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Light Up the Night
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Light Up the Night
Current price: $12.99
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Barnes and Noble
Light Up the Night
Current price: $12.99
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Light Up the Night
marked the end of an era for
the Brothers Johnson
-- it was the last of four albums that
Quincy Jones
produced for the Los Angeles siblings, and it was the last time a
Brothers Johnson
album was truly excellent instead of merely decent. When
Jones
was producing
's albums from 1976-1980, he gave them something their subsequent albums lacked -- consistency. Even though
George
and
Lewis Johnson
recorded some decent material after
, none of their post-
albums had the type of consistency that
gives this 1980 release. The album gets off to an impressive start with the major hit
"Stomp!"
(a definitive example of the smooth, sleek brand of funk that was termed sophisticated funk in the late '70s and early '80s), and the tracks that follow are equally memorable. From the sleek sophisti-funk of
"You Make Me Wanna Wiggle,"
"This Had to Be"
(which was co-written by
Michael Jackson
and employs him as a background vocalist), and the title song to the tender R&B/pop ballads
"Treasure"
"All About the Heaven,"
is without a dull moment. ~ Alex Henderson
marked the end of an era for
the Brothers Johnson
-- it was the last of four albums that
Quincy Jones
produced for the Los Angeles siblings, and it was the last time a
Brothers Johnson
album was truly excellent instead of merely decent. When
Jones
was producing
's albums from 1976-1980, he gave them something their subsequent albums lacked -- consistency. Even though
George
and
Lewis Johnson
recorded some decent material after
, none of their post-
albums had the type of consistency that
gives this 1980 release. The album gets off to an impressive start with the major hit
"Stomp!"
(a definitive example of the smooth, sleek brand of funk that was termed sophisticated funk in the late '70s and early '80s), and the tracks that follow are equally memorable. From the sleek sophisti-funk of
"You Make Me Wanna Wiggle,"
"This Had to Be"
(which was co-written by
Michael Jackson
and employs him as a background vocalist), and the title song to the tender R&B/pop ballads
"Treasure"
"All About the Heaven,"
is without a dull moment. ~ Alex Henderson