Mary Jane Girls

Mary Jane Girls

Left to right: Candice "Candi" Ghant, Joanne "JoJo" McDuffie, Cheryl "Cheri" Bailey, Kimberly "Maxi" Wuletich. Not shown: Yvette "Corvette" Marine.
Background information
Origin Los Angeles, California,
United States
Genres R&B, soul, funk, disco, dance
Years active 1979–1987
Labels Gordy Records
Associated acts Rick James
Past members
Joanne "JoJo" McDuffie (1979-1987)
Kimberly "Maxi" Wuletich (1979-1987)
Candice "Candi" Ghant (1979-1987)
Cheryl "Cheri" Bailey (1979-1985)
Yvette "Corvette" Marine (1985-1987)

The Mary Jane Girls were an American R&B, soul, funk and disco group in the 1980s. They were protégées of singer Rick James. They are known for their hit songs "All Night Long", "Candyman" and "In My House".

Contents

Formation

The group consisted of Joanne "JoJo" McDuffie (lead/background vocals), Candice "Candi" Ghant, Kimberly "Maxi" Wuletich, and Cheryl Bailey (who used stage name Cheri Wells) and the Water Sisters. The Mary Jane Girls project was to be a solo debut for JoJo, who had sung background for Rick James on tours and recordings. Rick James developed tracks with JoJo and session vocalists the Water Sister creating the Mary Jane Girls sound (see last released Motown compilation for verification).

Motown offered James a contract for what it believed was the girl group he wanted to produce and not wanting to lose the deal, James lied and told Motown that the Mary Jane Girls were a group and not JoJo's solo project. Rick got who he could to provide photographs to Motown. JoJo continued to sing both lead and background with the Water Sisters for all Mary Jane Girl recordings and Rick's band had to sing for the group with JoJo live on tour. The other members of the group could not sing at all or were extremely limited vocally.

The origin of the group's name is commonly believed to be an homage to James' affinity for marijuana, which is sometimes called "Mary Jane." The four group members took on distinctive character looks with matching personalities:

Cheri left the group shortly before the release of their second album, Only Four You in 1985 and was replaced by Yvette "Corvette" Marine who took on the role of the Valley Girl/Wild and Trendy Girl in the group.

Career

The group's self-titled debut album was released in 1983 and yielded their first R&B hits: "Candy Man," "All Night Long" (which was later included in the soundtrack of the 2002 video game Grand Theft Auto: Vice City), and "Boys." The group released their second album Only Four You in 1985. That album's lead single "In My House" became the group's biggest hit, reaching #3 on the R&B chart and then crossing over to the Hot 100 chart, where it reached #7 and spent 12 weeks in the Top 40. To date, this is the Mary Jane Girls' only Top 40 hit in the U.S. It also charted on the Hot Dance Club Play chart, peaking at #1 for two weeks in April 1985. "Wild and Crazy Love" was the second single from this album and it also fared well on the R&B (#10) and dance charts (#3). It barely missed the Top 40 on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at #42. The last single, "Break It Up," only reached #79 on the R&B chart and did not chart on the Billboard Hot 100. The group covered the Frankie Valli & the Four Seasons hit "Walk Like a Man," which was included on the soundtrack of the 1986 film A Fine Mess. The song missed the U.S. Top 40 by one spot. The group's next single, "Shadow Lover," was released in the spring of 1986, but problems between Motown and Rick James resulted in little promotion for the single, although it was performed on Soul Train. That same year, the Mary Jane Girls were ready to record their third album titled Conversation. The album was never released and the group officially broke up in 1987.

After Ghant and Wuletich left the group, JoJo McDuffie carried on as a solo artist. She also recorded with Rick James on his 1997 Urban Rhapsody album on the track "Never Say You Love Me," which was originally written for Teena Marie. After leaving the Mary Jane Girls, Cheryl Bailey sang lead for Morris Day's studio group The DayZs. Yvette Marine went on to sue Virgin Records in 1991, claiming that she had shared the lead vocals on the songs "Opposites Attract," "Knocked Out," and "I Need You" on Paula Abdul's debut album Forever Your Girl.[1] In 1993, a jury eventually ruled against Marine.[2]

In 1995, McDuffie, Ghant, and Wuletich, under the name "MJG," appeared on the daytime talk show Jenny Jones as the show's first musical guests. By 1997 Ghant and Wuletich left the group once again.

Current

Cover versions

Sampling

Discography

Studio albums

Year Album Chart positions
[4][5][6]
US
certifications
[7]
Record label
US US
R&B
UK
1983 Mary Jane Girls 56 6 51 Gold Gordy
1985 Only Four You 18 5 Gold
"—" denotes the album failed to chart

Compilation albums

Year Album Chart positions Record label
US US
R&B
1994 In My House: The Very Best of the Mary Jane Girls Motown
2001 The Millennium Collection: The Best of the Mary Jane Girls
"—" denotes the album failed to chart

Singles

Year Single Chart positions
[5][6][8]
Album
US US
R&B
US
Dance
UK
1983 "Candy Man" 101 23 8 60 Mary Jane Girls
"All Night Long" 101 11 13
"Boys" 102 29 74
1984 "Jealousy" 106 84
1985 "In My House" 7 3 1 77 Only Four You
"Wild and Crazy Love" 42 10 3
"Break It Up" 79 33
1986 "Walk Like a Man" 41 91 A Fine Mess (Soundtrack)
"—" denotes the single failed to chart

References

External links