wax Poetics
Chic (Luci Martin, Nile Rodgers, Bernard Edwards, and Alfa Anderson) on French TV. Photo by James Andanson/Sygma via Getty Images.

In Sync

With their band Chic, Nile Rodgers and partner Bernard Edwards created sophisticated dance music draped in mystery and anchored in the unison singing of a rotating cast of female vocalists—Norma Jean Wright, Luci Martin, Alfa Anderson, Robin Clark, Diva Gray, Michelle Cobbs, and newcomers Folami Ankoanda-Thompson and Kimberly Davis.

published online
Originally published in Issue 62, Summer 2015
By A. D. Amorosi

Part I

When Nile Rodgers releases Chic’s It’s About Time—the first studio album from that heralded dance music brand since 1992’s Chic-ismit maintains as much of its patented sleek disco flicker as it does funky futurism.

Rodger’s trajectory as a guitarist, songwriter, arranger, and producer—from Chic through to his famed work with David Bowie, Madonna, Duran Duran, Diana Ross, Bryan Ferry, Disclosure, Avicii, and Daft Punk—will be on gleeful display.

To a man, everyone connected with the band states that he is Chic and that it’s his perfect idea of sophisticated moveable soul (one shared with friend, bassist, and co-composer, the late Bernard Edwards) that is the brand.

Make that, to a woman.

It was the soaring, unified voices of Alfa Anderson, Luci Martin, Norma Jean Wright, Robin Clark, Diva Gray, and Michelle Cobbs—with Luther Vandross and Fonzi Thornton—that gave Chic its blissful lilt; that equal-but-separate helium-high choir tone where every singer rang clearly as one, though each could easily be picked out of a lineup. By 1992, all but Cobbs were gone when Tawatha Agee joined. Currently, Folami Ankoanda-Thompson and Kimberly Davis hold the microphones. “I must live up to the standard that those past women had; class, clothes, poise, all that they embodied,” says Folami, who, like Davis, has been with Rodgers since 2008.

Yet, on songs like the album’s first single, “I’ll Be There,” Chic’s new singers were joined by Anderson and Martin (in the studio) along with Clark and Wright (on tape, so far), as Rodgers famously culled It’s About Time from a box of old tapes filled with unfinished Chic material from the pre-1983 classic lineup. Rodgers stated that there are scads of these once-lost sessions to be released—credited to the Chic Organization he shared with Edwards—and that audiences can expect to hear the old and new Chic joined as one for some time.

Kimberly Davis speaks of interaction with Chic’s female avatars as “nothing but love,” something uniting Rodgers’s past with his present. “That was historical, having the originators and us in the same room singing,” she says.

“It’s a good thing,” says Luci Martin, before quoting the hook of Chic’s new single. “I don’t want to live in the past, but it’s a nice place to visit.” Anderson and Wright stress that sentiment as well, and the trio of singers (after years of laugh-and-tear-filled conversations that passed for therapy sessions) have united as Next Step and are recording new material. Next Step was featured—along with Sister Sledge’s Kathy Sledge—on a 2014 single by the Ibiza production duo Aristofreeks: “Get On Up” was inspired by the thirty-fifth anniversary of the infamous “Disco Demolition” at Chicago’s Comiskey Park.

“Those women deserve their own identity,” says Robin Clark. “They earned it. They’re Chic, yet much more.” Clark too is finishing work on a solo album for 2015, after forty years singing backgrounds for everyone from Bowie to Beyoncé, Teddy Pendergrass to Esther Phillips.

“Folami and Kim are fun women,” says Martin. “They’re bringing the joy back that went missing from our Chic with the pressures of the record biz toward the end.” Wright agrees, adding, “We love Folami and Kim, but Next Step are doing our own thing apart from anything Chic has been, is, or will be.”

