The “Golden Hits Of The 60s 

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SWEET INSPIRATIONS

(Dan Penn, Spooner Oldham)

Atlantic 2476

No. 18   April 27, 1968

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It all began in Newark’s New Hope Baptist Church, where Emily “Cissy” Houston, her nieces 0Dee Dee

and Dionne Warwick, and the sisters Judy (a.k.a. Judy Clay) and Sylvia Guions (a.k.a. Sylvia Shemwell)

became members of the Drinkard Singers.   Before evolving into the Sweet Inspirations, the group

recorded traditional gospel for RCA.

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“Growing up, mine was a pretty narrow road,” Cissy Houston–perhaps best known to younger pop fans

as the mother of Whitney Houston–recalled to Gerri Hershey in Nowhere to Run.   “Now I had been

brought up strict, to think that all of it, rock and all, was the devil’s music.   But if God gives you a gift, if

he gives you a voice, well, I don’t think He’s gonna discriminate on how you best put it to use.   But I

didn’t always feel this way.   Not at all … I suffered a great trauma when I went over [to singing pop

music].   But I had three children to raise.”

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Over the course of the ’60s, after some personnel changes, the Drinkard crew became one of the finest–

and most recorded-back-up vocal groups in the busi­ness.   Little did they suspect as much when Cissy,

Sylvia, Estelle Brown, and Myra Smith did their first secular studio work behind Ronnie Hawkins and a

group later known as The Band.   For six years, the girls labored behind the scenes spicing and enticing

the best perfor­mances out of acts such as WILLIAM BELL, Maxine Brown, Solomon Burke, Neil

Diamond, Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, and Dusty Springfield.   It was Jerry Wexler at Atlantic

Records who dubbed them “The Sweet Inspirations” and gave them the opportu­nity to record their own

effort.

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“A lot of girls got into doing that kind of session work,” Cissy told Hershey.   “But once we got it together

in the Inspirations, well, nobody could touch us.   Except maybe the Blossoms.”

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Elvis, beginning in 1968 and throughout his much­ publicized comeback, constantly drew upon the Sweet

Inspirations’ vocal talents for his nationwide extrava­ganzas and Vegas shows.   But as soloists–out front

and on their own–the Sweets clicked on the Top 40 with only one 45, a tune dashed off by Dan Penn and

Spooner Oldham.   A few other disks, appearing before and after their big moment, did stir up some

chart action­ “Why (Am I Treated So Bad)” (#57; R&B: #36, 1967), “Let It Be Me” (#94; R&B: #13, 1967),

“To Love Some­body” (#74; R&B:#30, 1968), and “Unchained Melody” (#73; R&B: #41, 1968)–but Cissy

and the others never achieved a sustained stardom.

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Cissy left the group in 1970 to tour with Darlene Love and Dee Dee Warwick as back-up singers for

Dionne Warwick, and soon thereafter, tried her way with a solo career.   “Be My Baby” (#92; R&B: #31,

1971) has became her only Hot 100 entry; though “Think It Over” (R&B: #32, 1978) and a few others

made the R& B listings.   In 1981, Myrna resurfaced as co-writer of many of the songs on Beach Boy Carl

Wilson’s lone solo LP (Carl Wilson).   Myrna and Sylvia continued on as sessionists, recording a few

disappointing solo projects during the ’70s; Estelle’s position was filled by Gloria Brown, later Pat Terry.