Info from SoulTracks.com-

For all those who consider themselves fans of iconic singer Chaka Khan - and isn't that everyone? - there is a special treat with this month's issue of Hits Magazine, where Chaka discusses her 50 years of musical greatness with renowned journalist Dyana Williams. For her five decades in the spotlight, Chaka Khan has virtually defined the term "Soul Diva," through a string of memorable, soulful performances and a singularly strong personality both as a member of Rufus and as a solo artist. And Williams is herself celebrating her golden anniversary in the music journalism business, and recalls playing Chaka's music when she was an on-air personality at WHUR [working under the moniker "Ebony Moonbeams"] back in the day. This interview is a treat that brings together two women who have meant so much to music of the past half century.


This Chicago-born Yvette Stevens changed her name to the African-influenced Chaka Khan while still a teenager. At age 19 Khan joined an established Chicago soul/funk group that was renamed Rufus, and she and the band played Midwest locations [including, amazingly, my brother's 1973 Flint, Michigan high school prom] before signing with ABC Records and recording the Stevie Wonder-penned classic "Tell Me Something Good" in 1974. The funky, sexy cut shot Rufus to the top of the Soul Music world, a place the group kept for nearly a decade. And while the band developed into one of the tightest, funkiest groups in popular music, the spotlight was always reserved for the mesmerizing Khan.


During her period with Rufus, her voice defined a number of major hits such as "Hollywood," "Once You Get Started," "Everlasting Love" and the wonderful "Sweet Thing." And despite the rocky relationship Khan had with the other members of Rufus, she remained the focus and defining element of the group. From 1978 - 1984, Khan was in and out of the group frequently, with Rufus sales going up and [precipitously] down depending on her participation on their recordings. She debuted as a solo artist in 1978 with the smash hit "I'm Every Woman" [later remade by Whitney Houston] and recorded three hit albums during this period while also scoring with Rufus on "Do You Love What You Feel," and "Sharing the Love." She also cut a rarely referenced but now cherished 1981 jazz album, Echoes of an Era, with an A-list of jazz performers. Her swan song with Rufus, the double album Stompin At the Savoy, was another major hit album and included the great single "Ain't Nobody." It became Rufus's last hit, and the Khan-less group broke up a year later.


Khan went solo for good in 1984, releasing the album and single "I Feel For You," an uber-infectious dance cut that shot to #1 and became the biggest solo hit she would ever have. The follow up single, "Through the Fire," was an adult contemporary hit and solidified her status as a bona fide solo artist. However, while her reputation as an extremely talented, somewhat tempermental singer kept her in the spotlight on Soul radio for several years, her crossover appeal stalled rather quickly. Khan recorded only three albums in the next decade, all of which hit the Soul top 10 but none of which did much on the pop charts.

Part One of the interview-
https://hitsdailydouble.com/news&id=...528PART-1%2529

Part Two of the interview-
https://hitsdailydouble.com/news&id=...HAN-INTERVIEW-[[PART-2)?fbclid=IwAR2XgFUXQhFcBdxNpINHo2Z3jkfTGorNb8d7Pm ABRadlhZLjJ1iA-A2jCRg