Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Harvey Kubernik Profiles BARBARA ACKLIN

Celebrating Black History Month, February & Women’s History Month,

BRUNSWICK RECORDS HONORS SINGER-SONGWRITER BARBARA ACKLIN

By Harvey Kubernik 


Singer and songwriter Barbara Acklin became one of the most prolific singer / songwriters of the 20th Century.  The “First Lady of Brunswick” sold millions of records, and is responsible for chart-topping hits such as “Have You Seen Her,” and “Stoned Out of My Mind,” by The Chi-Lites. 

In recognition of Black History Month, in March Brunswick Records will honor Acklin for her lifelong contributions to American music by issuing her estate a set of commemorative plaques highlighting her contributions.

"Am I The Same Girl" is currently Acklin’s top-ranking recording on Spotify with nearly 4.5 million streams, even more than Swing Out Sisters' 1992 hit version of the song, streamed more than 3 million times.

“Barbara Acklin is a history maker,” said Paul Tarnopol, president and co-owner of Brunswick Record Corporation, and son of the late Nat Tarnopol, the label’s chief architect. 

“This industry honor is long overdue.  With this recognition, Barbara’s contributions will be forever cemented in music history. She was one of the most prolific singer-songwriters of our time, and we are pleased that Brunswick was instrumental in her success.”

Born in 1943 Oakland, California, Acklin moved with her working-class parents to Chicago when she was about four or five years old.  After the family settled in Bronzeville on the South Side, the budding soprano honed her voice in the choir at Big Zion Baptist Church before graduating from Dunbar High School in 1961. Soon thereafter, she earned money as a waitress at the Club DeLisa,  5521 S. State Street, and also as a member of the Bill Cody Dancers, where she became a standout talent.

In 1966 she began a receptionist job at Brunswick’s office in a two-flat located at 1449 S. Michigan Ave. on Record Row. There, she would go on to help craft the label’s signature sound, making it a music powerhouse for a decade. Though originally established in 1916,  by the mid-1960s Brunswick was exclusively home to African American recording artists such as Jackie Wilson, (“Lonely Teardrops”), Little Richard (“Try Some of Mine”), Gene Chandler (“The Girl Don’t Care”), Tyrone Davis (“Turn Back the Hands of Time”), The Chi-Lites (“Oh Girl”) and the Artistics (“I’m Gonna Miss You”), among others. 

The label was instrumental in developing what became known as “Chicago Soul,” a musical genre with full-bodied roots in gospel and blues, accentuated with melodic touches and harmonies. Along with Chess Records in Chicago, Detroit’s Motown Records and Stax Records out of Memphis, Brunswick’s classic soul catalog ranges from 1957 to 1982 (having transformed from the Decca Records imprint to its own R&B label in 1960.)

It was while sitting behind Brunswick’s reception desk that Acklin met national heartthrob and crooner Jackie Wilson and quickly pitched a song she had written. “Whispers Getting Louder,” became a hit for Wilson and the song propelled his career back to the top of the charts. The song advanced to Number 5 on the Billboard R&B chart.

In an interview with Stephanie Gadlin, Marshall Thompson, the last surviving original member of The Chi-Lites, discussed Acklin:

“Here was this big star coming through and Barbara wanted him to hear a song she’d just written. (He) asked her to sing the song for him and it instantly blew him away. That’s when Jackie told (producer and A&R director) Carl Davis that she could not only write songs but she could sing them, too. Barbara became a triple-threat -- writer, arranger and, singer---and she could really belt it out.”

Acklin’s songwriting career grew and took to new heights when she partnered with Eugene Record, lead singer of The Chi-Lites.  Together, the duo penned “Have You Seen Her” and many of the quartet’s chart-topping hits over the years, as well as “Two Little Kids” by Peaches & Herb, which became a Top 20 hit in 1968.  She also authored and co-wrote a number of hit songs for other Brunswick artists, often teaming up with producers Carl Davis, Otis Leavill, Richard Parker, Willie Henderson, and Leo Graham.  The songstress worked with then up-and-coming engineering legend Bruce Swedien, who later was credited with developing Michael Jackson’s signature chart-busting sound.

“Barbara was a beautiful woman in a room full of guys -- but she was tough, didn’t take no stuff, and could hold her own with any of us,” Thompson said to Gadlin. “When we were on the road, she kept us together. She watched our back and we watched hers; we were like a family. It was bad enough that we all had to deal with a lot of racial hostility, especially touring the South -- but (Barbara) also had to deal with folks who didn’t always treat women with the respect they deserved.”

Early in her career, Acklin modeled her singing style after her icon Dionne Warwick, but later developed her own unique phrasing and raw,  sultry sound.   Her deeply personal lyrics often told the story of unrequited love, enduring hope, passion and pain, and the fear of loss. As Acklin’s career as a singer-songwriter flourished, Brunswick helped her shatter glass ceilings by providing her with the opportunity to work as a recording engineer, arranger and, backup singer for several of the label’s artists. 

