On their sixth album, 1976's
A Circle Filled with Love,
the Sons of Champlin sounded ready for a commercial breakthrough on the order of
the Average White Band, playing funky R&B, and they got halfway up the singles chart with "Hold On." But they didn't manage anything as successful as
Boz Scaggs'
Silk Degrees or
Wild Cherry's "Play That Funky Music," to cite music in the same vein.
Loving Is Why, their seventh album, boasts more commercial-sounding blue-eyed soul, such as the lead-off track and first single "Saved by the Grace of Your Love," but it also has a somewhat valedictory tone, notably heard in several ballads penned by lead singer
Bill Champlin. "Time Will Bring You Love," "Love Can Take Me Now," and, especially, "Where I Belong" are set to acoustic guitar-plus-strings arrangements over which
Champlin, usually a gruff-voice blues singer, croons introspectively. The band's old forays into jazz improvisation and spacy psychedelic rock are gone now, but
Champlin's ballads suggest a new direction toward sophisticated adult contemporary pop/rock. They also have a wistful tone. More than ever, a band that struggled to sound like a group of equals despite
Champlin's frontman abilities sounds like a showcase for him, and he sounds like he might be ready to try something new.