Perfect Angel
Perfect Angel is the second studio album by American singer Minnie Riperton, released on August 9, 1974, by Epic Records.[1] The album was primarily produced by Stevie Wonder, credited under the pseudonym El Toro Negro, with contributions from Riperton's husband Richard Rudolph, and features instrumentation performed by Wonder including piano, drums, and clavinet.[2] It showcases Riperton's signature five-octave vocal range, blending soul, funk, and pop elements in tracks that emphasize her ethereal whistle register and emotive delivery.[3] The album's lead single "Lovin' You", co-written by Riperton and Rudolph with production assistance from Wonder, became her biggest hit, topping the Billboard Hot 100 chart for one week in April 1975 and earning gold certification.[4] This success propelled Perfect Angel to commercial prominence, reaching number four on the Billboard 200 and number one on the R&B albums chart, marking Riperton's breakthrough after earlier group work with Rotary Connection.[5] Critically, the record has been lauded for capturing Riperton at her artistic peak, with its intimate production and innovative arrangements highlighting her as a distinctive voice in 1970s soul music.[6] Though Riperton's career was tragically shortened by her breast cancer diagnosis in 1976 and death in 1979, Perfect Angel endures as a defining work that influenced subsequent vocalists and remains celebrated for its joyful yet poignant sound.[7]Background
Prior career context
Minnie Riperton, born in Chicago in 1947, initiated her professional music career as a teenager, serving as lead vocalist for the local girl group The Gems, which signed with Chess Records and issued several singles in the early 1960s.[8] She concurrently worked as a receptionist and backup singer at Chess Studios, providing vocals for artists including Etta James, Bo Diddley, Muddy Waters, and Chuck Berry.[9] In 1966, Riperton joined the experimental psychedelic soul group Rotary Connection, formed by Chess heir Marshall Chess and arranger Charles Stepney; the ensemble released five albums between 1967 and 1971, fusing rock, soul, pop, and classical influences, with Riperton often delivering her signature five-octave vocal range in ethereal, layered performances.[10] Rotary Connection's output, including titles like Aladdin (1968) and Songs (1969), showcased Riperton's versatility but achieved limited mainstream commercial traction despite critical recognition for their innovative sound.[11] Concurrently, Riperton pursued her debut solo project, Come to My Garden, recorded in 1969 and released on GRT Records in 1970; produced, arranged, and orchestrated by Stepney, the album featured lush string and orchestral elements, with most compositions co-written by Riperton and her husband, Richard Rudolph, emphasizing intimate, nature-inspired soul ballads.[12] [9] Despite acclaim for its sophisticated production and Riperton's vocal prowess—described by contemporaries as a "masterpiece" in niche soul circles—Come to My Garden sold modestly, failing to chart significantly and constraining her visibility beyond underground audiences.[13] The underwhelming reception, coupled with Rotary Connection's disbandment around 1971, led to a several-year hiatus from major releases; during this interval, Riperton focused on family life after marrying Rudolph in 1972 and relocated to Los Angeles, where she briefly contributed to Stevie Wonder's backing group Wonderlove before securing a contract with Epic Records in 1973.[7] This period of transition underscored the challenges of her early career, marked by artistic experimentation amid commercial obstacles, setting the stage for her renewed solo endeavors.[5]Conception and songwriting
Perfect Angel was conceived in the early 1970s after Minnie Riperton's debut solo album Come to My Garden (1970) achieved limited commercial success despite critical praise for her vocal prowess. Riperton and her husband, Richard Rudolph, relocated temporarily to Gainesville, Florida, where she stepped back from music to focus on family, including the birth of their daughter Maya on July 22, 1972. Recognizing the need for stronger production support, they leveraged Riperton's prior collaborations with Stevie Wonder—who had invited her to contribute uncredited vocals to "Creepin'" on his 1974 album Fulfillingness' First Finale and "It Ain't No Use" on Music of My Mind (1972)—to secure his involvement as co-producer. Wonder, a longtime admirer of Riperton's five-octave range, agreed to helm the project pseudonymously as "El Toro Negro" to avoid conflicts with his Motown obligations, allowing Riperton to sign with Epic Records while retaining creative control.