Spotlight On: Lalah Hathaway

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Husky. Tender. Sexy.

Lalah Hathawy is 5 solo albums deep in a career that began in 1990 with Lalah Hathaway. Most artist with a 22-year-old recording history would be considered  a seasoned veteran with a household name. Yet Lalah Hathaway remains an atypical underground artist. Among R&B enthusiasts she is loved and appreciated, and routinely sells out small, intimate venues. However, like many Spotlight On selections, she hasn’t received commercial success by which many artists, musical and non, are judged.

Many female artist generate appeal by stretching the limits of their soprano, high-octave range. They make videos filmed with their bodies dancing to beats with strategically placed clothing to enhance their sexual appeal. Their labels invest money in promotions, collaborations, and ancillary endorsements. Consequently, we’re privileged to enjoy richly talented artists whose lyrical interpretations and vocal kinetics soundtrack memories we’ll remember until Alzheimer’s ends it all.

Not Eulalah Hathaway.  Her eponymous début enjoyed heavy rotation on R&B stations, introducing a mix of mid-temp toe-tappers (“Somethin'”” and “Heaven Knows”) and two solid ballads: “I’m Coming Back” and “Baby Don’ Cry”. A very under-the-radar- second album (A Moment), and silence…..

In 1999, Lalah collaborated with Joe Sample, famed pianist and original member of The Crusaders. Together, they produced The Song Lives On, one of  the better jazz albums of the decade, of which Lalah’s vocals invigorated jazz standards (“Fever” ) and updated underrated musical hybrid torch songs (“When Your Life was Low”, “When the World Turns Blue”). While new to jazz audiences, it was a refreshing return for her R&B fans wondering where her career had gone after her 1990 début.  Despite TSLO’s jazz categorization, in its wake, Lalah Hathaway’s style was tagged with the neo-soul label. Yet, anyone that had listened to her first three albums would have definitely refuted that her style and content were “neo” anything. Nonetheless, the appellation probably helped keep her socially relevant as R&B hiccuped its’ way through yet another reincarnation. Despite TSLO’s commercial and critical success, Lalah would not put out another album until 1994’s Outrun the Sky whose anchor song, a remake of Luther Vandrooss’ class “Forever, For Always, For Love”, reaffirmed her role as a sophisticated and fearless, deeply talented and intelligent singer, stylist and interpreter.

Fortunately, we haven’t had to wait decades between drops. Lalah’s been kind enough to drop a few collaborative gems and concert performances.  In 2008, she released Self-Portrait and in 2011 Where It All Began. Her latest album, Where It All Began, features one of her few interpretations from her fathers’ discography, “You Belong to Me”.  As showcased on Outrun the Sky, she maintains Luthers’ ability to take a popular, beloved classic and make it hers while honoring its’ tradition and roots. As she noted in a recent interview given to Black Enterprise (January 2012), despite 22 years in the business, at 42, she feels like she’s at the beginning again, and starting off on top.  We’re so happy to welcome her back home.

Track List:

Stay Home Tonight/Better & Better/Heaven Knows/Let Go/How Many Times/Dealing f Eric Roberson/That Was Then/Outrun the Sky/My Only/One Day I’ll Fly Away/Forever, For Always, For Love/Naked Truth/When Your Life was Low/I’m Coming Back

Sunday Slowdown: Ep 8

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The Down Tempo

The set was put together months ago. Yet when I went to play it for a new Sunday Slowdown post, it didn’t move quite right. After a little-a lot!- of tweeking, I came up with a down-tempo/electronica hybrid. As I put it together, I thought again about how R&B purists define “soul music” and as a site designed primarily for R&B fans, I’m not sure how this will go over.

There are sure to be a few recognizable names for those who push themselves to the margins of R&B, and are willingly to embrace a more elastic definition of “soul”. To me, there is something soulful about each track, although I’m under no illusion these artists will ever get “Quiet Storm” play.  It’s another dinner conversation about “soul music”, racial authenticity and who gets to cross/over the velvet ropes into R&B and soul music. In the coming year, I hope to introduce more music that invites a discussion about musical gatekeepers, rhythm signifiers and soul music personas.

In the mid-Atlantic, the weather is warm and the sun is slow to set. Tonight, it’s strictly chilled champagne.

Playlist:

Secret Box (Four Goes)/Ain’t No Sunshine (Emily King)/The First Taste (Fiona Apple)/A Moment with You (George Michael)/Here I Come (Blue Six)/Lover (Sweetback)/My Own Private Sunday (Tuomo)/My Torture (Esthero)/When My Anger Starts to Cry (Beady Belle)/Ghosts (Lewis Taylor)/The Hurting Time (Annie Lennox)/Never Be Mine (Kate Bush)

 

Sunday Slowdown Ep. 5

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I want very much to speak about Whitney Houston’s passing and her Going Home ceremony.  Every R&B music blogger knows her importance in our medium. Hers in a unique lexicon, and in paying an appropriate tribute, it’s important to get the right adjectives with the correct nouns. Syntax is significant.

