Chicagoan Eugene Record became interested in music at an early age, first picking up the guitar. A big influence was his older sister, an accomplished pianist who practiced classical music everyday in the living room of his family home. Classic music motifs appear later in Record's original songs and record productions. At 13, he shared his visions of owning his own record company with fellow teen
Gus Redmond. While attending Englewood High School, he formed the Chanteurs with
Robert Squirrel Lester and
Clarence Johnson. The group recorded a couple of singles (You Did That to Me) for Leo Ostell's Renee Records in 1959. Teaming with
Marshall Thompson and
Creadel Red Jones of
the Desideros, the quintet became
the Hi-Lites and started recording for the Daran label owned by
Thompson's cousin James Shelton. In 1964, the single I'm So Jealous was a moderate hit and was leased to Chicago-based Mercury Records.
Johnson left the group that same year and later produced the 1972 gold hit Love Jones by the Brighter Side of Darkness. Two more releases followed on Mercury's Blue Rock subsidiary while other singles were issued on Ja-Wes and Darin, including the
Monk Higgins song Go Go Gorilla. Their first big break came when
Marshall Thompson ran into
Otis Leavill while riding on a city bus.
Leavill suggested that the group, now called
the Chi-Lites, audition for producer Carl Davis, who had just opened his Dakar label. The Chi-Lites' first Dakar single was Price of Love in 1967. During that year, Davis met Nat Tarnapol, president of NY-based Brunswick Records at a DJ/record label convention. Producing Brunswick star
Jackie Wilson's comeback hits Whispers and (Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher, Davis was hired by Tarnapol to head the Chicago branch of Brunswick. Opening offices at 1449 S. Michigan, Davis signed
the Chi-Lites to Brunswick in late 1968, releasing their first national chart hit, Give It Away, which went to number ten R&B in early 1969. The double-sided follow-up was Let Me Be the Man My Daddy Was backed with The Twelfth of Never. Davis hired Record to write songs for his Jalynne publishing firm in the late '60s. Collaborating with fellow Brunswick signee
Barbara Acklin, who had a 1968 Top Ten R&B/pop hit with Love Makes a Woman, Record had a hit with
Peaches and Herb's Two Little Kids. Around this time, he and
Acklin wrote the classic melancholy ballad Have You Seen Her. While going through his catalog of songs for a new album, Have You Seen Her got his attention, but he deep sixed the idea of recording it because it was about five minutes long, which was well over the standard length of a three-minute 45 single record. With the success of Stax artist
Isaac Hayes'
Hot Buttered Soul album (with its ten-minute songs), Davis decided to include it on the group's (For God's Sake) Give More Power to The People LP. Recognizing a hit, Baltimore combo Frankie and the Spindles and seven other acts rush-released cover versions of Have You Seen Her. Soul music radio stations and other stations broke the three-minute barrier and played the long album version of the tune. Brunswick released a single version that first went gold, holding the number one R&B spot for two weeks and hitting number three pop in 1971, giving
the Chi-Lites their first pop hit. The hickory-flavored harmonica of
Cy Touff rolled up into a healthy heaping of Chicago soul was responsible for giving
the Chi-Lites their most successful single to date. Producer Carl Davis picked Oh Girl out of a seven-song tape of Eugene Record's original tunes. On the original recording session was Record on guitar and bass, drummer
Quinton Joseph, pianist
Tom-Tom Washington,
Touff, and engineer
Bruce Swedien, who went on to work with
Michael Jackson,
Quincy Jones, and others. Though a good portion of Brunswick's Chicago artists were recorded at
Murray Allen's Universal Recording Studios,
the Chi-Lites were engineered by
Swedien at Brunswick's Chicago branch. A March 1972 appearance on
Flip Wilson's top-rated NBC show was the springboard for the song, which went gold, hitting number one on the pop charts on May 27, 1972, and staying at number one R&B for two weeks. More hits followed, and Stoned... and There Will Never... were Record/
Acklin compositions.
Record wrote and produced hits for Jackie Wilson (You Got Me Walking, Don't Burn No Bridges by Jackie Wilson and the Chi-Lites) and other Brunswick signees. The songwriter wrote Raindrops -- not the 1961 Dee Clark hit -- for Barbara Acklin, which was her only post-Brunswick. During the early '70s, Record recorded demos for his songs on a tiny one-track tape recorder while playing all the parts himself on guitar and drums in his small basement apartment. This skill would prove to be useful as Record sometimes filled in for the rest of the group when they were unavailable for recording sessions. Later, Record became a "one-man band" on his solo LPs. In 1976, Record left the Chi-Lites and signed a solo deal with Warner Bros. The first of two Warner Bros. albums, The Eugene Record (February 1977) spawned the 1977 number 24 R&B hit Laying Beside You; the next LP, Trying to Get to You, was released a year later. Record kept busy writing songs and producing former Lost Generation member Lowell Simon aka Lowrell of Mellow Mellow Right On fame, among many others. Record occasionally joined the Chi-Lites on-stage and on record. Oakland, CA, rapper MC Hammer covered Have You Seen Her on his superstar-making second Capitol album Please Hammer, Don't Hurt 'Em. Have You Seen Her quickly went gold and peaked at number four on both the R&B and the pop charts during the summer of 1990, no doubt fattening the coffers of songwriters Acklin and Record. In 1988, Record became a born-again Christian, making a 1992 appearance on TV's #The 700 Club. After much study and spiritual growth, the veteran artist released his first all-gospel album, Let Him In, on his own label, Evergreen Records. Veteran promoter Gus Redmond was tapped by his childhood friend for promotional duties.
In December of 2003, Record reunited with the Chi-Lites to film the PBS Special #Superstars of Seventies Soul. The following year the hip hop generation knocked on his door once again as Are You My Woman was used as part of the Beyonce hit Crazy in Love. The song used enough of his tune to garner a writing credit and earned Record his first Grammy Award. After a long battle with cancer Eugene Record passed away on July 22, 2005 at the age of 64. At the time of his death he was busy with ministry work and planning a re-release of his 1998 gospel album Let Him In. ~ Ed Hogan, Rovi