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Alt text: "September 23 announcement for Volume 11 of Chuck Small's Record Relays featuring familiar voices and fresh handoffs."
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Chuck Small’s Record Relays, Volume 11:

The Popular Mix

September 22, 2025
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I’ll admit it:

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Some previous volumes of the Record Relays series…

The handoffs of superstar collaborations from one artist to the next…

…have leaned heavily on the obscure.

Not this one. This collection ought to bring nods of familiarity from most listeners.

Yes, there are a few lesser-known songs here, but more than 50 percent of this set hit the Top 20 on Billboard’s Hot 100.

Admittedly, that’s not the case with track one:


Barbra Streisand & Michael Crawford

Smiling couple posing together in a dimly lit setting.

 The Music of the Night

Barbra Streisand’s had her share of duet partners, but few have matched her belt for belt like Broadway’s Crawford. The British actor/singer, who had the initial success with this track in the musical “The Phantom of the Opera,” teamed up with Streisand for this version on her Back to Broadway CD.


Barbra Streisand & Kim Carnes

Two women in stylish white outfits, one with long blonde hair and the other wearing a white hat, pose together.

Make No Mistake, He’s Mine

This duet on Streisand’s CD Emotion came out in 1985 – four years too late in terms of pop success for either artist. (It peaked at No. 51 pop, though it went Top 10 AC.) Interestingly, Carnes’ 1980 duet partner Kenny Rogers recorded this song in 1987 with Ronnie Milsap as “Make No Mistake, She’s Mine” and scored a No. 1 country hit.


Kenny Rogers & Kim Carnes

"Vintage black and white photo of two singers performing on stage."

Don’t Fall in Love With a Dreamer

KennyRogers was incredibly hot in 1980, with four hits that went Top 10 country and AC and Top 20 pop. I love the gravelly vocals that Rogers and Carnes bring to this No. 4 pop hit, providing a grit that ballads often lack.


Kenny Rogers & Dolly Parton

Islands in the Stream

Between 1980 and 1983, Rogers pulled off four Top 20 duets with four different women: Kim Carnes, Dottie West (“What Are We Doin’ in Love?” in which he was uncredited but unmistakable), Sheena Easton (the wretched Top 10 remake of Bob Seger’s “We’ve Got Tonight”) and this Number One smash, written by the Bee Gees, and featured on Rogers’ CD “Eyes That See in the Dark.”  

(If you want, you can cite “Share Your Love With Me,” featuring Gladys Knight, as a fifth; I don’t, because she’s with the Pips, and their appearance is more background vocals than a duet.)


Dolly Parton & Steve Perry

Dolly Parton performing with a male singer on stage.

Open Arms

Perry sang lead with Journey on the original of this composition, which hit No. 2 in 1982. He teamed up with Parton to remake it on her 2023 “Rockstar” CD. Sometimes, it’s hard to hear him as Parton goes for Streisand-level belting at several points.


Kenny Loggins & Steve Perry

Two people smiling in a warmly lit indoor setting with plants and flowers.

Don’t Fight It

The first single from Loggins’ 1982 solo set High Adventure, it went Top 20 pop. It’s an enjoyable romp, but I do admit I prefer later singles from the album “Heart to Heart” and “Welcome to Heartlight.”


Kenny Loggins & Michael McDonald

"Two musicians on stage, one in a white chef-style shirt and the other in a black suit, with drums in the background."

This Is It

As the ’70s gave way to the ’80s, Loggins was scaling the Top 40 with this track, eventually peaking at No. 11. The Loggins-McDonald vocal production earned a Top 20 crossover to the R&B charts.


James Ingram & Michael McDonald

"Two male singers performing on stage with microphones."

Yah Mo B There

If McDonald thought a Top 20 R&B hit was an accomplishment, this 1984 track must have been really something: It went Top 5 R&B as well as Top 20 pop. It’s on Ingram’s CD It’s Your Night.


Donna Summer & James Ingram

Mystery of Love

A track on her eponymous album, produced by Quincy Jones, it bears all his hallmarks, including swooping background vocals from Ingram. I never understood Geffen Records’ singles strategy for this album; straight-up pop-rock tracks like this and the Bruce Springsteen-penned “Protection” were cast aside for the sleepy AC “The Woman in Me” and the spacey, offbeat “State of Independence.”  


Brooklyn Dreams & Donna Summer

"Two singers performing on stage with microphones, showcasing a lively musical moment."

Heaven Knows

You think you know this Top 5 pop hit, a collaboration between the Queen of Disco and singer Joe Esposito. You know one version of it.

Listen to this version (on the accompanying Spotify set) from the 1979 Brooklyn Dreams set Sleepless Nights. Esposito and Summer flip roles from the hit single for a version that sounds a bit rockier.


Brenda Russell & Joe Esposito

"Split image of a singer performing on stage and a woman smiling during an interview."

