The Astronettes and GO Bowie arranged Cherry and two other collaborators into a backing group called The Astronettes and recorded an album with them; however, the album would not be released until 1995 as
People From Bad Homes. The album was released without the approval of either Cherry or Bowie, and Cherry was particularly upset that the unfinished
demo tracks were released to the public. After the demise of her relationship with Bowie, Cherry joined
progressive jazz supergroup
GO. The group was a collaboration with
Steve Winwood,
Solo career After GO, Cherry returned to Chicago to embark on a solo career. Her first solo album was
Ripe!!!, released by
RSO Records in 1980 and produced by
Curtis Mayfield.
Ripe!!! was originally intended to be produced by
Gil Askey for
Curtom Records, but he was uncomfortable with her work with Bowie. and "I Just Can't Shake This Feeling". The minor success of the album combined with Cherry's history was enough for her to sign a deal with
Capitol Records shortly after. as were the two singles spawned off it, "Streetcar Named Desire" and "Love To Be Touched". Its lack of success was ascribed in part to racial stereotypes in the music industry; pop radio stations reportedly stopped playing the album after discovering Cherry was a black artist making 'white' music. Contemporary critical reception was positive, describing the album as "electric, heart-pumping funk" and drawing connections to
Grace Jones and
Debbie Harry.
Picture Me, Cherry's third studio album, was released in 1987. It was her most successful solo attempt, producing two Top 40 dance hit singles, but fell below the label's commercial expectations.
Picture Me received mixed reviews, being described as "slick and sexy synth pop", but also as a lean album of overplayed "skimpy grooves". Cherry would not release another solo record until the
EP Spend the Night in 1997, which was most known for its cover of "
Forget Me Nots" by
Patrice Rushen. After
Spend the Night, Cherry self-distributed a number of singles in the early 2010s. through which she released a cover of Bowie's "
Let's Dance"
Backup singer Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Cherry also worked as a backup singer to R&B musician
Luther Vandross. The pair had met many years earlier as backup singers to Bowie, and they built a close relationship, with Cherry referring to him as like a brother. The dresses Cherry wore on stage frequently cost more than his own outfits. Vandross' focus on Cherry and
Lisa Fischer as a core part of his stage show caused problems for other backup singers, who were required to sink into the background and not outshine them, and treated harshly if they were thought to catch too much attention. Cherry's place in Vandross' stage show has been analyzed for its significance and the implications for Vandross, a flamboyant figure with extensive speculation about his private life and sexual orientation. In 2013 she appeared in
20 Feet from Stardom, a documentary about backup singers. ==Discography==