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== External links ==
== External links ==
*[http://www.rose-royce.com/ Rose Royce Official Website ]
*[http://www.rose-royce.com/ Rose Royce Official Website ]
*[http://www.tonebee.com/Ringtone_Maker-Rose_Royce-mp3_ringtones_artist_14875.html Videos, Pictures & Articles related to Rose Royce]



[[Category:American rhythm and blues musical groups]]
[[Category:American rhythm and blues musical groups]]

Revision as of 14:41, 25 September 2007

Rose Royce in concert at the Chumash Casino Resort in Santa Ynez, California in 2005.

Rose Royce was a soul, funk, and disco band, formed by Motown writer/producer Norman Whitfield - previously most famous for his work with the Temptations - and featuring singer Gwen Dickey AKA Rose Norwalt. The backing group was composed of members of Total Concept Limited and Magic Wand, both backing bands for Motown artists such as Edwin Starr, The Undisputed Truth, and The Temptations. When Whitfield left Motown in 1975 to create Whitfield Records, he took the band members with him and Rose Royce was created.

The group turned out three hit albums during the late-1970s, including the platinum-selling soundtrack to the movie Car Wash. One song, "Wishing on a Star" (from the album "Rose Royce II: In Full Bloom"), peaked at only #52 on the R&B charts and failed to chart at all on the Billboard Hot 100; despite this it has gone on to become a mainstay of the "Quiet Storm" radio format and major part of the band's repertoire. While this is in part because the song was later enlivened by acts such as Teena Marie and later the Latin freestyle music girl group Cover Girls, who scored a #9 pop hit with it in 1992, Rose Royce's version is considered definitive by most. If chart success was hit or miss for the group, they nevertheless chalked up five classics in five years: "I'm Going Down", "I Wanna Get Next To You", "Wishing On a Star", "Love Don't Live Here Anymore", and "Car Wash". "Car Wash" has become a disco and funk classic, and both "Wishing On a Star" and "Love Don't Live Here Anymore" were also popular at after-night disco clubs along with Peaches & Herb's "Reunited".

Their 1979 album Rainbow Connection IV did not sell as well, but is still rated highly by disco/funk aficionados. Following 1980, and with the decline of disco in general, the group was unable to re-invent themselves and return to the charts; their 1981 album Golden Touch, featuring Richee Benson in the place of Norwalt, was not a success by any standard. The new millennium has however seen the emergence of the "Classic R&B" radio format, and with it has come a new resurgence for the group, primarily in their touring schedule.

Singles

Title (Year) Position
US Charts
Position
UK Charts
Position
R&B/Soul Charts
Position
Disco/Club Charts
"Car Wash" * (1976) #1 #9 #1 #3
"I Wanna Get Next To You" ** (1977) #10 #14 #3
"Do Your Dance (Part I)" (1977) #39 #30 #4 #20
"I'm Going Down" (1977) #70 #10
"Wishing on a Star" (1977) #101 #3 #52
"It Makes You Feel Like Dancin'" (1978) #16
"Ooh Boy" (1978) #72 #3
"I'm In Love (And I Love the Feeling)" (1978) #5
"Love Don't Live Here Anymore" (1979) #32 #2 #5
"Is It Love You're After?" (1979) #105 #13 #31
"First Come, First Serve" (1979) #65
"Pop Your Fingers" (1980) #60
"Golden Touch" (1981) #56
"RR Express" (1981) #8
"Best Love" (1982) #64
"Lonely Road" (1987) #45
"Doesn't Have To Be This Way" (1987) #22
"Car Wash '98" (1998) #18
"Car Wash b/w Is It Love You're After?" *** (1998) #20

*-#1 on the R&B/Soul charts for 2 weeks **-"I Wanna Get Next To You" also reached the #9 position on the Adult Contemporary charts ***-UK re-issue

Covers