by Alex Henderson
Black radio has often shied away from what it considers &club records,& and that was exactly what happened in the late '70s with soul/disco quartet Double Exposure. Although a major hit in dance clubs, the single &10 Percent& didn't receive nearly as much Black radio airplay as it should have. But make no mistake: this unmistakably Philly-sounding album (reissued on CD in 1993) is very mindful of disco's soul roots. Dance-floor treasures like &My Love Is Free,& the Norman Harris-produced title song and an inspired cover of the Four Tops' &Baby, I Need Your Loving& make Exposure's debt to groups like the Intruders, the Spinners and Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes evident, as do the slow jams &Pick Me& and &Just Can't Say Hello.& This is music that's exciting both on and off the dance floor.