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A close-up of a vinyl record spinning on a turntable. The record’s label features the Progress Pride Flag, showing rainbow stripes, chevron, and trans colors. The turntable brand “Technics” is visible in the lower left corner.
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Chuck Small’s Record Relays:

Volume 8: The Pride Edition

July 8, 2025
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It’s “Record Relays:” The series that features rare superstar collabs and hits from vinyl, cassette, and CD, and honoring the uncredited artists.


June may have come and gone.

But Pride is perpetual.

Not all of the tracks in this round of “Record Relays” feature artists from the LGBTQ+ community… but many do.

If you’re interested in learning more, I recommend Chris Molanphy’s recent Hit Parade look at LGBTQ+ hitmakers and the charts:

Screenshot of the Slate websites Hit Parade podcast page, showing the title, a brief description about queer artists in pop music, and an embedded audio player for Mighty Real Edition Part 1.

Which you can find over at Slate Magazine.


Johnny Mathis & Jane Olivor

A woman and a man, both holding microphones, sing together on stage under colorful lighting. The woman has short, curly blonde hair and wears a dark outfit; the man has curly dark hair and wears a light suit.

The Last Time I Felt Like This”

This duet was as glossy and middle-of-the-road as 1979 got, and I loved it.

From the soundtrack of the movie “Same Time, Next Year,” it never made AT40, peaking at No. 15 adult contemporary. The composition did earn an Oscar nomination for best original song.


Johnny Mathis & Take 6

A vinyl record label showing Columbia at the top and details for Johnny Mathiss song In the Still of the Night (Featuring Take 6). The text is red and yellow with black lettering.

It’s All in the Game

The smooth vocal group plays background singers to Mathis on this track from Mathis’ 1992 “Better Together” collection.

It’s a pleasant update to the standard.


Stevie Wonder & Take 6

Stevie Wonder and Take 6

Love’s in Need of Love Today

From the 2001 charity collection “America: A Tribute to Heroes” comes this take on Wonder’s track from 1976’s “Songs in the Key of Life.”

Wonder’s opening declaration is of the time: “When you say you hate in the name of God or Allah, you are lying to God, for that is not of our father.” Here’s a YouTube link.


Jermaine Jackson & Stevie Wonder

Let’s Get Serious

This is formally billed as a Jermaine solo record.

But producer Wonder takes charge on the powerful bridge. This was a chart-topper on the R&B charts and his biggest hit of the ‘80s on the pop chart, going Top 10 in the summertime.


Whitney Houston & Jermaine Jackson

Whitney Houston & Jermaine Jackson

Nobody Loves Me Like You Do

One of a couple of Houston-Jackson duets on her debut album.

This was an R&B/pop take on a composition that went No. 1 country for Anne Murray and Dave Loggins.  


Whitney Houston & George Michael

If I Told You That

Pop radio unjustly ignored this duet remix of a Whitney solo track in 2000, perhaps because both artists were tabloid fodder at the time.

You can find this on the collection “Whitney: The Greatest Hits.”


George Michael & Elton John

Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me

I didn’t care for the single edit of this 1992 superstar cover of John’s 1974 hit.

Part of the song’s appeal is its languor. Fortunately, we can find the full-length version of this chart-topper on several CDs, including the collection “Ladies & Gentlemen: The Best of George Michael.”


Elton John & RuPaul

Don’t Go Breakin’ My Heart

Elton’s 1976 smash with Kiki Dee gets a playfully kicky update via the “You Better Work” supermodel and Drag Race host.

This track is available on Elton’s “Duets” CD, but the video is the best way to enjoy it.


Martha Wash & RuPaul

It’s Raining Men (the Sequel)

Finished with anonymity after her voice was used without her name or permission on major hits, Wash took charge in the 1990s with this re-recording of her Weather Girls classic.

It’s not available on Spotify, but here’s a YouTube link.


Luther Vandross & Martha Wash

I (Who Have Nothing)

Wash was first a backup singer for disco singer Sylvester, whose final Top 40 hit was a remake of this Leiber-Stoller composition.

A decade and a half later, she recorded this slow-burn version with another former backup singer on his 1992 Power of Love CD.


Bruce Roberts, Elton John & Luther Vandross

The Man Who Loves You

Singer-songwriter Roberts released the CD “Intimacy” in 1995 with lots of superstar support.

On this track, both Vandross and John provide background vocals. It was not a hit, but I picked it up on a trip to New York’s (now late, lamented) Colony Records and loved it.


Elton John & k.d. lang

Teardrops

On the same CD as the RuPaul duet:

This track finds two icons of the LGBTQ+ community teaming for a dance-pop take on the Womack & Womack composition, a late ‘80s international hit that missed the U.S. pop charts.


Tony Bennett & k.d. lang

Moonglow

Predating the legendary crooner’s work with Lady Gaga by a decade and a half, genre chameleon lang performed this standard with Bennett on MTV Unplugged. .

They would later tour (I saw them, and they were terrific!) and do a full album


Tony Bennett & Lady Gaga

The Lady Is a Tramp

Before she had Top 5 ballad successes with “Million Reasons,” “Shallow” and her recent duet with Bruno Mars, “Die With a Smile,” Gaga was a revelation as a standards singer on her first album with Bennett, 2014’s “Cheek to Cheek.”


Lady Gaga & Beyoncé

Telephone

One of Gaga’s hits from her monster 2009-10 streak of pop success, this went to No. 3 on the Hot 100 from “The Fame Monster.

Its video earned as much attention as the song.


Destiny’s Child & Stevie Nicks

Bootylicious

Speaking of videos that earned attention:

This chart-topper’s lyrics and groove had already commanded R&B and pop attention by the time the video came out, with a cameo from Nicks, reprising her riff from her 1982 hit “Edge of Seventeen.” The video makes the most of the track’s cheek.


Robbie Patton & Stevie Nicks

Smiling Islands

This set closes as it started, with a collaboration that did better AC than pop.

This track – labeled as a Patton solo – from his LP “Order from Headquarters” missed the Top 40 pop but went to No. 16 AC.


Here’s the playlist:

Which is your favorite?

Share your thoughts in the comments!


Let the author know that you liked their article with a “Green Thumb” Upvote! 


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cstolliver

Chuck Small

Journalist-turned-high school counselor. Happily ensconced in Raleigh, N.C., with hubby of 32 years (10 legal).

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mt58
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mt58
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July 8, 2025 9:49 am

{Layout editor’s note:

Due a bone-headed and completely unintentional production error, Chuck’s always-excellent writing was edited and changed, making it unrecognizable.

I pulled the piece in order to correct my mistake and have fully restored the article to its proper and original state.

Massive apologies to our readers for the delay, but most of all to my talented friend Chuck.

No excuses. My fault, and I’ll do better.}

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