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Us3 videos
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Us3
Rahsaan & Gerard Presencer, US 3, US-3, US3, VS3
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Artista
Video
Album
Us3Cantaloop (1992 UK Version)The Video Pool UK November 1992
Us3CantaloopRock America Dance December 1993
Nw1 (Us3) Feat. Born 2 BThe Band Played The BoogieRock America Urban May 1992
Us3C'mon EverybodyETV ET-VideoLink Nite Life 235 December 1996
Us3CantaloopTelegenics Number 129A. Progressive. December 1993
Us3Cantaloop (1992 UK Version)MixMash Urban Classics Vol.8
Us3CantaloopHot Video Classics Best Of 1994 Vol.1
Us3Cantaloop 2004 (Soul Mix)Urban Video June 2005
Us3Cantaloop (1993 UK Version)Die 90er Show. 1990-1999
Us3CantaloopScreenplay VJ-Pro Classic Vision 90s Dance Essentials Vol.3 October 2008
Us3 is a jazz-rap group founded in London in 1992. Their name was inspired by a Horace Parlan recording produced by Alfred Lion, the founder of Blue Note Records.[1] On their debut album, Hand on the Torch, Us3 exclusively used samples from the Blue Note Records catalogue, all originally produced by Lion.
The jazz/hip-hop fusion collective Us3 scored a major hit in 1994 with "Cantaloop (Flip Fantasia)," a song that displayed the group's fondness for sampling classic recordings on the Blue Note label (in this case, Herbie Hancock's "Cantaloupe Island"). The group was founded in London in 1991 when concert promoter and jazz writer Geoff Wilkinson met Mel Simpson, who was writing music for television shows and ad jingles and had once played keyboards with John Mayall. The two produced an independent single, "Where Will We Be in the 21st Century?," which sold less than 250 copies. In 1992, their song "The Band That Played the Boogie" attracted the attention of Blue Note owner Capitol Records, which gave Simpson and Wilkinson free rein to sample anything from the catalog. The two immediately went to work, hiring several musicians and rappers Kobie Powell and Rahsaan Kelly, with Tukka Yoot joining later. The sessions resulted in the hit "Cantaloop" and the album Hand on the Torch. The group toured Japan and Europe, gradually weaning itself away from using samples in a live setting, and played a well-received show at the 1993 Montreux Jazz Festival. Hand on the Torch was ignored by most jazz publications, but was chosen Album of the Year by Japan's Swing Journal, and the group were named Jazz Musicians of the Year by Britain's The Independent. After a nearly three-year delay, Us3 returned in 1997 with Broadway & 52nd, an album which received positive reviews but failed to generate a hit. The band ( though it was mostly Wilkinson and guests at this point ) continued to release new material into the new millennium, however, including 2005's Questions and 2007's Say What!?
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