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The Edge of Daybreak was a group of inmates who met, wrote songs, rehearsed, and performed behind bars. This album was recorded live in a single morning by a mobile recording unit brought to the Powhatan prison complex in Richmond, Virginia, where the band members were incarcerated. Eyes of Love gained some regional publicity through local media outlets before band members were transferred to other facilities and ultimately released from prison, and they were not fated to create any follow-up music. Jon Kirby’s excellent liner notes to this reissue detail the circumstances of the members’ imprisonment, music, and eventual release, and I highly recommend that readers consult the fifteen-page booklet for more interesting details on this project. The Edge of Daybreak may be one of the best lesser-known soul groups of the late-1970s that remain unheard by most listeners, likely in large part due to the circumstances surrounding the group’s musical activities. However, it is apparent that this group was well-rehearsed and the songs carefully arranged. Despite the band not having enough time to do overdubs and re-recordings of their parts, the tracks on this record sound pristine—everything feels wonderful and there are few, if any, wrong notes. Highlights include the laid-back funk of the title track, the more energetic “I Wanna Dance With You,” and the band’s eponymous “E.O.D. (Edge of Daybreak),” a dance cut that is propelled by an active bass line and solid syncopated hi-ha

Eyes Of Love
Off Track Vol. III: Brooklyn
New Horizon
Kon & Amir present Off Track Vol. III: Brooklyn
Off Track Vol III: Brooklyn (unmixed tracks)
Kon & Amir Present Off Track Volume III: Brooklyn
Kon & Amir Present: Off Track, Vol. III: Brooklyn
Kon & Amir Preset Off Track Volume III: Brooklyn [[Disc 1]: Kon's Selection]
Kon & Amir Present Off Track Volume III Brooklyn
Eyes of Love (2015 Reissue)
Mid-Atlantic Story, Vol. 3
Channel 1