Heavy Duty (Xtatik album)

Heavy Duty is an album released by popular Soca band Xtatik from Trinidad and Tobago in 1997.[1] The album was considered one of the most successful Soca albums at the time of its release.[2] In a 2004 interview, lead vocalist of the band Machel Montano claimed it was his favourite album of all time.[3]

Heavy Duty
Studio album by
Released1997
Recorded1996, 1997
GenreSoca
LabelJW Productions
ProducerWinston Montano, Machel Montano
Xtatik chronology
Men At Work
(1996)
Heavy Duty
(1997)
Xtatik Live
(1997)

The song Big Truck on the album won Trinidad's 1997 Annual Road March Competition for Trinidad and Tobago Carnival.[4]

Track listing

  1. Intro
  2. Big Truck - Machel Montano
  3. Follow Yuh Partner - Sean Caruth, Samuel Jack
  4. Winerboi - Machel Montano
  5. Calypso Nice - Wayne Rodriguez, Joseph Rivers, Errol Singh, Machel Montano
  6. Tayee Tayee - Darryl Henry, Machel Montano
  7. J'Ouvert Girls - Nicholas Antoine
  8. What They Say (They Say) - Winston Bailey
  9. Pretty Gyal - Richard Felix, Machel Montano
  10. No Carnival - Machel Montano, Darryl Henry
  11. Crowded - Machel Montano, Darryl Henry
  12. Music Farm - Machel Montano, Darryl Henry, Nicholas Antoine, Vincent Rivers
  13. Outro

Vocals

  • Machel Montano - Lead Vocalist
  • Wayne Rodriguez - Vocalist
  • Darryl Henry (Farmer Nappy) - Vocalist
  • Vincent Rivers - Vocalist
  • Winston Bailey - Vocalist
  • Sean Caruth - Vocalist
  • Samuel Jack - Vocalist
  • Joseph Rivers - Vocalist
  • Richard Felix - Vocalist
  • Nicholas Antoine - Vocalist
  • Errol Singh - Vocalist

Musicians

  • Bass - Vincent Rivers, Joseph Rivers
  • Trumpet - Nicholas Antoine
  • Tenor Saxophone - Charles Dougherly
  • Trombone - Kurt Francisco
gollark: --remind 4s 4s test 2
gollark: --remind 4s 4s test
gollark: --remind 2s api form
gollark: --remind 2s apioform
gollark: ... oh, right.

References

  1. Machel Montano Discography at Official Website
  2. "T&T celebrities proud to say IZATRINI". Archived from the original on 2008-04-15. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
  3. "Machel exposed - Q&A". Archived from the original on 2005-09-06. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
  4. "Road Marches of Trinidad and Tobago". Archived from the original on 2008-04-13. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.