Be Thankful for What You Got (song)

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"Be Thankful for What You Got" is a song written and first performed by William DeVaughn.

DeVaughn wrote "Be Thankful for What You Got" in 1972, and paid $900 for its recording at the Sigma studio in Philadelphia. Remarkably, the session featured the MFSB group — Norman Harris (guitar), Earl Young (drums), Ron Baker (bass), and Vince Montana (vibes) — and was produced by Allan Felder.[1] The owner of Sigma, Frank Fioravanti, was impressed, and secured its release on the Roxbury Records record label.

The record sold nearly two million copies on its release in spring 1974, reaching #1 on the U.S. R&B charts and #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, selling a million copies.[2] With a sound and content influenced by Curtis Mayfield, its simple and encouraging lyrics hit home, to the extent that it became featured on gospel radio stations:

Though you may not drive a great big Cadillac
Diamond in the back, sunroof top
Diggin' the scene with a gangsta lean
Gangsta whitewalls, TV antennas in the back
You may not have a car at all
But remember brothers and sisters
You can still stand tall
Just be thankful for what you got.

DeVaughn's second album Figures Can't Calculate (TEC, 1980) included a remake.

The song was covered in 1991 by the British electronica band Massive Attack on their album Blue Lines and by Yo La Tengo on its 1997 "Little Honda" EP.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Sigma studio and some other information: Nathan. Other sources say "Omega".
  2. ^ Chart positions and sales figure: Nathan.

[edit] References

  • Nathan, David. Notes for William DeVaughn: Be Thankful for What You Got: A Golden Classics Edition. Collectables [sic] CD COL-5271. Collectables [sic] Record Corp., 1994.
Preceded by
"I'm in Love" by Aretha Franklin
Billboard Hot Soul Singles number one single
June 1, 1974
Succeeded by
"Hollywood Swinging" by Kool & the Gang