Mothers Finest

Mother’s Finest is an American funk‑rock band founded in Atlanta, Georgia, by vocal duo Joyce “Baby Jean” Kennedy and Glenn “Doc” Murdock in 1970, after they connected with guitarist Gary “Moses Mo” Moore and bassist Jerry “Wyzard” Seay. Their music blends funky rhythms, heavy rock guitars and expressive soul/R&B‑style vocals. The group charted with the singles “Fire” (No. 93 Pop), “Baby Love” (No. 58 Pop, No. 79 Black Singles), “Piece of the Rock” (No. 7 Dutch Top 40, No. 9 Dutch Single Top 100, No. 27 Ultratop 50 Flanders), “Don’t Wanna Come Back” (No. 54 Black Singles), “Love Changes” (No. 26 Black Singles) and “I’m ’n’ Danger” (No. 11 Black Singles) from the mid‑1970s through the late 1980s. Mother’s Finest released their debut album, Mother’s Finest, in 1972 on RCA. A second RCA album remained unreleased until it appeared as bonus material on the 2010 Wounded Bird reissue of Mother’s Finest. The group later signed with Epic Records and issued their second album — also titled Mother’s Finest — in 1976, which stirred controversy with the ironic track “Niggizz Can’t Sang Rock ’n’ Roll.” Riding a wave of success, the band’s next three albums — Another Mother Further (1977), Mother Factor (1978) and Mother’s Finest Live (1979) — all went gold, supported by extensive touring as the opening act for artists such as Ted Nugent, Black Sabbath, The Who, Aerosmith and AC/DC.
See for more.

Cry baby

Mickey’s Monkey

Fire

Thank You For The Love

Baby Love

Love Changes

Rain

Dis Go Dis Way Dis Go Dat Way

Watch my stylin

Fly With Me

Back to the homepage

This page contains text from Wikipedia. The content is available under the Creative Commons Attribution‑ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY‑SA 4.0). See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
This text is based on the original Wikipedia article.