Norma Jean Wright. Photo by Norman Seeff from the cover of her  1978 debut, <i>Norma Jean</i> (Bearsville).
Norma Jean Wright. Photo by Norman Seeff from the cover of her 1978 debut, Norma Jean (Bearsville).
The vocals were beautiful, but direct, unadorned with no ad-libs, and a uniform level of seduction. –Norma Jean Wright

How Norma Jean Wright (Chic’s original 1977 vocalist), Luci Martin (Wright’s eventual co-lead), Alfa Anderson (who with Martin became the sound of Chic from 1978 to 1983), and Robin Clark (the “glue” within their unified sound) got to Chic, got out of Chic, and moved forward from Chic is as crucial to this tale as Rodgers’s continued stewardship. 

Wright’s tenure is curious to the Chic legend, not just because she was their first vocalist, but rather because it was her Edwards/Rodgers–produced solo—1978’s Norma Jean—that set in motion the Chic-teaming most listeners are familiar with featuring Anderson and Martin.

“I started in a church choir, so there’s smokiness to my style,” says Wright, who came from Ohio and worked with the Spinners before finding her way to Manhattan in the early ’70s. Wright is a natural alto but used her voice’s lighter side for songs like Chic’s “Dance, Dance, Dance,” where she “played up the sexiness.” Yet, when she first arrived, she stuck with her huskier style, auditioning for R&B bandleader Curtis Knight’s ensemble immediately following his time with Jimi Hendrix. “Knight is why I moved to New York City, as he heard my tapes and asked if I’d move to Manhattan for his funk-rock band. When I got to rehearsal, I met this girl, Luci.”

Luci Martin. Photo courtesy of Luci Martin.
Luci Martin. Photo courtesy of Luci Martin.
Nile asked me if I’d heard ‘Dance, Dance, Dance.’ No. Disco wasn’t my thing. –Luci Martin

Luci Martin—a rocker—and Wright became friends, forgot about Knight, and zigzagged between Canada and NYC doing background vocals with various groups, until Wright’s roommate mentioned a possible gig with Edwards and Rodgers who were, at that point, morphing into Chic after trying sillier names and heavier sounds. “Soon as they heard me, we started,” says Wright, with the first song being “Everybody Dance” featuring her damsel-in-distress tones.

When it came time to record Chic’s eponymous 1977 album, Rodgers and Edwards (who worked “sternly but patiently” with their vocalists, notes Wright) brought in Nile’s old pals Robin Clark and Luther Vandross, with the latter also acting as vocal arranger. “I knew Nile from way before Chic,” Clark says. Luther, Fonzi, Robin, and her husband, famed David Bowie guitarist Carlos Alomar (Clark sang on 1975’s Young Americans), were in the late-’60s/early ’70s musical ensemble Listen My Brother, which would become a regular act on Sesame Street. “Carlos got Rodgers to sub for him in Listen My Brother with me and Luther during a tour with the Sesame Street road production,” Clark recalls. “Carlos got another gig with the Main Ingredient and wanted someone he trusted for the Sesame Street thing. It was one-for-all-and-all–for-one with us.” Through Alomar, Rodgers would also get his start in the Apollo Theater house band.

Alfa Anderson. Photo courtesy of Alfa Anderson.
Alfa Anderson. Photo courtesy of Alfa Anderson.
Everybody around that mic had to have the same inflection, the same enunciation. and it was nuanced stuff—very percussive and very legato. –Alfa Anderson

In the meantime, Wright dragged Luci Martin into the fold as her co-lead (“reluctantly,” laughs Martin), while Vandross brought in his new pal Alfa Anderson, a Georgia-born, soft Southern-belle jazz singer whose first gig in NYC was with Nat Adderley Jr., celebrating the music of his uncle, saxophone colossus Cannonball Adderley. “My Manhattan debut was at Lincoln Center,” says Anderson, whose goal to continue her work in education was sidelined after meeting Vandross at an audition. “Just to show you how small a world New York City session work was then, Nat wound up with Luther shortly after that gig, and stayed with him, even when I joined Vandross after Chic folded.” Adderley was Luther’s longtime musical director.

