I'm Gone would ascend to the number two spot on the Billboard RB charts in the fall of 1952, and was quickly followed by Shirley, Come Back to Me and Shirley's Back, cementing the teen romance narrative motif that characterized the duo's early output. Dubbed "the Sweethearts of the Blues," they spent much of the decade to follow on tour, at various times backed by New Orleans legends-in-waiting like Allen Toussaint, Huey Piano Smith, and James Booker. While their live audiences continued to grow, record buyers eventually tired of the soap opera melodrama of singles like Lee Goofed and Confessin', so with 1956's classic Let the Good Times Roll Shirley Lee changed course into rock roll, cracking the Billboard Hot 100 for the first time. The follow-up, Feel So Good, achieved the same feat, but when Messner died and Aladdin's properties transferred to the Imperial label, Shirley Lee's fortunes waned, and in 1959 the duo landed with the small Warwick imprint. The move was fortuitous, however, as 1960's I've Been Loved Before crept to the number 88 spot and a remake of Let the Good Times Roll went to number 48. Warwick shut down in 1961, however, and after a brief return to Imperial, Shirley Lee split the following year.
At that point, Goodman and her son relocated to California, where she became an in-demand session vocalist. In 1967, producer Huey Meaux teamed her with fellow New Orleans expatriate Jessie Hill for the Wand label duet Ivory Tower. (Several more duets followed, all of them commercial disasters, but in 1970 Meaux's Crazy Cajun label still compiled the sessions onto an LP, You'll Lose a Good Thing.) Goodman also partnered with Brenton Wood on the 1969 Whizz effort Kid Games and Nursery Rhymes. Despite subsequent session dates, including an appearance on the Rolling Stones' masterpiece Exile on Main St., she briefly retired from the music industry, working in the offices of Playboy magazine. While manning the switchboard there she renewed ties with fellow music biz veteran Sylvia Robinson, now co-owner of the All Platinum label. The two women began a regular correspondence, and in late 1974 Robinson paid for Goodman to fly to New Jersey to cut the lead vocal for a dance track titled Shame, Shame, Shame. Credited to Shirley Company, the resulting single was an overnight sensation, becoming one of the first international disco hits and reaching number 12 on the Billboard pop charts. Goodman toured behind the record until mid-1976, returning to New Orleans in 1979 and soon after retiring from pop music for good. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi