All I Need (Sylvester album) explained

All I Need
Type:studio
Artist:Sylvester
Cover:All_I_Need_Sylvester_Album_Cover.jpg
Released:1982
Studio:Independent Sound, San Francisco; Starlight Studio, Richmond, California
Genre:Dance, post-disco, Hi-NRG
Label:Megatone
Producer:James Wirrick
Prev Title:Too Hot to Sleep
Prev Year:1981
Next Title:Call Me
Next Year:1983

All I Need, later reissued as Do Ya Wanna Funk[1] is the sixth studio album by the American recording artist Sylvester and first released on Megatone Records. The album was praised by the LGBT community media as a return to form, recalling the energy of "You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)" released four years earlier. The San Francisco Sentinel wrote that the album was "pure pop geared directly for the I-Beam crowd that wants to boogie down for seven cuts." The Bay Area Reporter said the album was "masterful", gushing "Syl doesn't just present music, he music at its dynamic best." Mainstream music magazine Billboard noted that the album was "his most consistent [and] interesting" since the late 1970s.[2] In a retrospective review, AllMusic assessed the album poorly, writing that Sylvester "was now floundering, with his high-energy brand of disco out of fashion." In 2022, Rolling Stone ranked "Do Ya Wanna Funk" number 179 in their list of 200 Greatest Dance Songs of All Time.[3]

Physical copies of the single "Do Ya Wanna Funk" listed the song's artist variously as Patrick Cowley, Patrick Cowley featuring Sylvester, or simply Sylvester. The song peaked at number 4 on the Billboard Dance Club Play chart. It was also a top 10 hit in a few European markets and a top 40 hit in the UK. "Don't Stop" (with "All I Need" for some releases) also received significant US Club Play and peaked at number 3 on the Billboard Dance Club Play chart, where "Tell Me" also charted.

A massive album release party was held in December 1982 at the former Dreamland nightclub in San Francisco, with Steve Fabus serving as deejay for the packed dance floor.[2]

Personnel

Charts

Caption text
Chart (1982) Peak
Australia [4] 98
US 168
US R&B 34

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sylvester - Do Ya Wanna Funk (CD). Discogs. August 15, 2024.
  2. Book: Niebur, Louis . 2022 . Menergy: San Francisco's Gay Disco Sound . Oxford University Press . 188 . 9780197511077.
  3. Jon. Dolan. Julyssa. Lopez. Michaelangelo. Matos. Claire. Shaffer. 200 Greatest Dance Songs of All Time. Rolling Stone. 2022-07-22. 2022-10-30.
  4. Book: Kent, David. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. 303.