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Geraldine Hunt (born February 10, 1945 in St. LouisMissouri) is an American R&B singer best known for the 1980 #1 Hot Dance Music/Club Play hit Can't Fake the Feeling.


Life and career[edit source | editbeta][]

Hunt's parents are Rosie Lee Vickers and Frank Milligan. Her father was a one-man band, and her grandmother, Louella Reed was a singer on the Chitlin Circuit. In 1947 her family relocated to Chicago. While growing up on Chicago's south side Hunt discovered her musical talent. Living in that part of Chicago was not easy; recalls Geraldine. "On the weekends, we had to sleep on the floor, gangs were shooting through the house; I had been beaten up at gunpoint once, It was rough. We were living below middle class."[1]

Despite the bleak living conditions of her childhood, there were bright spots also. A notable time in her life was her years at Hyde Park High School. Her classmate and best friend at school was the late American soul singer-songwriterMinnie Riperton. Besides Hunt and Riperton, the school also produced a girl group called Coffee who recorded the 1980 hit "Casanova".[1]

Hunt began her recording career as a teenager with several singles released from 1962: she had her first glimmer of success in 1970 when "You & I" a duet with Charlie Hodges reached #45 on the R&B chart in Billboard and in 1972 Hunt's remake of "Baby I Need Your Loving" reached #47 R&B.

In 1975 Hunt relocated to Montreal Quebec where she cut her first album in 1978: the disco-oriented Sweet Honesty. In 1980 Hunt's second album No Way yielded the track "Can't Fake the Feeling" which reached #1 on the club chart inBillboard where it spent a total of seven weeks: with Top 40 radio then being disco-resistant "Can't Fake the Feeling" had little mainstream success reaching #58 R&B. However the track did afford Hunt a hit in France at #10[2] and charted in the UK at #44.[3]

Hunt is the mother of three children; Rosalind Hunt of the musical group Chéri, singer Freddie James and writer Jeanne Dupuis.

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