"Mother, mother, there's too many of you crying." — Marvin Gaye, 1971
The music of my race is something more than the American idiom. It is the expression of a people's whole attitude toward life.
— Duke Ellington, 1930
In 1954, a blind pianist from Georgia named Ray Charles recorded a song called "I Got a Woman." He had taken a gospel record called "It Must Be Jesus" by the Southern Tones — a song meant to be sung in church, toward God — and replaced the words with secular ones. The melody, the chord structure, the emotional architecture were borrowed wholesale from the sacred tradition. He dressed the Lord's music in street clothes and sent it downtown.
The response from the Black church community was swift and furious. Charles was accused of blasphemy. Preachers warned their congregations. Gospel singers stopped speaking to him. Thomas Dorsey — who had bridged the sacred and secular before and been condemned for it — understood exactly what Charles was doing: the emotional charge of gospel music was not being diluted by its transfer. It was being amplified. Charles wasn't making gospel secular. He was making the secular feel like gospel. That was the problem.
This is the originating moment of soul music as a genre, and also of its philosophy. The argument soul makes is that the sacred and the secular are a false binary. The longing in a love song and the longing in a prayer are the same longing. You do not diminish one by acknowledging its kinship with the other. You reveal both more fully.
Charles went blind from glaucoma at age seven. His mother Aretha made a decision that his biographers return to again and again: she would not do for him what he could do for himself. He learned to navigate alone, to identify objects by touch, to move through the world without the assistance that would have made him dependent. That radical self-sufficiency became the engine of his creative independence. When every record label told him what sound he should be making, he heard his mother's voice: you can do anything if you make up your mind. He made up his mind. He was addicted to heroin for seventeen years and then, in 1965, quit cold turkey in a private clinic. His doctor said it was the most complete withdrawal he had ever witnessed. Ray said: "I decided I didn't want to do it anymore."
Ray Charles also understood something that few contemporaries had articulated: genre is a financial category, not a moral one. Country music, gospel, jazz, rhythm and blues — these were labels applied by record companies to manage distribution and demographic targeting. He recorded Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music in 1962 — a Black man from Georgia making country records — partly because he loved the songs, partly because the separation of American musical traditions was a commercial fiction passed off as cultural truth. The album sold more than a million copies. He was delighted by the critics' confusion.
The philosophical move that Ray Charles made in 1954 — transferring emotional vocabulary from sacred to secular contexts — is the same move every soul artist in this series would repeat. Marvin Gaye's eroticism reaches for the transcendent. Al Green's love songs were prayers. The Isley Brothers' greatest ballads are about devotion in the full, religious sense. Soul music did not abandon the church. It took the church's most powerful emotional tools and asked: if these can move people toward God, what else can they move people toward? The answer was everything. Love. Politics. Grief. Rage. History. The question "what's going on?" is ultimately a theological question — addressed not to a woman or a congressman, but to the universe itself.
A note on scope: James Brown, Parliament, Funkadelic, Sly Stone, and Graham Central Station belong to Series XV, One Nation Under a Groove. Isaac Hayes belongs to Series XIV, Looking for a Brighter Day, where the Stax universe receives its full reckoning. This series covers the artists not yet given their full moment: the political soul tradition, the Philadelphia International story, the Isley Brothers' long independence, Syl Johnson's underground Chicago truth, and the weekly ritual that was Soul Train.
There is a performance in existence — Otis Redding at the Monterey International Pop Festival, June 17, 1967 — that tells you more about what soul music is than any critical text written about it. Redding had been given the slot between the Jefferson Airplane and the Who. The crowd was almost entirely white and almost entirely unfamiliar with him. He opened with "Shake" and within 90 seconds the crowd was his. He ended with "Try a Little Tenderness" — which begins as a quiet plea and ends, four minutes later, as one of the most physically overwhelming experiences in recorded popular music, the tempo doubling and doubling again, the word "gotta" used approximately 40 times in the final minute as if repetition were the only honest response to the feeling.
Redding told his road manager after the show: "I just played for the love crowd." He was right that it was love — not as sentiment, but as a force that overwhelmed the usual boundaries of who was allowed to feel what in front of whom. That was the Memphis condition: Otis Redding made you feel things you had not budgeted for.
