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Sharon Redd
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Key Information
Sharon Redd (October 19, 1945 – May 1, 1992)[2][3] was an American singer from New York City. She was the half sister of Snap! singer Penny Ford.[4]
Life and career
[edit]Redd was born on October 19, 1945, in Norfolk, Virginia, to Gene and Katherine Redd. Gene Redd was a producer and musical director at King Records, and her stepfather performed with Benny Goodman's orchestra.[1] Her brother Gene Redd Jr. was a songwriter and producer for Kool & the Gang and the band BMP.[5] Her half-sister Penny Ford is also a singer with two solo albums to her credit and known for her work as the main singer for Snap!, Soul II Soul, and the S.O.S. Band.[2]
She began her recording career with four singles in 1968 for the United Artists label, three written and all four produced by songwriter and record producer Bobby Susser. Susser chose the Hank Williams song "Half as Much" to be Redd's first single. Redd's vocals, against Susser's heavy-bass track, made her presence very quickly known to R&B radio stations.[6] Redd, as a budding actress, got a major break when she starred in an Australian production of the rock musical Hair.[1] She was among a troupe of young African American imports to the Sydney production, a group which notably included Marcia Hines. Redd appeared in the production from its June 6, 1969, premiere through 1971.[citation needed]
As Redd was becoming famous in Australia, she was interviewed by Barry Sloane on a 1971 episode of GTK.[citation needed] Her popular adverts for Amoco led to her own television special. Redd and Hair co-star Teddy Williams were asked to leave Australia by the Immigration Department in April 1971 for reasons they believed were race-motivated.[7][8] Aside from Hair, Redd also appeared in Ti-Jean and His Brothers and, in 1974, traveled to London to star in an American production of The Wedding of Iphigenia.[1] In 1977 Redd played the role of Sherrye in the U.S. sitcom television series Rhoda.[9][10] 1978 also saw Redd feature as a guest in the musical Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.[11]
In the mid-1970s, Bette Midler was looking to replace Merle Miller and Gail Kantor, both of whom had left after Midler's 1973 tour to pursue their own interests. Midler auditioned over 70 performers, but Redd landed the job, becoming one of Bette's Harlettes.[12] Aside from performing as a Harlette, Redd also provided backing vocals for Carol Douglas ("Burnin'" and "Night Fever") and Norman Connors ("You Are My Starship").[1] Having ended their association with Midler, Redd, Charlotte Crossley, & Ula Hedwig released an LP, Formerly of the Harlettes, in late 1977. In 1978, RCA Victor released "Love Insurance" on a 12-inch disco as Front Page with Sharon Redd. She was credited on that version.
In 1979, Redd recorded the disco hit "Love Insurance", released by Panorama Records under the name Front Page, her own vocals going uncredited. But she soon signed a recording contract with Prelude Records,[1] and Redd became the label's most successful artist. Her debut studio album, 1980's self-titled Sharon Redd, was closely followed by two more: Redd Hott (1982) and Love How You Feel (1983).[1] Redd had several charting songs on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart, including "Beat the Street", "In the Name of Love" and "Love How You Feel".[13]
After these releases, Redd returned to her successful career as a backing vocalist, most notably with the group Soirée, which also included among its members Luther Vandross and Jocelyn Brown.
In early 1992, she had a UK top 20 hit with a re-recorded version of "Can You Handle It", with "Tom's Diner" remixers DNA and appeared with the duo, singing live vocals, on BBC One's Top of the Pops on January 30.[14] Following the success of this new version of "Can You Handle It", she recorded a single entitled "All the Way to Love",[2] with L.A. Mix's Les Adams. This was to be her last solo recording and remains unreleased.
In the midst of mounting a comeback in the early 1990s, Redd died of pneumonia on May 1, 1992. Dance Music Report magazine reported that her death was AIDS-related.[15] The virus had weakened her immune system, which had become ineffective following the singer stepping on broken glass on stage.
In 1993, Redd's vocals featured on the duet track "Under Pressure", as found on her half-sister Penny Ford's self-titled album.
Legacy
[edit]Despite not being as recognized as other stars, Redd was able to establish herself as a Diva on the disco scene in the late 70s and early 80s.[16] Redd was honored by the National AIDS Memorial, in an online exhibit to commemorate Black History Month along with other celebrities like Sylvester and Arthur Ashe.[17] In 2011, Redd was posthumously honored at the 2011 Divas Simply Singing music benefit. Her name was among the number of celebrities featured on a special made red quilt displayed during the event.
