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'''Melanie Williams''' is a ]-based ]. She is best known for singing on the ], "]" alongside the ] ] outfit ] (who later became ]). | '''Melanie Williams''' is a ]-based ]. She is best known for singing on the ], "]" alongside the ] ] outfit ] (who later became ]). | ||
Revision as of 12:06, 6 April 2009
This biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately. Find sources: "Melanie Williams" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2008) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Melanie Williams is a UK-based singer. She is best known for singing on the hit record, "Ain't No Love (Ain't No Use)" alongside the Manchester dance outfit Sub Sub (who later became Doves).
Career
Williams was a friend of Sub Sub at the time, and the band, searching for a female guest vocalist, featured her vocals. This helped expose her talents to the public, and was followed by further critical success.
Williams and her writing colleague Eric Gooden, found Square One Studios in Bury, Lancashire. The proprietor Trevor Taylor, liked what he heard and they began recording a string of tracks assisted by house engineer and musician Stephen Boyce-Buckley, subsequently landing a recording contract with 10 Records; a sub-division of Virgin Records. Temper Temper put in a bid for the Miami Vice TV series theme tune, a track called 'Lovers and Gamblers' the bid was won by Jan Hammer.
Williams launched a solo career in 1994 as a soul/dance singer, signed to Columbia Records. Her debut solo single, "All Cried Out!" peaked at #60 in the UK Singles Chart. The follow-up, "Everyday Thang" peaking at #38. Her next single, the ballad "Not Enough?" managed a #65 chart placing. Her debut album Human Cradle failed to reach the UK Albums Chart.
Mel has also featured on an Adrian Snell album "Father" in which she reads psalm 139. They were recording in the same studio, Adrian heard her and liked her voice and so asked her to guest on his album.
Early in 1995, Williams returned to the UK Top 40 with a cover of "You Are Everything" (a duet with Joe Roberts). The song reached #28.
The The Other Two's second album Superhighways featured Melanie Williams on some tracks as a guest vocalist.
Discography
- 1990 Father
- 1991 Temper Temper
- 1994 Human Cradle
- 2001 Dark Flower
- 2007 Bodhi
References
- Melanie Williams at discogs.com