Magic" ultimately giving them their first gold record.

  5. Joy and Pain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joy_and_Pain

    Joy and Pain is the fourth album by Bay Area-based R&B group Maze, released on July 18, 1980, on Capitol Records. [2] The album features the R&B hits "Southern Girl" and "The Look in Your Eyes," along with the title track, all of which remain staples on Urban radio stations.

  6. Golden Time of Day - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Time_Of_Day

    Golden Time of Day is the second album by Bay Area-based R&B group Maze, released in 1978 on Capitol Records. [2] ... "Song for My Mother" – 5:02 "You're Not the ...

  7. Can't Stop the Love (album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Can't_Stop_the_Love_(album)

    Maze chronology; We Are One (1983) Can't Stop the Love (1985) Live in Los Angeles (1986) Professional ratings; Review scores; ... All songs written by Frankie Beverly.

  8. Silky Soul - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silky_Soul

    The Rolling Stone Album Guide wrote that Silky Soul "finds Maze updating its graceful sound with a subtly bracing touch of synthesized rhythms." [5] The Boston Globe thought that Frankie Beverly ably spans "boudoir intimacies and pleas for South African liberation and black cooperation—all with a voice as cool and buttery as [Marvin] Gaye's."

  9. Maze (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maze_(song)

    Both Kumi and the Heartsdales would also be featured in the music video, which carried a futuristic, but grunge-looking Tokyo. [2] "one" was also placed on the corresponding album, grow into one. Despite LISA being in the song, the track listing on the back covers of the single did not list her as the featured artist. [3]