Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 2016, Soul II Soul released a single, "A New Day", credited to Caron Wheeler, which features production from Jazzie B and Louie Vega. Soul II Soul released their live album Origins: The Roots Of Soul II Soul on 9 December 2016. [16] In May 2017, Soul II Soul performed at Electric Brixton, with Caron Wheeler and Charlotte Kelly as the lead ...
Soul II Soul released their debut album Club Classics Vol. One in April 1989 and it peaked at number 1 on the UK Albums Chart . It peaked at number 14 on the US Billboard 200 albums chart and earned a 2× platinum certification in the United States by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).
The album version of the song was an a cappella which was remixed and re-recorded before being released as a single. Two new versions were produced — the first taking the original recording with instrumentation added, and the second was a re-working of the song with new lyrics and chorus (also adding "However Do You Want Me" to the title).
The Soul II Soul track "Fairplay" was recorded there just before the group started to find wider success. [3] The nights at the Africa Centre would be celebrated in the 2003 compilation "Soul II Soul At The Africa Centre". In March 1991, he launched the label Funki Dreds and signed the singers Lady Levi and Kofi to the label. [4] [5]
Volume IV The Classic Singles 88–93 is the first compilation album by British group Soul II Soul, released in 1993. Along with the band's biggest hit singles released up to 1993, the album also includes one new song, "Wish".
Club Classics Vol. One (US title: Keep On Movin') is the debut album by the British group Soul II Soul.Released in 1989, the album featured the group's hit singles "Keep on Movin'" and "Back to Life (However Do You Want Me)", the latter of which was a UK number-one hit and the fifth best-selling single in the UK that year.
"Get a Life" is a song by British musical collective Soul II Soul, released in November 1989 by Virgin as the first single from the collective's second album, Vol. II: 1990 – A New Decade (1990). The song features Marcia Lewis and gained success in Europe, reaching number one in Greece, number two in the Netherlands, and number three in the UK.
A reviewer from The Network Forty described it as "Jazzy B's soul-jazz-African-operatic single". [7] Paolo Hewitt from NME remarked Wilson-James' "operatic technique". [8] Davydd Chong from Record Mirror felt that only one track from the album, "A Dream's a Dream", "warded off the bite of the critic, with a garland of garlic and a majestic ...