Lambert and Potter are a rare case of a successful trans-Atlantic songwriting partnership. Lambert was born in 1947 and raised in New York City. Potter was born in 1939 and raised in the Essex countryside of England. Lambert joined a record company in 1965, working in A&R, production, and songwriting. I'm not sure what Potter did at first (with him being almost ten years older than Lambert), but in 1965 he already had a big songwriting success, helping to write "What'cha Gonna Do about It," the first British hit for the Small Faces. Meanwhile, Lambert had a decent success in 1965 as well, co-writing "Do the Freddie," a hit for Freddie and the Dreamers.
Lambert and Potter met when Lambert was in London in 1969. The two of them decided to write songs together. They both moved to Los Angeles and began working with a record company there. One of their first songs they wrote together was "One Tin Solder." It made the Top Forty in the U.S. for the band the Original Caste. Then it would get higher on the charts in 1971 for the band Coven. Their first really big success together though was "Don't Pull Your Love," which was a Top Five U.S. hit in 1971 for Hamilton, Joe Frank and Reynolds.
From that point on, they had many more hits all through the 1970s. I've only included the ones I like best here. There were others that were Top Forty hits. Their songwriting continued until about 1980. I don't know much about Potter's career, but it seemed he stopped writing songs around that time, because I don't find any more songwriting credits for him after 1980.
However, Lambert kept going well into the 1980s, writing with others. He didn't have that many hits, but he had a couple of really big ones. He co-wrote "Nightshift" with a member of the Commodores, and the Commodores had a Top Five hit with it in both the U.S. and Britain in 1985.
He also helped write "We Built This City." That song was originally written by Martin Page and Bernie Taupin (the latter being the main co-writer for Elton John). But their version was lacking something. So Lambert and a producer named Peter Wolf drastically changed it. (That's a different Peter Wolf than the one in the J. Geils Band, by the way.) The result was a smash, going all the way to Number One in the U.S. for Starship in 1985. Personally, I don't think it's a bad song, but it's hated by a lot of people, making several worst songs of all time lists by critics.
Since then, Lambert and Potter presumably both eventually retired. But both of them are still alive as I write this in 2026.
Here's the Wikipedia page for Lambert:
And here's the one for Potter:
Brian Potter (musician) - Wikipedia
This album is 57 minutes long.
01 What'cha Gonna Do about It (Small Faces)
02 Do the Freddie (Freddie & the Dreamers)
03 Delighted to See You (Honeybus)
04 One Tin Soldier (Original Caste)
05 Don't Pull Your Love (Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds)
06 Keeper of the Castle (Four Tops)
07 The Runway (Grass Roots)
08 Ain’t No Woman [Like the One I’ve Got] (Four Tops)
09 Love Music (Sergio Mendes)
10 Are You Man Enough (Four Tops)
11 Country Boy [You Got Your Feet in L.A.] (Glen Campbell)
12 One Chain [Don’t Make No Prison] (Four Tops)
13 It Only Takes a Minute (Tavares)
14 Open Invitation (Santana)
15 Don't Look Any Further (Dennis Edwards & Siedah Garrett)
16 We Built This City (Starship)
17 Nightshift (Commodores)
https://pixeldrain.com/u/rrnJPb9s
alternate:
https://bestfile.io/en/oLZomJN7xtUUHiG/file
The cover image was the cover photo for an issue of Songwriter Magazine in 1977. That's Dennis Lambert on the left and Brian Potter (with the blue shirt) on the right.

It was I who made this sterling suggestion, and if you want suggestions for further volumes by this team, I stand ready to serve.
ReplyDeleteThanks again for that. I just added your name to the write-up. I think that's enough from this duo. But if you have ideas for other songwriters, I'm all ears.
DeleteThese guys were great, but not sure why the Honeybus song is on here.
ReplyDeleteBecause it was cowritten by Pete Dello of Honeybus and Brian Potter. See, for instance, here:
Deletehttps://secondhandsongs.com/artist/6420/all
I have never seen or heard of Brian Potter being involved in this song. He's not listed on the original single or any reissue I know of. As far as I know this is the only mention of it anywhere?
ReplyDeleteIt's tricky, because you're right, Potter is not mentioned in some versions of the song. But look, he's mentioned as a cowriter here:
Deletehttps://www.allmusic.com/album/the-philips-singles-1968-1969-mw0003917168
and here:
https://www.discogs.com/release/26827235-Various-Behind-The-Dykes-3-Even-More-Beat-Blues-And-Psychedelic-Nuggets-From-The-Lowlands-1965-1972
I think what's possible is that the song was first written by Dello, but then Potter was brought in for a sometimes uncredited assist. And it looks like Dello and Potter had a working relationship, because they also cowrote the song "I Don't Want You" together:
https://www.45cat.com/record/bf1471
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ReplyDeleteIt's not quite accurate to say they had no careers as performers. Lambert released a solo album called "Bags and Things" ( https://sessiondays.com/2024/03/12/1972-dennis-lambert-bags-things/ ) which can be heard on YouTube ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xXXC3023HU4 ). Some of the songs on this album that were hits (to one degree or another) by other artists, and which I would include on a collection of covers are "Ashes To Ashes" (The 5th Dimension), and "Somebody Found Her (Before I Lost Her)" by the Addrisi Brothers (Don and Dick), who were themselves songwriters, whose most famous song is probably "Never My Love" (The Association).
ReplyDeleteThanks for the info. I came very close to including Ashes to Ashes, but it just missed the cut. I have never heard the Addrisi Brothers song before. It's a nice one. But I can't find any version that doesn't have pops and scratches in it.
Delete