[14][15][3] The songwriting process emphasized Riperton's transition to a more prominent compositional role, with her and Rudolph co-authoring seven of the album's nine tracks, drawing from personal experiences of love, nature, and domestic bliss. Tracks like "Baby, This Love I Have" and "Simple Things" reflect this intimate partnership, blending Riperton's poetic sensibilities with Rudolph's lyrical structures to craft folk-soul ballads suited to her ethereal delivery. Wonder contributed the remaining compositions, including the title track "Perfect Angel," which originated from a pre-existing melody he adapted specifically for Riperton, viewing her as a rare, uplifting presence in music.[16][17] A pivotal example of the collaborative songwriting dynamic is "Lovin' You," initially penned by Riperton and Rudolph as a lyric-only lullaby for their daughter Maya years before the sessions, evoking springtime renewal and unconditional affection. During production in 1973–1974, Wonder transformed it into a full arrangement, adding a gentle acoustic guitar melody, flügelhorn accents, and synthesized bird chirps to mimic outdoor serenity, turning the personal ode into the album's centerpiece without altering the core lyrics. This ad-hoc evolution underscored the organic, improvisational nature of the sessions, where familial inspirations merged with Wonder's instrumental innovations to produce the track's chart-topping appeal upon release.[18][14][19]Production
Recording sessions
Recording for Perfect Angel took place primarily in Los Angeles at The Record Plant and Wally Heider Recording Studios between late 1973 and early 1974.[20] Stevie Wonder, who co-produced the album under the pseudonym El Toro Negro to sidestep contractual restrictions with Motown, handled much of the instrumentation himself, including acoustic and electric piano on most tracks, drums on the opening "Reasons," and contributions to synthesizers programmed by associate producers Malcolm Cecil and Robert Margouleff.[21] [5] Richard Rudolph, Riperton's husband and co-producer, collaborated closely on songwriting and oversight, drawing from demos the couple had developed prior to securing Wonder's involvement after Riperton's backing vocal work on his albums Stevie Wonder Presents: Syreeta (1974) and Fulfillingness' First Finale (1974).[3] The sessions emphasized a collaborative, organic approach amid Wonder's parallel commitments to his own recordings, resulting in a blend of live instrumentation and innovative synth elements; for instance, Wonder laid down foundational tracks quickly, often in single takes, before overdubs layered Riperton's five-octave vocal range, which required precise engineering to capture her signature whistle register without distortion.[7] Additional musicians, such as bassists and guitarists from Wonder's circle, contributed sporadically, with remixing later handled at Westlake Audio and mastering at Kendun Recorders to refine the album's warm, soulful sound.[20] The process was marked by creative efficiency, yielding the final product in time for its August 9, 1974 release, though Wonder's pseudonym reflected the era's industry tensions over artist-label loyalties.[5]Collaborators and technical aspects
Stevie Wonder, credited under the pseudonym El Toro Negro, served as the primary producer for Perfect Angel, handling arrangements, instrumentation, and overall creative direction alongside co-producer Richard Rudolph, Riperton's husband and a key songwriter on the album.[7][5] Wonder contributed multiple instruments, including acoustic and electric piano on most tracks, drums on the opening song "Lovin' You," and bass, while drawing from his Wonderlove backing band for additional support.[7][3] Associate producers Malcolm Cecil and Robert Margouleff managed synthesizer engineering and programming, integrating electronic elements into the album's soul and R&B framework; they also served as primary engineers.[2] Recording engineer Kent Duncan oversaw the sessions, with Gary Olazabal assisting, primarily at studios in Los Angeles where Wonder's involvement facilitated a collaborative, iterative process often starting with piano demos.[22] The production emphasized Riperton's five-octave vocal range, achieved through layered harmonies and minimalistic arrangements, with the initial eight tracks expanded to nine at Wonder's insistence to meet standard album length expectations of around 40 minutes.[7][2] Key musical collaborators included guitarists Marlo Henderson and Michael Sembello on lead and rhythm parts, respectively, alongside Wonder's percussion ensemble for tracks like "Lovin' You," which featured gentle piano foundations and backing vocals from artists such as Deniece Williams.[22][7] Technical choices prioritized warmth and clarity, utilizing analog recording techniques and synthesizers for subtle textures, reflecting Wonder's signature blend of organic soul with emerging electronic innovation during the 1974 sessions.[2]Musical content
