The story behind one of the late 1970s’ most memorable one-hit wonders is anything but ordinary. Inspired by a poem, a catchy guitar riff, and a challenge, the song went on to become an unlikely blue-eyed soul classic.

Released in 1976, “Smoke From a Distant Fire” caught listeners’ attention. Its distinctive sound and unforgettable hook turned Sanford-Townsend Band into chart stars almost overnight.

According to American Songwriter, the song originated during a college visit by John Townsend to his friend Ed Sanford. Sanford’s roommate was a guitarist named Steven Stewart, who was said to stay up all night practicing classical guitar.

In response to his roommate’s constant classical playing, Sanford challenged Stewart to come up with more commercial-sounding music. In reply, Stewart played a guitar riff that would become the basis for “Smoke From a Distant Fire.”

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After learning the riff, Townsend worked with some lyric ideas from Stewart and built the rest of the song around a poem he had written while in college. The finished track told the story of someone confronting a partner’s infidelity and the heartbreak that comes with it.

Townsend and Sanford would go on to form a music group called The Heart, which ultimately disbanded. The pair headed to Los Angeles, where they went on to sign a publishing deal as songwriters.

Producer Jerry Wexler heard the duo’s demo and helped get them signed to Warner Brothers Records. Wexler would eventually produce “Smoke From a Distant Fire” at Muscle Shoals Studios in Alabama for Sanford-Townsend Band’s self-titled debut LP.

In an interview with AL.com, Townsend claimed, “That was a rare treat. Working in Muscle Shoals was always an education. Working with Jerry Wexler was graduate school.”

“Smoke From a Distant Fire” would hit No. 9 on the Billboard Charts in 1977. It was the group’s only Top 10 hit.

Its success would propel the Sanford-Townsend Band to opening act for Fleetwood Mac‘s Rumors Tour. Townsend told AL.com that the band was “a little stuck up for us.” He alleged that during the year-and-a-half tour, Fleetwood Mac didn’t allow their openers a sound check.

Additionally, the group opened for both Marshall Tucker and the Charlie Daniels Band. “We all spoke the same language,” Townsend said. “We were always treated as equals and became great friends with most of them.”

The Sanford-Townsend Band broke up in 1980 after two more albums, Duo-Glide and Nail Me to the Wall. However, both men ultimately found other success in the music industry.

According to Culture-Sonar, “Sanford co-wrote Michael McDonald’s 1982 hit ‘I Keep Forgettin,’ and was featured on McDonald’s solo disc If That’s What It Takes. Townsend formed the Townsend/Toler Band with guitarist Dan Toler and released a solo album, The Road Leads Home.”

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