From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
8 (Spinners album)
8 is a studio album by American soul vocal group The Spinners, released in 1977. The recording represents a transition in the band's make-up that led to a commercial and critical decline.
| 8 | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| December 1977 (1977-12) | |||
| Kaye–Smith Studios, Seattle, Washington | |||
| Sigma Sound, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | |||
| Soul | |||
| 40:06 | |||
| English | |||
| Atlantic | |||
| Thom Bell | |||
| Yesterday, Today, & Tomorrow(1977) |
8(1977)
The Best of the Spinners(1978) | Yesterday, Today, & Tomorrow(1977) | 8(1977) | The Best of the Spinners(1978) | | Yesterday, Today, & Tomorrow(1977) | 8(1977) | The Best of the Spinners(1978) | | | | | | | | Yesterday, Today, & Tomorrow(1977)
8(1978)
From Here to Eternally(1979) | Yesterday, Today, & Tomorrow(1977) | 8(1978) | From Here to Eternally(1979) | | Yesterday, Today, & Tomorrow(1977) | 8(1978) | From Here to Eternally(1979) | | | | | | |
8 is a studio album by American soul vocal group The Spinners, released in 1977. The recording represents a transition in the band's make-up that led to a commercial and critical decline.
8 was recorded and released after Yesterday, Today, & Tomorrow, a studio album made up of two distinct sessions: one recorded during the making of Happiness Is Being with the Spinners in 1976, representing the last recordings with Philippé Wynne and the other with the first recordings featuring his replacement, John Edwards. Wynne departed to pursue a solo album and music business career and the remaining group continued recording with producer Thom Bell through 1978, but neither Wynn nor The Spinners would achieve the critical and commercial success they had during their run of 1970s albums. The Spinners promoted this album with a tour that included a brief residency in Los Angeles at Pantages Theater that included several fellow soul music acts; they also did radio promotions, an album-signing event, and a string of television appearances.
The editors of AllMusic Guide scored 8 two out of five stars, with reviewer Jason Elias noting that the loss of Wynne as a vocalist negatively impacted The Spinners, with their producer Bell having "no idea what to do" with Edwards; he notes that several tracks are successful, but "the bad outweighs the good here, making Spinners/8 the most problematic album Bell produced for the group".
- "I'm Gonna Getcha" (Leroy M. Bell and Casey James) – 4:25
- "I'm Tired of Giving" (Joseph B. Jefferson and Charles B. Simmons) – 4:11
- "Painted Magic" (Leroy M. Bell and Thom Bell) – 4:16
- "You Got the Love That I Need" (Sherman W. Marshall and Phillip T. Pugh) – 3:34
- "Heaven on Earth (So Fine)" (Casey James) – 4:00
- "Back in the Arms of Love" (Bill Lamb) – 4:36
- "(Love Is) One Step Away" (Juanita Gordon) – 4:38
- "Easy Come, Easy Go" (Leroy M. Bell, Thom Bell, and Casey James) – 4:26
- "Baby I Need Your Love (You're the Only One)" (Leory M. Bell and Casey James) – 6:00
Domestically, 8 entered the Billboard R&B chart on December 17, 1977 at 47 and peaked at 34 during a 10-week run; it reached 57 on the Billboard 200 and spent 13 weeks on the chart (it does not appear in the March 25, 1978 issue). In Canada, it topped out at 72, according to RPM.
-
List of 1977 albums
-
8 at Discogs (list of releases)
-
8 at MusicBrainz (list of releases)
Ask Mako anything about 8 (Spinners album) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report