Showing posts with label The Delfonics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Delfonics. Show all posts

Friday, October 2, 2015

The Stylistics~ "I'm Stone in Love With You"


The Stylistics are a soul music vocal group, and were one of the best-known Philadelphia soul groups of the 1970s.

They formed in 1968, and were composed of singers Russell Thompkins, Jr., Herb Murrell, Airrion Love, James Smith, and James Dunn.

All of their US hits were ballads, graced by the soaring falsetto voice of Russell Thompkins, Jr. and the lush productions of Thom Bell, which helped make the Stylistics one of the most successful soul groups of the first half of the 1970s."[1]

During the early 1970s, the group had twelve consecutive U.S. R&B top ten hits, including "Stop, Look, Listen", "You Are Everything", "Betcha by Golly, Wow", "People Make the World Go Round", "I'm Stone in Love with You", "Break Up to Make Up", and "You Make Me Feel Brand New".[1]



The Stylistics
The Stylistics on Soul Train 1974.jpg
The group performing on Soul Train in 1974.
Background information
Origin Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Genres R&B, soul
Years active 1968–present
Labels Avco, H&L
Members Airrion Love
Herbie Murrell
Harold Eban Brown
Jason Sharp
Past members Russell Thompkins, Jr.
James Dunn
James Smith
Raymond Johnson
Van Fields

Career

Early years

The Stylistics were created from two Philadelphia groups, The Percussions and The Monarchs.[2]

Russell Thompkins Jr., James Smith, and Airrion Love came from the Monarchs, and James Dunn and Herbie Murrell came from the Percussions. 

In 1970, the group recorded "You're a Big Girl Now", a song their road manager Marty Bryant co-wrote with Robert Douglas, a member of their backing band Slim and the Boys, and the single became a regional hit for Sebring Records.[1] 

Producer Bill Perry spent $400 to record the number in the Virtue Studios in Philadelphia. The larger Avco Records soon signed the Stylistics, and the single eventually climbed to number seven on the US Billboard R&B chart in early 1971.[1]


Success: The Bell/Creed years

After signing to Avco, the record label approached producer Thom Bell, who had already produced a catalogue of hits for The Delfonics, to work with the group.[3] 

The Stylistics auditioned for Bell, but he was initially unimpressed.[3] 

He ultimately agreed to produce the group because he believed in the potential of lead singer, Russell Thompkins, Jr.'s distinctive, nasal high tenor & falsetto voice.[3] 

Avco gave Bell complete creative control over the Stylistics and he proceeded to focus the group's sound exclusively around Thompkins's voice.[3] 

On most of the group hits, Bell would have Thompkins sing virtually solo.[3]


The first song recorded with Bell and his collaborator, lyricist Linda Creed, was the lush "Stop, Look, Listen".[4] 

Bell imported techniques he had perfected with The Delfonics and his musical arrangements worked perfectly with Thompkins' falsetto vocals.


Their hits from this period —distilled from three albums— included "Betcha by Golly, Wow" (U.S. #3), "I'm Stone in Love with You", "Break Up to Make Up" (U.S. #5), "You Make Me Feel Brand New" featuring Thompkins singing a rare lead vocal duet with Airron Love, the aforementioned "Stop, Look, Listen", "You Are Everything", and the Top 20 Pop hit "Rockin' Roll Baby" (U.S. #14). 

"You Make Me Feel Brand New" was the group's biggest U.S. hit, holding at No. 2 for two weeks just as the spring of 1974 turned to summer, and was one of the group's five U.S. gold singles.


The Stylistics' smooth sound also found an easier path on to adult contemporary airwaves than many other soul artists and the group made Billboard magazine's Easy Listening singles chart twelve times from 1971 to 1976, with three entries ("Betcha by Golly, Wow", "You Make Me Feel Brand New", and "You'll Never Get to Heaven (If You Break My Heart)") reaching the Top 10. 

Every single that Bell produced for the Stylistics was a Top Ten R&B hit, and several—"You Are Everything", "Betcha by Golly Wow!", "I'm Stone in Love with You", "Break Up to Make Up", and "You Make Me Feel Brand New"—were also Top Ten pop chart hits.[1] 

The band also enjoyed commercial success with big hits with this material throughout Europe.


Changing style: Continuing international success

Thom Bell stopped working with the Stylistics in 1974,[1] and the split proved commercially difficult for the group in the U.S. 

