Spencer Wiggins Jr. (January 8, 1942 – February 13, 2023) was an American soul and gospel singer. He was an exponent of so-called "deep soul".
Wiggins was born in Memphis, Tennessee. His parents had a strong interest in music, and while in high school Spencer formed a gospel vocal group, the New Rival Gospel Singers, which also featured his brother Percy Wiggins and sister Maxine Wiggins. At the same time, Spencer and Percy were members of the glee club at Memphis' Booker T. Washington High School when the student body included Booker T. Jones, Maurice White, and William Bell and the faculty included noted disc jockey and talent scout Nat D. Williams. In this fertile environment, Spencer and Percy first turned professional, forming an R&B vocal group called the Four Stars that featured David Porter, later to become a noted songwriter.
In 1961, Spencer graduated from high school and began making a name for himself on the Memphis club scene. After several years of gigging, he caught the attention of Quinton Claunch, a songwriter and producer who ran the soul-dominated Goldwax Records label. Claunch signed Spencer to a record deal in 1964, when he recorded his first single, "Lover's Crime", produced by Claunch, for the label, though his early recordings were licensed for release through the sub-label Bandstand USA. The recording was followed by eight further singles, but none became hits. His recordings for Goldwax included "Uptight Good Woman", written by Dan Penn and Spooner Oldham, and "I Never Loved A Woman (The Way I Love You)", recorded at the FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals with guitar by Duane Allman.
Despite cutting strong material with Claunch at the controls and some of the city's best session players backing him up, Spencer never scored the major breakthrough hit he needed, and after Goldwax went under in 1969, he went on to Fame Records, where he recorded two more singles, including "Double Lovin'", which reached no.44 on the Billboard R&B chart in 1970. However, other singles for Fame, and for the Pama and Vivid Sound labels, were unsuccessful.
In 1973, Wiggins left Memphis, married, and moved to Miami, Florida, where he became active in the Baptist church and in gospel music. By this time he had turned his back on secular music in favor of gospel. He became a deacon and choir director at the New Birth Baptist Church in Miami, and was named director of two of the church's choral groups. While a 1977 gospel album cut with the help of Al Green was never released, in 1999 Spencer issued a cassette-only EP, Jump for Jesus, which received significant airplay in the Miami area. A full-length gospel album, Key to the Kingdom, was released in 2003 and merged Spencer's full-bodied vocals and spiritual message with tracks produced and arranged in contemporary R&B and hip-hop styles.
Despite a relatively small official discography (eight singles for Goldwax, another two for FAME, and a handful for Sounds of Memphis/XL) beginning in the late 1980s, labels in Japan and the U.K. would collect his early material and unreleased tracks, releasing them to great acclaim and setting the stage for his return to secular music. Things began to change when his brother Percy began singing with the Bo-Kays, including at the 2008 Ponderosa Stomp, and miraculously Spencer agreed to go to Porretta with his brother and sing his old material. He went down a storm. The brothers returned there two years later and Spencer was equally effective, thrilling audiences with versions of his once forgotten, but now beloved songs.
Spencer and his brother Percy recorded and released a cover of Carr's "Dark End of the Street" on Bomar's Electraphonic label in 2013. That same year they appeared at the Ponderosa Stomp in New Orleans and returned to Porretta in 2018 where Spencer looked decidedly frail. In between they made what must have been one of the most unexpected trips of their career - the UK, where they appeared at the 100 Club together, as well as the Hole in Wall in Manchester and at least one other location. It was a great show but by then Spencer was already showing his age, but he proved that you could hold an audience just with the brilliance of vocals.
Spencer Wiggins died in Memphis on February 13, 2023, at the age of 81.
(Edited
from Wikipedia, AllMusic, Soul Express, The Vinyl Word & Commercial Appeal
newsletter)
Here’s a clip of Spencer Wiggins live at Band on the Wall, Manchester, U.K. Sunday 26th November 2017.
7 comments:
For “Spencer Wiggins – The Goldwax Years CD (2006 Kent)” go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/bVZ7w
01 Once In A While (Is Better Than Never At All)
02 Old Friend (You Asked Me If I Miss Her)
03 The Kind Of Woman That’s Got No Heart
04 Lonely Man
05 He’s Too Old
06 I’m A Poor Man’s Son
07 What Do You Think About My Baby
08 Anything You Do Is Alright
09 I’ll Be True To You
10 Take Me Just As I Am
11 That’s How Much I Love You
12 I Never Loved A Woman (The Way I Love You)
13 Who’s Been Warming My Oven
14 Walking Out On You
15 Soul City USA
16 Sweet Sixteen
17 Uptight Good Woman
18 Lover’s Crime
19 My Love Is Real
20 The Power Of A Woman
21 I’m A Poor Man’s Son (Alt version)
22 That’s How Much I Love You (Alt version)
This 22 track CD collects together all the sides from the Goldwax period. Some of the later masters recorded by Goldwax at Fame and subsequently sold to Fame are not included; they were erroneously issued as Goldwax sides in the 70s and 80s. This is the very best of Spencer Wiggins from his golden period in the mid-to-late 60s.(Kent notes)
For “Spencer Wiggins – Feed The Flame – The Fame And XL Recordings (2006 Kent)” go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/eJmG6
1. I’m At The Breaking Point
2. We’ve Gotta Make Up
3. This Love Is Gonna Be True
4. Holding On
5. You’re My Kind Of Woman
6. I Can’t Be Satisfied
7. I’d Rather Go Blind
8. Love Works That Way
9. Feed The Flame
10. Make Me Yours
11. Ooh Be Ooh Be Doo
12. Take Time To Love Your Woman
13. Let’s Talk It Over
14. I Can’t Get Enough Of You Baby
15. Double Lovin’
16. Love Machine
17. Love Attack
18. Hit And Run
19. Best Thing I Ever Had
20. Water
21. Love Me Tonight
22. Cry To Me
Kent’s Spencer Wiggins compilation put the spotlight on one of Southern soul’s great lost figures. That gathered together his recordings for the Goldwax label between late 1965 and early 1969 and was a critical and commercial success, making available for the first times in an eternity a set of great recordings. Since then Kent have been slowly piecing together this companion set. These are his later recordings, made at Fame and Sounds Of Memphis and of the 23-tracks, 11 are previously unreleased and another seven have never been available on a legitimate CD.(Kent notes)
ultra cool...thanks BB
Thank you very much, Bob!
Complete artworks for both CDs:
https://workupload.com/file/FT9KyLVgZdN
I had never heard of this singer. Thank you for the introduction. He truly was a "great" of southern soul.
Thanks for the artwork Krobi!
This is great
This is great
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