Released in 1977,
Having a Party was
the Pointer Sisters' final album during a five-year stint with Blue Thumb Records, and the ladies' first offering of new material sans co-founder
June Pointer, who exited in late 1975. Despite the merriment intimated in the title (and the cover of the 1962
Sam Cooke hit), there seems to have been little to celebrate within the band. It had been nearly two years since they released
Steppin' in 1975, and creative differences with producer
David Rubinson resulted in
Bonnie,
Anita, and
June wanting the opportunity to seek greener pastures. The boisterous atmosphere on the aforementioned opener, "Having a Party," was contagious, but only enough to attract a little airplay and even less sales. The entire LP is far from a washout, however, as demonstrated by the slinky space-age groove on "Don't It Make You Crazy," which is not too far removed from the likes of
Parliament/
Funkadelic as it trips along girded by a definitely disco-influenced and bopping uptempo melody. "I Need a Man" drives behind an edgier rock-oriented feel that ultimately fails to evolve beyond the repetitive beat. Worse still is the lightweight "Waiting On You," which suffers as much from being a product of its time as it does from being a half-hearted dance number. Somewhat better is the undercurrent of reggae beneath the
Bonnie Pointer co-penned "I'll Get by Without You," perhaps projecting a similar style that would resurface on the early- to mid-'80s
Pointers sides -- such as their remake of
Bruce Springsteen's "Fire." Both
Anita and
Bonnie collaborated with
Stevie Wonder on "Bring Your Sweet Stuff Home to Me" -- arguably the most inspired selection with a motivated tropical buoyancy. The concluding "Lonely Gal" is the sole tune that all three
Pointers contributed to, indicating that when left to their own devices, the three could come up with excellent songs and above-par performances to boot. After the album had been out of print for nearly 20 years, Hip-O Select issued
Having a Party on CD in a limited edition of 5,000 copies. ~ Lindsay Planer