Tuesday 9 September 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICAN AMERICAN " CHANTAY SAVAGE " IS AN R&B DANCE SINGER WHO FOUND SUBSTANTIAL SUCCESS IN THE 1990's WITH " I WILL SURVIVE " : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

                            BLACK                 SOCIAL             HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         Chantay Savage (born July 16, 1971) is an American R&B/dance singer who found substantial success in the 1990s with "I Will Survive", in which she reworked the Gloria Gaynor disco anthem. In total her singles have spent 452 weeks on various Billboard singlescharts,[1] and her albums have spent a total of 81 weeks on various Billboard charts.[1]

Biography[edit]

Before Savage signed a recording contract, she parlayed success into gigs as a session musician, singer, and songwriter with artists such as CeCe Peniston and Tanya Blount, she co-wrote Peniston's number one Dance single "We Got a Love Thang". In 1993 she released her first single "If You Believe" from her debut album Here We Go... (Chantay Savage album)|Here We Go..., her follow-up "Betcha'll Never Find" became a top twenty dance and R&B hit on the Billboard chart. She also released the singles "Don't Let It Go to Your Head" and "Give It to Ya".
In 1995 she teamed up with AaliyahEn VogueTLC (group)BlackGirlMary J. BligeVanessa WilliamsSWV, and others for the single "Freedom" from the movie Panther.
Savage took two years off before she returned in 1996 with "I Will Survive" from her second album I Will Survive (Doin' It My Way). The lead single became a moderate smash in the U.S., where it reached #5 on Billboard'R&B chart, and number 12 in the UK Singles Chart.[2] The single was also certified gold by the RIAA for US single sales of over 500,000 units. In 1997 she, along with Deborah CoxHeavy D, and Brownstone performed Janet Jackson's #1 single "That's the Way Love Goes" at the Soul Train Music Awards tribute to the popular icon. In 1998 Savage scored another minor hit with "Reminding Me (Of Sef)", performed by Common. It was a top 10 hit on Billboard's Hot Rap chart.
In 1999 she released her third album This Time, its first single "Come Around" which peaked at number 62. Savage wrote all the lyrics and played piano and drums. In 2003, she collaborated with spoken word artist Malik Yusef on the song "Auto-Eroticism" on his album The Great Chicago Fire: A Cold Day In Hell. Three years later, she appeared on a remake of the Earth Wind & Fire hit "September" for Full Flava's Music is Our Way of Life album. Also that year, she recorded the theme song for BellaNutri titled "Always Beautiful"[3]as well as an additional track "Shine" which was released on a CD for the company.[4]
In 2012, she collaborated with another spoken word artist, Quill, on his track "Everything Must Change."[5]























































































































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