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I Likes to Do It

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Download links and information about I Likes to Do It by People'S Choice. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Funk genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 49:13 minutes.

Artist: People'S Choice
Release date: 2000
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Funk
Tracks: 15
Duration: 49:13
Buy on iTunes $11.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99
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Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. I Likes to Do It 3:12
2. Big Ladies Man 3:29
3. The Wootie-T-Woo 3:14
4. Cause That's the Way I Know 3:20
5. Magic 3:30
6. Oh How I Love It 3:09
7. Let Me Do My Thing 2:52
8. On a Cloudy Day 3:23
9. Nothing But Soul Food 3:34
10. La Papala 3:16
11. When You're All Alone 3:30
12. It's Still Good 3:24
13. Grunt 3:08
14. Magic 3:04
15. Jo 3:08

Details

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Collecting both sides from all four of their 1971-1972 Phil-LA of Soul singles, and adding seven previously unreleased songs from the same era, this is notably rawer than their more famous material for TSOP later in the decade. Indeed, it's rawer than almost any soul-funk from the period that had a commercial impact, as three of these cuts did: "I Likes to Do It" made number nine R&B (and the pop Top Forty) in 1971, and "The Wootie-T-Woo" and "Let Me Do My Thing" were low-charting R&B singles. The People's Choice's stock-in-trade at this stage was loose, almost improvised-sounding funky workouts with basic but catchy riffing, semi-scatted vocals, and cool electric-keyboard vamping, often devised by connecting a guitar wah-wah pedal to an organ. The what-ya-play-is-what-ya-hear production is a refreshing contrast to the slicker sounds that were so much more prevalent in early-'70s Philly soul. And that's the way it should have been: when they tried to play conventional vocal sweet soul with strings on "Magic," they sounded far more ordinary. The seven previously unissued tracks (including a much different version of "Magic") are nearly on par with the singles, though perhaps these lean toward more basic riffs and words (this is in a group that favored minimal song construction to begin with). Simplicity can be a virtue, though, and this is damned infectious stuff, really. It's quite a find for early funk fans, to whom this compilation is highly recommended.