On The Rise cover

On The Rise

Released

The fourth album from the SOS Band was a change of direction from the consummate soul/post-disco sound of their previous album S.O.S. III. Enlisting Jam and Lewis who had worked on one song on III, they removed the horns and jazzy chord progressions and added the distinctive futurist boom and bap of the Roland 808 drum machine. On The Rise is mostly drum machine sweet soul and yearning electro funk, full of dense layers of interlocking keys and synths and of course includes perennial dance floor anthem Just Be Good To Me, a song so big it’s visible from orbit. 

The last two tracks — an ill-advised cover of Johnny Taylor’s 1968 hit Who’s Making Love which isn’t so much bad as just entirely out of place, and Steppin’ The Stones, a song which suffers from an identity crisis — don’t measure up to the rest of the quality on show here, but neither ruin what is a very fine album indeed. 

Harold Heath

Suggestions
Wild and Peaceful cover

Wild and Peaceful

Kool & the Gang
Woman To Woman cover

Woman To Woman

Shirley Brown
Nine cover

Nine

Sault
Body Heat cover

Body Heat

Quincy Jones
1980 cover

1980

Brian Jackson, Gil Scott-Heron
Get Into Something cover

Get Into Something

The Isley Brothers
Alexander O'Neal cover

Alexander O'Neal

Alexander O'Neal