Salsoul Orchestra
Salsoul Orchestra | |
---|---|
Origin | New York City, New York |
Genres | Dance, soul, disco, pop |
Labels | Salsoul Records |
Past members | Vincent Montana Jr Ronnie Baker Earl Young Norman Harris Gordon Edwards Bobby Eli Larry Washington |
The Salsoul Orchestra was the backing band of session musicians for many acts on New York City label, Salsoul Records and, under its own name, recorded several hit singles and albums between 1975 and 1982.
Contents
Group History
The orchestra was formed in 1974 and was disbanded in 1982. Their music featured elements of Philadelphia soul, funk, Latin and disco. The Salsoul Orchestra included up to 50 members and was put together for Salsoul Records by Philadelphia musician and conductor, Vincent Montana, Jr.. Montana wrote, arranged, conducted, produced and played on many of the orchestra's tracks until 1978, including a gold-selling Christmas album. [1]
The Salsoul Orchestra inially consisted of many of the original members of Philadelphia International's MFSB, who had moved to Salsoul as the result of a disagreement with producers Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff over finances. Other members began performing as The Ritchie Family and as John Davis and the Monster Orchestra. On later MFSB and Philadelphia International recordings, Gamble & Huff used a new rhythm section which resulted in a slightly different sound.
The orchestra's biggest chart singles were 1976's reworked version of the standard, "Tangerine" (pop #18, R&B #36) and "Nice 'N' Naasty" (R&B #20, pop #30) later in the same year.
When Montana left Salsoul, the orchestra recorded a final album at Sigma Sound Studios in Philadelphia mainly with producer Bunny Sigler. The orchestra's last three albums were recorded in New York City with local session players and producers, including Patrick Adams and Tom Moulton.
The orchestra's track, "Love Break (Ooh I Love It)" has been sampled in rap songs such as 50 Cent's "Candyshop" and Eric B & Rakim's "Paid in Full".
Partial discography
Singles
- "Salsoul Hustle" (1975) Billboard Hot 100 - #76 (charted for 6 weeks, Salsoul 8701/ Salsoul 2002)[1]
- "Tangerine" (1976) - Billboard Hot 100 - #18 (charted for 13 weeks, Salsoul 2004)[1]
- "You're Just The Right Size" (1976) - Billboard Hot 100 - #88 (charted for 5 weeks, Salsoul 2007)[1]
- "Nice 'N' Naasty" (1976) - Billboard Hot 100 - #30 (charted for 14 weeks, Salsoul 2011)[1]
- "Ritzy Mambo" (1977) - Billboard Hot 100 - #99 (charted for 1 week, Salsoul 2018)[1]
- "Getaway" - Billboard Bubbling Under - #105[2]
- "Dance Little Bit Closer" feat Charo - Billboard Bubbling Under - #104/Dance Club Play #18[2]
Other songs recorded
- "Chicago Bus Stop" (1975) [2]
- "It's Good For The Soul" [2]
- "Merry Christmas All" [2]
- "Run Away" (1977) featuring Loleatta Holloway, covered in 1996 by Nuyorican Soul with musicians from the Salsoul Orchestra[citation needed]
- "Salsoul 3001" (Also Spoke Zarathustra) [2]
Albums
- The Salsoul Orchestra – Billboard 200 - #14 (charted for 45 weeks, Salsoul 5501)[2] 1975
- Nice ‘N’ Naasty – Billboard 200 - #61 (charted for 14 weeks, Salsoul 5502)[2] 76
- Christmas Jollies – Billboard 200 - #83 (charted for 6 weeks, Salsoul 5507 in 1976 and re-entered the charts in 1977 at #48 for 7 weeks)[2] 76
- Magic Journey – Billboard 200 - #61 (charted for 20 weeks, Salsoul 5515)[2] 77
- Cuchi-Cuchi (Charo and the Salsoul Orchestra) – Billboard 200 - #100 (charted for 15 weeks, Salsoul 5519)[2] 77
- Up the Yellow Brick Road – Billboard 200 - #117 (charted for 8 weeks, Salsoul 8500)[2] 78
- Street Sense 79
- How High 79 Bubbled Under the Billboard 200 for 2 weeks, reaching #201
- Greatest Disco Hits: Music For Non-Stop Dancing – Billboard 200 - #97 (charted for 13 weeks, Salsoul 8508)[2]
- Christmas Jollies II – Billboard 200 - #170 (charted for 5 weeks, Salsoul 8547)[2] 81
- Heat It Up 82
References
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