Gladys Knight & the Pips
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Gladys Knight & the Pips | |
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Gladys Knight & the Pips perform aboard the aircraft carrier USS Ranger on November 1, 1981. Left to right: William Guest, Edward Patten, Merald "Bubba" Knight, and Gladys Knight.
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Background information | |
Also known as | The Pips |
Origin | Atlanta, Georgia, United States |
Genre(s) | R&B/soul |
Years active | 1953–1989 |
Label(s) | Vee-Jay, Soul/Motown, Buddah, Columbia, MCA |
Former members | |
Gladys Knight William Guest Edward Patten Merald "Bubba" Knight Brenda Knight Eleanor Guest Langston George |
- "The Pips" redirects here. For the BBC pips, see Greenwich Time Signal.
Gladys Knight & the Pips were an R&B/soul musical act from Atlanta, Georgia, active from 1953 to 1989. The group was best known for their string of hit singles from 1967 to 1975, including "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" (1967) and "Midnight Train to Georgia" (1973). The longest-lived incarnation of the act featured Gladys Knight on lead vocals, with The Pips, who included her brother Merald "Bubba" Knight and their cousins Edward Patten and William Guest, as backup singers.
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[edit] History
[edit] Forming the Pips
At the age of seven in 1952, Gladys Knight won Ted Mack's Original Amateur Hour television show contest. The following year, she, her brother Bubba, sister Brenda, and their cousins William and Eleanor Guest started a singing group called "The Pips" (named after another cousin, James "Pip" Woods). The Pips began to perform and tour, eventually replacing Brenda Knight and Elenor Guest with cousins Langston George and Edward Patten in 1959.
The Pips scored their first hit in 1961 with "Every Beat of My Heart", a cover of a Hank Ballard & The Midnighters song. The group had recorded the song for a friend in Atlanta, who promptly sold the master to Vee-Jay Records and cut the group out of the record's profits. The Pips recorded a second version of "Every Beat" with Bobby Robinson as the producer, and the song became a #1 R&B and #6 pop hit. Shortly afterwards, Langston George left the group, and the remaining members continued as a quartet, now billed as Gladys Knight & the Pips. Typically, most of the act's recordings featured Knight's contralto on lead vocals and the three male members of the group, usually referred to as "The Pips" by themselves, providing characteristic background vocals.
After a second Vee-Jay hit, "Letter Full of Tears", in 1962, Knight quit the group to start a family. The Pips toured on their own for two years, until Knight returned to the act in 1964 in order to support her two children.
The group developed a reputation for exciting and polished live performances that enabled them to work even without the benefit of best-selling records. Choreographer Cholly Atkins designed "fast-stepping" dance routines that became a signature of the Pips' stage presentation.
[edit] Gladys Knight & the Pips join Motown
In spite of another hit with 1964's "Giving Up" (later covered by Donny Hathaway), Knight and the Pips did not achieve widespread success until 1966, after signing to Motown. While at Motown in 1967, Gladys Knight was the first person to suggest that Berry Gordy sign an up-and-coming act from Gary, Indiana called The Jackson 5.
The group's third Motown single was the Top 40 hit "Everybody Needs Love", released in 1967. Another 1967 single, "I Heard It Through the Grapevine", provided a career-making breakthrough. "Grapevine" became a #2 pop hit on the Billboard Hot 100 and a #1 R&B hit for six weeks. The record sold 2.5 million copies, and at the time was Motown's best-selling single ever [1]. Producer Norman Whitfield recorded four versions of the song with various artists for potential single release; Knight and the Pips' version was the only one that Motown chief Berry Gordy did not veto. In late 1968, "Grapevine" would become an even bigger hit for Marvin Gaye, whose version, recorded before Knight's but released a year afterwards at Whitfield's insistence, became a #1 pop hit for seven weeks.
Further hits for the group included "The Nitty Gritty" (1968), "Friendship Train" (1969), one of Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong's "psychedelic soul" songs, the #1 R&B "If I Were Your Woman" (1970, later covered by Stephanie Mills, Shanice and Alicia Keys), and "I Don't Want To Do Wrong" (1971). Their biggest Motown hit was 1972's #1 R&B/#2 pop hit "Neither One of Us (Wants to Be the First to Say Goodbye)", which won the 1973 Grammy Award for Best Pop Vocal Performance By A Duo, Group Or Chorus.
"Neither One of Us" also happened to be one of their last Motown hits, as Knight and the Pips departed Motown for Buddah Records in 1973. While at Motown, Knight & the Pips recorded for Soul Records, a label Motown used for acts that recorded material with more of an R&B flavor than a pop flavor. On the A&E Network television program Biography, Knight stated that she and the Pips were regarded as a second-string act, and that "Diana [Ross] & the Supremes, The Temptations, and Marvin Gaye were given all the hits, while we took the leftovers." In Knight's autobiography Between Each Line of Pain and Glory: My Life Story, she stated that Diana Ross had the group removed from being The Supremes' opening act on a 1966 tour for, according to Knight, being too good.
