Oscar Toney Jr.
Oscar Toney, Jr. (born 26 May 1939, Selma, Alabama) was an American soul singer.
Career
Toney was raised in Columbus, Georgia, and sang gospel in churches while young. In his teens, he joined a gospel group called The Sensational Melodies of Joy, and after this joined secular group called The Searchers (no relation to The Searchers), who released a few singles between 1958 and 1961. In 1964, Toney released a solo single, "Can it All Be Love", on King Records, but did not garner any widespread notice.
Toney then began working with the record producer Papa Don Schroeder, who used Toney as a backup replacement for James & Bobby Purify when one of the two singers was unavailable for a live performance. Schroeder had Toney signed to Bell Records in 1967, and his first single, a cover of "For Your Precious Love" by Jerry Butler & the Impressions, was produced by Chips Morman. The tune would be the first and most successful of Toney's four chart hits. His last single was 1969's "Down in Texas" b/w "Aint That True Love", which failed to chart, and Toney left Bell when Schroeder quit the music industry.
In 1970, Toney released a single, "Down on My Knees", on Capricorn Records, but the tune did not chart; three more singles, all flops, followed on Capricorn, which dropped the singer in 1973.[1]
Toney's career was tenuous in America, but the British love for Northern Soul resulted in a second wind. Later in the 1970s, he was signed to the British record label Contempo Records for six singles and an album, yet none of these sold well, and in the 1980s Toney left the secular industry to focus on gospel again.
Discography
Albums
- For Your Precious Love (Bell Records, 1967) U.S. #192, US Black Albums #27[2]
- Guilty of Loving You (BGR Records, 2001)
Singles
Year | Title | Chart Positions[1][3] | |
---|---|---|---|
US Pop Singles | US Black Singles | ||
1967 | "For Your Precious Love" | #23 | #4 |
1967 | "Turn On Your Love Light" | #65 | #37 |
1968 | "Never Get Enough of Your Love" | #95 | - |
1968 | "Without Love (There Is Nothing)" | #90 | #47 |