As writers and producers, McFadden and Whitehead would go on to score 22 gold records, two platinum albums, and two Grammy nominations over the next six years. In addition to the O'Jays' follow-up smash For the Love of Money, their hits included Harold Melvin the Blue Notes' Wake Up Everybody and Where Are All My Friends, along with Archie Bell the Drells' Don't Let Love Get You Down. The duo also revived their Talk of the Town project, releasing the singles Super Groover (All Night Mover), Bumpin' Boogie, and I Apologize on the Philadelphia International spinoffs Gamble and TSOP. In 1978 they returned to the studio as simply McFadden Whitehead, recording Ain't No Stoppin' Us Now in one take. Whitehead even made up most of the lyrics on the spot. The single was a global blockbuster, topping the Billboard RB charts and later becoming a Philadelphia sports anthem, but the duo proved unable to generate a successful follow-up, with I Heard It in a Love Song and I've Been Pushed Aside barely scraping the charts. After 1982's Movin' On, McFadden Whitehead went their separate ways, reuniting in the 1990s to perform at corporate events and disco nostalgia shows. On May 11, 2004, Whitehead was shot to death while repairing his car on a Philadelphia street. The killing remains unsolved, and reportedly took an extreme toll on McFadden, who was already battling the liver and lung cancer that claimed his life on January 27, 2006. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi