“Tell Me Something Good”

Legendary soul performer, composer and producer Chaka Khan received her long deserved star on the Hollywood Walk-of-Fame this year. Following this lifetime achievement the festivities continued at Trastevere in the Kodak Plaza, home of Fame-Wall Hollywood where Dale Badway played host to the official Hollywood Walk-of-Fame after party celebrating the music icon with an unveiling of the newest Jim Warren portrait for the Fame-Wall .

Chaka Khan’s portrait unveiling continues a musical trend for Fame-Wall Hollywood after the recent unveiling of the Kool & the Gang  as well as The Beach Boys, celebrating their fiftieth anniversary in the music industry.

Chaka Khan (born Yvette Marie Stevens; March 23, 1953) is an American singer and composer who gained fame in the 1970s as the frontwoman and focal point of the funk band Rufus. While still a member of the group in 1978, Khan embarked on a successful solo career. Her signature hits, both with Rufus and as a solo performer, include "Tell Me Something Good", "Sweet Thing", "Ain't Nobody", "I'm Every Woman", "I Feel for You" and "Through the Fire".


In 1978, Warner Bros. Records released Khan's solo debut album, which featured the crossover disco hit, "I'm Every Woman", written for her by songwriters Ashford & Simpson. The success of the single helped the album go platinum, selling over a million copies. Khan also was a featured performer on Quincy Jones' hit, "Stuff Like That", also released in 1978.


In 1990, she was a featured performer on another major hit when she collaborated with Ray Charles and Quincy Jones on a new jack swing cover of The Brothers Johnson's "I'll Be Good to You", which was featured on Jones' Back on the Block.The song reached number-eighteen on the Billboard Hot 100 and number-one on the Hot R&B chart, later winning Charles and Khan a Grammy for Best R&B Vocal Performance By a Duo or Group. Khan returned with her first studio album in four years in 1992 with the release of The Woman I Am, which went gold thanks to the R&B success of the songs "Love You All My Lifetime" and "You Can Make the Story Right". Khan also contributed to soundtracks and worked on a follow-up to The Woman I Am which she titled Dare You to Love Me, which was eventually shelved. In 1995, she and rapper Guru had a hit with the duet "Watch What You Say", in the UK. That same year, she provided a contemporary R&B cover of the classic standard, "My Funny Valentine", for the Waiting to Exhale soundtrack.

 
http://www.nypost.com/p/entertainment/tv/starr_report_eWkQeBnyK8cyV1ld5TxgWJ