Soul Train
1 9 7 1 - 2 0 0 6 (USA)
The first-ever syndicated Soul Train on October 2, 1971 was
a party. Apart from upcoming Chicago soul man Bobby Hutton, there was
Eddie Kendricks, whose falsetto had helped shape the sound of The
Temptations, now making his TV debut as a solo performer. Another Motown
legend, Gladys Knight, sang
Friendship Train and her most recent hit, I Don't Want To Do
Wrong, while The Honeycone - the hottest vocal trio of the time -
were there delivering the infectious Want Ads and Stick-Up,
both R&B chart Number Ones. And taking the show to an even
higher plane were the dancers - exotically-dressed, Afro-mopped
exhibitionists, ever ready to shake a butt, boogaloo or whatever else
had to be done to make Soul Train the hottest spot on the box. Amid
it all, Don Cornelius, deep-voiced Svengali of the black music
industry, beamed. He'd made it, just as he knew he would. His
self-devised Soul Train show was about to show the world just
how potent soul and R&B could be . . . Cornelius was a Chicago
traffic cop until the mid-60s, when he pulled over a local radio
personality from the WVON station. The DJ noted Cornelius' resonant
baritone voice and advised him that he was in the wrong business. One
demo tape later, Don Cornelius was a radio announcer. Now TV beckoned.
But it was a white world, the pop portion of which was dominated by
Dick Clark's American Bandstand.
Cornelius plotted something better and cooler. His dream was called Soul
Train. A pilot, which appeared in mid-1970, was shot in black
and white and featured Ice Man Jerry Butler. It became a
five-day-a-week dance show on a small Chicago TV station, and an
instant hit with the Windy City's black, switched-on generation. After
a move to California, and a link with sponsors Johnson Hair Care
Products (creators of Afro-Sheen and
Ultra-Sheen) Cornelius readied a full-color version of his concept for
syndication across America. And on October 2, 1971, King Curtis's Hot
Potatoes - chosen as the show's theme - helped the Train rumble
forward on Metromedia television. The music came from the greatest
names in black music. But the dancing was something else. Cornelius
took the concept of line dancing, which was popular in Chicago's black
community during the 50s and 60s, and shaped it for countrywide
consumption. On a set decorated with rail tracks, dancers strutted
amid two lines of would-be terpsichoreans, each pairing attempting to
be more extravagant in their gestures than the last. Everybody
danced. At the start of the first show, all the stars could be seen
shaking their butts alongside the fans, after which Cornelius spent
time interviewing a couple of line dancers about the moves they'd
learnt along the way. The Exercise, The Philly Dog, The Breakdown . .
. the list seemed endless. The sound of James
Brown's latest release, Make It Funky, saw them all once
more limb-flinging in impressive style. In time, Soul Train would
become so successful that Cornelius could book just about anyone he
wanted. Even Elton John and David
Bowie would eventually appear, both claiming that it was an
ambition to be on the show. In 1975, Cornelius (along with his partner
Dick Griffey) launched the Soul Train label, signing The
Whispers, Shalamar and Carrie Lucas, with Griffey eventually taking
the helm and re-naming the label Solar. Cornelius ceased hosting the
show, taking more of an entrepreneurial backseat during the 80s, but Soul
Train - albeit suffering from a loss of direction, continued to
roll and became one of the longest-running syndicated shows in US
television history. One of the most popular TV shows in Japan, it's
also the most revered program in soul history.
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