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The Undisputed Truth - Esential Colelction (CD)

Esential Colelction
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Album Details: Esential Colelction

Release Date:05/07/2002
Label:Polygram Uk
UPC:731454472623

Track List: Esential Colelction

  1. You Got the Love I Need
  2. What It Is
  3. Papa Was a Rolling Stone
  4. Mama I Gotta Brand New Thing (Do...
  5. Law of the Land
  6. Help Yourself
  7. I'm a Fool for You
  1. Lil Red Riding Hood
  2. Spaced Out
  3. UFO's
  4. Got to Get My Hands on Some Lovin'
  5. Higher Than High
  6. Boogie Bump Boogie
  7. Let's Go Back to Day One

Pro Reviews: Esential Colelction

  • All Music Guide

    As is usually the case, Motown's European division and its licensors have been more active than their American counterparts, which is why this 19-song, 78-minute compilation surfaced in 2002, a year before the U.S.-issued 12-song Smiling Faces: The Best Of The Undisputed Truth. All 14 of the singles that were issued in America are represented, along with selected B-sides and album tracks, for a slightly more comprehensive overview of the group's output -- "Ball of Confusion (That's What The World Is Today)" and "Poontang" are missing, but in their place are some equally worthy cuts, mostly notably the group's poignant nine-minute rendition of "What's Going On." Obviously, along with being a cross-section of the group's sound, this compilation gives us a good look at Norman Whitfield's altering sensibilities, and the changes that American soul underwent during the four years represented. By 1972, the Undisputed Truth had moved into louder, bolder, more funk-oriented sounds (with the exc...eptions of "Smiling Faces Sometimes," "Papa Was A Rolling Stone," and their version of "What's Going On"); away from socially significant songs, and into more of a pure dance mode -- not that these aren't extraordinary dance productions; they are. Most notable is "Law Of The Land," with its pounding, larger-than-life rhythm section and swooping, soaring orchestral accompaniment. The sound is excellent throughout, especially on the later cuts. The solo electric guitar on "What's Going On," with its mix of trills and rhythm fills, is virtually isolated on its own separate channel, and is almost worth the price of the disc by itself. Its presence here is also a subtle tribute to Whitfield's influence on Motown: he was, after all, responsible for convincing Berry Gordy that there was room for two different hit versions of "I Heard It Through The Grapevine," when Gordy thought there wasn't room for one, and the original "What's Going On" was another case of Gordy almost missing the boat on something new, daring, important, and wonderful, and here was a sincere attempt to reshape that song from the bottom up. Only on the later tracks, such as "UFO's," "Higher Than High," and "Boogie Bump Boogie," do inspiration and subtlety seem to desert the band's sound, but they get it back for "Let's Go Back To Day One." - Bruce Eder, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

The Undisputed Truth

It's not exactly fair to peg the Undisputed Truth as a one-hit wonder, because they did have a few hits for Motown in the first half of the 1970s (albeit only one big one), as well as made half a dozen albums for the label. Still, it's not that far from the truth. Nothing else they did matched the strength of "Smiling Faces Sometimes," which made number three in 1971. C... Read more