Eat a Mango

Eat a Mango is the fourth album by Afropop music group Mango Groove. It was released by Tusk Music in November 1995. In 1996, Eat a Mango won a SAMA in the category "Best Adult Contemporary Performance: English" at the second annual South African Music Awards.[1] The band recorded music videos for three songs from the album: "Eat a Mango", "New World (Beneath Our Feet)", and "Right Time".[2]

Eat a Mango
Studio album by
Released20 November 1995 (1995-11-20)
Length40:25
LabelTusk Music
ProducerRed Earth Music Productions
Mango Groove chronology
Another Country
(1993)
Eat a Mango
(1995)
Bang the Drum
(2009)

Eat a Mango was the last studio album Mango Groove released until Bang the Drum in 2009. In the interim, the band members pursued other creative projects.[3] In a 2014 interview, lead singer Claire Johnston offered an explanation for the hiatus: "We experienced a creative lull. It happens to everyone; and I really learned a lot about myself during that time. I joined Mango Groove at such a young age, I needed to go out on my own and explore…".[4]

Releases

Cover of Fresh Music's 1995 CD release of Eat a Mango

Eat a Mango was released on CD in 1995 by both Gallo Record Company and Fresh Music, an independent record label in South Africa. The two releases had different visual designs. The Gallo Record Company later reissued Eat a Mango for digital distribution via Amazon Music, eMusic, iTunes, and Spotify. They reissued it on CD in 2011, in a release that also included the band's 1990 album, Hometalk. This CD reissue was part of the label's "Two on One Collection" series. Both this edition and the digital release omit the song "New World (Beneath Our Feet)", and include "We Are Waiting"—a song that originally appeared on Hometalk.

Reception

Drum magazine gave the album a favourable review, describing it as "a rocking collection of upbeat sounds celebrating life and love the Southern African way". The reviewer praised the album for being catchy and danceable, but added the following criticism: "The only negative thing I can say about this album is that some of the tracks sound too much like 'Dance Some More' and 'Another Country', which were big hits for the band. Perhaps they should explore some new ground."[5]

Track listing

Original version
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Eat a Mango"Claire Johnston, Don Laka, John Leyden4:02
2."No Problem"Claire Johnston, Mduduzi Magwaza2:37
3."The Lion Sleeps Tonight"Luigi Creatore, Solomon Linda, Hugo Peretti, Albert Stanton, George David Weiss3:30
4."New World (Beneath Our Feet)"Kevin Botha, Claire Johnston, Don Laka, Alan Lazar, John Leyden5:25
5."Right Time"Claire Johnston, John Leyden4:28
6."Gone Too Soon" (feat. Mahlathini)Claire Johnston, John Leyden, Mduduzi Magwaza, Simon Nkabinde4:11
7."Only Love"Claire Johnston, John Leyden5:01
8."Place in My Heart"Claire Johnston, John Leyden, Mduduzi Magwaza3:48
9."Hong Kong" 3:44
10."Place in the Sun"Claire Johnston, John Leyden3:39
Total length:40:25
Digital media reissue
No.TitleLength
1."We Are Waiting"4:40
2."Eat a Mango"4:03
3."No Problem"2:37
4."The Lion Sleeps Tonight"3:30
5."Right Time"4:29
6."Gone Too Soon"4:11
7."Only Love"5:02
8."Place in My Heart"3:48
9."Hong Kong"3:44
10."Place in the Sun"3:39
Total length:39:44
Hometalk / Eat a Mango. The Two on One Collection. (Gallo Record Company, 2011)
No.TitleLength
1."Tsa-oo!"4:16
2."Hometalk"4:14
3."Do You Dream of Me?"2:44
4."Moments Away"5:23
5."Marabi Party"3:03
6."Island Boy"4:49
7."Shoo-roop!"3:49
8."Uzongikhulula"3:23
9."Trouble Tonight"5:36
10."Taken for a Moment"3:47
11."We Are Waiting"4:39
12."Eat a Mango"4:02
13."No Problem"2:37
14."The Lion Sleeps Tonight"3:30
15."Right Time"4:28
16."Gone Too Soon"4:11
17."Only Love"5:01
18."Place in My Heart"3:48
19."Hong Kong"3:44
20."Place in the Sun"3:39
Total length:1:20:43

References

  1. Mojapelo, Max (2008). "When Two Cultures Kiss". In Galane, Sello (ed.). Beyond Memory: Recording the History, Moments and Memories of South African Music. African Minds. p. 127. ISBN 978-1-920299-28-6. OCLC 966015704 via Google Books.
  2. Mango Groove: The Essential (Media notes). Gallo Music Vision. 2009.
  3. Muston, Leon (17 October 2009). "Modern, fresh Mango Groove has new album". The Herald. Port Elizabeth.
  4. Vieira, Genevieve (1 April 2014). "A lifetime in the music industry and still learning". The Citizen. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  5. "Mango Groove Will Make You Move". Drum. African Drum Publications. 1996. p. 82.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.