'Searching' is the latest album from Mississippi legends the Staples Jr. Singers, the family band who released their last album 'When Do We Get Paid' in 1975 when they were just teenagers.
How many bands take almost fifty years to release their sophomore album? This has to be a record. After 'When Do We Get Paid' was reissued by Luaka Bop in 2022, the band headed back to the studio, dubbing 'Searching' last year and tapping into the same seam of gospel and funk. They've been busy in the downtime - apparently they have multiple full-lengths written - and the band has swelled as other family members have come of age, but despite this, their first live set in four decades came just following the debut's reissue. They proved they hadn't aged a day, and this brand new set only adds to the legend - there's nothing new added, their sound's still anchored by Edward, Annie and R.C. Brown's powerful harmonies, but they don't need to mess with the template. There's nobody else out there doing it quite like this, that's for sure.
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'Searching' is the latest album from Mississippi legends the Staples Jr. Singers, the family band who released their last album 'When Do We Get Paid' in 1975 when they were just teenagers.
How many bands take almost fifty years to release their sophomore album? This has to be a record. After 'When Do We Get Paid' was reissued by Luaka Bop in 2022, the band headed back to the studio, dubbing 'Searching' last year and tapping into the same seam of gospel and funk. They've been busy in the downtime - apparently they have multiple full-lengths written - and the band has swelled as other family members have come of age, but despite this, their first live set in four decades came just following the debut's reissue. They proved they hadn't aged a day, and this brand new set only adds to the legend - there's nothing new added, their sound's still anchored by Edward, Annie and R.C. Brown's powerful harmonies, but they don't need to mess with the template. There's nobody else out there doing it quite like this, that's for sure.
'Searching' is the latest album from Mississippi legends the Staples Jr. Singers, the family band who released their last album 'When Do We Get Paid' in 1975 when they were just teenagers.
How many bands take almost fifty years to release their sophomore album? This has to be a record. After 'When Do We Get Paid' was reissued by Luaka Bop in 2022, the band headed back to the studio, dubbing 'Searching' last year and tapping into the same seam of gospel and funk. They've been busy in the downtime - apparently they have multiple full-lengths written - and the band has swelled as other family members have come of age, but despite this, their first live set in four decades came just following the debut's reissue. They proved they hadn't aged a day, and this brand new set only adds to the legend - there's nothing new added, their sound's still anchored by Edward, Annie and R.C. Brown's powerful harmonies, but they don't need to mess with the template. There's nobody else out there doing it quite like this, that's for sure.
'Searching' is the latest album from Mississippi legends the Staples Jr. Singers, the family band who released their last album 'When Do We Get Paid' in 1975 when they were just teenagers.
How many bands take almost fifty years to release their sophomore album? This has to be a record. After 'When Do We Get Paid' was reissued by Luaka Bop in 2022, the band headed back to the studio, dubbing 'Searching' last year and tapping into the same seam of gospel and funk. They've been busy in the downtime - apparently they have multiple full-lengths written - and the band has swelled as other family members have come of age, but despite this, their first live set in four decades came just following the debut's reissue. They proved they hadn't aged a day, and this brand new set only adds to the legend - there's nothing new added, their sound's still anchored by Edward, Annie and R.C. Brown's powerful harmonies, but they don't need to mess with the template. There's nobody else out there doing it quite like this, that's for sure.
Available To Order (Estimated Shipping between 7-14 Working Days)
This item is to the best of our knowledge available to us from the supplier and should ship to you within the time-frame indicated. If there are any unforeseen issues with availability we will notify you immediately
'Searching' is the latest album from Mississippi legends the Staples Jr. Singers, the family band who released their last album 'When Do We Get Paid' in 1975 when they were just teenagers.
How many bands take almost fifty years to release their sophomore album? This has to be a record. After 'When Do We Get Paid' was reissued by Luaka Bop in 2022, the band headed back to the studio, dubbing 'Searching' last year and tapping into the same seam of gospel and funk. They've been busy in the downtime - apparently they have multiple full-lengths written - and the band has swelled as other family members have come of age, but despite this, their first live set in four decades came just following the debut's reissue. They proved they hadn't aged a day, and this brand new set only adds to the legend - there's nothing new added, their sound's still anchored by Edward, Annie and R.C. Brown's powerful harmonies, but they don't need to mess with the template. There's nobody else out there doing it quite like this, that's for sure.
Available To Order (Estimated Shipping between 7-14 Working Days)
This item is to the best of our knowledge available to us from the supplier and should ship to you within the time-frame indicated. If there are any unforeseen issues with availability we will notify you immediately
'Searching' is the latest album from Mississippi legends the Staples Jr. Singers, the family band who released their last album 'When Do We Get Paid' in 1975 when they were just teenagers.
How many bands take almost fifty years to release their sophomore album? This has to be a record. After 'When Do We Get Paid' was reissued by Luaka Bop in 2022, the band headed back to the studio, dubbing 'Searching' last year and tapping into the same seam of gospel and funk. They've been busy in the downtime - apparently they have multiple full-lengths written - and the band has swelled as other family members have come of age, but despite this, their first live set in four decades came just following the debut's reissue. They proved they hadn't aged a day, and this brand new set only adds to the legend - there's nothing new added, their sound's still anchored by Edward, Annie and R.C. Brown's powerful harmonies, but they don't need to mess with the template. There's nobody else out there doing it quite like this, that's for sure.