Style and instrumentation
Perfect Angel exemplifies "hippie soul," a style characterized by jazzy, psych-inflected arrangements that are woozy and loose in structure, blending experimental R&B with rock, pop, and trippy quiet storm elements.[23] The album incorporates soul-pop foundations with influences from easy listening, folk, light funk, singer-songwriter introspection, classic-rock atmospheres, psychedelia, and jazz, creating an eclectic sound that prioritizes atmospheric intimacy over dense orchestration.[3] Stevie Wonder's production emphasizes simplicity to foreground Minnie Riperton's five-octave vocal range, resulting in breezy, light textures often evoking jazz-funk grooves and celestial bliss.[23][3] Instrumentation across the record is deliberately spare and organic, featuring acoustic and electric guitars, rippling pianos, velvety keyboards, and subtle synth elements from collaborators like Malcolm Cecil and Robert Margouleff, who provided Moog synthesizer and electronic textures akin to Wonder's own work.[23] Wonder himself contributed drums, keyboards, harmonica (as on "Our Lives," with its psychedelic rhythm variations), and additional arrangements alongside members of his backing group Wonderlove.[3] Tracks like "Lovin' You" employ virtually a cappella minimalism with no percussion, gentle folky strums, and hushed support to accentuate vocal whistle register flourishes.[23][3] In contrast, "Every Time He Comes Around" deploys live-in-the-studio drums, fuzz-toned electric guitar, and tinkling keyboard accents for a fuller, funk-tinged drive, while "Take a Little Trip" highlights jazzy chord changes via keyboards and electric piano chords paired with tickling drums and muted guitar plucks.[3] "It's So Nice (To See Old Friends)" relies on strummed acoustic guitar and piano ripples for a relaxed, conversational feel.[3] This approach—rooted in live band dynamics with occasional psychedelic flourishes—ensures the album's moody, love-centric vibe remains uncluttered and voice-centric.[3][23]Themes and lyrical analysis
The lyrics of Perfect Angel, largely co-written by Minnie Riperton and her husband Richard Rudolph, center on romantic love portrayed through simple, direct language that conveys profound affection and intimacy, often eschewing the blues-infused hardship expected of Black female singers in the era.[5] Riperton explicitly rejected such conventions, stating, “Because I'm a Black woman, everyone thinks I should sing the Blues,” opting instead for themes of ecstasy, frivolity, and utopian bliss in relationships.[5] This approach blends sensuality with spiritual or mystical undertones, using nature metaphors—such as trees, flowers, and birdsong—to symbolize love's healing and divine qualities, as evident in tracks evoking earthly harmony and personal fulfillment.[24][25] The title track, penned by Stevie Wonder, positions Riperton herself as an ethereal figure, with lines like “What we're making is history, fooling impossibility; making love, not a fantasy” celebrating transcendent partnership and authenticity in devotion.[26] Wonder reportedly viewed Riperton as embodying this "perfect angel" ideal, infusing the song with optimistic realism about enduring bonds. Similarly, "Lovin' You," originally a lullaby for Riperton's daughter Maya Rudolph, employs naive charm in its declarations of uncomplicated joy—“Lovin' you is easy 'cause you're beautiful”—accompanied by acoustic guitar and natural sound effects that reinforce themes of pure, nurturing affection.[24][25] Sensual and erotic elements emerge prominently in songs like "Every Time He Comes Around," where lyrics depict overwhelming carnal desire merging with spiritual wholeness, described as having an "almost orgasmic" intensity that underscores uncontrollable passion within committed love.[25] "Reasons" opens the album with assertive expressions of deep-seated longing and triumph over adversity, blending erotic yearning with personal empowerment, while "Seeing You This Way" radiates devotion through wordless scatting that evokes pure relational harmony.[25][24] Deeper societal reflections appear sparingly, as in "The Edge of a Dream," a piano-driven ballad inspired by Martin Luther King Jr.'s civil rights legacy, featuring gospel-inflected pleas for unity and peace that tie individual dreams to broader human aspirations.[24] "Our Lives," meanwhile, envisions long-term domestic bliss and family legacy—“side by side, in the sun”—with harmonica accents adding emotional depth to themes of relational endurance.[25][24] Overall, the album's lyrical simplicity belies its emotional range, prioritizing affirmative, mystical eroticism over conflict to affirm love's transformative potential.[25]Release and commercial performance
