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  2. Play That Funky Music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Play_That_Funky_Music

    "Play That Funky Music" is a song written by Rob Parissi and recorded by the band Wild Cherry. The single was the first released by the Cleveland -based Sweet City record label in April 1976 and distributed by Epic Records . [ 4 ]

  3. Wild Cherry (band) - Wikipedia

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

    None of Wild Cherry's three subsequent albums were very popular. Neither Electrified Funk (1977) (which contained the "Play That Funky Music" soundalike single "Baby Don't You Know") nor I Love My Music (1978) produced any top 40 hits, and Only the Wild Survive (1979) did not even produce a top 100 single. The band broke up in late 1979.

  4. Wild Cherry (album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wild_Cherry_(album)

    The album includes the group's only major single success, "Play That Funky Music". Track listing. Song credits and lengths taken from original LP sticker. All songs ...

  5. Electrified Funk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrified_Funk

    Electrified Funk is the second studio album by the funk rock band Wild Cherry, released in 1977. [2] It contains the track "Baby Don't You Know", which roughly continues the theme and story of their 1976 hit "Play That Funky Music" by effectively explaining that, contrary to popular belief, all of the band's members were white despite its typically-Black funk/R&B sound.

  6. Funk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funk

    Even though some funk songs are mainly one-chord vamps, the rhythm section musicians may embellish this chord by moving it up or down a semitone or a tone to create chromatic passing chords. For example, the verse section of "Play That Funky Music" (by Wild Cherry) mainly uses an E ninth chord, but it also uses F#9 and F9. [23]

  7. Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southernplayalisticadillac...

    [8] [26] Music journalist T. Hasan Johnson notes "Outkast's first submission to the music industry" as significant for how they "broke from the binary production options split by California and New York artists", viewing that their decision to boast their region and a native production team "signaled a break from the conventional split between ...

  8. The Phat Pack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Phat_Pack

    The title is a parody of the Rat Pack, a group of friends and performers during the 1960s which included Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr. Goodwin arranged cover versions of two songs that were associated with the Rat Pack, "Too Close for Comfort" and "It Was a Very Good Year", and a hit from the 1970s, "Play That Funky Music". [2]

  9. I Love My Music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Love_My_Music

    I Love My Music is the third studio album by Wild Cherry, released in 1978. It includes "Don't Stop, Get Off", a single with no lyrics outside the title itself, sung in a strident voice, backed by horns playing a funky riff. Also featured on the album is "1 2 3 Kind of Love", which, while never released as a single, did receive radio airplay.