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The Gap Band

 
Artist: The Gap Band
  • Formed: 1967, Tulsa, OK
  • Genres: Rhythm & Blues
  • Representative Albums: "Ultimate Collection," "Gap Gold: The Best of the Gap Band," "Gap Band IV"
  • Representative Songs: "You Dropped a Bomb on Me," "Outstanding," "Burn Rubber (Why You Wanna Hu"

Biography

The first major hit for the Gap Band was a snazzy juke toon called "Shake." Just prior to the completion of their first album, Charlie Wilson cited the song for his brothers, thinking they might ridicule the lyric. His brothers loved it though, and the song was a smash number four single on the R&B charts, elevating the group to national status.

Born and raised in Tulsa, OK, the Wilson brothers began singing and playing in their father's Pentecostal church, and it was also mandatory they practice their music lessons at home as well. They learned various instruments which primarily included the piano. As much as they despised the lessons at the time, it proved to be a value tool for all three.

With Ronnie being the oldest, he established his own band by the age of 14. Charlie, a few years younger, joined a rival band a couple of years later. One night the two bands were performing across the street from one another. Ronnie stopped by to check out Charlie grooving on the organ. While there, Ronnie asked Charlie to join his band for 50 dollars over what he was making. Though Charlie's bandmates doubled his offer, he joined his brother's band, as Ronnie gave him no choice.

At a gig not too long after the two had joined forces, the group's bass player quit and Ronnie and Charlie summoned their younger brother Robert, barely 14, to the group to play bass. For a short while, the band performed without a name. Finally they began going by the name the Greenwood, Archer and Pine Streets Band. As advertising such a name on posters became too lengthy, the group shortened the name to the G.A.P. Street Band. Due to a typographical error, the group was advertised as Gap Band and it stuck.

They performed at various venues around the Tulsa area, including country & western joints, tennis clubs, rock clubs, and wherever else called on their services. However, by the middle of the 1970s, Charlie became interested in Los Angeles and left Tulsa to explore his possibilities. A short time later, Charlie convinced his brothers to join him. The group floundered about L.A., hitting and missing on record deals, gigs, and the like. Still maintaining their interest, the group met entertainment businessman Lonnie Simmons through their friend, singer/musician D.J. Rogers. Simmons owned a nightclub and a recording studio at the time and signed the group to his company. (He would later start up a record label.)

The Top Five single "Shake" followed in 1979, along with "Steppin' Out" (number ten) and "I Don't Believe You Want to Get Up and Dance (Oops, Up Side Your Head)" (number four) in 1980. The latter was inspired at a concert in Pittsburgh where some kids were chanting the groove and the Gap Band picked up on it. In December of 1980, the trio dropped its first number one single with "Burn Rubber (Why You Wanna Hurt Me)" and followed it with the Top Five ballad "Yearning for Your Love" (1981).

The group went on to score three more number one songs ("Early in the Morning" and "Outstanding" in 1982 and "All of My Love" in 1989), three more number two songs ("You Dropped a Bomb on Me" in 1982, "Beep a Freak" in 1984, and "Going in Circles" in 1986) and a horde of Top Ten hits. They also did the soundtracks for Leon Isaac Kennedy's Penitentiary III and Keena Ivory Waynans' I'm Gonna Get You Sucker. The group was given only 24 hours notice to complete the title song.

In 1984 Ronnie became a born-again Christian and started pastoring. He joined Melba Moore and David Peaston in the touring play Mama, I'm Sorry. Charlie has been one of most sought-after vocalists in the music industry. He has worked with Quincy Jones, Ray Charles, Eurythmics, Snoop Dogg, and scores of others. The Gap Band has recorded for various labels, including Mercury and Capitol Records. The group has remained together, enduring the good with the bad. They are still actively recording and touring the U.S. and abroad. ~ Craig Lytle, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: The Gap Band
Top
The Gap Band
Origin Tulsa, Oklahoma, U.S.
Genres R&B, funk, soul,Disco Music
Years active 1967 - present
Website www.gapband.com
Members
Charlie Wilson
Ronnie Wilson
Robert Wilson

The Gap Band is an American funk band who rose to fame during the 1970s and 1980s with their heavily-charged dance anthems and their sentimental and ethereal love songs. Comprising brothers Charlie, Ronnie and Robert Wilson, the band first formed as the Greenwood, Archer and Pine Street Band in 1967 in their hometown of Tulsa, Oklahoma. The group shortened its name to The Gap Band in 1979.

