Ten City
11 articles
List of articles in the library
Ten City: That Was Then, This Is Now (Columbia CT57183; CD and cassette)
Review by Amy Linden, The New York Times, 15 May 1994
BYRON STINGILY, singer for the trio Ten City, is a disciple of Sylvester, one of disco's biggest male stars. Like Sylvester, who died in 1988, ...
Ten City, Kym Mazelle: Town & Country, London
Live Review by David Sinclair, The Times, 27 March 1989
Beyond the beat ...
Report by David Toop, The Face, December 1988
When New York's Paradise Garage closed, the city lost part of its pulse, leaving only a brand of Eighties disco called Garage. In Chicago, it ...
Ten City, Kym Mazelle: Town and Country Club, London
Live Review by Dele Fadele, New Musical Express, 8 April 1989
KISS IT BETTER ...
House Music: The Blues for Dance
Report by Don Snowden, Los Angeles Times, 28 May 1989
The new sound pumps up the volume and eyes a move from R&B underground to the pop mainstream. ...
Ten City: Foundation (Atlantic)
Review by Frank Owen, Spin, June 1989
I, A HONKY away-from-homeboy, first heard the deep house anthem 'Devotion' by Chicago's Ten City (here included along with their other two club hits, 'That's ...
Interview by Jeff Lorez, Blues & Soul, 25 August 1992
Ten City's new album, No House Big Enough sees them in stripped down, raw and uncompromising form, intent on causing dancefloor mayhem. ...
Interview by Jeff Lorez, Blues & Soul, 30 April 1991
LAST ISSUE De La Soul made the comment: "the less talented you are as a singer, the better you seem to do in the commercial ...
Interview by Paolo Hewitt, New Musical Express, 4 February 1989
Spurning the sampler and the radio-friendly fast buck, Chicago's TEN CITY are committed to rekindling the spirit of classic soul. With 'That's The Way Love ...
Book Excerpt by Phil Hardy, Dave Laing, The Faber Companion to 20th-Century Popular Music, 2001
Byron Stingily; Herb Lawson; Byron Burke ...
Ten City: Mean Housin' Muthas From Chicago!!
Interview by Tom Doyle, Smash Hits, April 1989
As opposed to "mean rockin' muthas from hell" (haw haw). Tom Doyle gasps at their tale of dubious street gangs and teetering high heels and ...
see also Marshall Jefferson
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