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I thought of two tunes from the early 70's which feature vibes fairly prominently. The first is a one hit wonder by a singer/songwriter/guitarist named William DeVaughn entitled, "Be Thankful For What You Got." I had heard it driving to a gig last week on WXPN's "Funky Friday" program. I remember it from high school. One of the lyrics: "Diamond in the back / sunroof top / digging the scene with a gangster lean" became a catchphrase and appeared in numerous rap/hip hop records of the '90s. DeVaughn, a Washington, D.C. native was working for the government when he paid $900 for a recording session at Philadelphia's Omega Sound Inc. (basically a "vanity record" operation). Usually the results of such efforts are anything but star-making, but Omega featured the services of MFSB's main rhythm section (guitarist Norman Harris, drummer Earl Young, bassist Ron Baker, and vibist Vince Montana). Omega vice-president Frank Fioravanti was impressed with the record and began shopping it around to various labels. It was
finally issued on Wes Farrell's Roxbury imprint and produced by Frank Fioravanti and arranger John Davis, "Be Thankful for What You Got" sold nearly two million copies, gliding up to the top of the R&B charts and number four pop in spring 1974, with a nice vibes solo by Montana. The other song was from approximately the same time, "Keep on Truckin'" by Eddie Kendricks, former lead singer with the Temptations. The track features a vibes solo by, if memory serves me, LA studio percussionist Gary Coleman. This is a great track, funky, with strings and horns, a cooking rhythm section wih Hohner Clavinet, latin percussion, and even some timpani punctuations.

Comments

pap4456 Thu, 01/22/2009 - 12:06

In reply to by Marie-Noëlle

Thanks to Marie Noelle, the resident researcher and fact-checker, for finding the YouTube clips! These two tunes were a part of my life soundtrack. Be Thankful For What You've Got was always a good slow jam and I had done my share of slow drags with gals from high school at dances, proms, etc. to this tune.

John Keene Thu, 01/22/2009 - 09:01

I had never heard the DeVaughn track before, but I really like it. I vaguely remember the Eddie Kendricks but it came back to me when I played Marie's link to it, and I don't even remember a vibes part being on it. So it was great to revisit that track as well, especially bringing back memories of when I once aspired to be a great clavinet player (my non-mastery of the wah-wah pedal was my downfall on that instrument).

So what's happening with Vince Montana? Is he still active?

pap4456 Thu, 01/22/2009 - 09:55

In reply to by John Keene

Vince turned eighty last year and as far as I know, is still active. His daughter Denise is known in these parts as one of our finest singers and is a friend and occasional collaborator. As far as the clav, I still have my old D6, which is packed up and currently in my basement. I prided myself back in the day on my clav playing and learned how to work it with the wah0wah.