
How Earth, Wind & Fire made its masterpiece
As a kid growing up with showbiz connections in New York City, Lenny Kravitz had already beheld some of music's most thrilling live acts by the time he was 10 or 11.
'I'd seen the Jackson 5, I'd seen James Brown, I'd seen Miles Davis,' the rock star recalls. 'I knew great performances. But this…,' he adds of a gig he caught at the Forum in Inglewood as a young newcomer to Los Angeles — 'this was something so deep and mystical and entertaining that it just blew my mind.'
The concert was by Earth, Wind & Fire, which made the Forum something of a second home in the mid-1970s not long after Kravitz's mother, actor Roxie Roker, moved her and a preteen Kravitz to L.A. so she could take a role on TV's 'The Jeffersons.' A hard-touring nine-man R&B outfit masterminded by Maurice White, EWF had wowed countless audiences in the first half of the decade, not least the estimated 250,000 who saw the band play in 1974 at the fabled California Jam festival at the Ontario Motor Speedway. The group had created hits in the studio as well, scoring its first million-selling album with 1973's 'Head to the Sky' and crashing the upper reaches of Billboard's R&B chart with singles like 'Mighty Mighty' and 'Devotion.'
Yet it wasn't until the moment Kravitz bore witness to — with the band on the road behind its sixth LP, 'That's the Way of the World' — that everything came together for Earth, Wind & Fire: the songs, the stagecraft, the charisma, the sex appeal, the message.
'I'd never seen anything like it,' Kravitz says. 'It was a full assault on all your senses. Having that record come out and then getting to see it live changed the way I perceived things.'
Released in March 1975 — 50 years ago this month — 'That's the Way of the World' marked EWF's creative and commercial high point. The triple-platinum album was the band's first to top the all-genre Billboard 200, and it spawned the group's only No. 1 single in the explosive 'Shining Star,' which knocked 'He Don't Love You (Like I Love You)' by Tony Orlando and Dawn from atop the Hot 100 that May. At the Grammy Awards the next year, 'Shining Star' received the prize for R&B vocal performance by a duo or group — a win on the band's first nomination.
'Prior to that album, we were on our way,' says singer Philip Bailey, one of three core EWF members along with percussionist Ralph Johnson and bassist Verdine White who still play in the group. (Maurice White, Verdine's older brother, died at 74 in 2016.) 'We were in the process of discovering who we were and what we had. With 'That's the Way of the World,' you're hearing Earth, Wind & Fire in our stride.'
You're also hearing an album that would help shape music for the next half-century. Originally conceived as the soundtrack for a now-forgotten B movie about the shady record industry, 'That's the Way of the World' laid crucial groundwork for the rise of Afrocentrism in R&B and for the establishment of the quiet storm radio format; its delicate string and horn arrangements look toward neo-soul while its blippy synth textures anticipate a generation of bedroom tinkerers. Emotionally, the LP strikes a tone of cautious optimism that reflected the advances of the Black Power movement and the long-awaited end of the Vietnam War. Yet to put it on today is to recognize a familiar feeling.
'It's scarred but hopeful,' Verdine White says — one reason EWF opened with the album's soothing title track when the band performed at January's FireAid concert benefiting victims of the recent L.A. wildfires.
Beyond the title cut and 'Shining Star' — listen to the latter for Al McKay and Johnny Graham's crosscutting guitars and what Kravitz calls 'one of the funkiest and most intelligent bass lines ever' — standouts from 'That's the Way of the World' include the propulsive 'Happy Feelin'' and the jazzy 'Africano,' both with Maurice White on kalimba, and 'All About Love (First Impression),' which features Larry Dunn tripping out on a Moog keyboard (and sounds like it could've been recorded yesterday).
The LP is also home to perhaps the most sumptuous of EWF's many romantic ballads: 'Reasons,' with Bailey floating around in his falsetto like a guy sky-high on desire. Is 'romantic' the right way to describe a song about two people facing the harsh light of day after a one-night stand? (In a memoir published after his death, Maurice White says that he and Bailey wrote 'Reasons' about their inability to resist the temptations of groupies he refers to as 'erection machines.') Bailey is sympathetic to folks who've used 'Reasons' for wedding dances or to celebrate anniversaries.
'Music is very seductive,' he says. 'I think it's the sensuality of the song that people buy into. But you listen to what it's saying and it's clearly about a booty call.' Indeed, Bailey looks back at 'That's the Way of the World' as an album about 'the loss of naiveté' experienced by the band's members, all of whom were in their early 20s at the time except for Maurice White, who was a decade older.
Born in Memphis, where he grew up alongside future Stax Records royals David Porter and Booker T. Jones, Maurice White broke into the music business in Chicago in the 1960s, first as a staff musician at Chess Records — that's him playing drums on Fontella Bass' 'Rescue Me' — then as a drummer in Ramsey Lewis' pop-wise jazz trio. He formed Earth, Wind & Fire in Los Angeles and made two albums for Warner Bros.; neither did much, though they eventually brought the band (after a significant change in personnel) to the attention of Clive Davis, who signed EWF to Columbia Records in 1972.
