
Kim Weston
Kim Weston was born Agatha Natalie Weston on 30 December 1939,
in Detroit, Michigan. She was signed by Motown Records in 1963,
scoring a minor hit with Love Me All the Way .
Her biggest hits
with Motown were Take Me in Your Arms (Rock Me a Little While)
(1965) and Helpless (1966).
Her biggest claim to fame though, was
singing the classic hit It Takes Two in a duet with Marvin Gaye in
1966.
Weston left Motown in 1967 and later sued the label over
disputes about royalties. She and her then-husband William
"Mickey" Stevenson (former A&R head at Motown)
both went to MGM Records.
Weston cut a couple of singles for MGM,
I Got What You Need , and Nobody , which went largely unnoticed
due to lack of airplay and promotion. She also recorded an album
for the label, This Is America , which included her popular
version of the Black National Anthem, Lift Every Voice and Sing .
All the money from the single was donated to the United Negro
College Fund.
She recorded several more albums for various labels,
including Stax/Volt, and also made an album of duets with Johnny
Nash. None of these recordings charted, and Weston relocated to
Israel, where she worked with young singers.
She signed with Ian
Levine's Motorcity Records in the 1980s, releasing the single
Signal Your Intention and the album Investigate (1990) which
included some re-recordings of her Motown hits.
A second album for
the label Talking Loud (1992) was never released although all the
songs were included on the compilation The Best Of Kim Weston
(1996).
Today she is a disc jockey on a local Detroit, Michigan
radio station. She also tours sporadically, often alongside former
Motown colleagues Mary Wilson, Martha Reeves and Brenda Holloway.
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