The band began in 1969 as Project Soul, formed by
Louis A. McCall Sr. (drums/percussion/vocals) and Michael Cooper (rhythm guitar/lead vocals), both of whom were
high school students in
Vallejo, California. Their début album,
Organized Con Funk Shun, was recorded in 1973 but remained unreleased until 1978. (More
Memphis Sessions from this era remained unreleased until 1980.) In 1975 the band’s name was altered from "Confunkshun" to "Con Funk Shun" by Louis’ wife Linda Lou McCall who also handled the marketing and public relations. They went to Japan for performance in 1975. In 1976, Con Funk Shun signed to
Mercury Records, and then went on to release eleven albums over a span of ten years. The band's 1977 album,
Secrets, was certified
gold in the United States, as were the 1978 album
Loveshine, the 1979 album
Candy, and the 1980 album
Spirit of Love. "Ffun" (#23) and "Too Tight" (#40) were the group's only songs that crossed over onto the top 40 on the
Billboard Hot 100; 2 others did make the chart, while 4 of their songs hit the
Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart. Tensions from within the group built over the 1980s, and the band's final album,
Burning Love, was recorded without multi instrument-vocalist and songwriter Felton Pilate. After disappointing album sales, Mercury invoked its "key member clause" and dropped the band from the label. Michael Cooper then moved on to a solo run with
Warner Bros. Cooper had an R&B hit with "To Prove My Love" in 1987. The remaining original members tried to continue, but repeated efforts with new lead singers fell short, and they ceased performing and recording as Con Funk Shun in 1987. ==Later years==