Skip to content

The voices of Thom Bell

On November 5 in Brooklyn, the Spinners will be be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Known to British fans first as the Motown Spinners and then as the Detroit Spinners, in order to distinguish them from a Liverpool folk group active between 1958 and 1989 under the same name, their string of hits began with “I’ll Be Around”, “Could It Be I’m Falling in Love”, “Ghetto Child” and “One of a Kind (Love Affair)”. All four were plucked from their self-titled first album for the Atlantic label, after they had moved from Motown and came under the supervision of the producer, arranger, pianist, songwriter and genius Thom Bell. Subsequent successes included “Mighty Love”, “I’m Coming Home”, “The Rubberband Man”, “Then Came You” (with Dionne Warwick) and “They Just Can’t Stop It (The Games People Play)”.

Only one member survives from the original quintet, formed in 1954, and its Bell-produced incarnation of the 1970s. Henry Fambrough, their baritone singer, will have to stand in for the rest of them: Pervis Jackson, Billy Henderson, C. P. Spencer, Bobbie Smith, Philippé “Soul” Wynne and John Edwards are all gone, along with several others who passed through the ranks at other times (and, of course, Bell himself, who died in December 2022: obit here). There is still a group of younger men legitimately touring as the Spinners, but Fambrough, who is 85, retired earlier this year.

Several other R&B vocal groups of their era, such as the Dells and the Temptations, used more than one lead singer, occasionally within the same song. None, however, pulled it off with as much ease and elegance as the Spinners. On “Could It I’m Falling in Love” and “Mighty Love”, the smooth-toned Smith started off before Wynne took over to add a rougher, more gospel-hued and improvisatory delivery. Such combinations were still working in 1976 when Jackson’s bass introduction gave way first to Smith and Henderson and finally to Wynne on “I Must Be Living for a Broken Heart” on their sixth album, Yesterday and Today.

This sophisticated update of a 1950s doo-wop vocal strategy was typical of Bell, who made great records with the Delfonics and the Stylistics before reaching his peak with the Spinners. The early hits were characterised by an adaptation of the thudding tom-tom backbeat heard on Al Green’s Willie Mitchell-produced hits, again given an extra coat of luxury varnish. Recorded at Sigma Sound in Philadelphia, with the great studio engineer Joe Tarsia, they benefitted from the musicians who became known known as MFSB: Roland Chambers, Bobby Eli and Norman Harris on guitars, Ronnie Baker on bass guitar, Earl Young on drums, Larry Washington on percussion and Vince Montana on vibes, with Bell himself on piano.

One of his trademarks was a subtle use of syncopation and uneven meters: the clipping of a beat from a single bar here, the addition of a couple of extra beats at the end of a line, or the shuffling of stresses that could make it sound, on the choruses of “Then Came You” and “Are You Ready For Love” (written for Elton John), as though he’d turned the beat around when in fact he hadn’t. These little things both seized and satisfied the ear. And no one, not even Burt Bacharach, could integrate a concert harp or an oboe into an R&B record as smoothly as Bell.

Smoothness without blandness was his trademark, as can be heard throughout the eight albums he made with the group, now included intact on a seven-CD box compiled by Joe Marchese and the veteran British journalist David Nathan. You can hit the button on just about any track and find something nourishing (perhaps with the exception of an ill-advised big band jazz version of “Don’t Let the Green Grass Fool You” on that first album, an experiment not repeated). And occasionally you’ll find a masterpiece.

Two of them are on the second album, Mighty Love. The first, written by Charles Simmons, Joseph Jefferson and Bruce Hawes, three of Bell’s regular songwriters is “Love Don’t Love Nobody”, Wynne’s finest seven minutes on a deep-soul track I’ve written about at some length before (here). The second, penned by Bunny Sigler, James Sigler and Morris Bailey, is “He’ll Never Love You Like I Do”, one of those songs about a poor boy pressing his claim on the object of his affection: “His standard of living, his social rating / There’s nothing he can’t afford / He made you think I ain’t it / But when it’s love, I can give you more…”

It opens with an octave guitar, Wes Montgomery-style, accompanied by piano, soon doubled by a muted trumpet and cushioned by a purring bass and Don Renaldo’s gentle strings. Bobbie Smith begins the song, delivering the opening lines in a confiding croon before Wynne takes over halfway through the first verse, the two reversing the sequence in the second verse, with the joins at first barely audible (although Wynne’s ad libs give him away). And just as Motown’s Holland-Dozier-Holland had used the female chorus of the Andantes to lend an extra emotional dimension to the Four Tops’ records in the ’60s, so Bell adds the voices of Barbara Ingram, Yvette Benson, Carla Benton and Linda Creed, his frequent co-composer, to create a refined blend with those of the Spinners themselves.

