- Keep on Truckin' (song)
Single infobox
Name = Keep on Truckin', Pt. 1
Artist =Eddie Kendricks
from Album = Eddie Kendricks
B-side = Keep on Truckin', Pt. 2
Released = August 1973
Format = 7" single
Recorded = 1973
Genre =Funk
Length = 3:21 (single edit)
8:00 (album version)
Label = Tamla
T 54238
Writer = Leonard Caston
Anita Poree
Frank Wilson
Producer = Frank Wilson
Chart position =
*# 1 US Pop Singles
*# 1 US Black Singles
*# 18 UK Singles
Last single = "Girl You Need a Change of Mind (Pt. 1)"
(1972)
This single = "Keep on Truckin'"
(1973)
Next single = "Boogie Down"
(1974):"Keep on Truckin'" is also a lyric from theBlind Boy Fuller song "Truckin' My Blues Away"." "Keep on Truckin'" is a 1973 hit song recorded byEddie Kendricks forMotown Records ' Tamla label. The song was Kendricks' first major hit as a solo artist, coming two years after his departure fromThe Temptations . "Keep On Truckin'" reached number one on both theBillboard Hot 100 and R&B Singles Chart upon its release, and was Kendricks' only number-one hit. The song is considered by some to be the first disco song ever released, although that distinction is heavily debated.ong information
By 1973, Eddie Kendricks was two years deep into a solo career following his bitter split from
The Temptations in 1971. While his former band mates went on to record hits such as "Superstar (Remember How You Got Where You Are) ", which was a reported jab at Kendricks and fellow ex-TemptationDavid Ruffin and their seven-minute opus, "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone ", Kendricks had begun to reach a cult R&B fan base following his last two albums. Working closely withFrank Wilson , who was the main producer in most of Kendricks' solo efforts, the duo worked on a song that would aim at the dance floor rather than the serene ballads that Kendricks was used to recording. His earlier single, "Girl You Need a Change of Mind", was a cult favorite for club fans. With co-writers Anita Poree and Leonard Caston, Wilson created a song that rivaled that of the Temptations'Norman Whitfield -produced cinematic soul that had become commonplace among the group's recordings but instead of instigating drama, the song's grooves were clearly aimed at the dance floor.Upon its release in the summer of 1973, the song would finally bring Kendricks out of the shadow of his former band as the song's catchy beats and melody became a crossover hit. By late fall, the song had reached number-one on the US pop and R&B singles chart ironically eclipsing singles released by his former group. When "...Truckin'" became a hit, the Temptations' hit luster was waning with "Hey Girl (I Like Your Style)" barely reaching the Top 40 and the follow-up funk song, "Let Your Hair Down", becoming only a modest hit. Much like their "Superstar", which would ironically be covered by David Ruffin, Kendricks includes a jab at his former band mates with the lyric:
:"In old Temptations' rain, I'm duckin"':"For your love through sleet or snow, I'm truckin"'
The single version of the song, entitled as "Part 1" features the sound of a truck going by, before the coda.
The song would later be included in debates about the first-recorded and released disco record alongside
The Hues Corporation 's "Rock the Boat" andBarry White 's "Can't Get Enough". The song gave Kendricks a Grammy nomination for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance losing out toStevie Wonder 's "Superstition " and would remain his signature hit though he would score other hits such as "Boogie Down", "Shoeshine Boy", "Happy" and "A Friend of Mine". The song's instrumental bridge would later be sampled by rapperMr. Cheeks on his 2002 single, Lights, Camera, Action and in theJennifer Lopez 2007 single, "Do It Well "Credits
*Lead vocals by
Eddie Kendricks
*Background vocals by The Young Senators
*Instrumentation by assortedLos Angeles musicians
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