While Anderson describes her Chic sound as piercing, clear, and smooth (“I didn’t have what people thought of as a heavy soulful voice”), Luci Martin—who became Wright’s co-lead singer—was a native New Yorker via Queens who started her singing career accidentally when she auditioned for Hair. “I was going to be a chorus girl, dancing. My ambition wasn’t to be a singer. The producers asked me to do ‘Aquarius,’ liked it, and I got the job.”

As an alto with a big voice, Martin got tricked into a Chic audition when Wright—who already had the lead Chic gig—invited Luci to a party that Rodgers, Edwards, and Chic drummer Tony Thompson attended. “I knew Tony from Queens, and we joked about the neighborhood the whole time, until Nile asked me if I’d heard ‘Dance, Dance, Dance.’ No. Disco wasn’t my thing.” (Then again, Martin will eventually admit that Chic was never a disco band. “We were too rich and fully arranged for that.”) Back at the makeshift audition, however, Martin threw shade by telling Rodgers and Edwards that one of the notes in the “ba-ba-ba-ba” section was wrong—“that if you’re following the chord, the next note should be a half-step down.” The male Chic threesome left the room, returned, and said that Martin was in. “In what?” she asked.

That’s how Martin joined Chic. Wright’s hiring had been just as swift, as would be Anderson’s. Folami and Davis—the newest singers—were brought into the fold quickly as well, hitting last-minute auditions at the urging of friends and band members.

“Nile and Bernard made impulsive decisions,” says Clark, considering the Chic bosses’ gut-instinct musicality. “There was never advance warning or long rehearsals,” says Anderson. “You got material right before you recorded and had to be spot-on.” Folami agrees that things are still much the same. Davis, on the other hand, sees Rodgers as “open and willing to let you bring what you got to the table,” she says.

Chic onstage in London, October 1979. (left to right) Luci Martin, Nile Rodgers, Bernard Edwards, and Alfa Anderson. Photo by Gus Stewart/Redferns.
Chic onstage in London, October 1979. (left to right) Luci Martin, Nile Rodgers, Bernard Edwards, and Alfa Anderson. Photo by Gus Stewart/Redferns.
Chic backstage, 1981. Photo by Lynn Goldsmith/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images.
Chic backstage, 1981. Photo by Lynn Goldsmith/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images.

Part II

Unison singing, the likes of which the first incarnation of Chic (with Vandross aiding the arrangements) practically invented, is a matter of precision and perfection. “You had to be noticeably distinct to make yourself heard clearly within that sound,” says Anderson. Rodgers and Edwards wrote Chic music to their own strengths, never the vocalists’. And the vocals were nearly always in unison, a skill that is harder than group harmonizing. “Everybody around that mic had to have the same inflection, the same enunciation,” Anderson explains, “and it was nuanced stuff—very percussive and very legato.”

“The vocals were beautiful, but direct, unadorned with no ad-libs, and a uniform level of seduction,” says Wright. Martin enthused at how Rodgers guided each session between Anderson (a first soprano), herself (an alto/second soprano), Cobbs (a full-bottom alto), and Clark (something in-between). “Nile would run the vamp—the end of the song—first, then choruses,” Martin recalls. “Every time you sang, it had to be perfect, or you had to do it again. Nile blended and produced them in a way that all individual voices could be heard clearly.”

Unified vocals aside, Wright got singled-out for a solo album—a blessing and curse. Pleased with success (“every radio in every apartment and car; every DJ in every club,” she says of Chic’s ubiquity), she was flattered Rodgers and Edwards wrote and produced Norma Jean for her. “They wanted to show the world they could make gold for any artist,” says Wright. “The plan for me, however, was that I would still be in Chic.” Somehow, between the label that signed Wright (Bearsville, an offshoot from Chic’s Warner/Elektra/Atlantic family) and management, the Chic Organization could no longer incorporate her within the band. Wright still speaks of the split with sadness. “I was a Chic-sound prototype. I think about it now and I’m still sad. People say things happen for a reason—looking at it that way, I would not have my body of work, now, but I was disappointed.”