Many of Gladys Knight and the Pips' hits in the mid-1970s were written by country songwriter Jim Weatherly. Knight and the Pips charted with five of Weatherly's songs in 1973 and 1974: "Midnight Train to Georgia," "Neither One of Us," "Where Peaceful Waters Flow," "The Best Thing That Ever Happened to Me," and "Between Her Goodbye and My Hello." Weatherly had several hits of his own, the biggest of which was "The Need to Be" in 1974, and also wrote country hits for Ray Price, Glen Campbell and Bryan White among others.
[edit] Taking the "Midnight Train" to Buddah Records
Recording for Buddah in the mid 1970s, the group hit its popular and critical peak with #1 R&B hits such as "I've Got to Use My Imagination", and "Best Thing That Ever Happened To Me". The most notable hit of their career was their only #1 pop hit, "Midnight Train to Georgia", which won the Grammy for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals of 1973. The song eventually received the Grammy Hall Of Fame Award, which was established by the Recording Academy's National Trustees to honor recordings of lasting qualitative or historical significance.
Gladys Knight & the Pips' debut LP on Buddah, Imagination, was certified as a gold record. This began a string of LPs that were awarded gold status: Claudine (1974), I Feel a Song (1974) and 2nd Anniversary (1975). Other hits for Buddah included "Part-Time Love", the R&B #1 "I Feel a Song (In My Heart)," "Love Finds Its Own Way" (later sampled by Eels on their 1997 hit Susan's House) and, culled from a live recording, "The Way We Were/Try to Remember" (later sampled by the Wu Tang Clan for their 1993 single "Can It All Be So Simple").
Curtis Mayfield served as producer in 1974 when Knight and the Pips recorded the soundtrack to the motion picture Claudine, resulting in a #5 hit in the film's theme song, "On and On". The following year, the group got their own hour-long musical variety television program, The Gladys Knight & the Pips Show, which ran for four episodes on NBC as a summer-season replacement.
[edit] Later years
Knight and the Pips continued to have R&B hits until the late 1980s. From 1978 to 1980, Knight and the Pips were forced to record separately due to legal problems with Buddah. Knight released two solo albums and the Pips released two albums of their own.
In 1980, the Pips signed to Columbia Records, for which Knight had recorded her second solo album. Teaming up with songwriting husband/wife duo Nickolas Ashford and Valerie Simpson, Knight & The Pips released the album About Love in 1980, which featured "Landlord" and "Taste Of Bitter Love". Ashford & Simpson continued with Knight and the Pips for the 1981 follow-up, Touch, featuring "I Will Fight" and a cover of "I Will Survive".
Also in 1981, the group provided prominent backing vocals for Kenny Rogers on his remake of Bobby "Blue" Bland's "Share Your Love With Me". The Pips had appeared on Rogers' television show with the First Edition several times in the early 1970s.
After an international tour, Knight and the Pips recorded the LP Visions (1983), which resulted in a #1 R&B hit with "Save the Overtime (For Me)" and was certified gold. In 1987, Knight and the Pips released their final album, All Our Love, on MCA Records which was also certified gold. The album's single "Love Overboard" became a #1 R&B hit which won the 1988 Grammy for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals. In 1988 the band also won a Soul Train Music Award for Career Achievement.
Gladys Knight & the Pips embarked on their final tour in 1988 and disbanded upon its conclusion, as Gladys Knight decided she wanted to pursue a solo career. The Pips retired, while Gladys Knight began scoring hits of her own with singles such as "Men" (1991) and "I Don't Want to Know" (1994).
The group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996, the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2001 and received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Rhythm & Blues Foundation in 1998. Ms. Knight, now a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, continues to tour and record occasionally, and leads the Saints Unified Voices choir. Edward Patten of the Pips died in February 2005, of complications from his long bout with diabetes.
Gladys Knight & the Pips are ranked as the ninth most successful act in The Billboard Top 40 Book of R&B and Hip-Hop Hits (2005). They were also ranked #91 on VH1's Top 100 Artists of Rock n' Roll. In June 2006, Gladys Knight & the Pips were inducted into the Apollo Theater's Hall Of Fame in New York City.