Contents

History

Early years

Growing up with a Pentecostal minister father, the Wilson brothers formed the Greenwood, Archer, and Pine Street Band in 1967, with Tuck Andress (later of Tuck and Patti). The name was chosen to honor the tragic but affirming memory of the streets (Greenwood Ave., Archer St., Pine St.) that formed the African American business district of Tulsa, Oklahoma also called Black Wall Street.[1] The Greenwood district was the site of one of the most violent racially motivated attacks in United States history. The complete destruction of the community was the result of the Tulsa Race Riot.

At the time, the group had up to twelve musicians, including drummer Ronnie Smith. Condensing to the three brothers and with producer Lonnie Simmons at the helm, the group began to find success in 1978 with songs such as "I'm in Love" and "Shake", the latter becoming a Top 10 R&B hit.

Success

By 1979, the group had changed its name to The Gap Band, and found success with the groundbreaking single "I Don't Believe You Wanna Get Up and Dance (Oops!)". But it was in the 1980s that the group found their biggest success, with songs like "Burn Rubber On Me (Why You Wanna Hurt Me)", "Humpin' ", "Yearning For Your Love", "Outstanding", "You Dropped a Bomb on Me", "I Found My Baby", "Early In the Morning", and "Party Train" further establishing the group as icons. The group found their greatest success in the UK when their 1987 single "Big Fun" reached #4 in the UK chart ("Oops Upside Your Head" had also reached #6 there in 1980).

Four of the band's albums, The Gap Band II, The Gap Band III, Gap Band IV, and Gap Band V - Jammin, achieved platinum selling status, and four of their singles ("All Of My Love", "Outstanding", "Burn Rubber On Me (Why You Wanna Hurt Me)", and "Early in the Morning") reached the #1 spot on the Billboard R&B charts. Raymond Calhoun (writer "Outstanding"), Oliver Scott (co-writer "Yearning For Your Love), and arranger/producer Malvin Dino Vice (co-writer "Boys Are Back in Town"), were members of the backing band and major contributors to the Gap Band's successful recordings.

Their success dwindled at the end of 1984, although they have continued to record albums and are constantly on tour. Brother Charlie ventured into a solo career during a break from the group in the mid-1980s, being featured on the 1985 hit with funk group Zapp titled "Computer Love". Wilson's powerful vocals would be credited in part for establishing the careers of Guy's Aaron Hall, Keith Sweat, and R. Kelly. The band reunited in 1996, and issued The Gap Band: Live and Well, a live greatest hits album.

Ever since the 1990s, the Gap Band's most famous hits have been sampled and covered by the likes of Nas, Snoop Dogg, Warren G., Jermaine Dupri, Da Brat, Notorious B.I.G., II D Extreme, Blackstreet, Shaquille O'Neal, Mia X, and Mary J. Blige. "Outstanding" was even sampled for a famous 1990s commercial for malt liquor.Among the musicians they have inspired are R. Kelly, Keith Sweat, Ruff Endz, Guy, Blackstreet, II D Extreme, Mint Condition, Jagged Edge, D'Extra Wiley, and Aaron Hall. Recently, "You Dropped a Bomb on Me" was featured in the hit videogame Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, playing on funk radio station Bounce FM.

In mid-2005, Charlie released his third solo album, Charlie, Last Name Wilson, which was produced by R. Kelly.

On August 8, 2006, Hip-O Records released Gold, a 2-CD compilation from the Gap Band. [2].

Dale & Holley usage

Since joining the WEEI program in 2005, Michael Holley has made a habit of using clips of several Gap Band songs for different events. He and co-host Dale Arnold use the beginning of "You Dropped a Bomb On Me" when blowing up poor or disruptive callers. They use the chorus from the song "Outstanding" ("giving someone an Outstanding") when they have made a good point or done something right. And on occasion they will use a clip from "Oops, Upside Your Head" when a caller or member of the crew suggests something unusual or something that would prompt someone to "go upside their head."