Jimi Hendrix performed at Monterey the same evening. Before Hendrix took the stage, he walked up to Otis backstage and said something along the lines of: if I hadn't seen you play tonight, I would not have played like I'm about to play. Hendrix then went out and set his guitar on fire. He had been looking for the emotional justification to do it. Otis had provided it. Six months later, Otis was dead. Hendrix would follow him three years after that. The two greatest musicians at Monterey 1967 were both dead by 27.
The Memphis Condition was not only Redding. It was a complete sonic world built by the Stax/Volt label and its house band, Booker T. & the MGs — an integrated group in a segregated city, playing in the back of a converted movie theater at 926 East McLemore Avenue. The MGs gave Memphis soul its characteristic feel: slightly behind the beat, with a warmth in the low end that felt like earth. Where Motown was precision — Northern, urban, engineered for pop radio — Stax was presence. The imprecision was the point.
Redding's philosophical contribution was authenticity as method. He was incapable of not meaning what he sang. Most singers perform feeling. Otis experienced it in real time, on stage, in front of the microphone, and the experience was so legible that audiences of any background could read it instantly. He made you feel that he was doing exactly what singing is for.
Otis Redding recorded "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay" on December 7, 1967. He died in a plane crash into Lake Monona, Wisconsin, three days later. He was 26. The song came out January 8, 1968, and became his first number one hit. The whistled solo at the end was a placeholder — Otis hadn't written those words yet. Steve Cropper kept the whistle on the final mix because it sounded, after Otis died, like something he couldn't name: a man who had run out of words, falling silent over the water. The unfinished quality became the song's most devastating element. It ends not with resolution but with a man sitting, watching, waiting. Then nothing.
He had the ability to reach out and grab your soul. Not your mind. Your soul.
— Jerry Wexler, Atlantic RecordsI just want to ask a question. What's going on?
— Marvin Gaye, in the studio, June 1970
The song "What's Going On" was not written by Marvin Gaye. It was written by Renaldo "Obie" Benson of the Four Tops, with Al Cleveland. Benson had witnessed police beating anti-Vietnam War protesters in Berkeley's People's Park in 1969 — a white protest, not a Black one — and had been struck by the incomprehensibility of the violence. His question was not rhetorical. He genuinely did not understand. He brought the song to the Four Tops. They passed. He brought it to Joan Baez. She passed. Marvin Gaye heard it and said: this is me.
The recording session happened in June 1970. Gaye arrived at the studio and told the musicians — no charts, no plan — to simply play. He invited friends to come hang around, told them to bring drinks, to talk, to make the noise a party makes. The ambient sound of those people was woven into the final track's introduction. It opens with the sound of people being together before it opens with music. This was not accidental. The question could only be asked from within the community it was addressed to.
Berry Gordy refused to release "What's Going On." He called it, by various accounts, the worst thing he'd ever heard, uncommercially political, and commercially suicidal. Gordy had built Motown on tightly produced, deliberately crossover-friendly music. Marvin's response was calm and final: release it, or I never record another song for Motown. It came out January 20, 1971. It sold 100,000 copies in its first week — the fastest-selling single in Motown history at that point. Gordy called Marvin and told him to make the album. Marvin said he already had.
The What's Going On album (May 1971) is the central text of this series. Its nine tracks flow without pause into one another — a continuous suite covering Vietnam, environmental collapse, urban poverty, and the failure of politics to address any of it. It is also, throughout, a love record. The political and the erotic are not separated. Love between a man and a woman, love between citizens, love of God for creation — Gaye treats these as the same love, addressed to different recipients.
Marvin Gaye's philosophy — continued through Let's Get It On (1973), I Want You (1976), and the extraordinary Here, My Dear (1978) — is that the erotic and the political are the same energy in different registers. To fully desire another person is to recognise their humanity. To recognise humanity is to be unable to tolerate its violation. The thread from "Let's Get It On" to "Inner City Blues" is not contradiction. It is consistency. Both are arguments about the full dignity of human experience. Soul music's most radical claim, articulated most completely by Gaye, is that desire is a form of moral seriousness.
