Maxayn

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
The Finger Points To You 02:54 Tools
You Can't Always Get What You Want 05:09 Tools
Trying For Days 03:36 Tools
The Finger Points To You (Instrumental) 02:55 Tools
Bail Out 04:30 Tools
doing nothing, nothing doing 06:27 Tools
Gimme Shelter 04:06 Tools
Song 03:56 Tools
The Finger Points To You (as heard on Smallville) 02:54 Tools
Jam For Jack 04:33 Tools
Let Me Be Your Friend 04:51 Tools
Beloved 04:30 Tools
Life Is What You Make It 04:12 Tools
Love Is Near 05:23 Tools
Check Out Your Mind 03:40 Tools
Cried My Last Tear 04:54 Tools
Fun 03:06 Tools
Everything Begins With You 03:38 Tools
Moon Funk 04:37 Tools
Good Things 02:36 Tools
Moan To The Music 03:40 Tools
You Don't Have To Be Lonely 03:48 Tools
the answer 05:01 Tools
Tellin' You 03:37 Tools
Stone Crazy 05:05 Tools
Feelin' 03:57 Tools
I Want To Rest My Mind 05:08 Tools
The Finger Points To You (OST The Saboteur) 02:55 Tools
Travelin 03:32 Tools
Moonfunk 03:32 Tools
Travelin' 03:32 Tools
Trying, For Days 03:32 Tools
Fingertrack 918 03:32 Tools
Chilly in my yard 06:27 Tools
You Can't Always Get What You Want (4 Hero Mix) 06:27 Tools
Gimme Shelter (The Rolling Stones Cover) 00:30 Tools
I saw the sunshine today 03:32 Tools
jam for jack - maxayn 03:32 Tools
23. The Finger Points To You [instrumental] (OST-HD: Saboteur / Диверсант) Unofficial 2012 (Vk.Com/OstHD) 00:30 Tools
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Maxayn is a soul-funk band. Maxayn Lewis, with whom the name is normally associated, is one part of this band, which included Andre Lewis, Emilio Thomas, and Marlo Henderson (later, Hank Redd). Maxayn (the band) was a brilliant showcase for the songs and voice of this sister, who also doubled as a talented pianist and French horn player. Unlike other female focused bands of the era, like Blondie, the group did not have much commercial success, though their music is respected by fans of rare groove and is remembered fondly by those who had hip musical tastes in the early 70s. Their music was part funk, part gospel, part Roberta Flack-ish introspective soothers. And Maxayn's voice played the part at all times, whether it was to belt out the grittier soulful tunes with toughness or use a more subdued, relaxed style for the slower numbers. By combining spiritual grooves, an assertive attitude, updated urban sounds, and plenty 'o soul and funk, whatever Maxayn and her comrades did worked, and we've got 3 (out-of-print) albums to show for it. However, when the Maxayn band called it quits in 1974, the group did not die. Rather, it morphed into one of the strangest projects that the Motown label has ever recorded. This new group, born in 1977, was called Mandre and kept the core of the Maxayn group intact. This time the concept was futuristic space funk/disco complete with tons of synthesizers and blipping electronics. Maxayn's hubby Andre was at the helm, and album covers featured illustrations of his face covered by a mask, apparently (according to an insider) because Motown thought Andre was too ugly to show a picture of. Ms. Lewis was no longer singing lead in this group, but doing backup vocals, as well as songwriting and playing. And the Motown promotions machine tried to hype Mandre as being "funkier than Parliament." No one else seemed to think so, and after three albums, Mandre finally funked itself out in 1979. By the early 1980s, Maxayn (the woman) was singing on albums by the Gap Band. Few are aware that Maxayn Lewis also sang with the Bobby Blue Bland and the Ike & Turner Review during the mid-to-late 60s. She currently sings under the name Maxayn Lewis and Paulette Parker (her real name). Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.