Artist's albums
Pyramix
1993 · album
Back from the Tomb
1991 · album
King of Ecstasy (His Greatest Hits Album)
1989 · album
On the Nile
1984 · album
One Track Mind
1984 · album
Hai Karate (dub)
2022 · single
Skid Row (Help Needed)
2022 · single
Imagination (DJ Assault Remix)
2022 · single
Imagination (Feadz Remix)
2022 · single
Imagination Remixes
2022 · EP
Drive
2021 · single
Imagination
2021 · EP
IDKYBIWD
2021 · single
1986
2021 · album
Rockin' Planets
2020 · single
Come Back To Me (The Egyptian Lover Remix)
2019 · single
Beyond The Galaxy
2019 · EP
1985
2018 · album
Beyond the Galaxy
2018 · single
My House (On The Nile)
2016 · single
1983-1988
2016 · album
California
2016 · single
1984
2015 · album
Platinum Pyramids
2006 · album
Electro Pharaoh
2005 · album
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Biography
One of the most innovative producers of the old-school/electro era, Egyptian Lover's Greg Broussard recorded a parade of singles during the mid-'80s that proved influential for decades. Influenced himself by Kraftwerk/hip-hop soundclashes like Afrika Bambaataa's "Planet Rock" and Man Parrish's "Hip-Hop Be Bop (Don't Stop)," as well as the extroverted loverman soul of Prince and Zapp, Broussard began recording from his Los Angeles base in 1983. One year later, he emerged with the breakdancing anthem "Egypt, Egypt," released on the Freak Beat label. Similar to excellent tracks being produced all over America -- from Detroit (Cybotron) to New York (Mantronix) -- "Egypt, Egypt" and successors "What Is a DJ If He Can't Scratch," "And My Beat Goes Boom," and "Computer Love (Sweet Dreams)" spent a lot of time in DJ crates during the '80s and '90s. Broussard also released several LPs from the mid-'80s through the '90s, highlighted by 1984's On the Nile (practically a greatest-hits compilation), 1986's One Track Mind, and 1994's Back from the Tomb. He returned in 2006 with Platinum Pyramids, continued to perform live -- including dates with M.I.A. -- produced a track for Rye Rye, and, in 2015, released the long-in-the-works 1984. The following year, Stones Throw compiled 1983-1988, a proper anthology of Broussard's early highlights. It included a couple re-edits from label boss Peanut Butter Wolf, who sampled "What Is a DJ If He Can't Scratch" during his early-'90s partnership with MC Charizma. ~ John Bush & Andy Kellman, Rovi