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Tenderness

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (19 ratings)
Tenderness album cover
01
Try A Little Tenderness
4:02 $0.99
02
Sometimes I Cry
4:03 $0.99
03
Skinny
3:24 $0.99
04
Try To Be A Man
3:20 $0.99
05
Boardwalkin'
3:53 $0.99
06
Call Me
5:10 $0.99
07
Sitting On The Dock Of The Bay
3:26 $0.99
08
It Takes A While
4:30 $0.99
09
Hard To Love Your Brother
3:19 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 35:07

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Who is this??

WNEW1027

Not the Ohio Players I ever heard...

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abomination

DownTownDT

The Ohio Players have taken 2 great Otis Redding songs in "Dock of the Bay" and "Try a little Tenderness" and did absolutely no justice to them. This album is not one of the better Ohio Players' works.

user avatar

not worth it

fivefingers

I love the ohio players, however this album, and ouch! aswell, is not very good. pick up their other albums instead

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They Say All Music Guide

After being on nearly a two-year hiatus, the veteran R&B/funk aggregate signed with the now-defunct Boardwalk Records after being with Mercury for seven years and a brief stay with Arista. Hoping to jumpstart their once prosperous status, the Ohio Players recorded two Otis Redding classics: “Try a Little Tenderness” and “Sittin’ on the Dock of Bay.” Reduced to a quartet on this recording, they lay their patented style on the former. Beginning as a soulful ballad, the track kicks into high gear with Leroy “Sugar” Bonner’s trademark baritone complemented by horns and a groovin’ bassline. The single only managed to reach the number 40 position on the Billboard R&B charts after ten weeks, but it was truly deserving of a better outing. “Sittin’ on the Dock of Bay” was never released. The Ohio Players did not present anything new on this single; this is probably more a tribute to Redding. There are also two other featured singles that were promoted by the label: “Sometimes I Cry” and “Skinny.” The former is a slow, drifting song with a twist of country & western that is unlike any other Ohio Players recording; the single never charted. The latter, the title track, is a funky composition driven by Bonner’s scratch baritone and a delayed, groovin’ bassline; it posted a #46 rating after ten weeks. – Craig Lytle

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