HEATWAVE

Location:
London, UK
Type:
Artist / Band / Musician
Genre:
Funk / Disco House / R&B
Label:
GTO/Epic
Type:
Major
Completely cosmopolitan with international grooves to spare, Heatwave emerged as one of the disco era's funkiest dance groups. American serviceman brothers Johnnie Wilder and his brother Keith Wilder were based in Germany when they first began performing, and upon their discharge from the Army, the duo stayed in that country. Both singers, the pair gigged in clubs and bars with an assortment of bands while still enlisted. However, they were constantly looking to expand their horizons, and in mid year they relocated to the UK to link up with songwriter/keyboardist Rod Temperton. The nascent Heatwave quickly came together with the addition of Spanish bassist Mario Mantese, Czechoslovakian drummer Emest Berger and American guitarists Jesse Whittens and Eric Johns. With so many musical roots between them, it was only natural that they rapidly developed a sophisticated sound, an edge which Temperton would use to push Heatwave ahead of their peers.



Jamming, and ceaselessly touring the London club circuit allowed Heatwave to define and refine their music, eschewing straight disco beats for a sound that certainly contained that element, but fused it with a rich funk groove. That hard work paid off as the band signed to U.K. label GTO (Epic in the U.S) and began formulating their first album in fall 1976. The recording sessions nearly derailed, however, when Whittens was murdered before the band had even entered the studio. He was replaced with rhythm guitarist Roy Carter, and a pair of singles, "Ain't No Half Steppin'" and "Super Soul Sister" appeared before the end of 1976, to be followed by January 1977's anthemic "Boogie Nights". That single reached 2 on the British pop charts (it wouldn't appear on the American radar until later that summer, when it became a Top Five hit). The group's long-awaited debut album, Too Hot to Handle, finally appeared in late spring 1977, giving Heatwave a 11 hit in the US - it cruised to 5 on the R&B charts, while the next single, the sweet soul ballad "Always and Forever", closed out the year with a 2 U.S. hit in December. Again using Blue's production skills, Heatwave released Central Heating in April 1978. The album rode firmly on the tails of its massive single, the classic "The Groove Line", a hard hitting dance groove that rocketed up the charts, leaving the album's other single, the beautiful ballad "Mind Blowing Decisions" gasping for air in its wake.



Although their star power seemed unstoppable, Heatwave were to take some hard knocks in 1978, as first Johns, then Temperton quit the band. Although Temperton would continue writing new songs for Heatwave, he swiftly became better-known for his songwriting for other artists, penning award-winning songs for some of funk's heaviest hitters, including Rufus and the Brothers Johnson. He also wrote for Herbie Hancock and Quincy Jones, but his most famous partnership remains the one forged with Michael Jackson, writing two songs, "Rock With You" and "Off The Wall" for Jackson's 1979 Off the Wall LP. He also wrote three songs for the Thriller LP, including the title track.



Shaken, but undaunted by recent events, Heatwave were about to return to the studio, only to be dealt another blow as Mantese suffered horrific injuries in an auto accident. He, too, had no alternative but to leave the band, and was replaced with Derek Bramble. Adding guitarist William Jones and keyboardist Calvin Duke to the group, and now working with new producer Phil Ramone, Heatwave cut Hot Property. Released in May 1979, with nine of the ten songs penned by Temperton, the album unexpectedly foundered, despite its strong mix of ballads, soul scorchers and classic funk grooves, ultimately hovering just inside the U.S. Top Forty. Of the album's singles, "Therm Warfare", Razzle Dazzle", "One Night Tan" and "Eyeballin'" all failed to raise the roof, with only the latter even bothering the R&B Top 30. Soon after, Heatwave received another dismal blow as Carter left to carve his own path as a producer, ultimately having major success with Linx in the early 1980s. He was replaced by keyboardist Keith Harrison but, just as it seemed that the band might finally put their shake-ups behind them, founder Johnnie Wilder was himself involved a terrible car crash. Although he survived the accident, he was paralyzed from the neck down.



Determined to continue working with the band he'd nurtured since the very beginning, Wilder remained on board for studio work and, in 1980, Heatwave recorded the Candles LP, with Temperton again providing the songs. The group recruited James Dean "JD" Nichols to handle vocals in concert. Heatwave's spotlight seemed to be waning though, as the November single "Gangsters of the Groove" proved their last pop hit, reaching 21 in the U.S., and pulling in a surprisingly impressive 20 in the U.K. early in the New Year. But the album peaked at a mere 71 U.S. in December 1980, bringing a tumultuous time to a somewhat disappointing close. Two further singles, "Jitterbuggin' and "Where Did I Go Wrong", charted the following year, while both "Posin' Til Closin'" and "Turn Around" fared even worse.



Heatwave's 1982 LP, Current, marked yet another new era for the band as they returned to producer Barry Blue. The album managed only a desultory 156 on the U.S. Pop charts, although it scored the band a 21 hit on the R&B charts, where Heatwave continued to be a strong presence. A Rod Temperton penned single, "Lettin' It Loose" proved a minor hit in August. However, it also sounded a death knell for the group. Bramble quit the band at the end of 1982, like Carter, for a career in production (he would go on to work with David Bowie on 1984's Tonight LP, and later masterminded Jaki Graham's breakthrough). Nichols, too, decamped to fill Lionel Richie's shoes in the Commodores. Heatwave still continues to tour to this day.
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