The Questlove Show - Questlove Supreme: Howard Hewett
Episode Date: July 28, 2021In the words of our leader, this week's Questlove Supreme guest is a "freakin LEGEND". Howard Hewett is not only 1/3 of one of the most popular and influential singing groups of all time. He is a...lso known as a "singer's singer", in reference to his voice, which is incomparable to any of your favorites and that’s just the voice. Let us not forget about his cannon of solo hits that had us all in our feelings. Get ready for this story of a true master of his craft. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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A win is a win.
A win is a win.
I don't care what I'm saying.
Yep, that's me.
Clifford Taylor the 4th.
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When a group of women discover they've all dated the same prolific con artist,
they take matters into their own hands.
I vowed. I will be his last target.
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This week on the Sports Slice podcast,
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Questlove Supreme is a production of
Iheart Radio. Oh, damn.
Unpaid Bills here?
What the hell?
Oh, snap, son.
Here I am. Jesus Christ.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to
another episode.
Of course.
I'm Supreme.
Starring me,
Unpaid Bill.
Thank you very much.
Yeah.
Starring Unpaid Bill.
Damn, you're in the house.
Even with a
Tony,
you're still with us.
I know.
I'm this close from not.
I'm here for now.
Stay slumming, Bill.
Stay slumming.
The second you complete your egot,
you're not going to mess with this anymore.
The second I egot before you,
hell yeah.
I'm getting the fuck out.
It's called.
Bill loves Supreme.
Fuck at all.
I'm taking everybody with me.
Fonte's coming too.
And he says,
right.
La Hia.
Exactly.
All right.
Sugar Steve,
you're still loyal, correct?
To Bill Sherman, yes.
Okay.
All day.
Hey, at least you're loyal to somebody.
We got Fonigolo in the crib.
What's that, brother?
You cool?
Oh, that's good.
Yeah, I'm good, man.
We down 26, because...
Yes.
Nice.
We move in weight, son.
I like the fact that we down 26 actually is a good thing
because normally that could mean like Atlanta's down by 26.
Or you down $26,000 or something.
Exactly.
Nah, nah, we're good.
What, it was a game?
Nah, man, you know, it's still trying to be.
Trying to live past 50.
Yes, we're just, you know, struggle, super struggle.
Laya, how are you?
Hey, I'm good, man.
I'm feeling all right.
Feeling all right.
We're good.
All right. Ladies and gentlemen, what can I say? Our guess is a freaking legend known to us, of course, as one third of probably one of my favorite groups. I don't know. I can't categorize Shalimar as a soul group. I can't categorize them as a pop group or a Boogie group. But, you know, I mean, because they transition between disco, between Bucky and between
New Wave 80s pop.
You know, they were everlasting.
And, you know, of course, our
guest today is
without saying a singer's
singer, a real singer,
and awesome
singers had such a story career
singing the soundtrack
of our lives. I don't
even want to waste one minute.
In my patented long,
19 minute intros, I will just say,
welcome to Quest Left Supreme.
Be one and only, Howard
Uitt.
Yeah, yeah.
Thank you.
Yes, indeed.
Thank you.
Thank you for coming.
Yeah, I can't wait till we're off of Zoom so we can have like real handclaps again.
I know.
Like the last seven episodes we're all.
Yeah, he's breathing.
But that's what it's a killer because that's exactly what it sounds like when you're in,
when you're in like a huge crowd.
Right, exactly.
Right.
All right.
We'll look up the effects for you.
How are you today?
What's going on?
Very well, man.
Very well.
Just like we were talking earlier about, I do my daily walking.
I'm trying to stay ahead of this heat out here.
It's like crazy, man.
Really crazy out here in California.
Well, where I am, it's different temperatures.
Talk about it.
Yeah, Long Beach.
Out of the Long Beach yesterday, it was like 77 degrees.
Out here all day yesterday was like 100.
And real field was 100.
108.
So.
Jesus Christ.
Wait, what?
108, man.
That was one of those times you just stay in the house.
You don't even go outside.
Close the curtains.
You mentioned something that this actually might be inspirational for me.
How often do you have to commit to the daily walk?
I'll admit that I will often let my work schedule become my excuse to get out of it.
So I've been, I've been sort of religious about the daily walk.
But in the last two weeks, I've sort of slacked off on it just due to the scheduling of it.
But how important is the daily walked?
Because before we were rolling, we were just basically talking about the struggle to survive,
especially for black people to struggle to survive past 50 without, you know, some sort of condition happening.
So, you know, like, I'm certain that most of us that are on our walking thing,
is doing it for health reasons and whatnot.
So conditioning, you know, conditioning.
And, and for, but for me, especially for the past year since the, since the pandemic,
it was almost like in the beginning of the pandemic, it was a spiritual thing for me.
Because it was like, it was almost like God said to me, he said,
I'm going to remove everything from you that can distract you from me.
You dig what I'm saying?
Uh, I'm upset.
Me and my girl broke up a couple months before.
before COVID, you know, my, my partner, I'm not saying that that's why he took him away from here, but he passed, like in the very beginning of, of COVID.
I've known this cat since I was 20 years old and my best friend.
Right.
So, but through my career, I've gone through, you know, death, my mom and dad, you know, I've gone through breakups and all that kind of stuff.
So some of the saddest times that I spent in my career was spent on stage.
You did what I'm saying?
And I had my work.
I always had my work.
And so he said...
No more distractions now.
And he said, he said, and I'm going to take that away from you right now.
You know, for a...
Got to deal with some things.
And then my next question in my spirit was, now what you're going to do?
You know what I'm saying?
And so that's when I did a daily, I did a daily reading.
I get up.
I read a daily situation.
I read.
I started from Genesis in my Bible and went, I'm all the way up almost halfway through the New Testament now, you know, and all the way.
And every day, because when I built my house, I had them build a deck off of right on.
I can roll out of bed in five or six steps.
I'm right outside on my deck.
You know what I'm saying?
So that was my daily devotion between me, God, Christ, the Holy Spirit.
And so it was like, and with.
that I started a whole situation as far as like we were being shut in, but that didn't mean that
we had to be cosmetators. So like when I, in the beginning of the pandemic, you know, I got out
on my bike. There's like a 15, 20 mile route that I can take around my crib. I got on, I got out
on my bike. And then in the middle of that 15, 20 mile route, I decided I stopped to take a break.
And I said, well, let me go on Facebook, my Facebook fan page live. Let me go on live.
for a minute. And I went on there and all these people started flooding into the thing,
Howard, how's up, what's going? What are you doing? You know, what's happening? Blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah. And so then that told me that people are in. But, you know, and the thing about this pandemic,
about this virus, rather, is that it thrives on, it thrived on low immune systems.
It thrived on low vitamin D deficiencies, which is really heavy in all, especially within black people.
Right.
And so, like, it was like my, that's what I started.
When I started, I said, okay, I'm going to do my walk because I do like a four-mile walk.
And at first I was walking and had my phone in my hand.
Right.
I'm walking and talking at the same time, right?
And then I'm like, I wouldn't get any benefit.
it from the walk, actually, because I'm not pacing myself.
So then eventually I did in the middle of the four miles, after about two miles,
I'd stop at a specific place, and then I'd talk, right?
Okay.
At first it was FACC dot, dot, dot, and life, right?
Fresh air, cardio, all that leads to life, you know what I'm saying?
And then after we started talking and I started having these conversations,
my, you know, take on what was happening as far as last.
administration was concerned. My take on, you know, the virus, my take on this, my take,
and people were chiming in. Then it became a conversation. So then I added FACC at another C.
Dot, dot, dot, dot in life. Fresh air, cardio, conversation. Which adds to communication,
understanding each other, and all that leads to life. You know what I'm saying? So
So it's almost like now after all this time, it's like I feel like I'm obligated to get on there for my people.
So like, you know, the people that have dedicated themselves to being there.
So I have a dedication to that myself.
So on top of that, getting, you know, my health and keeping my health up and keeping everything up, you know, it's like, okay, I can take the time to do all that stuff.
Sometimes, you know, the schedule will, like, get in the way as far as, like, how early I start, how early I can get out there.
But I'm always going to get out there, you know what I'm saying?
Every day?
Every day.
I'm out there every day.
I love it.
Even on the weekend.
I don't come online on the weekend.
I don't go live on the weekend, but I get out there and do something on the weekend.
Do a daily show.
Okay.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, yeah.
Yeah.
How are you?
Just let it be known that you're definitely.
Definitely the straw that broke the, all right, fine.
If you, that's what I need to do here.
Yeah.
Because people have been good on me like, yo, man, you slacking off, man.
You were committed.
You da-da-da-da, you're falling off.
Like, you know, my partners that I walk with and all that stuff.
So they were getting on me today about that.
Like, you ain't walked in like 10 days of merit.
So, all right.
I now know.
I now know that I have to.
It's important, man.
It's really important because, you know, all you got.
If you don't have anything else, you know, you got and you have your health.
If you, if everything's jacked up, everything can be going well.
But if you don't have your health, man, that's crazy.
It's crazy.
And then if stuff is jacked up and your health is jacked up, that's like a whole other thing.
There's a whole other situation.
You're absolutely right.
Well, brother, you look awesome.
Like you look great and great health.
That's the 65-year-old goal.
That's it.
65, brothers.
Bro, bro, late 40s to me.
Yeah, like, for real, for real.
He still looked great.
So, yeah, the question I want to pose to you, of course, is the first question I was
on the show.
Could you please tell us what your first musical memory was?
My first musical memory, man, was actually, I would think Isley Brothers, Sam
cook in my grandmother's garage when we would have all the holidays we would we would we would
it would always be at my grandmother my grandma fitzew's house and what you mean records or in
person no records i'm talking about i say damn i was like whoa oh you're talking about live as far as
no no no no no no i mean just your first musical memory all right yeah that's my that's one that's
from years ago because we played I was in when I was five years old four or five years old
I was in charge of like playing the 45s and stuff and and they clear out the garage and
put a turntable in there and and we had the 45s and stuff so I remember chain gang gang
on Sam cook and Twits and Shout of course you know the Izzly brothers yeah yeah I remember I did
you know I did about about 20 cities with Ron Isley about some years about six seven
years ago. And usually when I do a show, I'm usually, I do my show and I'm gone. Or if I'm
headlining, I get there 20 minutes before I go on and that's it. I don't want to get there
hang around and stuff. And if I'm on before the headliner, then I'm gone. But with Ron, when I was
out there with Ron and I and Isy brothers and with Ernie and stuff, man, every night, I was
like in the wings, you know, I was just like watching. Because he
took me all the way back to when I was like five years old, you know, five, six, seven,
four, five, six, seven years old. And then he called me, you called me out on stage every once in a
while, man. And that was like, what? You're all right. Cool. You know, but that's my first,
as far as musical, musical situation, I think that's a foundation that I had. And then, you know,
went into the whole gospel thing. Okay. Yeah, I was going to say that, uh, okay, that makes sense
because usually every musical great has some sort of DJ curation experience before they get into their profession.
So that makes sense that you were in charge of the family collection.
All DJs want to be singers and all singers want to be DJs.
I was saying I was with Frankie Crocker a lot back in the day.
Wow.
That was one of my best partners.
What was he like, man?
Was he, you know, because he's known him as that person.
Was he really out there like that?
Oh, no.
Frankie, Frankie was the most down, down nigger in the world.
That cat.
Really?
I mean, you know, and I remember because when we first-
But it was so proper all the time I heard him speaking.
Dada-a-a-Hig.
You know what I said?
I'm on the Quest Love show.
I gotta be proper.
No, no.
No, you know.
No, you're crazy.
You must ain't listen to the Quest Love show full.
I was about to say.
I've done my homework.
You know.
Hey, bro.
Nah, we keep it out of here, bro.
Let it go.
No, no.
Frank was down, nigger boy.
He was like, and it was like when I first met him, you know, we, it was, we had a second time around out.
So we were getting a lot of the, a lot of the promotion in New York and stuff.
And we got to the, we got to WBLS, and he wasn't ready yet.
So the lady that was the rep that was from the record company, she said, okay, while we're waiting on, Frankie, we'll go over down to this other.
I forget what station was, Kiss or something like that.
That was Kiss, huh.
And so we went down there, did the interview and stuff, and then we came back.
And like Frankie, we're sitting out in the lobby of BLS and Frankie comes out.
And when he walks out, you know, this is tall.
I mean, black nigger, man.
He's like fine features, you know.
And I remember reading about Frankie when I was like 15, 16 years old when he got into the thing with the payola thing.
So I remember it was like an article in Playboy.
And of course, I never looked at the picture.
Oh, we read the articles.
We read the articles.
I'm proud of you.
I'm proud of you.
But it talked about his whole ordeal with the Peola situation and the fact
and the time that he, when he came back after the pale,
he came back riding up 125th Street on a white stallion.
Yeah, that's what I heard about him.
Wow.
Really?
Really?
Yeah.
He was asking me a class.
I was saying so like we, when he came out, he stood up there and he just kind of stood there, right?
And we're sitting there. He said, I got my spies out. I know y'all went to the other station.
Y'all heard you know. That's how we started out, right? So we went in and then he looked at it.
And he was doing the interview and stuff. And he says, you know, your voice reminds me a Gladys Night. And I'm like, Gladys Night.
What? Come on, man. Gladys Night. Yeah, I'm flattered, but Gladys Night. That's a chick, right?
So and so then that's how our whole thing started out.
And I kind of clamped up on the interview because I also heard about the Isley
Brother interview, the historic Isley Brother interview when they got in the fight on, you know,
live.
They live.
I've never heard of that one.
I've never heard this.
Let us know.
They got to fight live on the air, you know.
That's a lot of Isley brothers.
Like five on one?
That was before any, that's five, that's before any of them passed away.
So they was all on their page.
All of them.
Chris Jasper, too.
Six.
Right, right.
Isles and Jasley, Jasper, Isles.
A tall tree.
But check out.
So, like, later on, we said, you know, I saw him, I think, because we were there doing
the thing, I think it was at Madison Square or something like that, one of those big festivals.
And so at the, you know, when I saw him later on that night or the next night or something,
he said, look, I got a house, you know, in Beverly Hills, you know, off off a Bend, the Canyon.
He said, he said, here's that, you know, we exchanged numbers.
and stuff. He said, when you're back in town, when you're off the road, give me a car.
You come up and, you know, have some dinner. I say, cool. You know, that's good.
And so a couple, two, three weeks later, we're going, I'm home and I give him a car.
And he says, yeah, come on enough for dinner. And I'm thinking, you know, all right, Frankie Crocker's
house. I know he got ladies all over the plates and the whole thing. I'll be rolling, you know.
And I got up there and it was me, him, and his mom.
Miss Procker, and he took care of his mom.
And like from that point on, we got jam tight.
It was like, that was my, that was my man.
That was my man.
So, you know, yeah, he was, he was, he was not the persona, basically.
I mean, he lived large.
Don't don't get wrong.
And he, he demanded his respect as far as that's concerned.
