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Brass Construction Randy Muller known for a few funky dance classics. as well as writing and producing arranging hits for Brass Construction, Skyy, B.T. Express, Rafael Cameron.
Some of my fav-O-rite Bras Construction joints, Brass Construction (1975) 1. Movin' 2. Peekin' 3. Changin' 4. Love 5. Talkin' 6. Dance Brass Construction II (1976) 1. Ha Cha Cha (Funktion) 2. Get To The Point (Summation) 3. Sambo (Progression) 4. Screwed (Conditions) 5. The Message (Inspiration) this joint is just sic 6. Now Is Tomorrow (Anticipation) 7. Blame It On Me (Introspection) 8. What's On Your Mind (Expression) Brass Construction III (1977) 1. We 2. L-O-V-E-U 3. Happy People 4. Celebrate 5. Top Of The World 6. Yesterday 7. Wake Up 8. Get It Together Brass Construction IV (1978) 1. Get Up 2. One To One 3. Perceptions (What's The Right Direction) 4. Pick Yourself Up 5. Help Yourself 6. Night Chaser 7. Starting Tomorrow 8. Sweet As Sugar Brass Construction 5 (1979) 1. Music Makes You Feel Like Dancing 2. Right Place 3. Get Up To Get Down 4. Watch Out 5. It's Alright 6. Shak It 7. I Want Some Action Brass Construction 6 (1980) 1. How Do You Do (What You Do To Me) 2. Working Harder Every Day 3. We Are Brass 4. Don't Try To Change Me 5. Do Ya 6. We Can Do It 7. I'm Not Gonna Stop Attitudes (1982) 1. Can You See The Light 2. Funtimes 3. Attitude 4. Do That Thang 5. Forever Love 6. E.T.C. 7. Hotdog Conversation (1983) 1. We Can Work It Out 2. Walkin' The Line 3. Physical Attraction 4. Easy 5. Breakdown 6. I Do Love You 7. It's A Shame 8. No Communication Renegades (1984) 1. International 2. Never Had A Girl 3. We Can Bring It Back 4. Fasinating You 5. Partyline 6. Renegades 7. Dangerous 8. Closer To You 9. What Is The Law Conquest (1985) 1. Goodnews 2. Modern Touch 3. Give And Take 4. Startin' All Over Again 5. Comeback 6. Zig Zag 7. Secret Lover 8. My Place 9. Conquest [Edited 11/8/07 12:57pm] | |
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Get up
Get on down Gotta get up, gotta get up, gotta get up Gotta get on down Andy is a four letter word. | |
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vainandy said: Get up
Get on down Gotta get up, gotta get up, gotta get up Gotta get on down | |
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Yeah get up to get down is my shit. I also like the first
5 brass construction albums. I kind of lost track of the band after the first 5 albums. I am also very shocked that they continued to make albums all the way up until 1985. I wonder what Randy Muller is up to these days. You are right starmon about the message. I also like ha cha cha, get to the point, sambo, and what's on your mind. They weren't a top flight household name like ewf, ohio players, etc. but their horn section didn't take a back seat to no one. I have the brass construction 4 album and the green flashy duds they are wearing on the inside album jacket is sick. Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint | |
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phunkdaddy said: Yeah get up to get down is my shit. I also like the first
5 brass construction albums. I kind of lost track of the band after the first 5 albums. I am also very shocked that they continued to make albums all the way up until 1985. I wonder what Randy Muller is up to these days. You are right starmon about the message. I also like ha cha cha, get to the point, sambo, and what's on your mind. They weren't a top flight household name like ewf, ohio players, etc. but their horn section didn't take a back seat to no one. I have the brass construction 4 album and the green flashy duds they are wearing on the inside album jacket is sick. I hear ya', I dug up to about their 5th and 6th album, the rest had a cut or two. They never had that album were you'd go Daayum! this shit is fiyah, but they were able to string along a solid hit or two on an album. Randy Muller has a Classical CD out and on another note Rafael Cameron is doing Gospel, after the end of Sal-Soul no one offered him a record deal and he really didn't seek one, so i guess he was content with his life Aw man the Message is a jam the first time i heard it, i had to drop the needle again, and again, and again "life is just a melody". | |
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I've only got one Brass Construction album, their debut.
Good album It is not known why FuNkeNsteiN capitalizes his name as he does, though some speculate sunlight deficiency caused by the most pimpified white guy afro in Nordic history.
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Timmy84 said: vainandy said: Get up
Get on down Gotta get up, gotta get up, gotta get up Gotta get on down Get Up To Get Down This is a wicked cut.. the horns, the synth.. "Get down, get down. you got to get down". | |
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FuNkeNsteiN said: I've only got one Brass Construction album, their debut.
