Saturday, September 27, 2008

Guide to Starting a Career in Audio + Jazmine Sullivan

B&H Photo offers a variety of interesting guides. Here's their technical version of "letters to a young artist" for students of audio aspiring to a career in the field.



I don't mean to be a hater, not at all. But I think at some point I feel popular music needs to address more than the various topics that operate under the rose-colored umbrella called love. So we get an album of songs that touch on:
• falling in love
• love betrayed (from the pov of the betrayer as well as the betrayed)
• second thoughts about love left behind
• being a fool in love
• fear of love
• the tragedy of being the other woman, in love.

≈ I think I want a soul song about having to take 3 trains to a job to put food on the table, keep your kids in Payless sneakers, and/or pay your students loans.
≈ How about a love song about finally finding your heart's calling and it not being a romance, but some way you get to meaningfully contribute to your community and feed your soul at the same time?
≈ What about an R&B song about not getting tenure, or not getting that promotion you worked your posterior off for a year to achieve? What about the broken-heartedness suffered by a family getting their house foreclosed on? Or the disappointment in finding a respected supervisor or elder is busy sexually harassing junior co-workers, and not taking care of the emotional needs of his/her family?
≈ What about a love song about a community pulling together to confront corporate environmental injustice? Roxbury Environmental Empowerment Project, anyone?

So, really, this isn't hating on Jazmine Sullivan, though I think the Phyllis Hyman comparison might be pushing things (Hyman didn't push that melismatic vocal technique to such a great degree; her technique allowed her to put her emotions right at the front of voice with velvety textures). Sullivan just comes to mind because Giant Step is featuring her release this week. I gotta give props to anyone who can get Missy Elliot to team up with Salt N Pepa on their first single "Need U Bad," plus she's got those richly dense, almost orchestral, horn arrangements on "Lions, Tigers, and Bears." After all, I'm really just musing about the general state of soul music/R&B. Every few years an article comes out lamenting the state of soul, hip hop soul, neo-soul, etc. It's a fair area of contemplation. But it occurs to me that if people want the music to change, it's not just about whether the instrumentation harkens back to Motown or the Philly Soul, or Memphis Stax sound and resultant questions of authenticy, nostalgia and originality. The questions should also deal with how to incorporate new themes, and how to employ instrumentation and arrangements to create works that don't sound banally expository or didactic. But, hey that's just my opinion.

While I'm thinking on music and transformation, here's almost the entirety of Fela Kuti's 1970s hit single about the Nigerian military "Zombie":

Zombie no go go unless you tell him to go
Zombie no go stop unless you tell him to stop

Zombie no go turn unless you tell him to turn
Zombie no go tink unless you tell him to tink




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Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Fela Kuti coming to Off-Broadway: August 5, 2008


Well, I just got the news via Joe's Pub that the life of Fela Kuti is coming to Off-Broadway, in the form of FELA! A New Musical. Helmed by Tony award-winning choreographer Bill T. Jones who is directing and choreographing the musical with a book by Jim Lewis and arrangements by Aaron Johnson and Antibalas, performed by members of Antibalas.

Apparently it was Bill T. Jones' who conceived of bringing the story of the creator of Afrobeat, genius Nigerian multi-instrumentalist/composer and controversial political and human rights activist Fela Anikulapo Kuti (1938-1997) to the theater. The iconoclast Kuti was an international figure, whose popularity on the African continent and in his home of Nigeria made him a frequent target of the government. Kuti died in 1997 from AIDS-related complications. Here's Bill T. Jones talking about his complex vision of Kuti and the impetus to produce a theatrical expression of Kuti's life. Jones is so wonderfully brilliant; check out this video. Also, check the musical's website for more video of interviews, rehearsals, and performances.




The show is running August 5 - September 21, 2008
37 Arts
450 West 37th Street @ 10th Avenue
New York, NY 10018
Box Office: (212) 560-8912
Google Map

(The tickets aren't cheap: $51.25 the last I checked. But the Ticketmaster site isn't currently selling any tickets -SEE BELOW for $25 tix!)


Endnote:
• The Fela Kuti Project, combining Palgrave Macmillan's publication of a collection of essays, Fela: From West Africa to West Broadway, the 2003 art exhibition Black President: The Art and Legacy of Fela Anikulapo Kuti and initiatives meant to commemorate Kuti's life and legacy.

• A note from the Fela! folks:
You can actually get $25 tickets to Fela! if you visit http://www.felaoffbroadway.com/socnet-01.html and use code Social1



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