The Best Is Yet to Come (Grover Washington Jr. song)

"The Best Is Yet To Come"
Single by Grover Washington, Jr. featuring Patti LaBelle
from the album The Best Is Yet To Come
Released 1983
Recorded 1982, Sigma Sound Studios, Philadelphia
Genre Jazz fusion, smooth jazz, pop
Label Elektra
Writer(s) Cynthia Biggs, Dexter Wansel
Producer(s) Cynthia Biggs, Dexter Wansel
Patti LaBelle singles chronology
"Family"
(1982)
"The Best Is Yet To Come"
(1983)
"If Only You Knew"
(1983)

"The Best Is Yet To Come" is a 1982 song written by Philadelphia-based songwriters Cynthia Biggs and Dexter Wansel, who also produced the song as a duet between jazz saxophonist Grover Washington, Jr. and American recording artist Patti LaBelle.

It was released as a single in February 1983 on Washington's Elektra label. It became Washington's second biggest hit following the success of his Bill Withers duet, "Just the Two of Us", reaching number fourteen on the Billboard R&B singles chart and reaching number-four on the Billboard Hot 100's Bubbling Under chart. The song features Washington's trademark saxophone riffs and an inspiring vocal delivery from LaBelle, who first sings it in her mid-range, before reaching higher vocal ranges near the end of the song, similar to the direction she took when she recorded "If Only You Knew" several months earlier. The song later won LaBelle her first Grammy Award nomination in the Best Female R&B Vocal Performance category. After the success of "The Best Is Yet To Come", LaBelle's label, Philadelphia International Records, released "If Only You Knew", also written by Biggs and Wansel with minor contribution by Kenny Gamble as the first single off her second PIR album, I'm in Love Again. It led to LaBelle finding chart success with the single. LaBelle rarely performed "The Best Is Yet To Come" live in concert. After the eighties, it was not included in her set list; LaBelle included the song back in her set list during recent tours however.

Credits

Charts

Chart (1983) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 Bubbling Under 4
U.S. Billboard Hot Soul Singles 14

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, September 15, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.