Performance

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The Essential Delfonics

168.8M streams

168,788,490

Love Songs

116.6M streams

116,638,022

La-La Means I Love You

39.1M streams

39,087,787

Delfonics

3.1M streams

3,101,162

Ready or Not Here I Come (Can't Hide f...

1.4M streams

1,429,353

The Definitive Collection

1.1M streams

1,123,229

La-La (Means I Love You)

1.1M streams

1,077,092

Alive & Kicking

1.1M streams

1,071,126

La La (Means I Love You) [UK Chart Top...

747.7K streams

747,703

Best Of Delfonics

738.3K streams

738,289

Biography

The Delfonics were one of the first groups to sing in the sleek, soulful style that became popularized (thanks to producer Thom Bell) as the "Philadelphia sound." A vocal trio made up of brothers William and Wilbert Hart and high school friend Randy Cain, the Delfonics' roots go back to doo wop singing at school dances in the early '60s. They were well-known in the Philly area for their supple, airtight harmonic talent, which brought them to the attention of record producers, eventually landing them a contract with Cameo-Parkway. While their early records brought them little if any notice, it did bring them to the attention of producer/arranger Thom Bell, who signed the band to his soon-to-be influential soul label Philly Groove. Right from the start, this was a perfect match as the band released the classic "La La Means I Love You" in 1968, a song that set off a string of hits lasting into the mid-'70s. The sound that Bell created for the Delfonics was the antithesis of the soul sound that came from Stax in Memphis and Muscle Shoals in Alabama. He sandpapered away the grit, lightened up on the backbeat, brought in string sections, and created a smooth, airy sound. Critics enamored of the soul singing of Wilson Pickett and Otis Redding accused Bell and his groups of creating aural wallpaper, but the reality was that Bell and the Delfonics were setting the stage for a different kind of groove where subtlety and nuance reigned. The hits slowed for the band in the mid-'70s, and in 1971 Randy Cain quit and was replaced by Major Harris. A few more minor hits followed, but Harris left the band for a solo career in 1975, effectively finishing the Delfonics. Multiple versions of the group toured, and one even released an album, Delfonics Return, in 1981. In the late '90s, the William Hart, Major Harris, and Frank Washington (of the Futures) version of the Delfonics appeared on Ghostface Killah's "After the Smoke Has Cleared." (The group had long been a frequent source of sampled material for hip-hop artists.) The band also played a significant musical role in Quentin Tarantino's film Jackie Brown. Tarantino, a '70s pop culture obsessive, used "La La Means I Love You" and their best single, "Didn't I (Blow Your Mind This Time)," as a way of underscoring the relationship between actors Pam Grier and Robert Forster. In the film, Forster's character is so struck by the music (and Grier's character) that he goes out and buys a Delfonics' Greatest Hits cassette the following day. Near the end of the decade, the William Hart-led version of the group released Forever New on the revived Volt label. Multiple forms of the group continued to exist through the 2000s. Composer, multi-instrumentalist, and producer Adrian Younge -- notable for his soundtrack to the 2009 blaxploitation comedy Black Dynamite as well as Venice Dawn's Something About April -- sought William Hart out to record an album-length project in which the singer was front and center. Hart obliged, and Adrian Younge Presents the Delfonics was released on Wax Poetics in 2013. William "Poogie" Hart died on July 14, 2022 at Temple University Hospital in Philadelphia due to complications from surgery; he was 77 years old. ~ John Dougan, Rovi