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I Am (Earth, Wind & Fire album)

1979 studio album by Earth, Wind & Fire From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I Am (Earth, Wind & Fire album)
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I Am is the ninth studio album by the American band Earth, Wind & Fire.[1] It was released in June 1979 by ARC/Columbia Records. The LP rose to number one on the Billboard Top Soul Albums chart and number three on the Billboard 200 chart.[2][3] I Am has been certified Double Platinum in the U.S. by the RIAA, Platinum in the UK by the BPI, and Platinum in Canada by Music Canada.[4][5][6]

Quick facts Studio album by Earth, Wind & Fire, Released ...
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Overview

I Am was produced by Maurice White.[7] The album features guest appearances by the Emotions and Toto's Steve Lukather.[1]

Singles

"After the Love Has Gone" reached number two on both the Billboard Hot 100 and Hot Soul Songs charts.[8][9] "After the Love Has Gone" also reached number three on both the Billboard Adult Contemporary Songs and UK Pop Singles charts.[10][11] The ballad was Grammy-nominated in the Record of the Year and Best R&B Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group categories, and won the latter.[12]

Another single, "Boogie Wonderland", featuring The Emotions, reached number two on the Billboard Hot Soul Songs chart and number 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.[13][14] "Boogie Wonderland" was also Grammy-nominated in the categories of Best Disco Recording and Best R&B Instrumental Performance.[12] It won the Grammy for the latter category.

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Critical reception

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Eric Sieger of The Baltimore Sun described I Am as "faultlessly produced." Sieger added, "The album features a horn and string section, synthesizers, congas, and kalimbas and the material ranges from straight boogie to soulful ballads. Lyrically, some of the numbers leave something to be desired, but Earth, Wind & Fire is one group where the musicianship is so sharp and vibrant that the words don't seem to matter quite so much."[20] AllMusic's Alex Henderson noted, "I Am isn't a radical departure from its predecessor, All 'n All. Though not in a class with That's the Way of the World, Spirit, or All 'n All, I Am is a rewarding album that has a lot going for it."[15]

Phyl Garland of Stereo Review wrote: "As Earth, Wind & Fire have strengthened their grip on success, the mystical and extraterrestrial emblems adorning their albums have gained proportionately in grandiosity. This latest one, with a title echoing the majesty of Jehovah and an inside cover featuring a portrait of the group costumed and posed as princes out of fable, is no exception. Such bombast may be considered forgivable in this case, however, because of the excellence of the music on the record. As usual, this astral outfit blasts off in a balls-of-fire flurry of rhythm, which is cleverly varied through the album, even within selections, without losing its driving thrust. There is some evidence of capitulation to disco, particularly on Boogie Wonderland, to which the Emotions lend a few spirited soprano embellishments, but the emphasis throughout is on a dazzling interplay between precision ensemble voices-employed like horns-in rapid, robust exchanges with the group's instruments augmented by a large orchestra."[21]

Rose Riggins of Gannett exclaimed that "I Am is explosive and ready to lift you off your feet to boogie wonderland. Earth Wind & Fire's 10th album, it shows the band is still on the move upward. This is a fine LP, both versatile and creative."[22] Dave Marsh of Rolling Stone said that "I Am is obviously meant to portend something, but who knows what? Is this Maurice White's vision of paradise?"[23] John Rockwell of The New York Times stated: "This flashily theatrical, musically imaginative creation of Maurice White can almost always be counted on for interesting records, and the new I Am album is no exception." Rockwell added, "Mr. White's records reaffirm one of the basic truths about the shifting fashions of black music. All these up‐tempo Idioms are inherently related. Disco and funk and soul and rhythm and blues are all fruits of the same tree —the music of rural black people, growing from African roots and shaped by influences from the dominant white culture, evangelical Christianity and the 'urban experience. A band like Earth, Wind and Fire will enjoy its disco hits. But those hits won't sound like a very significant change in direction because a slight emphasis of the bass line entails only the most modest modification of the basic style."[24]