'They just floored me,' Davis tells The Times of his initial encounter with the group as it opened a show for John Sebastian of the Lovin' Spoonful. The veteran executive, who's now 92, recalls flying the band to London — 'even though it was costly,' he says — to perform for Columbia's marketing, sales and promotion staff during the label's annual convention. 'I wanted them to see how dazzling they were in person,' he says. 'How else could you translate the uniqueness?'
EWF spent its first three Columbia LPs honing its approach: the blend of funk grooves and rock riffs, the proto-self-help philosophizing, the ornate visual style that crossed psychedelia with Egyptology. 'Today it's hard to imagine a band of that size having multiple albums to develop and prove itself,' says Jason King, dean of USC's Thornton School of Music. Yet the way Verdine White sees it, the earlier work 'prepared the audience for what was coming' with 'That's the Way of the World.'
Adds Johnson: 'It was the right album at the right time with the right record company.'
To record the album, Earth, Wind & Fire returned to Colorado's remote Caribou Ranch, where the band had made 1974's 'Open Our Eyes' (and where Elton John cut the same year's 'Caribou'). 'It was like a winter wonderland,' Dunn told Red Bull Music Academy of the comfortably appointed studio in the Rocky Mountains. 'There were brass beds in the rooms and really expensive bear rugs on the floor.'
This time, though, Maurice White elevated his friend Charles Stepney, whom he'd known since the Chess days and who'd worked on 'Open Our Eyes,' to a role as his co-producer; Bailey, Johnson and Verdine White all agree that Stepney pushed the group to a new level of creativity — and a new level of diligence. Stepney was 'definitely the dad in our group,' Bailey says in the 2001 documentary 'Shining Stars'; the band's focus was so intense, the singer tells The Times, that he had trouble processing the loss of his mother, who died during the recording process.
'I didn't really take the time to grieve until about a year later,' Bailey says, 'when I was on a plane and it all came down on me.'
'That's the Way of the World' accompanied a film of the same title directed by Sig Shore (who'd produced 1972's 'Super Fly') and starring Harvey Keitel as a hit-seeking record exec. Or at least it was meant to accompany the film, which also featured EWF's members onscreen: Having sensed that the movie might not shape up as a classic, Maurice White pushed to release the album months before the film premiered in theaters; he also hid the words 'original motion picture soundtrack' in fine print on the album's back cover.
'I thought that was pretty slick,' Johnson says with a laugh.
The LP was an immediate hit, even in a field as crowded as R&B was in the mid-'70s. (As the story goes, 'Shining Star' inspired Stevie Wonder to write 'I Wish,' from 1976's 'Songs in the Key of Life.') USC's King says 'That's the Way of the World' represents a peak achievement of the 'open and assimilationist' funk that defined the era across demographic groups even as it spoke intimately to the lives of Black people navigating America in the wake of the struggle for civil rights.
'This is not a closed music,' King says. 'There's something that everybody can find their way into, and I think that's part of the reason it's lasted as long as it has.' Though Earth, Wind & Fire went on hiatus in 1984, the sound of 'Reasons' echoed through Prince's 'Adore' in 1987; Kravitz paid such loving homage to the album's title track in his 'It Ain't Over 'til It's Over,' from 1991, that someone on YouTube made a seamless mashup of the two songs.
'First time I heard his tune,' says a grinning Verdine White, 'I said, 'OK, Lenny.''
'Shining Star' has been sampled by dozens of hip-hop acts, including MC Lyte and the Roots; in 2004, the Recording Academy inducted 'That's the Way of the World' into the Grammy Hall of Fame. And this summer, you're all but certain to hear several of the album's cuts when EWF plays the July Fourth Fireworks Spectacular over three nights at the Hollywood Bowl.
Yet to hear Kravitz tell it, even those plaudits don't properly honor the group he credits with playing 'such a huge part in my education' starting with that show five decades ago at the Forum. 'They're like the Beatles to me,' he says. 'There will never be another Earth, Wind & Fire — nothing even close.'
