Zapp VII - Roger & Friends Zapp

Album info

Album-Release:
2018

HRA-Release:
09.02.2021

Label: Leopard

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Mainstream Jazz

Artist: Zapp

Album including Album cover

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Formats & Prices

FormatPriceIn CartBuy
FLAC 44.1 $ 13.20
  • 1Rock Ya Body03:42
  • 2Shy03:33
  • 3Make It Funky04:32
  • 4Zapp & Roger03:03
  • 5Appreciate You03:38
  • 6Red & Dollars04:33
  • 7Angel03:07
  • 8Ms. Perfection03:20
  • 9Bailando04:29
  • 10Parking Lot03:33
  • 11Me and You03:49
  • 12After Party03:33
  • Total Runtime44:52

Info for Zapp VII - Roger & Friends



ZAPP IS BACK! New album continues the band’s 40-year legacy of funk with special guest appearances by Bootsy Collins, Frankie J., Tuxedo, Kurupt and Snoop Dogg

Back in 1978, four brothers out of Dayton, Ohio — Roger, Larry, Lester and Terry Troutman — formed the electro-funk band Zapp with the single-minded purpose of getting people out on the dance floor. Their 1980 self-titled debut, produced by Bootsy Collins and with input from P-Funk founder George Clinton, went gold on the strength of their influential hit single, “More Bounce to the Ounce,” which would later be sampled by the next generation of rappers and hip-hop stars, including EPMD, The Notorious B.I.G., Public Enemy, Ice Cube, Easy-E, Ice Cube and Snoop Dogg, among many others. “I’m sure that song has over 600 cleared samples now,” says Lester Troutman Jr., who manages business affairs for the Dayton-based band. “That tune was hit hard. It was up there with some of James Brown’s catalog. It almost got to the point where if you wanted some kind of commercial success, you had to get a Zapp-Roger sample.”

Roger Troutman, the gifted multi-instrumentalist-singer-arranger for the group, would go on to score similar success with the equally infectious single “Dance Floor” from Zapp’s 1982 followup gold album, Zapp II. The band of brothers continued to hit gold on 1983’s Zapp III and 1985’s Zapp IV, then delivered Zapp V: Zapp Vibe in 1989. Tragedy struck in 1999 with the untimely deaths of Zapp’s principal creative force, Roger, and his older brother Larry. The band regrouped and delivered Zapp VI: Back By Popular Demand in 2001 and subsequently returned to active duty on the international touring scene.

Now the funkateers are back with Zapp VII: Roger & Friends, which celebrates the 40-year legacy of the band while paying homage to the creative genius of Roger Troutman. The album will be released on the LEOPARD label in fall 2018. With Roger’s signature talk box and synth bass lines in full effect on tunes like “Rock Ya Body” (featuring Mr. Talkbox), “Shy” (with Tuxedo), “Make It Funky” (with Bootsy Collins), “Red & Dollars” (with Snoop Dogg) and “After Party” (with Kurupt), this latest Zapp outing is geared to make people move on the dance floor. As Lester Troutman Jr. explains, “This group has always been about three things: hook ‘em, get ‘em dancin’ and keep ‘em dancin’. And I honestly think the secret to Zapp has always its authenticity. They genuinely want to make you get up and really dance and just forget about all your troubles, and it comes out through the music.”

Zapp VII: Roger & Friends also includes posthumous performances by Roger himself on “Red & Dollars” and the beautiful ballad “Angel,” which was pieced together from an early demo tape he made. His voice can also be heard explaining his discovery of the talk box and its effect on dancers in the spoken word passages on “Zappa & Roger.” “Roger’s real instrument was guitar,” explains Larry Troutman Jr.. “He loved jazz, he loved instrumental music, but he was also a great producer-arranger in the studio and he developed something that was going to catch the people. And so it’s great that these West Coast legends like Snoop, DJ Battlecat and Kurupt pay homage to Roger’s genius and creative abilities on this new record.”

From start to finish, Zapp VII: Roger & Friends fulfills the 40-year legacy of the Ohio electro-funk pioneers. Expect the excitement level on Zapp’s upcoming tours of the States, Europe and Asia to be off the hook. As Larry Troutman Jr. puts it, “When you see the band performing, when the music starts to really hit it doesn’t stop. Once the music starts people are doing backflips, people are getting into it. Zapp is going to make you feel it.”

Zapp



Zapp
One of the most underrated funk groups of the 1980s, Zapp revolutionized the computer pop of electro with their trademark vocoder talk boxes and bumping grooves, emulating the earthier side of Prince and Cameo, with a leader in Roger Troutman who was more than efficient at polished production. The family group, with brothers Roger, Lester, Larry, and Tony Troutman, grew up in Hamilton, OH, influenced by hometown heroes the Ohio Players as well as Parliament and other funk groups. Tony was the first to begin recording, with an obscure single for Gram-O-Phon Records, "I Truly Love You," which scraped the R&B charts in 1976. Joined by his brothers (with Roger on vocals and guitar, Lester on drums, Larry on percussion, and himself contributing bass) and christened Zapp, the group played around the Midwest and gradually picked up backing vocalists (Bobby Glover, Jannetta Boyce), keyboard players (Greg Jackson, Sherman Fleetwood) and a horn section (Eddie Barber, Jerome Derrickson, Mike Warren).

Zapp IZapp's following quickly gained notices, and Bootsy Collins himself was hired on to work with the group on their debut album. Released in 1980, Zapp hit the Top 20 on the pop charts, thanks to the single "More Bounce to the Ounce." The following year, Roger worked on Funkadelic's The Electric Spanking of War Babies and released his solo debut album, The Many Facets of Roger. His special cover of "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," complete with vocoderized talk box, pushed the album into gold territory (as Zapp had done). Zapp II appeared in 1982 and proved just as popular as the group's first, including Zapp's only number one R&B single, "Dance Floor."

Zapp IIIZapp III barely made the Top 40 pop charts upon release in 1983, and Roger's second solo album, The Saga Continues, was also a disappointment, though his cover of "Midnight Hour" featured the Mighty Clouds of Joy. The New Zapp IV U fared slightly better after release in late 1985 (thanks to the single "Computer Love"), but in 1987, Roger's third solo album, Unlimited!, featured the group's biggest hit yet, "I Want to Be Your Man," a chart-topper on the R&B lists and a respectable number three pop. Though Roger and/or Zapp hit the R&B charts frequently during the rest of the late '80s, the unit had effectively halted recording with the 1991 Roger LP Bridging the Gap. Roger continued to produce and play with other artists, and it was his talk box that graced Dr. Dre & 2Pac's Top Ten 1996 single "California Love." The 1993 Roger & Zapp collection All the Greatest Hits sold well, earning the collective their first platinum record. The Zapp story ended in tragedy on April 25, 1999, when Roger was shot to death by Larry, who then turned the gun on himself. (John Bush, AMG)

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