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Vocalist L.J. Reynolds hovered on the edge of stardom in the '80s, but never made the major single or album he needed to explode as a solo artist. Reynolds had some good singles in the early '60s, when he was recording for Tri-Spin as Larry "Chubby" Reynolds. He moved to Mainstream in 1969, then was lead vocalist for <a href="spotify:artist:2zJzEEpMuOkF89sXrjVHOW">The Relations</a> in 1970. After cutting singles for several small independents and landing one Law-ton single in the R&B Top 30 ("Let One Hurt Do" in 1971), Reynolds replaced William Howard in <a href="spotify:artist:2W8UTum7bU7ue6m0r14H97">The Dramatics</a> in 1973, remaining with them until 1980. He then signed a solo deal with Capitol, and his LPs were frequently well received, but never sold very well. Only the song "Touch Down" among his many Capitol releases ever reached the R&B Top 30. Reynolds rejoined <a href="spotify:artist:2W8UTum7bU7ue6m0r14H97">The Dramatics</a> in 1986. ~ Ron Wynn, Rovi

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