Burton Mail

I would never fight with my sisters... I want that to be known

Sister Sledge star Kathy Sledge talks to ALEX GREEN about being a disco pioneer, the genre’s pandemic resurgence and healing her relationsh­ip with her siblings

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LAST summer Kathy Sledge toured with a newfound energy.

Disco, the music she helped pioneer as one quarter of Sister Sledge, had found a new multigener­ational audience, eager for positivity after months of lockdowns. And for the first time in some 20 years, Kathy, 62, was able to use the Sister Sledge name following a thaw in the frosty relationsh­ip with her sisters.

“Finally, because of some of the madness with the sisters, I was allowed to use the brand,” she explains from her home in the US.

“It was crazy. For like the past 20 years, as a corporatio­n, they voted that I was the only sister that couldn’t say I was ‘of ’ Sister Sledge or ‘from’ Sister Sledge.”

But characteri­stically, Kathy is upbeat about the whole affair.

“It was serendipit­ous for me,” she offers. “Because I started learning how to produce festivals and how to perform in such a way that singing all these hits and using the brand value as well now, has just been amazing.

“So this past summer, for the first time I started, I guess you could say, just reinventin­g.”

Alongside her sisters Debbie, Joni and Kim, youngest sibling Kathy was responsibl­e for some of the biggest hits of the 70s and 80s.

She was the voice behind arguably the group’s most beloved song, We Are Family, as well as favourites such as Thinking Of You and He’s The Greatest Dancer.

Raised in Philadelph­ia by a father who tap danced on Broadway and an actress mother, the sisters were taught to sing by their grandmothe­r Viola Williams – a former opera singer with links to the civil rights movement.

They found some success, but things took off in earnest when they met Chic’s Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards and released the album We Are Family in 1979.

After becoming an internatio­nal force, Kathy left in 1989 to become a solo artist and her three sisters continued to perform as Sister Sledge. Occasional­ly she would join them on stage.

For the last 20 years or so, contractua­l wranglings have meant she has toured without being able to use the name Sister Sledge. But during the pandemic and following Joni’s death in 2017, things changed.

“Kim actually is my neighbour,” she reveals.

“We get along – we go and get coffee. She knocked on my door right before the pandemic and she said, quote unquote, ‘I’m sorry we’ve been so mean to you’. And she voted back my rights.

“One thing I would like to clear up. When I say my rights, it gave me the right in the company to vote, because they had taken that away from me.

“Now what I’m trying to do is clear up, because it’s very nebulous out there. I would never fight with my sisters. I want that to be known. Yes, I have for lack of better words, fought to be able to sing. And I feel like what’s meant for you is meant for you.”

This thaw was always going to prompt suggestion­s of a reunion, but Kathy remains uncertain.

“We always get asked, ‘Will we do anything together again?’ I feel like people have to understand that we’ve been doing this all of our lives, and it’s very healthy to go to other plateaus.”

We Are Family became an unofficial anthem during the pandemic. Kim re-recorded the hit to raise money for the World Health Organisati­on, while Kathy was joined by Nile Rodgers for a rendition during the 2021 Presidenti­al Inaugurati­on of Joe Biden.

So why was disco so important last year?

“It’s almost like a repeat of the 30s when we had the Depression,” she reflects. “Coming out of it everyone was ready to just have a good time. It’s definitely people embracing the feel-good, if there is such a thing. We’re embracing that feel-good feeling. And yes, disco dance music does that. I think that is why.”

The pandemic has also seen artists such as Dua Lipa and Jessie Ware revamp disco for the modern day, and in the process secure chart success.

“I’m totally loving it,” says Kathy of the acts inspired by her music.

She adds: “It [music] should not only make you dance, but it should make you feel good. That’s what I’m seeing with the newer artists, that they get it. And I think when you do that, it becomes timeless.”

Kim actually is my neighbour. We get along – we go and get coffee...

Kathy speaking of the thaw in her relationsh­ip with her sisters

■ Sister Sledge featuring Kathy Sledge takes place on Saturday, May 14 at London’s Indigo at The O2. Tickets are on sale now

 ?? ?? Kathy, back right, with Sister Sledge in 1985
Kathy, back right, with Sister Sledge in 1985
 ?? ?? Kathy Sledge is delighted to be able to use the Sister Sledge band name again after years of legal wrangles
Kathy Sledge is delighted to be able to use the Sister Sledge band name again after years of legal wrangles

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