Search This Blog

Showing posts with label Lets Stay Together. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lets Stay Together. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

In the 1970s Al Green



The American gospel and soul singer was born as Albert Green in 1946. Al was one of ten children in the family from Arkansas. Al sang and toured in the 50s and 60s.  He had success with Al Greene and the Soul Mates in 1967 and was heard by band leader Willie Mitchell who took him on his record label.
In 1970 Green had an album called Al Green Gets Next To You which produced several hit singles. Tired Of Being Alone hit the UK single charts in 1971 at No. 4 and was a gold single. The song was actually recorded in 1969. The follow up was also a gold single the same year.



Let’s Stay Together got as high as No. 7 and was produced by Willie Mitchell. It became the bestselling single in 1972 on the Billboard charts. 1972 gave Al two singles one at No. 44 called Look What You Done For Me.

The second was I’m Still In love With You a No. 1 stateside but got only as high as No. 35 in the UK, but a gold single in the U.S. Al could do no wrong with his songs on both sides of the Atlantic. As You Ought To Be With Me scored a top ten in the U.S. as his follow up, but did not chart in the UK.
1973 gave Al three hit singles in the top ten and two going gold too. But Al was about to have a shock as in 1974 he released a single called Lets Get Married which was a minor hit in the U.S. His girlfriend wanted to marry Al, even though she was not married. She threw hot frying pan of oil over him and then shot herself dead. This was a lucky escape for Al as he wounds were not too serious, but from that point he began to turn to religion and gospel music.

Amazingly the next hit in both UK and the States was Sha La La ( Make Me Happy) which became another Gold single in the U.S. The last hit single in the UK would come from 1975 called L.O.V.E (Love) which Al co-wrote with Marbon Hodges.

Al Green had eight top ten albums and twelve top thirty singles.