Heart-Soul And Inspiration
1974
Heart-Soul And Inspiration
01. I'm Gonna Love You More 10:56
02. Can't Get Enough 7:09
03. Make Love To Your Mind 4:59
04. Can't Get Enough 7:09
05. My First, Last, My Everything 4:50
Bass – Jimmy Soul
Drums – Vince Howard
Guitar – Ron Carr
Piano – John True
Vocals – Martha Sims
Heart-Soul And Inspiration by Vince Howard and his Heart-Soul & Inspiration Orchestra is one of those gloriously over-the-top 1970s soul-funk artifacts that feels like it was recorded in a velvet-lined bedroom after way too much wine and Barry White records. Released in 1974 (though often dated to 1975 in some references) on the tiny Los Angeles imprint Viscojon Records, this private-press gem is a sweaty, ambitious love letter to the bedroom funk sound that ruled mid-70s dancefloors and slow jams alike. Clocking in at a lean but potent six tracks, the album drips with extended grooves, playful sensuality, and enough dramatic flair to make Isaac Hayes raise an eyebrow in approval.
Vince Howard himself is a fascinating character who lived several musical lives before this project. A crooner who got his start way back in 1957 on Herb Newman’s Era label with doo-wop and early soul singles, Howard spent the ensuing years grinding through the L.A. scene, releasing sporadic singles and slowly assembling his “Orchestra.” By the early 1970s he had gathered a tight crew including bassist Jimmy Soul, guitarist Ron Carr, and pianist John True. The group cut this sole full-length album under the watchful eye of R&B godfather Johnny Otis, who engineered the sessions at his Hawksound Studios. Howard handled drums and production duties himself, with additional orchestral arrangements from Nate Fortier. It’s a family affair of sorts—tight, live-sounding, and unapologetically steeped in the era’s lush, libidinous soul traditions.
The influences are worn proudly on the sleeve like a polyester leisure suit: think Barry White’s orchestral seduction, Isaac Hayes’ cinematic soul, and a hefty dose of raw 1970s funk energy. Howard doesn’t just borrow—he stretches the template into something almost comically extended and horny. The opener and undisputed centerpiece, “I’m Gonna Love You More,” is an eleven-minute tantric reinterpretation of Barry White’s “I’m Gonna Love You Just a Little More Baby.” Where White kept things subtly suggestive, Howard turns it into a marathon funk workout complete with slippery bass lines, break-heavy drums, and Marsha Sims delivering playful, moan-filled ad-libs that escalate from flirtatious to downright climactic. It’s the musical equivalent of a long, slow seduction that refuses to end until everyone involved needs a cigarette and a nap.
The rest of the album keeps the mood firmly in the boudoir. “Can’t Get Enough” delivers seven more minutes of groovy persistence, while “Make Love to Your Mind” stands out as a stone-cold killer—sensual vocals floating over a locked-in rhythm section that would make any bedroom (or nightclub) speaker beg for mercy. Covers like “My First, Last, My Everything” (another Barry White nod) fit right in, and shorter cuts like the punchy “Funk on Down” and the closer “Fallen Angel” show the group could tighten things up when they wanted to, injecting a bit of uptempo energy before the final emotional exhale. The playing throughout is professional yet loose enough to feel like the band is having an absolute ball in the studio—tight rhythms, soulful horns where they appear, and Howard’s confident, if not virtuosic, croon holding the center.
Viscojon Records was a classic small L.A. independent run by John Spriggs (sometimes spelled Springs), one of those hyper-local outfits that pressed just enough copies to service the West Coast soul circuit without ever cracking the national charts. That limited run, combined with the rise of disco and DJ culture, meant the album slipped into obscurity almost immediately after release. Howard and crew even followed it with a 7-inch single of “Funk on Down” b/w “Fallen Angel” that got some local nightclub play, but the momentum wasn’t there. Shortly after, the group disbanded as the musical winds shifted. Howard himself pulled off one of the great career pivots in music history, trading the drum kit for acting gigs—he popped up in everything from Star Trek and Mission: Impossible to Cheers, Knight Rider, and films like Trouble Man and Lethal Weapon. Talk about trading one kind of spotlight for another.
Upon its original release, Heart-Soul And Inspiration barely registered with the broader public. Private-press soul albums from the 1970s often suffered that fate—too funky for easy-listening crowds, too niche for major radio, and pressed in quantities that made them instant collector bait. Critics at the time didn’t widely review it (or if they did, those notices have vanished into the ether), but modern reissues have changed the narrative dramatically. When Numero Group and later Tidal Waves Music gave it proper vinyl reissues (complete with bonus 7-inch in some editions), crate-diggers and soul enthusiasts lost their minds. Reviewers now hail it as a “soul masterpiece,” praising its unbridled sensuality, extended grooves, and that perfect storm of Barry White/Isaac Hayes worship executed with genuine heart (and a fair bit of pelvic thrust).
Its legacy today is that of a cult classic in the deep funk and rare soul community. Original copies command serious money on the secondary market, and the reissues have introduced it to a new generation of listeners who appreciate its over-the-top charm in an era of polished, algorithm-friendly music. It’s the kind of record that sounds best played loud on a Saturday night when the lights are low and expectations are even lower. Vince Howard may not have set the charts on fire, but he left behind a gloriously funky, unapologetically sexy time capsule that still makes listeners grin, sway, and occasionally blush. If you’ve never experienced it, do yourself a favor—dim the lights, drop the needle, and let the Heart-Soul & Inspiration Orchestra take you on a ride that’s equal parts ridiculous and sublime. Just don’t blame me if you need a cold shower afterward.