Discography
[edit]Albums
[edit]| Year | Album | Label | Format | Peak chart positions | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| US Dance [13] |
UK [18] | ||||
| 1980 | Sharon Redd | Prelude | LP, CD | ― | ― |
| 1982 | Redd Hott | 1 | 59 | ||
| 1983 | Love How You Feel | ― | ― | ||
| "—" denotes releases that did not chart. | |||||
Compilations
[edit]- The Classic Redd (Prelude, 1985)
- Beat the Street: The Best of Sharon Redd (Unidisc, 1989)
- The Complete Sharon Redd on Prelude 1980–1985 (Karamel, 1990)
- Essential Dancefloor Artists Vol. 3: Sharon Redd (Deepbeats, 1994)[3]
Singles
[edit]| Year | Single | Peak chart positions | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| US Dance [13] |
US R&B [13] |
AUS | UK [3][18] |
NL [19] |
NZ [20] | ||
| 1967 | "Half as Much" | ― | ― | ― | ― | ― | ― |
| 1968 | "I've Got a Feeling" | ― | ― | ― | ― | ― | ― |
| 1969 | "Easy to Be Hard" | ― | ― | 32 | ― | ― | ― |
| 1980 | "Can You Handle It" | 5 | 57 | ― | 31 | ― | ― |
| "Love Is Gonna Get Ya" | ― | ― | ― | ― | ― | ― | |
| 1981 | "You Got My Love" | ― | ― | ― | ― | ― | ― |
| 1982 | "Never Give You Up" ‡ | 1 | ― | ― | 20 | ― | ― |
| "Beat the Street" ‡ | 41 | ― | ― | ― | ― | ||
| "In the Name of Love" ‡ | ― | ― | 31 | 11 | ― | ||
| "Takin' a Chance on Love" ‡ | ― | ― | 91 | ― | ― | ||
| 1983 | "Love How You Feel" | 16 | ― | ― | 39 | ― | ― |
| "You're a Winner" | ― | ― | ― | 83 | ― | ― | |
| "Liar on the Wire" | 33 | ― | ― | ― | ― | ― | |
| 1985 | "Undercover Girl" | ― | ― | ― | ― | ― | ― |
| 1988 | "Second to None" | ― | ― | ― | ― | ― | ― |
| 1992 | "Can You Handle It" (DNA's re-recording) | ― | ― | ― | 17 | 62 | 41 |
| "—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that territory. | |||||||
‡ Denotes tracks from US Dance-charting LP Redd Hot which included all cuts.[13]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g Kellman, Andy. "Artist Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved December 22, 2008.
- ^ a b c "Sharon Redd Page". Soulwalking.co.uk. Retrieved December 10, 2008.
- ^ a b c Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 454. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
- ^ "Snap! with Penny Ford official website". Retrieved January 17, 2022.
- ^ "Sharon Redd". Baltimore Afro-American. February 14, 1981. Retrieved September 6, 2010.
- ^ Billboard Magazine. October 1969.
- ^ "Two blacks from 'Hair' get boot from Australia". The Miami News. April 9, 1971. Archived from the original on July 18, 2012. Retrieved September 6, 2010.
- ^ "'Hair' players await visas". Sydney Morning Herald. April 30, 1971. Retrieved September 6, 2010.
- ^ "To Vegas with Love". Rhoda. Season 3. Episode 24. March 13, 1977. Archived from the original on June 11, 2011.
- ^ "Johnny's Solo Flight". Rhoda. Season 4. Episode 9. December 11, 1977. Archived from the original on June 11, 2011.
- ^ "Sharon Redd - IMDb". Akas.imdb.com. May 1, 2009. Retrieved April 23, 2012.
- ^ "Sharon Redd". The Staggering Harlettes. October 19, 1945. Archived from the original on February 26, 2012. Retrieved April 23, 2012.
- ^ a b c d e "Sharon Redd Top Songs / Chart Singles Discography". Music VF. Retrieved September 5, 2020.
- ^ "Top of the Pops". BBC. January 30, 1992. Retrieved January 17, 2022.
- ^ Andyboy (May 22, 1992). "The First Cut". DMR. 15 (9): 3.
The impact of AIDS on the dance music industry has been felt by many on an excruciatingly personal level. News this week of Prelude artist Sharon Redd's recent death due to AIDS once again brought reality into chillingly clear focus.
- ^ "Sharon Redd – 20 Years On…". June 9, 2023.
- ^ "Black lives lost to AIDS commemorated in heartbreaking virtual exhibition". June 9, 2023.
