The founder and longtime creative sparkplug of the group is Blackmon, who came from New York City's Harlem neighborhood and grew up near the famed Apollo Theater. Starting at age four, he was taken to the Apollo by an aunt and uncle, and he kept going on his own.
Another influence on Blackmon, one that showed up in the complex arrangements of many Cameo songs, was classical music; he studied at New York's Julliard School. Working as a tailor by day and frequenting New York clubs at night, Blackmon was inspired by the Ohio Players and other horn-heavy funk bands of the early 1970s to create a group of his own in 1974. At first the group was called the New York City Players, but soon they changed their name to Cameo With a full horn section in action, the group numbered 13 players at its largest, and after a few years of playing New York dance clubs, they were signed in 1976 to the Chocolate City label, a subsidiary of the larger urban independent label Casablanca.
Cameo released their excellent debut album, 1977's Cardiac Arrest, was highlighted by four singles. Three of those hit the Billboard R&B chart: "Rigor Mortis" (number 33), when Blackmon heard the first one, "Rigor Mortis," on the radio at the tailor shop where he was still working, he put down the chalk with which he had just marked the cuffs of a customer's jacket for alteration, and walked out, never to return. They quickly followed it with “Funk Funk" (number 20), and "Post Mortem" (number 70). Although the group was clearly inspired by elder funk groups like Parliament, Funkadelic, and the Ohio Players, Cardiac Arrest made Cameo's case for belonging in the same division an open-and-shut one case.
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Cameo set up its own label, Atlanta Artists, and landed a distribution deal with the large Polygram conglomerate. With Cameo's sound revamped to take advantage of 1980s synthesizer technology but not losing sight of its funkier roots, Blackmon entered a creative songwriting period. One of the most significant ripples in Cameo's time line came during that period, in 1982, when they packed up and set up shop in Atlanta. Pared down to a quintet and located in a less hectic city, the group became bigger fish in a smaller pond. Blackmon even started his own label, Atlanta Artist. The label's first LP, Style, also marked a significant shift in sound, with synthesizers taking on a pronounced role.
It did not take long for the Atlanta move to begin to pay off. "She's Strange," the title track of a 1984 album, was one of the first singles from outside the rap sphere to feature rapped passages; the song topped R&B charts and cracked the pop top 50. Single Life reached the number two spot on the Billboard R&B chart, and Cameo's popularity built steadily.
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1994 saw the release of In the Face of Funk that got some club play, a single release, and at least one track that received critical acclaim (for "You Are My Love").
In 2000, Cameo released their last-recorded album Sexy Sweet Thing, the album's title track, also had a single and video release. Around this time, they frequently performed in the U.S. and at various dates in Europe.
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