Vicki Sue Robinson

Singer

Birthday May 31, 1954

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Harlem, New York, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2000-4-27, Wilton, Connecticut, U.S. (45 years old)

Nationality United States

#43652 Most Popular

1954

Vicki Sue Robinson (May 31, 1954 – April 27, 2000) was an American singer, closely associated with the disco era of late 1970s pop music; she is most famous for her 1976 hit, "Turn the Beat Around".

Born in Harlem, New York, to African American Shakespearean actor Bill Robinson and his European American wife Marianne, a folk singer, Vicki Sue Robinson was reared in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for most of her early years, returning with her family to New York City when she was teen.

1960

She gave her first public performance in 1960 at the age of six, when she accompanied her mother on stage at the Philadelphia Folk Festival.

Ten years later, at the age of 16, while a student at the New Lincoln School, Robinson made her professional performing debut when she joined the Broadway cast of the musical Hair.

Robinson remained with Hair for six weeks before moving to a new Broadway production, Soon, whose cast included Peter Allen, Barry Bostwick, Nell Carter, and Richard Gere.

After the show's short run, Robinson appeared in the Off-Broadway play Long Time Coming, Long Time Gone, in which she and Richard Gere played Mimi and Richard Fariña.

New York magazine opined that Robinson "sings with gentle power, accompanying herself on guitar and dulcimer, and moves with astounding confidence."

1971

Robinson also had bit parts in the films Going Home (1971) and To Find A Man (1972).

1972

Robinson made her recording debut as one of several Hair veterans invited to sing background on Todd Rundgren's Something/Anything? album released in 1972.

1973

After a sojourn in Japan, Robinson returned to Broadway in 1973, joining the cast of Jesus Christ Superstar.

In 1973 she spent time in Japan with Itsuro Shimoda, with whom she did session work on his album Love Songs and Lamentations, and toured nationally.

1975

In 1975, Robinson was providing vocals at a New York recording session for the album Many Sunny Places by Scott Fagan, a singer with whom she had performed in Greenwich Village clubs.

Warren Schatz, a producer/engineer with RCA Records, was struck by Robinson's voice and saw her potential as a disco-oriented artist.

Schatz invited Robinson to cut some demos including a remake of the Foundations' "Baby Now That I've Found You", which became Robinson's first solo release.

Despite that track's failure, RCA green-lit Schatz producing Robinson's debut album Never Gonna Let You Go.

1976

The title cut, a Schatz original, became a #10 disco hit but another album track, "Turn the Beat Around", began to build "buzz" and was expediently released as a single, topping the disco charts on March 20, 1976.

It reached the U.S. top 10 in August, spending around six months overall on the Billboard Hot 100 and propelling the Never Gonna Let You Go album to #49.

"Turn the Beat Around" would chart internationally, reaching #14 in Canada, #11 in the Netherlands, and #12 in South Africa.

The track would earn Robinson a nomination for a Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance.

In 1976, Robinson toured across the United States promoting her hit tune, "Turn the Beat Around".

She performed on major TV shows such as The Midnight Special, Don Kirshner's Rock Concert, The Merv Griffin Show, Mike Douglas, American Bandstand, and Soul Train.

She also performed at the top venues around the country, such as the Boarding House in San Francisco, The Starwood, in Los Angeles, The Bottom Line, Felt Forum, and Carnegie Hall in New York.

The original touring band consisted of Dan Pickering on trumpet and flute, Bill Cerulli on drums, Wendy Simmons on bass guitar, Nacho Mena on percussion, Vernie "Butch" Taylor on guitar, and George Pavlis on keyboards.

George Pavlis would be later replaced by Joey Melotti on keyboards.

The touring band members recorded four tracks on Robinson's second album, Vicki Sue Robinson.

Again with Schatz producing, Robinson recorded Vicki Sue Robinson for release in the fall of 1976; although its lead single, a cover of Bobby Womack's "Daylight", was only a minor hit (#61), the album reached #45.

1977

Robinson's next Hot 100 appearance was in August 1977, with her version of David Gates' "Hold Tight", which peaked at #67 (and #2 on the disco chart).

1978

Its parent album, Half and Half, again produced by Schatz, was not released until 1978, and peaked at #110.

1979

In 1979, Robinson contributed the track "Easy to Be Hard" to the Schatz production Disco Spectacular – an album of dance versions of songs from the musical Hair, inspired by the release of film version – and recorded what would prove to be her final album, Movin' On.

Although Schatz was credited as the album's executive producer, that job was done by Evelyn King's producer, T. Life.

Movin' On's tracks were ignored in the dance clubs, but Robinson scored a 1979 club hit with "Nighttime Fantasy", a track written and produced by Norman Bergen and Reid Whitelaw, recorded for the film Nocturna: Granddaughter of Dracula.

Also in 1979, Robinson appeared in a film made by the same production company as Nocturna: Granddaughter of Dracula titled Gangsters (now called Hoodlums), which also featured T. Life and Cissy Houston, and the first credited screen role for Jean Smart.

1980

In 1980 Robinson moved from RCA to Ariola Records, Warren Schatz having assumed the position of COO at Ariola.

However, Schatz did not continue as Robinson's producer at Ariola.

Respecting her wishes to move in a new musical direction, he had her record at Muscle Shoals Sound Studios with Clayton Ivey and Terry Woodford, producing the single "Nothin' But a Heartache", the recording of the Michael McDonald composition being Robinson's sole Ariola release.

Robinson sang background on Irene Cara's hit single "Fame" in 1980, and as the decade progressed she returned to session work, backing Michael Bolton and Cher.

1984

She subsequently resumed recording dance music with Schatz, with releases on a number of labels: Prelude, Promise, Perfect, and Profile, with the Profile releasing her dance version of "To Sir with Love", which became a surprise top ten hit in Australia in 1984.

Robinson's next release, a remake of "Everlasting Love" in 1984, was her last recording for almost fifteen years, apart from the track "Grab Them Cakes", a duet with professional wrestler Junkyard Dog featured on The Wrestling Album (1985).

"Grab Them Cakes" was issued as a single, with Cyndi Lauper miming the guitar in the music video.

2011

In 2011, Gold Legion.com digitally remastered and reissued Robinson's four albums for RCA Records on CD, along with bonus tracks and liner notes.