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In the Stone

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"In the Stone"
Single by Earth, Wind & Fire
from the album I Am
B-side"You and I"
Released1979
Recorded1978
GenreDisco[1]
Length4:48
LabelColumbia
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Maurice White
Earth, Wind & Fire singles chronology
"After the Love Has Gone"
(1979)
"In the Stone"
(1979)
"Can't Let Go"
(1979)

"In the Stone" is a song by R&B/funk band Earth, Wind & Fire issued as a single in 1979 on Columbia Records. The song rose to No. 23 on the Billboard Hot Soul Songs chart.[2][3]

Overview

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"In the Stone" was produced by Maurice White, who composed the song with Allee Willis and David Foster. The single also came off Earth, Wind & Fire's 1979 album I Am.[2]

Background and composition

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In an interview with Questlove Supreme, songwriter Allee Willis explained the story behind the song saying : "The first thing Maurice ever said to me was "What do you know about Eastern philosophies ?" and I said I didn't know anything so he gave me a list of books and sent me to a store in L.A. called The Bodhi Tree. He gave me 10 books and said the one you have to start with is The Greatest Salesman in the World and I thought it's about advertising I got this down and I opened it up and it's not about advertising, it's about the prophets and they're in the old Egypt. I got so confused immediately."[4]

"But In The Stone was supposed to be the song that got all their philosophy in there so I never understood it as we were writing. He would basically tell me what he wanted to say and I would give him 10 different lines that said that. Now of course I understand everything it's very much about the fact that everything is pre-written, there's this mindset for what men is and he very much believed in past lives and future lives but that one I was flying by the seat of my pants."[5]

In Maurice White's autobiography, he explained : "One thing that I wanted Allee (Willis) and all the people who collaborated with me to understand is that non-conformity and curiosity always lead to a heightened creativity. The reason I wanted her to read certain books was twofold. One, it was not so much to hip her to this or that as just to expose her to different things, break her out of the norms of conventional thinking. Inhibitions kill imagination. Mysticism helps keep it alive. Secondly, I wanted to give her a language that would hip her to write lyrics in a philosophical manner, even so-called love songs. That language would really manifest itself in the song “In The Stone.”[6]

About the songwriting process, Willis said : "I don't remember with that particular song that I was in the same room at the same time with David Foster. He started it with Maurice then Maurice brought it to me and we like finished it."[7]

Critical reception

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Phyl Garland of Stereo Review wrote "In the Stone is less imaginative than many of Earth, Wind & Fire's previous efforts, but performing gusto compensates for the slim substance."[8][9] Ace Adams of the New York Daily News called "In the Stone" one of the album's "best songs."[10] Cash Box said it was "an irresistable dancing cut" that "moves to a swinging mixture of catchy percussives and intricately woven harmonies."[11] James Johnson of the Evening Standard proclaimed "the slightly curious cosmic overtones of their lyrics remain in evidence on..In the Stone".[12]

Personnel

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  • Writing, lyrics – Allee Willis, David Foster, Maurice White
  • Producer – Maurice White

Production[13]

Engineers

  • Engineer – George Massenburg, Tom Perry
  • Mixing engineer – George Massenburg
  • Assistant engineer – Craig Widby, Ross Pallone

Performers

  • Saxophone – Fred Jackson Jr., Herman Riley, Jerome Richardson
  • Alto saxophone, baritone saxophone – Don Myrick
  • Tenor saxophone – Andrew Woolfolk, Don Myrick
  • Bass – Meyer Rubin, Susan Ranney, Verdine White
  • Drums – Fred White, Maurice White
  • Guitar – Al McKay, Johnny Graham, Marlo Henderson, Steve Lukather
  • Congas – Philip Bailey
  • Keyboards – Bill Myers, David Foster, Eddie Del Barrio
  • Percussion – Maurice White, Paulinho Da Costa, Philip Bailey, Ralph Johnson
  • Piano, synthesizer – Larry Dunn
  • Timpani – Richard Lepore
  • French horn - Barbara Korn, Marilyn Robinson, Richard Perissi, Sidney Muldrow
  • Trombone – Benjamin Powell, Garnett Brown, George Bohanon, Louis Satterfield, Maurice Spears, William Reichenbach
  • Trumpet - Bobby Bryant, Elmer Brown Jr., Jerry Hey, Michael Harris, Oscar Brashear, Rahmlee Michael Davis, Steve Madaio
  • Viola - Barbara Thomason, Linda Lipsett, Norman Forrest, Renita Koven
  • Violin - Barry Socher, Betty Lamagna, Carl LaMagna, David Stockhammer, Haim Shtrum, Harris Goldman, Jack Gootkin, Lya Stern, Marcia Van Dyke, Mary D. Lundquist, Ronald Clark, Ruth Henry, Sheldon Sanov
  • Cello – Daniel Smith, Jan Kelley, Ronald Cooper, Concert Master, Janice Gower
  • Harp – Dorothy Jeanne Ashby
  • Vocal - Maurice White, Philip Bailey
  • Background Vocal – Maurice White, Philip Bailey

Chart positions

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Chart (1979) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 58
U.S. Billboard Hot Soul Singles 23
New Zealand RIANZ Top Singles 39[14]

References

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  1. ^ Holtje, Stephen (January 1, 1998). "Earth, Wind & Fire/Maurice White". In Graff, Gary; du Lac, Josh; McFarlin, Jim (eds.). MusicHound R&B: The Essential Album Guide. Detroit: Visible Ink Press. pp. 189–190.
  2. ^ a b Earth, Wind & Fire: In the Stone. Columbia Records. 1979.
  3. ^ "Earth, Wind & Fire: In the Stone (Hot Soul Songs)". billboard.com. Billboard.
  4. ^ "QLS Classic : Allee Willis". Questlove Supreme.
  5. ^ "QLS Classic : Allee Willis". Questlove Supreme.
  6. ^ White, Maurice (13 September 2016). My Life with Earth, Wind & Fire. Amistad. ISBN 978-0062329165.
  7. ^ "Episode 10 – Allee Willis". Sodajerker.
  8. ^ Garland, Phyl (October 1979). "Earth, Wind & Fire: I Am" (PDF). americanradiohistory.com. Vol. 43, no. 4. Stereo Review. p. 100.
  9. ^ Garland, Phyl (October 1979). "Earth, Wind & Fire: I Am" (PDF). americanradiohistory.com. Vol. 43, no. 4. Stereo Review. p. 102.
  10. ^ Adams, Ace (June 22, 1979). "Mini Reviews". newspapers.com. New York Daily News. p. 321.
  11. ^ "CashBox Singles Reviews" (PDF). Cash Box. September 29, 1979. p. 18. Retrieved 2022-01-01.
  12. ^ Johnson, James (June 14, 1979). "Pick An Album". Evening Standard. p. 27 – via newspapers.com.
  13. ^ "Jaxsta". jaxsta.com. Retrieved 2023-01-25.
  14. ^ "Earth, Wind & Fire: In the Stone". charts.nz. RIANZ.