Like so much of Bell’s output, this track demonstrates the power of restraint, a quality evident throughout these fine albums. Even after the advent of disco, bringing adjustments to rhythmic emphases and the occasional flicker of wah-wah guitar, and with the arrival of John Edwards to replace Wynne halfway through the making of Yesterday and Today in 1977, the combination remained, and remains, exemplary.

* The Spinners’ Ain’t No Price on Happiness: The Thom Bell Studio Recordings (1972-79) is out on 29 September on SoulMusic Records. If anyone knows who took the fine photograph of Bell at the top of this piece, I’d be very pleased to add a credit.

12 Comments Post a comment
  1. Tim Young's avatar
    Tim Young #

    As far as I know, Steve Levine still has the interview material for a unrealised Record Producers episode on Thom for Radio 2!

    September 21, 2023
    • Andy Fortune's avatar
      Andy Fortune #

      I’ve often wondered what happened to the Thom Bell episode of the Record Producers.
      It’s always a delight to read about The Spinners and Thom Bell, particularly in such a detailed piece. I grew to love “Don’t Let The Green Grass Fool You” through multiple plays of their first Atlantic album as it was much less trouble to listen than get up and move the needle.
      I will go back and listen to those tracks where there were multiple lead vocals – Phillipe Wynne was often given the credit for Bobbie Smith’s vocals.
      I must admit that I thought John Edwards was still alive, though disabled. I am sorry if this is not the case.
      The original mix of “Are You Ready For Love”, where John’s and the group’s vocals are clearly evident, is far superior to the familiar hit version on which Elton John more or less erased the Spinners’ contribution from the mix.

      September 21, 2023
  2. David Ellis's avatar
    Crel13 #

    Thank you Richard for this marvellous tribute to one of the finest of groups. I’ll Be Around is one of my absolutely favourite songs of all time.

    September 21, 2023
  3. Peter Hamshaw's avatar
    Peter Hamshaw #

    Sorry, not a comment on Thom Bell, but did you realise Richard Davis had died? I haven’t seen an obituary from UK, thanks,Peter (1947, also Nottingham)

    September 21, 2023
    • Mick Steels's avatar
      Mick Steels #

      Surprisingly no obits in The Guardian or Times yet, but RW pays due respect on Twitter

      September 21, 2023
  4. Steve Price's avatar
    Steve Price #

    Richard
    A lovely write up. However, not a mention of one of the greatest soul records ever released. Its a shame. Written and produced by a young Stevie Wonder, possibly still a teenager!
    I had the pleasure of seeing him performing the song in 1970/ 71 at the Lewisham Odeon. At the same show he sang Never Can Say Goodbye through a Vocoder, before Peter Frampton made a living out of it. Happy memories

    September 21, 2023
  5. 1dancequeendq's avatar

    When I was much younger and a die-hard Soul Girl and Funkateer, I didn’t have much time for the Detroit Spinners as I thought they were too Pop for my taste. I now appreciate them a lot more. I can’t wait for the album to be released, thank you for letting us know about it.

    September 23, 2023
  6. stevesky60's avatar

    Richard,
    I rarely comment on what I read on the internet but I had to let you know how much I enjoyed this article on Thom Bell. Coming out of High School in 1971 in the Washington DC area there was a lot of great music but Philly Soul was it for me and it still is. Melvin Lindsey’s Quiet Storm in the evenings featured many of the great artists mentioned in your piece. Thank you for the appreciation you expressed.

    September 28, 2023
  7. reCon's avatar
    reCon #

    I beg to differ on your opinion of “Don’t Let The Green Grass Fool You”. Part of the Spinners lore was their love of the Mills Brothers vocal styling. If you listen to it you’ll hear them. Many of us who’ve grew up listening to the Spinners actually LOVE that track. The band swings like Count Basie’s band also. It’s a great change up for MFSB to swing.
    Great article.
    Long live TSOP Thom Bell Gamble Huff Sigma Sound and everything that made those sounds and songs and dancing to that music something many of us will never forget.

    October 18, 2023
  8. richardwilkes145's avatar
    richardwilkes145 #

    Thank you so much Richard for introducing me to this wonderful side of the Spinners. I lost track of them after they left Motown – what a misrake that was!
    Although the joy of listening to the likes of He’ll Never Love You Like I Do and Love Don’t Love Nobody plus others from that period with Atlantic and Thom Bell these last few weeks almost makes up for it.
    I now count them as being right up there with my other favourites, The Dells and Little Anthony & The Imperials (the Teddy Randazzo period. I would love to hear ypour take on those.
    Thanks again for your expertise and exemplary writing.
    Richard Wilkes.

    October 26, 2023
    • Richard Williams's avatar

      Thank you. Richard. I adore the Dells — early and late stuff — and virtually anything Randazzo did (did you get the Ace compilation of his stuff?).

      October 26, 2023

Leave a comment