Just as with the Delfonics, the Stylistics were to some extent a vehicle for Bell's own creativity. 

They struggled to find the right material although their partnership with label owners Hugo & Luigi as producers and arranger Van McCoy started well with "Let's Put It All Together" (#18 pop, No. 8 R&B) and "Heavy Fallin' Out" (#4 R&B, No. 41 pop). 

Following singles were notably less successful, but as U.S. success began to wane, their popularity in Europe, and especially the United Kingdom, increased.[1] 

Indeed, the lighter 'pop' sound fashioned by McCoy and Hugo & Luigi gave the group a UK #1 in 1975 with "Can't Give You Anything".[1][5] 

Further successes with "Sing Baby Sing", "Na Na Is The Saddest Word", "Funky Weekend" and "Can't Help Falling in Love" consolidated the group's European popularity.[1][5] 

They are one of the few U.S. acts to have two chart-topping greatest hits albums in the UK.[5]


The Stylistics switched record labels during this period as Avco Records transitioned into H&L Records in 1976.[1]

Notwithstanding this, the band began to struggle with increasingly weak material, and although the singles and albums came out as before, by 1978 chart success had vanished. 

A move to Mercury in 1978 for two albums produced by Teddy Randazzo failed to produce any major success. 

 Russell Thompkins Jr. wrote (in the sleevenotes for the re-issue of the 1976 album, Fabulous) that the group began to feel that the music they were recording was becoming dated and not in keeping with the popular disco sound of the late 1970s.


In 1979, they had a small part in the movie Hair, directed by Miloš Forman, where they play conservative army officers. 

They double Nell Carter in singing a tongue-in-cheek song called "White Boys".


Later years

Both James Dunn and James Smith departed in 1980 due to conflicts over the direction of the group.[6] 

The group continued, recruiting new member Raymond Johnson. 

They would also reunite with Thom Bell and sign with Philadelphia International Records subsidiary, TSOP Records in 1980. 

They released the single, "Hurry Up This Way Again", that year which brought them back into the R&B Top 20 (peaking at #18). 

Johnson departed in 1985, leaving the group a trio. Love, Murrell, and Thompkins continued to tour until 2000, when Russell Thompkins, Jr. left the group.


Love and Murrell brought in two new members from one set of the Delfonics – (Harold) Eban Brown as lead singer, and tenor singer Van Fields who also sang with an a cappella group called A Perfect Blend. 

In 2011, Fields departed from the group due to creative differences and was replaced by Jason Sharp (formerly with the band Heatwave). 

The group, prior to Fields' departure, was featured live on the DVD The Stylistics Live at the Convocation Center (2006), as well as with other artists of the 1970s on the DVD, 70s Soul Jam. They recorded their latest album, That Same Way, in 2008.


Russell Thompkins, Jr. launched his own group in 2004, the New Stylistics, with the returning Raymond Johnson, plus James Ranton and Jonathan Buckson. 

They were featured on the DVD Old School Soul Party Live!, which was part of the PBS My Music series.


In 2006 their hit single, "Can't Give You Anything (But My Love)", was used as the base for a Japanese advertisement campaign by Gatsby, to launch their new male hair styling product, 'Moving Rubber'.

The campaign was successful and featured one of Japan's most popular celebrities Takuya Kimura of the pop group SMAP

They were also featured guests on SMAP's television show, SMAP×SMAP, one of the highest rated shows in Japan to promote the 'Moving Rubber' product.


In October 2009, they featured on the UK BBC One television program, Friday Night with Jonathan Ross.


Their song, "People Make the World Go Round", was used by Spike Lee in the soundtrack for 1994 film Crooklyn, as performed by Marc Dorsey.

Personnel

Current members
Former members
  • Russell Thompkins, Jr. – born March 21, 1951, Philadelphia (1968–2000)
  • James Dunn – born February 4, 1950, Philadelphia (1968–1980)
  • James Smith – born June 16, 1950, New York City (1968–1980)
  • Raymond Johnson (1980–1986)
  • Van Fields – born November 12, 1952, Philadelphia (2000–2011)

Discography

Awards and recognition

Source: Wikipedia.org

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Thursday, August 27, 2015

The Delfonics~ "La La Means I Love You"




The Delfonics are a pioneering Philadelphia soul singing group, popular in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

Their most notable hits include "La-La (Means I Love You)", "Didn't I (Blow Your Mind This Time)", "Break Your Promise", "I'm Sorry", and "Ready or Not Here I Come (Can't Hide from Love)".