But he wasn't some unordily, you know, crazy.
Wait.
He had a house in Beverly Hills and he was in New York personality too?
Yeah.
Yeah.
He had that house up on, off of Benedict Canyon.
Yeah.
No question.
He was the highest played like black radio jock in the country.
So was he doing syndicated back then or was it just?
He was doing, he would do, I think syndication was just coming in maybe.
Okay.
Not too long after that.
But he had, he's had that house up.
He had that house up there for a long time.
Payola.
I'm about to say.
That's what I was thinking of pay.
Through quix teeth.
You're living by coastal.
They're going to put you in the paper.
Maybe, you know.
Yeah, I see.
Do you remember the first album that you purchased with your own money?
With my own money?
I don't remember which one, what it was exactly.
I can't say back in the day.
And also be stolen, too, just in case you didn't pay for it.
I'm just saying.
People have copped to stealing their first records, which is okay.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
But see, you know, I come from my household.
I have four older sisters, you know what I'm saying?
So they bought.
Oh, you're the baby of four.
Oh, wow.
Okay.
So like, what was that household?
Oh, you know too much.
times I had to, I think of an album, though, I do believe an album that I would have purchased, it might not have been the very first one, but it's like Parliament, Funkadelic and, you know, all that kind of stuff, like maggot brains, and I love that Eddie Hazel situation.
Okay.
Yeah.
I'd take it, I know you were born in Ohio, but I don't know what city you were born in.
Akron, Akron, Ohio.
Akron, okay.
Yeah.
Wait a minute.
Okay. This explains it. All right. So I know that James Ingram is also from Akron, Ohio.
Mm-hmm. Yeah. And I assume that you two were really good friends.
15. I met James when I was 15.
Wow.
So this explains why you two are also seeing him background on PYT together.
Exactly.
Aha. Okay. I was with James when he got the demo for just once, you know.
And he's like, man, how to listen to it?
Because we live right around the corner from each other at that time.
And he said, man, he said, listen to us, what do you think about this?
I said, man, I think that's a cold little song.
He said, man, this is some pop pussy right here, man.
And I said, I said, yeah, yeah, that's right.
That's true, boy.
Because, you know, but see, when Jane, when I was back in Ohio, my group was called Life,
we spelled the L-Y-F-E.
So Life Jennings.
Life Jennings.
It wasn't the first nigger to say that, right?
You all was first.
Okay.
We spelled L-Y-F-E, Life Band, and show, and it was like seven of us.
And we were like 15, 16, 17, 18.
I think Ricky Parker, Ricky Fletcher, it was 18, 19 years old.
And so we were protégés of Revelation Funk, which, you know, James played keyboards.
And they were all like about four years old and then us.
So James played keyboards and sang background because he didn't consider himself a lead singer, right?
And they had this lead singer named Bernard Lawson.
He's still back in Akron now.
Bernard Lawson, to this day, can sing me under this, my desk over here.
This boy is, you're talking about going from natural, effortlessly up into your force.
He had that back.
He had that down back there.
Tall, lanky brother and like a dance or dance and sing the same time.
And it was like, I mean, they were funky.
Revelation Funk was funky, you know.
Wait a minute.
Okay.
So what's the name?
That's the group that James Ingram was in that he was playing keyboards in?
Revelation.
Ah, damn it, damn it, damn it, damn it.
The ones from, every day, is they in Dolomite?
Yeah, so weren't they?
The Dolomite movie?
I think there was a Dolomite movie.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
Because they came out here.
They came out here.
Bernard never came out here because the Lord called him back to the church, fortunately,
because there was some crazy stuff that was happening.
But they had this cat named Wucci, Wayne Arnold that came out.
Wayne was bad, too.
I don't know what he's doing now.
Name like that.
You got to be bad for real.
No, Wucci.
Who's me, Wayne Arnold.
What happened to make the names like Wucci?
So we were like.
Nobody called Gucci anymore.
But they came out here, and they only stayed together out here about a year and a half, maybe two years or so, and then they broke up.
And James stayed out, Dap, the drummer, stayed out.
T. Tucker, the bass player, stayed out here.
And so, you know, and then for James, the rest was his.
He started working with Ray Charles and a bunch of other people and stuff, you know, in the studio and stuff.
It was cool.
Just to get this straight.
James Ingram sounded like that at 15 years old.
No, nothing has ever changed.
Well, he was about when I first met him, he was 19,
because he was about four years older than me.
And yeah, I mean, he had to, all that stuff down hard.
And it's like, but he didn't develop it
and really kind of take it out where it's supposed to be
until, you know, until he got it, until he went solo.
So.
Wait, one more thing.
So if you were friends with James, were you at all in proximity of his brother, Philip,
at the time when Philip was developing his switch?
Mm-hmm.
Switch also has Akron connections, correct?
Yeah, Philip, Philip was like, Philips is his younger brother.
So Philip's younger than me.
And Phillips grew back in Akron, man, what was the name?
I forget their name.
We had weird names back there.
There was a group called Picket Fence.
I don't know what that was about.
But it was like, you know, but Philip was with raw soul, I think it was.
And, I mean, Akron was an amazing place to grow up, man.
And the rubber cap was a rubber capital of the world at that time.
So middle class was thriving.
It was like, you know, it was, and you either did, you either did music.
You did, you worked in the rubber factory, or you were a pimp, one or the other.
you know, then some cats tried to do all three, right?
All three, all three.
But like, have some rubbers and see to you.
Philip.
I think the name of Phillips group was raw, so if I'm not mistaken.
But yeah, Philip had a great voice and everything.
And when they came out with Switch, I didn't even have a deal at that time.
I was talking to Elle about that just the other day.
Because every time I listen to Elle, I hear Bobby.
You know what I'm saying?
And it's just, it's crazy.
And so they came out and, you know, it was like Eddie Flewellyn, the trumpet player.
Eddie and I, Eddie and I went to grade school, junior high and graduated high school together.
So when they came out, I would go, you know, I heard they were coming out,
Germain was bringing them out.
And so I went and hung out with them at the studio, you know, while they were, while they were recording, I call your name or something like that.
And I would just sit there in awe, just listen.
listening to Bobby, he could do that.
Because I think it was his false, but that wasn't his false.
That was his natural voice.
Just like I was listening to Elle the other night,
Elle's false is his natural voice.
That's his natural voice.
Right.
And so, you know, it's, you know, it was amazing.
It was amazing as far as I was concerned.
So yeah, Philip and Eddie came out when Switch came out.
Question.
I do remember, I think I remember,
during one of the interviews with Don Cornelius on Soul Train,
where you talked about you were actually dancing on the show first?
Is that true?
Were y'all just joking with each other?
I was never a soul trained dancer.
Okay.
Never.
Okay.
I thought I heard, okay.
Because it was set with a laugh.
So I was like, wait, I don't know if he's serious or not.
But, okay.
I never knew if that was true.
I was dating this lady that worked for Don at the soul.
train dance studios in the office in the front office.
Pam Brown? No, no, no.
No, no, no. Her name was right.
Amy Cunning.
Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute.
Jesus Christ, I can't believe I'm talking to you right now. How are you?
Documentary time.
You've, no, no, no, no, no, no. It just hit me. You literally have christened a human being
with my all-time favorite name. I read about this in right on. You have a daughter
named Rainy Days.
Rainy Days, D-A-Z-E, brother.
Yo, when I read that shit, when I was 10 years old,
I'm like, I'm going to have a girl, and I'm a name of Rainy Days.
Like, it just, wow, that's crazy.
Her mom, you know, eventually became my wife.
She was the mother and my two older daughters.
But when Rainey was born, the Rainey was the only child
that I didn't see come out, you know, because I was on the road.
I had my oldest daughter with me.
She was like a year and a half at the time.
Right.
And so her mom was so huge.
I was like, look, I'm going to take, I'm going to take Lakeva.
My oldest daughter's name is Lakeiva, you know, which was the name.
Lekeva, K-I-V-E, which is the name I made up when I was 19 years old.
I used to go to Kent State for a minute.
And like I used to walk past Kiva Hall, this hall called Kiva Hall.
And I say, every morning I'm walking to my first class.
So I'm saying, wow, Kiva.
Kiva would be a beautiful name for a little girl, but add a love on the front of.
Love keep.
All right.
That is so black.
You got all the names, Bill.
You got all the names, correct, Bill?
I got it.
I got it.
That's free up right now.
You can call me.
You can call me LaBille.
LeBille and my friend LaFonte and Questlove.
I'm already lying here.
Got you.
So like, but like, I took the Kiva out on the road with me because her mom was so huge.
I just wanted her to concentrate on being pregnant, not having the kids.
Right, having to, right.
So she was having to take care of my one and a half kids.
So I took my daughter out on the road with me.
So we would work at the time, Salamar, we were working Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, off Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
So Thursday, I'd finish the show Monday, I mean Sunday, rather, I'd finish the show.
Then Monday morning, me and Kiva would jump on the plane, fly back here to L.A., sit there,
you know, I'd take her to the beach, walk her on the sand, you know, our whole thing,
trying to make that baby drop, you know what I'm saying?
And after got three weeks or so going back and forth, back and forth, I was like wiped out.
So we were near Ohio, and I called her and I said, you know, how do you feel?
She said, I don't feel me.
I said, look, me and Kiva are going to go to my mom's house and just chill.
So went to my mom's house and said enough, we got there on Monday and like Tuesday or Wednesday she had the baby, right?
So we named her after her mom.
Her mom's name was raining.
And so my partner, a partner mine was out.
I got him a job working with the group when I was with the group and stuff.
So one of my best partners.
So, you know, he was out on the road with it.
And like we were sitting in my,
and either his room or my room and like, he said, so, uh,
yeah.
I can tell us it's already going to be my favorite interview, man.
Herbal essence.
Herbal essence, yes, Montana.
I'm saying, I feel like Howard Hewitt needs to be a permanent member of this debacle.
Yes, I was going to say, let Howard Heward fucking,
not Howard Heward.
He said, and I, and he said so.
You know, you name when the baby, Rainey had the baby.
She said, yeah.
So what's you going to name her?
I took this time.
I was like, what are you going to name her?
I said, Rainy, after mom, you know,
said, what's the middle name going to be?
I said, well, I was thinking about days.
Does she know this story?
Still know it if she sees this interview.
Yo.
She thinks that I was drunk or something when I
The whole time you was talking, I was just thinking, I was like, I hope Howard remembers all the stories of how his kids were born.
Because not for nothing, especially the girls.
My dad used to call me every year of my life up until he got like 80 and tell me on my birthday, like, how my conception and how I was born.
And it's just a lovely thing.
Wait, he told you about the conception?
Not the conception.
I'm sorry, how I was born.
The day I was born.
The day I was born.
Sorry.
Yeah.
But the day I was born.
But yeah, say those stories.
Tell them stories.
People love this, especially they get older.
I was going to say there was a 10-year-old reading Right on magazine that was really, really hell of impressed with that name at the time.
I was like, wow, that's the greatest name ever, Rainy Days.
All right.
Rainy Day.
I'm going to have Rainy Days 2.0.
All right.
So it's still in the cars.
She hated it when she was in grade school, but when she got into junior high and in high school and then out of all that time.
And Doha, she loves her name, you know.
Nice.
Nice.
Is she in the, does he have musical talent?
Does she, I have no clue.
Like what?
Yeah.
She sings.
She came out of schools, came out of high school, wanted to do, you know,
wanted to get into the business and stuff.
And so, like, you know, I gave her my advice.
And she, you know, got herself a little job, started, you know,
putting together her demos, about three or four demos,
three or four songs.
And she got her head shots together.
And then got herself a deal with this company called Notting Hill.
You know, Notting Hill was in L.A. as well as in London, you know, in the UK.
So she was, they were working on an album together and then halfway through the album when she comes to me, she says, you know, dad, I'm really not into this.
I said, what do you mean?
Whoa.
She said, I'm more interested in what I'm going to wear than the music.
You know what I'm saying?
So he was into the fashion.
Unfortunately, the people at Notting Hill.
were cool and they had put a single out in the UK that did fairly well, but, you know,
she wasn't, she wasn't into it.
So they let her go and then she got a position with a Vera Wang company, you know.
Yes, Vera Wayne.
Okay.
She did that for a while.
So she lived in London for a while?
She went to London.
She didn't live there, but she spent a lot of time.
Okay, I see, I see.
A win is a win.
A win is a win.
I don't care what you're saying.
Yep, that's me.
Cliver Taylor the Fourth.
You might have seen the skits, the reactions, my journey from basketball to college football,
or my career in sports media.
Well, somewhere along the way, this platform became bigger than I ever imagined.
And now I'm bringing all of that excitement to my brand new podcast, The Clifford Show.
This is a place for raw, unfiltered conversations with some of your favorite athletes,
creators, and voices that not only deserve to be heard, but celebrated.
One week, I'll take you behind the scenes of the biggest moments in sports and entertainment.
And the next, we'll talk about life, mental health, purpose,
and even music.
The Clifford Show isn't just a podcast.
It's a space for honest conversations,
stories that don't always get told,
and for people who are chasing something bigger.
So if you've ever supported me
or you're just chasing down a dream,
this is right where you need to be.
Listen to The Clifford show on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more behind the scenes,
follow at Clifford and at TikTok Podcast Network on TikTok.
There's two golden rules that any man should live by.
Rule one, never mess with a country girl.
You play stupid games, you get stupid prizes.
And rule two, never mess with her friends either.
We always say that, trust your girlfriends.
I'm Anna Sinfield, and in this new season of the girlfriends,
Oh my God, this is the same man.
A group of women discover they've all dated the same prolific con artist.
I felt like I got hit by a truck.
I thought, how could this happen to me?
The cops didn't seem to care.
So they take matters into their own hands.
I said, oh, hell no.
I vowed I will be his last target.
He's going to get what he deserves.
Listen to the girlfriends.
Trust me, babe.
On the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up, everyone?
I'm Ego Vodom.
My next guest, you know from Stepbrothers,
Anchorman, Saturday Night Live,
and the Big Money Players Network.
It's Will Ferrell.
My dad gave me the best advice ever.
I went and had lunch with them one day.
And I was like, and dad, I think I want to really give this a shot.
I don't know what that means, but I just know the groundlings.
I'm working my way up through, and I know it's a place that come look for up and coming talent.
He said, if it was based solely on talent, I wouldn't worry about you, which is really sweet.
Yeah.
He goes, but there's so much luck involved.
And he's like, just give it a shot.
He goes, but if you ever reach a point where you're banging your head against the wall and it doesn't feel fun anymore, it's okay to quit.
If you saw it written down, it would not be an inspiration.
It would not be on a calendar of, you know, the cat.
Just hang in there.
Yeah, it would not be.
Right.
It wouldn't be that.
There's a lot of luck.
Listen to Thanks Dad on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I do want to know.
Okay, first of all, before you get into your entry,
do you know exactly what the situation was that caused
Gerald Brown to leave Shalimar that was your vacancy?
Because even with those first two records,
I always felt like I had, you know,
the first two albums as a kid or whatever.
