Gordy Harmon, Co-Founder Of Hitmakers The Whispers, Dies At 79

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Gordy Harmon, Co-Founder Of Hitmakers The Whispers, Dies At 79


The Whispers in a publicity {photograph} circa 1971. Photo: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Gordy Harmon, a co-founder of American soul favorites the Whispers, died final Thursday (5) in his sleep at his house in Los Angeles, on the age of 79.

“‘We are saddened by the passing of one of the founders and former member of the Whispers,” mentioned the group on their Instagram web page. “Our thoughts and prayers are with the family and his memory and his contributions will never be forgotten. Much love.”

Harmon co-founded the group in Watts, in Los Angeles County, in 1963 with Marcus Hutson, Nicholas Caldwell, and brothers Wallace and Walter Scott. They first recorded for the native Dore label in 1964 and broke by means of to the nationwide US soul charts on the finish of the last decade, initially on Soul Clock. The string-laden, doo-wop influenced “The Time Will Come” hit No.17 in 1969 earlier than the Whispers landed their first Top 10 R&B hit with the ballad “Seems Like I Gotta Do Wrong” in 1970.

Soul within the 70s

Switching to the Janus label, the group scored a number of extra chart entries, together with the Top 20 “Your Love Is So Doggone Good” in 1971, earlier than Harmon left in 1973, after injuring his larynx in a driving accident. He was changed within the line-up by Leaveil Degree, who had briefly been a member of Friends of Distinction.

The Whispers went on to be one of the crucial profitable soul and crossover pop vocal teams of the Nineteen Seventies and 80s, transferring to Soul Train (on which that they had soul prime tenners with “One For The Money” and a remake of Bread’s “Make It With You”) after which as one of many flagship teams on Dick Griffey’s Solar label. 1980’s “And The Beat Goes On,” additionally a significant worldwide hit, and 1987’s “Rock Steady” each topped the R&B listings, the latter going Top 10 pop within the US.

Further hits adopted on Capitol within the late Nineteen Eighties and first half of the 90s. Caldwell died in 2016 and Hutson in 2000; the Scott brothers stay energetic to this present day. The group have been inducted into the R’n’B Music Hall of Fame in 2014.

Listen to uDiscover Music’s Greatest Soul 45s playlist on Spotify.

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