Their hit songs were all written by songwriter and producer Thom Bell and lead vocalist and founder William Hart.

Their songs have been used extensively in film soundtracks, including Quentin Tarantino's 1997 movie Jackie Brown, in which "La-La (Means I Love You)" and "Didn't I Blow Your Mind" underscore the pivotal relationship between the characters played by Pam Grier and Robert Forster.

Their song "Ready or Not Here I Come (Can't Hide from Love)" was used in the video game Grand Theft Auto V on the fictional radio station The Lowdown 91.1.

Their songs have been sampled extensively by various hip-hop and rap artists including: The Wu-Tang Clan, Fugees, Deltron 3030, The Notorious B.I.G., Nas, Boyz II Men, Missy Elliott and DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince.

In addition, their songs have been covered by numerous other performers, including Aretha Franklin, The Jackson 5, Patti LaBelle, New Kids on the Block, Fugees, Todd Rundgren, Prince, Swing Out Sister and The Manhattan Transfer.

The Delfonics~ Image Search 


The Delfonics
Origin Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Genres R&B, soul, Philadelphia soul
Years active 1965–present
Labels Philly Groove Records

Members William Hart
Greg Hill
Johnney Smalls
Wilbert Hart
Salaam Love
Joe Branch

Past members Randy Cain
Ritchie Daniels
Major Harris
Frank Washington
Freddy Ingleton
Eban Brown
Van Fields
Johnny Johnson
Garfield Fleming

 

 

Career

Original group members were William and Wilbert Hart, Ritchie Daniels, and Randy Cain, whom they met at Overbrook High School in the 1960s.

Their first recording, "He Don't Really Love You", was for Moon Shot in 1966. Daniels was drafted and left for the service in 1968.

At Cameo, producer Stan Watson introduced them to producer Thom Bell, then working with Chubby Checker. With Cameo they recorded a popular tune called "You've Been Untrue".

The group's first album, released on Watson's own Philly Groove record label, featured the smash hit "La-La (Means I Love You)" in 1968. The single sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold disc.[1]

Four more Bell-produced albums appeared in the next few years: The Sound of Sexy Soul, The Delfonics Super Hits, The Delfonics and Tell Me This Is a Dream.

Among the Delfonics' popular hits were the Grammy-winning "Didn't I (Blow Your Mind This Time)", "(For The Love) I Gave To You", "Ready or Not Here I Come (Can't Hide from Love)", and "Hey Love".

The Delfonics and Bell had to work with a basic budget on the first creation as Thom explained "When I took them into the studio we didn't have any money to pay for string players and an orchestra so I played most of the instruments myself!" - a far cry from the full classical productions from 1968 to the beginning of the seventies.[2]

"Didn't I (Blow Your Mind This Time)" also sold a million copies and by March 1970 received a gold disc from the R.I.A.A..[1]

Randy Cain left the group in 1971, and in 1973 had a hand in formulating Blue Magic, best known for their classic "Sideshow," when he brought singer-songwriter Ted Mills in to do some writing for W.M.O.T. (We Men Of Talent), and the remaining future members of Blue Magic came in for an audition.

Cain was replaced by Major Harris; by then, however, Thom Bell had moved on to produce The Stylistics and later, The Spinners, all artists in the mold of the Delfonics.

The Delfonics swiftly produced another album, Alive & Kicking, produced by Stan Watson. However, in the absence of Thom Bell, the Delfonics' career declined sharply, and with the exception of the aforementioned "Hey Love" and the minor hits "When You Get Right Down to It", "I Don't Want To Make You Wait" and "I Told You So", success eluded them after 1975.

 ("(For The Love) I Gave To You", although popular, was never released as a single.) Most of their songs at this point were written by lead singer William Hart.

Split

The group split around 1975; one group featured Major and Wilbert, with new member Frank Washington, formerly of the Futures. (Major Harris also had major success with the solo recording "Love Won't Let Me Wait").

The other group featured William with new members. Lineups would become confusing as members shifted between groups and multiple groups toured.

