Seven years later, he honed his talents enough to get a recording deal with Capitol Records, armed with material by the Salty Peppers (who evolved into Earth, Wind Fire). Maurice White, Wade Flemons, and Donald Whitehead wrote Crook's first single, In the Warmth of My Arms (1969), but it did nothing to establish Crook anywhere except the Chicago lounges where he was already a legend. A second single, When Love Leaves You Crying (1970), written by Crook and John Jones, never took off, and the association with Capitol ended on a sour note.
Later in 1970 on Down to Earth Records, a label small enough to fit in Capitol's coin pocket, Crook scaled the RB charts with Gimme Some, reaching number 22. He danced again in 1971 with What Time Is It, which reached number 31 on the RB charts. While the little hits provided Crook a rush, he didn't chart very high, and nothing came close to crossing over for the man who -- judging by his birth name -- would have made his parents extremely happy if he had chose the military as a career.
A stint with Wand Records produced three well-played RB hits -- The Best Years of My Life (1973), Tell Me What 'Cha Gonna Do, and the immortal There's a Fever in the Funkhouse (both 1974) -- and the self-titled album General Crook. He returned with Down to Earth in 1974, but missed with What I'm Getting Now and What I'm Used to Ain't the Same and Do It for Me. He later turned away from his singing career to concentrate on producing and writing for others (i.e., Syl Johnson and Willie Clayton) while cutting the occasional one-off single, such as Main Squeeze and In This Thing Called Love. ~ Andrew Hamilton, Rovi