Reid got her start at age 16 in 1980 as a
backing vocalist for the percussionist/band leader Bill Summers and the funk band
Con Funk Shun. Reid co-wrote one of Con Funk Shun's singles, "Body Lovers". A local musician gave Reid a production deal which fell through several months later when she became pregnant with her daughter. Reid's cousin is R&B singer
Cherrelle who was featured, along with
Johnny Gill, on her 1991 hit song, "Always". Meanwhile, by the time she began scoring her first solo successes, she and Smith had split. In July 1989, Pebbles formed the
Atlanta-based production company Pebbitone and founded her own record label, Savvy Records. Pebbitone managed
TLC, which was signed with her then husband
L.A. Reid's record label
LaFace Records. When TLC filed for bankruptcy in 1995, due to Pebbles' alleged mismanagement regarding their funds, the ensuing conflict damaged Pebbles' marriage. She divorced Reid, and Pebbitone sued LaFace for $10 million. she founded Women of God Changing Lives (WOGCL) Ministries. As an ordained minister, she now preaches and ministers through song. In 2008, after a thirteen-year music hiatus, Reid released her fourth album and debut gospel album,
Prophetic Flows Vol I & II, which peaked at #12 on the
Billboard Gospel Album Chart. In February 2011, she was named the executive producer/host of
Essence's national R&B search. ==Personal life==