I had the Uptown Festival 45 and whatnot.
And it's like,
I never thought his voice blended in with that group.
Well, even take that, I mean, take that to the bank.
Of course, it was a classic song no matter what.
Yeah.
But I never felt like his voice fit into it.
He was like, he was like a grown adult and I always felt like Jody and Jeffrey represented like the kids.
Kids and stuff.
Wow, he was like a proper adult or whatever.
But what was the situation that caused him to vacate the group?
I don't, I don't know the specific.
situation, exactly what happened. I think there was some stuff, some questions about management,
maybe, or about whatever. Because, you know, Gerald had been in the business for a while with
Soul Train, with the Soul Train gang and coming from Cincinnati. And that first Uptown
Festival album, the first out, that wasn't Gerald. That was this cat named Gary Mumford. So they had
Oh, okay. I didn't know that. They had two lead singers before, before me, right? So it was,
Gary Mumford on Uptown Festival and then Gerald Brown.
Uptown Festival was one of those things where, you know,
back in the day with disco and stuff,
that's why I was never really a big fan of disco
because I always thought it was pretty fabricated music.
And, you know, I was more into the band and the real people that did it
because you do, you know, they would put together a, you know,
a song with studio musicians,
and studio vocalists, throw it out there,
see if it made some noise.
If it made some noise, then they go and put a group together.
And that's how Salamar basically, you know, formed.
So it was like Gary Mumford on the Uptown Festival.
And then he, I think he went back to the church too,
if I'm not mistaken.
And then Gerald Brown came in.
They took him from, you know, because it was Diarraninius
and Dick Griffey.
Dick Griffey, right.
Right.
Right.
So, you know, at first it was sold train records.
You know what I mean?
And so they brought Gerald Brown in, and then they did take that to the bank.
They were out in the middle of a promotional tour.
I was working with this cat, Jeffrey Bowen at the time.
Because I was with a group down that was formed people that was formed by the people in a mavarez.
Jeffrey Bowen, yeah.
Jeffrey Bowen produced a song for you by The Temptations, right?
Right?
Yep.
And a bunch of comments.
Yeah.
Did Don Bonnie Pointer was his lady.
He was his wife.
Right.
Don Bonnie Pointer was his wife.
And wait, did he, didn't he produce, I think he co-produced with George Clinton, two songs on guitarist.
Eddie Hazel.
Eddie Hazel's record.
We were, we were, well, we were, he had hired me because I, I was, this girl, Tammy Gibson, who used to sing for Stevie and Wonderlove.
Okay.
She was looking, and she came looking for me because I was with a group that ended up, we ended up overseas for about a year and a half, this show group called Beverly Hills, right?
And the people at Mavericks Flat down in the Crenshaw district, John Daniels and Alonzo Daniels, his brother, they put together show groups and stuff.
So this was one of the groups that they put together.
We ended up touring overseas for about, you know, a little less than a year and a half or so.
And I was making like 250, 300.
What year is this around?
This is like 77, 77, because I brought 78 in, 77.
At the end of 77, I was in Helsinki, Finland, which was the first gig that we did.
And then we went to Geneva, Switzerland.
And I remember that because we brought 78, 1978 in Geneva, Switzerland.
And then we went on to Benadorm, Spain, Santerpe, France.
We were all over the place.
I was making $250, $300 a week.
You know what I'm saying?
But I was having to fall.
I was like 22, about 22 years old.
I'm pulling out my inflation calculator.
Just to see.
Sorry.
Just to see.
So when you're saying the show group, you're saying in terms of like you guys,
because I think Heatwave was sort of in the same situation
where they were for more in like Army bases or clubs of the day.
Is that the same situation?
No, we never did Army bases, but when I say a show group, I mean, like a top 40 group, you know what I'm saying?
We did everything from disco inferno to Mandy, you know what I'm doing?
Those are still around today.
Yeah, and it's like, you know, did, you know, afternoon delight, all that kind of stuff, you know.
It was like, you know, it was my stuff.
Exactly.
We didn't do any original stuff.
It was just, and it was like, you know.
But wait, by the way, guys, 250 back in 19.
77 was 1,087 and 86 cents by 2021 sand today.
That was good.
That was cool, money.
Or 22-year-old.
I wish I would have felt that then.
I came back after a year and a half with about $500.
That was this.
But so, you know, so like I came back and all the, at Mavericks Flat was a really interesting place where on the weekend it was a club.
And on the weekdays, that's where we rehearse.
We would rehearse a band.
And any time we had a show that we wanted to try out on people at a live audience,
we would play at Mavericks Friday and Saturday night.
And so it was like, you know, I mean, Mavericks was interesting in that you can look out in the audience at any time.
Shaka Khan would be sitting out there or Lionel Richie when he was with the Commodores or Richard Pryor hung out there all the time.
And it was just a great place.
to like cut your teeth as far as like you know uh the way that you do your show the whole thing
and uh and wherever is that located crinchall right crinch on stocker right on the corner
crinchaw and stocker so at this point in crinchaw because i also know that wait is was total
experience also a club on crinshaw as well totally right up the street as far as the black
clubs are concerned you're saying that maverick flats and total experience and like what were the
other night life options for you're right there
black people to go to.
Strawberry Hill was a club there.
I don't know a whole bunch of clubs around there
because I hung at Mavericks all the time.
You know, it was like, I had a key to Mavericks at one time.
So, you know, that was my hanging spot.
You know, so there's other guys and dowels, I think,
was a club, but I think that was a little bit
before I got there, you know, guys and downs.
But I'm not really familiar with a whole bunch of the clubs over there.
So you're saying that if you, if it's 1977, 78, 79, and you're a black professional,
chances are like you're hanging in on Crenshaw Boulevard at a club.
So we weren't really doing like West Hollywood back then or?
No, it didn't do a lot of West Hollywood back then because that was like I got to,
I got out here at L.A. in 1976, you know.
Okay.
And so I hooked up with the people at.
Mavericks about two months after I got out here.
And we and John Daniels told me what he, what he was, what he wanted to do.
He had a, he had a bunch of show groups.
And one of his main show groups was this group called The Love Machine.
It was like seven, seven, fine, fine.
Kathleen Bradley, who was the first black model on the Price is Right.
She was in.
Oh, Kathleen, Miss Parker.
Yeah, Ms. Parker.
She's talking from Friday, yeah.
She was in, that's where she...
Shut up, Bill.
Bill's who's in this parker, Miss Parker.
She was banging.
And he's done. He's done over there.
It's like, man.
So, yeah, she was in the Love Machine
and six other beautiful women.
And they went all around the world.
When I first went down there, the cat T. Tucker,
that played bass for Revelation Funk.
Like I said, by that time, they were broken up,
and T was playing for The Love Machine.
And I called T one day.
I said, I got his number.
I called him.
I said, yo, man, I'm in town, blah, blah, blah.
He said, man, come down to Mavericks Flat.
I'm rehearsing today.
You know, I'm playing with this group called Love Machine.
So me and my cousin went down to Mavericks Flat and stuff.
And they were rehearsing at that time to do a showcase that night for Tom
Jones because they were they Tom Jones wanted them to open up for him so you know that was how that
whole thing came about and then we started putting a group and stuff together but I was working there
went overseas came back from there we broke up the group Beverly Hills broke up after about a year
little less than a year and a half over in England and it came back and I started kicking around
LA and then that's when I hooked up with with Jeffrey Bowen you know to he was he's a
was doing this album, this solo album on Eddie Hazel, you know.
And he says-
Please describe what Eddie Hazel was like.
I've, besides George Clinton, I really haven't gotten a straight story about Eddie
Hazel.
He was, he was an interesting cat in that you really couldn't get a good feel for Eddie
because he was, he was high a lot of times, you know.
He was like, you know, an amazing guitar player, Magid Bram,
that's Eddie, you know, right, Eddie Hazel.
And, um, but he was, he, he, I mean, I just smoked weed, but he's smoked weed, you know,
I'm saying.
G-13.
Like I said.
I don't know what that means.
You all know it.
You go back.
Yes.
But, but he was cool.
I mean, real cool, real cool, brother.
But, um, so you're saying that Eddie Hazel once potentially had a deal on Motown records that
fell through? I don't know if it fell through.
Man. They were, they, you know, Eddie, Jeffrey was producing it. And then we were working because
after I came, like I said, Tammy came and got me because she wanted me to do this. She was,
she was contracting the backgrounds for those that they were doing. So I went in and did the session.
It was me, Tammy, this girl, Kathy James. I forget it. I think that was her name. And we went in and did
the session and then after after we got done with the tones and stuff Jeffrey Cohen
Jeffrey Bowen came to me he said you know man I love your vocals I love this is
going to be a self-contained situation so you know I love for you to be a part of
it's gonna be you Tammy and the girl that we were working with and I say cool you
know that's great he said I can get you in he said we can start working on the
contracts you know but I can get you into the union tomorrow right and I say cool
Okay, good. So next day, I joined after, you know what I'm saying? And all just checks and we started. And it was like, I wasn't contracted yet. You know, so if you're an uncontracted artist, you have to get paid from the time you walk into the studio, the time you walk out of the studio. So Jeffrey would book the time for like 8 o'clock, you know, in the evening. He wouldn't show up for whatever reasons. I don't know until midnight. And then we would, we would.
work till about, you know, about four or five o'clock in the morning. So that's like eight and hours,
you know, at about 130, 140, whatever the scale was at that time. If you were doing a solo or,
you know, inflation calc. Inflation count. It's a lot of money, Bill. It's a lot of money. That's a lot of
money right there. So that sounds like that sounds like, you know, but then after about working about
couple months, you know, started getting kind of flaky, you know what I'm saying? Kind of shaky as far as like
The checks weren't reflecting the time that we, you know, that we were in the studio.
And so then I called a meeting.
I took my lady.
I took my lady to work.
She worked at, you know, like I said, for dying at the Soul Train Dance Studios up in West Hollywood.
And I took her, dropped her off of work, told her I'm going to the Motown building and have a meeting, right?
So I'm sitting in a meeting on the 15th floor.
And I'm like, you know, you're all giving me the mold.
town running around, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, you know, blah, getting all this stuff
off my chest.
And the phone rings, right?
And this guy, Angelo Bond was his co-producer.
Angelo answers the phone, and he looks at me and he says, it's for you.
I said, it's for me.
I said, if it's my lady, tell her, I'll call her.
I'll call her back, right?
He said, well, it's not a lady.
And it sounds like it's long distance.
That was before cell phones when you hear the crackling on the phone.
Right, right.
You know, it's $9 a minute.
He said, it's not a lady.
It's a guy and it sounds like it's long distance.
So I take the phone and it's Jeffrey Daniel, right?
They were in New York at the time in the middle of this promotional tour.
Whatever it was that they got into an argument about, I never, he said, he told me,
I forget exactly what it was.
I wasn't interested in and wide where this was happening.
And it's like, what are we getting to as far as like this phone call?
And he said that, you know, that Gerald Brown, that Gerald said, hey, when y'all can see it my way, give me a call.
And he jumps on the plane and leaves.
Oh.
They're in the middle of a promotional tour, you did?
And so like, he says, I know, you know, because they, Mavericks Flat, all the soul train people used to come down to Maverick's Flat all the time.
Okay.
I first met Jeffrey and Jody before Shalimar at Maverick's Flat.
right and say so they used to come there and they used to show they used to see the show that i did
with beverly hills there right all there's three degrees of separation just crazy you know what i'm
saying so they saw the show geoffrey that before before shallomar even was this to jeffrey had told me
man i love your vocals i said i love you dancing man you and jody i used to watch them before
i even left ohio on soul train i see them dancing right wow that's that's great that's great so he says
I know we, you know, you know that we formed Salamar, blah, blah, blah.
We got to take that to the bank out there.
We're in the middle of the promotional tour.
We want to offer you an equal position in the group, you know, as lead singer.
And I said, well, okay.
And he told me all this stuff.
And then he says, you're at the Motown building, right?
I said, yeah.
He said, where are you?
I'm up on the 15th floor.
He said, well, Solar's offices are down on the ninth floor in the same building.
And we talked to, and we already talked to Dick Griffey, and he's waiting for you to, you know, for you to get in touch with him.
So like, you know, so he talked a little while longer.
I get off the phone.
And I tell Jeffrey Bowen and I tell Angela Bond what to do.
Oh, no.
I say, what?
And there's a Daniel says, man, Chalimar's just a fly-by-night disco group.
They'll never amount to anything.
And you don't want to get involved with solar.
You've got the potential to be with Motown.
And then Jeffrey started talking some stuff.
And when things like that happened, I have a tendency to just kind of sit back.
And ever since I was a kid, if I had to think, you know, I want to sit back and take in everything that they're saying.
So I'm listening.
And when they get done, I said, well, my car is parked on the street.
I need to go put some money in the meter.
Oh, no.
I went down to the ninth floor, got it.
in, talk to Dick. This was on a Friday, right? And Dick reiterated what Jeffrey, the offer Jeffrey
made. And I said, I told him, I said, no, I'm really interested. I said, but I got to give these
people upstairs a chance to rectify themselves because even though I didn't have contracts,
my word was still, you know, worth more. What is your word? Contract, right? So I called them and told
them look i'm gonna be home if you guys want to rectify this thing let me know call me right and so
all night friday night nobody called saturday morning i called dick and he i went over to his house
watched the videotape of the shallamard show and then i was sitting in this rocking chair right i
remember i watched the show i'm sitting this rocking chair the show goes off and dick says well
sing something you know jeffrey and joe say you're great singer sing something i said i said right here
Acapella and they, you know, he said, yeah, and I said to myself, I said, well, Lord, you know, me and you.
So I broke in the field of fire by Peebo Bryson, Acapella.
Something that's told me, you know, and yeah, and got through the first verse, half the hook.
And Dick says, okay, okay, okay, I'll be right back.
He goes upstairs, comes back down.
He has like, goes in one pocket, he has some cash.
He said, here's some cash, you know, leave with your old lady.
some bills and he went in the other pocket and brought out an airline ticket.
That was pre-9-11.
I could ride on your ticket, you know.
I could ride on you.
Right on my ticket.
I can write on.
You didn't have to have a specific name.
He said, here's an airline ticket.
You got to be on the red eye out tonight.
Meet the group in New Jersey tomorrow.
They move from New York to New Jersey.
He said, meet the group in New Jersey tomorrow.
He said, and go over the lip sync and the choreography and take that to the bank.
He said,
because Monday you got a TV show to do.
And I'm like, you know, I'm like, you know, being from Ohio,
the thing about Ohio is that the prerequisites as far as being from Ohio,
you got to be cool about everything.
You know what I'm saying?
So like, I'm like, okay, okay.
You think you can handle it?
Oh, sure, I can handle it.
Inside, I'm like, I got a job.
What I would ask, what was Dick Griffey like, man?
There's been like a lot of stories about it.
Let me add on to that.
What was your experience?
Let me add on to that, Fonte.
Howard, we've asked at least seven people this question.
Yes, yes.
