This album aptly summarises the best hits of the early British funk band, Heatwave. There is something fresh, light, happy, naive even in the way the band play, in the orchestrations and in Wilder's unique vocal range which means that many of the tracks have outlived the post-disco era and can lay claim to being classic funk tunes. Rod Temperton's peerless songwriting skills are in evidence on the biggest hits, Boogie Nights probably being the biggest of all.
The album contains all the best songs, although I share the previous reviewer's frustrations that extended versions were not included, specifically of Always and Forever and Gangsters of the Groove.
Only four stars because there is unfortunately a bit of padding with some truly poor efforts, notably track 9, which show up the fact that Heatwave were not a band "built to last". There's also some fairly shameless copying of the Earth, Wind & Fire style on one or two of the tracks, showing that the band quickly ran out of ideas.
Nevertheless, Heatwave were pioneers of the Britfunk scene and helped lay the path for bands like Level 42, Incongnito, Light of the World, Central Line et al. The album is good value and, with use of the skip track button, gives you half an hour or so of great music.