US disco & funk group
Formed in New York City in the early 70’s, by bass player and later manager
Donnie Linton.
Initially they were called The Nue Day Express.
They took their new name from a district of their native Brooklyn.
The group comprised Nue Day Express members
Donnie Linton (bass) ,
Philip Thomas (vocals), William Anderson (guitar, vocals) and
Ray Rock (drums, percussion, vocals), alongside James Baynard (trumpet, vocals), Stan Johnson (keyboards),
Darryl Gibbs (saxophone) and Julius Dilligard Jr. (vocals).
Arnold Muki Wilson later replaced
Donny Linton on bass and vocals.
The group was initially signed by RCA, for whom they recorded a self-titled album in 1974 and enjoyed regional hit singles with Super Rod and Leave The Kids Alone.
A number of personnel changes then ensued, with brothers
Bert Reid (Bertram Charles Reid Jnr., 25 October 1956, New York, USA, d. 12 December 2004, New York, USA; tenor saxophone, vocals) and Raymond Reid (trombone, vocals) replacing
Darryl Gibbs and Julius Dilligard Jr. and Stan Johnson and James Baynard making way for Howie Young and Tyrone Demmons respectively.
The new look group switched labels to De-Lite Records, then home of
Kool & The Gang and recorded their second studio album.
Under the guidance of producers - writers
Freida Nerangis and Britt Britton and managers Thomas Nerangis and
Donny Linton , Crown Heights Affair leapt to the forefront of commercial funk, recording four hit R&B/pop singles from their first two De-Lite Records albums - Dreaming A Dream, Every Beat Of My Heart, Foxy Lady and Dancin’.
De-Lite Records’s subsequent worldwide pact with PolyGram Records, Inc. saw the unit break internationally, with Galaxy Of Love hitting the UK Top 30 and I’m Gonna Love You Forever’ the Top 50 in 1978. Trumpeter James Baynard had by this point returned to the line-up in place of Tyrone Demmons, while for 1979’s Dance Lady Dance, Skip Boardley was brought in to share lead vocals with
Philip Thomas.
The influence of new producer Bert DeCoteaux and the emerging songwriting abilities within the band consolidated their position in 1980, with You Gave Me Love’ reaching the UK Top 10.
The single featured on the album Sure Shot, recorded without keyboard player Howie Young.
While this represented the peak of their chart success, Crown Heights Affair continued to churn out competent singles and albums for much of the next decade.
Bert Reid departed to pursue a production career before the release of 1982’s Think Positive, which featured the group’s last US R&B hit, Somebody Tell Me What To Do.
Reid’s brother Raymond Reid and William Anderson also emerged as in-demand producers in the early 80’s for Donnie Linton Management, which ultimately led to their departure from Crown Heights Affair in 1986.
Bert Reid died of lung cancer in December 2004.