A Boston-based singer of what one might refer to as "traditional" R&B (i.e.,'50s- and '60s-style),
is the owner of one incredible pair of lungs and limitless energy and enthusiasm for his music. A soul screamer in the spirit of
, though never breaking big nationally, are a great cult act, a triumph of substance over style, with a bunch of terrific records to boot.
Whitfield (real name
Barry White, no joke!) came to Boston from New Jersey in the late '70s to attend Boston University. Prior to college, he'd spent time singing in an assortment of ill-fated hard rock, disco, and even progressive rock bands, never really singing the soul music he grew up loving. His move to Boston was a way of putting (at least temporarily) his musical past behind him. He had no intention of starting another band; his focus was on college. That was until he fell in with a bunch of Boston musicians led by ex-
Lyres guitarist
Peter Greenberg, who shared
Whitfield's love of raging soul and R&B. After hearing
Whitfield sing,
Greenberg was convinced they'd found the best voice in the city and
Barrence Whitfield & the Savages were born. For a while, they were the toast of the town, and without a doubt one of the best live acts in Boston. It was a hopeful sign too -- an African-American man working with a bunch of white guys in a city not known for its racial hospitality. After some dues-paying at college frat-house parties,
the Savages were ready for the local club scene, and they tore it up.
Whitfield was a dervish on-stage, working himself into such a frenzy of screaming and running around that he would occasionally black out. The band, especially
Greenberg and drummer
Howie Ferguson, were raucous and rough, in high gear from the moment they hit the stage.
Their debut LP was released to much acclaim (some of it national) in 1984, but
the Savages' brand of old R&B, and the fact that they relied almost exclusively on covers, didn't help them get beyond their status as enthusiastic archivists. By the time the third album was released,
the Savages had been replaced by a whole new band, and while the mania remained intact, there was a concerted effort for smoother soul songs designed to show off
Whitfield's voice. While America was being apathetic to
the Savages, England was going wild for them. BBC disc jockey
Andy Kershaw fell in love with the band, taped a gig in Boston for air in Britain, and brought
the Savages over for a tour. Among their English fans were
Robert Plant (who showed up at some gigs) and
Elvis Costello, who was supposedly writing a song for them.
Unfortunately, English success didn't translate back into big sales in America, and the band soldiered on with a few more personnel changes, but remained a cult act, touring in their strongholds and releasing fewer and fewer records. In 1997,
Whitfield began working with
the Movers, a Boston-based blues octet.
–
John Dougan, Rovi