And they kind of glide by the situation.
Okay, I know the brother's not here right now.
But can you give us a real, real, in quotations, Dick Griffey's situation?
Oh, he's.
Dick was a very, should I say, complex character.
in certain ways, but very direct in other ways.
And as far as like, you know, he used a lot of under the thumb type of tactics
to keep things, you know, intact as far as his.
So, but that was his thing.
That was how, that was where he came from.
For instance.
For instance.
All right.
All right.
Without, without you compromising your position.
I don't understand.
Is it really scary?
Were there any buildings with balconies on them?
That got utilized.
My office hours are from 9 to 5.
I don't think that happening with Dick, you know, with the five heartbeat situation.
You know, but I've heard of certain situations with other characters who we won't, you know, going to right now also doing that whole thing.
But I don't think Dick ever did that type of thing.
But he was, he was, you know, he was a gangster type of cat, you know.
And, but he respected if you stood up for what you, you know, stood for.
You know, 55 minutes is the first time you stuttered.
Huh?
55 minutes we've been talking.
It's the first time you said.
Because, because you want to be, because I got to be careful.
I get it.
I get it.
I guess.
Yeah, because you want to be, because I have, I have much respect for it.
Because Dick, thank God, you know, Dick was a vehicle that was chosen to get my foot in the door, you know.
You know what I'm saying? And as long as you, you know, once you get your foot the door,
it's up to you to put, to open up the door and get in there. So like, you know, I appreciate
the opportunity that Dick presented to me and, and respected him, you know, immensely and missing
dearly now. But, you know, I mean, we had our knock down, drag out fights, man. And it was like,
you know, if I felt something, if I felt this was not the way.
that this should be. He really, he really didn't like me going out and, and, and working with people like
Quincy, working with people like, uh, other, other producers and stuff. Because then I can see,
you know, how it was really supposed to be done and how the, and how the, the real business looked
like. The business was supposed to be done. And he, he, he didn't like for me to do that, but I was going
to do that. When I went out, work with Stanley, when I worked with George. Yeah, George, yeah. And,
And all those, and like I said, Quincy.
And, you know, so I could see how that whole thing was supposed to go down, you know,
and as far as financially, everything is concerned.
So it's kind of like you feel like it's kind of like a learning process.
And he was the beginning of learning process because I was wondering when you got excited
about getting a job and everything at that moment, you don't wonder, well, what do I have any say in the songs that we sing?
And, you know, like all the business stuff that, like, in retrospect, you may have.
but at the same time didn't have it at that time yeah well at first at first i didn't want to have
any sales far as long as concerned because because my whole thing was like i want to learn i want to
look at it i'm not i don't want to come here acting like i know what i'm doing because i had never
been in a recording or a real recording studio at all up to that point you know like you know and
and and leon silvers you know like you know it was like a learning process i i saw how he worked i saw
how his crew work, his crew of writers, Will Shelby, Kevin Spencer,
David. Kevin Spencer, yes, indeed. And I would sit back, a lot of times I was
back, the first song that I really participated on and participated in writing and felt
comfortable enough to present it to them as far as the writing was concerned was for the
lover in you, you know? Wow. Right. And so, yeah, so like, you know, that was me and Dana
Myers. And like, so, I mean, we had a thing where we were, we printed, well, presented to the people to his
his, his stable writers and stuff. And they would say, uh, no, veto, you know, or, or, so, you know,
it was like, it was, it was a learning process for me. I didn't want to jump in there. Oh, I know what I'm,
I want to write down. I want to, I want a lesson that a lot of the youth here. So that's why
I wanted you to tell us. So let me, let me ask then. So with, so you're first,
album is big fun, correct?
Big fun album, right?
I got it. Okay, when I was in care, I was like,
oh, the dolphin record.
They were killer wells. They were killer wells.
Wait, there was a killer wells.
I thought there was dolphins, too.
I thought they were dolphins.
That's right. They are black, so.
They're killer well.
Actually, they were barrels that we were sitting on,
and they superimposed a killer well.
Barrels, okay.
Okay.
That was a classic moment.
So with barrels, okay, with big fun.
Yeah, so walk us through the process of one, like, by this point when you're doing
Big Fun, how long have you been in the group?
What's your jelling situation?
Now, complete disclosure, I'm probably the only human being on Earth that has not seen unsung.
I've heard it might have been a tense episode.
I don't know.
So I'm kind of asking you this, you know,
from the total naivete of not knowing what the situation was.
But what was, how long was it before,
after that New Jersey first gig with them
until you started recording big fun?
And what was the jelling situation like with you,
Jeffrey and Jodi?
Jodie.
It was, you know, because when we first,
When I first got there, we were like thrown together, you know, when I first got to Jersey.
And we were, you know, I was in, all day Sunday, I was in a, I forget it was either
Josie's room or Jeffrey's room, I forget, but it was crammed into, you know, like, learning
the lip sync.
I studied the lip sync, you know, while I was flying across country and then learning the
choreography because I'm used to singing.
I'm not used to dance and I'm a singer, right?
So, you know, that choreography.
And so then we got that together.
And then we continued on from the rest of that promotional tour, which if I'm getting, I'm trying to get, I'm at the point now where I'm even trying to get the timelines together because I'm writing a book.
I want to write my book, you know, so I need to get these timelines together myself.
So when I got, I think I got there in New Jersey.
it had to been winter time because I had to buy an overcoat because I didn't have an overcoat.
So I went to this clothing store in New Jersey.
I think it was called Heaven on Earth or something like that.
And bought this overcoat, you know.
So that was, so it had to have been like about maybe November, November, September, October, November, December time.
And then we finished up that promotional tour.
at the Coppa Cabana, you know, in New York.
And then as soon as we flew back to L.A.,
which was the beginning of 79, I believe,
because it was 78, yeah, the beginning of 79,
we started immediately recording the big fun album,
went in and started putting that whole thing together
and took us, it took us, you know, four, five, six months
or four or five months or so to do the whole album.
And then we put, then we put, so we went,
so that takes us into, towards the end of 79,
you know, the middle, mid towards the end of 79,
and then put second time around out there.
And second time around at first was kind of creeping up the charts,
you know what I'm saying?
But it wasn't, it wasn't until we did a remix.
That back then, that's when remixes were really,
real big, you know what I'm saying?
12 inches, yeah.
And 12 inches and stuff.
So I forget who did the remix.
We did a remix on it, put it out there, then it like screamed up the charts.
So like that was towards the end of, end of 79 into 80.
You know what I'm saying?
So it was like from that time, then we had a hit record in 80.
Wow.
Can you describe what working with Leon Silver's is like?
And do you have any big Fred Lewis stories to go with it?
I'm playing.
I know that one point, you know,
because Leon is like a stickler for backgrounds and stuff like that.
I mean, just like stickler for backgrounds.
And like, I remember going in there one time.
And there was a part I was supposed to be doing that day.
And like, we started out.
I could tell it was going to be one of those days.
You were like, uh, uh, that's good.
It sounds great.
Let's do it again.
It's good.
And then he's like, you know, and after about 45 minutes or so, I said, Lee, I said, man, I can't do this today.
Let's start again tomorrow, man.
He was just a taskmaster, like, hard.
I mean, I mean, phrasing, you know, and when you talk about Howard Hewitt sound, I would give a big portion of that, the kudos up for to Leon for helping me.
developed the Howard Hewitt sound.
You know, I had my sound, you know, going from the natural to the forest, you know,
before I left out of Ohio.
You know, when I was a kid, I developed that in my mom's bathroom with all the tile and everything,
with the, you know, built-in reverb that you got in the bathroom.
So I developed that natural going into the forest back then.
But he helped me develop that other, like stang, like stickler as far as phrasing is concerned.
You know, looking at every nuance, all those ad lives that you think are ad libs on there,
on those, there ain't no ad lives.
We thought that stuff out.
You know what I'm saying?
Wow.
Okay, put it.
Really?
Put it there.
Put it here.
Put it there.
Yeah.
Do you remember, like, a moment, a time when that, when that happened, when you thought,
all right, I don't know about this, but, like, no, you got to do that and it worked.
Yeah.
Well, well, oh, yeah.
I know it worked every time, but, like.
Those type of things were like, are you sure that?
That's going to work in there.
You know, yeah, just do it.
And that, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
And it just fell right in the place.
It's like, but do you have any memories of recording?
Because like two of my favorite Shalamo songs of all time, over and over.
And let's find a time for love.
Oh, you remember those sessions?
Yeah, oh, I remember over and over, like it was like yesterday,
because that was when I was the only one in the group, basically.
You know, Jeffrey and Jody had already.
already split. So like at that time I wanted to do I wanted to do my solo thing but
Dick says well you know you still got two and a half three years left on this
contract so you either got you're either gonna do it you know go just sit around and
ride it out go to court you know or move to England or wherever where Jeffrey
and Jody moved to or else you can do another you know another album and so of course
I hate court I don't like court you know courts it's like that's like
Of course, like a nightmare in Vegas, you know what I'm saying?
You just don't know what's happening.
So, so like, you know, but we recorded that over and over at that time, did the video and that whole thing.
That was when in the video was like me and Mickey Free, you know, me, Mickey Leon in that video.
And let's find the time for love.
Was that the song you said?
Let's time.
Yeah, that was it.
Yeah, let's find the time for love.
Yeah.
That's not on the look, is it?
Is it?
Yeah, that was, uh, was it?
I think that was on three for love.
Let me, let me, hold of them, let me.
Yeah, no, no, no, it wasn't.
It was on.
Is it on friends?
No, I think it's gone.
Fonte, let me find out that you're a fan of go for it.
Yo, like on the low.
Why you push it?
Go on, man.
Like, I know you're a deep cut cap,
But come on, dog.
Hey, man.
I rock that album, Doc.
Yo.
God, here you go, man.
It was finding time for love?
That wasn't on goal for it, was it?
Nah, that was, it wasn't friends.
God, I mean, I had this album.
That was a beautiful thing about finding time for love.
It's just a beautiful song, man.
It really, yeah, it is.
I love that record.
But you remember recording it?
Do you remember, like, recording that join or, like, that session?
I don't really, really remember anything that stuck out in my mind
about recording except that it was just a
the
da-dun-dun-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-b-d-d-b-d-d-b-d-b-d-mbo-boom-boom.
Damn it, now I'm looking for it.
Yeah, I'm not. How did it on?
And the thing that really, that really stood out to me
as far as that song was concerned also was just
the combination of me and Jody Wiley, man.
It was like...
It was on Big Fun. It was on Big Fun.
That's not it was big fun.
That was the first album.
I think that was the first time we really realized the magic that the combination of our of our voices really projected out there.
It was, you know, the timbre of her voice and my voice together, even on the background situation was like amazing.
That's a gorgeous song, man, and great performance by all the other people.
I don't necessarily want you to throw him under the rug, but can you answer two questions for me?
because, you know, I just got to know.
Because, again, like, it's also my perception of Shalimar coming from a 10-year-old.
But every time I turn around, like, Jeffrey Daniel had a guitar in his hand, but I don't recall him playing guitar.
Was he always air guitaring?
Well, he was air guitar in sometimes, but he knows how to play.
You know, he really stuck to it.
And he really, he can play it now, you know what I'm saying?
And he really knows how to play now.
And that's him singing on Pop-A-Long Kid?
Yeah.
That's him singing on Pop-A-Long Kid, yeah.
Okay, I kid, okay, I get it, okay.
No, I just wanted to make sure I didn't know if that was him.
That was you, if he was given much singing duties or not, okay.
No, how, from one to impossible, how hard were they on the choreography front of things?
Because you guys, you guys really had a together, you know, it's almost like a,
I wish it was five of you because you guys were doing shit that's like, for a listener's out there,
if you could demo, if you could demo, if you could Google a song called Sho Sho Sho Shine by the Dynamic Superiors,
in my opinion, is one of the greatest performances ever on Soul Train in which they literally act out every word that's saying.
Like, this is past Charlie Atkins.
This is past Brooke Payne.
as choreography is concerned.
But yeah, I was saying that the, the choreography that you guys had, even if you say,
like, I'm not a dancer, but somehow in my mind, I just always walked away with, like,
Shalimar really had great polished choreography.
Like, how hard, how hard and, like, how much time did you guys spend on those routines?
Spending a lot of time on the routines.
Jody, Jody was really instrumental as far as, like,
putting together a lot of routines,
Jeffrey would throw his situation in there a lot.
And I was just, because one of the things that I was concerned about
was the fact that I sing.
And when you sing, it's like you gotta breathe
and you're breathing if you're out of breath,
you know what I'm saying.
And so that's when I, you know,
I did the choreography and went through the quote,
but I told them, let's make,
be conscientious of the fact that I'm singing.
You know what I'm saying?
Right.
You know, you guys, I'm saying, I'm singing.
I got to hit those notes that I created on those albums
and all that kind of stuff.
So, you know, so that's when-
Yeah, like, like, and then get, right.
You know what I'm saying?
So, you know, it was like, then we started being,
I think we started being conscientious,
of, they started being conscientious of that.
And that's when the whole,
situation of like, you know, there's in choreography a lot of times less is more. You know what I'm saying?
And the human mind, the human brain can only just take so much. You know, so I would rather
people walk away from a concert saying, man, you remember when they did this thing together,
boom, boom, boom, boom, they were together. And then Howard broke off and he broke off. And then
they came back and did it together. And so I would rather that than a whole,
bunch of stuff that they're not really going to remember anyway. And so Jeffrey and Jody were on it.
Jeffrey's whole backsliding thing that he had eventually, he's the one to talk Michael how to do
that. And Michael named it the moonwalk. Jeff taught him how to do that. So, but at the, you know,
during the show, we would play this song called, what was it called? I forget the name, but it was
first part of Right in the Socket. It's called Right in the Socket. Yeah. Yeah. And we,
and it would be, and then the band would break down into this funky groove,
and me and Jody would be on one side of stage rocking,
and Jeffrey would be all the way on the other side of stage,
and Jody and I would pull this imaginary rope, right,
and pull it and boom like that,
and Jeffrey would backslide all the way across the stage, man.
First, all people on the floor is guaranteed.
They're standing up because they think he's on like a conveyor belt.
That's how it's true.
And so that from that point on, we could do anything.
We would do it.
It was on.
It was on.
So do you have any knowledge of, because I know that Jeffrey was also trying to get another group off the ground, the one that with Casper, Coley and Casper, like his other dancers, there was like, I think it was like a singing group, whatever.
I assume that he was trying to bring them through the Solar Channel.
Did anything ever happen to that project?
I'm not sure.
I remember Casper and Cooley, though, definitely.
Caspar and Cooley actually went over first,
because we were going overseas for a promotional thing for about six weeks.
So that's when Michael wanted to learn the backslide.
So first, Casper and Cooley went over there to try and teach it to him.
But for some reason, he couldn't grasp it from them.
So when we came back from the promotional tour,
that's when Jeffrey went over and taught him.
how to do it. It taught it to. Okay. But I think the,
the group was called,
what was the name of the group? I forget that. I'm forgetting.
Yeah, I'm drawing a blink right now. It's a, it was a dance group, basically.
Okay. Yeah, and like, I don't know whether Jeffrey
was trying to make it into a singing group too and maybe
bring it to Dick or whatever, but nothing really came of it.
A win is a win. A win. A win is a win. I don't care what I'm saying.
That's me, Clifford Taylor the 4th.
You might have seen the skits, the reactions, my journey from basketball to college football,
or my career in sports media.
Well, somewhere along the way, this platform became bigger than I ever imagined.
And now I'm bringing all of that excitement to my brand new podcast, The Clifford Show.
This is a place for raw, unfiltered conversations with some of your favorite athletes,
creators, and voices that not only deserve to be heard, but celebrated.
One week, I'll take you behind the scenes of the biggest moments in sports and entertainment,
and the next we'll talk about life, mental health, purpose, and even music.
The Clifford Show isn't just a podcast, it's a space for honest conversations,
stories that don't always get told, and for people who are chasing something bigger.
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Listen to the Clifford Show on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
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There's two golden rules that any man should live by.
Rule one, never mess with a country girl.
You play stupid games, you get stupid prizes.
And rule two, never mess with her friends either.
We always say that trust your girlfriends.
I'm Anna Sinfield, and in this new season of the girlfriends...
Oh my God, this is the same man.
A group of women discover they've all dated the same prolific con artist.
I felt like I got hit hit.
by a truck. I thought, how could this happen to me? The cops didn't seem to care. So they take matters
into their own hands. I said, oh, hell no. I vowed. I will be his last target. He's going to get
what he deserves. Listen to the girlfriends. Trust me, babe. On the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or
wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Ego Wode. My next guest, you know from Step Brothers,
Anchorman, Saturday Night Live and The Big Money Players Network.
It's Will Farrell.
Woo!
Woo!
My dad gave me the best advice ever.
I went and had lunch with him one day, and I was like, and dad, I think I want to really give
this a shot.
I don't know what that means, but I just know the groundlings.
I'm working my way up through, and I know it's a place that come look for up-and-coming talent.
He said, if it was based solely on talent, I wouldn't worry about you, which is really sweet.
Yeah.
He goes, but there's so much luck involved.
And he's like, just give it a shot.
He goes, but if you ever.
reach a point where you're banging your head against the wall and it doesn't feel fun anymore,
it's okay to quit. If you saw it written down, it would not be an inspiration. It would not be on
a calendar of, you know, the cat, just hang in there. Yeah, it would not be. Right. It wouldn't be
that. There's a lot of luck. Listen to Thanks, Dad, on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever
you get your podcasts. Um, okay. So at the time when
second time around becomes a big ass hit.
And it's definitely established that you're in a, you know, a well-established group that's not going to have to struggle.
At least in our eyes, it's like, oh, you made it right out the box.
How different does your life change?
Like, what is it to be a young, successful blackmail with,
A hit group in Los Angeles, California, 1980.
Goopies were crazy, you know, but, uh, wet-ass pussy.
Did Steve just say that?
He did, and it made so much sense between me and Steve and Howard, and I'm afraid the rest of the world.
I was there, too.
I just don't know if every, you know.
Bill was there, too.
I heard the, I was there.
I was there.
Okay.
Leave it out of context.
Context, just trust me, listeners, a conversation was had earlier, but good.
But in a sense, that was one of the changes because, you know, I had dealt with the whole groupie thing since I was like, you know, young, very young, like even in the gospel situation, you had your gospel groupies, you know, and when I.
Oh, yeah, that's what my grandma called.
They was holy from the waist up.
Oh, man.
They were telling me and say, you know, the Lord told me to get.
give this to you, okay.
Oh, you know.
You know, and so, but then, you know, and then I had, you know, when I went into the R&B
situation back in, back in Ohio, we had our fans that follow us around and then going
overseas with the group with Beverly Hills, you know, yeah.
Man, I can, yeah, I already know.
Foreign, yeah, foreign situation.
Yeah, you are.
And when I get with the group, I'm like, you know, I'm like, oh, man, I got this down.
This is like, I've been dealing with.
on this for a long time.
There ain't nothing like hit record groupies.
Hit record group is the ones that like, you know,
you come in a room all of a sudden, it's like,
oh, how'd you get in here, you know?
And so, you know, that after a couple years of that,
that really made me look at that whole thing
and look and see, you know, that's not something
I really want to deal with as far as that's concerned,
because it's not like they know me.
They just know what they think about.
about me. They knew me. They might not even like me. So like, so that, so I ended that whole thing. That was, that was a change in my life. But, you know, as far as the responsibility, I think you started getting, at least I did anyway, started getting a sense of responsibility of what you're saying. And because you know that people are really listening to you. You know what I'm saying? And it's like, and that's, with that comes responsibility. It's like, you know, I got a, like I said,
I came from a whole house full of women, you know, like my mom, my mom, my four sisters, and
me and my dad were the only testosterone, you know, walking around there for about three or four
years until my younger brother came. But, you know, but I always looked at that and that
always kind of shaped what I would allow myself to, you know, to say in my music and what I do
and what I project as far as the music is concerned.
So, you know, but I mean, it was, it was,
because at the time, we were only two,
second time around was out there.
I think it was like, I think I was about 23,
23 years of, you know, so.
Tiring from group, you were young.
We were really, really young.
Jeffrey's only like a couple of months older than I am.
And Jody's like, I forget like about three, four years younger.
But, you know, we were young, you know,
when that whole thing went down.
So it was a big adjustment and big adjustment.
Is there any, I mean, not preparing you, but did it ever get to the point where,
especially when you're young and impressionable, you have ideas of what starter was like,
like, oh, there's a limousine and there's a bodyguard, but I mean, was there just ever time
when you just couldn't do something simple, like just go to the 7-Eleven to get, you know,
a stick of gum or something like?
Was it like that or was it just could you still have a personal life or was it like constantly being chased around and that sort of thing?
Not being chased around.
I think it was like, you know, here in the States, you had to realize you had to get a sense of where you could go and where you couldn't go.
You dig?
It's like, you know, there's places that even now I won't go because I won't be, it won't be, you know, like.
You want a piece.
Yeah.
You're eating, which I don't mind, you know, autographs and stuff, that's the part.
You asked for it.
You got it to Toyota, you know what I'm saying?
So that's a whole thing.
But like, you know, the place that was really difficult to get around was in the U.K.
Once when everything hit in the U.K.
Because the U.K. is so condensed.
You know what I'm saying?
I mean, the whole island is what about.
above as big as California.
But you got all kind of people in there.
And then, and so once we hit there, it was like, I mean, it was, hit, hit,
Jeffrey went on top of the pops, did his thing.
The next day it was like, bam.
It was crazy.
Can you explain that situation?
Because I've seen him do night to remember where he's just pop locking by himself.
And, you know, even I went to live there for a couple of years.
years and they still talk about like that being such a game changing moment i know that geoffrey also
hosted uh the british version of soul train same soll train six 20 or whatever it was called
but what was the situation that both you and jody didn't make that promotional tour and geoffrey
just decided to pop lock and then well to give you guys a backstory i believe that the the legend is
that you guys were supposed to perform on top of the pop
but something happened.
So he decides I'm just going to pop lock
and he does the moonwalk on the show
and suddenly you guys become instant
mega celebrities. That's what I always
say, whatever we were, whatever we
are over there in the UK.
I mean, we still, Jeffrey and I
and Carolyn Griffey still tour over there now.
And we've carved out a real niche out there,
real good niche over there where we're doing
festivals with 60, 70,000 people
over there now, you know,
And, but what happened was, all right?
You mean what had happened was?
It happened was.
It's going to be good.
No, we have been on the road so much.
Also, Jody was, like, pregnant with her first child, her daughter, Lauren.
And I was trying to piece together what little bit was left of my first marriage, you know,
and which didn't happen, you know, didn't work.
But, but we had been on the role.
so much for so long. We said, and at the time, I can make you feel good. There's another song
that I, me and, um, I forget, we wrote, we wrote together. And, um, and I can make you feel good
came out over there. I can make you feel good, blown up, you know, going up to charts and took so
long for us to decide what we were going to do by time he got there. I can make you feel good
had, had fallen to number two. And top of the pop was a number, uh, was, was, was a, uh, was a, uh,
a program where they only did number one records on there.
So he couldn't do, he couldn't do, I can make you feel good.
But then somehow, I forget what happened, they arranged it so he could come back on there
since he was all the way all the way over there because it fell to number two on his way over there.
You know, that's cold blood.
I know.
So like they said, you know, they said, well, you know, you know, we can get him
on here you can do you know do a dance with because he was going to do a dance thing to to
to I can make you feel good but he ended up doing it to a night a night to remember yes
remember yeah and I think that was going to be the next single anyway or something like
that so he went on there and and top of the pops is a type of show it came on every
Thursday you know and and if you went on top of the pops and and kill Friday you saw
your album sales go go through the roof that's how how how
how instantly impactful, you know, that show was to the UK.
So, man, he went on there.
They went crazy, man.
They went crazy.
It was like, it was like, you know, we couldn't walk down the street half the time.
Then we finally went over there, you know.
I was going to say that in some weird way, you guys not going over there almost served the group better.
because of that very specific
Hey guys
I don't know if you remember
but when Leon had did our show
he had mentioned
a Shalimar video
that
it's escaping me right now
but I went
I forget the title
but I went to actually look it up
on YouTube
and I have to say it, it's probably, in my mind, I thought the emergency video for the Whispers was the weirdest video from the solar cannon with them arguing inside of a phone booth.
But you guys have a very, it might have been for the song you just mentioned, it was like you were in a garden or do you not remember?
Oh, in a garden?
Like you're in a flower shop or something like that.
It was like, I don't want to be the last to know.
Yo, okay, who conceptualized?
Have you guys seen this video, y'all?
No.
Forget, keep on loving me.
Forget all the weird videos that have come from Civil War Records.
Oh, they're dressed like the 1800s or something.
This tops everything.
Oh, my God.
This tops everything.
I only wish at a time machine to go back to Leon Sillian.
over's interview so we could talk about this video some more.
Because I looked it up way after we did the interview.
Yeah.
What was who conceptualized that video?
Is Jody and Whiteface?
What's going to do?
It's like,
it's like,
it meets,
I had one of them flop hats on or something like that.
Yeah, it's like an antebellum, like,
what's going on in this video?
I don't want to be the last to know if you're,
gonna leave.
Yeah, man.
It was like, that was back in it, that was back.
We did three videos in the same day.
Man.
This was the last one.
Y'all was tired.
This was tired.
I don't know who came up with their concept.
Man, man.
Wow.
Your hair looks great, though.
I mean, but it's just like, what was it?
A night to remember.
I remember, I think, when Jeffrey was the, the bartender, the waiter or the barter.
Yeah, yeah.
And he came out the closet.
I'm like, oh, that's not cool.
Yeah, that video was weird.
But this, this takes the click.
Yeah, man, this white face.
I don't know.
This is the one time I wish this show had a visual component.
Oh, everybody.
I'm looking at it now.
This is the oddest thing.
Yo, man.
It's crazy.
Like I said, but we did three videos.
I remember it was.
It's night to remember.
I don't want to be the last.
And this tune called Work It, Work It Out, Work It Out, You know.
Right.
Okay.
Check out, work it out.
Work it out is like, that's the bomb.
That's even, that's even crazy.
It's even weirder.
Who directed these videos?
Bill Parker.
Jesus Christ, it's weird.
You're right.
I'm sorry.
I'm like, looking at it right now.
Work it out.
Yes.
We got balloons.
Work it out.
Yes.
Oh, my God.
And then the balloons go back up.
But I mean, but really, though, I mean, those videos are weird,
but I really, looking back at it,
videos were really something that I think it took a lot of,
like, black artists a while to figure out, you know what I'm saying?
Like, what it was?
Because a lot of those, like, early age,
I mean, they, you could tell, like,
they didn't know what the fuck to do.
You know what I mean?
Right.
You know what I'm saying?
That's why aha, still the best, was the first,
that best video.
I mean, you look at the don't look any further video.
It's just like what in the hill, you know what I mean?
Right, right.
Don't look any further video from Dennis Edwards.
Inside here.
Yeah.
But I will admit, like you guys, the whole solar canon, all the groups, including the lakeside videos, and even their album.
Like, I at least like the fact that you guys were thinking forward as far as the visual component that most groups weren't even thinking of back then.
You know, so it's almost like, and that probably explains, I'm going to get into, yeah, for the life of me, I don't even know how you guys were successful in getting a dead giveaway on MTV at a time when MTV was very slow to play back black videos.
But wait, I do have a question.
I got to go to Charlene and Willis's theme.
Please, why wasn't somewhere there's a love for me ever released as a single?
Oh, my God.
Oh, there.
Amazing song.
The way that people respond to it, man, you would think it was single.
You would think it was a single at some point because it's like, ah, they go crazy.
That different strokes episode did y'all justice.
Like, that's, you know, for those that don't know, you know, when Janet Jackson first was on different strokes, like, that was her and Will, and Todd Bridges' song on that show.
I didn't know that.
I didn't know that.
You never knew that?
I never knew that.
I never really watched different strokes that much, but.
Song placement, man.
Again, I was a 10-year-old, so it's like, you know.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Can you explain why me being aware of what you guys' records were as they came out?
I do remember being very shocked and surprised when GoFurt was just like in the record bin,
and I was like, well, wait, where's the single at?
How come, like, I almost felt like it was just put out there.
It was just arbitrarily.
Like, what was, was, was, for a bunch of throwaway songs or?
It was, it was, there was, we were going,
Solar was going from RCA distribution to electric distribution.
To complete, to complete their obligation to RCA,
each group on the, on the, on the, on the, on the, on the, on the, on the, on the,
old RCA, another album, one more album, and then Solar could move on to Electra Distribution.
So it was like, it was, we called it, we used to call it the throwaway album.
But on that album, you had, you had sweeter as the days go by.
You had, you know, this talk to me, which was like a crazy, crazy thing.
James and I did a song on there called You Got a.
You got to be running.
Right.
You know, one of those urgency things, you know.
And, and, but that's what it was.
We used to call it the throwaway album, you know.
And that was because we had to fulfill the obligation to RCA distribution company
and so that they can move on to the electric.
So at the time, though, and, you know, like throwaway albums are, you know,
Frank Zappa was famous for it.
You know, Prince did.
ass and disorder.
Like throw away albums,
there's nothing new about it.
But at the time,
are you feeling like,
well,
we do have a,
are you thinking about it
in terms of legacy?
Like,
well,
I don't,
I don't want to just put a stinker out there
or something that doesn't have
all this promotion or something.
Because you guys are basically releasing it,
knowing that it's going to be dead in the water anyway.
But did you feel any sort of way about that as a group?
Like,
we don't want to waste a shot,
especially when we had this much momentum.
Nah,
We really didn't think about that a lot because I guess we were depending on the guidance of the record company as far as that's concerned.
