Jump to content

A Lighter Shade of Brown: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Reverted edits by Macattac to last revision by XLinkBot (HG)
Macattac (talk | contribs)
Undid revision 359825388 by 5 albert square (talk)
Line 114: Line 114:


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.myspace.com/OfficialLighterShadeofBrown Lighter Shade of Brown Official Myspace]
*[http://www.alightershadeofbrown.com/ LSOB]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Lighter Shade of Brown}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lighter Shade of Brown}}

Revision as of 11:24, 3 May 2010

A Lighter Shade of Brown

A Lighter Shade of Brown (LSOB) was a Mexican American hip hop duo from Riverside, California best known for their 1991 hit single "On a Sunday Afternoon", a success in the U.S., written by songwriters/musicians David Dunson & Micah Carson.

History

LSOB was formed in 1990 by One Dope Mexican (Robert Gutierrez) and Don't Try to Xerox (Bobby Ramirez).[1] They recorded demos and landed a record deal soon after with small independent label Pump. Their debut album, 1991's "Brown and Proud," brought the group their lone Top 40 single in the U.S. with "On A Sunday Afternoon," which contained samples of The Young Rascals' 1967 hit "Groovin' " and Tommy James and the Shondells' 1969 hit "Crystal Blue Persuasion" and peaked at #39 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song also went to #1 for 2 weeks in New Zealand.

The duo provided songs for Latino-market movies such as Mi Vida Loca and I Like It Like That following the release of their second LP, 1992's '"Hip Hop Locos," which failed to chart. The success of "Sunday Afternoon" nonetheless resulted in Mercury Records signing the group and releasing their third disc, Layin' in the Cut, in 1994. The record did not sell as well as was hoped, peaking at #184 on the Billboard 200 albums chart. LSOB went on a temporary hiatus,[1] returning in 1997 on indie Thump Records. Their self-titled fourth album featured guest appearances from Rappin' 4-Tay and Dwayne Wiggins of Tony! Toni! Toné!.

1999 marked the last of their releases, including a greatest hits album and a non-charting single, "Sunny Day." That year, Gutierrez became a DJ at a San Bernardino radio station.[1]

Discography

Year Title Label US R&B Chart[2] US Top 200[2]
1991 Brown & Proud Pump Records - 184
1992 Hip Hop Locos Quality Records 87 -
1994 Layin' in the Cut Mercury Records 54 169
1997 A Lighter Shade of Brown Thump Records - -
1999 If You Could See Inside Me Associated Records - -
1999 Greatest Hits Thump Records - -

Singles

Year Title Chart Positions[3] Album
Billboard Hot 100 US Hot Hip-Hop & R&B Singles US Hot Rap Singles
1991 "Latin Active" 59 - - Brown & Proud
"On a Sunday Afternoon"
(feat.Shiro and Huggy Boy)
39 - -
1992 "Homies" 57 54 13 Hip Hop Locos
1994 "Hey D.J." 43 67 18 Layin' in the Cut
"If You Wanna Groove"
(feat.Novelist)
- - 45

References

  1. ^ a b c Biography, Allmusic.com
  2. ^ a b Billboard, Allmusic.com
  3. ^ Billboard Singles. Allmusic.com.