Shalamar was the creation of Dick Griffey, the booking agent for the television R&B program Soul Train, and British R&B producer Simon Soussan. The group's first single, the 1977 Motown medley "Uptown Festival," featured a bevy of faceless studio musicians; once it became a hit, Griffey decided to form a performing group under the name Shalamar. Through Soul Train, Griffey found Jody Watley, Jeffrey Daniels, and Gerald Brown, the three vocalists that became Shalamar; Brown was quickly replaced by Howard Hewitt in 1978.
Shalamar's string of poppy dance-soul hits began in 1979 with "Take That to the Bank"; later that year, "The Second Time Around" hit the Top Ten. Throughout the early '80s the group were favorites on the U.S. R&B scene, as well as scoring a number of British hit singles. Watley and Daniels left the group in 1982 and were replaced by Delisa Davis and Micki Free in 1984; Watley went on to stardom as a solo act. The following year Shalamar won a Grammy award for "Don't Get Stopped in Beverly Hills," which was featured in Beverly Hills Cop. Hewitt left for a solo career in 1986, signaling the end of the band's career as hit-makers. Sidney Justin replaced Hewitt and the group recorded 1987's Circumstantial Evidence, which was a commercial disappointment. The group faded away soon after the release of 1990's Wake Up. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi
Bookmark
SAVE
Loading...
Loading...
Feed Readers (RSS/XML)
SUBSCRIBE
Loading...
Shalamar
Creator: Zvents
Hot Tickets
More »
ON SALE NOW
-
Wed 5/23 8:00p
-
Wed 2/15 7:00p
-
Sun 3/4 7:00p
-
Mon 2/20 7:00p
-
Thu 3/29 7:00p
-
Sat 2/25 7:00p
ON SALE SOON
Related Performers
Performer Information
RESOURCES
add to our listings





Show all 25 related performers...
Show only the first 7 related performers...