I may have asked this before but does anyone know who the ladies are that sing the backgrounds on Tammi's Oh What A Good Man He Is? I seem to recall something being said about the Waters Sisters?
I may have asked this before but does anyone know who the ladies are that sing the backgrounds on Tammi's Oh What A Good Man He Is? I seem to recall something being said about the Waters Sisters?
I was listening to this one recently and loving it! I was also surprised to discover it's written and produced by Smokey Robinson.
Apart from the lyrics, I thought it didn’t really sound like a Smokey tune… not sure why, too bluesy and funky, perhaps.
Now let’s appreciate this awesome video … I wonder who made it
Love it!
According to liner notes in the "Come On And See Me" Hip-O release from 2010, the track was recorded August 1, 1967, background vocals recorded August 5 and lead vocal recorded August 16 and re-cut August 25, 1967.
No word about who the back up singers are.
The essay, written by Daphne Brooks, states:
"Later in '67 Tammi Terrell experimented with stretching her vocalizing. Her third Motown solo single, "What A Good Man He Is", written and produced by another new partnership, Smokey Robinson and Al Cleveland, rode the wave of the burgeoning soul movement led by the likes of a newly reinvigorated Arethe Franklin, fresh from her turbulent, gospel-inspired, recording sessions at the Muscle Shoals recording studio in Alabama. Its release, however, came just before a lurking tragedy struck."
Last edited by WaitingWatchingLookingForAChance; 02-07-2022 at 04:51 AM.
No worries WW!!! All of your videos are amazing, but this one is really very entirely awesome!
Also, I think you’re right about it being The Waters Sisters. It’s definitely not The Andantes, and I think the Waters would have been around at this time…?
Could it be the Blackberries?
I agree that the song doesn't sound like it was written by Smokey, or that he produced it. It is much too bluesy and funky, and it doesn't have the usual poetic feel of most of Smokey's songs. I would guess that the song is mostly al Cleveland's ideas, with Smokey helping him polish it, just as Mickey Stevenson helped polish Ivy Hunter's songs that he generated on his own.
Bookmarks