Good album Talkin' Movin' Changin' are the ones i dig from the first album, Dance is ok. [Edited 11/8/07 23:34pm] | |
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StarMon said: FuNkeNsteiN said: I've only got one Brass Construction album, their debut.
Good album Talkin' Movin' Changin' are the ones i dig from the first album, Dance is ok. [Edited 11/8/07 23:34pm] agreed nipsy | |
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StarMon said: phunkdaddy said: Yeah get up to get down is my shit. I also like the first
5 brass construction albums. I kind of lost track of the band after the first 5 albums. I am also very shocked that they continued to make albums all the way up until 1985. I wonder what Randy Muller is up to these days. You are right starmon about the message. I also like ha cha cha, get to the point, sambo, and what's on your mind. They weren't a top flight household name like ewf, ohio players, etc. but their horn section didn't take a back seat to no one. I have the brass construction 4 album and the green flashy duds they are wearing on the inside album jacket is sick. I hear ya', I dug up to about their 5th and 6th album, the rest had a cut or two. They never had that album were you'd go Daayum! this shit is fiyah, but they were able to string along a solid hit or two on an album. Randy Muller has a Classical CD out and on another note Rafael Cameron is doing Gospel, after the end of Sal-Soul no one offered him a record deal and he really didn't seek one, so i guess he was content with his life Aw man the Message is a jam the first time i heard it, i had to drop the needle again, and again, and again "life is just a melody". All you gotta do is sang it sang it sang it. What's on your mind! What's on your mind! Say say say what's on your mind! Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint | |
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StarMon said: Timmy84 said: Get Up To Get Down This is a wicked cut.. the horns, the synth.. "Get down, get down. you got to get down". Yeah you can't help but shake yo ass on this one. Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint | |
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phunkdaddy said: Yeah get up to get down is my shit. I also like the first
5 brass construction albums. I kind of lost track of the band after the first 5 albums. I am also very shocked that they continued to make albums all the way up until 1985. I wonder what Randy Muller is up to these days. You are right starmon about the message. I also like ha cha cha, get to the point, sambo, and what's on your mind. They weren't a top flight household name like ewf, ohio players, etc. but their horn section didn't take a back seat to no one. I have the brass construction 4 album and the green flashy duds they are wearing on the inside album jacket is sick. Here's what Randy Muller is up 2 now,Smooth Jazz! http://www.plazarecords.c...xSite.html Randy Muller Boom Chang Bang's long awaited Smooth Jazz debut CD, "Groovin' U," features Randy Muller on flute, keyboards, vocals and percussion, and brings together some of the finest musicians this side of the funk. Pre-release downloads exclusively in the Wavehill/Plaza Shop. There are few pleasures greater than hearing that your favorite sonic pilot has returned to burn. Your thoughts soar back to good times in humid clubs. And, as your mind rewinds the music man's blazing singles of yesteryear, you easily remember when those songs were the soundtrack to your life. On Groovin' U (Plaza), the solo debut by multi-gold and platinum songwriter/arranger/producer Randy Muller �responsible for sweaty hits by Skyy ("Call Me," "High"), B.T. Express ("Do It Till You're Satisfied," "Express"), Cameron ("Boogie's Gonna Get Ya"), Charles Earland ("Let The Music Play"), Garnett Mimms ("What It Is"), and his own jam band Brass Construction ("Movin'," "Changin'," "Walkin' The Line"), among others �he turns his attention to �no, don't stop reading �smooth jazz. In the process he reinforces and extends his reputation as a groove master. "In all of my work I insist on a certain rhythmic factor," Muller explains. "This project is no exception." Beyond dull and cheesy, the CD also contributes textural depth to the genre that sustains countless stations. Adds Muller: "I've noticed a gaping hole in the smooth jazz radio format. As someone who enjoys the style instrumentally, it seemed to be dominated by sax, guitar and trumpet. When I do hear flute, it's usually lofty, genteel and with a deficit of soul. I long to hear a Herbie Mann or Hubert Laws doing their thing, and this album presents the flute in a more street-savvy context." A classically-trained musician, Muller attacks his instrument with the ferocity of a natural improviser. The mood throughout is passionate and intense. "I recorded most of the flute performances at home, some time after midnight �when I am typically at my creative best," notes Muller. Overall, a soulful, romantic quality is conveyed. Groovin' U has been in the embryonic stage for years. "The vocabulary of the flute has always been the perfect companion to my musical voice," says Muller. "Somehow I can say things with it I would otherwise have a difficult time expressing. Boom Chang Bang, the group of musicians I�e been able to bring together, and this CD, is something I've been threatening for some time now." In fact, Muller wrote the