I’m not ready yet.  So I’m serving a simple and neat helping of neo-soul from artists both quite familiar and a few less so. It’s an easy Sunday supper with mellow and quiet soul to bring the calm back.

Peace & Blessings

Love Ashaki

Track List

Why Can’t I See (Kendra Ross)/ In Love w/You (Chris Youngblood)/Break Up to Make Up (Sam Bostic)/ What They Gonna Do (Pru)/ Goodbye (Hil St. Soul)/ Save Your Love (Felicia Adams)/ Bittersweet (Siji)/ The Book (Keplyn)/Hope She’ll Be Happier (Sweetback)/Always Remember (Sirius B Project f. Donnie)

Funk It Friday Ep. 5 & 6

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Another hiatus. Another resurrection. Thankfully, I ‘m old enough to know the failure rate of New Year’s resolutions and thus avoid the trap of setting goals beyond just getting out of bed in the morning. I’ve replaced ‘goals’ with ‘hopes’, procuring sympathy for myself.  For instance, I only ‘hoped’ I’d be more disciplined about posting music more often. If it weren’t for the hard-working music bloggers that inspired me with their discipline and devotion, I wouldn’t have conceived the Aural Pleasure Palace. You look out at yourself and observe that your inspirations and your aspirations are walking on separate sides of the street.

So, I’ve been fledgeling, and doubting I’m up for the tasks at hand. When you’re down and feeling defeated, it’s the beats that lift you. To make up for lost time, I’m serving up two mixes in the Funk It Friday series.  As always, we try to drop a little funk, a little punk, and R&B in all its’ incarnations.  Here’s two hours of music that should take where you need to go on Friday afternoon: homebound, club bound, but never tightly wound. If they ask you what you’re doing, tell ’em you’re just “funking it”.

Enjoy

Ashaki

Funk It Friday 5

L.O.V.E (Terri Walker)/Gettin’ Happy (The Family Stand)/ The Pressure (Andrew Roachford)/I’ve Grown (Christion)/PYT (Noel Gourdin)/Missyou (Musiq)/Keep This Fire Burning (Bev. Knight)/Lost My Mind (Jamie Hawkins)/When It’s All Said & Done (Nine 20)/Underneath a Red Moon (N’Dea Davenport)/So Hot (R. Patterson)/You’re Not My Girl (Ryan Leslie)

Funk It Friday

All I Said (Guru f. Macy Gray)/Four Alarm Fire (YahZarah)/Mind Blowin’ (N’Dambi)/I’ve Got the Love (Chante Moore)/I Need You (Darien Brockington)/Coming Back (Smove f. Jess Roberts)/Ridin (Amp Fiddler)/My Favorite Nothing (Janelle Monae)/I’m a Lady (Santigold)/Lemonade (Fly Moon Royalty)/Lovesick (Tiara Wiles)/Anymore (Tweet)

Cupids Hunt 12

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This is my first foray into the beautiful musical collaboration  known as Cupid’s Hunt. I first tripped over this beat in 2010,  and I’ve been in love every since. Created by Todd Grundy and his musical family, it’s nothing short of….orgasmic….in the pleasure it delivers.

 

 

Black love is an intense conversation. This podcast is a quiet, yet heated exchange between two of our most beloved lyricists: Me’Shell and Maxwell.
Do enjoy!

Beautiful (Me’Shell)/Outside Your Door (Me’Shell)/Each Hour, Each Second, Each Minute (Maxwell)/Andromeda & the Milky Way (Me’Shell)/Gravity:Pushing to Pull (Maxwell)/Love Song #1 (Me’Shell)/Drown Deep Hula (Maxwell)/Silently (Maxwell)/Let Me Love You (Me’Shell)/Til the Cops Come Knockin’ (Maxwell)/Love You Down (Me’Shell)/Sumthin’ Sumthin’ (Maxwell)/Reunion (Maxwell)/Mary Magdalene (Me’Shell)/Wasted Time (Me’Shell)/Fistful of Tears (Maxwell)/ May This Be Love (Me’Shell)/Suitelady (The Proposal Jam)/ Fortunate (Maxwell)

 

Sunday Slowdown Ep. 4

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Another collection of gems to bring Sunday evening into perspective. Dusk is within reach and a sense of quietude whispers through leafless branches. It is crisp and peaceful.  The music tells a better story than any sentence I could compose.

Love,

Ashaki

Track Selection:

Don’t Make Me Wait (Will Downing)/I Gotta Move On (Lalah Hathaway)/Write You a Letter (Miles Jaye)/Vanishing (Mariah Carey)/ Turn Out the Stars (Ali Ollie Woodson)/Throw the Roses Away (Hall & Oates)/Don’t Make Me Wait for Love (Kenny G f/Lenny Williams)/I Just Had to Hear Your Voice (Oleta Adams)/Don’t Take Me for Granted (Nanette Maxine)/Love Always (El DeBarge)/Lost in You (Howard Hewett)

Funk It Friday: Try Jah Love

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It’s a brisk Autumn night in the District. I want Hot Apple Cider, a flannel blanket and a fireplace. In other words, it’s the exact opposite of the Funk It Friday music selection. Tonight we travel to the tropical lands of the Caribbean islands, and bring back Jamaica’s finest legal export: reggae.

I composed this podcast knowing I was deep out my range. My roots don’t go further south than Mississippi and I’ve mismanaged every possible opportunity to bask and skin burn in the islands lapped by the Caribbean sea. I can do no more than eavesdrop on even a casual conversation about reggae, ska, calypso or soca. For most Americans, especially those from the Stax/Motown aesthetic, meaning those that believe American R&B is the singular definition of MUSIC, rhythms and beats from  “foreign” lands rarely receive more than a cursory listen. Caribbean-derived musical genres never fail to demand engagement. It is always a bold  invitation to release, relax and escape.  Yet, I don’t understand enough about it to be appropriately seduced.

So, in an amateurish pilgrimage to discover root music not seeded in Tennessee dirt, I’m tilling Jamaican soil, a good portion of it watered by the Marley family genius. However, diversity abounds with selections from Third World, Maxi Priest and Wailing Souls. In an arrogant lack of restraint, these traditionalist are joined by hip-hop and neo-soul remixes of Marley classics.

Autumn leaves crowd the landscape.  Add rum to the cider. Pretend the fireplace is a sandy beach midnight bonfire and  just FUNK IT! Jah-style…

Ashaki

Cool Me Down (Tiger)/Groove Master (Arrow)/Now that We Found Love (Third World)/Mother & Child Reunion (Wailing Souls)/Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner (Michael Rose)/Just a Little Bit Longer (Maxi Priest)/I’m Hurting Inside (Cedella Marley)/Sweet Jamaica (Tony Rebel)/Rebel Music- 3 O’clock Roadblock (Krayzie Bone)/Riding High (Bob Marley)/No More Trouble (Erykah Badu)/Live On (Wailing Souls)/Johnny Was (Guru)/OK Corral (Wailing Souls)/Tumblin’ Down (Ziggy Marley)/Trenchtown Rock-Live (Bob Marley)

Sunday Slowdown Ep.3

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Washington, DC weather, like its’ politics, refuses to make a firm decision about the weather. We’re stuck in  a  beautiful Indian Summer that makes sipping Hot Toddy’s and Buttered Rum Apple Cider feel premature.  The sun is dropping slow into the hills of Rock Creek park, and spiderweb streaks of honey and gold sunlight stretch over trees quietly shedding their leaves. It’s too early in the season for the weight and sophistication of the Hot Toddy. There is still youth left in the changing weather.  This Sunday Slowdown is dedicated to “the between” times. While it’s another selection of classics, we’ve stuck to the 80’s and 90’s, offering  gems from Cameo to Vesta*.  The perfect accompaniment: a chilled White and a view.

Track list:

Don’t Be Lonely (Cameo)/Livin’ For Your Love (Melba Moore)/Don’t Take It Personal (Jermaine Jackson)/I’ll Prove It to You (Gregory Abbott)/Foolish Heart (Sharon Bryant)/Have You Ever Loved Somebody (Freddie Jackson)/Darlin I (Vanessa Williams)/Every Now & Then (EWF)/Tell Me (Vesta)/My First Love (Atlantic Starr)/Remember:The First Time(Eric Gable)/The Moon (Eric Roberson)

*When I came to publish this playlist, I was set aback with the reminder of Vesta’ s passing last month.  Many playlist are put together far in advance. Between a playlists’ composition and publication, life does change. Hopefully, the Vesta track included in the playlist is a wonderful remembrance of a powerhouse voice in the R&B community.

Love,

Ashaki

Funk It Friday. Ep. 2

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It’s Friday..AGAIN. In every pocket of America, the (fortunately, still-) employed are running to 5pm like Usain Bolt to a Gold medal. Here’s another dose of funk to celebrate survival of week #37.

