Leon Ndugu Chancler & The Chocolate Jam Co. - Do I Make You Feel Better? (2001)
Artist: Leon Ndugu Chancler, The Chocolate Jam Co.
Title: Do I Make You Feel Better?
Year Of Release: 1980 (2001)
Label: Epic/Sony
Genre: Soul, Disco, Jazz-Funk
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log,scans) / 320 kbps
Total Time: 40:11
Total Size: 296 / 107 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Do I Make You Feel Better?
Year Of Release: 1980 (2001)
Label: Epic/Sony
Genre: Soul, Disco, Jazz-Funk
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log,scans) / 320 kbps
Total Time: 40:11
Total Size: 296 / 107 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Shadow Dancing (6:58)
02. Come into My Life Again (4:14)
03. Send You My Love (4:10)
04. Take Some Time (4:30)
05. Give Your Love (4:45)
06. Space Connection (1:01)
07. Make You Feel Better (Parts 1 & 2) (5:08)
08. A Chance with You (4:55)
09. Jungle Journey (0:21)
10. Love Anew (What You Feel Inside) (4:09)
When drummer Leon "Ndugu" Chancler brought his Chocolate Jam Co. project to Epic in 1979, he signed a contract that called for two albums. Epic didn't do a lot to promote either the Company's first LP, The Spread of the Future, or its sophomore effort, Do I Make You Feel Better?. Consequently, the vast majority of R&B fans didn't know that the albums existed. And that's regrettable because even though Do I Make You Feel Better? isn't fantastic, it's a decent album that deserved a kinder fate. Parts of this 1980 LP are a bit more disco-minded than its predecessor, especially the Chic-like "Send You My Love" and a cover of Andy Gibb's "Shadow Dancing." But most of the material is either tough funk or smooth, polished late-'70s/early-'80s soul that has more in common with Earth, Wind & Fire or George Duke (one of the session's keyboardists) than disco. The Duke influence isn't surprising when you consider that Chancler (who produced the album, wrote or co-wrote all of the songs, and shares the lead vocals with Leo Miller) was a member of Duke's band at the time. Because Do I Make You Feel Better? received so little promotion from Epic, it only stayed in print a few years. Nonetheless, the album is a pleasant, if unremarkable, footnote in the history of R&B.