- ^ a b "SHARON REDD - full Official Chart History". Official Charts Company. Retrieved September 5, 2020.
- ^ "Discografie Sharon Redd". dutchcharts.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved January 20, 2022.
- ^ "Discography Sharon Redd". charts.org.nz. Retrieved January 20, 2022.
External links
[edit]Sharon Redd
View on GrokipediaEarly life
Family background and upbringing
Sharon Redd was born on October 19, 1945, in Norfolk, Virginia.[6][7] Her father, Gene Redd Sr., was a bandleader, songwriter, vibraphonist, trumpeter, and A&R executive at King Records, where he worked on sessions and helped develop early careers of performers including James Brown and Hank Ballard.[8][9] Her mother was Katherine Redd.[1] Redd grew up in a musical household that later relocated to New York City.[10] Her stepfather performed as a musician in Benny Goodman's orchestra.[1][10] She had a brother, Gene Redd Jr., who worked as a recording engineer, songwriter, and producer, including credits with Kool & the Gang.[10][9] Redd also shared a half-sister, Penny Ford, an R&B and dance singer recognized for her vocals on Snap!'s hits and her own solo releases.[11][12] The family's industry ties offered Redd proximity to recording environments and live performances from childhood, fostering her initial familiarity with professional music settings.[13][10]Career
Backing vocals and session work
Redd began her professional vocal career in the early 1970s, providing backing vocals on several recordings before joining established touring ensembles. In 1973, she contributed background vocals to Bonnie Raitt's album Streetlights, appearing on tracks such as "Got You on My Mind" and "I Got Plenty," alongside singers Carl Hall and Tasha Thomas.[14] That same year, she sang backing vocals for artists including Barry Manilow, Bette Midler, and Lyn Christopher, honing her studio technique amid New York's burgeoning R&B and pop scenes.[13] By mid-decade, Redd secured a prominent live role as a member of the Harlettes, Bette Midler's backing vocal trio, which she joined after auditioning against 70 competitors following her return from an Australian theater production.[3] Comprising Redd, Ula Hedwig, and Charlotte Crossley, the group supported Midler on tours from 1973 to 1977, delivering harmonized performances that emphasized dynamic R&B delivery and stage energy during Midler's rise in the glam and pop arenas.[15] The Harlettes' tenure provided Redd with rigorous live experience, including high-profile shows like a 1973 Detroit performance where Midler introduced the trio onstage.[15] Post-Harlettes, Redd continued session work in the mid-1970s disco and jazz-funk crossover sphere. She provided backing vocals on Norman Connors' 1976 album You Are My Starship, contributing to tracks with a lush, soulful ensemble that included Michael Henderson and Jean Carn, enhancing the album's smooth fusion sound.[16] In 1977, the former Harlettes regrouped for promotional efforts, as noted in contemporary coverage of their independent pursuits after parting with Midler.[17] By 1978, Redd, Hedwig, and Crossley released Formerly of the Harlettes, a soul-jazz LP that showcased their collective vocal prowess in original material, marking a transitional step in Redd's development from ensemble supporter to featured interpreter.[18] These experiences solidified her reputation for versatile, powerful harmonies in both studio and live contexts, bridging pop, R&B, and emerging dance styles.Transition to solo artistry
After releasing the single "Love Insurance" in 1979 on Panorama Records, which gained traction in New York disco circles despite lacking formal credits for Redd on some pressings, she secured a recording contract with Prelude Records, a label central to the city's burgeoning dance music scene.[13][19] Her transition materialized with the self-titled debut album Sharon Redd, issued in 1980 on Prelude, featuring production and co-writing by Willie Lester and Rodney Brown on key tracks.[3][20] The lead single "Can You Handle It," backed with "You Got My Love," peaked at number 5 on the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart in 1980, marking her first notable solo chart entry and demonstrating early club airplay appeal, while "You Got My Love" itself failed to chart independently.[3][21]Peak commercial success
