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Shirley Goodman
Shirley Goodman
American singer
1
Evelyn King
Evelyn King
American singer
2
Bingo Players
Bingo Players
Dutch electronic music project by Maarten Hoogstraten
3
Ian Carey
Ian Carey
American house DJ and producer
4
Lisa Lisa and Cult Jam
Lisa Lisa and Cult Jam
urban contemporary music band
5
Loleatta Holloway
Loleatta Holloway
American singer (1946–2011)
6
Donna Summer
Donna Summer
American singer and songwriter
7
Akcent
Akcent
Romanian Band
8
The Flirts
The Flirts
female music band
9
Stacy Lattisaw
Stacy Lattisaw
American R&B singer
10
Janis Ian
Janis Ian
American singer-songwriter and writer
11
Rockers Revenge
Rockers Revenge
12
Khalid
Khalid
American singer and songwriter
13
Shirley & Lee
Shirley & Lee
14
Milow
Milow
Belgian singer-songwriter
15
Jason Nevins
Jason Nevins
American DJ, record producer and remixer
16
Gloria Gaynor
Gloria Gaynor
American singer
17
Barry Blue
Barry Blue
English singer, producer and songwriter
18
Van McCoy
Van McCoy
American musician, record producer, arranger, songwriter, singer and orchestra conductor
19
The Three Degrees
The Three Degrees
American vocal group
20
Arrested Development
Arrested Development
American alternative hip hop group
21
Sister Sledge
Sister Sledge
American vocal group
22
Bob Crewe
Bob Crewe
American songwriter, dancer, singer, manager, and record producer
23
R. Dean Taylor
R. Dean Taylor
Canadian singer, musician, songwriter and record producer
24
Steve Hurley
Steve Hurley
American DJ
25
Leo Sayer
Leo Sayer
British singer-songwriter, musician, and entertainer
26
Vengaboys
Vengaboys
Dutch eurodance pop group
Intro
band
Genres

Shirley & Company was an American disco group, consisting of Shirley Goodman (1936–2005), Jason Alvarez (now a pastor), Walter Morris, Bernadette Randle, Seldon Powell, Jonathan Williams, Kenny Jeremiah, and Clarence Oliver.

They topped the U.S. Dance chart in 1975 with "Shame, Shame, Shame" (U.S. Pop #12), and did extremely well in Europe: the song reached #6 in the UK Singles Chart and #1 in Austria, Belgium, Germany, and the Netherlands. The follow-up, "Cry Cry Cry", made it to #91 on the Hot 100 later that year.