Brazilian romp "BALA" when he was a college undergrad. The breezy bossa nova bouncer was his final class project for a jazz workshop led by Modern Jazz Quartet's Milt Hinton. "I recently stumbled onto a raw cassette copy of the original performance and decided to properly record it in the studio," Muller says. The composition now exudes a richly-contoured warmth and sophistication. The finger-poppin', put-your-hands-together aesthetic pioneered by the likes of Ramsey Lewis in the late '70s/early '80s pervades the collection's hooky title track. "I wanted to compose a song that brings to mind those rare and essential party grooves," Muller explains. Once the main course on a soulful platter, they were slow-cooked in an open musical environment back in the day, when it wasn't unusual for a tune to run eight minutes or more. Reaching further back for inspiration, "Standin' In Da Rain," featuring deliciously cool singer Polina, evokes the smoky ambiance of an elegant 1920s cabaret. With its thick, rubbery back beat, strutting minor keys and sweetly strafing bridge (populated with vintage hisses, pops and haunting monotone vocals), this retro-neuvo number boldly ignores the conventional line separating "straight-ahead" and "experimental." Other standouts include the deliciously cascading "Magic," co-written by producer Adrian Bailey (Kevin Little's Top 10 smash "Turn Me On"); "Westchester Nights," which captures the carefree experience of a scenic drive along New York's winding Saw Mill River Parkway; and a crease-less remake of Skyy's "Call Me," whose frisky bass line translates nicely within the new, warmer surroundings. Another cover, the Rod Temperton-penned "Always and Forever," benefits from impulsive inspiration. "I recorded this version at three in the morning, on a basic Shure microphone and eight-track tape machine," Muller recalls. "Although I tried to re-do it in a more professional setting, this spontaneous performance always won the day." Before there was even a category for brand-new-heavy jazz, Randy Muller was making passionate music with a beat. With a career spanning more than three decades, he has produced or penned over 200 titles (many earning gold and platinum status) across the pop, RandB and jazz genres (see discography). Three major influences Muller cites as shaping his musical sensibility came from similarly disparate directions. One was James Brown. Another was Philadelphia-International. A third came from calypso, which Muller, a Guyanese native, could scarcely avoid. For him Hubert Laws set the standard for all contemporary flute players to follow. "No one can touch him," Muller says. "The man is simply the best at making music from this piece of tubing I� still striving to master." Growing up in Brooklyn, New York, Muller formed his first group at age eight, beginning his long and varied journey into sound. Fast forward to 2007, and Muller remains an active musical participant. His records are in-rotation classics and sampled by Salt-n-Pepa, Dr. Dre, DMX, Lil Kim and others. And he's still carving new ground. "Over the years, I've been identified mostly with dance, soul and funk," Muller says. "I believe that with Groovin U, anyone acquainted with my body of work will see a whole other side; this album moves me closer to a more actualized musical self." | |
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Jboogiee said: phunkdaddy said: Yeah get up to get down is my shit. I also like the first
5 brass construction albums. I kind of lost track of the band after the first 5 albums. I am also very shocked that they continued to make albums all the way up until 1985. I wonder what Randy Muller is up to these days. You are right starmon about the message. I also like ha cha cha, get to the point, sambo, and what's on your mind. They weren't a top flight household name like ewf, ohio players, etc. but their horn section didn't take a back seat to no one. I have the brass construction 4 album and the green flashy duds they are wearing on the inside album jacket is sick. Here's what Randy Muller is up 2 now,Smooth Jazz! http://www.plazarecords.c...xSite.html Randy Muller Boom Chang Bang's long awaited Smooth Jazz debut CD, "Groovin' U," features Randy Muller on flute, keyboards, vocals and percussion, and brings together some of the finest musicians this side of the funk. Pre-release downloads exclusively in the Wavehill/Plaza Shop. There are few pleasures greater than hearing that your favorite sonic pilot has returned to burn. Your thoughts soar back to good times in humid clubs. And, as your mind rewinds the music man's blazing singles of yesteryear, you easily remember when those songs were the soundtrack to your life. On Groovin' U (Plaza), the solo debut by multi-gold and platinum songwriter/arranger/producer Randy Muller �responsible for sweaty hits by Skyy ("Call Me," "High"), B.T. Express ("Do It Till You're Satisfied," "Express"), Cameron ("Boogie's Gonna Get Ya"), Charles Earland ("Let The Music Play"), Garnett Mimms ("What It Is"), and his own jam band Brass Construction ("Movin'," "Changin'," "Walkin' The Line"), among others �he turns his attention to �no, don't stop reading �smooth jazz. In the process he reinforces and extends his reputation as a groove master. "In all of my work I insist on a certain rhythmic factor," Muller explains. "This project is no exception." Beyond dull and cheesy, the CD also