There's only three things that's for real: that's me, you, and God.
— Marvin Gaye, in conversation, 1972The Temptations in 1965 were the finest pop vocal group in America. David Ruffin, Eddie Kendricks, Otis Williams, Melvin Franklin, Paul Williams — five voices produced by Smokey Robinson into a sound so perfectly calibrated for AM radio that it barely seemed to breathe. By 1967, that perfection was beginning to feel like a sealed object, unable to admit the world outside the studio. The world outside in 1967 was Detroit burning, Vietnam escalating, and Martin Luther King announcing the Poor People's Campaign.
Norman Whitfield had been a Motown staff producer since 1963. He had also been listening to Sly Stone, to the West Coast psychedelic experiments, and to James Brown's increasingly stripped-down aggression. Beginning in 1968, he pushed the Temptations into territory Berry Gordy explicitly warned against: long-form production, distorted guitars, social commentary, and a sound less about romantic perfection and more about the chaos of the actual world. The result is a string of records that remain astonishing fifty-five years later.
"Cloud Nine" (1968) was about drug addiction in the ghetto — not metaphorically, but directly. Gordy hated it. He thought it associated Motown with social problems the label had always deliberately avoided. When "Cloud Nine" won the Grammy for Best R&B Performance in 1969 — Motown's first Grammy in any category — Gordy was forced to acknowledge that Whitfield was right. He did not stop fighting him.
The sequence between 1968 and 1972 is one of the great production runs in pop music: "Cloud Nine," "Runaway Child Running Wild" (twelve minutes of a confused boy on city streets, never played on radio in full), "Psychedelic Shack," "Ball of Confusion (That's What the World Is Today)," and finally "Papa Was a Rolling Stone" (September 1972) — eleven minutes and forty-four seconds beginning with a bass figure so deep it functions as weather. For the first four minutes, no vocals: only bass, orchestra, and a guitar asking a question it cannot answer. When the vocals arrive they tell a story of a boy discovering, on the day of his father's death, that his father was a fraud. It is a requiem for Black male responsibility, sung over a groove that refuses to resolve.
Gordy put "Papa Was a Rolling Stone" in a drawer for months, then relented. It won three Grammys in 1973 — Best R&B Song, Best R&B Group Performance, and Best R&B Instrumental. Three Grammys for a single R&B recording remains a record. Meanwhile: David Ruffin was fired in 1968, replaced by Dennis Edwards. His raw preacher's baritone was the sound of the Smokey Robinson era; Whitfield's new direction required something different. In 1969, Ruffin showed up at a Temptations concert and tried to walk on stage. Security removed him. He had been the lead voice on "My Girl." He stood in the alley for a while. Then he went home.
Ball of confusion — oh yeah, that's what the world is today.
— The Temptations, Gordy Records, 1970Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff had been trying to start a Black-owned record label since 1967. They had the songs and the production vision. What they lacked was distribution. In 1971, Columbia Records gave them one. Philadelphia International Records launched that year as the first Black-owned label to secure major-label distribution — a fact whose political significance Gamble understood as clearly as its commercial implications. The label's first years produced a run of music unlike anything else in its moment: orchestral, lush, and consciously political in its content.
The strings on Philadelphia International records were not decoration. They were an argument: that Black popular music deserved the full resources of the Western musical tradition. Arranger Thom Bell built string parts simultaneously emotionally overwhelming and structurally precise. The sound of Philadelphia International is the sound of a message delivered in the most beautiful possible container, because the message was important enough to warrant it.
"Ship Ahoy" (1973) by the O'Jays opens with the sound of water, a ship's bell, chains, and a voice narrating the Middle Passage — the transatlantic slave trade — before moving into a meditation on Africa as home. Gamble and Huff had spent months researching the slave trade. The lyric is historically specific: it names the conditions, the horror, the deliberate erasure. When Columbia's promotion department asked what the song was about, Gamble told them it was a love song. It was, in a sense.
