The Ohio Players - Ecstasy (CD)

Ecstasy
$13.99 - $17.81
5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (1 Review)

Album Details: Ecstasy

Release Date:01/01/1973
Label:Westboound Uk
UPC:029667372626

Track List: Ecstasy

  1. Ecstasy
  2. You and Me
  3. (Not So) Sad and Lonely
  4. (I Wanna Know) Do You Feel It
  5. Black Cat
  1. Food Stamps Y'all
  2. Spinning
  3. Sleep Talk
  4. Silly Billy
  5. Short Change

User Reviews: Ecstasy

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Funky As Soulful Funk Can Be

    By Andre  Mar 12, 2006

    Pros: Organic And Rhythmic From Every End With Wonderful Vocal Harmonizing

    Cons: Minimally produced but that may not be such as bad thing.

    'Ecstacy' is an Ohio Players rare treasure from their Junie Morrison era in 1973.As with all of their records at the time the sound is very basic and stripped down-bass,drums and tons of organ and guitar.At this point Junie's organ's ...are very gospelish and Sugarfoot's guitar is played in a very rough wah-wah tone.Every cut is filled with this flavor,especially "Food Stamps Y'all" is filled with classic early 70's funk additude.However on "You and Me" and "Spinning" the Ohio Players throw down classic sounds straight from classic Chicago and Philly soul.The country soul ballad of "Silly Billy" followes in the same area.It proves funk bands could be true to the genre that spawned them.But that doesn't stop the title track,the rhyhtmic "Sleep Walk"-pretty much the whole album from being funk in the raw.A treat for any lover of classic funk in it's most basic form. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Ecstasy

  • All Music Guide

    Throughout the 1970s, the Ohio Players were famous (or infamous) for their erotic album covers. But there are major differences between the covers of Mercury albums like Skin Tight, Fire, Honey, and Contradiction and the covers of such Westbound releases as Pleasure and Pain. At Mercury, the Players' album covers favored softcore erotica à la Playboy or Penthouse, whereas the covers of their Westbound LPs were more bizarre and offered kinky bondage/SM imagery. Those covers came under attack from different parts of the political spectrum; some of the more radical feminists accused the Players of objectifying women, while Republicans and Christian fundamentalists accused them of promoting moral decline. And the Players were laughing all the way to the bank at least from 1974 on. When their third Westbound album, Ecstasy, came out in 1973, they were still a year away from signing with Mercury and becoming really huge. But they did have a small cult following, which found that Ecstasy fel...l short of the excellence of Pain and Pleasure. Nonetheless, the material is respectable and generally decent. Serious Players fans will find sweaty funk items like "Spinning," "Black Cat," and the title song to be enjoyable even though they aren't among the band's essential recordings. While Ecstasy isn't recommended to casual listeners, it isn't a bad album to have in your collection if you fancy yourself a hardcore Players addict. - Alex Henderson, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

The Ohio Players

With their slinky, horn-powered grooves, impeccable musicianship, and eye-popping album covers, the Ohio Players were among the top funk bands of the mid-'70s. Emerging from the musical hotbed of Dayton in 1959, the group was originally dubbed the Ohio Untouchables, and initially comprised singer/guitarist Robert Ward, bassist Marshall "Rock" Jones, saxophonist/guitaris... Read more