Initial release and promotion
Perfect Angel was released by Epic Records on August 9, 1974.[5] [7] The label promoted the album by emphasizing Minnie Riperton's exceptional five-octave vocal range and the uncredited production contributions of Stevie Wonder, who handled instrumentation and arrangements under the pseudonym El Toro Negro on several tracks.[3] [6] Initial marketing efforts included the release of "Reasons" as a lead single earlier in 1974 to build radio airplay and anticipation, alongside print advertisements in music trade publications and distribution of promotional posters featuring the album's artwork.[16] [27] Promotional review copies were sent to industry insiders, including radio programmers and journalists, to secure early coverage and playlisting.[28] While the album did not immediately achieve massive commercial breakthrough, these strategies laid the groundwork for subsequent success driven by the later single "Lovin' You."[29]Chart performance
Perfect Angel debuted on the US Billboard 200 chart following the release of its lead single "Lovin' You", which ascended to number one on the Billboard Hot 100 for one week on April 5, 1975.[30] The album itself climbed to a peak position of number 4 on the Billboard 200 during 1975, reflecting sustained sales momentum driven by the single's airplay and crossover appeal.[31] It also topped the Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, underscoring Riperton's strong foothold in that genre despite her pop breakthrough.[30] Internationally, the album achieved modest traction; in the United Kingdom, it reached a peak of number 33 on the Official Albums Chart and spent three weeks in the top 100.[32] Year-end summaries placed Perfect Angel at number 11 on the 1975 Billboard 200, highlighting its commercial endurance amid competition from established acts.[31] In Canada, it ranked 55th on the RPM year-end albums chart for 1975, indicating regional interest but limited dominance.[31]| Chart (1974–1975) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 4 |
| US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums | 1 |
| UK Albums (OCC) | 33 |
Sales and certifications
Perfect Angel achieved commercial success primarily driven by the hit single "Lovin' You", leading to its certification as Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on March 21, 1975, for shipments exceeding 500,000 units in the United States.[33][34] This certification reflects sales performance bolstered by the album's release through Epic Records, though exact worldwide figures remain undocumented beyond U.S. thresholds.[31] No Platinum certification was awarded by the RIAA, indicating shipments did not surpass 1,000,000 units domestically. International certifications are absent from verified records, with claims of UK Silver status by the British Phonographic Industry unconfirmed in official databases.[31]| Region | Certification (date) | Certified units/sales |
|---|---|---|
| United States (RIAA) | Gold (March 21, 1975) | 500,000[31] |
Reception and legacy
Contemporary critical reviews
Robert Christgau of The Village Voice reviewed Perfect Angel in his 1974 Consumer Guide column, assigning it a B grade and dubbing Riperton "Our Lady of the Five Octaves." He commended her evolution from the "mannered abruptness and pseudopsychedelic melodrama" of prior work toward a "sensuous spirituality that feels lived-in," while noting Stevie Wonder's pivotal role: "Wonder plays most of the instruments himself, and his production is subtle and right." Christgau critiqued the material as "slight—sweet nothings from a voice of heavenly dimensions," suggesting the songs' delicacy sometimes overshadowed their depth despite the vocal and production strengths.[36] Contemporary coverage in trade publications like Cash Box highlighted the album's potential amid Riperton's rising profile, though full-length critiques were sparse prior to the "Lovin' You" single's chart success in early 1975.[37] Critics generally emphasized Riperton's extraordinary range—spanning whistle register notes—and Wonder's uncredited multi-instrumental input as key assets, positioning the release as a showcase for her talents after years in relative obscurity.[6] The album's gentle, folk-soul leanings drew comparisons to Wonder's own style, with reviewers appreciating the understated arrangements over bombast.[36]Commercial and retrospective critiques
