Before 1979's
We Are Family,
Sister Sledge wasn't a huge name in the R&B/disco world. The group had enjoyed a small following and scored a few minor hits, including "Love, Don't You Go Through No Changes on Me" in 1974 and "Blockbuster Boy" in 1977. But it wasn't until
We Are Family that the Philadelphia siblings finally exploded commercially, and the people they have to thank for their commercial success are
Chic leaders
Nile Rodgers and
Bernard Edwards. The
Rodgers/
Edwards team handles all of the writing, producing, and arranging on this album; so not surprisingly, almost everything on
We Are Family is very
Chic-sounding. That is true of the sexy "He's the Greatest Dancer" and the anthemic, uplifting title song (both of which soared to #1 on the R&B charts), as well as excellent album tracks like the lush "Easier to Love," the perky "One More Time," and the addictive "Thinking of You." The least
Chic-sounding tune on the album is the ballad "Somebody Loves Me," which favors a classic sweet soul approach and is the type of song one would have expected from
Thom Bell,
Gamble & Huff, or
Holland-Dozier-Holland rather than
Rodgers/
Edwards. Meanwhile, the intoxicating "Lost in Music" (a #35 R&B hit) is about as
Chic-sounding as it gets. When Rhino reissued
We Are Family on CD in 1995, it added four bonus tracks, all of which are remixes of either the title song or "Lost in Music." These remixes are intriguing; it's interesting to hear late '70s classics turned into high-tech 1990s dance-pop. But they are less than essential, and the original versions are by far the best -- how can you improve on perfection? Both creatively and commercially,
We Are Family is
Sister Sledge's crowning achievement. ~ Alex Henderson