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"Fire"
Ohio Players
Mercury 73643
Feb. 1975
Billboard: #1     Videos Icon

Ohio Playershe Ohio Players had been together for 15 years, in on incarnation or another, before they suddenly leaped out of obscurity to become one of the oldest, established, permanent "overnight successes" in the rock era.

'Fire' - Ohio Players
"Fire" was the No. 1 title track from the Dayton-based Ohio Players' sixth studio album. First charting on Nov. 23, 1974, Fire spent one week at the top of the Billboard Hot 200 album chart, and remained on the chart for 29 weeks. It was certified gold by the R.I.A.A. on Dec. 13, 1974.
Formed in Dayton, Ohio, in 1959, as Greg Webster and the Ohio Untouchables, they provided the vocal backing for the Falcons' 1962 R&B hit, "I Found a Love" (number 75 on the pop chart). The record is also notable for its impassioned lead vocal by 19-year-old Wilson Pickett. The Untouchables later released their own single for the Detroit-based LuPine label, but soon disbanded.

However, two of the Untouchables -- reedman Clarence "Satch" Satchell and bassist Marshall "Rock" Jones -- decided to take another shot. Recruiting some local Dayton musicians, they put together a new ensemble called the Ohio Players. They worked as the house band for Compass Records, recording demo tapes on their own time. One of their tapes found its way to Capitol Records, and the Hollywood-based label signed the group in 1969.

Following the unsuccessful Observations in Time album, the Players pooled $400 for a trip to Nashville to record their next LP, Pain, which was released by Westbound Records of Detroit. Adopting an ultra-funky style strongly influenced by Sly Stone, the group began its ascent to the top with their first bona fide hit, "Funky Worm" (number 15 in May, 1973). Their three albums for the label featured pulsating rhythms and suggestive cover art, featuring a bald, scantily-clad female model in various poses of sexual bondage.

When the Ohio Players switched to Mercury in 1974, their first album for the label, Skin Tight, outsold the three Westbound releases within three months. The title track became their biggest pop hit yet, peaking at number 13 in October, 1974.

The cover of their next album, Fire, revealed a gorgeous model wearing a fireman's helmet (and little else) and erotically fondling a hose. But if the artwork was hot, the sounds inside were blazing. Released in November, 1974, Fire was certified gold in two weeks. The title track entered the Billboard Hot 100 at number 73 on December 14, 1974, and moved to number one eight weeks later.

- Fred Bronson, The Billboard Book of Number One Hits, Billboard, 1988.

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