You know, they said, okay, we're going to do this.
This is going to be cool, blah, blah, blah.
And like I said, some Swedish days go by, that was a, that was a pretty, you know, turned out to be a pretty, especially overseas, turned out to be a pretty popular song and stuff.
So it wasn't, it wasn't like we put, it wasn't like if you listen to the album, it wasn't like we
put a stinker out there. There was some stuff on. There was some stuff on. Sorry about that. I didn't
mean stinker, but just in terms of releasing it, knowing that you're just going to go put all
the energy in front of the friend's album. That's... Yeah. Yeah. On the front of an album with the new
distribution company. Now, I think we were, you know, again, we were so, we were still, at that
point, we were still pretty young in the business. And like, so we were, we were depending, you know,
if Dick said, we're going to put away, you know, get a throwaway album. Leon said, we're going to do a
Go away album. Okay. All right, cool. Let's do it. Let's get in there and work.
But I also noticed that this is the album that the three of you really got to contribute a lot of your personal songs to it.
Right, right, especially Jeffrey. Jeffrey did a lot of stuff on there.
So in your mind, like, what's your favorite album of the Shalimar Canon?
I think, like, I really dig three for love. I dig three for love because of the politics of it.
as far as, because Lee Young Jr. told me when I first got with the group,
because up until that time, it was a lot of caricatures as far as album cover is concerned.
You know, the Uptown Festival album cover was a cartoon type of character, the disco gardens.
Yeah, disco garden.
And also, you know, even the big fun album, you know, on those.
With the dolphins, right, yeah.
And stuff is still, you know, but Lee told me, man, you have.
have to establish your faces as far as the group is concerned.
When people, you have to establish it so that when people say
Chalimar, they think of Howard, Jeffrey, and Joey,
because they see it.
And on the legal tip, you know, that was very cool.
So that was a real important to me as far as that album was concerned.
Which album was for the Lovering You On?
Was that on Three for Love?
That was on Three for Love, I believe.
I believe, yeah, it's on three-full-off.
Yeah.
Yes.
And what you were talking about in the very beginning of this whole show was very important
because when I first got with the group, it was like, you know, Salamar, the disco group.
You know what I'm saying?
And like I said, I wasn't a big fan of disco, you know what I'm saying?
So my thing was like, we need to establish this as a group, as a whatever you want to pop,
R&B, whatever, not disco.
So when we did for the Lover and You,
for the Lover & You was very instrumental in doing that,
taking us from the disco group into, you know,
when they started talking about Shalimar, you know,
after for the Lumbering You, it was like, yeah, the group,
Shalimar, the singing group, pop group, R&B group.
But, you know, put the disco group out of the picture.
What was the name?
Where did the name come from?
What was the meaning of the name, Shalim,
This is, there's, uh, this cat named Simone Sousan, who brought, uh, Uptown festival to, uh, Dick and, and, uh, Don Cornelius.
Uptown festival was like a medley of Motown hits, you know, okay.
So like, uh, you know, in the disco, in the disco format. And, uh, so Simone suzine was this cat
and there was a, he, there was a garden over in the Middle East or something like that called
Salamar Garden.
It was a S-H-L-I-M-A-R, you know, Shalimar.
Ah, okay.
There was this, there was this botanical garden that this potentate or somebody, you know, put together for his lady, you know.
And so, like, there was this beautiful garden.
That's how they got disco garden out of it.
And then they changed the I to the A and S-A-L-A-M-A-R.
S-H-A-L-A-M-R.
Yeah. Okay. What can you tell us both legally and respectfully about Jody's situation and why she's not touring with the band currently?
With us currently? Yeah, yeah.
At the time, we got an offer, Jeffrey, like, I think it was probably 20 years ago, 17, 20 years ago.
We got, well, Jeffrey got an offer to do five gigs over in Asia or in throughout Japan or stuff.
And so, you know, we called Jody.
We said, you know, Jeff called me.
I said, yeah, I'm down.
I'm cool.
It would be fun.
And then we called Jody.
And Jody said, well, I don't think I really want
to revisit that part of my life, you know.
And which, you know, you can't say.
I mean, she, you know, everybody didn't have the same.
You know, it's a situation.
You can do, you know, three people, two people
can experience the same exact thing.
and come away with two different experiences.
Two different experiences.
So you got three people who experienced the same exact thing
and came away with three different experiences.
So at that time, Jeffrey and I went and we did the shows by herself.
We put the band together and we did the shows ourselves, you know.
And then in fact, we went on to do a bunch of stuff in the UK.
We went to Africa a couple of times with that line with just me and Jeffrey.
And then when we wanted to bring the female entity back into it, Carolyn Griffey, who is Dick Griffey's daughter.
Daughter, right.
And she was singing background for me on a lot of my solo stuff, you know.
And so she had the history of the group.
She had the passion of the group.
So we didn't even, we didn't even, and also she has an amazing voice.
I love her.
I love an instrument.
And we didn't even auditioning anybody else.
we just offered the position.
Yeah.
Yeah.
How was your,
how was your relationship before Mr. Griffey when he passed?
How was our relationship at that time right before he passed?
Me and Dick?
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, we were, we were at each other's thoughts about something.
I forget what it was.
It seems like.
I forget what it was.
And it was funny because, like, you know, he was just,
he was just learning about texting and stuff at that time.
And he texted something and accidentally sent it to me.
I'm like, nigger.
You know, and I just laugh, you know, and I forget what it was we were arguing about at that time.
But I loved him.
I loved it, you know.
And then we had a bittersweet thing.
How old was he when he passed?
Dude.
70s, I want to say.
70 something, yeah, 70 something, you know.
And like, you know, it was sad.
I never got a chance to see him right when, before he passed.
We had a couple meetings before he got, before he got sick.
And, you know, but we were arguing about something then.
I forget what it was.
Wow.
Hey, I know I brought it up earlier, but I kind of want to revisit it.
I know that you and James Ingram are singing,
on PYT.
Are you at all involved
on the original version
of PYT?
The slower
before it
turned into the version
that's on Thriller,
there's another alternative
slower,
smoother version of
PYT.
Yeah.
Yeah, a slower version.
Are you on that version
at all or is it just
the version that's on thriller?
Just a version
on Thriller.
I didn't even know
there was a slower version out.
You know,
you know, good and well,
yeah,
they left no stone unturned
like they kept.
I mean, were the background
sampled from the first, from the
No, no, no, no.
It's completely different recording.
Just the title.
They shared a title.
That's all.
Like they turn into something totally, totally different.
But speaking of, speaking of Griffey,
again, you know, MTV was just a baby.
And of course, they were world famous for really not focusing on that many black hacks.
And yet I remember.
at the same time when they started slowly playing Billy Jean and beat it.
You guys were one of the few groups that they slowly let in the door along with like Prince and Lano Richie.
Eddie Grant.
How do you know how that happened?
Like how was, was that the making of Dick Griffey or like?
I don't know what the politics were as far as what the politics were as far as getting all that into into the playlist.
But at the time, it was just us and Michael.
And but, you know, you had that, you have that famous interview with David Bowie.
David Bowie, yeah.
And I think at that point, they started kind of re-looking at certain situations when a David Bowie comes up to you, says,
how can you call yourself a music channel and you're not playing black music?
It's like, it's crazy, you know.
So, so like, but I'm not sure about the policy.
It was just, you know, people, the promotion people kept pushing it, kept pushing it.
But at the time, like I said, it was just us and Michael at the time that they were playing.
Okay, so can I assume that the look was technically kind of sort of maybe your first solo record,
but kind of in group or name?
Oh, really? Okay.
It was the last, it was the last album that we did that Jeffrey and Jody and I did together,
but they participated just like they, you know, just like, equally as far as like,
just like we used to do all the rest of the projects and stuff.
There's a tune on there called You are the, you're the one for me.
Yeah, check that tune out.
If you get a chance, check that tune out.
Oh, I know, I know it well.
I know it well.
But I just wanted to know, like, the working process.
Speaking of the look, I know, I know, and, you know, I'm a Philadelphia and so.
I feel like a bad Philadelphia because I'm going to ask you this question,
but I know that you wrote the look with Stanley Clark.
Now, personally, one of my all-time favorite How at You with songs,
non-Shallamore-related, but really, if I'm honest with it,
this is probably my all-time favorite song of yours,
is Heaven Sent.
Now, you know, as a jazz head, you know,
this is a guy that's, you know, doesn't return to forever,
doesn't change the world of bass music.
I feel really silly that this is also might be my favorite Stanley Clark song.
Be as though he has such an intricate history with his bass.
But this one particular song says,
could you,
what I really want to know is why didn't you say that for your own project?
Yes,
even though it made noise on his record.
I almost felt like,
because when it came out,
I felt like,
oh,
this is the,
how are you a solo joint?
And then my aunt couldn't find it.
She was looking for forever.
And then finally it's like, ah, it's buried on, you know, the Stanley Clark record.
Did you talk about that song?
That song, it was one of the first times that I ventured, one of my first ventures off from Solar.
You know what I'm right?
And so, like I said before, Dick wasn't really a big fan of that.
But, you know, it was like, you got to, you can't just, you know, keep people sold up in certain situations.
And so it was when Stanley, because Stanley and I met first,
and then he introduced me to George.
And when we met, we had a mutual friend that was his accountant, I think,
and then he did some work for me.
And then he introduced me to Stanley.
Stan was a fan of, you know, the Salamar stuff.
And I was definitely a fan of Stanley's because my first instrument
that I learned out of play when I was like 12 years old was,
bass. So, you know, I was the, the, Stanley was like the cat, right? So we just started working
together. And there was another cat that wrote that song. I think you passed away. I can't
remember. That wrote a lot. What was it? On heaven sent? Heaven sent. Yeah. Okay. I got to look it up.
Yeah. I can't remember his name. There was some, I remember there was some stuff that was going on with him
and Stanley. But, you know, we got, we, you know, we went in and started record, started messing
around with it. And it was just, it was, it was just slated to go on his album. It wasn't slated
to go on my album. And that was before, I think, you know, the whole concept of putting a song,
you could put it on this album, well, I'll do it. If I could put it on my album, you know what I'm
saying? We, you weren't doing that then. Is this song, is it still in your repertoire?
Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah, definitely. Definitely.
I was just going to ask what was the creative chemistry like Stanley and George working together.
What were they like in the studio together?
Man, it was like, because I did a lot of the Clark Duke project.
Yeah, Clark Duke project, yeah.
And a lot of involved in a lot of that, especially the videos.
I do these little crazy cameo appearances on the video.
It didn't make any sense.
All of a sudden, I'm there, you know what I'm saying?
It was amazing. I mean, George, just working with George, so George was just, I mean, if you didn't know, anybody didn't, all the whole bottom part of George's house in, in Hollywood, lower Hollywood Hills, basically off of Franklin, the whole bottom part of his house was his studio, everything.
Okay. Room, studio, you know, everything, the lounge, everything was a studio. He had a, he had his, um,
wine cellar down there and stuff.
And I mean, it was, it was just, we would just go in there.
And it was a place to go in and just be creative and working with, and then watching him
and Stanley together was just a double, double situation, double dose of what, you know,
George did.
And it, and it was enhanced by Stanley's stuff.
Stanley do some stuff.
George would enhance it with his thing.
I mean, it was a major, major creative,
total creative atmosphere in them.
That's beautiful, man.
Wow.
Could you, what was the audition process like for Mickey Free and Delisa Davis once?
Jeffrey and Jody left Shalimar?
Well, for Mickey, there wasn't really an audition situation.
And Mickey was working on a project, I think, with Leon.
You know, and Mickey was like basically, you know, this prince-like bar player cat.
And he was working out of studio masters.
And so I would come there.
I was working on something.
And then we see each other.
I think with these studio masters, a Larby studio.
I can't remember.
But we crossed each other across path.
I thought, hey, man, what's up?
Hey, man, what's up?
And then keep on going to go.
going, right? And then we started talking and stuff. And Mickey is, Mickey, if he ever decided to put this guitar down and not do music anymore, he could be a stand-up comedian for real.
That, that nigga had me cracking up the whole time. And so then that's when I talked to Leon, because like I said, they were working on something. And then I said, well, why don't I bring, you know, Mickey in, which changed the whole.
situation of the group, you know, because Mickey was more of this rock cat, and I was just looking
to do something to pass the time for two and a half years, you know, so, you know, and we went into
the whole, you know, we went into the whole rock thing. You know, and I always had my dressing room,
when Jeffrey was in the group, it was me and Jeffrey had a dressing room, right? We did have
come together. Jody would have her own dressing room. But it's just, you know, the camaraderie of it,
You know, so Mickey and I had our dressing room together.
Our theme song in the dressing room was Rebel Yell, which we're called.
By Billy Idol.
Yeah.
Rebel Yale.
We put the leather gloves on and the belt gang, you know what I'm saying?
And we're ready to go out there and deal, man.
And so, like, it changed the whole thing.
Now, with Delisa, we, Dick came up with this idea of involvement.
involving a lot of the local, different local radio stations across the country and do this contest, the contest to find the girl for Shalama.
Wow.
And it involved the local radio stations and all of them they put together this thing.
They had auditions.
Dawn Lewis audition in New York.
That's when I first met Don Lewis.
Wait, did she tell us this, y'all?
I don't remember.
I don't think that.
I don't think that.
I was it all the episode.
I missed that episode.
Yeah, Dawn was our last pre-COVID interview.
Oh, yeah.
Now, Dawn, I remember Dawn coming out with these hot pants and these, and these, what they call,
fishnet stockings, right?
For years, I called her fishnet, right?
Because she didn't, she didn't win the audits in Deleese, because she won the New York audition.
And then she was, then they flew, they flew her to L.A.
And when she was L.A., in L.A., one of the time she was in L.A.,
that's when she, I guess, she connected with the different world people or, yeah, the different world people.
But for years, after I knew, you know, after I knew Dawn, for years, I can never really remember her name, but I call her fishnets, you know.
So.
Yes.
You know, but that was the process, you know, DeLisa was from a.
Nashville. So when we went to Nashville, did the audition there. Oh, so this, this was nationwide.
It was nationwide, yeah. Oh, wow. Okay. We did New York and Nashville all over the place.
We were all over the place. By the way, did Mickey ever share any of that basketball Charlie Murphy's story with
you at all? The day after. He told you after. The day after it happened, man. That's why when people called me,
when people called me after Dave Chappelle did it,
years later, when people called me and told me,
man, you see that skit, the Charlie Murphy Hollywood stories,
and on Dave Chappelle, they did a thing.
They talked about Mickey going up and going up to Princess House.
I said, man, Mickey called me the day after they did that.
And so we up a short cash house, man, last night.
And Eddie Murphy and Charlie Murphy, everybody came up to play basketball.
He said, Prince went out there,
in his heels and was Duncan.
And then after where he said, man,
anybody wants some pancakes?
Wait a minute.
He called me the day after.
A day after that went down.
That's a letter.
Wait, can I get this, Fonte?
Because I'm going to forget this.
