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  1. Georgie Woods, a Philadelphia radio DJ, is thought to have coined the term "blue-eyed soul" in 1964, initially to describe The Righteous Brothers, then white artists in general who received airplay on rhythm and blues radio stations.

  2. blue-eyed soul, music created by white recording artists who faithfully imitated the soul music of the 1960s and later, a select few of whom were popular with Black audiences as well as white listeners.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Jan 22, 2024 · In 1964, Philadelphia radio DJ Georgie Woods is credited with coining the term “blue-eyed soul” to describe The Righteous Brothers, who were white artists receiving airplay on rhythm and blues (R&B) radio stations. The Righteous Brothers even titled their 1964 LP “Some Blue-Eyed Soul.”

  4. Two years down the road, in 1964, Woods coined the phrase “blue-eyed soul” referring to The Righteous Brothers. Six years later, the term got heavy use for the Osmond Brothers’ hit, “One Bad Apple,” when the group sounded very similar to the Jackson 5.

  5. George Woods, an on-air radio personality with WDAS in Philadelphia, is credited with coining the term “blue-eyed soul” to describe the kind of music these two white Righteous Brothers were then turning out — music enjoyed by both R&B and pop listeners.

  6. Blue-Eyed Soul refers to soul and R&B music performed and sung by white musicians. The term first came into play during the mid-'60s, when acts like the Righteous Brothers had hits with soulful songs like "You Lost That Loving Feeling."

  7. Two years later, he claimed that a record from an all-white act, the Righteous Brothers, was "blue-eyed soul." The term came into widespread use a few years later when the Osmond Brothers were mocked as the white copycat version of an African-American singing family, the Jackson 5.

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