from
Aurra's 3d
Album A little
Love Read below ↓ for more info ↓
Album review
Having created a stir with their debut, this eminently funky
R&B; combo was now ready to light the sky on fire. All fat bass and liquid guitar riffing,
A Little Love was a nice combination of dirty and sweet, ballad and body-shaker. It was a smart concoction; the LP would give the band a Top Ten hit, while "Make up Your
Mind" emerged a popular opener in its own right, giving Aurra their highest-ever chart hit. And it's no wonder. Among the best songs the duo ever recorded, "Make up Your Mind" was a complex slab of funked-up disco augmented by a superb classic rock guitar solo from
Steve Washington, sandwiched within a fat bassline. But Aurra didn't let it go with that. "A Little Love" itself is a sweet song with a ferocious bite, the intro unleashing a heavy hook before the rest of the show, while "
Thinking of You" remains the LP's best ballad.
Stronger across some tracks than others, A Little Love is ultimately an uneven effort. However, when Aurra is in top form they are truly outstanding, and this LP is worth having because of that.
Biography Aurra & Deja
Centered around leader Steve Washington and singers Starleana
Young and
Curtis Jones, Aurra was an outgrowth of the Ohio-based funk band
Slave. They recorded a handful of albums during their late-'70s and early-'80s existence, with most of that output released on
Salsoul. The group's membership shifted constantly, with most of the musicians having strong ties to Slave. Aurra helped take Salsoul into the '80s by recording dancefloor-friendly material with the help of synthesizers and programmed rhythms. While the bulk of Salsoul's early releases featured elaborate string sections, mostly live instrumentation, and thumping disco foundations, '80s projects such as Aurra took advantage of studio technology and appealed to club DJs and radio programmers alike by concentrating equally on traditional songcraft and dance rhythms.
Washington instigated Aurra as a family affair of sorts, using various friends and members of the Slave road crew to fill out the group's lineup; at various points, Aurra's personnel swelled to a dozen. In addition to the core of Washington, Young, and
Jones, Aurra's membership included
Mark Adams,
Steve Arrington,
Charles "Cedell"
Carter,
Philip Field,
Buddy "Hanks"
Henderson,
Jennifer Ivory, Tom Lockett,
William Young, and
Mike Young. Washington helped Aurra score a contract with Salsoul, one of the premier disco labels.
Their self-titled
1980 debut was actually released on
Dream, a subsidiary of Salsoul, but their next three albums --
1981's
Send Your Love,
1982's A Little Love, and
1983's
Live and Let Live -- were released on Salsoul proper.
Around the time Live and Let Live was conceived and released, financial matters began to cause turmoil within the group. Young and Jones grew increasingly distrustful of Washington, and the tension became so great that a frustrated Washington left and offered to sell Aurra's trademark to Young and Jones. Washington ended up keeping the name -- allegedly after Young and Jones failed to follow through on the offer -- and recorded an Aurra record for
Quest with new membership, including former
Bride of
Funkenstein Sheila Horne and
Chaka Khan sibling
Mark Stephens.
Thanks to the legal protestations of Young and Jones, the record never saw the light of day.
Young and Jones recorded a fifth Aurra
album after leaving Salsoul.
Apparently, Salsoul's improprieties were another source of strife within the group.
Released on
Next Plateau,
1985's Like
I Like It gave Aurra their first chart hit in the
U.K, in the form of the title track. That was the last anyone would hear from Aurra in name. Weary of further legal hassles, Young and Jones continued under the name
Déjà and scored a number two R&B; chart hit in
1987 with "
You and Me Tonight." Young split from Jones in
1988 and went solo; she released an album in
1991 and also did background vocal work for her husband,
Kool & the Gang's
J.T. Taylor. Jones continued Déjà with
Mysti Day and released a second album under that name.
- published: 04 Aug 2008
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