504人收藏

29条评论

在网易云音乐打开

风格
#放克 #都市音乐
地区
欧美

艺人介绍

by Andrew HamiltonAugie Johnson, a member of Side Effect, formed the Boppers in Los Angeles, CA, in the mid-'70s to back his stylish, knickers-wearing group who had inked with Fantasy Records. The Boppers, consisting of Robert Griffin, Kenny Davis, Ed Riddick, Ed Luna, and Vance Tenort cut their own Fantasy album entitled The Boppers in 1978. Unfortunately, neither it nor single releases "Everybody Wants to be a Star" and "Something Missing" were successful.

They switched to Mercury Records in 1980 and became the L. A. Boppers. The lineup also went through some tinkering and now consisted of Tenort (lead), Gerry Davis, Riddick, Kenny Styles, Michael Stanton, Stan Martin, with Augie Johnson (on loan from Side Effect) also contributing to their sound. The L. A. Boppers (with from Mikki Howard) dropped on Mercury in 1980; the first single "Is This the Beat (Bop-Doo-Wah)" made the R&B Top 30 and become their most popular single ever. Subsequent releases, the jazzy "Watching Life" and "Be-Bop Dancer," failed to capture the same audience. A final Mercury album Bop Time (1981) featured an update of the Delfonic's "La, La Means I Love You."

A final album on MCA Records Make Mine Bop in 1982 spawned two poor selling singles: "Where Do the Bops Go" b/w "Well Deserved Rest," and "How Strong Love Can Be" b/w "Dog House." Disenchanted, they disbanded after MCA failure. Soul/funk/jazz fans worldwide now trumpet their unheralded album cuts including "Give Me Some" and "Funk It Out."


最新简评(共29条)