| | Brand New Heavies Shelter CD Brand New Heavies Discography of CDs
(4 Customer Reviews)
Additional personnel includes: Neil Cowley (guitar, piano, Fender Rhodes, keyboards); Gavyn Wright, Wilf Gibson, Jim McLeod, Perry Montague-Mason, Dave Nolan, Boguslav Kostecki (violin); Peter Lale, Garfield Jackson (viola); Tony Pleeth, Paul Kegg (cello); Michael Smith, Paul Wiemar (saxophone); Gerald Presencer (trumpet, flugelhorn); Noel Langley (trumpet); Dennis Rollins, Pat Hartley (trombone); Chris Laurence, Mike Brittain (bass); Jeff Scantlebury (congas, percussion); Yo Yo, Henry Binns, Beverly Brown, Richard Wayler (background vocals).
By the time the Brand New Heavies released Shelter in 1997, urban R&B was shifting toward the more organic grooves that they helped pioneer in the early '90s. Although the Heavies were into acid jazz as well, they smoothed over many of the experimental elements of their music in the mid-'90s, leaving behind a seductive, earthy, and jazzy variation of urban soul. That provided the foundation for Shelter, their first album featuring Siedah Garrett as lead singer. Garrett's smooth voice helps push the band toward more conventional territory, yet their songwriting is stronger than most of the contemporaries, and their sound is funkier and more convincing. While there are no standout singles on Shelter, it's a uniformly engaging listen, illustrating that the Brand New Heavies are one of the great underrated urban R&B bands of the '90s. ~ Leo Stanley
Siedah Garrett (vocals); Simon Bartholomew (guitar, background vocals); Andrew Levy (bass, percussion, tambourine, background vocals).
Brand New Heavies: Jan Kincaid (vocals, keyboards, drums, percussion);
Q (5/97, p.114) - 3 Stars (out of 5) - "...their most cohesive set yet, a simmering collection of sweaty funk workouts dispatched with the band's unique sense of cool." JazzTimes (10/97, p.86) - "...the familiar Brit-influenced grooves are in place....there isn't a whole lot of envelope pushing here, just a pleasant holding pattern." Vibe (6-7/97, p.165) - "...With SHELTER, the Heavies prove they're still the feel-good band they've always been, serving up a hearty stew of deep grooves, breezy horns, and funky bass lines..." Shelter Music | List Price | $11.98 (You save $2.19) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Rock CDs, R&B, Dance, Urban Soundtrack, Soul/R&B, Contemporary R&B, Acid Jazz | | Label | Delicious Vinyl | | Orig Year | 1997 | | All Time Sales Rank | 45753  | | CD Universe Part number | 1575098 | | Catalog number | 76768 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Feb 20, 2001 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | The Brand New Heavies | | Personnel | Jan Kincaid - vocals, keyboards, drums, percussion ;
Also: Gavyn Wright, Peter Lale, Chris Laurence, Tony Pleeth, Paul Kegg, Neil Cowley, Wilf Gibson, Garfield Jackson, Michael Smith, Michael Smith, Henry Binns, Jim McLeod, Boguslav Kostecki, Perry Montague-Mason, Jeff Scantlebury, Noel Langley, Noel Langley, Dennis Rollins, Gerard Presencer, Yo Yo, Mike Brittain, Boguslav Kostecki, Beverly Brown, Dave Nolan, Pat Hartley, Paul Wiemar, Richard Wayler |
Brand New Heavies Shelter Songs Shelter Music Review Average Rating: (4 out of 5 stars)   Great Job Siedah Garrett I am a big N'Dea Davenport fan but this is still a great BNH album. Siedah Garrett does a great job with Andrew, Simone and Jan. This album is a must have for BNH fans. Submitted by rochfam2000 (Washington, DC)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
WARNING Just a warning to anyone looking to purchase this album that the version of "You've Got A Friend" included here is an INFERIOR remixed version, not the original..... Submitted by Nathan (Australia) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Nice A well rounded mix of tunes that are sure to please with each listen. As far as classic soul/funk sounds go, these folks have definitely got what it takes. Siedah Garrett's sexy vocals are truly icing on the cake. Comes with a couple of covers, a nice job done with Al Hudson's classic 'You Can Do It', and also a fresh upbeat arrangement of Carole King's 'You've Got A Friend'. If you love the 70s-80s style of funk and soul, this album is highly recommended!! Submitted by D.B. (Manchester, NH, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
great soul, funky, music---sounds like 70's this is anew group for me/ i do not
know anything about them but this has
got to be one of the best soul CD's
ever---great singing---music like it
used to be Submitted by nat (hoover, alabama) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Shelter CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Paul Butterfield Blues Band CD (1965)
Shelter songs
$6.19 (MP3 Available for Download)
| | Brand New Heavies Brother Sister CD (1994)
Shelter album
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| | VH1 Presents The Corrs Live In Dublin CD (2002)
Shelter CD music
$6.39 (MP3 Available for Download) This audio document of The Corrs' Dublin homecoming concert has pretty much everything ...
| | Drive-By Truckers Southern Rock Opera CDs (2001) Digipak
Shelter MP3 Album
$11.99 (MP3 Available for Download)
| | Dredg Catch Without Arms CD (2005)
Shelter music CDs
$8.49 (MP3 Available for Download)
| | Brand New Heavies Get Used To It CD (2006)
Shelter songs
$12.05 The most surprising thing about Get Used to It is that the Brand New Heavies sound very much like an honest-to-gosh band instead of the instrumental unit with a hired frontwoman they always have been. Out of the BNH crew for a decade, vocalist N'Dea Davenport returns and it's both familiar and just ...
| | Juvenile Tha G-Code CD (1999)
Shelter album
$12.05 (MP3 Available for Download)
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Shelter CD music
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| | Essential Chillout, Vol. 2 CDs (2002)
Shelter MP3 Album
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| | Barry Adamson King Of Nothing Hill CD (2002)
Shelter music CDs
$10.95 (MP3 Available for Download) With As Above, So Below, Barry Adamson took a detour from the soundscape work that comprised much of his early solo catalog. It was more conventional sounding than anything he had written prior, and with production help from Flood, the album's seedy undertones and gritty seduction were given center stage. With The King of Nothing Hill, he continues where As Above left off -- seamlessly blending funk, jazz, rock, disco, and '60s French pop while swapping street tales with the listener. It's apparent on tracks like the funk-fueled "Cinematic Soul," the trippy "Twisted Smile," and the intense "When Darkness Calls" that Adamson can evoke a variety of feelings in any one of a number of musical styles. He's as convincing when vividly painting a crime scene as when he becomes "Satisfaction Jackson" in an attempt to seduce his prey. He occasionally dips into his soundtrack roots on tracks like the murky "Le Matin des Noire" and "The Second Stain," but when he does, he maintains the continuity of the album. This variety is what makes The King of Nothing Hill so enjoyable -- it revels in being both fun and furious. Whether he's talking about love or the streets, there's usually a clever hint of irony present. Adamson is blatant when he needs to be, but gets his point across most effectively ...
| | Collection Aa CDs (2005) Import
$8.29 | | Kidz Bop 7 CD (2005)
Shelter songs
$14.69 (MP3 Available for Download) Just when you thought it ...
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