Celebrate! Explained

Celebrate!
Type:studio
Artist:Kool & the Gang
Cover:Celebrate!.jpg
Released:September 29, 1980
Recorded:January – July 1980
Studio:House of Music, West Orange, New Jersey
Genre:Post-disco, funk
Length:35:18
Label:De-Lite
Producer:Kool and the Gang, Eumir Deodato
Prev Title:Ladies' Night
Prev Year:1979
Next Title:Something Special
Next Year:1981

Celebrate! is the twelfth studio album by American band Kool & the Gang. Released on September 29, 1980, the album reached No. 1 on the US R&B chart and #10 on the Billboard 200. The album produced perhaps Kool & the Gang's most recognizable hit song, the #1 chart-topper, "Celebration", which still receives heavy play today over four decades later.

Critical reception

Dennis Hunt of the Los Angeles Times called Celebrate! "the band's mostly excellent new album."[1] Robert Christgau of The Village Voice gave a C− grade saying "It says something for these funk pioneers that unlike James Brown, George Clinton, and the Ohio Players they've adapted painlessly, nay profitably, to disco: a number-one single leads their Deodato-produced album into the top ten. What it says is that their funk was as bland as you suspected." Amy Hanson of AllMusic found that "Celebrate itself marked the end of an era for Kool & the Gang, as the band would slip even farther from their funk roots and adopted dance grooves into the realms of smooth soul. But what a way to go!" Philip Hall of Record Mirror gave a 3 out of 5 star rating, saying "Kool's Gang play penthouse-suite disco music. Every song gives off an air of easy affluence. There's no soul sound on this album just plenty of precise modern dance music. Though I admire Kool & The Gang for the way they effortlessly create light and airy dance rhythms, the overall feel of the album left me feeling untouched. This is highly efficient, automated disco music designed to keep the night clubbers of the world happy."

Personnel

Production

Notes and References

  1. News: . Hunt . Dennis . KOOL'S GANG CELEBRATES . Los Angeles Times . 16 November 1980 . q73 .