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Description of Philly Soul

 
Sweet, seductive and subtle, Philly Soul was the uptown R&B sound of the 1970s. Kicked off at the end of the hippie era, the musical style was defined more by the Philly-based production/songwriting duo Gamble & Huff than by city-specific artists. Gamble & Huff combined the best parts of early Motown and classic R&B vocal groups with Curtis Mayfield's Psychedelic Soul and post-What's Going On Marvin Gaye, then filled it out with their own lush studio sound. Philly Soul instrumentation brims over with funky electric bass lines, solid percussion tracks (from congas to cowbells to non-stop high-hat action), stabbing horn charts and sweeping string sections. The music works on the dance floor or in the bedroom, but many songs/albums of the genre also have an overt social or political edge. The O'Jays were the single greatest Philly Soul act, working personal, political and emotional themes into a string of great albums, including 1972's classic Back Stabbers (which contains the joyous Disco blueprint "Love Train"). Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes, featuring lead vocals by Teddy Pendergrass, were another amazing Philly Soul vocal outfit who had plenty of hits throughout the '70s. Gamble & Huff's magic also revived the careers of two of Chicago's greatest soul singers, the urbane Jerry Butler and the more gritty Lou Rawls, while Philly native (and old G&H associate) Daryl Hall took the style in a different direction with Hall & Oates. The Philly Soul sound was so popular that many other soul and pop artists started copying it, causing the sound to split rapidly into Disco, Quiet Storm and Smooth Jazz. Boz Scaggs' "Dirty Lowdown" and David Bowie's "Young Americans" exude the upscale vibe of Philly Soul, while today's Neo-Soul acts are spreading the genre's penthouse and pavement gospel to new generations.
 

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Philly Soul Key Artists

 
Billy Paul

He started singing in the
1950s, but it was 1972's "Me
and Mrs. Jones" that made
Billy Paul a star.

Harold Melvin and The Blue Notes

A quintessential Philly Soul
outfit, Harold Melvin and
The Blue Notes were
masters of the love song.
Things really picked up fo...

Jerry Butler

Soul singer Jerry Butler
earned his nickname "The
Ice Man" because of his cool
when singing heart-rending
lyrics. Butler grew up po...

Lou Rawls

A much-loved singer who
treads the line between
jazz and R&B, Lou Rawls'
elegant voice brings the
game to a whole new leve...

Teddy Pendergrass

A rugged vocalist,
Pendergrass' name is
synonymous with urban
love ballads that uncork the
wine before you even to...

The Delfonics

A legendary Philadelphia
R&B/Soul act, the Delfonics
recorded a slew of hit love
songs in the late 1960s and
early 1970s. Their many s...

The O'Jays

Philly Soul stalwarts the
O'Jays brought three-part
harmonies to hits such as
"Love Train" and "Back
Stabbers." In an age of de...

The Stylistics

The Stylistics gave us Philly
Soul standards like "You
Make Me Feel Brand New"
before sliding into easy
listening territory. The ba...

Electronics

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