1979 studio album by Lakeside
Rough Riders is the third album by the American band Lakeside .[ 1] [ 2] Released in 1979 on the SOLAR Records label, it was produced by Dick Griffey , Lakeside, and Leon Sylvers III . "Pull My Strings" was a hit.[ 3]
The Oakland Post praised the "dynamic instrumentation, pinpoint rhythms and power funk chords layered with four-part harmonies dancing under strong, alternating lead vocals."[ 6] The New York Times wrote that Rough Riders "displays a competent show band adept at several rhythm-and-blues idioms, but the material and arrangements are drearily formulaic."[ 7]
"Rough Rider" (Stephen Shockley) - 4:45 "All in My Mind" (Otis Stokes, Stephen Shockley, Tiemeyer McCain) - 4:42 "If You Like Our Music (Get Up and Move)" (Otis Stokes, Stephen Shockley) - 4:33 "I Can't Get You Out of My Head" (Norman Beavers) - 5:36 "Pull My Strings" (Fred Lewis) - 6:54 "I'll Never Leave You" (Bryan Evans, Tiemeyer McCain) - 6:15 "From 9:00 Until" (Otis Stokes) - 6:04 Backing vocals, bass, clavinet, guitar, lead vocals, piano (acoustic), synthesizer - Otis Stokes Backing vocals, bells, lead vocals - Tiemeyer McCain Backing vocals, electric piano (Fender Rhodes), lead vocals, piano (acoustic) - Mark Adam Wood, Jr. Backing vocals, lead vocals, vocals - Thomas Shelby Bass - Marvin Craig Clavinet, ensemble (string), keyboards, synthesizer - Norman Beavers Clavinet, guitar, synthesizer - Stephen Shockley Congas, percussion, synthesizer (bass), timbales - Fred Lewis Drums - Fred Alexander Jr. ^ Thompson, Dave (2001). Funk . Backbeat Books. p. 268. ^ Black Los Angeles: American Dreams and Racial Realities . NYU Press. 2010. p. 272. ^ "Four superstar musical groups from Solar Records...". Oakland Post . No. 558/559. 29 June 1980. p. 4. ^ "Rough Riders Review by Craig Lytle" . AllMusic . Retrieved 23 January 2024 . ^ Larkin, Colin (1998). The Virgin Encyclopedia of R&B and Soul . Virgin. p. 198. ^ "Lakeside's story began in 1969 in Dayton, Ohio...". Oakland Post . No. 555. 25 June 1980. p. 10. ^ Holden, Stephen (23 Mar 1980). "Solar Could Be the Motown of the 80's". The New York Times . p. D25.