Modern Usage

The song Party Train is used today by slot machine manufacturer WMS Industries in their Monopoly Jackpot Train slot machine.

Discography

Albums

  • 1974 – Magician's Holiday – Shelter
  • 1974 - Momma's Boys - Shelter
  • 1976 - The Gap Band - Tattoo
  • 1979 – The Gap BandMercury
  • 1979 – The Gap Band II – Mercury
  • 1980 – The Gap Band III – Mercury
  • 1982 – Gap Band IV – Total Experience (Reissued on CD by Mercury)
  • 1983 – Gap Band V: Jammin' – Total Experience (Reissued on CD by Mercury)
  • 1983 - Strike a Groove - Passport (consists of remixes of tracks from the group's early albums)
  • 1984 – Gap Band VI – Total Experience
  • 1985 – Gap Band VII – Total Experience
  • 1986 – Gap Band 8 – Total Experience
  • 1987 – Straight from the Heart – Total Experience
  • 1989 – Round TripCapitol
  • 1994 – Humpin'PolyGram
  • 1994 – TestimonyRhino
  • 1995 – Ain't Nothing But a Party – Raging Bull
  • 1996 – Live & Well – Intersound
  • 1999 – Y2K: Funkin' Till 2000 Comz – Crash
  • 2001 - Love At Your Fingatips (Reissue of Ain't Nothing But A Party with new remixes)
  • 2001 - Greatest Hits Collection

Singles

  • 1979 - "Shake" US #101, US R&B #4
  • 1979 - "Open Up Your Mind (Wide)" US R&B #13
  • 1980 - "Oops Upside Your Head" UK #6, Netherlands #7, US #102, US R&B #4
  • 1980 - "Party Lights" UK #30, US R&B #36
  • 1980 - "Steppin' (Out)" US #103, US R&B #10
  • 1980 – "Burn Rubber on Me (Why You Wanna Hurt Me)" UK #22, Netherlands #23, US #46, US R&B #1
  • 1981 - "Humpin' UK" #36, US R&B #60
  • 1981 - "Yearning for Your Love" UK #47, US #60, US R&B #5
  • 1982 - "Early in the Morning" UK #55, US #24, US R&B #1
  • 1982 – "You Dropped a Bomb on Me" US #31, US R&B #2
  • 1983 – "Outstanding" UK #68, US #51, US R&B #1
  • 1983 - "Party Train" US #101, US R&B #3
  • 1983 - "Jam the Motha" US R&B #16
  • 1983 - "I'm Ready If You're Ready" UK #87
  • 1984 - "Someday" UK #17
  • 1984 - "Jammin' in America" UK #64
  • 1984 - "Beep a Freak" US R&B #2
  • 1985 - "I Found My Baby" US R&B #8
  • 1985 - "Disrespect" US R&B #18
  • 1985 - "Desire" US R&B #46
  • 1986 - "Automatic Brain" US R&B #78
  • 1986 - "Going in Circles" US R&B #2
  • 1986 - "Big Fun" UK #4, US R&B #8
  • 1987 - "How Music Came About" UK #61
  • 1987 - "Oops Upside Your Head '87" UK #20
  • 1987 - "Sweeter Than Candy" US R&B #40
  • 1987 - "Zibble Zibble (Get The Money)" US R&B #15
  • 1988 - "I'm Gonna Git You Sucka" UK #63, US R&B #14
  • 1988 - "Straight from the Heart" US R&B #36
  • 1989 - "All of My Love" UK #88, US R&B #1
  • 1990 - "Addicted to Your Love" US R&B #8
  • 1990 - "We Can Make It Alright" US R&B #18
  • 1995 - "First Lover" US R&B #59
  • 1995 - "Got It Goin' On" US R&B #75
  • 2004 - "Oops Upside Your Head" (with DJ Casper) UK #16

[3]

Sources

References

  1. ^ A post by blogger Greg Saunders
  2. ^ Profile of Gold at Allmusic
  3. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 221. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 

 
 

 

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