Candido – Jingo
Label: |
Salsoul Records – SG 219 |
---|---|
Format: |
Vinyl
, 12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Single, Stereo
|
Country: |
US |
Released: |
|
Genre: |
Funk / Soul |
Style: |
Disco |
Tracklist
A | Jingo | 9:20 | |
B | Dancin' And Prancin' | 6:53 |
Companies, etc.
- Phonographic Copyright ℗ – Salsoul Record Corp.
- Manufactured By – Salsoul Records
- Mastered At – Frankford/Wayne Mastering Labs
- Pressed By – Goldisc Recording Products, Inc. – K-10886
- Pressed By – Goldisc Recording Products, Inc. – K-10887
Credits
- Executive-Producer – Stan Cayre
- Producer – Joe Cain
Notes
From The Salsoul L.P. SA 8520 "Dancin' And Prancin'"
℗ 1979 Salsoul Record Corp.
℗ 1979 Salsoul Record Corp.
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Rights Society (Side A): BMI
- Rights Society (Side B): ASCAP
- Matrix / Runout (Side A label): SG 219 A
- Matrix / Runout (Side B label): SG 219 B
- Matrix / Runout (Side A runout): SG 219A -RE FW [apple symbol] GOL K-10886
- Matrix / Runout (Side B runout): SG 219B -RE FW [apple symbol] GOL K-10887
Other Versions (5 of 67)
View AllTitle (Format) | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |||
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Recently Edited
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Jingo / Thousand Finger Man (12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Single) | Salsoul Records | SG-219 | Canada | 1979 | ||
New Submission
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Jingo / Dancin' And Prancin' (7") | Salsoul Records | S7 2137 | Italy | 1979 | ||
New Submission
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Jingo (7", 45 RPM, Single, Promo, Styrene, Stereo, Mono) | Salsoul Records | S7 2094 (DJ) | US | 1979 | ||
New Submission
|
Jingo (7", 45 RPM) | Salsoul Records | XB-2329 | Netherlands | 1979 | ||
Recently Edited
|
Jingo (7", 45 RPM, Single, Stereo) | Salsoul Records | S7 2094 | US | 1979 |
Recommendations
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1982 UK12", 45 RPM, Single
Reviews
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This is the perfect example of why it was great to be a DJ attending the Old School. Here you have what should really be a Beatlesque "Double A-Side" from the geniuses at Salsoul. Jingo the better of the two songs IMHO, but not by much. This was a 12" to buy two or even three copies of, depending how many tables your crew worked, and you would get your money's worth for 4 or 5 years of using at gigs, even if you only rocked the break behind a newer record. And what WAS your money's worth. In '79, most probably $1.99 each from a store that catered to DJs like "Rock & Soul Electronics" in NYC; or maybe $2.49 if you shopped at a regular Sam Goody type store. 99¢ if you got lucky in a store selling B Stock or Notches. Or there was always your friendly neighborhood Record Pool, or your friend upstairs at 240 Madison Ave. It's nice to make nice to the A&R guys upstairs in NY or LA to get copies of their new stuff they knew you would play (push) for them. Those were the Days. Peace, Joey G.
Release
See all versions
Recently Edited
Recently Edited