Sister Sledge - When The Boys Meet The Girls (1985) [Hi-Res]

Artist: Sister Sledge
Title: When The Boys Meet The Girls
Year Of Release: 1985/2015
Label: Rhino Atlantic
Genre: Disco, Funk, Soul
Quality: flac lossless / flac 24bits - 96.0kHz / flac 24bits - 192.0kHz
Total Time: 00:42:09
Total Size: 281 / 930 mb / 1.59 gb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: When The Boys Meet The Girls
Year Of Release: 1985/2015
Label: Rhino Atlantic
Genre: Disco, Funk, Soul
Quality: flac lossless / flac 24bits - 96.0kHz / flac 24bits - 192.0kHz
Total Time: 00:42:09
Total Size: 281 / 930 mb / 1.59 gb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. When the Boys Meet the Girls
02. Dancing on the Jagged Edge
03. Frankie
04. You're Fine
05. Hold out Poppy
06. The Boy Most Likely
07. You Need Me
08. Following the Leader
09. Peer Pressure
Their last album to hit the charts, 1985's When the Boys Meet the Girls found Sister Sledge attempting to return to past form as they brought Chic's Nile Rodgers back onboard to produce and perform. And although the move would ultimately prove ineffective, as the album appeared and hovered just out of the Top 50, this easy pairing returned the sisters to an earlier edge. With the title track backed by an eclectic arrangement, those classic punchy Sister Sledge vocals were pushed well into the front of the action. The album birthed two further standouts, as both "Frankie," which is spun to become reggae-lite, and the heavily Rodgers-influenced club hit "Dancing on the Jagged Edge" rippled off the grooves. The latter, just barely limping to a paltry number 73 R&B, would prove the band's last hit until their comeback in the early '90s. Elsewhere, the Kathy Sledge-led ballad "You Need Me" emerges the best of the bunch, while the snappy "Peer Pressure" wades into wave territory, leaving the frenetic and not-quite-pleasing "Hold out Poppy" well out of the loop. When the Boys Meet the Girls is a fine effort, but this late in the day it just doesn't pull enough tricks out of the hat to make it worthwhile. And even through it's a major step up from their last effort, Sister Sledge is far better sampled across their earlier R&B heyday.