With their slinky, horn-powered grooves, impeccable musicianship, and eye-popping album covers,
were among the top funk bands of the mid-'70s. Emerging from the musical hotbed of Dayton in 1959, the group was originally dubbed
. In late 1961, a relative of
's founded the Detroit-based Lupine Records, and the group traveled north to the Motor City to back
subsequently exited for a solo career, the group essentially disbanded.
At that point, the nucleus of
Middlebrooks,
Jones, and newly added guitarist
Leroy "Sugarfoot" Bonner returned to Dayton; there they recruited saxophonist
Andrew Noland and drummer
Gary Webster, the latter a somewhat elusive figure whose true involvement in the group's convoluted history has never been definitively answered -- some sources credit him as a founding
Untouchable, others even as the band's early leader. In any case, by 1967, with the subsequent addition of singers Bobby Lee Fears and
Dutch Robinson, the newly rechristened
Ohio Players were signed as the house band for the New York-based Compass Records, backing singer
Helena Ferguson on her lone hit, "Where Is the Party," before issuing their solo debut, "Trespassin'," which hit the R&B charts in early 1968.
Although
the Players' trademark bottom-heavy, horn-driven sound was already blossoming, their follow-up, "It's a Cryin' Shame," flopped, and as Compass teetered on the brink of bankruptcy they exited the label. (Their early Compass sides were later packaged as
First Impressions.)
The Players then landed on Capitol, where 1969's "Here Today, Gone Tomorrow" was a minor hit; an LP,
Observations in Time, soon followed, with covers of "Summertime" and "Over the Rainbow" offering a strong hint of the stylistic detours to follow. In 1970 the group disbanded, however; Fears and
Robinson both mounted solo careers, while the remaining members again decamped to Dayton, eventually re-forming with keyboardist
Walter "Junie" Morrison, trumpeter
Bruce Napier, and trombonist
Marvin Pierce.
Influenced by the groundbreaking funk of
Sly & the Family Stone -- and with the nasal, cartoon-voiced
Bonner assuming vocal duties -- the new
Ohio Players lineup made their debut with the single "Pain," issued on the small local label Rubber Town Sounds; it was soon picked up for distribution by the Detroit-based Westbound label, reaching the R&B Top 40 in late 1971. An LP, also titled
Pain, appeared that same year, and was followed in 1972 by
Pleasure, which launched the absurdist smash "Funky Worm."
Ecstacy appeared in 1973, and after 1974's
Climax,
the Players signed to Mercury; the label change also heralded yet more lineup changes, with keyboardist
Billy Beck replacing
Morrison (who later signed on with
Parliament) and drummer
Jimmy "Diamond" Williams taking over for
Webster.
At Mercury,
the Ohio Players enjoyed their greatest success; not only did their sound coalesce, but they became notorious for their sexually provocative LP covers, a tradition begun during their Westbound tenure. Their 1974 Mercury debut,
Skin Tight, was their first unequivocal classic, launching the hit title track as well as "Jive Turkey." Its follow-up,
Fire, remains
the Players' masterpiece, topping the pop charts on the strength of its bone-rattling title cut, itself a number one hit; "I Want to Be Free," one of the band's few attempts at social commentary, was also highly successful. 1975's
Honey -- which featured perhaps
the Players' most controversial and erotic cover to date -- was another monster, generating the chart-topping masterpiece "Love Rollercoaster" in addition to the hits "Sweet Sticky Thing" and "Fopp."
The insistent "Who'd She Coo?" from 1976's
Contradiction, was
the Players' last number one R&B hit; "O-H-I-O," from 1977's
Angel, was their last major hit on any chart, and as the 1970s drew to a close, the band's fortunes continued to decline. 1979's
Jass-Ay-Lay-Dee was their final Mercury effort, and upon signing to Arista,
the Players returned with
Everybody Up, followed by a pair of dismal releases on Boardwalk, 1981's
Tenderness and 1982's
Ouch! After 1984's
Graduation, four years passed prior to the release of their next effort,
Back; no new material was forthcoming, although various lineups continued performing live well into the following decade. Founding member
"Satch" Satchell died in late 1995, while
"Pee Wee" Middlebrooks passed on in late 1996 and
Leroy "Sugarfoot" Bonner in January of 2013.
–
Jason Ankeny, Rovi