The Isley Brothers Get Into Something Rar
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Almost twenty years before they would release their first platinum selling album, the Isley Brothers formed as a quartet in Cincinnati, Ohio in the mid-1950s, consisting of O’Kelly, Rudy, Ronald, and Vernon Isley. Before achieving any success as a group, Vernon Isley died under tragic circumstances making the group a trio. Despite this setback, through the late 1950s to the late 1960s, the group signed recording contracts with then RCA Victor Records (now RCA Records), Wand Records, and United Artists Records (now Universal Records), discovered guitar maestro Jimi Hendrix, launched and folded their own record label T-Neck Records, and accepted an offer to record albums for Tamla Records.
Isley Brothers Get Into Something
Another T-Neck release to receive reissue through Sony's Legacy division in the late '90s, Get Into Something boasts six Top 30 R&B chart hits.
During this time, they recorded a couple hit records such as: “Shout” and “This Old Heart of Mine (Is Weak for You),” but as the 1960s came to a close, the collective left Tamla Records and expanded their trio into a legitimate R&B band, with the incorporation of the three youngest family members, including siblings: Ernie and Marvin Isley and brother-in-law, Chris Jasper. In 1969, they decided to resurrect their T-Neck Records imprint and released five albums: It’s Our Thing and The Brothers: Isley (1969), Get into Something (1970), Givin’ It Back (1971), and Brother, Brother, Brother (1972). On the last two albums, the youngest members of the group began to experiment with their overall sound, thus asserting their musical influence. Due the success of the aforementioned albums, the group signed a new record distribution deal with Epic Records in 1973. Shortly thereafter, they sought out the services of legendary engineering and producing tandem, Malcolm Cecil and Robert Margouleff, in effort to take their sound to another level. As a result, they collaborated and created an aptly titled album, 3 + 3, reflecting the newly formed six man ensemble. On August 7, 1973, 3 +3 would be released by T-Neck/Epic Records.
The album would spawn three hit singles: “That Lady,” “What It Comes Down To,” and the remake of Jim Seals and Dash Crofts’s record “Summer Breeze.” In observance of Black Music Month, we spoke with legendary engineer Malcolm Cecil about his role in constructing this timeless recording. When did you and Robert Margouleff first start working with the group on this album? Malcolm Cecil: They called us looking to find out if we could do for them what we’d done for Stevie Wonder. Simple and clean remix download. Vcenter converter 4.1.x boot cd download.