Frankly, so was Martin, as she joined Chic to be with her pal. “At first, we were too busy to realize what was happening,” says Martin. “I thought Norma Jean got carried away with the momentum. You couldn’t ask Nile or ’Nard about it. They weren’t the type to discuss their business. It was them reorganizing for the future.” That next step would mean C’est Chic and Risqué; number one pop hits in “Le Freak” and “Good Times”; and a new co-lead singer: Alfa Anderson.

“Huh?” laughs Martin, who at the time didn’t get to know Anderson as a backup vocalist or as Chic’s co-lead. “She seemed nice, but all I gathered was that my best friend was ousted, I can’t know anything because Nile and Bernard ain’t saying, I’m doing music I barely knew—successfully though,” she says with a laugh. “But it was with a girl I never got to know, even when we were mega-successful. We were too busy though, so it wasn’t an issue. I felt a way, and if Alfa’s honest, I know she felt the same way then.”

Alfa Anderson, Nile Rodgers, and Luci Martin onstage in London, October 1979. Photo by Gus Stewart/Getty Images.
Alfa Anderson, Nile Rodgers, and Luci Martin onstage in London, October 1979. Photo by Gus Stewart/Getty Images.
Photo by LGI Stock/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images.
Photo by LGI Stock/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images.

Anderson didn’t know Wright, despite having toured with her, and didn’t know the politics of her split. At the time—early 1978—all she knew was that Vandross would no longer be able to tour with Chic, because “he had to go and become Luther,” says Anderson with a chuckle. “But Luther did say Nile and Bernard asked if I would stay and take Norma’s place.”

While the next several years brought mega-stardom based on the Chic Organization’s winning way with melody and rhythm, much of their success came too from their image—a noir-ish, couture look that annoyed Martin. “It didn’t always go over, no,” she says. “I like having my own fashion sense. I wasn’t going to call something fantastic just because they thought it.”

For all of Chic’s hit-making, after 1980 and until 1983—the years of Real People, Take It Off, Tongue in Chic, and Believer—there came a decline in the band’s fortunes and mood due to disco’s rapid downfall. “It was a shame, because there was some beautiful material there, and the longer that Luci and I worked together, we became more adventurous vocally,” recalls Anderson. “There were some amazing Chic songs that people didn’t hear due to disco’s demolition,” says Martin.

Ultimately, cultural and professional fission busted up Edwards and Rodgers, and therefore Chic, a fact that saddened Anderson (who immediately ran to Vandross and became his background singer) and pissed off Martin. “No, darling, I didn’t have mixed feelings,” she says when asked. “I had one: anger. We were in the middle of something in the studio, but I was home. All of a sudden, there’s this pink slip, so to speak. No explanation. We knew they were having differences of opinion about the next step but figured that they’d work it out. Then nothing. So, no mixed feelings. Just: What the F, pardon my French.”

Like Wright and Clark, Martin and Anderson wound up with background vocal sessions after their Chic run.

Chic at the Hammersmith Odeon, London, October 1979. Photo by Mike Prior/Redferns.
Chic at the Hammersmith Odeon, London, October 1979. Photo by Mike Prior/Redferns.
Luci Martin with Chic at the Hammersmith Odeon, London, October 1979. Photo by Mike Prior/Redferns/Getty Images.
Luci Martin with Chic at the Hammersmith Odeon, London, October 1979. Photo by Mike Prior/Redferns/Getty Images.

Norma Jean Wright worked with Aretha Franklin, Madonna, D Train, Arthur Baker, Melvin Van Peebles, and C+C Music Factory, as well as writing and singing for several gospel hitmakers. Robin Clark, already having moved on long before the split, worked with Vandross, Pendergrass, and George Benson, among many others. She also had a stint with Simple Minds and released her own solo record, 1985’s Surrender. Besides her work with her friend Luther, Alfa Anderson racked up credits with Gang of Four, Teddy P., Dionne Warwick, and Eddie Murphy. Luci Martin recorded for B.B. King and Robin S, but mainly got sick of the music business, went into computer technology, then medical records transcribing, then nursing full bore with the same feeling she had for music. “It’s a passion,” says Martin. Anderson too, got out of the life and went back to her “other calling”—education. First as a principal for a school in New York City, then with NYC’s Department of Education in its Arts and Special Projects division, looking for ways to integrate music into every aspect of holistic learning.

