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"O-o-h Child" | ||||
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Single by Five Stairsteps | ||||
from the album Stairsteps | ||||
A-side | "O-o-h Child" | |||
B-side | "Who Do You Belong To" | |||
Released | April 1970 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 3:11 | |||
Label | Buddah | |||
Songwriter(s) | Stan Vincent | |||
Producer(s) | Stan Vincent | |||
Five Stairsteps singles chronology | ||||
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Audio | ||||
"O-o-h Child" on YouTube |
"O-o-h Child" is a 1970 single, written by Stan Vincent, recorded by Chicago soul family group the Five Stairsteps and released on the Buddah label.
The Five Stairsteps previously had limited success recording in Chicago with Curtis Mayfield.[3] When Mayfield's workload precluded his continuing to work with the group, they were reassigned to Stan Vincent, an in-house producer for Buddah Records who had recently scored a Top Ten hit with the Lou Christie single "I'm Gonna Make You Mine". The Five Stairsteps' debut collaboration with Vincent was the group's rendition of "Dear Prudence" designated as the A-side with Vincent's original composition "O-o-h Child" as B-side. However, "O-o-h Child" broke out in the key markets of Philadelphia and Detroit to rise as high as #8 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the summer of 1970.
The track's R&B chart impact was muted, peaking at #14, although in time it came to be regarded as a "soft soul" classic. Billboard ranked the record as the No. 21 song of 1970.
...together they are utterly disarming, and they all come together for one of pop's most affecting climaxes.
...when DJs flipped their cover of the Beatles' "Dear Prudence" in favor of a song that became R&B's answer to "Over the Rainbow."