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Major Lance (April 4, 1939 – September 3, 1994[2]) was an American R&B singer. After a number of US hits in the 1960s, including "The Monkey Time" and "Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um", he became an iconic figure in Britain in the 1970s among followers of Northern soul. Although he stopped making records in 1982, Major Lance continued to perform at concerts and on tours until his death in 1994.

Contents[]

 [hide*1 Early life

Early life[edit][]

There has been some dispute over Major Lance's birth year; some sources say he was born 1941[3][4][7] or 1942 (as Lance claimed).[5][6] However, 1939 appears to be his correct year of birth. In the 1940 U.S. Census, there is a "Mager" Lance listed in Washington County, Mississippi as the one year old son of a widow, Lucendy Lance.[8]Lance's gravestone also states he was born in 1939.[9] 'Major' was his given forename, not a nickname or stage name.[10]

Lance, who was one of 12 children,[11] moved with his family on the northwest side of Chicago in the Cabrini-Green projects,[12] a high-crime area,[13] as a child where he developed a boyhood friendship with Otis Leavill, both attending Wells High School.[14] This was the same school Curtis Mayfield and Jerry Butler attended.[15] Mayfield called him a "sparkly fellow, and a great basketball player, which is probably how we met. His hero was Jackie Wilson, and he was always coming round and looking through my bag for songs that I'd written but didn't want to do with the Impressions. He was pretty good at picking them, too."[16]

Lance was also a baseball player.[11] Lance and Otis both did boxing, and also singing as members of the Five Gospel Harmonaires.[17][18][19] Both of them also worked together at a drug store.[13]

Career[edit][]

Beginnings[edit][]

Lance and Otis Leavill formed a group named the Floats in the mid-1950s but broke up before recording any material. Lance became a featured dancer on a local TV show named "Time for Teens",[20] and presenter Jim Lounsbury gave him a one-off record deal with Mercury Records. Mercury released his single "I Got a Girl", written and produced by Curtis Mayfield, in 1959; it was not successful. Lance worked at various jobs over the next few years.[17]

Okeh Records[edit][]

In 1962 he signed with Okeh Records on Mayfield's recommendation.[17] Major was constantly showing up at the Okeh offices, offering to run errands for Carl Davis, telling him about the record he'd once made and how he and Curtis Mayfield were friends from their childhood.[13] His first single, "Delilah", was not successful,[13] but established his partnership with a writing and arranging team of Mayfield, Carl Davis, and Johnny Pate, often with members of Mayfield's group the Impressions on backing vocals. Together they developed a distinctive, Latin-tinged sound which epitomised Chicago soul in contrast to music recorded elsewhere.[10][17]

"The Monkey Time" (1963)MENU   0:00 Monkey Time was Major Lance's first successful hit song, and became Okeh's first hit single for 10 years.----
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The second Okeh single, "The Monkey Time" (also written by Curtis Mayfield), was Major Lance's first hit,[21] became a #2 Billboard R&B chart and #8 pop hit in 1963. "The Monkey Time" became Okeh's first hit single for 10 years.[22] "That was my introduction with working with Carl Davis," Pate said. "We had a ball, making some very great music."[23]

A succession of hits followed quickly, including "Hey Little Girl", "Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um" (his biggest hit, reaching #5 in the US pop chart and #40 in the UK, where it was his only chart success), "The Matador" (the only one not written by Mayfield), "Rhythm", "Sometimes I Wonder", "Come See", and "Ain't It A Shame".[24][25]

In 1965, Pate left Okeh and Mayfield began to concentrate on working with his own group. Lance and Davis continued to work together, and "Too Hot To Hold" was a minor hit, but they had diminishing success before Davis in turn left the company.[17]

Touring in the United Kingdom[edit][]

During the 1960s, Lance toured the UK, where he was supported by Bluesology, a band including pianist Reggie Dwight, later known as Elton John.[10][26]

Over the next two years he worked with several producers, with only "Without a Doubt" becoming a minor hit in 1968. Soon afterwards Lance left Okeh and moved to Dakar Records, where he had the Top 40 R&B hit "Follow the Leader." He then moved to Mayfield's Curtom label, which resulted in his last two Top 40 R&B hits, "Stay Away From Me (I Love You too Much)" and "Must Be Love Coming Down."[17] One of Lance's song recorded at Curtom called "Stay Away From Me" was listed #4 in Jet Magazine's "Soul Brothers Top 20".[27] He left Curtom in 1971, and recorded briefly for the Volt and Columbia labels.