“That didn’t mean music wasn’t there,” says Martin. “It was always on my shoulder like a green devil.” Anderson adds: “I started to want to make music again through mentoring kids.” She wound up finally releasing her first solo track, “Former Lady of Chic,” in 2013. Martin actually began doing track dates with Norma Jean nearly twenty years ago. “I’d been working with a gospel act that had a hit in Japan,” Wright explains, “and I went but asked Luci to do the date with me.” Martin chimes in: “Next thing, a promoter who knows that we were in Chic, asks us to do a one-off show in Japan. Okay, I need a new roof. This is several thousand dollars. Sure. Next weekend, someone in Italy asks for the same. Why not. Next thing, I’m keeping a bag packed in my trunk, leaving my nurse’s job on Friday afternoon, flying to wherever, getting home Sunday night, then back to my nine-to-five.”

Anderson also called on the pair to sing a track (“My Lover’s Arms”) that her husband, bassist Tinker Barfield, had written. Before that, though, the threesome began getting together for group chats that lasted for hours—“emotional conversations finding out how we had felt or what we knew back then,” notes Anderson. “We often shared the same opinion, but we never knew,” says Martin. All this was but an entrée to the three main Chic singers reuniting for their own thing, Next Step—a trio that each of its members takes seriously, enough so to make certain that it’s not, in Wright’s words, “Chic 2.0.”

Robin Clark. Photo courtesy of Robin Clark.
Robin Clark. Photo courtesy of Robin Clark.
Those women deserve their own identity. They earned it. They’re Chic, yet much more. –Robin Clark

Meanwhile, Rodgers—since finding that box of old Chic tapes in 2010—had been calling on the original singers to come record with him again as Chic. “I don’t know every song that’s on all of those tapes, but I remember how beautiful everything sounded,” says Clark.

Like the old days, Martin and Anderson say Rodgers would hint about getting ready to do new sessions. “My reaction was, ‘Okay, Nile. Let me know,’ ” says Martin. “ ‘Hey Lulu. I’m almost ready,’ he’d say.” Then, at the end of 2014, Rodgers invited Anderson and Martin to lay down vocals with Davis and Folami for the new album. Anderson says, “That’s Nile—a moment’s notice. The whirlwind begins again.” Folami knows Rodgers’s last-minute ways well. She digs the surprise element of Rodgers’s secret-keeping, likening it to the filmmaking process. “It’s like when you shoot a movie and leave the set, you’re never really sure what the director used until you see the final product.” Martin laughs about living in Florida and getting the ticket to go to the same studio in New York City where they recorded their legendary hits—all in a twenty-four-hour period. “I like how Nile’s juxtaposing new vocal rhythms with the old vocal rhythms,” says Martin of the recent sessions.

“During our time in the studio, I looked over at Nile and Luci after a take, and I heard her say the funniest thing,” recalls Anderson. “It was this emotional moment for me—recording at the same studio where we had in the past—and there I see Luci looking at Nile and saying, ‘Wow, Nile, you really learned how to do this.’ He just stared at her like, ‘Duh. Yeah.’ That says so much about who we were then and who we are now. It’s still family.”

The continuation of Chic’s sleek-sounding family lies in Folami Ankoanda-Thompson, a Bay Area–raised soprano (“I can go first tenor low”) known singularly as Folami, and Kimberly Davis, a house music hitmaker, born and raised in Brooklyn, with her own first soprano-to-tenor tone (“I have range, boo!”) to tend to. With each of these women raised on Chic hits and Rodgers’s lend, they’re not about to let the brand falter on their watch.

“With the women in Chic, there was always dignity without drama, and we’re following suit,” says Davis. “We’re keeping the name clean and representing the music in the best way. Plus, we keep everyone dancing.”

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