Las Vegas Review-Journal

The O’jays sound off about America’s woes

- By Mark Kennedy The Associated Press

The O’jays have always made music for the heart. Now the R&B hit-makers are going for the jugular on what they say is their last album.

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees known for the classic song “Love Train” on Friday released the politicall­y charged single “Above the Law,” which explores racial and class inequality. The lyrics include: “Game is fixed / Pure parlor tricks.”

The single will be part of the O’jays’ final studio album, the socially conscious “The Last Word,” their first original material in almost 20 years, which is set for release Feb. 22 from S-curve Records.

Group co-founders

Eddie Levert Sr. and Walter Williams Sr. said this week that the group didn’t intend to make new music as it looks toward retirement but felt compelled by what it has seen over the past few years.

“You almost have to say something. You almost have to get involved. You know, it’s bad. I’ve never seen it this bad,” says Williams, 75. “You have to say something. You have to do something. People have to get out and vote to change things if they want change.”

“Above the Law” was composed by Betty

Wright and Angelo Morris and produced by Steve Greenberg, Wright, Mike Mangini and Sam Hollander. More of its lyrics include the lines “Reinvent slavery / Erase the war on poverty / Separate primarily / By class.”

“As soon as I heard it, I told Mr. Greenberg, ‘We are all going to jail,’ ” Williams says, laughing. “He said, ‘Don’t worry about it. I’ll be the guy that gives you the cake with the file in it.’ ”

The cover, by artist Christa Cassan, shows businessme­n with briefcases riding flying pigs over the Capitol. A lyric video for “Above the Law” begins with a $100 bill being burned, before showing photos of black men manhandled by the police, scary newspaper headlines, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders and Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

Levert, 76, said he feels like he’s stepped back in time to when he was a child in Alabama and the Ku Klux Klan was terrorizin­g people. He has watched with alarm as white supremacis­ts are walking through U.S. city streets once more.

“Now, it seems like we’ve done a 360-degree turn and gone back to those same times when they can hang and shoot and kill people just because of their color,” Levert says. “Walter and myself, we’re living this twice. It’s like repeating yourself. It’s crazy.”

Williams and Levert formed the band in 1963 in Canton, Ohio, alternatin­g as lead singers. Hits from their peak in the 1970s and ’80s include “Backstabbe­rs,” “Love Train” and “Use Ta Be My Girl.” The group’s last album of new material, “Love You to Tears,” appeared in 1997.

While known for their funky, soulful songs, the O’jays often tackled social issues, as with “For the Love of Money” and “Put Your Hands Together,” in which they urged “praying for all the people who are sleeping in the street.” They had a hard time getting radio stations to play “Rich Get Richer,” which argued: “The people who live on the hill / Don’t have time for the ghetto.”

But “The Last Word” will be the group’s most powerful political statement yet. Another track is called “Stand” and speaks of how love is needed to heal. “Turn off the TV to avoid the news / Look up to heaven ’cause I’m so confused/ Another child lost to the city.”

 ?? Charles Sykes ?? The Associated Press R&B hit-makers the O’jays say “The Last Word,” due out Feb. 22, will be their final studio album.
Charles Sykes The Associated Press R&B hit-makers the O’jays say “The Last Word,” due out Feb. 22, will be their final studio album.

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