Featuring more darting and swooping trails of synths than you can shake a stick at,
Universal Robot Band's
Dance and Shake Your Tambourine is nonetheless a surprisingly unmemorable album when compared to the other
disco works bearing the stamp of
Greg Carmichael and
Patrick Adams. The album opens with the nine-minute
"Flintstone Disco," a dancefloor-fitted version of
The Flintstones' theme song, yabba-dabba-dos and all.
"Space Disco" is similarly light in spirit and long in length, and uses high-pitched, multi-tracked vocals similar in fashion to the ones heard on
Bumblebee Unlimited's
"Love Bug" (another
Carmichael/
Adams product).
"Dance and Shake Your Tambourine" and
"You're My Music" are the two top cuts. The former, while not spectacular, has a sticky chorus and a pleasant
boogie drift. The latter, penned in part by future
Kleeer leader
Woody Cunningham (actually, most of the players on this record would later become that group), is closer to smooth but funky
soul than anything else and deserved to be a radio staple. This is not a bad record by any stretch of the imagination, but it looks that way when stacked against the group's 1982 single,
"Barely Breaking Even" (though it did feature a drastically different lineup), and other flashes of timeless brilliance from
Carmichael and
Adams. Originally issued by
Carmichael's
Red Greg label in 1976,
Unidisc reissued it for CD in the '90s and added a single edit of the title track. ~ Andy Kellman