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This Is Niecy

Deniece Williams
Release Date: 07/17/2008
Original Release:  1976
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 1052682_CD
UPC # 886972392929
Label: Legacy Recordings
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Track Details Credits Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. It's Important to Me
2. That's What Friends Are For
3. How'd I Know That Love Would Slip Away
4. Cause You Love Me Baby
5. Free
6. Watching Over
7. If You Don't Believe
8. Free - (single version)

Performer: Deniece Williams
Artist: Maurice White; Ernie Watts
Engineer: George Massenburg
Producer: Maurice White; Charles Stepney
Distributor: Sony Music Distribution (

Notes: Personnel: Deniece Williams (vocals); Al McKay (guitar); Oscar Brashear (trumpet); Gale Robinson (French horn); George Bohanon (trombone); Jerry Peters (piano, keyboards); Verdine White (bass instrument); Freddie White (drums, percussion); Maurice White (drums, background vocals); Ernie Watts, Plas Johnson (wind); Sydney Barnes (background vocals). Liner Note Author: Deniece Williams. Deniece Williams spent the first half of the '70s establishing herself as a background vocalist for an impressive line of artists, including Stevie Wonder, Minnie Riperton, Roberta Flack, and Esther Phillips. Though she'd continue to do session work throughout her career, she also became accomplished as a solo artist. Unfortunately, a lot of people think she came out of nowhere for 1984's "Let's Hear It for the Boy," a number one pop hit, but she was making excellent albums as early as 1976. The songs that would eventually make up her debut, This Is Niecy, were sent to Earth, Wind & Fire. Williams didn't intend to make her own album and thought these songs would be a good fit for Philip Bailey. Instead, she got to record them with most of EW&F, including Maurice White and Charles Stepney as producers, Verdine White on bass, Freddie White on drums, those glorious horns, and several other associates of the group. Three of the album's seven songs were released as singles, and they're all stunners, each with its own mood and style (fittingly, one peaked on the disco chart, one hit the Top 30 of the pop chart, and one scraped the black singles chart). The best of the lot is "Free," a subtle but powerful sparkler that expressed Williams' desire to break from the more traditional lifestyle that had been mapped out for her. Out of everything she recorded, this low-key song demonstrates most how her time with Riperton and Syreeta rubbed off on her, showing how a bedroom whisper can be just as affecting as an in-the-red wail. Also containing strong album cuts, This Is Niecy is a great complement to Earth, Wind & Fire's Spirit, released the same year -- not only for its overlapping personnel, but also for its greatness. ~ Andy Kellman
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Shipping or Dimension weight in pounds: 0.5

PID # 4263800


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