Motown Records was considered the number one most influential company to lead in setting a precedent for talent, style, good music, swag and success The Detroit label was founded on the same business model of automotive companies that ruled the blue collar town during that time. Founder, Berry Gordy believed in building a company that scouted and signed raw talent, polished them and carried them through an assembly line of artist development that is sadly missing in todayās music business.
Gladys Knight and the Pips were part of the āgolden eraā of Motown Records. They contributed to its long illustrious line-up of catalog hits that included āNeither One of Usā, āI Heard It Through the Grapevineā, āIf I Were Your Womanā among them. In 1976, the group left Motown and joined Buddah Records where they continued to create a string of classic hits like āMidnight Train to Georgiaā. After much success Ms. Knight moved on to embark on a successful solo career with Columbia Records and MCA Records reuniting with the Pips in the 1980ās. The lead vocals on each song belonged to Gladys Knight and her smooth and timeless voice still rings strong today.
Chicago Defender had an opportunity to engage the seven-time Grammy awarded artist and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee in candid conversation while in town for a concert at Ravinia and to promote her latest single āJust A Littleā. The independent release of her single is available on September 25th and produced by Grammy award producer, S1. Sheās no stranger to overseeing her own music company but this time itās with the help of her husband and manager.
āI told my crew, please donāt sign me to another record label. You can give people chance, after chance, after chance but it hasnāt changed,ā Knight said. āWhy do you think there arenāt any record labels left? People got tired of not being paid while these mega companies are at the top with executives living in big houses, owning luxury cars and taking our money sending their kids to college. I have kids in college as well and I need my money.ā
With her new company, comes new talent and sheās happy to bring on young and fresh ears to the camp. Rising singer and current vocal arranger, R&B singer Avehre has managed to capture Knightās interest in becoming one of the premiere artists on her independent label.
āAvehre is an amazing, talented and respectful young man. My husband has taken him under his wing. They are in the studio right now,ā Knight said. āThis man can write, produce and do his own thing.ā

As the business has changed over the years Knight has experienced challenges including the loss of her son James Newman who was also her manager, and her daughter and former manager who fell ill. She confesses that her spirituality and relationship with God has kept her going. As a mother, grandmother and great-grandmother, sheās noticed a cycle of social injustice that has continued to plague our community. Current day injustices have stirred past memories citing that the generational gap is not too different than when she was coming up in the Civil Rights movement.
āWe were determined more than we were angry so we marched. We came together as a people. We held up our heads. Not only were we fighting for justice, we were fighting for respect,ā Knight said thereās a difference between her generationās approach and the following generation. āYou canāt demand respect if youāre not respectable. In our homes, when we try to teach our kids about being respectable ā they get so much pressure from outside of the homes. They just got tired so they donāt want to hear it, āIām mad now!ā Growing up, they need what weāve received on the spiritual side in order to keep them grounded,ā said Knight. āThe concept of God was taken away from us and everything and everybody along the way. Thatās the primary reason why we are where we are today. Weāre too busy being politically correct.ā
Knight and her husband William McDowell of 15 years are happily married and reside in Canton, North Carolina. There they recently purchased the schoolhouse, where McDowell attended elementary school. The building has been abandoned for a number of decades and they are seeking to transforming it into a state-of-art performing arts facility for new students. Itās a labor of love. She is looking forward to reaching out to her industry friends for assistance in bringing more opportunities to the community.

As she wraps up, she recounts what makes Chicago so special every time she visits the Windy City, āItās a team place. Iāve had friends here and I worked here all my young life. The theaters were something here. They were a learning place. Itās just a wonderful, aggressive place,ā She said, āBeing friends with the Staples, Jerry āIcemanā Butler and other friends, I got to learn about the city and the clubs. Thatās what I love about Chicago. I still get a good feeling when I come here.ā