Redd's breakthrough came with her self-titled debut album Sharon Redd, released in 1980 on Prelude Records, produced by Willie Lester and Rodney Brown of Mainline Productions. The lead single, "Can You Handle It," co-written by Lester and Brown, peaked at number 5 on the US Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart and reached number 31 on the UK Singles Chart.[22][23] Other tracks from the album, including "You Got My Love," contributed to its club-oriented reception but saw limited crossover to mainstream R&B or pop formats.[24] Her second album, Redd Hott (also stylized as Red Heat in some releases), issued in August 1982, marked the height of her dance chart dominance. All cuts from the LP simultaneously topped the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart on October 16, 1982, a rare feat driven by extensive club remixes and DJ play.[25] Standout singles included "Never Give You Up," which held number 1 on the disco chart for one week and peaked at number 20 on the UK Singles Chart, and "Beat the Street," benefiting from vocal and instrumental remixes that amplified its underground appeal.[26] Despite this club success, the tracks failed to penetrate the Billboard Hot 100 or Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs charts significantly, highlighting Redd's niche within post-disco dance music rather than broader commercial radio.[24] Redd received no major industry awards such as Grammys during this period, though her output aligned with the era's dance-specific recognitions centered on chart performance and club rotation rather than formal accolades.[19] Her success relied on Prelude's promotion of extended mixes tailored for disc jockeys, underscoring a market performance tied to venue play over retail sales data, which remains undocumented in verifiable figures.[27]Later recordings and collaborations
Following the release of her third and final studio album Love How You Feel in 1983 on Prelude Records, Sharon Redd's output of new material significantly diminished as the popularity of disco waned and the label approached its closure in 1986.[7] Without transitioning to another major label for original recordings, Redd shifted to sporadic session work as a backing vocalist during the mid-1980s.[7] Compilations aggregating her earlier hits emerged in the late 1980s, including Beat the Street: The Best of Sharon Redd issued in 1989 by Unidisc Music, which compiled tracks like "Beat the Street" but achieved no notable chart performance amid the rising dominance of house and electronic genres.[28] Similarly, The Complete Sharon Redd on Prelude 1980–1985 appeared in 1990 on Karamel Records, focusing on reissues rather than fresh content and reflecting the era's retrospective interest in post-disco artists. These releases underscored declining commercial viability, with none reaching the Billboard Dance chart peaks of her 1980–1982 singles, such as #1 for Redd Hott.[7] In 1991, Redd made a brief comeback attempt with a solo single, representing her last original recording before her passing, though it garnered minimal promotion and failed to chart.[7] Concurrently, her catalog connected to early house music through remixes; producers like Dimitri From Paris reworked "Never Give You Up" in 1990, incorporating electronic elements that aligned with club trends, yet these efforts did not involve new vocal contributions from Redd.[29]Personal life
Relationships and family
Sharon Redd kept her personal relationships largely private, with no publicly documented marriages, long-term partners, or children.[13][30] She was the half-sister of singer Penny Ford, sharing the same father, Gene Redd Sr., a record producer and musician who worked at King Records.[13] Penny Ford, born in 1964 to Redd Sr.'s second wife Carol Ford, pursued a parallel path in R&B and dance music, releasing solo albums Pennye (1984) and Contact (1993) before gaining prominence as lead vocalist for the Eurodance group Snap! on hits like "The Power" (1990).[13] Redd also had a full brother, Gene Redd Jr., who composed and produced tracks for Kool & the Gang, including contributions to their 1970s albums.[3] Redd's familial connections remained tied to the New York music community, where her relatives' involvement in production and performance mirrored aspects of her own environment, though she avoided extensive public commentary on these ties.[13]Health issues and death
In the early 1990s, Sharon Redd was reportedly preparing a musical comeback, including plans for a return to live performances, when her health declined due to AIDS-related complications that weakened her immune system.[31] [32] These complications progressed to pneumonia, the immediate cause of her death on May 1, 1992, at age 46 in Westchester County, New York.[33] [34] Initial obituaries attributed the death to pneumonia alone, but Dance Music Report magazine specified it as AIDS-related, with the virus rendering her immune system ineffective against opportunistic infections.[35] [1] This discrepancy aligned with patterns in 1990s music industry reporting, where AIDS diagnoses were often obscured amid prevailing stigma, delaying public acknowledgment of the underlying condition.[5] Redd was interred at Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, New York.[34]Musical style and influences
Genre contributions
Sharon Redd played a pivotal role in the transition from late-1970s disco to early-1980s house and garage subgenres, particularly through her recordings on Prelude Records, a New York label instrumental in producing post-disco tracks that emphasized relentless grooves and vocal-driven energy.[36] Tracks like "Never Give You Up" (1982) retained disco's signature four-on-the-floor kick drum pattern—delivering a steady pulse on every beat—while layering soaring vocal hooks and simplified basslines that stripped away orchestral excesses, facilitating adaptation by DJs into proto-house mixes.[37] This structural evolution, rooted in empirical club playback demands for extended, remix-friendly formats, positioned her work as a causal link to garage house's emphasis on emotive, hi-hat-accented rhythms and filtered synth stabs in successors like those from Chicago and New Jersey scenes.[38] Her pioneer status in club music is evidenced by sustained DJ rotation and remix proliferation; for instance, "Beat the Street" (1984) achieved #1 on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart and was sampled extensively in early house productions by artists such as Todd Terry, extending its lifespan through layered percussion and acapella breakdowns that became staples in 1980s-1990s remixes.[39] Prelude-era releases like hers often featured production techniques—such as gated reverb on snares and pitched-up vocals—that prioritized dancefloor propulsion over melodic complexity, influencing a shift toward minimalism in house.[40] Comparatively, Redd's approach overlapped with contemporaries like Loleatta Holloway in leveraging powerful, gospel-inflected diva vocals atop up-tempo R&B foundations, yet Redd's tracks under producers like Eric Matthew integrated more electronic timbres earlier, fostering proto-house timbres evident in shared remix aesthetics like those applied to Holloway's "Love Sensation" (1987).[38] Both artists' outputs, analyzed through their chart dominance and sampling frequency, demonstrate causal parallels in production: emphasis on breakdown builds and vocal ad-libs that DJs like Larry Levan exploited for seamless transitions, though Redd's Prelude catalog arguably accelerated garage's New York-specific vocal house variant by 1982.[41] This influence persisted via posthumous reissues and modern remixes, underscoring her empirical impact on subgenre hybridization without reliance on mainstream radio validation.[42]Vocal technique and production elements
Redd's vocal delivery emphasized power and resonance, developed through classical training begun in childhood in Norfolk, Virginia.[1] This foundation supported a belting style effective for sustaining high-energy phrases over dance rhythms, as evident in studio tracks like "Never Give You Up" (1982), where her voice cuts through layered instrumentation without strain.[43] Live renditions, such as her 1980 UK television performance of "Can You Handle It," showcased comparable endurance, with dynamic projection adapting to stage acoustics absent studio enhancement.[44] Recordings frequently incorporated ad-libs and call-response patterns in hooks, enhancing rhythmic drive; examples include improvisational flourishes in "Beat the Street" (1982), which amplified vocal interplay suited to club playback.[45] Production signatures involved synth basslines via Moog and similar synthesizers for pulsating low-end, as in "Never Give You Up," paired with Prophet or Oberheim polyphonics for harmonic depth.[46] Remixers like Shep Pettibone extended these elements in 12-inch versions, such as the 1982 "Beat the Street" remix, introducing crisp percussion and amplified bass to prioritize dancefloor sustainment over concise structures.[47] While some analyses highlight formulaic repetition in such extended formats—relying on looped bass and hooks for endurance—Redd's vocal stamina provided differentiation, maintaining clarity across 7- to 10-minute mixes.[48]Legacy
Industry recognition
Sharon Redd secured notable industry recognition through her dominance on Billboard's Dance Club Songs chart in the early 1980s, amassing multiple number-one hits that underscored her influence in the dance music genre. Her single "Never Give You Up," released in 1982, topped the chart on December 25, 1982, marking a peak position sustained for 16 weeks.[49] Similarly, tracks from her album Redd Hott (1982) collectively achieved number-one status, with all cuts from the LP reaching the summit on dates including October 16, 1982, and November 6, 1982, a rare accomplishment for an artist in the format.[50][51] Additional singles reinforced her chart prowess, including "Can You Handle It" (1980), which peaked at number five, and "Beat the Street" (1983), contributing to her string of dance radio and club successes. These peaks were documented in Billboard's historical listings, reflecting peer-driven airplay and sales metrics from DJs and programmers at the time.[52] While no major award certifications like Grammys were attained, her consistent top placements—spanning over a dozen charting entries—positioned her as a commercial force in underground and crossover dance circuits.[13] Posthumously, Redd received tributes acknowledging her foundational role, including honors from the National AIDS Memorial in a Black History Month exhibit alongside figures like Sylvester. Such recognitions, drawn from archival music reporting, highlight her enduring metric-based legacy amid limited mainstream accolades.[4]Cultural and genre impact
