Rose Royce

Rose Royce is an American soul and R&B group. They are best known for several hit singles during the 1970s including "Car Wash", "I Wanna Get Next to You", "I'm Going Down", "Wishing on a Star", and "Love Don't Live Here Anymore".

Rose Royce
Rose Royce in concert at the Chumash Casino Resort in Santa Ynez, California in 2005
Background information
OriginLos Angeles, California, United States
GenresSoul, R&B, disco, funk
Years active1973present
LabelsWhitfield, Epic, Streetwave, Omni
Associated actsYvonne Fair
The Undisputed Truth
MembersGwen Dickey
Kenny Copeland
Kenji Brown
Lequeint "Duke" Jobe
Victor Nix
Henry Garner
Freddie Dunn
Michael Moore
Terry Santiel
Michael Nash

Career

The Los Angeles-based group comprised Gwen Dickey (vocals), Henry Garner (drums), Terral "Terry" Santiel (congas), Lequeint "Duke" Jobe (bass), Michael Moore (saxophone), Kenny Copeland (trumpet, lead vocals), Kenji Brown (guitar, lead vocals), Freddie Dunn (trumpet), and Victor Nix (keyboards). The group began in the early 1970s, when members of several backup bands from the Watts and Inglewood areas of Los Angeles united under the name Total Concept Unlimited. In 1973, this collective toured England and Japan behind Motown soul star Edwin Starr.[1] Starr introduced them to Norman Whitfield.[2]

Whitfield, after a decade at Motown, wanted to start a company of his own. He took the T.C.U. octet under his wing and signed them to his label. The group, now called Magic Wand, began working with Yvonne Fair and became the studio and concert band for The Undisputed Truth. During a tour stop in Miami, Undisputed Truth leader Joe Harris noticed a singer named Gwen Dickey, then a member of a local group called The Jewels. Harris informed Whitfield of his discovery and Dickey was flown to Los Angeles to audition. In Dickey, Whitfield found the ingredient he felt was missing in Magic Wand: a charismatic female singer. He gave her the stage name Rose Norwalt. The original band lineup, now complete, prepared their debut album.

During this time Whitfield was contacted by film director Michael Schultz, fresh from the success of his first feature, Cooley High. Schultz offered Whitfield the opportunity to score his next picture, Car Wash. Whitfield would use the film to launch his new group and began composing music based on script outlines. He and the band visited the film set, soaking up the atmosphere. This was one of the rare instances in Hollywood in which the music was composed concurrently with the picture instead of after the fact. In the spirit of the soundtrack, the band's name was changed one final time to 'Rose Royce'. The name not only referenced the movie's automotive theme, but it also placed Gwen "Rose" Dickey front and center. Further, it hinted at a touch of class the band strove to bring to 1970s soul-funk.[3]

The movie Car Wash and the soundtrack were great successes, bringing the group national fame. Whitfield won the Best Music award at the Cannes Film Festival, and the album received the Grammy for Best Motion Picture Score Album of the Year. Released in late 1976, the soundtrack featured three Billboard R&B Top Ten singles: "Car Wash," "I Wanna Get Next to You," and "I'm Going Down."[1] The first of these was also a number one single on the Billboard popular music chart, and "I Wanna Get Next to You" reached number 10.

The group's follow-up album, Rose Royce II: In Full Bloom, produced two Top Ten singles, "Do Your Dance" and "Ooh Boy".[1] It also included "Wishing on a Star", which for Rose Royce was a top-10 hit only in the UK; it became notable elsewhere through its cover versions, including The Cover Girls' Top Ten single in 1992.

During 1978, they released their third album, entitled Rose Royce III: Strikes Again!, and it featured "I'm in Love (And I Love the Feeling)" and "Love Don't Live Here Anymore". Both singles entered the Billboard R&B Top Five.[1] "Love Don't Live Here Anymore" was a number 2 hit in the UK, and would later gain greater exposure through its cover versions, most notably by Madonna in 1984 and 1995.

The group followed with a series of modest successes that reached the charts, but never gained the status that their previous songs did. Dickey left the group in April 1980 and Rose Royce temporarily disbanded.[4] However, the remaining members regrouped, adjusted the line-up, and kept the group somewhat popular in the UK, where they remained a marquee attraction.[1]

Rose Royce was featured in the TV One's seasonal series, Unsung during the spring of 2010. The story featured the successes and internal bickering of the group. Dickey, Copeland, Jobe, Moore and Garner were the only members of the band who gave interviews throughout the program. Dickey now performs as a solo artist in the UK, but mentioned during the interview that she would not mind performing with the group once again. From 2012-2013, R&B vocalist Debelah Morgan joined the band as their lead singer for a few shows. Additionally, Bag Raiders and Daft Punk sampled their single "First Come First Served" with the songs "Shooting Stars" and "Too Long" respectively. [5][6]

On June 25, 2019, The New York Times Magazine listed Rose Royce among hundreds of artists whose material was reportedly destroyed in the 2008 Universal fire.[7]

Discography

+ The Show Must Go On appears to be an unreleased album recorded near the end of the group's association with Streetwave Records in the mid-1980s; apart from the single "Love Me Right Now" (which lists The Show Must Go On as its parent album), there seems to be no existing information about any songs from the album or an album cover.

Cover versions

In addition, Jay-Z recorded his own song, also called "Wishing on a Star", for which Gwen Dickey re-recorded some of her original lyrics and was credited as a featured artist, and the song "Theme from S-Express" by S-Express uses a substantial portion of "Is It Love You're After" as a sample.

References

  1. "Rose Royce - Biography & History". AllMusic. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
  2. Album notes by A. Scott Galloway, The Very Best of Rose Royce, 2001, Warner Bros.
  3. A. Scott Galloway album notes, The Very Best of Rose Royce, 2001 Warner Bros
  4. Tobler, John (1992). NME Rock 'N' Roll Years (1st ed.). London: Reed International Books Ltd. p. 341. CN 5585.
  5. Nichols, Kevin L. (21 June 2012). "KLN Publishing, LLC: Rose Royce - A blast from the past that everyone still loves". Klnpublishingllc.blogspot.com.
  6. PERRY, BRANDON A. "Classy Soul at the Classic". Indianapolisrecorder.com.
  7. Rosen, Jody (25 June 2019). "Here Are Hundreds More Artists Whose Tapes Were Destroyed in the UMG Fire". The New York Times. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
  8. "Rose Royce - Album Discography". AllMusic. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
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