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Musique: Act Three

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Download links and information about Musique: Act Three by Musique. This album was released in 1979 and it belongs to Electronica, Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Dancefloor, Disco, Pop, Dance Pop genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 37:53 minutes.

Artist: Musique
Release date: 1979
Genre: Electronica, Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Dancefloor, Disco, Pop, Dance Pop
Tracks: 13
Duration: 37:53
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Uptown Girl 2:35
2. You Can't Hurry Love 2:24
3. No More Tears 2:07
4. The Star Spangled Banner 1:42
5. Johnny Has Gone for a Soldier 2:56
6. God Bless the U.S.A. 3:19
7. After the Gold Rush 4:05
8. Gold Dust Woman 3:50
9. I Hope You Dance 4:38
10. Break Away 1:53
11. A Little Bit 2:27
12. My Immortal 3:00
13. Vittoria! 2:57

Details

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Musique's corps of vocalists changed completely for the group's second round. Gone were Jocelyn Brown, Christine Wiltshire, Angela Howell, and Gina Tharps — Mary Seymour, Denise Edwards, and Gina Taylor replaced them. The key returning factor was Patrick Adams, who reprises his role as producer, arranger, and mixer. Along with a stable of studio hands dubbed the PA System Rhythm Section, a double 12" (one song per side) was cut that doesn't quite measure up to Keep on Jumpin'. Nothing caught fire like "In the Bush," and nothing equals the breathless brilliance of "Keep on Jumpin'," but nothing here is weak by any stretch. François Kevorkian, still on the Prelude payroll at the time, casts his indelible remixing skills to each track, custom-fitting each one for maximum dancefloor response. Adams' writing and arranging work is in fine form. "Glide," written with Stan Lucas (Dazzle, Inner Life), and "Number One" (written by Ken Mazur) sound particularly spectacular decades after the fact. "Love Massage" is definitely a sequel of sorts to "In the Bush," taking sexual innuendo even further with lines like, "Touch me where I need you/Make me wet." When Unidisc reissued the album on CD, they added six alternate mixes, including the radio edit of "Love Massage" and Adams' previously unreleased mixes of "Love Massage," "Good and Plenty Lover," and "Number One." Kevorkian's work definitely has more oomph to it, but old disco-heads will love to hear Adams' renderings, particularly the instrumental "Raw Groove" mix of "Love Massage."