Allen Weiner of The Morning Call stated, "EW&F's latest effort goes beyond every level of achievement Maurice White's legions have yet attempted. "I Am" is a splendid example of EW&F's ability to create soul with individuality and without cliches, music that is both artistic and commercial."[25] Robert Christgau of the Village Voice wrote, "Sexy, dancey pop music of undeniable craft, and it doesn't let up. But as we all know, they could be doing a lot better."[16] Connie Johnson of the Los Angeles Times proclaimed that "I Am is freshly innovative for EW&F in that it emphasizes the one-on-one—as opposed to the cosmic—experience, and freely utilizes the skill of other writers to propel that message. The album should also enforce EW&F's image as trend-setters for other rhythm & blues groups seeking to escape the traditional, doo-wop mold."[26] Robot A. Hull of Creem described the LP as "a rhythmic utopia".[27] James Johnson of the Evening Standard stated: "On I Am ... the band's flashy staccato rhythms, their smooth melodies and precise production adds up to another majestic album".[28] Ace Adams of the New York Daily News called the album "a collection of numbers from disco to rhythm and blues and into a little jazz." Adams added that "the group's impressive vocals make this album a must".[29]

NME placed I Am at number sixteen on their albums of the year list for 1979.[30] Melody Maker also placed the album at number eight on their albums of the year list for 1979.[31] Bandleader Maurice White was also Grammy-nominated in the category of Producer of the Year Non-Classical.[32]

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Track listing

Original release

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[33]

2004 reissue bonus tracks

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[34]

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Personnel

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Earth, Wind & Fire

EWF Horn Section
  • Don Myrick – alto saxophone, baritone saxophone, tenor saxophone, sax solo (3)
  • Louis Satterfield – trombone
  • Rahmlee Michael Davis – trumpet, trumpet solo (6)

Additional musicians

Horns and Strings

  • Jerry Hey – horn arrangements (1, 3, 8, 10–12)
  • David Foster – string arrangements (1, 3, 8, 10)
  • Thomas "Tom Tom 84" Washington – horn arrangements (2, 4, 6, 9), string arrangements (2, 4, 6, 7, 9)
  • Benjamin Wright – horn and string arrangements (5)
  • Janice Gower – concertmaster
Horns
Strings
  • Delores Bing, Larry Corbett, Jan Kelley, Jacqueline Lustgarten, Miguel Martinez, Daniel Smith, Kevan Torah and John Walz – cello
  • Dorothy Ashby – harp
  • Marilyn Baker, Rollice Dale, Linda Lipsett, Virginia Majewski, James Ross and Laurie Woods – viola
  • Ron Clark, Marcy Dicterow, Pavel Farkas, Henry Ferber, Pamela Gates, Harris Goldman, Joseph Goodman Jack Gootkin, William Henderson, Cynthia Kovaks, Gina Kronstadt, Carl LaMagna, Joseph Livoti, Jerome Reisler, Henry Roth, Sheldon Sanov, Anton Sen, Bryana Sherman, Leeana Sherman, Haim Shtrum, Ilkka Talvi, Judith Talvi, Rosmen Torfeh and Jerome Webster – violin[33][34]
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Production

  • Maurice White – producer
  • Al McKay – producer (5)
  • Paul Klingberg – additional production (10, 12)
  • Leo Sacks – producer (reissue)
  • George Massenburg – engineer, remixing
  • Tom Perry – engineer
  • Mark Wilder – mixing (11)
  • Ross Pallone – assistant engineer
  • Craig Widby – assistant engineer
  • Mike Reese – mastering at The Mastering Lab (Hollywood, California)
  • Roger Carpenter – album design
  • Shusei Nagaoka – illustration

[34]

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Charts and certifications

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Charts

Albums

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Year-end charts

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Singles

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Certifications

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Accolades

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See also

References

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