1980 studio album by Shalamar
Three for Love is the fourth album by American R&B group Shalamar , released in 1980 on the SOLAR label. It was produced by Leon Sylvers III and features the 'classic' Shalamar line-up (Jeffrey Daniel , Howard Hewett and Jody Watley ).
Three for Love has been certified Gold in the United States for sales of over 500,000. The album eventually went Platinum . It peaked at #8 on the R&B chart and #40 on the Billboard chart .
In 2002, Three for Love was re-released by Sanctuary Records in the United Kingdom in a two-for-one CD format with Shalamar's previous album Big Fun .
Reception
AllMusic rated the album four and a half out of five stars.[ 1] Music critic Robert Christgau graded it "A−".[ 2] Writer Colin Larkin rated it three out of five.[ 3]
The album had sold over 875,000 copies by July 1982. The single "Make That Move" sold more than 535,000 units.[ 4]
The album was ranked 43 on "The 80 Greatest Albums of 1980" by Rolling Stone .[ 5]
Track listing
Side one Title Writer(s) 1. "Full of Fire" Jody Watley , Joey Gallo, Richard Randolph 6:20 2. "Attention to My Baby" William Shelby , Kevin Spencer , Wardell Potts4:32 3. "Somewhere There's a Love" Otis Stokes, William Shelby, Ernest "Pepper" Reed 4:23 4. "Some Things Never Change" William Shelby, Dana Meyers 4:55
Personnel
Shalamar
Musical Personnel
Leon Sylvers III - bass, percussion
Foster Sylvers - bass
Wardell Potts, Jr. - drums
Stephen Shockley - guitar
Richard Randolph - guitar
Ernest "Pepper" Reed - guitar
Ricky Sylvers - guitar
Fred Alexander, Jr. - percussion
Kevin Spencer - keyboards
Joey Gallo - keyboards
James Sylvers - keyboards
Michael Nash - keyboards
Ricky Smith - keyboards
Charts
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
Single
References
^ Henderson, Alex. "Shalamar – Three for Love " . AllMusic . Retrieved December 25, 2014 .
^ Christgau, Robert. "Shalamar - Three for Love " . Robert Christgau . Retrieved December 25, 2014 .
^ Larkin, Colin (2002). "Shalamar" . The Virgin Encyclopedia of 70s Music . p. 395. ISBN 9781852279479 . Retrieved December 14, 2017 .
^ Gayle, Stephen (July 1982). "Solar Empire Strikes Gold" . Black Enterprise . p. 40. Retrieved December 14, 2017 – via Google Books.
^ "The 80 Greatest Albums of 1980" . Rolling Stone . 11 November 2020.
^ "Shalamar, TLP" . Billboard . Retrieved June 27, 2021 .
^ "Shalamar, BLP" . Billboard . Retrieved June 27, 2021 .
^ "Top Billboard 200 Albums – Year-End 1981" . Billboard . Retrieved June 27, 2021 .
^ "Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums – Year-End 1981" . Billboard . Retrieved June 27, 2021 .
External links
Studio albums Singles Related articles