The inspiration from the song came from the beginner's ski slope at Mammoth Mountain in California. Joe Sample said he "'saw people falling, running into each other... it was absolute chaos. It looked like a boulevard of madness.' And I said, 'That's what street life is.'"[4] Sample teamed up with lyricist Will Jennings, who said that "the lyric, all that came right off of Hollywood Boulevard".[5]
Sample first met Crawford when he played on her debut album Everything Must Change in 1976.[4] After having good reviews about her song, but not being commercially successful, Crawford was then asked by Sample to sing the vocals for the song. As a result of this, the Crusaders produced her fourth album Now We May Begin, which became very successful.[6]
Jazz reviewer Scott Yanow wrote "Although the Crusaders could not have known it at the time, their recording of 'Street Life'... was a last hurrah for the 20-year old group. Their recordings of the next few years would decline in interest until the band gradually faded away in the ’80s." Whereas, for Crawford, this song brought her recognition and effectively marked the beginning of her career.[1]
Track listings
7"
"Street Life" – 3:58
"The Hustler" – 3:50
12"
"Street Life" (Special Full Length US Disco Mix) – 7:50