Sharon Redd's vocal tracks from the early 1980s, characterized by soaring gospel-inflected delivery over driving rhythms, provided a blueprint for the "house diva" archetype that dominated later electronic dance music. Producers in the emerging house and techno scenes frequently sampled her recordings, embedding her timbre in foundational works; for example, elements from "Beat the Street" (1983) were interpolated in early house productions by Todd Terry and the S-Express's "Theme from S-Express" (1988), linking her post-disco sound directly to the genre's New York and Chicago evolution. Similarly, "Can You Handle It?" (1980) yielded samples in tracks like Discotexx's "Sphère De Discotheque" (2010s-era nu-disco revival) and various soulful house cuts, demonstrating causal persistence through sampling chains rather than stylistic imitation alone.[39][53] Amid the post-1979 disco backlash, which marginalized the genre in mainstream narratives, Redd's output via Prelude Records sustained New York's underground club ecosystem, where tracks like "Never Give You Up" (1982) fueled resident DJ sets at venues transitioning from disco to hi-NRG and proto-house. This underground tenacity countered broader cultural dismissal, as her chart-topping dance hits—such as "Redd Hott" reaching number one on Billboard's Disco Top 20 in October 1982—preserved rhythmic and vocal innovations in club play long after radio airplay waned.[50][19] Redd's legacy reflects club circuit endurance over pop permeation, with her limited Hot 100 crossover (none surpassing Billboard's top 100) underscoring systemic underrepresentation of black female dance vocalists in media retrospectives, which often prioritized white or male innovators despite empirical sampling evidence. Revivals via remixes and reissues affirm this niche impact; Prelude-era masters saw vinyl compilations and edits in the 2010s, including colored-press reissues of "Master Mixes" (2023 edition tracing 2010s demand) and Michael Gray's 2022 rework of "Never Give You Up," which charted in dance pools and evidenced sustained DJ utility over two decades post her final recordings.[54][55]Discography
Studio albums
Sharon Redd released three studio albums, all on Prelude Records, marking her primary full-length output in the post-disco and boogie genres.[56] Her debut album, Sharon Redd (1980), featured tracks including "You Got My Love" (5:52), "Can You Handle It" (6:26), "It's a Lie" (5:40), "Try My Love on for Size" (5:06), "Leaving You Is Easier Said Than Done" (3:51), "Love Is Gonna Get Ya" (4:56), and "You Stayed on My Mind" (5:38).[57] The second album, Redd Hott (1982), was produced by Eric Matthew and Darryl Payne and included "Never Give You Up" (7:00), "You're the One" (6:20), "Send Your Love" (6:57), "Beat the Street" (5:40), "In the Name of Love" (6:30), "Takin' a Chance on Love" (5:02), and "We're Friends Again" (4:43); it peaked at number 59 on the UK Albums Chart.[58][48][2] Love How You Feel (1983), her final studio album, contained "Activate" (8:30), "You're a Winner" (6:40), "Got Ya' Where I Want" (7:26), "Liar on the Wire" (5:18), "Sweet Sensation" (6:30), "Somebody Save the Night" (6:55), and "Love How You Feel" (4:06).[59]Singles and EPs
Sharon Redd released several 12-inch singles primarily through Prelude Records, targeting the dance club market with extended mixes suitable for DJ play. These standalone releases emphasized post-disco and early house grooves, often featuring remixes by producers like François Kevorkian.[56] Her debut single "You Got My Love," issued in 1979 on Prelude Records in 12-inch format, marked her entry into the genre with a funky bassline and orchestral elements, though it did not achieve significant chart success.[60] The 1980 single "Can You Handle It," also on Prelude as a 12-inch with remixes, peaked at number 5 on the US Billboard Dance Club Songs chart and number 57 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.[61] Its B-side included instrumental versions, highlighting Redd's powerful vocals over upbeat rhythms.[62] In 1982, the double A-side 12-inch "Never Give You Up / Beat the Street" on Prelude reached number 1 on the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart, driven by the former's insistent hook and the latter's streetwise funk. "Never Give You Up" also hit number 20 on the UK Singles Chart.[26] The single featured extended mixes and dub versions, with "Beat the Street" incorporating electro elements.[63] "Love How You Feel," released in 1983 on Prelude as a 12-inch single, charted on the Billboard Dance Club Songs, buoyed by its soulful delivery and club-friendly production.[13] No extended plays (EPs) were released by Redd during her career, with her output focused on vinyl singles and full-length albums.[56]| Year | Title | Label | Key Formats | US Dance Peak |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1979 | "You Got My Love" | Prelude | 12-inch single | — |
| 1980 | "Can You Handle It" | Prelude | 12-inch single (remix) | #5[61] |
| 1982 | "Never Give You Up / Beat the Street" | Prelude | 12-inch double A-side | #1 |
| 1983 | "Love How You Feel" | Prelude | 12-inch single | Charted[13] |