Retrospective assessments of Perfect Angel's commercial performance highlight its status as Minnie Riperton's peak in sales and chart success, albeit modest by pop standards of the era. The album achieved RIAA gold certification on March 21, 1975, for U.S. sales exceeding 500,000 units, propelled by the chart-topping single "Lovin' You," which held the #1 spot on the Billboard Hot 100 for one week in April 1975.[33] [38] Critics have noted that while it reached #4 on the Billboard Top Soul Albums chart, its #48 peak on the Billboard 200 reflected limited crossover appeal beyond R&B audiences, attributing this to Riperton's niche five-octave vocal range and eclectic style, which resisted mainstream pop formulas despite Stevie Wonder's production involvement.[24] The album's commercial trajectory was further constrained by Riperton's breast cancer diagnosis in 1976 and her death in 1979 at age 31, forestalling potential sequels or tours that might have sustained momentum.[39] Later critical reappraisals consistently acclaim Perfect Angel as a sophisticated fusion of soul, funk, folk, and psychedelia, often ranking it among Riperton's finest work and a high-water mark for 1970s vocal experimentation. In a 2017 Pitchfork review of the deluxe reissue, the album was described as her "brightest moment," praising its bold instrumentation via Wonder's Wonderlove band and tracks like "Reasons" for blending eroticism with structural looseness, though acknowledging some overly whimsical lyrics as period artifacts.[24] A 2024 Albumism retrospective for the album's 50th anniversary lauded it as a "sophomore stunner" and "triumph of utopian folk-soul," emphasizing Riperton's ecstatic delivery and the reissue's bonus tracks for revealing untapped depths in her catalog.[5] Similarly, PopMatters' 2024 analysis at the half-century mark portrayed it as "imperfectly angelic," valuing Riperton's multi-octave prowess and songwriting on cuts like "Lovin' You" while critiquing minor dated elements in production, yet affirming its enduring appeal as a showcase of raw talent overshadowed by tragedy.[3] These views underscore a consensus that the album's initial underappreciation stemmed from its resistance to genre constraints, positioning it retrospectively as a cult classic rather than a blockbuster.[23]Influence and cultural impact
Riperton's innovative use of the whistle register on Perfect Angel, particularly in the single "Lovin' You," established a benchmark for vocal range and technique that influenced subsequent generations of singers. Mariah Carey has repeatedly cited Riperton as a pivotal inspiration for her own whistle register abilities, crediting the album's demonstration of octave-spanning control in a 1998 Vibe magazine interview and subsequent discussions.[40] Similarly, artists including Prince, Janet Jackson, and SZA have drawn from Riperton's Perfect Angel-era phrasing and high-note execution, with SZA attempting the "Lovin' You" whistle during a 2024 performance.[39] The album's tracks have permeated hip-hop and electronic genres through sampling, amplifying Riperton's soulful essence in urban music contexts; producers like DJ Shadow and A Tribe Called Quest incorporated elements of her Perfect Angel sound into their works, bridging 1970s R&B with 1990s rap production.[39] Covers of "Lovin' You" by Norah Jones and Andra Day further attest to its melodic durability, maintaining the song's gold-certified status and cross-genre appeal decades later.[39] Cultural recognition of Perfect Angel peaked with its 50th anniversary in 2024–2025, culminating in the September 23, 2025, Hollywood Bowl tribute concert titled Perfect Angel: The Definitive Minnie Riperton Tribute, where Stevie Wonder joined performers to celebrate the album's embodiment of peace and vocal artistry amid contemporary challenges.[4] [39] This event underscored the album's role in fostering a legacy of nuanced, healing soul music, as noted by collaborators like Patrice Rushen, who praised Riperton's "special subtlety" on the record.[39]Reissues and later assessments
Remastering and expanded editions
In 2017, Capitol Records issued a remastered deluxe edition of Perfect Angel as a two-disc set, released on December 1 in CD, digital, and 96 kHz/24-bit high-resolution audio formats.[41][42] The reissue features the original 1974 album on the first disc, augmented by a bonus single version of "Lovin' You" with a countdown intro, while the second disc, subtitled A More Perfect Angel, contains eleven previously unreleased or alternate recordings.[42][24] The bonus material emphasizes extended jam sessions and studio variations from the original production under Stevie Wonder (credited as El Toro Negro due to contractual constraints with Motown), including longer takes that reveal improvisational elements and backing vocal contributions.[24] Key additions comprise:- "Reasons" (extended version, 4:13)
- "It’s So Nice (To See Old Friends)" (extended version, 8:46)
- "Take a Little Trip" (duet with Stevie Wonder, 4:15)
- "Seeing You This Way" (acoustic version, 3:26)
- "The Edge of a Dream" (extended version, 5:06)