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Some are sweet, some are funny, some are cute and some might bring tears to your dad's eyes when he reads it. Though, whichever one you choose to give him will fill his heart with 1. Shining Star I love you, Dad, and want you to know I feel your love wherever I go. Whenever I've problems, you're there to assist. The ways you have helped me would make quite a list. Your wisdom and knowledge have shown me the way. And I'm thankful for you as I live day by day. I don't tell you enough how important you are. In my universe you're a bright shining star. —Karl Fuchs2. An Ode To DadDads are the rock that holds us strong,A compass to guide us all foundation of our lives they create,A stronghold of love that's never strength and support, they stand by our side,A beacon of hope that never are the world we live in each day,And their love is what lights the way.—Melodia Ortez3. My SuperheroDad you know that I like Batman,And Superman's cool too,But I don't really need them,As long as I have you!—Meagan Tuffley4. A Daughter's First HeroA dad is his daughter's first hero, The man she admires from the whether she's small, or completely grown up, He has a warm place in her heart.—Unknown 5. No Other Dad Like youYou're one-of-a-kind, that's plain to see,Always there for me, no matter where I may be.I appreciate your love and support, it's true,Dad, I'm grateful for all that you do.—Louie Clyborne 6. What Makes A Dad?God took the strength of a mountain,The majesty of a tree,The warmth of a summer sun,The calm of a quiet patience of eternity,The depth of a family need,Then God combined these there was nothing more to add,He knew His masterpiece was complete,And so, He called it ... Dad.—UnknownRelated: 7. Silent and StrongHe never looks for praises, He's never one to just goes on quietly working, For those he loves most. —Karen K. Boyer8. My Father, a TreeFather, I know you are here,The only place you must be,Where the heavy branchesLean into bright air.—Tina Chang9. I Love YouDaddy, I love you for all that you do.I'll kiss you and hug you,'Cause you love me too. —Tava10. F.A.T.H.E.R.S."F" aithful."A" lways there."T" rustworthy."H" onoring."E" ver-loving."R" ighteous."S" upportive.—Unknown 11. GratefulI hope you know I'm grateful,And my heart is truly glad,That today and every single day,I have you as my Dad.—Holly Giffers 12. Special HeroWhen I was a baby, you would hold me in your arms.I felt the love and tenderness, keeping me safe from harm.I would look up into your eyes and all the love I would did I get so lucky that you were the dad chosen for me?There is something special about a father's it was sent to me, from someplace up love is everlasting and I just wanted you to know,That you're my special hero, I wanted to tell you so.—Christina M. Kerschen 13. 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Daddy's Little PrincessI'm daddy's princess, that's plain to see,My hero and protector, he'll always be,With a love that's pure and true,Dad, I'm grateful for all that you this special day, I want to say,I love you more and more each day.—Meagan Tuffley 20. A Boy And His DadA boy and his dad on a fishing-trip—There is a glorious fellowship!Father and son and the open sky,And the white clouds lazily drifting the laughing stream as it runs along,With the clicking reel like a martial the father teaching the youngster gay,How to land a fish in the sportsman's way.—Edgar Guest 21. In Her EyesThe depth of a father's love shows in his daughter's eyes,What's known is what's shown from sunset to sunrise.A foundation built on more than just what is spoken,It's commitments kept and promises that go emotion so immense that nothing in this world can erase,The permanent impression of love is tattooed upon her face.A relation so peculiar that only the two can understand,Yet so immaculate it's obvious that, by God, it was planned.—Michelle W. Emerson 22. One Day I'll Be BigOne day I'll be big like you, Dad,Strong and brave, and rarely sad.I'll always look up to you with pride,Dad, you're my hero and my guide.—Kip Alderidge 23. My Awesome DadMy awesome dad is the coolest guy,He makes me laugh and teaches me to try.I love spending time with him each day,My dad's the best, that's all I can say.—Brann Rafferty Related: 40 24. Welcome to FatherhoodWelcome to fatherhood, it's a brand new game,With plenty of surprises and a steep learning curve to dirty diapers to sleepless nights,You'll face it all with a brave face and lots of life has now changed, in oh so many ways,No more late-night parties or sleep-ins on lazy days,But don't fret, dear new dad, for you'll soon find,The joys of fatherhood are the best the first time they grab your finger with their tiny hand,To when they learn to walk and explore the watch in wonder and pride, as they grow each day,And realize that being a dad is really the only on this first Father's Day, we want to say,Enjoy the journey, in every possible remember that being a dad is one heck of a ride,But it's totally worth it, with a little one by your side.—Jordyn Sandleford 25. The Luckiest DadYou're the luckiest dad, that's what they say,With me as your child, each and every day.I may be a handful, a little wild and crazy,But you love me just the same, even when I'm here's to you, dad, on this special day,The luckiest dad in every possible way!—Corey Mitcherson 26. The Greatest RoleA dad is the greatest role one can makes you a star to your child on any given day. It's a title worthy of fame when you hear your little one call out your name.—Unknown 27. My Father, My FriendMy father, my friend,This to me you have always good times and bad,Your understandings I have had.—Peggy Stewart 28. Meant To Be A DadDad, oh father of mine,No matter what you do, you always amaze me every single way,From going to work to attempting to never fail me and I know you never will,Being a dad is your ultimate skill.—Unknown 29. Destined To BeFrom the first time we met, it was love at first fed me, loved me and stayed up with me through the do anything for me, I have no a dad looks easy to you, you've figured it all were always meant to meet and have the bond that we do,You were always supposed to be a dad and I was always supposed to belong to you.—Morgan Shamoun 30. Dad DNABring a dad is in your DNA,It's part of you in every single comes naturally to you in all that you do,Like counting to ten and saying 'I love you.'—MM 31. Father's Day PoemRoses are red,Violets are blue,You're my dad and I will forever cherish you.—Unknown 32. Grateful I'm glad you're my dad, You're the best role model I could have. You teach me right from wrong, And help make me strong. No matter what comes my way, I know it'll all be OK. —Unknown 33. My Father, My FatherMy father, my father made me see,He made me see how beautiful this world can really be.—Dakota Ellerton 34. 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