Details

Track Listing DISC 1: 1. Open Our Eyes 2. Evil 3. Keep Your Head To the Sky 4. Devotion - (live) 5. Mighty Mighty 6. Kalimba Story 7. Shining Star 8. That's the Way of the World 9. Happy Feelin' 10. All About Love 11. Yearnin' Learnin' 12. Sun Goddess - (live) 13. Sing a Song 14. Can't Hide Love 15. Getaway
DISC 2: 1. Got To Get You Into My Life 2. Love Music 3. Saturday Nite 4. On Your Face 5. Biyo 6. Imagination 7. Spirit 8. Burnin' Bush [Shout It On the Mountain Mix] - (remix) 9. Serpentine Fire 10. Fantasy 11. Love's Holiday 12. Ponta De Areia [Brazilian Rhyme] 13. I'll Write a Song For You 14. Jupiter 15. Be Ever Wonderful
DISC 3: 1. September 2. Boogie Wonderland 3. Let's Groove 4. In the Stone 5. Can't Let Go 6. After the Love is Gone 7. And Love Goes On 8. Rock That! 9. Fall In Love With Me 10. Side By Side 11. Wanna Be With You 12. Where Have All the Flowers Gone 13. Gratitude 14. Reasons 15. Kalimba Story/Sing a Message To You - (live)
| Details | | Producer: | Leo Sacks, Maurice White | | Distributor: | Sony Music Entertainment | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel: Al McKay (vocals, guitar, percussion); Maurice White (vocals, drums, kalimba, timbales); Philip Bailey (vocals, congas, percussion); Verdine White (vocals, percussion); Johnny Graham (guitar, percussion); Andrew Woolfolk (flute, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone, percussion); Don Myrick (saxophone); Rahmlee Michael Davis (trumpet, flugelhorn); Elmar Brown (trumpet); Louis Satterfield (trombone); Larry Dunn (piano, organ, synthesizer); Ralph Johnson (drums, percussion). The booklet that comes with THE MUSIC OF EARTH, WIND & FIRE--a three-disc box that will slot easily next to your DVDs rather than your CDs--lists the other EW&F titles available from Columbia/Legacy, including eight other compilations. Needless to say, a casual fan has several options, and while THE MUSIC OF EARTH, WIND & FIRE is the most extensive of the bunch, containing all the notable hits (with the exception of "Africano," a number one disco single), a casual fan doesn't need to go quite this deep. For those who want to go beyond the obvious hits but cannot quite justify picking up the albums from 1972's LAST DAYS AND TIME through 1983's POWERLIGHT, this is close to ideal.
|