My NTS
Live now
1
North Carolina
02:00 - 04:00

Carolina Soul is a record seller based in Durham, NC, USA. They specialize in rare and classic soul, boogie, gospel and modern obscure tracks from the Carolinas and beyond, mixed with all-time bangers and ballads.

2
San Francisco
02:00 - 03:00

Mr. Big Happy is a graphic designer, artist, DJ, and music archivist from San Francisco, California. While he is an accomplished designer and artist, over the years he has always had a love for music and spends time searching for rare and obscure vinyl. Big Happy’s focus is the late 70s into the late 80s - modern soul, funk, boogie and disco.

Vicki Sue Robinson

Vicki Sue Robinson

Vicki Sue Robinson has been played on NTS in shows including The Extended Play Sessions w/ Mr Pedro, featured first on 8 June 2019. Songs played include Hope Your Feelings Are Like Mine, Hot Summer Night and Turn The Beat Around.

Vicki Sue Robinson (31 May 1954 – 27 April 2000) was an American theatre and film actress and singer born in Harlem, New York, USA, closely associated with the disco era of late 1970s pop music; she is most famous for her 1976 hit, Turn the Beat Around. A former jingles singer, this talented lady appeared in Hair and Jesus Christ Superstar. She was a waitress, model and even recorded with Japanese artists. She later became the most associated singer with the disco era. Her 1976 hit, "Turn the Beat Around", went into the top 10, and stayed there for six months, and earned her a Grammy Nomination for Best Female Pop Performance. She also won the Billboard Award for No. 1 Pop album for "Never Gonna Let You Go". Robinson's second album "Vicki Sue Robinson" released in late 1976 was slightly more successful, reaching #39 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and #45 on the Billboard 200. Her self titled album scored hits with the singles "Daylight" and "Should I Stay/I Won't Let You Go." Released in 1978, Robinson's third album "Half & Half" was slightly less successful, peaking at #56 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and #110 on the Billboard 200. The album scored hits with "Hold Tight", "Trust In Me", "Jealousy", "Freeway Song" and the albums' most single successful hit "Nighttime Fantasy." When her fourth album "Movin' On" was released in 1979, it inexplicably was failed to chart and its singles were virtually ignored by the mainstream. In the 1980s, Robinson released a few singles with varying degrees of success. She returned to session work for much of the decade. Her career saw a resurgence thanks to the renewed interesting Disco during the mid-late 1990s. She toured successfully with other Disco artists. In addition, she recorded such single as "For Real" (1995) and "House of Joy" (1997). This song became hit, becoming her only charted single in the UK. Robinson recorded two more hits "Pokemon (Dance Mix)" and "Move On" (both released in 1999). Robinson undertook the role of a fairy godmother in the independent film Red Lipstick, which was released on April 16, 2000. On April 27, 2000, eleven days after the release of Red Lipstick, Robinson died of cancer at her home in Wilton, Connecticut. All of Vicki Sue Robinson's albums were reissued by the record label, Gold Legion.

read more

Vicki Sue Robinson

Vicki Sue Robinson has been played on NTS in shows including The Extended Play Sessions w/ Mr Pedro, featured first on 8 June 2019. Songs played include Hope Your Feelings Are Like Mine, Hot Summer Night and Turn The Beat Around.

Vicki Sue Robinson (31 May 1954 – 27 April 2000) was an American theatre and film actress and singer born in Harlem, New York, USA, closely associated with the disco era of late 1970s pop music; she is most famous for her 1976 hit, Turn the Beat Around. A former jingles singer, this talented lady appeared in Hair and Jesus Christ Superstar. She was a waitress, model and even recorded with Japanese artists. She later became the most associated singer with the disco era. Her 1976 hit, "Turn the Beat Around", went into the top 10, and stayed there for six months, and earned her a Grammy Nomination for Best Female Pop Performance. She also won the Billboard Award for No. 1 Pop album for "Never Gonna Let You Go". Robinson's second album "Vicki Sue Robinson" released in late 1976 was slightly more successful, reaching #39 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and #45 on the Billboard 200. Her self titled album scored hits with the singles "Daylight" and "Should I Stay/I Won't Let You Go." Released in 1978, Robinson's third album "Half & Half" was slightly less successful, peaking at #56 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and #110 on the Billboard 200. The album scored hits with "Hold Tight", "Trust In Me", "Jealousy", "Freeway Song" and the albums' most single successful hit "Nighttime Fantasy." When her fourth album "Movin' On" was released in 1979, it inexplicably was failed to chart and its singles were virtually ignored by the mainstream. In the 1980s, Robinson released a few singles with varying degrees of success. She returned to session work for much of the decade. Her career saw a resurgence thanks to the renewed interesting Disco during the mid-late 1990s. She toured successfully with other Disco artists. In addition, she recorded such single as "For Real" (1995) and "House of Joy" (1997). This song became hit, becoming her only charted single in the UK. Robinson recorded two more hits "Pokemon (Dance Mix)" and "Move On" (both released in 1999). Robinson undertook the role of a fairy godmother in the independent film Red Lipstick, which was released on April 16, 2000. On April 27, 2000, eleven days after the release of Red Lipstick, Robinson died of cancer at her home in Wilton, Connecticut. All of Vicki Sue Robinson's albums were reissued by the record label, Gold Legion.

Original source: Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

Hope Your Feelings Are Like Mine
Vicki Sue Robinson
RCA Victor1979
Hot Summer Night
Vicki Sue Robinson
Prelude Records1981
Turn The Beat Around
Vicki Sue Robinson
RCA Victor1976
Hot Summer Nights
Vicki Sue Robinson
Prelude Records1981
Hot Summer Night
Vickie Sue Robinson
Rams Horn Records1981