Philadelphia RowHome Magazine Fall 2021

Page 75

45s Philly

“When Will I See You Again” by

The Three Degrees

N

by Geno Thackara

MUSIC

phia certainly has its share of the best. According to the folks behind Guinness Book of World Records, the city can also claim the longest-running female singing group out there. The Three Degrees have lasted from early 1963 to the present day - almost as long as the Rolling Stones, and without the endless old-age jokes. Granted, it hasn’t been the same group all along. Fayette Pinkney, Shirley Porter and Linda Turner started singing together between classes in high school. Even when they caught the ear of producer Richard Barrett and started to work on weekends, they never really considered it work. Everyone was in it for the joy of singing. With hard work and dedication, the group persisted. Even when life lured two of them in different directions, Pinkney carried on with new trio mates. Adapting to changes was already a habit by the time the Degrees

ing the iconic label’s support behind them, it meant working with Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff. 1973’s selftitled The Three Degrees included three songs co-written by the pair, and it’s no coincidence that they were the ones to become singles and ultimately hits. “Year of Decision” and “Dirty Ol’ Man” were catchy and sassy enough to earn some decent radio play. Even so, there’s one defining tune that most people associate with the group. “When Will I See You Again” is a time capsule of the ‘70s for sure. There’s the warm electric piano, the coating of slow-flowing strings, and the Latin-flavored percussion that helped define the sound of Philly soul. The timeless theme beneath the dressing is even more universal than it first sounds. As love songs go, Gamble and Huff keep this one more mysterious than most. The title is one that relates to everyone, especially with today’s levels of isolation. Beyond that, there’s still a wealth of possible meanings one can read into it. The ladies lead with some angelic cooing harmonies about precious moments. Ferguson soon takes the lead asking the key question, equally sad and sweet. Interestingly for a love song, though, there are more and more questions to follow. “Will I have to suffer / and cry the whole

night through?” could refer to being apart or being together (and for vastly different reasons). “Are we in love or just friends?” is a worrying thought between new partners and even worse for old ones. It’s never clear just what the relationship is or how it might turn out. There’s no tidy chorus to shed more light on things, either - just the ladies continuing to wonder and wonder again until everything fades out. Well, love songs aren’t always happy, after all. And there’s always going to be some mystery in life whether we want it or not. The single resonated with enough people to merit a #2 spot on the charts which arguably should have been #1, considering that it was only topped by Carl Douglas’s disco novelty, “Kung Fu Fighting.” Despite that small injustice, the Degrees’ biggest hit has only continued to resonate from then to now, much like their catalogue and, indeed, the group itself. Scott (who returned in the mid-’80s) and Holiday are still going today, most recently accompanied by Freddie Pool for the last decade. If it wasn’t for the ongoing pandemic, they’d doubtlessly be performing somewhere right now. As it is, the question of seeing each other still lingers - though hopefully with an actual answer still to come. PRH

October / November / December 2021

| ROWHOME MAGAZINE | 73

ew York City had the Ronettes and the Shangri-Las; Atlanta had Gladys Knight and the Pips. San Francisco gave us the Paris Sisters, the Pointer Sisters and Love Unlimited. The most famous mother lode of R&B girl groups came from Motown - the Marvelettes, the Jones Girls, Martha and the Vandellas, and the Supremes. Regardless of which area produced the most, Philadelrecorded their first single, “Gee Baby,” in 1965. Helen Scott, who stepped in as one of those early replacements, soon stepped out to trade the music biz for married life and family. Her replacement, Sheila Ferguson, hung around for a couple of decades before moving on to a solo career. A remarkable 15 Degrees have come and gone and come again during the group’s existence. Pinkney, Ferguson and longtime mainstay Valerie Holiday happened to make the lineup at the Degrees’ highest peak. It was one step up after another through the mid ‘70s: they hit the top 10, appeared in the occasional movie and TV sitcom, and worked their way through several record companies before landing at the iconic Philadelphia International Records. They’re the ones singing the only lyric line in MSFB’s otherwise-instrumental hit “T.S.O.P. (The Sound of Philadelphia).” It was natural that their own next release would hit gold. Besides hav-


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