Andrea True

As a singer, she is best known for the 1976 pop-disco hit "More, More, More" (performed as part of her recording project the Andrea True Connection), which peaked at no.

[5][6] Andrea Marie Truden was born in Nashville, Tennessee,[3] where she attended St. Cecilia Academy, a Catholic school for girls dedicated to the performing arts.

[9] At age 15, she hosted her own television program Teen Beat for Nashville station WLAC.

[10] In a recorded interview published by The Rialto Report, True stated that she married David L. Wolfe at age 19, leaving college to follow her husband for his academic career, first to Oklahoma and then eventually to New York City in the late 1960s.

[13] During her heyday as a porn actress, around 1975, True was hired by a real estate business in Jamaica to appear in their commercials.

While she was working there, the Jamaican government banned asset transfers in response to sanctions imposed by the U.S. after the election of Michael Manley, a supporter of Fidel Castro.

[4] A full album with the same title followed, which performed moderately in North America and spawned the second single, "Party Line", a minor chart hit.

But even if you haven't seen her movies, she projects an exhibitionistic suck-and-fuck tractability that links the two pervasive fantasy media of our time, and from such conjunctions Great Art arises."

It was a commercial flop and did not chart due to a lack of promotion from Buddah Records as the label was struggling financially at the time.

[13] She did, however, perform two sold-out shows at the Paramount Theater in New York City in 1994, and worked on new music, which eventually never materialised.

[17] True received a renewed burst of publicity in 1999 when the Canadian group Len sampled the instrumental break from "More, More, More" in their single "Steal My Sunshine".

and 100 Greatest One-Hit Wonders (both in 2002), in which she said she wanted "to be remembered as someone who brought people joy" — then emphasized the words "with her music".

[2][8] "More, More, More" remained a popular song on television and in movies, and True was eventually able to claim outstanding royalties from the track's usage and sales.

Under the administration of Prime Minister Michael Manley , the Jamaican government banned money transfers in retaliation to sanctions imposed by the U.S., forcing True to invest her pay into recording a demo of " More, More, More "