Home / Tag Archives: The Chi-Lites

Tag Archives: The Chi-Lites

Omni

Among the lesser-known songwriting/producing groups of their own time, Rodney G. Massey (b. Jan. 5, 1953) and Lawrence Hanks (b. 1955) fulfilled up as teens; they gradually shaped a a friendly relationship that ultimately led to an innovative union. In the past due ’60s, the duo was tutored by famous …

Read More »

Bob & Gene

Though Bobby Nunn and Eugene Coplin were still teenagers in 1967 when Nunn’s father William made a decision to start his very own label, Mo Do Records, the duo didn’t permit how old they are stop them from spending their afternoons writing tracks and practicing their harmonies. Their one “You …

Read More »

The Vibrations

Though never main hitmakers, the Los Angeles-based Vibrations were consistent performers through the ’60s. The lineup included Wayne Johnson, Carl Fisher, Richard Owens, Dave Govan, and Don Bradley. They started documenting as the Jayhawks, after that scored several novelty hits carrying out as the Marathons. Neither “The Watusi” nor “Peanut …

Read More »

The O’Jays

The O’Jays were among Philadelphia soul’s most popular and long-lived outfits, rivaled only with the Spinners as soul’s greatest vocal band of the ’70s. Within their excellent, the O’Jays’ recordings epitomized the Philly spirit sound: smooth, wealthy harmonies supported by elaborate preparations, lush strings, and some modern funk. They proved …

Read More »

The Esquires

The Esquires were a vocal group from Milwaukee, WI, formed in 1957 in the height from the R&B vocal boom. Gilbert Moorer, his sibling Alvis, and sister Betty had been children of the musical family members; their father experienced sung inside a gospel group known as the Friendly Five, while …

Read More »

The Chi-Lites

Probably one of the most popular clean spirit groups of the first ’70s didn’t hail from Philadelphia or Memphis, both towns known for nice, string-laden spirit. Rather, the Chi-Lites had been from Chicago, a city better known because of its gritty metropolitan blues and traveling R&B. Led by vocalist Eugene …

Read More »

The 3 Tenors of Soul

A one-group revival from the famed Philadelphia spirit sound from the 1970s, the 3 Tenors of Spirit feature the business lead singers of three vocal groupings from that golden period, Russell Thompkins, Jr. from the Stylistics, Ted “Wizard” Mills of Blue Magic, and William “Poogie” Hart from the Delfonics, some …

Read More »

The Whatnauts

A Baltimore vocal group whose heartache music were admired with the ’70s spirit hardcore, though they didn’t generally register a sufficient amount of with the overall R&B audience to become strikes. Lead vocalist Billy Herndon teamed with Garrett Jones and Gerald Pinkney for many unforgettable singles on Stang, although their …

Read More »

The Stylistics

Following the Spinners as well as the O’Jays, the Stylistics were the best Philly soul group made by Thom Bell. Through the early ’70s, the music group had 12 directly Top Ten strikes, including “YOU MIGHT BE Everything,” “Betcha by Golly, Wow,” “I’m Rock deeply in love with You,” “SPLIT …

Read More »

The Moments

Perhaps one of the most consistent R&B aggregations from the ’70s, the Occasions enjoyed a string of main hits through the entire 10 years. The Hackensack, NJ, trio released themselves as well as the Stang label with “Not really externally” in 1968, and topped the R&B graphs in 1970 using …

Read More »