Their first single, "Three Time Lover", went to No. 10 on
Billboard's
Hot Dance Singles Sales chart. Tairrie B left the group to pursue a
solo career and was replaced by Lisa "Jaz" Teaney. In 1988, the group released their album
Bold as Love and their second single "Magic Carpet Ride". The single went to No. 5 on
Billboard's Hot Dance Singles Sales chart and No. 81 on the
Billboard Hot 100. The group performed the
song on Club
MTV. "When We Kiss", the third single from the album, would turn out to be the group's biggest hit going all the way to No. 36 on the
Billboard Hot 100. The fourth single released from the album, "Bleeding Heart", was a top 40 hit on the
Billboard's Hot Dance Singles Sales chart. A fifth and last single release from that album, "Hold Me, Hold Me" did not chart. Jaz left the group in 1989 and was replaced by Melanie Taylor.
Shangri-La was the group's second and last album. "I Love to Bass" was the only single from the album to make it on to the
Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 68, No. 3 on the
Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart, No. 32 on the
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks chart. The second single "Thumbs Up" made it to No. 17 on the Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart and No. 59 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks chart. The last single from the album, the title track "Shangri-La," rose to No. 40 on the Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart.
Jon St. James produced both Bardeux albums. Bardeux is often considered a
one-hit wonder, but the group produced many dance hits in their short career. Acacia resurfaced as a new incarnation of Bardeux (presumably a solo act) in 1995 with the single "Be My Man" (credited as "Bardeux Featuring Acacia") on Thump Records in 1995, taken from the compilation album
Thump Retro Disco Volume 3. Melanie Taylor later went on to perform as one of
The Staggering Harlettes (
Bette Midler's backup troupe) from 1993 to 2000, and released a collection of holiday songs on a solo album,
This Christmas, in 2000.
Tairrie B went on to release a critically acclaimed gangsta rap album called
Power of a Woman on Comptown/
MCA Records in 1990, and then resurfaced in the late 1990s as the co-founder and lead singer of the
nu metal band Manhole (later renamed
Tura Satana for legal reasons), and then the
alternative metal band
My Ruin in the 2000s. ==Discography==