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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > What Minnie Riperton’s music means 50 years after ‘Lovin’ You’
What Minnie Riperton’s music means 50 years after ‘Lovin’ You’
Entertainment

What Minnie Riperton’s music means 50 years after ‘Lovin’ You’

Last updated: September 23, 2025 8:00 pm
Editorial Board Published September 23, 2025
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Stevie Marvel is on the telephone recounting the expertise — making an attempt to recount the expertise — of recording “Lovin’ You” half a century in the past along with his buddy, the late Minnie Riperton.

“We were down at the Record Plant, and I was playing the Fender Rhodes,” he remembers. “She was singing, and obviously she sounded wonderful on it.” As he speaks, Marvel is noodling on the harpejji, the electrical string instrument you’ve in all probability seen him play on TV on the Grammy Awards or “Dancing With the Stars.”

“It was just a magical time,” he provides earlier than letting the music pour from his fingers for a second: lengthy, rippling melodic traces that preserve veering between a serious and a minor key.

“Sorry — I’m a little distracted because I’m thinking about then versus what’s happening now in this nation and how f— up it is,” he says. For Marvel, 75, Riperton’s music evokes a kinder, gentler period, her soothing voice an embodiment of “a commitment to music, a commitment to peace, a commitment to unity, a commitment to bringing people together.”

That steadfast serenity comes via nowhere extra vividly than in “Lovin’ You,” which hit No. 1 on Billboard’s Scorching 100 in April 1975. The following-to-last lower on Riperton’s album “Perfect Angel” — which Marvel co-produced with the singer’s husband, Richard Rudolph — is a radically stripped-down ballad about romantic devotion that makes you’re feeling as if you’re eavesdropping on a pair of their residence. And it’s received probably the most well-known excessive notes in pop music historical past.

The success of “Lovin’ You” drove “Perfect Angel” to the highest of Billboard’s R&B chart, the place it sat for 3 weeks earlier than making room for Earth, Wind & Fireplace’s “That’s the Way of the World.” Riperton, who by then had already been singing professionally for greater than a decade, lastly appeared arrange for an extended stretch within the highlight. But inside 5 years she was lifeless from breast most cancers, a rising star pulled down too quickly at age 31.

Now, 50 years after “Lovin’ You,” Riperton can be honored Wednesday night time with a tribute live performance on the Hollywood Bowl that includes Marvel, George Benson, Lizz Wright, Aloe Blacc, Alex Isley and Chanté Moore, amongst different acts but to be introduced.

Marvel views the present as a chance to “get people to come back to the truth and the light,” as he places it, at a second when many are caught “in a place of confusion.”

It’s additionally the newest signal that Riperton’s music — the stuff she did with Marvel within the mid-’70s in addition to her earlier work as a member of the Rotary Connection — continues to resonate: In 2019, Jordan Peele memorably soundtracked the twist ending of his film “Us” with Riperton’s music “Les Fleurs”; final 12 months, Norah Jones put that tune into her dwell repertoire whereas Andra Day sang “Memory Lane” on the NAACP Picture Awards; this previous Might, a video went viral on Instagram exhibiting SZA reaching for (and virtually nailing) the excessive word in “Lovin’ You” backstage on the American Music Awards.

Thanks partially to her untimely departure, Riperton stays curiously underappreciated within the broader tradition, in keeping with Marvel and others, who say the singer with the so-called whistle register has but to obtain her due.

“You know how they say, ‘If you know, you know’?” asks Patrice Rushen. “I think that’s the situation with Minnie.” Rushen, a veteran jazz and R&B artist and former chair of the favored music program at USC’s Thornton Faculty of Music, describes “the special subtlety and nuance” in Riperton’s singing — “her ability to be very sweet and very earthy at the same time.”

In 1980, Rushen recorded a digital duet with Riperton for the album “Love Lives Forever,” which got here out a 12 months after Riperton died and featured appearances by Marvel, Benson, Michael Jackson and Roberta Flack. “There’s a simplicity to a song like ‘Lovin’ You,’ but when I say ‘simplicity,’ that doesn’t mean it’s easy,” Rushen says. “It actually shows great mastery — an understanding of what a song needs to get across.”

Isley, an up-and-coming R&B singer whose father is Ernie Isley of the Isley Brothers, calls Riperton “the prime example” of a voice that reveals “the strength in restraint,” and certainly you may hint her affect via the softly confiding tone of music by Prince within the ’80s and Janet Jackson within the ’90s to modern-day songs like Isley’s dreamy “Good & Plenty” or Ravyn Lenae’s breathy pop hit “Love Me Not.”

Says Rudolph, whose two youngsters with Riperton embody the actor and comic Maya Rudolph, “It really touches my heart that the younger generation of musicians is still moved by Minnie and what she did.”

Singer Minnie Riperton, her husband Richard Rudolph and children Maya Rudolph and Marc Rudolph December 1978 in Los Angeles.

Minnie Riperton, her husband Richard Rudolph and kids Maya Rudolph and Marc Rudolph attend the Hollywood Christmas Parade in December 1978 in Los Angeles.

(Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Photographs)

Riperton grew up in Chicago and received her begin in music in a teenage lady group signed to Chess Information (the place she additionally labored as a receptionist); later, she sang backup on a number of the label’s hits, together with Fontella Bass’ “Rescue Me,” which additionally featured the handiwork of drummer Maurice White and vibes participant Charles Stepney, who would go on to very large renown with Earth, Wind & Fireplace.

Earlier than that, Stepney recruited Riperton to sing within the Rotary Connection, a sort of psychedelic soul-rock act that made a string of information within the late ’60s which have since been broadly sampled by the likes of DJ Shadow and A Tribe Known as Quest. Riperton met Rudolph in a stairwell of the rock membership he was managing — “It was one of those moments you see in the movies,” he says now — and the 2 shortly fell in love; Rudolph started writing songs with Stepney for what grew to become Riperton’s solo debut, 1970’s ornately trippy “Come to My Garden,” which Stepney produced.

“Charles and I thought we were gonna be the next Burt Bacharach and Hal David,” says Rudolph, who remembers writing the phrases to “Les Fleurs” as he did his rounds as a bus driver for a Chicago nursery college. In actuality, the LP flopped, which led the couple to separate for Florida, the place Rudolph had spent a part of his childhood; they rented a home in Gainesville by a duck pond and he labored odd jobs together with making sandals for an area head store.

But Riperton and Rudolph had been additionally writing songs. “Lovin’ You” started as a lullaby for child Maya that they placed on tape as a loop “so we could sneak off while she was in her little Swyngomatic,” Rudolph says; “The Edge of a Dream” captured their ideas on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy within the years after his assassination. Ultimately, a university rep for Epic Information discovered the couple in Gainesville and satisfied his boss to hearken to the music they’d been making; Epic signed Riperton, and she or he and Rudolph moved their younger household to Los Angeles.

In accordance with Rudolph, a buddy of Riperton’s supervisor launched the singer to Marvel, who instantly invited her to contribute backing vocals to his album “Fulfillingness’ First Finale.”

“Stevie was making his album and he was making an album for [his ex-wife] Syreeta, and he just said, ‘Why don’t we make an album for Minnie while we’re in here?’” Rudolph says of the periods on the Report Plant on West third Avenue close to La Cienega Boulevard. “Perfect Angel” incorporates enter by most of the identical gamers as these different LPs — drummer Ollie E. Brown, as an example, and bassist Reggie McBride — although Rudolph ended up enjoying guitar on “Lovin’ You” attributable to guitarist Michael Sembello’s bout with carpal tunnel syndrome.

“These two lunatics, Stevie and Minnie, put me in the studio with a click track and the two of them in my headphones saying the most outrageous things you could say to try to get me to mess up,” Rudolph remembers, laughing. With the essential tracks full, Marvel insisted the music wanted chirping birds like these the couple had caught via an open window whereas recording their residence demo; Rudolph says he, Riperton and Marvel ventured to UCLA’s botanic gardens with a microphone and a tape recorder to get the sound.

Due to the phrases of his contract with Motown, Marvel wasn’t allowed to make use of his identify on “Perfect Angel”; he’s credited on the album as El Toro Negro, although at the moment he says, “I think most people knew who the bull was.”

In any occasion, the LP was not successful proper out of the field — it didn’t begin promoting till “Lovin’ You” blew up as a single months after the album’s launch. Rudolph describes a short interval of hard-won pleasure earlier than Riperton was identified with most cancers. But she continued to work at the same time as she was handled for the illness — touring with Benson, acting on TV, recording three extra studio information (together with 1979’s Grammy-nominated “Minnie”) and appearing as a spokesperson for the American Most cancers Society.

George Benson, from left, Minnie Riperton and Stevie Wonder circa 1978.

George Benson, from left, Minnie Riperton and Stevie Marvel circa 1978.

(Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Photographs)

Benson laughs as he remembers one long-ago night time on the street along with his buddy. “My manager was one of those strict guys: ‘It’s one minute after 10 — you were supposed to be on a minute ago,’” says the singer and guitarist. “He tried that on Minnie, who was opening the show — told her the promoter was very mad because she was late. She said, ‘If he wants the show to get started, tell him to get his behind out there and start it, because as you can see, I’m not ready.’”

Riperton died in L.A. in July 1979. In September of that 12 months, Marvel appeared on “Soul Train” and spoke tenderly in regards to the singer earlier than performing a medley of “Lovin’ You” and “Perfect Angel’s” title observe, which he wrote. A long time later, he says, he wrote the music “My Love Is on Fire,” from 2005’s “A Time to Love” LP, about Riperton.

“I had dreams about her, so it was kind of a fantasy song,” he says. “We were never intimate — she was married, obviously — but I had love for her, and it was a wide spectrum of love.”

Requested what it’s like to listen to Riperton’s music now, Rudolph says, “Sometimes it’s beautiful and sometimes it’s very painful.” Today, he lives between L.A. and Japan along with his second spouse; not way back, he was in a bar in Japan when the DJ placed on Riperton’s 1975 “Adventures in Paradise” album.

“I was trying to talk to the people I was with, but eventually I just couldn’t,” he says. “I had to listen and relive the whole thing.”

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