(June 19, 2021). Within weeks of 2021 starting, the music world began commemorating the golden anniversary of one of the most important record companies in American music history—a label that, during the 1970s, would become the cornerstone for a soul music sound that was as much linked to its home city as Motown had been to Detroit the decade before.
Philadelphia International Records, founded by iconic musical geniuses Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff, was formed in 1971 and, thanks to a lucrative distribution deal signed with CBS Records (by then-president Clive Davis), plus those killer sounds by some of the greatest musicians on the planet, the label sold tens of millions of albums and singles over the next three years alone…and then multiplied those sales to well over one hundred million over the next decade and a half.
Gamble and Huff, with the regular partnership of fellow legend Thom Bell plus other talented songwriters like the late Bunny Sigler, the late Gene McFadden, the late John Whitehead, and Dexter Wansel, turned Philadelphia International Records -or PIR – into the Motown of the 1970s and early ‘80s. Gamble, Huff and Bell would join forces to form the Mighty Three Music publishing company and the three men—along with the other writers signed to their companies—would pen hundreds of songs bearing the unmistakable Philly Soul sound.
Distinguished by its sophistication in instrumentation—with lush string arrangements, rolling piano flourishes, majestic organs, uncharacteristic woodwind instruments, stellar brass punctuations, and unique driving beats that presaged disco—the Philly Sound would be responsible for dozens of No. 1 soul songs, three No. 1 pop hits, and many more top tens between 1971 and 1991.
(Scroll down to skip the preliminaries and get right to djrobblog’s exclusive, comprehensive and most objective ranking of the 100 greatest songs on the PIR label!)
While Bell’s talents were spread across many different artists on other labels—like the Stylistics on Avco Records and the Spinners on Atlantic—Gamble and Huff mainly kept things in-house, co-writing and/or co-producing nearly all of the hits on the PIR label and its subsidiaries like Gamble and TSOP Records.
The label’s first album in 1971 was Billy Paul’s Going East, then came Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes’ I Miss You, followed by the O’Jays iconic Back Stabbers LP, which featured two No. 1 soul chart hits: the title track and its follow-up smash, “Love Train,” the latter of which also topped the pop chart.
Billy Paul, Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes, and the O’Jays were just the first artists out of the gate. Soon afterwards came artists—both new and established—like Lou Rawls, Three Degrees, Jerry Butler, Dee Dee Sharp-Gamble, Dexter Wansel, the Jones Girls, Patti Labelle, Phyllis Hyman, and McFadden & Whitehead.
And who could forget the legendary house band MFSB (Mother, Father, Sister, Brother), a group of stellar musicians who recorded at the infamous Sigma Sound studios in Philly and created that unmistakable sound on nearly every release from the PIR label during its heyday.
Djrobblog celebrates the label’s 50th anniversary plus African-American Music Appreciation Month by presenting this exclusive ranking of PIR’s 100 greatest tunes. This countdown is also likely the most objective ranking of its kind, based on a combination of Billboard chart performance (using soul, pop and disco chart data), several music critics’ individual top-50 rankings and the results of recent soul music polls conducted by SiriusXM. All of this information was compiled using a point scheme and then songs were ranked from No. 1 to 100, based on total points.
There is a caveat: for those readers looking for classic Philly soul songs by groups like the Spinners, the Stylistics, Blue Magic and Daryl Hall & John Oates, note that those artists did not record for Philadelphia International Records, thus they’re not eligible for this list.
Still, you won’t find a more complete, more objective ranking of this historic label’s recordings anywhere but right here on this djrobblog.com recap.
If you love Philly Soul like I do from the people who mastered it, then scroll down and begin this musical journey through one of the greatest catalogs in soul music history!
It starts at No. 100 and goes all the way to No. 1, so let the music begin, and please enjoy the Spotify playlist linked below the rankings.
Oh, and Happy Juneteenth to everyone!
Don’t forget to scroll through all one hundred tunes using the right-arrow button above (scroll buttons are located below each group of 25 songs).
And here’s that playlist of the 100 songs plus a few extras that didn’t quite make it but are classic tunes nonetheless!
So let readers know what you think. Please feel free to comment about these rankings, including favorites of yours you believe I missed or didn’t get right. Comment either below or on any of the social media feeds where this article is posted.
DJRob
DJRob is a freelance music blogger from somewhere on the East Coast who covers R&B, hip-hop, pop and rock genres – plus lots of music news and current stuff! You can follow him on Twitter at @djrobblog.
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Thank you this is great! Living in England and a teen during the 70’s there’s lots here I know and love and some i haven’t heard before. I have an awful lot of homework to do
Yes, this list was meant to both entertain and enlighten! I’m glad it’s accomplished both! Thanks for reading and commenting. And feel free to share the article!
Thanks, this is a great list! I’ll listen to the playlist as soon as I can.
Thanks, Daniel. Enjoy it!