Also, on the look, you worked with the legendary David Hawk Wazinski,
formerly of Rufus.
Yes.
Yeah, could you talk to, like, that's a cat I definitely want to interview as well.
Like, do you talk about the process of songwriting with him and working with him?
It was wild.
Hark was wild.
He, his studio was called, it was up in the hills off of, off the 101, off the, off the one-on-one, Laurel,
wasn't Laurel Canyon, I can't remember.
Okay.
It was up in the hills.
And the name of his studio was called Food in the Hill.
You know what I'm saying?
Oh, fool in the hill.
Okay.
Fool in the Hill Studios.
So it was like me, him, Mickey.
We had it.
Yeah, it was just the whole writing process.
If we would get serious,
then all of a sudden,
it would just go off to change somewhere else.
And we were just, you know, we were just up there.
We had, we had, you know, interesting situations,
visitors up there in and out and all.
In quote, okay.
Quote, unquote, I see what you're going.
And so like, you know, but it was, but the creative situation of it, when we would be on track was amazing, was amazing.
We got a lot of work done, a lot of creative looking at.
We did one of the songs we did was called My Girl Loves.
My Girl Loves Me. That's my shit.
My girl loves me.
Yeah.
A win is a win.
A win is a win.
I don't care what you're saying.
Yep.
That's me, Clifford Taylor the 4th.
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any man should live by.
Rule one, never mess with a country girl.
You play stupid games, you get stupid prizes.
And rule two, never mess with her friends either.
We always say that trust your girlfriends.
I'm Anna Sinfield, and in this new season of the girlfriends,
Oh my God, this is the same man.
A group of women discover they've all dated the same prolific con artist.
I felt like I got hit by a truck.
I thought, how could this happen to me?
The cops didn't seem to care.
So they take matters into their own hands.
I said, oh, hell no.
I vowed I will be his last target.
He's going to get what he deserves.
Listen to the girlfriends.
Trust me, babe.
On the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up, everyone?
I'm Ego Vodom.
My next guest, you know from Step Brothers Anchorman,
Saturday Night Live and the Big Money Players Network,
It's Will Farrell.
Woo.
Woo.
My dad gave me the best advice ever.
I went and had lunch with him one day.
And I was like, and Dad, I think I want to really give this a shot.
I don't know what that means, but I just know the groundlings.
I'm working my way up through, and I know it's a place that come look for up and coming talent.
He said, if it was based solely on talent, I wouldn't worry about you.
Which is really sweet.
Yeah.
He goes, but there's so much luck involved.
And he's like, just give it a shot.
He goes, but if you ever reach a point.
point where you're banging your head against the wall and it doesn't feel fun anymore,
it's okay to quit. If you saw it written down, it would not be an inspiration. It would not be on
a calendar of, you know, the cat. Just hang in there. Yeah, it would not be. Right. It wouldn't be
that. There's a lot of luck. Yeah. Listen to Thanks Dad on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcast. I know probably to you, like, this was like, all right, I'm just
to do this bid and then get out here and do my solo join but you know for a whatever a past the time
record at least in your words like i the the heartbreak record was actually kind of dope and
i i do i do want to know the story okay so i know the history dean uh pitchford because i went to
perform in arts high school so dean pitchford of course you know he's he's he's he's a fellow e guy
Got her, Bill.
You should know this person.
He wrote, I mean, from Godspell, the fame.
He wrote, like, a lot of Broadway stuff.
He won Mad Grammys and a Tony and an Emmy.
I know that him and Bill Wolford wrote,
about to say Footloose.
Well, they wrote that, too.
They wrote Dancing in the Sheets.
Sheets, Lae.
In the streets to a child in here.
Excuse me, Mr. Hewitt, and I know I called you Howard the whole time.
But a young child who hears that song,
you sang the first time you heard.
heard that somebody said it was dancing in the street.
I think they're talking about getting it on and they talk about the sheets.
Kids don't even hear that part.
You just hear the-
I was a kid and I heard that part.
You know, I'm going to the streets with my coat.
Nah, grab your coat when we're going home.
That's what he said.
Yeah, I'm enlightened.
As of today, I am enlightened.
Yes, she thought it's dancing in the streets.
But wait, can I just ask though?
Yes, the song was a bona fide hit.
But did anyone ever raise the question that it might be a tad bit
derivative of 1999 at all?
Well, you know, the thing, the whole, the way that whole thing came about was,
um, at the time, like I said, it was just me.
I don't even think I had Mickey in the group at that time.
It was just, just me.
And, um, and Dean Pitchford called and wanted me and Leon to come to the
Paramount Studios and listen and look at this movie that he had and he had temporary music and,
you know, just stuff.
And then when it came to the part where he had written, you know, for dancing in his sheets,
he said, this is where I want, you know, Salamar thing to be.
And so, like, you know, we watch the movie.
We talked, blah, blah, blah.
And Leanne and I are walking back to the parking lot.
And I said, well, what do you think?
You know, he said, wow, I got a whole lot on my plate.
I don't think that's going to be a big movie.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like, and I got a whole lot.
I got a whole lot on my plate.
I don't really, I'm not, I'm not really going to have time to do it.
He said, well, what do you think?
I said, well, I don't think it's going to be a big movie either, you know, but.
Oh, God.
What?
I'm having a brain for it.
I'm going to throw Leon under the bus like that.
It was me, too.
I said, I don't think it's going to be a big movie either.
So you saw a footloose and you were just like, man, whatever.
Yeah.
Okay.
You know, because it was just, you know, this gap.
This cat teaching white folks how to dance and all that kind of stuff.
Like, you know, it's like, you know, it's like, hey, you know,
I don't think it's going to be that big of a movie, but I said,
but being with the position that the group, which I was going to have to keep on,
at that time I knew Dick Riffey wasn't going to allow me to get out of my contract,
so I had to keep on with the group.
I said, but given the position that the group is in at this time,
I said, I think it would be a good, even though I don't think it's going to be a, I don't think it's a great movie, they're going to put a push behind it.
Yeah, it's a good look. Yeah, it'll be a good look for emotional thing.
So it would be, you know, why not? Do it, I'll do it. I'll put it, you know, do the song, put it in there.
Shall it my name lives forever, you know what I'm saying?
Little did you know.
I know.
And I had to go to Solar, to the legal department in Solar.
When somebody called me one morning and then the soundtrack had been out there and it is sold because at that time soundtracks weren't really big.
People really didn't look at soundtracks, you know.
And that was like the first one of the first big soundtracks out there.
But I had to go to Solar and say, because somebody called me that particular morning and said,
you've been checking out the footloose soundtrack?
I said, no, it was a, hey man, they're so.
platinum already. I said, what?
Are you serious? And so I go
and talk to Virgil Roberts
at the record company.
I went down the record company. I said,
man, Virgil, you've been checking the
dancing, the
footloose soundtrack?
Virgil goes to and say, yeah, you know,
but how these things really don't
sell a lot, you know?
It's not, it's a sound
and I said,
I said, dude, it's platinum.
Somebody told me it's platinum.
Yeah, there's no way.
No way it flattened.
And then it took off from there, man.
It's crazy.
But I was about to say, you guys double-dip because isn't the only Grammy for
Shalimar also for your participation on the Beverly Hills Cop?
Yeah, for Don't Get Stopped in Beverly Hills.
So it was almost like 84 was the year of.
Yeah, that was Hawk Wilensky.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah, double dip.
That's right.
If we didn't, I don't think we, no, we didn't win anything for, uh,
well, that, well, the, the, the soundtrack won a Grammy.
So I, I assume that someone gets that, uh, you know, that sort of thing.
I was gonna, I was gonna ask you out, man, uh, what can you tell us about your marriage to
Nia peoples?
I used to always watch the party machine when I was a kid.
Jesus Christ, Christ, I got.
Y'all were like the first, like, so I thought like, yeah, they were a little celebrity couple.
Yeah, you're the original J&B.
Yeah, all I got to say is,
Oh, okay.
Oh, never mind.
No, no, no, no, no, no, not never mind.
Keep going.
That's good story right there.
What can you tell us?
There was a cat.
There was a cat, Jerome Gasper, who was A&R cat for Polygram, I think, at the time.
He was a good friend of mine.
Okay.
And so, let me prefaced it also.
I had a condo in Hancock Parker.
at that time. And I had this, in my bedroom, I had this big, you know, remember the rear projections,
big screen TV. I had a big, rear projections, big screen TV at the bottom of my bed. And every
morning, I wake up, you know, turn on the TV, flip through the channels, get to Channel 11 or 9
or whatever. And I see fame was on, you know, what I'm saying? And I'm not saying, man,
this is this fine woman that comes on fame, you know,
I never knew
I never waited for the credits or anything
I just wanted to look at her.
You know what I'm saying?
And I keep it on fame
on the channel where fame was for about
10, 15 minutes.
If she didn't come on the screen, I'd start
flipping through the channel.
But on the screen, I'm sitting there,
yeah, I go, fine, you know what I'm saying?
So this cat Jerome Gashvachar called me
and he said, he talks,
I said, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah. Howard, Howard, Howard, Howard.
You know, he said, man, we just signed the girl from fame, you know, to a contract or a pithogram.
I want you to do a few songs on her. We want to do a couple, two, three songs on her.
I said, well, which girl is? This is near people.
I said, well, which girl is it? I'm just, you weren't that same.
He said, he said, I sent you an overnight a compilation via a tape to you.
And I said, okay, cool. Next morning, the FedEx comes.
they get the tape.
I put the tape in my VA
and I said,
ladies gentlemen,
near people,
and she comes walking out on stage,
I push cars,
and I caught,
I'm in,
I'm in.
I'm on my way.
Whatever you want me to do,
I'm there,
you know,
and I thought Soul Train was first.
I said,
I messed up that timeline
in my kid head
because I was like,
oh, I thought Soul Train was first,
but Soul Train was after the two of y'all,
her host and Soul Train.
She was never on Soul Train.
She was never on.
She was on party machine.
Party machine.
Party machine.
Thank you.
Sorry.
Wrong show.
But to our long, but to our younger Gen Z listeners, she's all, she's the hot mom on pretty little liars.
So.
Oh.
Oh.
That's what everyone knows her as like, yes.
The hot mom on pretty little.
We, so yeah.
We worked on, we worked on the album and really got, you know, got the, got to really close.
So she's, she's a good lady.
She's a good one.
moment. We have our son. We have Christopher.
It's our son, you know, and it's amazing. We just had lunch
about two weeks or so ago. She and I, Christopher,
her other daughter and stuff. It's like, it's good. It's very cool.
It's very cool. That's what's up, man. She's going to hear your first response and be like,
this fool. We just had lunch. Right.
No, wait, I got to say, though, damn.
Wait, because I know we got to end this episode eventually.
Sometime.
However, I will, I got us, what is, okay, this is always what I always wanted to know.
When an artist does their signature, like, when they do the token gospel song on their record,
i.e. Mono Ritchie, Jesus's love, that sort of thing.
What is, are you at a place in your life what is sort of like, because we didn't even get into
the personal
comes and goings
and the life
and the turmoil
and whatever
like we're just
on the creative
and the things
but at that point
the fact
the fact that say amen
became such a signature song
for you
like where were you
in your life
that that song
made
made its appearance
and the way that you delivered
it like we really believed it
so were you at a transitional
phase in your life
where that song
came right in time. Okay. So before I left the group, before I left Salamar, at the time, like two or three
years, two or three years before, I left Salamar. I always had the situation I wanted to do a
solo album. So I remember praying. Seriously, I prayed prayer. I said, Lord, when I'm by myself,
when I'm solo, when I'm responsible for what I say, I said, I promise that I will honor you on
every solo project that I do, you know.
And I have, say amen was the first, was on the I Commit to Love album,
was the first solo album and then on and on.
But when I finally rolled my contract out, I had Elektra, you know,
if you know the term, the lecture had first rights or refusal on everything that came
off of Solar, right?
So I had to give them, I had to go through them before I could go in.
anywhere else, you know, as far as my solo situation was concerned.
So, you know, at the time, the lecture was like cold as ice.
They didn't, they had, all they had over there were the eagles and, and that whole thing.
And so, like, I told my attorney, I said, okay, so they have to have first rights of refusal.
In other words, they have to, you know, decline the deal that we bring to them, you know, you know,
you know what I'm saying?
So I said, if that's the case, why don't we just make this deal so ridiculous that
they're going to decline it?
You did?
So we put all kind of stuff in there.
Bumps here, you know, the money was like unheard of for a first time solo hours.
Even though I had the success with Shalimar, it was crazy.
And we took it to him, Bob Krasnow, who was head of the company.
Yeah, we know Bob.
Bob says, he calls your bluff.
He says, okay, what else you know?
Wow.
You know, so, so like, you know, okay, they accepted it.
So it was a great deal monetarily.
And the company was a great turnout to be a great company,
but it was almost like I just describe solar,
electric like a 12-cylinder car and you're only running on six-cylinder.
you know what I'm saying and like because they did their job they did their situation as far as the
urban R&B situation is concerned but the pop department over there never came to the party so you know
it was like it was the whole thing but getting back to when when I when I first went to the thing
I had the new record company and I had a new management company so this was in 1985 when I first left
the group and so I had a meeting with
with a new record company.
I had a meet with A&R Cat, new record company,
had a meeting and with the new management company
that I had hired.
And I went in, I was excited about doing my first solo project,
took everybody's hand.
And I sat down and I said, first of all,
before we get started in this meeting,
I said, I want to say, I want to do a song to the Lord
on this album.
It was like, that's how you started the meeting?
That's how I started the meeting.
And so I want to do a song to the Lord on this album.
And it's like, you can hear crickets in there.
This is 85.
I don't know when Jesus' love came out, but this.
That was 80, but again, it was a rare move.
Like, you actually opened the door.
You normalized it.
When you did it, then everyone started doing it.
Or real, for real.
But it was it.
But at the time, it was like, you know, I'm talking about putting, you know,
Denise would do a gospel album.
Right.
Then she'd go, she'd come back and do an R&B album.
I was talking about combining, putting that on there.
You know what I'm saying?
And so, like, you know, this one cat starts talking, well, you know, Howard, you know,
we might get into, we want to take your career in the sex symbol direction.
And might not be conducive to religious overtones and this and then, dan, this.
And then my management's company, the cat from my management, he started talking because I hadn't even
talked to him about this yet, right?
And so I'm sitting again.
I sat back and I listened.
I listened to what they were saying.
And all the time in my head, I'm saying,
okay, Lord, you know, what am I supposed to do here?
You know what I'm saying?
And so when they got done talking, I said, you know what?
I hear you and I understand you and I can dig where you're coming from.
I said, but maybe because in my mind too, man,
is that these people got to promote my record.
I don't want to get anybody, you know,
You want to give them something that they're enthusiastic about as well.
Yeah, sour about promoting the record and stuff.
But I had to stand, you know, I had to stand for what I had promised.
And when I said, I said, look, I said, I understand it.
I hear where you're coming from.
There's 1985.
I said, but let me just let me, let me go back and let me rephrase what I said.
I said, let me say that I'm going to do a song.
I ain't asking, motherfucker.
I ain't asking.
Like, I'm going to do a song to the Lord on this album.
My promise to him sits up here as far as, like, my priorities.
And if it's like, you know, and I'm going to do a song to the Lord on this album.
So I said, we can talk about everything else now.
So we talk about everything else.
And then, then, you know, we went away once Monty Seward, who was co.
writer on that on that on say men when we put it when we put it together man it was like it was good
but I will say that it was 1985 around that time or so and then I I was dating as a girl in
Miami lit was her family was in Miami so I remember we were going to spend
Thanksgiving there with her family she had moved to LA and we were going to spend
Thanksgiving. So I was in the studio, you know, the whole day and she had already flown down there
and I was going to get on a red eye and meet her there, right? So I get on a plane and Monty and I
had come up with the track, like a real rough track for say amen. And I knew that's what I wanted
to be, you know, the inspirational song. So I jump on a red eye going to Miami and I get on the plane.
I put my headphones on.
I put the cassette in.
It was on the cassette, you know.
And so I was listening to about three or four songs
that I still had to write melodies and lyrics to.
And at the end of that cassette was like a real rough track of say amen.
I mean, one of the, and it didn't even go all the way through.
It just, you know, it was just a real rough track of say amen.
And when it came on, all these lyrics started coming to me.
And it's like, you know, it's time to say good.
goodbye for now, you know. We'll have our second time around. Second time around. You know,
we'll have our second time around. But before we go, there's something I got to say. Everything's
not what it seems. There's a stronger force behind the scene. He's in our lives every day.
He's right there when we call. And him is where my stress. And I'm writing and writing. And there's
this lady sitting next to me. And then when I got to the second, I got the second verse where it
says, talks about cattle on a thousand hills. My mom used to always tell me when I was
kid. She says, you're the king's kid. You're the king's kid. You know, and the king, and he had,
you know, you're God's child. This is what she was saying. And there's, and she would always tell him,
there's golden cattle on a thousand hills. And that's yours. You know, that's yours, because you're,
you're the king's kid. That's ours. You know, we're children of the God's God. And so when I started
right now, I said, you know, I know there's someone who don't believe sometimes it's very hard to see we
live with those lives lives every day. Some things don't go away.
But to be without is not his will.
There's cattle on a thousand hills.
Man, it hit me.
I'm like, right, and it's cattle on a thousand hills.
It hit me there.
Tears started coming down.
And this lady sitting next to me like,
what the hell is happening with this?
She's like looking over here.
You know, can I move my seat or something like that?
By time in touch down at Miami International.
national lyrically the song was totally done.
That's crazy because you know most people when they hear that song,
no matter how many times they hear that song,
they feel the same way you felt when you wrote it.
Like, it's one of those songs where it just gets you,
no matter where you are like, shit.
Yeah, it's an ultimate praise song.
But how did they go to a single?
They didn't even want the gospel song,
and then it became a single.
Well, they were playing the album cut on Black Radio.
Right, but they had to make so did Black Radio
made it a single?
Yeah, they played it.
I mean, you know, Donnie Simpson ended it.
Yes, he did, Thomas. Yes, he did that.
Yes, he did.
A whole bunch of black radio shows across the country, you know, ended it with it.
And then I did it at one of Black, Black Radio exclusive, B.R.E.
Remember, like, Sid Miller's things.
I closed up the, closed up the whole convention with that song.
Oh, Lord.
I remember from, like, you did it also on the Robert T.
and partners and crime.
Robert Townsend.
That's right.
Yeah.
When Robert got in touch with me, that's because I'm still my boy.
We're really good friends still now.
That's what's up, man.
But like when he approached me about it, he called and called and asked for a meeting.
So I went over to where he was doing some stuff and went into the office and stuff.
And he says, man, you know, I'm getting ready to do my, my partners of crime, my, you know, HBO special.
And he said, I would love for you to do, you know, say amen.
I said, oh, man, that's what's up.
Okay, that's gold.
I love to do.
I'll be honored.
And then he says, I want to sing it with you.
Uh-oh.
I got about that font.
Like, and in my mind, you know, do you sing?
I mean, I don't know if you're singing that.
And I guess, because I don't, you know, my face kind of tells all kind of stuff when I'm thinking sometimes, unfortunately.
But like, you know, you know, I'm thinking.
You know, he looked at me and he said,
Hey, man, you know, this is my first special.
This is my first HBO special.
And I couldn't find, I couldn't think of any other way
to thank God, you know, for this first special.
Wow.
And it came off so cool.
Nah, it was dope.
Yeah.
And what was interesting about that was that at the time
when the Partners in Crime special aired,
I was, my second solo album had already.
been released. I commit to love was in the bend.
Oh, Forever and Never was out?
Forever. Never. Yeah, forever and never.
I've already been released. But once that, once partners in crime aired across the country,
you know, record stores had to reorder I commit to love because everybody, you know,
flooded in, you know, looking for say amen, you know.
I was going to say, was this the, this is pre-Silvia Rone's. This is like the Bob
Maryland era of Elektra?
Right about.
Bob Merlin, I always called Bob Melon.
Merlin, was he there at the time?
Or is it, no, well, I know Brock Presno was ahead,
but Merlin Bob wasn't there at the time, was he?
Or did he come in like 88, 89?
I don't remember him, but.
That I didn't know.
So, I mean, but afterwards, did they, of course,
acknowledge that, okay, you was on point with this?
And, you know, because Bob and I had created a routine of like,
whenever I would start, whenever I get ready to start an album, I would call it.
If I was in New York, I'd go have a meeting with him.
If I was here and he was in New York, we talk on the phone and just talk about the direction,
talk about what I want to do, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And at the end of every, after say, man, at the end of every conversation, Bob said,
well, I know you're going to do another one of those God songs, right?
about them and do another guy's song.
It's going to be cool.
Because, of course, after the success and the popularity
is say, man, of course, it was everybody's idea then.
You know, I'm saying, oh, wait, wait.
They took credit for it.
Yep, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So.
Wait, before we wrap, I got one,
or unless you had something fine.
I just wanted to say, man, show me.
Yes, thank you.
Fontaine.
I don't know, I don't know if you know, like, how popular.
That is a, me and my wife.
if we dance, we do Chicago Step.
That is a very popular stepping song, you know what I mean?
But that's just, I just a gorgeous song, man,
beautiful performance, everything.
What was the inspiration for that and what was it like recording it?
John Nettlesby and Terry Coffey, you know,
it was his writing partner, Terry Coffay.
It was actually coffee.
He spelled it C-O-F.
But he wanted to co-face, so that's cool.
That's all good, you know.
So they wrote this track.
I forget how we got out.
I forget how we connected.
But they got this track to me, man.
And like, and when I heard this track,
I just moved into this new crib.
And I didn't have any recording equipment up or anything.
So I'm like, I got this track.
And I was like, man, this track is amazing.
It's an amazing, amazing track.
And so I didn't have any recording equipment set up.
So I had, but I had two boom
boxes that record it. You did? So I laid down in the middle of my floor and up in my,
up in my bedroom and I had like probably a bottle of red wine. You know,
okay. And I put one box on one side, one box on this. I put cassettes in and I started bouncing
things, you know, from that. And I started coming up with, you know, different scenarios,
different things. I wanted to think about things that are romantic stuff that I wanted to
do with my woman, for my woman, and all that.
And then that hook came.
And that hook was just so undeniable, man.
It was just, it was, you know, it was like,
you know, like you do some songs in it,
and it's like fighting, you're pulling teeth
to make this go here and make it fit.
And you know, phrasing life.
Man, show me was like butter.
And it just came down and it was like,
you got.
To let me know, just how to let this go.
Help me.
Darling, please show me.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like, and then the video was like crazy.
Yeah, of course it was.
I remember that video.
Yeah, of course it was, hello.
You know what time it was.
Yeah, we did.
Yeah, very much so, very much so.
I just wanted to say, if Howard He was a show must be a very religious experience
in the way that you put these songs together and the way that at least the ladies or
some of the fellas receive them live.
Like, do you see that in the crowd?
Do you see people responding in a way that's like, like most shows?
Crazy.
It's crazy.
If I had a dollar for every time a cat came up to me, man, you helped me out.
I'd be a more time.
millionaire at this time. And like I always say, you know, my thing is like, you know,
some cats don't know what to say. You know what I'm saying? So my thing is like, okay,
I'll give you what to say. You can say, listen to Howard. Listen to how. Show me. Once twice,
three times. Yes, once twice three times. You know, and, and listen to Howard, listen. And I tell them,
now I can get you to the bedroom. I can get you to the bedroom door. But you got to do. I
I ain't going in the bedroom with you, right?
I like to give your sisters all the credit.
Yeah.
And then when I do the shows, I mean, it's so, it's so beautiful because, you know, before BC, before COVID anyway, I would spend most of my time in the audience rather than on stage because I like to, I like to feel my audience.
I like to have them participate.
And it's a beautiful thing because, you know, a lot of cats, they're there with their woman and they're with a lady.
And they're pointing, come sing to her.
Come sing to her.
Yes, because he's going to get some.
Yeah, you're going to get some.
Because she ain't going home with me, right?
Love it.
All right, wait, I got to ask this one last question
because, you know, I've asked one too many soul-train questions,
but I know that you took over the theme to the show in 87 with George Duke.
What was the, well, like, what was the process, like basically,
Don just asked you guys to do it or like how did that go down?
Don asked George to do it and George asked me to do it.
You know what I'm saying?
So it wasn't a collaborative situation as far as that's concerned.
But, you know, George said, George, you know, George and I wrote a bunch of stuff, you know,
through the years and bunch of themes, songs of this and that.
And, I mean, we did a song for, he said, Howie, I want you to come write these lyrics, you know, for this,
pop artist over in Japan, right?
I forget the cat's name.
He said, but you can't get deep.
This dude is not deep.
You can't get deep.
You can't get deep. It's got to be shallow.
Girl, I love you.
You love me.
Baby, you on my mind.
I think about that all the time.
I wrote this thing.
Waiting, contemplating.
I wrote this thing called New York girl.
You know, it's like, it's like, you know,
I can't remember the lyrics, but it was the perfect time.
But now with the soul train.
board thing uh don george was taking over all the stuff as far as that's concerned and then he
asked me to come in and do uh do uh some ad lives and stuff on the uh on the so yeah so what is it
i guess in closing what is it that you've what is it that you've learned that made you a wiser
human being like it just in your your your your journey to this point that that's brought you here
to this day that still has you here.
You know, that's a deep question because, you know,
you learn so much on your way in different scenarios and different places.
I think one of the things, though, that's most important as an artist for me and as a man,
as with your integrity, as far as that's concerned, is to let your yes be yes and your no be
no, you know what I'm saying?
Understand and do and say what you're going to?
do what you're going to you know like I said in the earlier situation my word was was worth more even
before I knew that my word was worth more than than anything any piece of paper I could sign you know
your integrity will follow you through this business closer than anything else will all you can do
you can do all that you can have all the hit records you want all the you know the love people to
love but if you are a flaky person and and don't and and and deal in
in situations where your integrity is not intact, you know, intact, you know, it doesn't mean anything.
It really doesn't mean because at the end of the day, it's going to be about who this man,
what you as a man is about, what are you about?
You know, you can do all the music and people say, what do you want your music,
want people to remember about your music.
I want to remember the integrity of my music that I stayed in, I stayed in a,
I had people saying, you should put rap and you should put a rap thing,
you should do some talk about, you know, sex and all this kind of stuff.
No, that's not my lane.
You know what I'm saying?
My lane is like here and stay here and I have to, when I got in this business,
I wanted to be, I wanted to achieve longevity.
I didn't want to just come in this business, make a couple hit records,
and then go laid out on the beach, you know what I'm?
I wanted to work at it. I wanted to work, the work ethic, what it takes to keep and stay and
keep your integrity in this business. And as a man, you know, man, it's like, you know, where I,
where I've come as far as where I am now is that I can look in the mirror and say, I like that
cat. He's cool. It's all right. It's cool. You know what I'm saying? And I've had my craziness.
and all that. But hey, it's about, you know, praise God. That's, that's all I can say. Praise God.
That's all you can say, man. Well, thank you very much. Brother Hewitt. Thank you for doing our show.
It's been a pleasure. It's been my pleasure. It's been my pleasure.
Sugar Steve, are you gearing up to say?
Sick is knocked out over there a minute ago.
No, that's just the weed talking. What are you going to say, Steve?
No, I'm serious. I'm on the scissor up tonight.
So I was, you got a cold.
I never went fully unconscious, but-
Oh, that's right. You weren't.
Wait, Steve, you're sick?
Uh-oh, I told you, Steve, you're supposed to tell people that you're supposed to,
you gotta do disclaimers and stuff.
You can't just put that out there.
Just the cold.
Good thing, we're on Zoom.
Right?
No, that's it. But look, they worked together every day.
I was just with Steve, like three hours ago.
Right.
So I'm playing.
I'm playing.
I was going to say Howard, man, like some
years ago, this has been over a decade ago, I actually met you, I ran to you, it was real quick,
it was an LAX. And if I'm not mistaken, I think it was LAX, but you were just, just as you are
now, man, super cool. And I just walked up. I was like, yo, man, I'm a big fan. And, like, you were
just kind of low key. So I didn't want to blow your spot up, you know what I mean? Because I was like,
I don't want to make people notice. And then it's like 30 more people coming. So I just, well,
I was like, yo, I'm a fan brother. And you was like, oh, thank you, man. Like super cool.
And I started the tweet. I was like, you.
Yo, I just met how are you?
Then I thought I was like, I don't know what he doing out here.
So let me not.
I don't want to blow the spot up, whatever.
But I just, you know, I was super cool.
I was like going there and sneaking, you know.
Right, right.
But he was super cool.
And I just, I never forgot that, man.
And just when you were a class act, then you still are.
And I just thank you for all the music and for all your contributions, man.
For real.
Yes.
Thank you for the music.
That's all.
I always say, man, we all in this thing together.
Ain't none of us getting out of this thing alive.
You know what I'm saying?
So we might as well, might as well do this together and be as, as cordial and respectful and, you know, as possible.
So unfortunately, some of my peers, you know, use their celebrity as an excuse to be rude to people.
But, you know, it's like, especially in this business, it's like we're not athletes.
You know, sometimes athletes, they want people to hate them because they'll come to the stadium to hate them.
because they'll come to the stadium to hate them.
But in this business, if somebody hates you,
they ain't going to buy your records anymore.
Customer service, sir.
True.
Exactly.
Well, we thank you for doing our show on behalf of Cizirp, Steve,
and unpaid bill putting the kids to bed right now,
Fon Cigolo and Laia.
This is Questlove, once again, The Immortal,
Howard Hewitt, on Questleaf's The Cream,
and we will see you next to go around.
Thank you.
Yo, what's up?
This is Fonte.
Make sure you keep up with us
on Instagram at QLS
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