Although Chapman had initially chosen not to work with Exile again following the failure of "Try It On", his wife persuaded him to give the band a second chance, as she liked their music.
Chapman then invited the band to the Forum, a recording studio in Covington, Kentucky, where he presented them with a song he had written called "Kiss You All Over".
After some stressful sessions, Chapman brought in lead guitarist and co-founder J.P. Pennington and bassist Danny Williams to perform vocals on lines that Stokley had issues singing.
On "Kiss You All Over", Pennington would share the verses, the pre-choruses with Stokley, and the choruses with Williams, who sang in a lower register and would provide the higher vocal notes.
While recording his composition, "Ain't Got No Time", Danny Williams grew frustrated with the amount of control Chapman was exercising over the rest of the band in the studio, and was fired in late 1977.