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One of the great vocal groups of the early '70s, the Chi-Lites
date back to the doo-wop
era of the 1950s. They came out of two separate groups, the
Desideros and the Chaunteurs. The new group called themselves
the Hi-Lites and comprised Eugene Record, Robert Lester,
Marshall Thompson, Creadel Jones, and Clarence Johnson. The Hi-Lites
did one single for James Shelton's Daran label, then Johnson
left the group. Their next song, "I'm So Jealous," was picked up
for national distribution by Mercury on its Blue Rock
subsidiary. While on that label, the group changed their name to
the Chi-Lites. Two more releases followed on Blue Rock in 1965,
and both flopped. By 1966, the Chi-Lites were back with Shelton
and came out with "Pretty Girl," a ballad that did very well
locally. Then they met producer Carl Davis, who had started a
company at Roosevelt and Wabash. Davis saw that Eugene Record
was writing good songs and signed the Chi-Lites to his Dakar
label. Their 1967 debut release for the label, "Price of Love,"
truly ignited the group's career.
In late 1968, the Chi-Lites signed with Brunswick and had their
first national R&B hit, "Give It Away," early the next year. The
follow-up, "Let Me Be The Man My Daddy Was," also fared well
with Black America. While pop chart success was still a couple
of years off, the basic ingredients of the Chi-Lites were
there--Eugene Record's excellent melodies and lyrics, and the
group's tightly-sung neo-doo-wop harmonies.
The group began the '70s with the album I Like Your Lovin', on
which they were dead ringers for the "Psychedelic Shack"-era
Temptations . The LP
produced two hit R&B singles, the title track and "Are You My
Woman (Tell Me So)," but was not among the Chi-Lites' best
material. Nineteen-Seventy-One proved the Chi-Lites'
breakthrough year. They kicked it off with the album Give More
Power To The People, whose title track became their first top
forty pop hit. At the year's end, the Chi-Lites hit #3 pop and
#1 R&B with the gorgeous ballad, "Have You Seen Her." In 1972,
they hit #1 on both charts with "Oh Girl."
And the hits kept coming. The albums A Lonely Man (1972), A
Letter To Myself (1973), and Toby (1974) all sold well and
produced numerous hit singles, although primarily on the R&B
charts. In 1975 the Chi-Lites released Half of Love, which
produced only one hit single, the double-sided "It's Time For
Love"/"Here I Am," and that peaked only at #27 R&B. |