With his recording career flourishing, Ingram expanded into freelance songwriting, partnering with RB veteran Rice in 1971 for the Staples' Respect Yourself. The single was a crossover smash, fall just shy of the Billboard Top Ten, and in the years to come received cover treatments by everyone from Joe Cocker to actor Bruce Willis. A year later Ingram notched a blockbuster of his own with (If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don't Want to Be Right, a potent tale of infidelity written by Homer Banks, Raymond Jackson, and Carl Hampton. Ingram's rich, intimate vocal proved a perfect match for the material, selling over a million copies and reaching number three on the pop charts, although country crossover queen Barbara Mandrell later scored a smash cover version as well. A series of RB chart hits including You Were Made for Me, Always, and Love Ain't Gonna Run Me Away followed, and in 1973 he returned to the pop Top 40 one final time with the sublime I'll Be Your Shelter (In Time of Storm). At the peak of Ingram's fame, however, KoKo ran into financial turmoil and during the remainder of the 1970s he issued only a handful of additional singles, all of them undermined by distribution and marketing issues. After more than a decade out of the limelight, Ingram signed to Profile in 1986 and resurfaced on the RB Top 40 with Baby Don't Get Too Far. The minor hits Don't Turn Around and Gotta Serve Somebody followed, and in 1992 he wrapped his recording career with the Ichiban single I Like the Feeling. After years of health struggles including kidney disease and diabetes, Ingram died of heart failure on March 19, 2007. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi