|
.
The CAMEO biography by Andy KELLMAN
(AMG) :
(all AMG links in this current bio. section opens an AMG page)
An outlandish, in-your-face
stage presence, a strange sense of humor, and a
hard-driving funk sound that criss-crossed a few
musical boundaries earned
Cameo countless comparisons to
Parliament/Funkadelic
in their early days. However,
Cameo eventually wore off accusations of
being derivative by transcending their
influences and outlasting almost every single
one of them. Throughout the '70s and '80s, the
group remained up with the times and
occasionally crept ahead of them, such that they
became influences themselves upon younger
generations of R&B and hip-hop acts. By the time
the group's popularity started to fizzle in the
late '80s, a series of R&B chart hits -- ranging
from greasy funk workouts to synthesized funk
swingers to dripping ballads -- was left in
their wake. Further separating
Cameo from their forebears, they didn't have
a diaper-clad guitarist. Instead, they had a
codpiece-wearing lead vocalist.
That
vocalist was
Larry Blackmon. In 1974, the ex-Juilliard
student and New York City club-goer instigated a
funk band with a membership of 13 called the New
York City Players.
Blackmon,
Tomi Jenkins, and
Nathan Leftenant formed the group's nucleus.
The Casablanca label signed the group to their
Chocolate City offshoot, and shortly after that,
the group changed its name to
Cameo. Their excellent debut album, 1977's
Cardiac Arrest, was highlighted by four
singles. Three of those hit the Billboard R&B
chart: "Rigor Mortis" (number 33), "Funk Funk"
(number 20), and "Post Mortem" (number 70).
Although the group was clearly inspired by elder
funk groups like
Parliament,
Funkadelic, and
the Ohio Players,
Cardiac Arrest made
Cameo's case for belonging in the same
division an open-and-shut one.
In an
attempt to keep the ball rolling, 1978 saw the
release of
Cameo's second and third albums. Neither
We All Know Who We Are nor
Ugly Ego were as solid as the debut, but the
group's singular characteristics were becoming
increasingly evident. The winding,
horn-punctuated "It's Serious" (from
We All Know Who We Are) narrowly missed the
Top 20 of the R&B chart, while "Insane" (from
Ugly Ego) dipped just inside it, peaking at
number 17. The best halves of these two albums
would've made a fine sophomore LP.
1979's
Secret Omen, featuring a disco-fied
re-visiting of
Cardiac Arrest's "Find My Way" and the
magnificently funky and slightly loony "I Just
Want to Be" (a number-three R&B chart hit), was
stacked with fine album cuts and brought
Cameo back as a group that excelled in the
LP format. "Sparkle" was one of their best
ballads, a sinewy number that hit the Top Ten.
Five albums released between 1980 and 1983 (Cameosis,
Feel Me,
Knights of the Sound Table,
Alligator Woman,
Style) brought about a slight dip in quality
on the album front. Despite an abundance of
filler on each record, none of those albums were
strict disappointments, delivering hot Top 20
R&B singles like "Shake Your Pants," "We're Goin'
Out Tonight," "Keep It Hot," "Freaky Dancin'"
"Just Be Yourself," "Flirt," and "Style."
One of the most significant ripples in
Cameo's time line came during that period,
in 1982, when they packed up and set up shop in
Atlanta. Pared down to a quintet and located in
a less hectic city, the group became bigger fish
in a smaller pond.
Blackmon even started his own label, Atlanta
Artist. The label's first LP,
Style, also marked a significant shift in
sound, with synthesizers taking on a pronounced
role. Paydirt was struck with 1984's
She's Strange; the title cut, a late-night
slithery smolder, topped the R&B chart and
eclipsed the Top 50 of the pop chart, kicking
off a remarkable three-album run that made
Cameo one of the most popular groups of the
'80s.
Single Life and
Word Up!, released respectively in 1985 and
1986, continued the hot streak. The singles from
those two albums -- "Attack Me With Your Love,"
"Single Life," "Word Up," "Candy," and "Back and
Forth" -- held down the Top Five plateau of the
R&B chart. "Word Up" even went to number six on
the pop chart, giving them their biggest bite of
the mainstream. The song was everywhere.
What goes up must come down, and that's
exactly what happened to
Cameo. Despite the fact that two more
singles -- "Skin I'm In" and "I Want It Now" --
scaled up to number five on the R&B chart,
neither
Machismo nor
Real Men Wear Black performed well as
albums. After 1991's
Emotional Violence, the group's profile was
lowered significantly, but they did tour
sporadically to the delight of hardcore fans as
well as plenty of misguided people who thought
Cameo was all about "Word Up" and nothing
more. Notably,
Blackmon spent a few years of the '90s at
Warner Bros., as the vice president of A&R.
Cameo's presence continued to be felt
throughout the early 2000s, not only through
extensive sample use and less tangible
influences upon younger artists and producers.
Several retrospectives have kept the group's
music alive: Casablanca's 1993 compilation
The Best of Cameo is an excellent point of
entry. Mercury's
12" Collection & More, released in 1999,
covers the group's best dancefloor moments.
2002's spectacular
Anthology, a double-disc set also released
by Mercury, covers a lot of ground and does the
group justice as a total package.
|
 |