Stargard热门歌曲下载
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歌曲 | 专辑 | 时长 |
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1
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Theme From Which Way Is Up | 03:08 | |
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2
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Wear It Out SQ | The Changing Of The Gard | 05:17 |
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3
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Footstompin' Music SQ | The Changing Of The Gard | 04:30 |
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4
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Lowdown Dancing | The Changing Of The Gard | 04:10 |
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5
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Back To The Funk SQ | Back 2 Back | 04:25 |
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6
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Just One Love SQ | Back 2 Back | 05:50 |
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7
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Theme From "Which Way Is Up" (Single Version) | 03:07 | |
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8
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Theme From "Which Way Is Up" (Single Version) | 03:07 | |
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9
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It's Your Love That I'm Missin' SQ | Back 2 Back | 04:28 |
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10
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I Just Imagined You | The Changing Of The Gard | 04:29 |
Stargard最新专辑下载
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The Changing Of The Gard
2009-02-24
Back 2 Back
1980-01-01
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band(黑胶版)
1978-01-01
Stargard歌手简介
Heavily influenced by Labelle and the Pointer Sisters, Stargard was a female R&B vocal group that was best known for providing the theme song from the 1977 film Which Way Is Up. Rochelle Runnells, Debra Anderson, and Janice Williams -- who comprised Stargard's original three-woman lineup -- didn't go for the type of breathy, sweet, girlish vocals that the Supremes and the Three Degrees were known for. Like Labelle and the Pointer Sisters, Stargard favored robust, aggressive belting and brought a gospel-like passion to its funk, soul, and disco. Stargard signed with MCA in 1977, when its first single, the ultra-funky "Theme From 'Which Way Is Up'" (a Norman Whitfield gem), soared to number one on the R&B singles charts. Stargard's self-titled debut album came out in early 1978, and later that year, MCA released the trio's sophomore effort What You Waitin' For. That album's funky title track (also written by Whitfield) became a Top Ten R&B hit, but after that, Stargard lost its commercial momentum. In 1979, Stargard left MCA for Warner Bros. and recorded its third album, The Changing of the Gard, which was produced by Robert Wright and Earth, Wind & Fire's Verdine White (Maurice White's brother) and contained the single "Wear It Out." That superb album had the makings of a smash, but regrettably, it didn't do nearly as well as it should have. In 1980, Anderson left the group, and Runnells and Williams decided to carry on as a duo instead of hiring a replacement. As a duo, Runnells and Williams recorded 1981's Norman Whitfield-produced Back 2 Back for Warner Bros. and 1982's Nine Lives (which Runnells produced) for MCA. Both of those LPs received very little attention, and in 1983, Stargard broke up.