Due to its range, it does illustrate that Douglas could have done more than novelties, given the right material and right producer - not much more, perhaps, but he was a good journeyman vocalist and when he's given solid genre material like 'When You Got Love,' the results are indeed pleasant. release) are included on the 22-track The Soul of the Kung Fu Fighter, which is likely more than anybody really needs from Carl Douglas though it is easily the most comprehensive and best collection assembled of the artist yet.
These and much, much more (including a contemporary remix of the hit, which was a British hit itself and the reason why this Castle collection was assembled for U.K.
Saddled with such an indelible novelty hit, Douglas' skills faded into the background, particularly since he recorded his fair share of songs that were either kitschy - the talk-box heavy 'Too Hot to Handle' - or were direct rip-offs of 'Kung Fu Fighting': 'Dance the Kung Fu,' 'Green Tangerine and Wild Evergreens' - the last of which has the exact same melody as the hit song. Nobody really cares, though, because he was the guy who sang 'Kung Fu Fighting,' a delightfully silly artifact of the '70s, combining disco and kung fu films in an absurdly catchy, unforgettable way. The tragedy of Carl Douglas' career is that he was actually a good singer, capable of being more than a novelty act.