| フォーマット | CDアルバム |
| 発売日 | 1994年01月25日 |
| 国内/輸入 | 輸入 |
| レーベル | Mercury |
| 構成数 | 1 |
| パッケージ仕様 | - |
| 規格品番 | 510279 |
| SKU | 731451027925 |
構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:47:13
Third World: S. "Cat" Coore (vocals, guitar, harmonica); M. "Ibo" Cooper (vocals, keyboards); W. "Rugs" Clarke (vocals); R. "Richie" Daley (bass, background vocals); W. "Willie" Stewart (drums, background vocals).
Additional personnel: Tommy McCook, Roland Alponso (saxophone); Stephen Stewart (guitar, keyboards); Mike Bennett, Handel Tucker (synthesizer); Leroy Romans (bass); Mafia and Fluxy (drums, bass); Michael Spence (drums); Brian Gold, Tony Gold, Peter Mann, Chevelle Franklin, Brian Thompson, Mikie Bennett (background vocals).
Recorded at Music Works, Mixing Lab and CRS, Kingston and Grove Music, Ocho Rios, Jamaica, and Hit Factory, New York, New York.
Personnel: Third World (background vocals); Steven "Cat" Coore (vocals, guitar, harmonica, background vocals); Michael "Ibo" Cooper (vocals, keyboards); Bunny Rugs (vocals, background vocals); Stephen Stewart (guitar, keyboards); Roland Alphonso, Tommy McCook (saxophone); Michael Bennett , Mikey Bennett (synthesizer, background vocals); Handel Tucker, Leroy Barbie Romans (synthesizer); Fluxy, Michael "Drummie" Spence, Mafia , Mafia & Fluxy, Michael Spence (drums); Geoffrey Chung (programming); Chevelle Franklyn, Brian Thompson, Peter Mann, Tony Gold, Brian & Tony Gold (background vocals).
DJ: Jamal-Ski.
Audio Mixers: Gerry Brown ; Phase 5 .
Recording information: CRS Studio, Kingston, Kingston, Jamaica; Grove Music Studio, Ocho Rios, Jamaica; Hit Factory Studios, New York, NY; Mixing Lab Studios, Kingston, Jamaica; Music Works Recording Studio, Kingston, Jamaica.
Committed not only proclaimed Third World's renewed commitment to reggae and Rastafarian culture, but it also signaled the group's new label and theoretical new start. From the bold red, gold, and green of the Ethiopian flag on the CD's back cover to the equally prominent Lion of Judah, Third World was intent on displaying where their heart was. Indeed, the vocals and musical arrangements are fresher and more reggae-focused than anything the group had done in the previous five years. From the bass-heavy groove of the opening track, "Riddim Haffe Rule," to the sweet lovers rock melodies on the title song, Third World was back with a vengeance. Make no mistake, the pop orientation that the band had adopted during decades of playing is still here, from the pop-light tones on "Living for the Sunshine" to the sappy "Love Needs a Little More Love." But it appears to a much lesser degree, and gems like the patois-laden "Mi Legal" more than make up for the less authentic tunes. ~ Rosalind Cummings-Yeates
録音 : ステレオ (Studio)
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