In 2007, The Pips appeared in a commercial for the auto insurance company Geico. As Edward Patten had died two years prior, one of Gladys Knight's current backing singers, Neil Taffe, accompanied the remaining pips.[2]
[edit] Members
- Gladys Knight (1953–1962; 1964–1989)
- Merald "Bubba" Knight (1953–1989)
- William Guest (1953–1989)
- Brenda Knight (1953–1959)
- Eleanor Guest (1953–1959)
- Edward Patten (1959–1989)
- Langston George (1959–1962)
[edit] Discography
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"I Heard It Through the Grapevine" Gladys Knight & the Pips' version of the song, from their 1967 album Everybody Needs Love. - Problems playing the files? See media help.
[edit] Top Forty U.S. and UK Pop Hit Singles
- 1961: "Every Beat Of My Heart" (credited as The Pips, U.S. #6)
- 1962: "Letter Full Of Tears" (U.S. #19)
- 1964: "Giving Up" (U.S. #38)
- 1967: "Everybody Needs Love" (U.S. #39)
- 1967: "Take Me In Your Arms and Love Me" (UK #13)
- 1967: "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" (U.S. #2)
- 1968: "The End of Our Road" (U.S. #15)
- 1968: "It Should Have Been Me" (U.S. #40)
- 1969: "Friendship Train" (U.S. #17)
- 1969: "The Nitty Gritty" (U.S. #19)
- 1970: "You Need Love Like I Do (Don't You?) (U.S. #25)
- 1970: "If I Were Your Woman" (U.S. #9)
- 1971: "I Don't Want to Do Wrong" (U.S. #17)
- 1972: "Make Me The Woman That You Go Home To" (U.S. #27)
- 1972: "Help Me Make It Through the Night" (U.S. #33, UK #11)
- 1973: "Neither One of Us (Wants to Be the First to Say Goodbye)" (U.S. #2)
- 1973: "Daddy Could Swear, I Declare" (U.S. #19)
- 1973: "Where Peaceful Waters Flow" (U.S. #28)
- 1973: "Midnight Train to Georgia" (U.S. #1, UK #10)
- 1973: "I've Got to Use My Imagination" (U.S. #4)
- 1974: "Best Thing That Ever Happened to Me" (U.S. #3, UK #7)
- 1974: "On and On" (from Claudine, U.S. #5)
- 1974: "I Feel a Song (In My Heart)" (U.S. #21)
- 1974: "Don't Burn Down the Bridge" (U.S. #21)
- 1975: "The Way We Were/Try To Remember" (U.S. #11, UK #4)
- 1975: "Part Time Love" (U.S. #22)
- 1976: "So Sad the Song" (U.S. #47, UK #20)
- 1977: "Baby Don't Change Your Mind" (U.S. #52, UK #4)
- 1987: "Love Overboard" (U.S. #13)
[edit] Top Forty albums
- 1971 : If I Were Your Woman (U.S. #35)
- 1973 : Neither One Of Us (U.S. #9)
- 1973 : Imagination (U.S. #9)
- 1974 : Claudine Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (U.S. #35)
- 1974 : I Feel a Song (U.S. #17)
- 1975 : 2nd Anniversary (U.S. #24)
- 1976 : The Best of Gladys Knight & the Pips (U.S. #36)
- 1983 : Visions (Columbia Records) (U.S. #34)
- 1987 : All Our Love (MCA Records) (U.S. #39)
[edit] Awards and achievements
- Grammy Awards
- 1973: R&B Best R&B Vocal Performance By A Duo, Group Or Chorus - "Midnight Train to Georgia"
- 1973: Best Pop Vocal Performance By A Duo, Group Or Chorus - "Neither One Of Us (Wants To Be The First To Say Goodbye)"
- 1988: Best R&B Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal - "Love Overboard"
- American Music Awards
- 1975 Favorite Pop/Rock Band, Duo or Group.
- 1975 Favorite Soul/R&B Band, Duo or Group.
- Favorite Soul/R&B Single - "Midnight Train To Georgia"
- Favorite Soul/R&B Album - Imagination.
- 1976 Favorite Soul/R&B Band, Duo or Group.
- 1984 Favorite Soul/R&B Band, Duo or Group.
- 1989 Favorite Soul/R&B Band, Duo or Group.
- Other awards
- 1988 Gladys Knight & the Pips received the 2nd Annual Soul Train Heritage Award (Later Renamed To Quincy Jones Award for Career Achievement).
- 1998 Gladys Knight & the Pips received Lifetime Achievement Award from the Rhythm And Blues Foundation.[3]
- 2001 Gladys Knight & the Pips inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame.
- 2006 Gladys Knight & the Pips inducted into the Apollo Theater's Hall of Fame in New York.
[edit] Notes
- ^ George, Nelson (1985, rev. 2003). Where Did Our Love Go: The Rise and Fall of the Motown. London: Omnibus Press. ISBN 0-7119-9511-7.
- ^ Star-Gazette, Dec 4 2007
- ^ Rhythm and Blues Foundation Pioneer Award Honorees.