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How the leader of the band behind 'Shining Star' and 'September' By Jordan Runtagh in People
Born in Memphis in 1941, White endured an unstable childhood marked by separation from his mother while his grandmother raised him and the death of his father at a young age. Music became both a refuge and a purpose. After moving to Chicago as a teen, he worked at the legendary Chess Records. While honing his skills as a producer, he began developing a vision. "He said, 'I wanna have a band that renders a service to humanity,'" bandmate Philip Bailey, 75, says. To make that vision a reality, White assembled a formidable group of musicians, including bassist Verdine White and drummer Fred White, his younger half brothers. "We were into the concept, we were into the music, and we were in it together," Verdine, 74, says. Though not a blood relative, percussionist Ralph Johnson says it felt like a band of brothers: "We did it all to the max because we believed in it."
For Maurice, Earth, Wind & Fire became the close-knit surrogate family he'd longed for as a boy. "For at least 10 years, I saw these guys more than I saw my wife and kids," says Bailey. And lie most families, they sometimes disagreed. Case in point: Bailey initially wasn't sold on the 1978 hit "September." The singer thought the now-classic "bah-de-ah" refrain was "kinda corny," he says. "But I was definitely wrong." As the band's popularity grew, so did its ambitions. Live performances evolved into dazzling spectacles with Broadway-level choreography, the Egyptian-inspired costumes and levitation tricks courtesy of world-class magicians. As songwriter, producer, arranger and frontman, White carried the weight of an ever-expanding enterprise. In 1984 he stunned his bandmates by dissolving Earth, Wind & Fire. The decision was especially painful for Verdine, who spent years estranged from his older brother. Today, however, he sees a man overwhelmed by the demands of success. "It's a lot of pressure with all the music and the traveling and the performing," he says. "The demand was huge." The band reunited later in the decade and continued performing together until White was sidelined by Parkinson's, which claimed his life in 2016. Fred White died in 2023, but Verdine continues to tour with Johnson and Bailey. Today the surviving members are struck by how much of White's vision endures. "I think Maurice would be pleased," Verdine says. "I think he would be pleased that the three of us are still here -- Philip, Ralph and myself -- to tell the story." ![]()
From People's June 30, 1975, issue. BETTE MIDLER REVIVES THE DIVINE MISS M FOR A RECORD-BREAKING REVUE
IN THE NEWS: JUNE 1975
Royals: Princess Anne, 24, and her husband of nearly two years, Mark Phillips, 26, made their first visit to the United States as a couple to compete in the U.S. Open Championship. The princess sought a spot on the British equestrian team for the 1976 Olympics. Goodbye: After 27 years in circulation and the death of creator Walt Kelly in 1973, the cartoon comic strip Pogo ceased publication. STAR TRACKS Back in Time James Brolin and Jill Clayburgh (left) transformed into Clark Gable and Carole Lombard to film Gable and Lombard, a movie about the actors' 1930s love story. Testament to Talent Burt Lancaster (right) stepped into his first television role to play the title character in the CBS miniseries Moses the Lawgiver.
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