Major Harris moved to William's group around 1980, with their third member being the returning Randy Cain. Frank Washington also switched from Wilbert's group, joining in 1985.

While the main recording lineup of the group was William Hart, Major Harris, and Frank Washington, they would tour as two separate trios with additional members added.

One group featured William, Randy Cain, and Garfield Fleming, and the other consisted of Frank, Major, and Freddy Ingleton.

William also toured with another line up consisting of himself, Johnny ("JJ") Johnson and Pat Palmer,[3] and toured in Japan at least one time with Ingleton and Dr. Salaam Love.[4]

1980s and on

Through the 1980s and the 1990s, the Delfonics groups continued to perform. The William Hart/Major Harris/Frank Washington group made several recordings, including backing vocals on the track "After the Smoke is Clear", on the 1996 hip hop album Ironman by Ghostface Killah.

Their works continued to be sampled. Rapper The Notorious B.I.G. sampled "Hey Love" in his song "Playa Hata", released in 1997, and in 1996 rapper Nas sampled their "Walk Right Up To the Sun" for his hit "If I Ruled the World.

"Rapper Missy Elliott sampled "Ready Or Not Here I Come" in her hit "Sock it 2 Me." Rapper Ghostface Killa sampled "La La Means I Love You" in his hit "Holla". Eazy-E, Gang Starr, and Ed OG have sampled "Trying To Make a Fool of Me."

The groups reorganized in the late 1990s. William Hart started touring with Johnny Johnson and Garfield Fleming; this group recorded as the Delfonics. Major Harris toured with Frank Washington and Pat Palmer.[5]

Wilbert also led a Delfonics group; members in the 1990s included Salaam Love (formerly in William's group) and Eban Brown (falsetto).[6]

They were replaced by Greg Hill (former bassist for Teddy Riley & New Edition) and Van Fields (who joined Eban in the Stylistics until 2011).

One year after Greg joined the group, a good friend of Wilbert told him about a talented first tenor named Joe Branch. Joe sang with a number of local groups including The Dynamics along with (Lillo Thomas).

Wilbert then asked Greg to bring Joe down to one of the rehearsals and Joe eventually replaced Van Fields as the new lead vocalist.

The William/Johnny/Garfield lineup of the group was featured in concert on the DVD's The Big Show and '70's Soul Jam, whereas Wilbert Hart's group with Greg Hill and Joe Branch are featured on the DVD Old School Soul Party Live!, which was part of the PBS My Music series. Harris is also featured on the re-released DVD Blue Magic/Margie Joseph/Major Harris Live!, which was recorded in 1975.

The current line-ups are William Hart, Pat Palmer and Johnney Smalls, and, Wilbert Hart, Joe Branch and Salaam Love.

Recent times

Garfield Fleming left the group and was replaced by Frank Washington, who subsequently left around 2003 to join The Spinners.

The position was then filled by Johnney Smalls. Johnny Johnson left shortly thereafter and joined The Fonics[7] and Pat Palmer was brought in as replacement.

The band now consisted of William Hart, Major Harris, Pat Palmer and Johnney Smalls and continued to tour thereafter.[8]

Major Harris died on November 9, 2012.

Wilbert also continues to tour with his Delfonics group (Joe Branch and Salaam Love) sometimes called "The Delphonics", "The New Delfonics" or simply billed as "Wilbert Hart."

Wilbert's group released a CD in 2005 with featuring Joe Branch and Greg Hill, Fonic Zone.[9]

Wilbert Hart, Greg Hill and Joe Branch had been touring together for the past fifteen years.

Along with touring, the trio recorded a single with Rick Ross entitled "Here For U". After many years of touring with Wil Harts Delfonics group, Greg Hill left Wilbert Hart's Delfonics and is currently touring with his own group called Greg Hill & The Delfonics Revue featuring himself, Tommy Moore and Benny "prymtime" Daniels (formerly of The Stylistics Revue) while William Hart's group periodically performs on the "70s Soul Jam Tour".

The Delfonics were featured on the Unsung TV series on TV one.

Original members

Formed in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1965 and originally known as the Four Gents, the Delfonics classic lineup featured:

 

Source: Wikipedia.org



Somebody Come and Play in Traffic with Me! Earn as You Learn, Grow as You Go!

The Man Inside the Man
from
Sinbad the Sailor Man
A
JMK's Production

 

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