In 1968 she recorded a duet, “From the Teacher to the Preacher” with Gene Chandler. While touring the South with Brunswick artists, her album “Love Makes A Woman” catapulted Acklin into the stratosphere with the release of its title track reaching number three on the R&B chart and number 15 on the U.S.  pop chart, earning her a gold record.  She subsequently recorded four more Brunswick albums, Seven Days of Night (1969), Someone Else's Arms (1970), I Did It (1971), and I Call It Trouble (1973).

During 2018, I interviewed Marshall Thompson about the Brunswick Records label, Jackie Wilson and Barbara Acklin.

“Jackie Wilson was my close friend. We ended up singing on ‘Higher and Higher.’ We sang on some things. I played drums on ‘Don’t Burn No Bridges,’ billed as Jackie Wilson & The Chi-Lites. Eugene Record wrote that. Jackie was one of the greatest entertainers ever. Hands down. He had the looks for the people and the girls screaming to their heads fell off. Greatest dancers to ever hit a stage.”  

In late 1968, producer Carl Davis inked the Chi-Lites to his Dakar label, releasing their first national chart hit "Give It Away," which became their U.S. initial number ten R&B hit in early 1969. A double-sided 45 RPM, "Let Me Be the Man My Daddy Was" backed with "The Twelfth of Never," followed. Davis expressed delight by the songs of Eugene Record.

Davis then hired Record to collaborate with Brunswick label mate Barbara Acklin, who herself  scored a 1968 Top Ten landmark R&B / pop hit with "Love Makes a Woman.”

Don Cornelious was a very good friend of mine in Chicago,” Thompson told me in our 2018 interview. “He and I used to talk about how he was gonna start Soul Train on 69th Street ... just sitting with me and him in a bar. Later, every time he needed a group to come on his show, it was always The Chi-Lites. I would book acts to him for a local show. He’d have me come down to Channel 26 every day.

“I went down to see him one day and he called me in the room.  ‘I’m thinking I’m gonna move to California.  But we need some people to make a tape for us so I can present it out there for people I can get a deal with.’ I went and got the Dells, Tyrone Davis, Barbara Acklin, the Staple Singers ... and we all got together to make a tape. A pilot tape. He took it to California and then called me and said ‘Marshall. I got the deal! Soul Train is going to California.’ Once we got to California, it took off. Don Cornelious never went Hollywood on me. He always called me. I don’t care how big he got since we helped him do that pilot that got him his deal. The Chi-Lites, Jerry Butler and the Emotions performed on the very first episode of Soul Train.”    

“Barbara was a beautiful, soulful lady,” offered legendary arranger Willie Henderson in a rare interview. He worked with Acklin for the better part of three decades. “She was a tremendous talent, a hard worker, and an all-around nice person. Barbara used to walk around the office, throwing out a few lyrics and we’d all go back and forth until we developed it into something. She was always writing, always creating.”

Henderson also noted, “The times were changing, we were young and doing our best to contribute in some kind of way” he said. “Martin Luther King, Jr. had moved to Chicago at one point; and his murder had a profound impact on how we all thought about the transformative power of music. Barbara played a big part in shaping the Chicago sound; and, Brunswick gave us the space to be creative and contribute in a meaningful way.”

After leaving the label, Acklin signed with Capitol Records in 1974, continued to perform and nurture younger artists entering the business.  Married three times, the songstress raised two children, a godson, and two stepdaughters in the city’s Pill Hill neighborhood, home to a multitude of African American professionals. Her home on South Ridgeland Avenue was a revolving door of musicians, celebrities, political figures, and other notables, many of whom attended late-night jam sessions there. 

“I’m very happy that Barbara Acklin is being recognized not only for her own accomplishments as a truly singular vocalist but also for her songwriting efforts,”  stressed Bob Merlis, music industry veteran and co-author of Heart & Soul: A Celebration of Black Music Style in America 1930-1975. “Songs she had a hand in writing gave new life to the careers of other artists and those selfless efforts are, at last, being recognized and celebrated.”

“My mother blazed trails for Black people and especially women in the recording industry,” said Samotta Acklin, herself a singer and producer who travels the world performing covers of her mother’s songs.  “She broke these barriers while juggling a marriage, raising two children, and being a godmother to neighborhood kids.

“The Acklin family is honored to accept this recognition from Brunswick,” she continued.  “My mother’s story is long overdue and is finally being told.  I’m also grateful to the global DJ community that continues to stream my mother’s music and introduce her to a new generation of music lovers.”

Acklin was on the verge of reviving her career and unveiling new music when she became ill in Nebraska and died unexpectedly on November 27, 1998.  Her legacy and impact on music live on.  

-- Harvey Kubernik 

 

Ironically, despite being a noted songwriter, Barbara Acklin didn't write the two songs she is most associated with!  "Love Makes A Woman" hit #9 in 1968 (#15 in Billboard) ... and her original version of "Am I The Same Girl" peaked at #52 (vs. #79 in Billboard) the following year.  (For that one, she simply sang her vocal over the instrumental version of "Soulful Strut," recorded by Brunswick's Young-Holt Unlimited.  THEIR version became a #3 smash in early 1969.)  When Swing Out Sister revived the vocal version of the tune in 1992, it went to #21 on the Radio and Records Chart. (It only peaked at #45 in Billboard ... and really should have been a much bigger hit.)  kk