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Noun
intruders- Plural of intruder
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Extensive Definition
The Intruders is a former American
soul
music group most
popular in the 1960s and 1970s. As one of the
first groups to have hit songs under the direction of
Kenny
Gamble and Leon Huff, they
had a major influence on the development of Philadelphia
soul.
Biography
Formed around 1960, the group originally consisted of Sam "Little Sonny" Brown, Eugene "Bird" Daughtry, Phillip "Phil" Terry and Robert "Big Sonny" Edwards. In 1969, Sam Brown was replaced as lead singer by Bobby Starr, only to rejoin the group in 1973.In 1965, when legendary songwriters and record
producers Kenny Gamble
and Leon
Huff first contemplated leaving the Cameo-Parkway record label
to risk launching their own recording label, the vocalists on which
they pinned all their hopes and venture capital were The Intruders.
Like many other subsequent acts the duo produced, which includes
the popular
Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes and The O'Jays,
The Intruders had already developed a vocal sound that was both
theirs and uniquely Philadelphian.
Sam "Little Sonny" Brown, Eugene "Bird" Daughtry,
Phillip "Phil" Terry and Robert "Big Sonny" Edwards had been
recording and performing one-off singles
together since 1961, blending Philly's street corner doo-wop tradition
with black gospel fervor. The result was neither as pop-infected as
Motown,
nor as funky and blues-inflected as Stax, but
had an appeal all its own. The sound which The Intruders refined
for the Excel,
Gamble and
Philadelphia International imprints reflected a different
attitude than either Stax or Motown.
Gamble and Huff's success with The Intruders
helped convince Columbia
Records to grant them the money to launch Philadelphia
International, which became the most successful soul label in the
1970s. Gamble and Huff acknowledged that their work with The
Intruders was the very foundation of what they called "The Sound Of
Philadelphia".
The Intruders, meanwhile, were undergoing some
internal turmoil. When the group resurfaced on the 1970 Gamble
LP, When We Get Married,
lead singer Sam "Little Sonny" Brown was replaced by nightclub singer, Bobby Starr
(born Robert Ferguson). The title song, "When We Get Married"
(R&B #8, Pop
#45), a Dreamlovers
cover,
became a hit on the charts, as
was the follow-up "(Win, Place Or Show) She's A Winner". Starr's
tenure with the group was short-lived; Little Sonny returned to the
group in 1973 for the album Save The Children, which spawned The
Intruders' last two big hits, "I'll Always Love My Mama" (R&B
#6, Pop #36) and "I Wanna Know Your Name" (R&B #9, Pop #60).
But "Cowboys To Girls" (R&B #1, Pop #6) will remain as the only
chart
topping single of their career. It was recently covered by the
Hacienda
Brothers.
During the late 1970s and early 1980s, in the West
Coast, their music was very popular among Latino, specifically
Chicano,
youth. Tragically,
Eugene "Bird" Daughtry died of cancer in 1994, and Sam "Little
Sonny" Brown committed suicide in 1995.
Discography
Singles
- "Gonna Be Strong" (1965)
- "(We'll Be) United" (1966)
- "Together" (1967)
- "A Love That's Real" (1967)
- "Cowboys To Girls" (1968)
- "Love Is Like A Baseball Game" (1968)
- "Slow Drag" (1968)
- "Sad Girl" (1969)
- "Me Tarzan, You Jane" (1969)
- "When We Get Married" (1970)
- "Save The Children" (1973)
- "I'll Always Love My Mama" (1973)
- "I Wanna Know Your Name" (1973)
- "Hang On In There" (1974)
- "Energy of Love" (1974)
- "A Nice Girl Like You" (1974)
References
intruders in German: The
Intruders