Track Listing 1. Sight For Sore Eyes 2. Search For The Hero 3. Open Your Heart 4. Love Rendezvous 5. Precious Pearl 6. Sugar Town 7. Walk Away 8. Drive Time 9. Padlock 10. And Finally 11. Itchycoo Park (bonus track) 12. Itchycoo Park (Morales classic club mix/bonus track)
| Details | | Number of CDs: | 1 | | Producer: | M People | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Distributor: | Sony Music/Arvato Services | | Recording Mode: | Stereo |
Album Notes M People: Heather Small (vocals); Mike Pickering (vocals, saxophone); Paul Heard (keyboards, programming); Shovell (percussion).Additional personnel: G.A. Parricelli, Jim Williams (guitar); Yolisa Phale, Steven Hussey, Ivan Hussen, Ellen Blair (strings); Chris "Snake" Davis (saxophone, flute); John Thirkell (trumpet); Andy Connell, Graham Harvey (piano); Julian Crampton (bass); Andy Gangadeen (drums); Paul Jervier (programming); Juliet Roberts, Carroll Thompson, Beverly Skeet, Fay Simpson, Paul "Tubbs" Williams (background vocals).Recorded at The Strongroom, London, England.
Editorial Reviews 3.5 Stars out of 5 - Good - ...This self-produced album is not one long throbbing dance marathon; the group's unifying vision of emotive pop music pulls together a collection of actual songs. They're all emboldened by Heather Small's lustrous contralto, catchy melodies and a house-music undertow...Spin (6/95, p.99) - 7 - Flawed Yet Worthy - ...Although the instrumentation...relies on traditional musicianship rather than samples, the riffs and tunes quote liberally from 30 years of American R&B. M People's consistently substantial songs generate much body heat...Entertainment Weekly (5/19/95, p.63) - ...has more than its share of house-quaking grooves. Their secret. Delectable R&B-based arrangements layered on top of the beat and Heather Small's smoky, ecstasy-or-bust voice... - Rating: A-Musician (5/95, pp.90-92) - ...a dream you can dance to....is no longer interested in charting the outer limits of clubland, but rather turning the underground sounds of yesterday--lush disco sweeps with butt-burning basslines, sway-your-arms choruses--into today's hits... Rolling Stone (08/10/1995)
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