arts&life music / on the cover The Queen Of Everything Detroit-native Allee Willis comes home to celebrate an extra-awesome year. LYNNE KONSTANTIN ARTS & LIFE EDITOR “Midnight creeps so slowly into hearts Of men who need more than they get.” P oetry? Yes. But chances are, you’ve grooved along on a dance floor — in a club, in your home, in your mind’s eye while driving to work — belting out this prose without giving it a second thought. These are the lyrics that open “Boogie Wonderland,” one of the most complex and misinterpreted songs of the disco era. Made an icon by Earth, Wind & Fire that went gold in 1979, the year it was released, the song was inspired by the film Looking for Mr. Goodbar, in which Diane Keaton’s lost-soul character lives for the night life while on the brink of destruction. The song was written by Detroit homegirl Allee Willis. “‘Boogie Wonderland’ is one of my favorite lyrics ever,” Willis says. “People tell me, ‘That is the happi- est song.’ Have you listened to the 40 May 10 • 2018 jn lyrics? That ain’t a happy song. “I put lyrics into music like that a lot,” she says. “I think it’s a lot harder to be a great lyricist than a great music writer. You can have a really good song with crappy lyrics; but give it good lyrics, and it’s a great song. “You can take very serious lyrics — even sad, dirgy lyrics — and get messages across in music that’s bouncy and uplifting,” Willis says. “Even if people are not conscious of what they’re singing, it’s a way for me to get a message across, vibrationally.” As a songwriter, Willis writes both music and lyrics. Besides “Boogie Wonderland,” she’s penned Earth, Wind & Fire’s “September,” “I’ll Be There for You” (the theme from Friends and one of the best-selling TV themes of all time), “Lead Me On” by Maxine Nightingale, the Pointer Sisters’ “Neutron Dance” (the theme song from Beverly Hills Cop), “Dance Away” by Roxy Music and more. She’s collaborated with hundreds of artists and composers, including Bob Dylan, Patti LaBelle, Herbie Hancock and Motown legend Lamont Dozier. Her songs have sold more than 60 million records. Last month she returned from South Africa, where she attended the opening of The Color Purple — the Grammy- and Tony-winning musical she co-wrote and which was produced by Oprah Winfrey, Quincy Jones and Scott Sanders. Last week, she picked up a distin- guished achievement award at the Detroit Music Awards. And she’s about to be recognized for the work she’s done by her industry peers — Willis will be traveling to New York City to be inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame on June 14. She adds that honor, held by the likes of Diane Warren, Carole King, Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen, to her list of awards already won — Grammy, Emmy, Tony and Webby. Before that, though, Willis will be returning to her hometown. On May 18-19, Willis will perform Allee Willis Loves Detroit!, her one- woman “party performance” show, at Detroit’s City Theatre. Allee Willis, 70, was into music as long as she can remember. Growing up on Sorrento Street in Detroit, known by her birth name, Alta, Willis never learned to play an instrument. “I’m untrained,” she says. “The only music lessons I had was that on Saturdays I’d have my parents drop me off at the Motown house [on West Grand Boulevard]. I’d sit on the grass and listen to what they were doing inside.