In 1972, he relocated to England, so as to capitalize on the success of his older records among fans of Northern Soul music, in dance clubs which played mostly rare and obscure American soul and R&B records. According to one writer, "the Major's contribution was truly phenomenal and unforgettable...[He] was to become legendary as a UK club act, known to deliver 110% at every performance."[10] In 1972 while in England he recorded an album, Major Lance's Greatest Hits Recorded Live At The Torch, recorded at The Torch, a club in Stoke on Trent,[28] which has been described as "perhaps the best Northern Soul album ever made".[10]

Later career[edit][]

Lance returned to Atlanta in 1974, and recorded an updated disco version of "Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um" for Playboy Records.[29] He set up a new label, Osiris, with former Booker T and the MG's drummer Al Jackson, but again with little success,[10] and his career hit a downward spiral. But he later found that his recordings had become popular on the beach music circuit in the Carolinas, where he continued to undertake live performances. He recorded a comeback album, The Major's Back, and several tracks for the Kat Family label.[10]

Lance's final performance was in June 1994 at the 11th Chicago Blues Festival.[2]

Personal life[edit][]

Major Lance was married to Christine Boular Lance, and had nine children.[30] He was 6 foot 6 inches tall.[31]

Lance was arrested twice in his life. In 1965, he was arrested in violation of the Paternity Act. A Chicago woman, Para Lee Thomas, claimed she had a son by Lance, Ronnie Maurice Lance, born January 13, 1964(age 50). She asserted that Lance had promised to pay her doctor and hospital bills of around $375, but had defaulted on these payments. Judge Benjamin J. Kanter issued a warrant for Lance's arrest, setting Lance's bond at $1,000.[32] After recording briefly for the Motown subsidiary label Soul, he was convicted of cocaine possession in 1978 and served a four-year prison term.[17][33]

In 1987, Lance was diagnosed with a heart attack, and became nearly blind from glaucoma.[34] As a result, he made no more recordings.[17][19] In September 1994, he died in his sleep[34] at the age of 55 of heart disease in Decatur, Georgia. He was survived by his family.[2] He is buried at Washington Memory Gardens Cemetery in Homewood, Illinois.

Other media[edit][]

[1][2]Cover art for the short CD collection titled The Very Best of Major Lance

On February 28, 1995, shortly after Lance's death, Sony released a CD collection called Everybody Loves a Good Time: Best of Major Lance. It features 40 recordings for Okeh from 1962-1967 on 2 discs. Allmusic reviewer Richie Unterberger gave the CD 4 and a half stars, calling it a "Delightful 40-song, double-CD compilation of Lance's best work for Okeh between 1962 and 1967, including all of the chart singles, quite a few misses and B-sides, five previously unreleased cuts, and some Curtis Mayfield songs from his debut LP."[35] Sony later released a shorter version of the CD collection titled The Very Best of Major Lance.

Discography[edit][]

Singles[edit][]

Year Title Label &

Cat. No.

U.S. R&B[36] U.S. Pop[36] UK[25]
1959 "I Got a Girl" Mercury 71582 - - -
1962 "Delilah" Okeh 7168 - - -
1963 "The Monkey Time" Okeh 7175 2 8 -
1963 "Hey Little Girl" Okeh 7181 12 13 -
1964 "Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um" Okeh 7187 1* 5 40
1964 "The Matador" Okeh 7191 4* 20 -
1964 "Girls" Okeh 7197 25* 68 -
1964 "It Ain't No Use" Okeh 7197 33* 68 -
1964 "Think Nothing About It" Okeh 7200 - - -
1964 "Rhythm" Okeh 7203 3* 24 -
1965 "Sometimes I Wonder" Okeh 7209 13 64 -
1965 "Come See" Okeh 7216 20 40 -
1965 "Ain't It a Shame" Okeh 7223 20 91 -
1965 "Too Hot to Hold" Okeh 7226 32 93 -
1965 "Everybody Loves a Good Time" Okeh 7233 - 109 -
1966 "Investigate" Okeh 7250 - 132 -
1966 "It's the Beat" Okeh 7255 37 128 -
1967 "Ain't No Soul (In These Old Shoes)" Okeh 7266 - - -
1967 "You Don't Want Me No More" Okeh 7284 - - -
1968 "Without a Doubt" Okeh 7298 49 - -
1969 "Follow the Leader" Dakar 608 28 125 -
1969 "Sweeter As the Days Go By" Dakar 612 - - -
1970 "Stay Away From Me (I Love You Too Much)" Curtom 1953 13 67 -
1970 "Must Be Love Coming Down" Curtom 1956 31 119 -
1971 "Girl Come On Home" Volt 4069 - - -
1971 "I Wanna Make Up (Before We Break Up)" Volt 4079 - - -
1972 "Ain't No Sweat" Volt 4085 - - -
1974 "Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um"

New version

Playboy 6017 59 - -
1975 "Sweeter As the Days Go By"

New version

Playboy 6020 58 - -
1975 "You're Everything I Need" Osiris 001 50 - -
1975 "I've Got a Right To Cry" Osiris 002 - - -
1977 "Come What May" Columbia 10488 - - -
1978 "I Never Thought I'd Be Losing You" Soul 35123 - - -
1982 "I Wanna Go Home" Kat Family 3024 - - -
1982 "Are You Leaving Me" Kat Family 4182 - - -

* Billboard magazine did not publish an R&B chart during 1964; these chart positions are from Cashbox magazine.

Selected albums[edit][]

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