The O'Jays — Eddie Levert, Walter Williams, William Powell — were the label's flagship act. "Back Stabbers" (1972) was their commercial breakthrough. What followed is more interesting: "For the Love of Money," "Give the People What They Want," and the full Ship Ahoy album, which is, in its entirety, a meditation on Black economic and historical consciousness. Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes, with Teddy Pendergrass on lead vocals — a voice of such physical force that the word "powerful" was inadequate — gave the label something the strings alone could not: the sense of genuine distress, the feeling that the music was not a performance of emergency but its actual occurrence. "Wake Up Everybody" (1975) is the most direct statement of the label's political programme.
Billy Paul had been a Philadelphia jazz singer before Gamble and Huff signed him. Critics had occasionally questioned whether he was "Black enough" for the soul market. His response was "Am I Black Enough for You?" (1972) — eight minutes of controlled fury, a question used as a verdict. Leon Huff reportedly tried to talk him out of recording it. Paul recorded it anyway, presented it as a fait accompli. It is one of the most extraordinary documents in the Philadelphia International catalogue: a man accused of being too refined deciding that the most refined thing he could do was answer the accusation at full volume.
We wanted to tell the truth with music. And we wanted it to sound like God had arranged it.
— Kenny Gamble, on the Philadelphia International projectThe soul artists who argued loudest — Gamble and Huff's orchestral manifestos, Whitfield's eleven-minute noir epics, Marvin Gaye's suite addressed to God — made their argument through scale. Bill Withers and Al Green made the same argument through restraint. Two men who understood that the interior life, rendered honestly and without embellishment, was as politically charged as any direct statement. In a culture that denied Black men the full range of their inner lives, making that inner life publicly visible was an act of resistance. You did not need to name the politics. You only needed to tell the truth about what it felt like to be human.
Withers was 32 when he recorded "Ain't No Sunshine" (1971). He had spent nine years in the Navy and several years working at an aircraft assembly plant in Los Angeles, installing lavatory components in Boeing 747s. His first album, Just As I Am, produced by Booker T. Jones of Booker T. & the MGs, was a series of honest portraits of working-class Black life: his grandmother, his neighbourhood, the particular quality of being alone and knowing you will be alone for a while. These are the least fashionable subjects in popular music. They are also the most universal.
While recording "Ain't No Sunshine," Withers repeated "I know, I know, I know" twenty-six consecutive times in what was supposed to be the song's bridge. Producer Booker T. Jones told him to write lyrics for that section; it was just a placeholder. Withers listened to the take and said he wasn't sure what the words should be. Booker T said: "Leave it." The twenty-six "I knows" became the most imitated moment in the song's life. Withers kept his factory job building lavatory components for Boeing 747s until his first royalty cheque arrived. The cheque was for fifty thousand dollars. He called the plant foreman the next morning. He was not unkind about it. He just did not go back.
In 1985, Withers effectively retired from recording. He never fully explained why. He has said he was uncomfortable with the music business, that he had said what he needed to say, that he preferred his private life. The retirement is as honest as the records: a man who recorded when he had something to say and stopped when he didn't.
On October 18, 1974, Al Green's girlfriend Mary Woodson poured a pot of boiling grits on him while he slept, then shot herself with his gun. Green survived. Woodson died. Green had been, until that moment, the most commercially successful soul singer in America, with a run of albums at Hi Records in Memphis — produced by Willie Mitchell — that are among the most sustained expressions of erotic and spiritual longing in popular music. After the incident, Green sold his mansion, became an ordained minister, purchased a church in Memphis, and began recording almost exclusively gospel music. The albums he made before the conversion sound, in retrospect, like a man who was always singing to God and happened to be using women's names as the nearest available pronoun.
Al Green's career poses the question that Ray Charles answered in 1954, with a different conclusion. Charles said: the sacred and the secular are the same emotional energy. Green said: they are the same emotional energy, and I was confused about which one I was serving. His gospel records are not less intense than his soul records — they are more so, because the same voice now points directly at God without the mediating fiction of a human relationship. Was the early Green using secular love songs to approach the divine, or using divine longing to write better love songs? His answer, apparently, was that the distinction finally became too uncomfortable to ignore.
The Isley Brothers — O'Kelly, Rudolph, and Ronald, from Cincinnati Ohio, later joined by younger brothers Ernie, Marvin, and cousin Chris Jasper — are the longest continuously active soul act in American music history. They began recording in 1958. The story of their career is also the story of what it meant to insist, with almost reckless consistency, on owning what you made.
"Shout" (1959) happened at a live performance — the set was ending, the crowd wouldn't leave, and in desperation O'Kelly Isley started ad-libbing the word "shout!" over the band's vamp. The crowd's response was instantaneous. RCA signed them on the strength of the recording, paid a flat session fee, and kept all royalties. "Shout" became one of the most covered songs in rock history. The Isley Brothers made essentially nothing from it. This experience is why T-Neck Records exists.
In 1964, the Isley Brothers hired a seventeen-year-old guitarist from Seattle named Jimi Hendrix as a sideman. They let him stay in their home in Englewood, New Jersey, use their equipment, and develop his playing on their live circuit. When Hendrix became the most celebrated electric guitarist in history, he consistently credited the Isleys as his first major break. Ernie Isley was eleven years old when Hendrix was practicing in his house, watching him. When Hendrix died in 1970, Ernie picked up an electric guitar and taught himself to play. His solo on "That Lady" (1973) is the most direct heir to Hendrix's vocabulary in recorded popular music: the same amplifier distortion, the same willingness to let a sustained note exist on the edge of noise, the same understanding that the guitar could say things that words could not.
T-Neck Records was founded in 1964 — the same year the Civil Rights Act was signed. Ron Isley has said the timing was not a coincidence. Owning their music was continuous with the political struggle being waged in the streets. The label had early difficulties and was dormant for several years. It relaunched in 1969 with "It's Your Thing" — a celebration of individual autonomy so complete that it was adopted by the women's liberation movement — and began the sustained creative period that produced the greatest work in the Isleys' career.
The Isley Brothers' political philosophy is not expressed primarily in their lyrics — though "Fight the Power" and "Harvest for the World" are explicit enough. It is expressed in the structure of their career. Owning T-Neck meant controlling what was recorded, how it was packaged, when it was released, and who received the money. The music business was organised to ensure Black artists did not accumulate the capital their work generated. The Isleys refused this structure. Their masters stayed theirs. When "Shout" had taught them what giving these things away meant, they organised their entire subsequent career around not repeating the lesson. That is a political philosophy fifty years ahead of the streaming-era conversation.
We didn't just want to make music. We wanted to own it. There's a difference.
— Ronald IsleyThe soul music that reached the charts was understood by its producers to be in a negotiation with mainstream America. The political content could go only as far as the market would bear. The orchestration had to be beautiful enough to sweeten the message. Chicago's soul underground operated under no such constraints.
Syl Johnson was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi in 1936 and raised in Chicago. His older brother Jimmy was a respected blues guitarist on the Chicago circuit. Syl worked the clubs from the early 1950s, recording for Chess and then for Twinight — a small Chicago label with almost no promotional budget and no ambition toward national distribution. He was not, by any reasonable measure, in the running for mainstream success. He made music for the audience in front of him: Black Chicagoans, working-class, not particularly interested in the kind of aspirational polish that Motown sold.
"Is It Because I'm Black" was recorded in 1969 and released in 1970. It is eight and a half minutes long, barely produced, and recorded for Twinight with almost no budget. It describes, in plain language rather than metaphor, the barriers a Black man faces in America: the job application rejected, the landlord who doesn't call back. The title is not a question so much as a question used as an accusation. Johnson is not asking whether racism exists. He already knows. He is asking his audience to acknowledge that they also know. The song sold poorly on its initial release. When hip-hop producers began mining soul records in the 1980s and 1990s, they found it. Johnson has estimated he has been sampled over fifty times and has received royalties from fewer than half of those uses. He has sued. He has usually won.
The Chicago soul world Johnson inhabited also produced Curtis Mayfield — whose work with the Impressions and his solo records (Curtis, 1970; Superfly, 1972) belong in any honest account of this era. Mayfield had been refining the same political argument since "Keep On Pushing" (1964), moving steadily toward the full declaration of There's No Place Like America Today (1975). Chicago's soul tradition was the tradition of direct address — less ornate than Philadelphia, less cosmic than Motown's later experiments, more direct than either.
At seventy-five, Syl Johnson was still performing and still pursuing uncleaned sample cases through the courts. In a 2014 interview, he said: "I wrote that song when I was angry. I'm still angry. The song was true in 1969. It's still true." He was asked if he thought things had gotten better. He considered the question. He said: "Some things. Not enough." He then asked the interviewer if they wanted another drink. The interviewer, by all accounts, said yes.
The philosophical move Johnson makes — the question as accusation — is the opposite of the rhetorical question. The rhetorical question assumes a shared answer and addresses itself to agreement. Johnson's question assumes the listener already knows the answer is yes, and asks them to sit with that knowledge rather than escape it. "Is It Because I'm Black" does not invite you to consider whether racism exists. It invites you to stay in the room with the fact that it does. The song's refusal to resolve — its refusal to offer gospel's catharsis or funk's collective release — is its argument. Some things do not resolve. Sitting with that is the only honest response.
Love, peace, and soul.
— Don Cornelius, closing sign-off, every episode of Soul Train, 1971–2006
Every artist in this series — Ray Charles, Otis Redding, Marvin Gaye, Norman Whitfield's Temptations, the O'Jays and Harold Melvin and Billy Paul, Bill Withers and Al Green, the Isley Brothers, Syl Johnson — made music that had to travel from the studio to the audience through intermediaries: radio stations whose programming could be influenced by money or racial politics; television variety shows whose producers curated Black music for white audiences; record stores in neighbourhoods that might or might not stock what you needed. Don Cornelius built the infrastructure that bypassed most of these intermediaries: a weekly television programme where Black culture was presented by and for Black people, without the mediation of a white gatekeeper deciding what was appropriate or legible.
Soul Train launched on WCIU Chicago on August 17, 1970. It went national in syndication in 1971. By 1973, it was in seventy markets — more than The Tonight Show. What Cornelius built was not simply a music television programme. It was a weekly archive of Black popular culture: the music, the dance, the fashion, the movement vocabulary of Black America between 1971 and 2006, documented in colour video at a moment when almost nothing else was documenting it.
Dick Clark had run American Bandstand since 1952 and was acutely aware of what Cornelius had built. Clark approached Cornelius about a merger or coordination agreement. Cornelius refused. Clark launched a competitor: Soul Unlimited, a variety show aimed at Black audiences, hosted by a Black performer. It lasted less than a season. The implicit argument Clark was testing — that Soul Train's success was a format that could be replicated — was wrong. Soul Train's appeal was the specificity: a show where Black culture was presented by and for Black people, without the mediation of a white gatekeeper making it legible to a white audience. That specificity was the whole point. You could not copy it. You either had it or you were Dick Clark in a different suit.
The Soul Train line — two rows of dancers forming a corridor, one or two people moving through the middle — became one of the most recognised rituals in American television. It worked for the same reason the music worked: it was collective, it was improvisatory, and it made visible something that the people watching needed to see. Themselves. On television. Looking like that.
"Love, peace, and soul!" — Cornelius said this at the close of every episode for thirty-five years. It was a position statement: Black popular culture was a force for these three things, and making it visible was itself a political act. Cornelius died in February 2012 of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. He had been suffering from a severe neurological condition for years. His son Tony said his father did not want to be remembered as someone who had been diminished. The man who spent thirty-five years making sure Black America looked extraordinary on television wanted to be remembered at his best.
Cornelius understood that visibility is power: the culture that is seen is the culture that is taken seriously, that has market value, that is treated as a contribution rather than a deviation. Black popular music in 1971 was commercially successful but culturally marginalised in representational terms — largely absent from the mainstream media spaces where culture acquired its standing. Soul Train put it in the living room. Every living room that received the signal on a Saturday morning became, for that hour, a space where what mattered was what Black people had made. That is what a sanctuary is: a space with different rules, where different things are possible. Cornelius built one every week for thirty-five years.
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