blinkx
  • browse

YouTube

Sharon Redd - Can You Handle It


Sharon Redd - Can You Handle It

When Sharon Redd was born on October 19, 1945, you could say that she already had music swimming in her veins. Her father, Gene Redd, was an executive producer at King Records and her stepfather performed with the Benny Goodman band. Her brother was a writer and producer for Kool & the Gang and BMP, and her sister, Pennye Ford, is also an accomplished singer with two albums to her credit. Sharon grew up in Norfolk, Virginia. As a child, she took lessons in classical vocals and also had operatic training. In her mid-twenties, Sharon was a budding actress. She also recorded four singles in 1968 for United Artists, three written and all four produced by songwriter and record producer, Bobby Susser. Susser chose the Hank Williams song, "Half As Much" for Sharon's first single. Sharon's extroadinary vocals against Susser's bass pounding musical track, made Sharon's presence very quickly known in the music industry, though it was not a big hit. Sharon got a major break starring in an Australian production of Hair . She also appeared in her own television special and, in 1974, traveled to London performing in an American production of The Wedding Of Iphigenia. Shortly thereafter, she moved back to the United States and appeared in a popular marketing campaign, which brought her widespread recognition. At around this same time, Bette Midler was looking to replace Merle Miller and Gail Kantor, who had left after Bette's 1973 tour, to pursue their own interests. Bette auditioned over 70 performers, but Sharon's talent, experience, and exposure as the 'Shaffer Beer Girl', may have given her the edge she needed. She landed the job and officially became one of Bette's Harlettes. (Photo: From left to right, Redd, Ula Hedwig, and Charlotte Crossley) Aside from performing as a Harlette, Sharon also provided backing vocals for Carol Douglas ('Burnin' & 'Night Fever'), and Norman Connors ('You Are My Starship'). In 1979, Sharon sang the smash disco hit 'Love Insurance', released under the artist name Front Page (Panorama Records), and, though her vocals were uncredited, producers had started to sit up and take notice of her amazing voice. Soon she had a recording contract with Prelude Records. Sharon released her first album in 1980 (self-titled 'Sharon Redd'), closely followed by two more ('Redd Hott' - 1982, and 'Love How You Feel' - 1983), which sealed her reputation as a true "disco diva". These recordings featured such disco classics as 'You Got My Love', 'Never Give You Up', 'In the Name of Love', 'Love How You Feel', 'Beat The Street', and the piece de resistance 'Can You Handle It' featuring Redds unparalleled raw vocal delivery woven into the alternating lush orchestration and stripped down funk of one of Disco's most stunning and sublime productions. After these releases, Sharon returned to her successful career as a background vocalist. Then, in 1991 she released a single entitled 'All The Way To Love'. This was to be her last solo recording. She died the following year. In 1993, Pennye Ford dropped the 'e' from her name and released the album 'Penny Ford', which featured a duet with her sister entitled 'Under Pressure'.

YouTube | May 11, 2008

Tags:. .miller. .australian. .actress. .sang. .bobby











Accomplished   Actress   Aside   Auditioned   Australian   Beer   Benny   Bette   Bettes   Bmp   Bobby   Budding   Burnin   Carol   Charlotte   Chose   Connors   Contract   Delivery   Diva   Douglas   Entitled   Exposure   Fever   Ford   Funk   Gail   Gene   Given   Goodman   Grew   Handle   Hank   Hedwig   Hott   Insurance   Kantor   Kool   Left   Lush   Merle   Midler   Miller   Norfolk   Norman   Operatic   Orchestration   Panorama   Penny   Pounding   Prelude   Pursue   Recognition   Redd   Redds   Replace   Reputation   Resistance   Sang   Sealed   Selftitled   Shaffer   Sharon   Sharons   Single   Songwriter   Starship   Stepfather   Stunning   Sublime   Thereafter   Though   Ula   Uncredited   Unparalleled   Veins   Vocalist   Vocals   Widespread   Woven