Powerlight | |
Type: | Studio album |
Artist: | Earth, Wind & Fire |
Cover: | Earth, Wind & Fire - Powerlight.jpg |
Released: | February 3, 1983 |
Recorded: | July–November 1982 |
Length: | 41:23 |
Label: | Columbia |
Producer: | Maurice White |
Prev Title: | Raise! |
Prev Year: | 1981 |
Next Title: | Electric Universe |
Next Year: | 1983 |
Powerlight is the twelfth studio album by American band Earth, Wind & Fire, released in February 1983 by Columbia Records.[1] The album rose to No. 4 on the Billboard Top R&B Albums chart and No. 12 on the Billboard 200 chart.[2] [3] Powerlight was also certified Gold in the US by the RIAA.[4]
Powerlight was produced by EWF leader Maurice White. According to White the LP's title has to do with "the chakras -- the centers of the body that connect us with cosmic power." Artists such as Robert Greenidge, Maxayn Lewis and Zakir Hussain also appeared on the album.[5]
The album cut "Fall in Love with Me" rose to No. 17 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and No. 4 on the Billboard Hot R&B Songs chart. "Fall in Love with Me" was also Grammy nominated for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals.[6]
As well another single entitled "Side by Side" got to No. 15 upon the Billboard Hot R&B Songs chart.[7] "Straight from the Heart" was released as a single in the Netherlands.
Robert Palmer of The New York Times noted "Mr. (Milton) Nascimento, and Brazilian pop in general, combine African-derived rhythms that tend to be more flowing and buoyant than their North American funk counterparts with a melodious pop lyricism based on relatively complex, jazzy harmonies, and Maurice White has done something very similar on Earth, Wind and Fire's Powerlight album." Vanity Fair found that "Earth, Wind & Fire's oddysey of uplift, Powerlight is, impossible as it may seem, even more relentlessly cheerful than its predecessor Raise!, a concoction designed to do precisely that to listeners' spirit". Tony Prince of the Daily Mirror called Powerlight the album of the week exclaiming "The worst you can say about Earth, Wind & Fire are their high standards of arrangements are predictable. They just can't get any better!" Robert Christgau of the Village Voice proclaimed with an A− grade that "Their sonic affluence and showtime groove encompass whispering strings no less perfect than their JB guitar beats, Funkafunnies harmonies no less schmaltzy than their Lionel Richie homages, and when the synthesis is this catchy it's the best argument for universalism they'll ever make."[8] Craig Lytle of AllMusic in a four out of 5 star review found "Many groups lose the steam that propelled them to the top; Earth, Wind & Fire, contemporary sound and all, were still blazing when this album was released." Lytle continued saying "Throughout the entire album, White's unifying message is fueled by the aggressive rhythms and relaxing melodies." Connie Johnson of the Los Angeles Times wrote Powerlight "does show why EWF is one of the masters of studio pop." Johnson added "EWF mostly keeps the rhetoric in check focusing instead on assertive rockers that give everyone in this nine-member unit a chance to flex his muscles There is less cosmic emphasis but the EWF formula—heavy on the richly textured vocals horns and rhythm—is still intact. And surprisingly still fresh."
With a 3 out of 5 stars rating, Ken Tucker of the Philadelphia Inquirer wrote "Earth, Wind and Fire's new collection of Utopian funk, "Powerlight" (Columbia), has a glossy sheen that manages to coat even the banal songs with a pretty surface that's pleasing."[9] Chip Stern of Musician claimed "Powerlight stands both as a testament to White's absolute mastery of production and EW&F's renewed vigour as a band."[10] Dave Marsh of the Philadelphia Daily News gave Powerlight 4 out of 5 stars and claimed it's mostly "notable for the power of the playing."[11] David Hepworth of Smash Hits gave the album an 8/10 rating and declared EWF are "firing on all cylinders." Hepworth added "They weld their massive sound together with such precision that their whole ensemble can provide a rhythm as spare and compulsive as a snapping finger, they write production numbers instead of songs and never allow the momentum to flag for a second, they're soppy as hell and, when they produce records like 'Powerlight', there's absolutely nothing wrong with that". Hugh Wyatt of the New York Daily News found "Earth, Wind & Fire gives new meaning to the word classy, and I like it".
Issac Hayes called Powerlight one of Earth, Wind & Fire's five essential recordings.[12] Powerlight was also placed by music critic Robert Christgau of the Village Voice at No. 36 on his dean's list of 1983.
Earth, Wind & Fire
Additional musicians
Horns
Strings
Year | Chart | Peak position |
---|---|---|
1983 | US Top LPs & Tape | 12 |
US Top Soul LPs | 4 | |
Sweden Albums (Veckolista Album)[14] | 2 | |
Dutch Albums Dutch Album Top 100[15] | 6 | |
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[16] | 6 | |
Norwegian Albums (VG-Lista)[17] | 7 | |
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[18] | 13 | |
UK Pop Albums[19] | 22 | |
CA RPM Canadian Pop Albums[20] | 24 | |
Year | Single | Chart | Position |
---|---|---|---|
1983 | "Fall in Love with Me" | US Hot R&B Singles | 4[21] |
US Dance Club Play | 31[22] | ||
US Hot 100 | 17[23] | ||
CA RPM Canadian Pop Singles | 14[24] | ||
UK Pop Songs | 47 | ||
Blues & Soul Top British Soul Singles | 20[25] | ||
"Side by Side" | US Hot R&B Singles | 15[26] | |
US Hot 100 | 76 | ||
"Spread Your Love" | US Hot R&B Singles | 57 | |
Dutch Singles | 48[27] |