The Sequence


The Sequence was an American female hip–hop trio from Columbia, South Carolina, who formed in 1979. The Sequence is noted as the first female hip hop trio signed to the Sugar Hill label in the late–1970s and early–1980s. The group consisted of Cheryl Cook, known as "Cheryl The Pearl", Gwendolyn Chisolm, known as "Blondie" and lead singer/rapper Angie Brown Stone, as Angie B who were all high school friends.

Background

The trio was noticed when they bum rushed a performance by the Sugarhill Gang and sang for them and Sylvia Robinson backstage. Their most notable single was "Funk You Up", which was the first rap record released by a female group and the second single released by Sugar Hill Records.
Elements of "Funk You Up" were later used by Dr. Dre for his 1995 single "Keep Their Heads Ringin'". The group backed Spoonie Gee on the single "Monster Jam". Their single "Funky Sound " was a remake of the single "Give Up the Funk " by Parliament. The groups other charting single was "I Don't Need Your Love ". Angie Stone subsequently became a member of Vertical Hold and later a solo artist.
In September 2011, without Angie Stone, Cheryl Cook and Gwendolyn Chisolm released a single entitled "On Our Way to the Movies". "On Our Way to the Movies" contains a sample of The Staple Singers' song "Let's Do It Again". Represented by famed Entertainment Attorney Antavius Weems, in December 2017, the group filed a Federal Copyright Infringement claim against Bruno Mars for his hit song "Uptown Funk", claiming that the song used their 1970s mega-hit "Funk You Up".

Discography

Albums