- "Perfect Angel" (extended version, 5:09)
- "Every Time He Comes Around" (extended version, 6:18)
- "Lovin’ You" (alternate band version, 4:51)
- "Our Lives" (extended version, 9:40)
- "Don’t Let Anyone Bring You Down" (Perfect Angel version, 3:43)
Recent reappraisals (post-2020)
In 2024, marking the 50th anniversary of Perfect Angel's release, music publications issued retrospective analyses emphasizing its artistic merits beyond the hit single "Lovin' You." Albumism lauded the album as Riperton's "sophomore stunner," portraying it as a focused exploration of "ecstasy and frivolity" that achieves a "triumph of utopian folk-soul."[5] Similarly, The Guardian contextualized the record within Riperton's oeuvre, crediting it with transforming her from a backing vocalist to a pop star through its blend of soul, psychedelia, and sensuality, while ranking multiple tracks from the album among her 20 best songs.[25] Rock and Roll Globe's reexamination highlighted Riperton's songwriting contributions to seven of the nine tracks, her multi-octave vocal range, and the album's stylistic breadth—from rock-inflected longing in "Every Time He Comes Around" to gospel and country-soul elements—bolstered by Stevie Wonder's production and instrumentation.[16] The review critiqued "Lovin' You" as a comparatively weaker, novelty-like entry amid stronger material, arguing that confining Riperton's legacy to it equates to dismissing Patti Smith solely for "Because the Night," thereby positioning Perfect Angel as evidence of her underappreciated versatility and influence on artists like Mariah Carey.[16] PopMatters offered a nuanced take in "Imperfectly Angelic," acknowledging the album's cover imagery and Riperton's comfortable poise as reflective of its intimate, assured vibe, while probing its thematic mix of amusement and detachment.[3] These assessments collectively reframed Perfect Angel as a cohesive showcase of Riperton's gifts, countering her posthumous one-hit-wonder perception.[16] The album's renewed cultural resonance extended to live tributes, including the September 2025 Hollywood Bowl event "Perfect Angel: The Definitive Minnie Riperton Tribute," which saluted its 50th anniversary with an all-star lineup featuring Stevie Wonder and performances of its tracks, affirming its status as a "joyous soul-rock hybrid."[4] An earlier December 2024 concert at YouTube Theater similarly celebrated Wonder's production role and the record's lasting impact.[4]Credits
Track listing
All tracks on Perfect Angel were written by Minnie Riperton and Richard Rudolph, except "Take a Little Trip", which was composed by Stevie Wonder.[44]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Reasons" | Riperton, Rudolph | 3:26 |
| 2 | "It's So Nice (To See Old Friends)" | Riperton, Rudolph | 4:44 |
| 3 | "Take a Little Trip" | Wonder | 4:08 |
| 4 | "Seeing You This Way" | Riperton, Rudolph | 2:52 |
| 5 | "The Edge of a Dream" | Riperton, Rudolph | 3:11 |
| 6 | "Perfect Angel" | Riperton, Rudolph | 3:40 |
| 7 | "Every Time He Comes Around" | Riperton, Rudolph | 4:28 |
| 8 | "Lovin' You" | Riperton, Rudolph | 3:51 |
| 9 | "Our House (Side by Side)" | Riperton, Rudolph | 4:59 |
Personnel
Production and arrangementThe album was primarily produced by Stevie Wonder, who also contributed to arrangements alongside his ensemble Wonderlove.[45] Associate producers and engineers included Malcolm Cecil and Robert Margouleff, who handled synthesizer programming and recording duties at Crystal Recording Studio in Hollywood, California, during sessions in 1974.[2] Executive production oversight was provided by Charles Stepney.[43] Vocals
Minnie Riperton performed lead vocals across all tracks, showcasing her five-octave vocal range, including the signature whistle register.[45] Background vocals were supplied by Deniece Williams, Lani Groves, Shirley Brewer, and Yvonne Wright on select tracks.[45] Instrumentation
Key instrumentalists included Reggie McBride on bass for most tracks; Ollie E. Brown on drums; Marlo Henderson on guitar and rhythm guitar; Stevie Wonder on electric piano, Moog bass, drums, cymbals, and additional bass; Rocki Dzidzornu on congas for tracks such as "Every Time He Comes Around" and "Perfect Angel"; Hubert Laws on flute; and Sneaky Pete Kleinow on pedal steel guitar.[45] [43] Wonderlove provided horn arrangements, with contributions from The Seawind Horns.[43] Additional guitar work came from Dennis Coffey, Ray Parker Jr., and Michael Sembello, while percussion was handled by Bobbye Hall.[45] Richard Rudolph, Riperton's husband and co-writer, contributed guitar on certain tracks.[45] Technical staff
Engineering was led by Malcolm Cecil and Robert Margouleff, with assistance from Gary Olazabal and remix support from Baker Bigsby.[45] Mastering was performed by Kent Duncan.[46]