Dyke & the Blazers

Formed
1964 
Active Decades
19001020304050607080902000 
 
by Richie Unterberger
Dyke & The Blazers were one of the first acts -- possibly the first notable act -- to play funk other than James Brown. Indeed, they often sounded like a sort of junior version of Brown And The Jb's, playing songs in which the rhythms and riffs mattered more than the tune. Similarly, vocalist Dyke Christian sang/grunted words that mattered more for the feeling and rhythm than the content. Their best-known track, "Funky Broadway, " was covered for a bigger hit by Wilson Pickett, though Dyke & The Blazers got a few more R&B hits before Dyke was shot to death in 1971.



Arlester "dyke" Christian was born in Buffalo, NY, in 1943, and by the mid-'60s was singing and playing bass with The O'jays backing band, The Blazers. Dyke and some of the other Blazers were stranded in Phoenix when The O'jays' couldn't afford to bring them back to Buffalo, and The Blazers based themselves in Phoenix, having no means to travel elsewhere. Their "Funky Broadway" was released on the Phoenix indie Artco in late 1966, and picked up for distribution by the L.A.-based Original Sound label. It became a sizable R&B hit (and a small pop one), and may have been the first record to use the word "funky" in the title.

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