Dennis Edwards: lead vocals on all tracks except A4
Glenn Leonard: vocals
Richard Street: vocals and lead vocals on A4
Melvin Franklin: vocals
Otis Williams: vocals
with:
Sly Stone: clavinet, organ and ARP
and
Side One:
Bass – William "Billy Bass" Nelson, Rustee Allen & Freddie Stewart
Drums & Percussion – Ollie E. Brown
Guitars – Freddie Stewart & William "Billy Bass" Nelson
Trumpets – Pat Rizzo & Steve Madaio
Horn & String Arrangement - Truman Thomas
Solos on A1 & A3 - Truman Thomas
Side Two:
Moog Programming, Keyboards, Rhythm & Vocal Arrangements - Donald Baldwin
Record & Mastering Engineer: Russ Terrana
Mixing Engineers: Russ Terrana & Jeffrey Bowen
Assistant Engineers: Jack Andrews & Jane Clark
Recorded & Mastered at Motown Recording Studio, Hollywood, California
Cover Illustration: David McMackin
Art Direction: Frank Mulvey
Produced by Jeffrey Bowen & Berry Gordy
Executive Producer: Berry Gordy
Written by:
Jeffrey Bowen, Jimmy Ford, Truman Thomas (tracks: A1, A3, A4)
Jeffrey Bowen, Jimmy Ford (track: A2)
Jeffrey Bowen, Donald Baldwin, Jimmy Ford (tracks: B1 to B3)
℗ 1976 Motown Record Corporation © 1976 Motown Record Corporation
Printed in U.S.A.
http://www.discogs.com/Temptations-Wings-Of-Love/release/2433705
From wiki:
Wings of Love is a 1976 album by The Temptations for the Gordy (Motown) label. The album was an unsuccessful release, both commercially and critically. Wings of Love's only single, "Up the Creek (Without a Paddle)" was co-written by Sly Stone, the inspiration for many of the Temptations' late 1960s/early 1970s "psychedelic soul" records; because of tax reasons, he could not take a publishing credit on the song. Stone and other members of the Family Stone appear on "Up the Creek", as well as "Sweet Gypsy Jane" and "China Doll"
Producer Jeffrey Bowen preferred Dennis Edwards to the rest of the group, and wanted to produce an Edwards solo album instead of a group album. As a result, Bowen de-emphasized the rest of the group's vocals and placed them at levels far below Edwards' leads, prompting his dismissal as the Temptations' producer after this album's release. Unsurprisingly, Edwards sings lead on all but one of the songs on the album, leaving "China Doll" in the capable hands of Richard Street. The upshot of Bowen's obsession with Edwards is that fans will enjoy hearing Edwards exercise a greater vocal range than normal, particularly on the album's ballad-heavy second side.
It at least received praise for being one of the most beautiful album covers in the group's discography. It returned to an old Motown marketing device of using abstract art to detract from the artists.