Love Is The Message

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Love Is The Message album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 34:44

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A Philly Classic!!!

isaacmusicman

I know I keep saying it, but Gamble and Huff are genuises. Producing their house band and making them stars was so smart, so when their records were played, you knew who it was. "Love Is The Message" is so smooth that it boggles the mind! And again, even when they tackle other peoples material("Cheaper To Keep Her"), they put their stamp on it, like the song belongs to them. Philly soul has another reason to be proud!

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BER3257

EMUSIC-004E7475

This album was absolutely fantastic in the mid seventies and it was another one that was great on FM radio when it was king.

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Big Orchestra Sound

MsMellow

Pefect for the end of Summer backyard bash. Conversations will slow, relaxation will begin.

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Philly Soul, Pt. 2

By Elizabeth Isadora Gold, eMusic Contributor

The Sound of Philadelphia is the sound of home to me. I grew up in Philly in the 70s and 80s, when it was almost impossible not to hear "The Love I Lost," wafting over my family's back fence, or "If You Don't Know Me By Now" blasting from passing car windows. But I also have a very specific connection to this music. My father, Larry Gold, started out as a cellist in MFSB, the… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Most prominently featuring “Love Is the Message” and “T.S.O.P.,” this 1975 album by MFSB serves as a landmark LP for Philadelphia’s mid-’70s soul movement. While “T.S.O.P.” became a giant hit for the group at the time of its release, forever being associated with the television show Soul Train, “Love Is the Message” would go on to be an enormous underground hit in New York’s late-’70s disco scene, championed by influential DJs such as Larry Levan (becoming an anthem at Levan’s Paradise Garage). In addition, the album also features the orchestra’s take on “Touch Me in the Morning,” a song popularized by Diana Ross that was another proto-disco classic. The other tracks here — “Cheaper to Keep Her,” “My One and Only Love,” and “Bitter Sweet” — are also wonderful tracks exemplifying the group’s uplifting, massive sound but aren’t nearly as timeless as the three aforementioned songs. Sony’s Love Is the Message: The Best of MFSB is still the best and most readily available showcase for this group’s influential accomplishments as a proto-disco group, while this album is arguably their strongest non-compilation release and one of Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff’s shining moments. – Jason Birchmeier

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