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RnB 03/02/2005

Ashanti, Li'l Kim, Lauryn Hill And Lisa Stansfield Guest On Kool And The Gang's New CD - The Hits: Reloaded

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NEW YORK (Kool & The Gang PR team) "This Reloaded CD features ASHANTI, BLU CANTRELL and LI'L KIM -- so we've got quite a few divas on there!" - Kool

Kool and the Gang celebrates 40 years together with an amazing package featuring superstar guest appearances by artists including, ASHANTI, BLU CANTRELL and LI'L KIM. The group has rounded up numerous hit acts to appear on revamped versions of their best-known songs, including Angie Stone, Jamiroquai and Jamelia. With 11 tracks, many artists faithfully pay homage to the originals, and a handful have stamped their own mark on the "Kool" classics. Sean Paul's "Ladies Night" is an instant smash, Youssou N'Dour and Lauryn Hill collaborate on a lovely cover of "Summer Madness" and Lisa Stansfield's jazzy "Too Hot" is inspiring.

The New Jersey Pop and R&B legends have recruited a host of chart-topping stars on The Hits: Reloaded available on KTFA Entertainment/Sanctuary Urban. Kool notes: "We were lucky to get BEVERLY KNIGHT, JAMELIA, ATOMIC KITTEN and JAMIROQUAI which was amazing. The BLACK EYED PEAS couldn't fit their schedule around ours -- We'll save that one for the future!"

From "Joanna" to "Too Hot" to "Jungle Boogie," the song that awakened Generation X to old-school funk when Quentin Tarantino included it in "Pulp Fiction" Kool is forever cool. The seven-piece Gang, which is still led by Robert "Kool" Bell more than 40 years after he formed the group with his Jersey City, N.J., pals, tours and now has released a new CD with many of their peers and new school artists.

Kool and the Gang have sold more than 70 million albums worldwide during the course of the band's history. Songs such as 'Celebration,' 'Cherish,' 'Jungle Boogie' and 'Ladies Night' have brought the band two Grammy Awards and seven American Music Awards.

The group has 25 Top 10 rhythm and blues hits, nine Top 10 pop hits and 31 gold and platinum albums to their credit. As the band continues to tour into its fourth decade, it still enjoys enormous popularity.

Consisting of Robert 'Kool' Bell, Khalis Bayyan, George Brown, Dennis Thomas and Charles Smith. With the release of its newest album, the band has expanded its' sound. 'The future of our sound will be an infusion of classic Kool & the Gang with hip-hop,' said band member Bayyan. 'I feel that our longevity in the music industry is a result of our relentless pursuit of excellence and consistency. And after 40 years together we're having more fun now than ever -it just gets better and better."

SO they now invite their fans to "Cherish" the sound of Kool & the Gang today. Formed in the mid-1960s, the pop-R&B group - best known for its upbeat song "Celebration" - has re-created itself several times over the decades to keep pace with an ever-changing music scene.

More on Kool:
They started in Jersey City as a jazz ensemble and after signing with DeLite Records in 1969, the group shifted to a funkier sound, coming into its own with 1973's "Wild and Peaceful." It continued as a powerful funk force until the late 1970s. In 1979, the band exploded into the pop-R&B genre on the strength of songs like "Joanna," "Cherish" and "Fresh."

Kool and the Gang, the band that went from hard funk and R&B in the '70s to pop hit-makers in the '80s consistently performs their hits including "Jungle Boogie," "Ladies Night" and "Hollywood Swinging" to later cuts like "Celebration" and "Emergency."

Big Across the Pond:
While band still tours the U.S., they've enjoyed a recent popularity surge is in England "Hollywood Swinging" may be one of their signature dance floor anthems, but for Kool & the Gang, the world's most swinging locale might be England instead.

In the U.K., the Gang is very much a going concern. Commissioned by the band's British label, "The Hits: Reloaded" is the latest example of musicians finding more acclaim abroad - a trend that began with jazz stars like Dexter Gordon in the '50s.

There's always been a special link to the U.K. - "British folks were the fans outside the U.S. that really bought into our sound," says Dennis Thomas. The Gang was even the lone American group to be included on the 1984 Band-Aid single "Do They Know It's Christmas?"

During the '90s, the Gang recorded "Unite" and "State of Affairs," which featured electronics and guest rappers married with horn-heavy groove.

Formed in Jersey City in the mid-'60s around the core of Robert "Kool" Bell and his brother Ronald (a.k.a. Khalis Bayyan), the Gang was a group of former jazz musicians who made the transition to R&B. Thomas, in fact, was one of the early leaders of the band, inspiring Ronald Bell to first pick up a saxophone.

They created some of the funkiest singles of the '70s, charting with percussive, chanted throwdowns like "Jungle Boogie" and "Hollywood Swinging." A more mainstream audience arrived and in 1979, the smooth "Ladies Night" kicked off a nine-year run of hits that set the standard for pop-R&B crossovers.

Kool & The Gang's story starts in the Jersey City projects. They were teenagers, studying Miles Davis albums and James Brown singles, jamming in basements, partying for the people in a swirl of Black consciousness. In 1969 they made their first record. Still teenagers, and full of confidence, they named that first record after themselves. Their confidence and creativity produced a string of loose-but-tight, "fun" records, culminating in the Pop Chart smash Jungle Boogie. Kool & The Gang didn't need a singer then: the horns were the lead voice; the fans chanted along. Their songs are featured in films like Rocky and Saturday Night Fever.






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