Singer Shannon hit gold with the trendsetting, pulsating dance classic
"Let the Music Play" and other similar-sounding hits in the mid-'80s.
Born Brenda Shannon Greene in Washington, D.C. in 1958, she grew up in Brooklyn
and while at college, joined the New York Jazz Ensemble as a singer.
While a member, she met drummer Lenny White and sang with Brownstone,
which led to some recording. One single, 1983's "Let the Music Play,"
was issued on the New York-based dance label Emergency Records as a 12"
single with Shannon listed as the artist. Produced by Mark Liggett and Chris
Barbosa, the track's upfront heavy, staccato beats and synth bass marked it as
an electro single, The record became a monster club hit, pumped its way up to
the pop Top Ten, and sold a million copies. Her debut album titled Let the
Music Play was issued in February 1984 and went gold, peaking at number 32 pop
in March 1984. Shannon followed that up with the Top Ten R&B hit "Give
Me Tonight" and "My Heart's Divided."
Do You Wanna Get Away was the title of her second Mirage album, issued
in May 1985. The title track single hit number 13 R&B in spring 1985. Her
third album Love Goes All the Way was released on Atlantic in 1986, with the
singles "Dancin," "Criminal," and "Prove Me
Right." Shannon's career was remarkably short-lived, however, due in part
to the closing of Emergency Records, some litigation surrounding "Let the
Music Play," the decline of dance-oriented radio stations, the loss of
club airtime on mainstream radio stations, and the inevitable "Let the
Music Play" sound-alike clones that surfaced. Nevertheless, Shannon
appeared on a 1999 segment of VH1's Where Are They Now, vowing to return to the
top of the charts; the following spring she released the album The Best Is Yet
to Come.
~ Ed Hogan, All Music Guide
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