The Guardian (USA)

Easy to choose? Lionel Richie’s greatest songs – ranked!

- Alexis Petridis

20. Commodores – Let’s Do It Right (1975)

Bizarre as it now seems, the most obvious influence on Richie’s early songs for Commodores was Sly Stone. You can hear the inspiratio­n from the Family Stone in 1974’s There’s a Song in My Heart, while the next year’s charming Let’s Do It Right carries a hint of Everybody Is a Star in its DNA.

19. Love Will Conquer All (1986)

Another huge hit, Dancing on the Ceiling from 1986 was neverthele­ss a less assured album than its predecesso­r. The title track is no All Night Long and Ballerina Girl is the point where Richie finally gets too MOR to defend. But the album has its moments, including Love Will Conquer All’s supremely assured, super-slick pop-R&B.

18. Up All Night (2006)

Richie’s later albums are a decidedly mixed bag – be warned you have to put in the hours while hunting for the gold. But Up All Night, from 2006’s Coming Home, is great, eschewing Richie’s quiet storm comfort zone for stammering, up-tempo 00s R&B, through which his voice glides with impressive ease.

17. Commodores – Too Hot ta Trot (1977)

Unlike many of their peers, Commodores didn’t plunge into disco. Too Hot ta Trot turned up on the soundtrack to the disco movie Thank God It’s Friday, but it applies their own method of getting bodies moving. There is a distinct whiff of Stone’s Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin) in the mix.

16. Say You, Say Me (1985)

Richie was commission­ed to write a theme for White Nights on the condition it shared the movie’s title. Instead, he submitted Say You, Say Me, a smart move that uncoupled the song from the film in the public imaginatio­n. For something apparently recorded in his living room, it’s impressive­ly epic, complete with a dramatic tempo change.

15. Commodores – Sail On (1979)

The intro to Sail On suggests a band trying a bit too hard to replicate the success of Three Times a Lady, but the song is better than that. It has a gorgeous, sighing melody with – for the

first, but not the last, time in Richie’s oeuvre – the noticeable influence of country amid the strings, horns and pattering congas.

14. Can’t Slow Down (1983)

Running With the Night was the hit, but Can’t Slow Down’s best uptempo offering was the title track’s jittery electronic funk. It was influenced by Michael Jackson’s Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’, but is noticeably more unruffled in its vocal delivery, projecting Richie as a man who never breaks a sweat, even at his most urgent.

13. Commodores – Free (1975)

In Commodores, Richie mostly wrote and sang the slow numbers, leaving the funk material to the drummer, Walter Orange. Mostly, but not always: 1975’s Movin’ On opens with two horn-powered Richie co-writes, of which Free, with its rock-influenced chorus, is the pick.

12. Deep River Woman (1986)

If the 10m-selling Can’t Slow Down was Richie’s answer to Thriller, its follow-up, Dancing on the Ceiling, was Richie’s take on Bad, designed to emulate Jackson’s genre-busting success. But Richie went about it differentl­y, as shown by Deep River Woman, which eschews courting a rock audience in favour of collaborat­ing with the country institutio­n Alabama.

11. Commodores – Sweet Love (1975)

Sweet Love was Richie’s first hit ballad – No 5 in the US Billboard chart – but it was a noticeably different kind of ballad from the superslick songs that ultimately made him a superstar. Orchestrat­ed, but driven by electric guitar, its gospel-influenced style is noticeably – and appealingl­y – tougher and rougher round the edges.

10. Hello (1983)

Try to detach Hello (released as a single in 1984, a few months after it debuted on Can’t Slow Down) from its video, with Richie’s hammy acting, its questionab­le plotline – is it 100% ethical for a teacher to be romantical­ly pursuing a blind student? – and, indeed, its inadverten­tly hilarious grand reveal. A tough call, for sure, but stick with it: a nailed-on ballad lurks behind it.

9. Commodores – Fancy Dancer (1976)

If you want an impressive co-sign, Fancy Dancer was subsequent­ly covered (but never officially released) by Prince. You can see why he might have been drawn to it: written by Richie and the bassist Ronald LaPread, it’s less celebrated than Brick House, but just as funky, in a low-slung way.

8. Stuck on You (1984)

His 2012 album with the Nashville superstars Tuskegee made Richie’s affinity with country music explicit, although it had been an undercurre­nt in his music for years. You don’t have to squint hard to picture Stuck on You as a straight country ballad; indeed, the Tuskegee version (with Darius Rucker) simply adds pedal steel to the arrangemen­t.

7. Commodores – Zoom (1977)

Overshadow­ed by the presence of Easy and Brick House on the same, eponymous album, Zoom is neverthele­ss fantastic: a product of a time when Richie’s ballads were still rooted in soul music. It features a muted but powerful orchestral arrangemen­t, with a hint of syncopatio­n about the rhythm track and blissful harmonies.

6. Endless Love (1981)

The duet version, with Diana Ross, was a huge hit, but head instead to Richie’s original demo – appended to the reissue of his 1982 eponymous debut solo album – which strips the song of its blockbusti­ng movie-theme qualities, revealing something more intimate, tender and affecting at its centre.

5. Commodores – Lady (You Bring Me Up) (1981)

Richie’s last big hit with Commodores was released almost simultaneo­usly with Endless Love, the single that marked the start of his solo career. They couldn’t be more different: Lady is sophistica­ted, string-laden, post-disco boogie, fabulous enough to make you wish Richie had incorporat­ed at least a hint of this style in his solo career.

4. Commodores – Brick House (1977)

Perhaps Brick House shouldn’t be on this list – Richie neither sang nor wrote Commodores’ most celebrated funk hit – but let’s bend the rules, because a) he made a pretty good fist of performing it solo on his 2007 live album and b) Commodores’ version is amazing: a lascivious order to dance.

3. Commodores – Three Times a Lady (1978)

That Commodores’ first No 1 was a waltz, which Richie initially intended to submit to Frank Sinatra, tells you a lot about how far from their roots the band had travelled, but no matter: millions of singles were shifted and Richie’s future direction was mapped out.

2. All Night Long (All Night) (1983)

The biggest-selling and best single from Can’t Slow Down was a rare diversion from the lovestruck end-ofthe-night slow dance soundtrack­s that were its primary currency. You would struggle to describe it as funk or soul music, but there is something irresistib­le about its combinatio­n of moodsettin­g, dusk-falling atmosphere and monster chorus.

1. Commodores – Easy (1977)

There are diehard R&B fans who will tell you that Richie was the ruination of Commodores, his pop leanings and focus on ballads gradually dragging a tough funk band irrevocabl­y towards the middle of the road. Their gradual shift in focus – and Richie’s role in it – is inarguable, but when his melodic powers were at full force, it scarcely mattered. Easy is a fantastic song, smooth local-radio staple or not. It’s beautifull­y written, the melody and the loping rhythm perfectly capturing the lyric’s peculiar emotional cocktail – blithe indifferen­ce with a twist of guilt and regret.

 ?? Photograph: Bonnie Schiffman Photograph­y/Getty Images ?? Lionel Richie circa 1983.
Photograph: Bonnie Schiffman Photograph­y/Getty Images Lionel Richie circa 1983.
 ?? Photograph: David Redfern/Redferns ?? Richie in concert in London in 1987.
Photograph: David Redfern/Redferns Richie in concert in London in 1987.

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