Song of the Day 11/5: The Five Stairsteps, “O-o-h Child”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on November 5, 2022

Before the Jacksons stole their title, the Five Stairsteps were known as the First Family of Soul.

The five children of Chicago police detective Clarence Burke Sr. went from winning a talent contest in 1965 to a contract with Curtis Mayfield’s record company and a five-year run of nine Top 10 hits on the R&B charts. “O-o-h Child” was their only crossover hit, topping out at No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1970.

This live version is rougher around the edges, but gives a good view of what their stage act looked like.

The song, written by producer Stan Vincent, has been covered dozens of times by all kinds of artists — R&B singers like Nina Simone and Mary Wilson, power-popsters the Posies and the Wondermints, and folk singers like Lisa Loeb and Jill Sobule have all tackled the tune. I think the best rendition is by English folk-electronica artist Beth Orton, who stripped it down for her 2002 “Daybreaker” LP.

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  1. Jill says:

    I love these aspects of the live, rough around the edges version: the physical appearance including outfits and hair styles, the beautiful teeth, the choreography. And I like the voices and the arrangement of the music. Color me retro.

  2. bamboozer says:

    Love this one! So much music, so little time….