contributes textural depth to the genre that sustains countless stations. Adds Muller: "I've noticed a gaping hole in the smooth jazz radio format. As someone who enjoys the style instrumentally, it seemed to be dominated by sax, guitar and trumpet. When I do hear flute, it's usually lofty, genteel and with a deficit of soul. I long to hear a Herbie Mann or Hubert Laws doing their thing, and this album presents the flute in a more street-savvy context." A classically-trained musician, Muller attacks his instrument with the ferocity of a natural improviser. The mood throughout is passionate and intense. "I recorded most of the flute performances at home, some time after midnight �when I am typically at my creative best," notes Muller. Overall, a soulful, romantic quality is conveyed. Groovin' U has been in the embryonic stage for years. "The vocabulary of the flute has always been the perfect companion to my musical voice," says Muller. "Somehow I can say things with it I would otherwise have a difficult time expressing. Boom Chang Bang, the group of musicians I�e been able to bring together, and this CD, is something I've been threatening for some time now." In fact, Muller wrote the Brazilian romp "BALA" when he was a college undergrad. The breezy bossa nova bouncer was his final class project for a jazz workshop led by Modern Jazz Quartet's Milt Hinton. "I recently stumbled onto a raw cassette copy of the original performance and decided to properly record it in the studio," Muller says. The composition now exudes a richly-contoured warmth and sophistication. The finger-poppin', put-your-hands-together aesthetic pioneered by the likes of Ramsey Lewis in the late '70s/early '80s pervades the collection's hooky title track. "I wanted to compose a song that brings to mind those rare and essential party grooves," Muller explains. Once the main course on a soulful platter, they were slow-cooked in an open musical environment back in the day, when it wasn't unusual for a tune to run eight minutes or more. Reaching further back for inspiration, "Standin' In Da Rain," featuring deliciously cool singer Polina, evokes the smoky ambiance of an elegant 1920s cabaret. With its thick, rubbery back beat, strutting minor keys and sweetly strafing bridge (populated with vintage hisses, pops and haunting monotone vocals), this retro-neuvo number boldly ignores the conventional line separating "straight-ahead" and "experimental." Other standouts include the deliciously cascading "Magic," co-written by producer Adrian Bailey (Kevin Little's Top 10 smash "Turn Me On"); "Westchester Nights," which captures the carefree experience of a scenic drive along New York's winding Saw Mill River Parkway; and a crease-less remake of Skyy's "Call Me," whose frisky bass line translates nicely within the new, warmer surroundings. Another cover, the Rod Temperton-penned "Always and Forever," benefits from impulsive inspiration. "I recorded this version at three in the morning, on a basic Shure microphone and eight-track tape machine," Muller recalls. "Although I tried to re-do it in a more professional setting, this spontaneous performance always won the day." Before there was even a category for brand-new-heavy jazz, Randy Muller was making passionate music with a beat. With a career spanning more than three decades, he has produced or penned over 200 titles (many earning gold and platinum status) across the pop, RandB and jazz genres (see discography). Three major influences Muller cites as shaping his musical sensibility came from similarly disparate directions. One was James Brown. Another was Philadelphia-International. A third came from calypso, which Muller, a Guyanese native, could scarcely avoid. For him Hubert Laws set the standard for all contemporary flute players to follow. "No one can touch him," Muller says. "The man is simply the best at making music from this piece of tubing I� still striving to master." Growing up in Brooklyn, New York, Muller formed his first group at age eight, beginning his long and varied journey into sound. Fast forward to 2007, and Muller remains an active musical participant. His records are in-rotation classics and sampled by Salt-n-Pepa, Dr. Dre, DMX, Lil Kim and others. And he's still carving new ground. "Over the years, I've been identified mostly with dance, soul and funk," Muller says. "I believe that with Groovin U, anyone acquainted with my body of work will see a whole other side; this album moves me closer to a more actualized musical self." Nice read jboogie There are few pleasures greater than hearing that your favorite sonic pilot has returned to burn. Your thoughts soar back to good times in humid clubs. And, as your mind rewinds the music man's blazing singles of yesteryear, you easily remember when those songs were the soundtrack to your life. Ever so true, In my case. | |
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"Movin" (1976)
spring '76 jam! | |
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Thanx j boogie. It's nice to know randy muller is live and well.
Sounds like he got a nice jazz thang going. Is the internet the only way you can purchase his new album? I would love to see randy round up that brass construction horn section and funk ensemble and give it to us one mo time. Get up to get down! Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint | |
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