- A1: Bad (Remixed Feat Ragan Whiteside) (5 09)
- A2: Human Nature (Remixed) (5 16)
- A3: The Girl Is Mine (Remixed Feat Steve Oliver) (5 14)
- B1: Billie Jean (Feat Porter Carroll Ii) (5 08)
- B2: I Can't Help It (Feat Lori Williams - Vocal Version) (6 22)
- B3: I'll Be There (Remixed) (4 11)
- B4: Prodigious (Remixed) (5 09)
- C1: The Lady Is In My Life (Remixed) (5 39)
- C2: Let Me Show You The Way To Go (Remixed) (4 41)
- C3: She Is Out Of My Life (Feat Chieli Minucci - Remixed) (5 28)
- D1: Don't Say Goodbye (Remixed) (2 25)
- D2: Never Can Say Goodbye (Remixed - Feat Chuck Loeb) (6 01)
- D3: I Wanna Be Where You Are (6 04)
Поиск:whiteside
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Scoring the lives of small-time players, pimps, junkies, and prostitutes lurking around his simultaneously blessed and cursed existence, Wee mastermind Norman Whiteside lived in an entirely different Columbus than Capsoul's Bill Moss or Prix's Clem Price. Alternating between Stevie Wonder's dreamy soul and Sly Stone's druggy groove, You Can Fly On My Aeroplane bypasses Whiteside's everyday gritty street life reality, focusing instead on the airy sounds of fantasy and masquerade. Smooth, sexy, and synthy, You Can Fly On My Aeroplane is a peerless and sprawling psychedelic soul concept album and a sure'fire panty soaker to boot.
- You're All I Need To Make It
- Who Knows
- I'm Gonna Keep On Loving You
- Sock It To 'Em Soul Brother
- Too Far Gone
- You Can't Blame Me
- Number One
- Row My Boat
- Without Love
- I Want To Be Ready
- Your Love Keeps Drawing Me Closer
- Hot Grits!!!
- I Can't Take It
- Can We Try Love Again
- You're My Desire
- A World Without You
- Go On Fool
- Pure Soul
- It To 'Em Soul Brother (Inst.)
- All I Need To Make It (Inst.)
Where everything Numero begins. Three guys in a purple Saturn station wagon drove down to Columbus, Ohio, and came back to Chicago with a lost label - the rest is history. In the early '70s, Bill Moss' Capsoul imprint could barely break wind in the larger music marketplace, and yet today the label's output can stand shoulder-to-shoulder with any classic soul of its era. Isolated in central Ohio and lacking the funds to back them, groups like the Four Mints and Johnson, Hawkins, Tatum & Durr might've easily withstood ten rounds against the Temptations, Smokey, or Otis. The scrappy Capsoul writing team of Dean Francis, Jeff Smith, and Norman Whiteside would've thrown blow-for-hook-filled-blow with any Gamble & Huff or Holland/Dozier/Holland thrown at them. From Bill Moss' civil rights meditation "Sock It To 'Em Soul Brother" to Marion Black's future hit about the future "Who Knows" to Kool Blues bounding "I'm Gonna Keep on Loving You," Eccentric Soul: The Capsoul Label remains dollar-for-dollar the best soul compilation of its century and the perfect primer for anyone piqued by the Eccentric Soul series - otherwise known around here as the "budding Numero enthusiast."
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