The Hippest Trip in America

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Authors: Nelson George
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performance by Barry White and his Love Unlimited Orchestra on which the maestro did three solo hits, including “Can’t Get Enough of Your Love, Babe” and several instrumentals. Neon signs behind the stage read BARRY WHITE and LOVE UNLIMITED instead of SOUL TRAIN . A Barry White–sponsored Little League baseball team, the Maestro Players, even appeared in the show.
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    Cornelius: So we did Barry White with a forty-piece orchestra. We didn’t really want to, but that’s what Barry White wanted, and Barry White was so hot at the time we were like, We’re not gonna lose this booking. We gotta do what we have to do; we ended up doing Al Green with his band, and we did James Brown and the JB’s, and James Brown with his whole band. We did Sly and the Family Stone, whole band. We did Tower of Power, who we hope people will remember with that, you know, superb horn section that they had. God, we did . . . and these were the most—as far as the economics were concerned, as an owner, I kind of hated it. But these were the most exciting times of my whole life. These were the most exciting experiences I had in my entire—not just my experience with the show, but in my entire life.
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    Don’s son Tony, who would eventually spend fifteen years working on Soul Train , remembers the tension of the live tapings well. “The difficulty of putting together a live show as well as the excitement is you’re trying to put something together mistake-free, and when you’re trying to put something together mistake-free, when there’s money being spent, if you can get through it, you’ve accomplished a whole lot. My father is thinking of the fact that people were working so hard to make sure that this live element worked. The live experience is an experience that you can’t forget because you’re trying to get all this done without a mistake, and with mistakes comes money lost.”
    White, an ex-gang member from South Central turned R&B producer-arranger turned disco love man, was one of Don’s closest friends in the music industry, so it’s not surprising he bit the financial bullet for him. Watching them banter during his numerous appearances throughout the seventies and early eighties was to hear a basso profundo wrestling match, wondering which man’s bass voice would wrestle the other’s to the ground. With White, as with so many of the soul era artists Don interviewed, you can sense the host reveling in the music and friendship.
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    Barry White’s lush disco sound made him a Soul Train staple.
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    Al Green, who was the hottest young singer of the early seventies, introduced an updated Memphis soul sound that was spare and clean, driving on up-tempo numbers and haunting on ballads. He appeared regularly on Soul Train, displaying a sexy midrange tenor and an ability to sing softly with amazing vulnerability and passion. His seven-minute performance of “Jesus Is Waiting,” from his Call Me album, on the show in 1973 is masterful. He starts by reciting the Lord’s Prayer before flowing into the gospel song with the nuance of a love song. Though people didn’t turn to Soul Train for religious music, you can hear the crowd enjoying the testimony, especially when Green has the band bring it down low so he can sing with his trademark quiet intensity. His left arm is in a red bandanna sling, which only adds to the performance’s devotional fervor.
    On episode #38, Sly Stewart, of Sly & the Family Stone fame, made an equally flamboyant impression on the Soul Train audience. While Al Green was an ascendant star during his initial appearances, Sly was widely thought to have peaked by 1974. He was chronically late to shows, sometimes even missing them altogether. Many of the original members of his fantastic Family Stone had left the band in various disputes with its mercurial leader. But his performance of “I Want to

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