Track List:

You Make It Heave (Full Flava f/Joy Rose)/The Real Thing (Lisa Stansfield)/Take Me Home Tonight (Cooly’s Hot Box)/If You Wanna (Roy Davis Jr f/Terry Dexter)/Fly Away (Goapele)/You Make Me (Monday Michiru)/Let’s Fall in Love (Incognito f/John-Christian Urich)/Find Your Way Again (Gabrielle)/Taste of Bitter Love (D’Influence)/Blew My Cool (Eleana Young)

Sunday Slowdown Ep. 2: The Smooth Jazz Edition

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Smooth “spazz” is how jazz purist deride the mid-90’s format that birthed Chicago’s WNUA radio station.  Seen at its worst as enervated, and lazily composed rip-offs of  jazz instrumentation,  “smooth jazz” represented an insulting attempt to streamline jazz to an adult audience that, while appreciative of classical jazz, found it inaccessible.  A young Jewish kid from Seattle, Washington blueprinted the format with the release of his third album, G Force.  Kenneth Gorelick teamed with R&B singer, composer and producer Michael Jones, known to most listeners by the singular moniker Kashif and delivered G Force to a predominantly African-American audience.  Kashif’s influence put Kenny G’s 1983 release on R&B radio rotation with “Help Yourself to My Love” and “G Force”. Three years later, with amble assistance from super producer and songwriter Narada Michael Walden, and a greater lead on songwriting and composition, Kenny G delivered Duotones. While Gravity enjoyed mid-range success with R&B audiences that recognized Kashif’s vocals, Duotones  greatest success  was the Kenny G composed instrumental “Songbird” that struck a chord with predominantly White 30 year olds’ dabbling in mid-80’s New Ageism.  However, with a sense of awareness about his confirmed success on Black radio, warmed up R&B audiences found themselves ardently included with cuts that included classic crooner Lenny Williams delivering the vocals  on “Don’t Make Me Wait for Love”, and toe-tapping to the Junior Walker remake “What Does It Take (To Win Your Love)”.

For R&B radio, Duotones continued the successful collaboration between jazz and R&B that Stanley Clarke, George Duke, and George Howard had successfully mined on their 70’s and 80’s releases.  Yet “Songbird” provided a marketing guidepost for a new genre of music: smooth jazz. The critics were quick and fierce, detailing the impossibility of diluting jazz to increase its’ accessibility while still referring to it as jazz.  As its’ critics detailed the increasingly diminished financial returns for up and coming classically trained jazz musicians, the smooth jazz curriculum passed from city to city, spawning Smooth Jazz fests, compilations CD’s and ultimately, its’ own Grammy category.

Although its’ critics would concede nothing that would confer respectability to the genre, smooth jazz employed enough artists to make a few shine.  While fashionably White during its primacy, the mid 90’s saw Black artists  such as Roy Hargrove and the Urban Knights infuse the bloodline. Both R&B and White artists continued Kenny G’s blueprint of sharing the platform with either new or established vocal R&B artists. These collaboration allowed artists gave artist airplay traction in both Smooth Jazz and R&B Quiet Storm formats.  The release of Fourplay’s 1991 eponymous album bought back R&B sensibilities with a supremely dedicated El DeBarge providing the smoothest vocals ever Fourplay’s remake of Marvin Gaye’s “After the Dance”.  Luther Vandross’ “sha la la” refrain on Dave Koz’s “Can’t Let You Go” caused many to refer to it as “The Sha La Song”.  Bob James and David Sanborn’s Grammy-winning album, “Double Vision” bought in Al Jarreau for a powerful rendition of “Since I Fell For You” and Roy Hargrove, kept the beats street with vocals by Erykah Badu, Common and  Q Tip on his rH Factor “Hard Groove” album.

Although many of the smooth jazz stations that helped create a distributive platform for the genre no longer exists, its’ former primacy can no better be exemplified than by Kenneth Gorelicks’s self-parody in Audi’s 2011 Superbowl commercial.  According to website kgsax.com, Kenny G is the “best-selling instrumental musician of all time with global sales of over 75 million records!” Spazz indeed. So after you’re done arguing with your music fan buddies, tune it to this smooth jazz episode of the Sunday Slowdown. It’s not heavy, it’s smooth.…..

Track List:

Better w/Time(Boney James f/Bilal)/The One (Urban Knights)/So In Love (Alex Bugnon)/Day by Day (Najee)/Walk Through the Fire (Eric Marienthal & Carl Anderson)/Easy Living (Norman Connors)/Just 2 Be w/You (Gerald Albright)/If You Were Mine (George Howard)/Oohh Baby (George Duke)/Why Can’t It Wait ‘Til Morning (Fourplay- Phil Collins Vocals)/Storm Warning (Hilary James)/Tender Is the Night (Dave Koz-Phil Perry Vocals)/You Make Me Believe-Kenny G (Clayton Richardson Vocals)

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