Once an extremely popular regional attraction,
John Edwards moved from the chitlin circuit to the big time when he joined
the Spinners. Born in St. Louis,
Edwards began singing in men's clubs while stationed in Germany during his Army days. When he was discharged,
Edwards came to Columbus, GA. He appeared once with
Wilson Pickett and then did several dates in Chicago, where he met
Curtis Mayfield in 1968.
Mayfield got
Edwards a session at Weis Records and
Jo Armstead produced "If I Don't Lose My Head" in 1969.
Armstead produced other singles for Weis and Twin Stacks before
Edwards moved to Bell in 1972.
Floyd Smith co-wrote and produced "The Look on Your Face," after which
Edwards moved again to
Aware, in 1973.
Smith produced his LP
John Edwards, and "Messing up a Good Thing" generated some attention. But it was "Careful Man" in 1974 that got
Edwards his first and only hit as a single act; it reached number eight. When
Aware folded,
Edwards did a few dates with
The Spinners in 1973, but continued his solo career with Cotillion. His 1976 LP
Life Love and Living contained some excellent deep soul tunes, particularly "Baby, Hold on to Me," but didn't get much attention.
Edwards joined
The Spinners full-time in 1977 and remains with them currently. "Working My Way Back to You/Forgive Me, Girl" and "Cupid/I've Loved You for a Long Time" in 1980 are the biggest
Spinners hits featuring
Edwards to date.
–
Ron Wynn, Rovi