Morris Day and the Time
This funk group enjoyed a string of inventive hits in the early 80s that,
for verve, style, and wit, often matched the output of their mentor, Prince.
Flamboyant singer Morris Day played drums in Prince's junior high school
band, Grand Central. After several years on the local R&B circuit
he hooked up with Prince and the highly popular Minneapolis funk band
Flyte Tyme who, after singer Alexander O'Neal was deemed surplus to requirements,
were renamed The Time.
The line-up on 1981's self-titled debut album comprised Morris Day (vocals),
Jimmy "Jam" Harris (keyboards), Terry Lewis (bass), Jellybean
Johnson (percussion/drums), Jesse Johnson (guitar) and Monte Moir (keyboards).
The album, which was produced by Prince under the pseudonym Jamie Starr,
set out their blueprint: infectious dance-funk workouts often spilling
over into extended jams.
The band enjoyed immediate success on the R&B chart with the hits
"Get It Up" (number 6), "Cool (Part 1)" (number 7),
and "777-9311" (number 2). The latter was taken from their brilliant
follow-up, "What Time Is It?," on which their sound was honed
to a razor-sharp edge and Day's rampant, preening sex-machine persona
was just about kept in check.
Moir, Harris and Lewis had left by the time of 1984's "Ice Cream
Castle" with Jerome Benton (Lewis' half-brother) and Paul 'St. Paul'
Peterson joining the line-up as replacements. In a busy year, Morris Day
starred in Prince's highly successful movie "Purple Rain." The
Time also appeared in the movie, while two of their featured songs, "Jungle
Love" and "The Bird," entered the US Top 40. By the time
the latter charted, however, the band had split-up. Day and Johnson concentrated
on solo careers, with Morris Day topping the R&B chart and reaching
the US Top 30 in 1988 with "Fishnet," and Johnson enjoying a
string of Top 10 R&B hits.
In the meantime, their former band mates, Harris and Lewis, had established
themselves as black music's leading production team under the title, Jimmy
Jam And Terry Lewis, enjoying particular success with Janet Jackson in
the late-80s. Nevertheless, the original line-up (plus Benton) re-formed
in 1990 to record the excellent "Pandemonium," which spawned
the US Top 10 hit, "Jerk-Out," and became their highest charting
album.
Let us connect you with a Morris Day Agent now to book
Morris Day and The Time to appear at your next corporate,
private or special event!
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