Piano in the Dark

This is just one of those timeless classics; it sounded like no other Top 10 hit from 1988, and radio was all the better for it. The duet brought Russell her biggest hit ever and first time in the Top 40 since “So Good, So Right” in 1979. It also marked Esposito’s only hit under his own name.


Brenda Russell & Sheila E.

Two women smiling, wearing colorful "L.O.V.E." t-shirts, promoting positivity and unity.

Walkin’ in New York

Despite the fact that Russell was a “two-hit wonder” on the pop chart, she kept on writing and performing into the 21st century. This comes from her 2000 collection Paris Rain. Sheila E. brings her jazzy percussion work to the track.


Sheila E. & Prince

"Prince performing on stage with a female guitarist, showcasing vibrant 80s fashion."

A Love Bizarre

he single version of this isn’t available on Spotify (other than a live version from the Ringo Starr All-Stars tour, on which Sheila E. played). But the full, 12-minute version from the album Romance 1600 is, and it shows off a broader range of Ms. Escovedo’s talents. (It’s hard for me to hear this without thinking of the mondegreen that one of my sister’s high school friends gave it – she thought it was about the store World Bazaar.)


Prince & Sheena Easton

U Got the Look

Unlike their previous team-up on Easton’s “Sugar Walls” (a track I loathed almost as much as her “We’ve Got Tonight” duet), this track completely cooks. I love the attitude Easton gives off in both the track and its video, as someone not easily impressed with the Purple One. It gives the collaboration more tension and groove. From his Sign o’ the Times” collection (BTW, this track also features Sheila E.)


Sheena Easton & Babyface

The Lover in Me

The success of her work with Prince pushed Easton in a more R&B-oriented direction than her early 1980s pop/AC. In 1988, she teamed up with the hot production team of L.A. Reid and Babyface for the album The Lover in Me. The title track soared to No. 2 in March 1989.


Des’ree & Babyface

Fire

The singer/songwriter/producer had cooled off just a bit by 1998, when this cover of the Bruce Springsteen composition (and No. 2 hit for the Pointer Sisters) appeared on the soundtrack of the romcom Hav Plenty.


Terence Trent D’Arby & Des’ree

"Two singers performing together on stage, showcasing vocal harmony."

Delicate

The final Hot 100 single for the artist now known as Sananda Maitreya went to No. 74 on the Hot 100 but did better overseas, hitting the Top 20 in Britain, Iceland and the Netherlands. It preceded the massive success Des’ree would have the following year with “You Gotta Be.”


Here’s the Spotify set for this volume. (All of them were available this time, so no YouTube links!):

So, how many of them did you know this time?

Share your answers and thoughts on this set, in the comments.


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cstolliver

Chuck Small

Journalist-turned-high school counselor. Happily ensconced in Raleigh, N.C., with hubby of 32 years (11 legal).

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rollerboogie
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rollerboogie
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September 22, 2025 11:20 pm

6 for 17. An improvement for me, but still, at 35%, that would be a solid F.
I should have audited the class.

Virgindog
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Virgindog
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September 23, 2025 9:41 am

I knew 5 by name, and recognized 2 more when listening. I guess duets weren’t my thing.

Unless, of course, Joey Ramone was involved.

JJ Live At Leeds
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September 23, 2025 12:31 pm

There’s 5 of them I recognise in this form. Along with one more that I’m familiar with in its original form; Michael Crawford with Sarah Brightman on Music Of The Night. A #7 UK hit, Phantom Of The Opera was a big deal here.

I had no idea Piano In The Dark was a duet. I haven’t heard it in a long time and don’t remember a male voice on it. Over here it was released as a solo effort by Brenda Russell.

cappiethedog
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cappiethedog
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September 23, 2025 3:01 pm

Obscure duets, the search for, can be fun.

This is my personal favorite.

Admiral Freebee, a legendary(Note: I think he’s legendary.) Belgium singer-songwriter, paired up with Emmylou Harris in 2006 on “Coming of the Knight”, from his third album Wild Dreams of New Beginning. This song came out six years before Sweden’s First Aid Kit’s tribute song “Emmylou”.

blu_cheez
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blu_cheez
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September 23, 2025 3:24 pm

That last held note of “Music Of The Night”? god-tier.

Zeusaphone
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Zeusaphone
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September 23, 2025 4:12 pm

I had heard 13 of the 17 before. I was young in the 80s!

I’m pretty sure the only time I heard that Carnes/Streisand song was when I was doing my “listen to every song that’s hit the Hot 100” project.

My mother is a huge Michael Crawford fan, so I’ve heard that song way too many times.

Ozmoe
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Ozmoe
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September 23, 2025 4:22 pm
Reply to  Zeusaphone

How well did your “listen to every song that’s hit the Hot 100” project go anyway, Zeusaphone?

Ozmoe
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Ozmoe
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September 23, 2025 4:25 pm

Got 10 of these just by reading the names of the songs, a new high here, woo hoo! Incidentally, Brenda Russell’s “So Good, So Right” deserved a top 10 placement in 1979 as much as “Piano in the Dark” did in 1988, IMO.

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