A seminal set from Ned Doheny – a lasting bit of California cool from
the 70s, and a record that's every bit as refreshing as its image on the
cover! The sound is tight, but never too slick – well-crafted
songwriting with equally well-crafted production and studio execution –
but somehow in a space that's far from the charts, too – which makes the
whole thing a really great discovery in music! Ned Doheny's got a way
of hitting an AOR vibe, but holding into more personal elements too –
and the vocals glide along with the music with the same charming vibe.By Dusty
BIG THANKS V. Fockas (Mr. Vagz) & V.Bertolis ( JazzVandals)
Track List :
1 Gabor Szabo And The California Dreamers - San Franciscan Night 2 Igor Nazaruk Quartet - Approval 3 Janko Nilovic - Trumpet Sketches 4 The Invaders - Lost Time 5 Ju Par Universal Orchestra - Flute Salad 6 Aura Urziceanu - Surpriza 7 Houston Person - Soul Dance 8 Hinbal Butss - In The Pocket 9 The Rob Franken Organ-Ization - Scintilla 10 Roberto Pregadio - Erika Seq.18 11 Connie Boerman - Yes Tonight 12 Soul Swingers - Ca - Ba - Dab 13 The Majestics - Funky Chick 14 The Jimmy Ed Trio - Baby , Baby , Oh Baby 15 Roy Lee Johnson - Boogaloo #3 16 Cover Up 17 Leroy & The Drivers - The Sad Chicken 18 Electric Machine - Fancy Good 19 Collage - Do What You Gotta Do 20 Nata - Tu Sais Que Je T'aime Bien (edit) 21 Dos Mukasan - Betpak dala 22 Michel Gonet - Flower Dance A 23 Embryo - Knast Funk
Chilly was a popular German Euro disco/rock band at the end of the 1970s and the beginning of the 1980s. Their most famous songs include hits like "Friday On My Mind",'Johnny Loves Jenny', 'Come to L.A.', 'Simply a Love Song', 'For Your Love' and 'Get Up And Move'.
The Song "For Your Love" was originally written by Graham Gouldman (later of 10cc fame) and performed by the Yardbirds
in 1965. Chilly's version was produced by the composer and author Bernt
Moehrle, who created with this song a new standard in Disco music in
the late 70s and early 80s. His version was used and remixed among
others by DJ Hell
on the album Munich Machine. It was also re-released in 2006 by the
French label D-Classics in an edited version called "4 Love" made by
Dylan Petit and in 2011 by Chocolate Puma feat. Colonel Red.