"O-o-h Child" is a 1970 single, written by Stan Vincent, recorded by Chicago soul family group the Five Stairsteps and released on the Buddah label.
The Five Stairsteps previously had limited success recording in Chicago with Curtis Mayfield.[3] When Mayfield's workload precluded his continuing to work with the group, they were reassigned to Stan Vincent, an in-house producer for Buddah Records who had recently scored a Top Ten hit with the Lou Christie single "I'm Gonna Make You Mine". The Five Stairsteps' debut collaboration with Vincent was the group's rendition of "Dear Prudence" designated as the A-side with Vincent's original composition "O-o-h Child" as B-side. However, "O-o-h Child" broke out in the key markets of Philadelphia and Detroit to rise as high as #8 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the summer of 1970.
The track's R&B chart impact was muted, peaking at #14, although in time it came to be regarded as a "soft soul" classic. Billboard ranked the record as the No. 21 song of 1970.
The Five Stairsteps' only pop Top 40 hit, "O-o-h Child" would be the group's last R&B top 40 hit (they had several top 40 R&B hits in the 1960s) until 1976's "From Us to You". Included on the band's The Stairsteps album from 1970, it has become the Stairsteps' signature song and has inspired more than twenty covers since its release. The song featured various members, including lone female member and eldest sister Alohe, brothers Keni, Dennis, James, lead singer Clarence Burke Jr. singing in various parts of the song.
The lyrics tell the listener that "things are gonna get easier" in times of strife. The song's uplifting message helped it to become popular among pop and rhythm and blues audiences when it was released.
AllMusic review by Joe Viglione: "Producer Stan Vincent's Top Ten hit for the Stairsteps, "O-o-h Child," was one of those bright, memorable, sterling songs which, as with Alive 'N Kickin's "Tighter, Tighter," made the summer of 1970 so memorable."[4]
Dusty Springfield covered the song in 1971 for possible inclusion on See All Her Faces. It was finally released in 2001 on the posthumous compilation Love Songs.
The New Birth covered the song on their 1971 album, Ain't No Big Thing, But It's Growing.
The Edwin Hawkins Singers recorded this song for their 1973 release I'd Like To Teach the World To Sing, also on the Buddah label.
Richie Havens covered the song on his 1974 album Mixed Bag II.
Dee Dee Sharp covered the song on her 1975 album Happy 'bout The Whole Thing.
Valerie Carter covered the song for her 1977 release Just a Stone's Throw Away.
In its 2002 CD release the 1971 album Gonna Take a Miracle by Laura Nyro was augmented by four live tracks from Nyro's May 30, 1971 concert at Fillmore East including "Ooh Child" with the entire concert being issued in 2004 as Spread Your Wings and Fly: Live at the Fillmore East.
Donnie McClurkin covered the song featuring Kirk Franklin on his 2004 album Psalms, Hymns and Spiritual Songs and his version was also on the soundtrack of the 2005 film The Gospel, starring Boris Kodjoe.
The song was covered by Raya Yarbrough and Bear McCreary in "The Devil in the Dark", Episode 3 Season 1, of the TV show Defiance. The show was first aired April 29, 2013, and is contained on the accompanying soundtrack album to the series.[14][15]
Jill Sobule covered the song on her 2018 album Nostalgia Kills.
The Quiet Loud (formerly The Show) covered the song in 2018. The song was unreleased until 2020, when the band made it available to radio and for download as a fundraising song for their hometown Pittsburgh music venues during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Paul Stanley's Soul Station covered the song on the 2021 album Now and Then.
A.J. Croce covered the song on his 2021 album By Request
The song's chorus was used by rapper Z-Ro in the song "Lord Tell Me Why", on his 1998 debut album Look What You Did to Me. He used the chorus again in 2000, on the song "Gonna Get Easier".
^Pitchfork Staff (August 22, 2016). "The 200 Best Songs of the 1970s". Pitchfork. Retrieved October 13, 2022. ...together they are utterly disarming, and they all come together for one of pop's most affecting climaxes.
^Pitchfork Staff (August 22, 2016). "The 200 Best Songs of the 1970s". Pitchfork. Retrieved October 13, 2022. ...when DJs flipped their cover of the Beatles' "Dear Prudence" in favor of a song that became R&B's answer to "Over the Rainbow."
^"Soul icon Curtis Mayfield dies", BBC News, December 27, 1999: "Credited with introducing social comment to soul music". Retrieved 25 May 2021.