Taylor joined the band in 1979 after the group auditioned for a lead singer. He noted that vocals added more warmth to the songs, especially to ballads, which the group had avoided as no one could sing them properly. Taylor also recalled some resistance from some members and the group of female singers they had used on
The Force and ''Everybody's Dancin
. In 1979, the band recorded and released Ladies' Night'', which became their most successful album since their formation helped by the singles "
Too Hot" and "
Ladies' Night", which went to No. 5 and No. 8 on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart, respectively. In January 1980, ''Ladies' Night'' was certified
platinum by the RIAA for selling one million copies in the US. In September 1980, the band released the album
Celebrate! It became a bigger commercial success than ''Ladies' Night''; the lead single "
Celebration" remains the band's only single to reach No. 1 on the
Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. The song originated from the lyric "Come on, let's all celebrate" from "Ladies' Night" which inspired
Robert Bell to write a song that he described as "an international anthem." The song was used in national media coverage for the
1980 World Series, the
1981 Super Bowl, the
1981 NBA Finals, and the
1981 return of the Iran hostages. Bonnefond stayed with the group for
Emergency (1984), which remains their highest selling album with over two million copies sold in the US. It spawned four US top 20 singles, including "Emergency", "
Cherish", "
Fresh", and "
Misled". This feat made Kool & the Gang the only band to have four top 20 singles from a single album in 1985. In June 1984, Kool & the Gang took time off from recording
Emergency to perform at
Wembley Stadium as part of a sold-out summer concert organised by
Elton John. The group's seventeenth album,
Forever, was released in November 1986. The album included two hit singles on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart: "Victory" (US #10, R&B #2) and "
Stone Love" (US #10, R&B #4). Two further singles, "Holiday" and "Special Way" were also released from the album; the former reached the top ten on the R&B Chart, the latter hit reached #6 on the Adult Contemporary chart. By 1986, the band had scored 14 top 40 singles in the US since 1980, more than
Michael Jackson. In July 1986, the band recorded a special version of "Celebration" with different vocals that was used in an advertisement for
Wendy's. In 1987, the band completed a 50-city tour of the US. The tour included the group establishing their own public service program, devised by Robert Bell and Taylor, which encouraged school children to pursue education, giving free tickets to those with perfect attendance. The group rehearsed their stage show with a choreographer at Prince's studio at
Paisley Park. At the time of the tour's start, the band ceased producing adverts with Schlitz beer because of their new image towards children and that they felt it had run its course. == Solo career ==