Three Minute Update is the newest SoulTracks feature. It is designed to give classic soul fans a chance to catch up with what’s going on with their favorite soul music artists of the 60s, 70s and 80s. All in three minutes. Our latest in the series is a 3 minute update on: The Chi-Lites. Let us know your thoughts in the comment section and hit us up with your suggestions of future 3 Minute Updates by using the “Contact Us” button below.
In the 60s, Smokey Robinson virtually reinvented the sweet soul ballad and paved the way for a number of groups that would make the early 70s a ballad lovers dream era. And no act epitomized that genre more than the hard working group from Chicago known as The Chi-Lites.
Like many popular soul groups of the 60s and 70s, the Chi-Lites found each other as teens, singing together and apart in various groups in their native Chicago until joining together as the Hi-Lites in the mid 60s. By the time they signed with the local Brunswick label in the late 60s, they had added a “C” and become the Chi-Lites. The Chi-Lites marriage with Brunswick bore fruit quickly, as they had their first R&B hit in 1968 with the sweet ballad, “Give It Away.”
Over time the Chi-Lites developed their own unique sound around the writing and production of lead singer Eugene Record, along with impeccable harmonies of Marshall Thompson, Squirrel Lester and Craedel Jones. An immense talent, Record distinguished the Chi-Lites from other silky soul groups like the Stylistics and Blue Magic by balancing sweet soul ballads about loneliness and vulnerability with funky thumpers about race relations and social justice. In retrospect, how could an album boast the thumping “Give More Power to the People” alongside the almost saccharine love song, “I Want to Pay You Back?”
The Chi-Lites moved from “soul superstars” to simply superstars in 1972, as two group ballads rocketed to the top of the charts and became among the most memorable songs of the decade. “Have You Seen Her,” with its sad opening monologue, took the pop world by storm, only to be topped by the forlorn harmonica lead and impeccable harmonies of the group’s greatest song, “Oh Girl.”
Personal issues led Jones to leave the group in 1973, but the hits kept coming for the remaining trio. “Homely Girl,” “Stoned Out of My Mind,” and “Toby” kept the group near the top of the R&B charts, though, by 1975, crossover success had waned. Due to serious financial difficulties at Brunswick that would ultimately kill the label, the group released its final Brunswick album, “Half A Love,” in 1975.
Eugene Record left the group in 1976 and released three solid but underrated albums for Warner Brothers. Marshall Thompson continued to lead a revamped Chi-Lites line-up through the remainder of the 70s, dropping two surprisingly good albums (Happy Being Lonely and The Fantastic Chi-Lites) without Record’s participation.
In 1980, the most popular Chi-Lites lineup, consisting of Record, Thompson, Lester and Jones, reunited and released the “Heavenly Body” LP. Jones left the group after two more albums, but the remaining members continued on for four more years and several more albums on various labels, with limited chart success. In 1985 Eugene Record again left the group, but his compositions have continued to find the spotlight, being covered by dozens of artists from MC Hammer to Paul Young. He also quietly released an excellent gospel album in 1997, entitled “Let Him In.”
The Chi-Lites had a big year in 2004. Their early 70s hit, “Are You My Woman,” was remade by Beyonce Knowles as the across-the-board hit and Grammy winning, “Crazy In Love.” And their 1974 song “That’s How Long” was used as the backdrop for one of the cuts on Jay-Z’s Black Album. Also, the group reunited with former lead Eugene Record for the March 2004 PBS Soul Music special and they sounded great. Sadly, Record died in July 2005 after a long bout with cancer. He will be greatly missed.
Marshall Thompson and Squirrel Lester, along with more recent addition Frank Reed (alternating with Anthony Watson) and the group’s first female member, Tara Thompson, continued the Chi-Lites tradition, recording sporadically and touring unceasingly in the 90s and 00s. Sadly, Lester died in January of 2010, leaving Marshall Thompson the sole remaining founding member of the group. Then, in February of 2014, Reed died after an illness.
Marshall Thompson also had a health scare in 2014, as he suffered a stroke. While it affected his ability to walk distances, it did not affect his effervescent personality or his desire to perform with a reconstituted version of the group, even if he sings sitting down.
A well deserved honor for The Chi-Lites happened on September 30, 2021, when Marshall Thompson accepted on behalf of the group a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The Chi-Lites’ have left a legacy of great harmonies and classic material that continue to influence today’s pop and soul artists and still wow soul music fans after more than 50 years.
By Chris Rizik