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SYLVESTER "You Make Me Feel"
(Sylvester / Wirrick)
Produced & By Harvey Fuqua
Sylvester - lead vocals & acoustic piano
Michael Finden - organ, clavinet, electric piano
Patrick Cowley - Oberheim DS2 sequencer, Special effects
Tip Wirrick - guitar, Bob Kingson - bass
David Frazier - percussion
Izora Rhodes, Martha Wash - background vocals
Eric Robinson - rhythm arrangement
Horns & Strings arranged by Leslie Drayton
Mastered By Joe Tarantino @ Fantasy Studios, Berkeley
Fantasy Records
1978 -
AMAZING



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Biography:
Sylvester

Along with
the Village People,
'70s disco artist Sylvester was one of the few
artists of the era not afraid to openly acknowledge
his homosexuality. Born Sylvester James during
September 1944 in Los Angeles, CA, Sylvester was
introduced to music at an early age by his
grandmother, Julia Morgan,
who was a jazz singer. While still a youngster,
Sylvester began singing in gospel groups, while
finding further inspiration from the likes of
Bessie Smith and
Billie Holiday, among
others. After relocating to San Francisco in the
late '60s, Sylvester began to perform in a musical
production called Women of the Blues, before
becoming the star attraction of a transvestite vocal
group called the Cockettes
in the early '70s. After leaving the band in 1973,
Sylvester signed on with the
Hot Band and issued such releases as
Scratch My Flower
and Bazaar the
same year. Sylvester's dance-happy funk style
eventually transformed into disco, as his flamboyant
and over-the-top stage act created quite a following
for the singer in the San Francisco area. He also
issued some of his best-known recordings around the
end of the decade — 1977's
Sylvester and 1979's in-concert
Living Proof —
while racking up such popular disco hits as "You
Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)" and "Dance (Disco
Heat)."
1979 saw Sylvester receive
three Billboard awards and another for Best Male Disco Act
from Disco International Magazine, as well as landing a bit part in
Bette Midler's 1979 movie, The
Rose. But by the dawn of the '80s, disco was being considered
increasingly passé and the singer's career began to slow down (funny
enough, Sylvester's backup singers, Martha Wash
and Izora
Rhodes,
would go on to form the Weather Girls,
and score one of 1982's big dance hits with "It's Raining Men").
Although he continued to issue albums throughout the '80s, Sylvester's
career came to an abrupt and tragic end on December 16, 1988, when he
died from AIDS-related complications. Despite his passing, Sylvester's
music remains popular on dance floors worldwide, while "You Make Me
Feel (Mighty Real)" has been covered over the years by three separate
artists: former lead singer of Bronski Beat
and the Communards
Jimmy Somerville (on his 1989 solo debut
Read My Lips), comedian/actor/singer
Sandra Bernhard (on her 1994 release
Excuses for Bad Behavior, Pt. 1), and
by former Ten City lead singer
Byron Stingily (on his 1998 solo debut,
The Purist), whose version hit
number one on the U.S. dance chart the same year.
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