The Ohio Players were among the top funk bands of the mid-'70s. Emerging from Dayton, Ohio in 1959, the group was originally dubbed the Ohio Untouchables, and initially comprised singer/guitarist Robert Ward, bassist Marshall "Rock" Jones, saxophonist/guitarist Clarence "Satch" Satchell, drummer Cornelius Johnson, and trumpeter/trombonist Ralph "Pee Wee" Middlebrooks. In late 1961, a relative of Ward's founded the Detroit, Michigan-based Lupine Records, and the group traveled north to the Motor City to back the Falcons on their hit "I Found a Love"; the Ohio Untouchables soon made their headlining debut with "Love Is Amazing," but when Ward subsequently exited for a solo career, the group essentially disbanded.
At that point, the nucleus of Middlebrooks, Jones, and newly added guitarist Leroy "Sugarfoot" Bonner returned to Dayton; there they recruited saxophonist Andrew Noland and drummer Gary Webster, the latter a somewhat elusive figure whose true involvement in the group's history has never been definitively answered — some sources credit him as a founding Untouchable, others even as the band's early leader. In any case, by 1967, with the subsequent addition of singers Bobby Lee Fears and Dutch Robinson, the newly rechristened Ohio Players were signed as the house band for the New York City-based Compass Records, backing singer Helena Ferguson on her lone hit, "Where Is the Party," before issuing their solo debut, "Trespassin'," which hit the R&B charts in early 1968.
Band Members

Andrew Noland Saxaphone

Billy Beck Keyboards

Bobby Lee Fears Singer

Bruce Napier Trumpet

Clarence "Satch" Satchell Saxaphone

Clarence Willis Guitar

Cornelius Johnson Drums

Dutch Robinson Singer

Greg Webster Drums

James "Diamond" Williams Drums

Jimmy Sampson Drums

Leroy Bonner Guitar

Marshall Jones Bass

Mervin Pierce Trombone

Ralph "Pee Wee" Middlebrooks Trumpet

Robert "Kuumba" Jones Percussion

Vincent Thomas Percussion

Walter Morrison Keyboards

Wes Boatman Keyboards
Discography

Trespassin' 1966

Observations in Time 1968

Pain 1971

Pleasure 1972

Ecstasy 1973

Superpak 1974

Skin Tight 1974

Climax 1974

Greatest Hits 1975

Rattlesnake 1975

Honey 1975

Fire 1975

Contradiction 1976

Gold 1976

The Best of the Early Years, Vol. 1 1977

Mr. Mean 1977

Angel 1977

Jass-Ay-Lay-Dee 1978

Everybody Up 1979

Tenderness 1981

Ouch! 1982

Graduation 1984

Back 1988
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