翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Pure Devotion
・ Pure Disco
・ Pure Dixieland (album)
・ Pure Dope
・ Pure Drivel
・ Pure Dynamite (Buddy Terry album)
・ Pure Dynamite! Live at the Royal
・ Pure Earth
・ Pure economic loss
・ Pure economic loss in English Law
・ Pure Electric Honey
・ Pure Ella
・ Pure Energy
・ Pure Energy (band)
・ Pure Energy (Information Society album)
Pure Essence
・ Pure Euphoria
・ Pure Film Movement
・ Pure Fingers
・ Pure Flix Entertainment
・ Pure FM
・ Pure FM (Portsmouth)
・ Pure Food and Drug Act
・ Pure Food and Drug Act (band)
・ Pure Food Building
・ Pure Football
・ Pure Frosting
・ Pure Fucking Mayhem
・ Pure function
・ Pure fusion weapon


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Pure Essence : ウィキペディア英語版
Pure Essence

Pure Essence were an American R&B band from Cincinnati, Ohio, originally consisting of Steve "Tuck" Walters, Jerome "Mouse" Richmond, Toby Rivers, Tony Coats, Dwight Trible, Larry Middleton, Antonio "L.A." Reid, and Kevin "Kayo" Roberson. The band released only one record, in 1976, and achieved limited regional fame during their tenure. But they received wider attention and acclaim nearly three decades later after one of their songs, "Third Rock", was sampled by producer/musician RJD2 on the track "Clean Living" (2004). The group's songs later appeared on the ''Chrome Children'' compilation album (2005), the ''Saints Row 2'' video game soundtrack (2008), and the ''Soul Cal: Funky Disco & Modern Soul, 1971–82'' compilation album (2012). A 2006 issue of ''The Fader'' called Pure Essence a "crucial soul-rock outfit" of the 1970s.〔

==Biography==
When Steve "Tuck" Walters and Jerome "Mouse" Richmond joined Cincinnati band Mother's Pride in the early-mid 1970s, they helped lead the group into a different musical direction, as well as a name change, to Pure Essence. Pure Essence was influenced by such acts as Sly And The Family Stone, Curtis Mayfield, Yes, and contemporary local artists including Jimi Macon and Bootsy Collins.〔http://soulcalrecords.com/pure-essence-wake-up/〕
Former baseball player Dave Parker, then of the Pittsburgh Pirates, partially banked the group which helped them to record some songs in the studio.〔
〕〔

Antonio "L.A." Reid, the band's drummer, recalled: "We took one song ('Wake Up') to WCIN and they played it, and another ('Third Rock') went to a WEBN album project. I was 18 and I had songs on both stations."〔 Reid noted that "Third Rock" was added to WEBN's playlist where "it became a local hit."〔

By 1980, following several personnel changes, some of the remaining band members had relocated to Indianapolis. The group, now known simply as "Essence", worked the local club circuit, playing four shows a night, six nights a week. Reid told ''Vibe'' in a 2003 interview that in addition to drumming, his duties within Essence at this time included being a roadie, managing the band, songwriting, and peacekeeping.〔

It was not long before the band again dissolved, but Reid and Roberson re-emerged in 1983 to form The Deele, whose lineup included Indianapolis native Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds on guitar.〔〔 Reid and Edmonds went on to become music industry executives, co-founding LaFace Records in 1989.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Pure Essence」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.