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Thread started 07/14/17 7:57pm

JabarR74

TRIBUTE: Celebrating 30 Years of Terence Trent D’Arby’s ‘Introducing the Hardline According to...’

TRIBUTE: Celebrating 30 Y...g to...’

July 12, 2017 / Patrick Corcoran

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Happy 30th Anniversary to Terence Trent D’Arby’s debut album Introducing the Hardline According to Terence Trent D’Arby, originally released July 13, 1987.


The sweet science of pugilism demands certain key characteristics. Speed of mind and body. The ability to punch powerfully and accurately. An impenetrable defensive setup. Conditioning to survive twelve brutal rounds of battle. Discipline to devote the prime years of your life to a monk-like existence. And the courage to take that long walk from changing room to ring.

None of which count for a thing without confidence—staring your opponent in the eye and knowing beyond all knowing that you have the beating of your nemesis mere inches away, no matter how intimidating he or she may look. For the winner of the Florida State Golden Gloves Lightweight title of 1980, confidence was never an issue—even when he abandoned boxing and a career in the army to become a musician. After all you don’t call your debut album the most important record since Sgt. Pepper’s if you’re the shy and retiring type.

Born Terence Trent Howard in Manhattan in 1962, July 1987 saw the supernova arrival of Terence Trent D’Arby and his extravagantly monikered debut album Introducing the Hardline According To Terence Trent D’Arby. Within just three days of its release, it had sold a million copies, establishing him as a nascent superstar to battle with the global behemoths (Prince, MJ and Madonna) that bestrode the music world.

That arrival though was fueled by his residence in the UK, rather than his homeland. Just as Jimi Hendrix and other artists in the past had left their home shores behind to taste success, so TTD did the same. Seemingly taking refuge on legendary music show The Tube (and dating host Paula Yates for a year), he launched his own brand of soul, pop and funk (with the help and guidance of Martin Ware of pop denizens Heaven 17) to a world unsure of where to place him in the musical climate of the moment. Europe seemed a more natural home for his prodigious talents, as he didn’t neatly pigeonhole himself alongside the trends taking root in the US. There was decidedly nothing of the newly birthed New Jack Swing sound and the awakening giant of hip-hop received no shrift either. So what could America make of this throwback with his Sam Cooke vocals, Elvis Presley lip curl and James Brown moves?

Times were getting tougher for those not following the aforementioned templates, even for established stars. 1987 saw the creative peak of Prince’s work in the form of Sign O’ the Times, but his commercial clout had dwindled post Purple Rain and wouldn’t return until he himself gave in to following trends, rather than making them with 1991’s Diamonds and Pearls. What place was there for a black man with a guitar and an incandescent charisma?

In 2015, D’Arby gave an interview to Kate Mossman (which was both revealing and utterly hilarious) for the New Statesman during which he alluded to that very question. He talked about Lenny Kravitz’s success and the notion that only one achingly virile black rock star would be “allowed” by a music industry still seeped in racial prejudice. How accurate that is will depend on your perspective, and while it’s not hard to imagine his ego-driven self-immolation of a sophomore album (1989’s Neither Fish Nor Flesh) playing its role in hastening the premature ending of his mainstream career, it is also far easier to imagine him being right.

Pressing play 30 years later, his voice and style have lost none of their allure despite some dated sounding production. His attitude and style is best summed up by the spoken word intro that kicks off his paean to the restorative joy of music, “Dance Little Sister.” Ably demonstrating the two sides of both his character and voice, it is a call to arms—the power of a heart and soul liberated on the dance floor: “Get up outta your rockin’ chair grandma! / Or rather would you care to dance grandmother?”

The first refrain is delivered with a disrespectful sneer that would scandalize the grandma in question, while the second is delivered as eloquently and politely as an Edwardian gentleman. It serves as a metaphor for his voice—a voice capable of the growling ferocity of a testosterone fueled lion, but equally capable of a deft softness containing more romanticism than a Byron poem.

These vocal qualities lend themselves perfectly to a winning blend of uptempo soul and funk songs and a line in ballads that shames most other artists. Among the former are the standout singles that were released. “If You Let Me Stay” is as great a pop song as has ever been written, as it morphs from pleading a wronged lover to stay, to a defiant “You will regret it someday” sentiment. “Wishing Well” is a stately, snappy funk number of romantic tendencies that prowls like a tiger on the loose.

As for ballads, the worldwide smash that was “Sign Your Name” is an obvious highlight with its sublime drum patterns and barely contained eroticism. But better is its close cousin “Let’s Go Forward” which sees D’Arby run the full gamut of his soul vocal stylings, from his warm and innocently cherubic mid range, through his peerless falsetto and onto his rumbling growl of desire. It is heavy on atmospherics and lust.

Elsewhere less feted songs sit comfortably alongside those classics. “As Yet Untitled” is a master class in the art of simplicity, replete with his amazing voice, exceptional performance and lyrics to shake your foundations: “Shall I tell my children if they ask of me / Did I surrender forth my right to be? / Y’see my daddy died to leave this haunting ground / And this same ground still haunts me.”

“Who’s Loving You” finds D’Arby channeling Sam Cooke and Jackie Wilson in his delivery of the Smokey Robinson classic. Album opener “If You All Get to Heaven” is a bizarre slice of slightly preposterous magic that defies accurate description, but succeeds due to his impeccable delivery and the sparkling, nimble keyboard lines of the verses.

In the months after his explosion into public consciousness, he won a Grammy award for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance in 1988 and the world was, seemingly, at his feet, and the stars seemed to augur that D’Arby was destined to become a leading light of the musical universe.

Then what might have seemed inevitable given his swift ascent to the rarefied heights happened: an equally swift drop to the depths of almost complete anonymity.

The aforementioned sophomore album Neither Fish Nor Flesh spectacularly misfired and sent him packing for the next four years. Most gave up on him, but those that didn’t were rewarded with two albums of equally stellar quality in Symphony or Damn (1993) and Vibrator (1995), before he changed his name to Sananda Maitreya and taking up residence in Italy to raise a family and work independently, churning out album after album direct to those who want them.

None of this depressing tale should obscure the quality of his output though. He may have been a lightweight boxer, but he will forever be a heavyweight musician and artist.

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Reply #1 posted 07/15/17 6:25am

AlexdeParis

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A stone cold classic music music music
"Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis
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Reply #2 posted 07/15/17 7:02am

deebee

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Coming soon: 'Introducing the Hardline According to Terence Trent D'Arby - 30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition'

Featuring:

** 2017 remaster of the classic album. Mixed by a work experience student from an original cassette copy, this new master has been specially enhanced by the 'loudness' button of a 1989 Hitachi hifi to give the listener the impression of facing a sonic onslaught by U.S. Special Forces whilst cowering in the compound of General Manuel Noriega.

** Four complete discs of Shep Pettibone remixes of 'If You All Get To Heaven' (including hard to find 'Prayer For My Camel House Version', 'Camel House Extended Mix', and 'One More Hump Camel Dub').

** Acappella version of 'As Yet Untitled'.

** 68-page booklet of TTD's extensive, free-associative 'spiritual reflections' on the album, his recent work, something about some timelords, and how he'd definitely have been more successful if Michael Jackson hadn't been such a massive c**t.


[Edited 7/15/17 7:06am]

"Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced." - James Baldwin
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Reply #3 posted 07/15/17 7:21am

deebee

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From around the time.... Cool as fook.



cool

(I actually prefer the vocal on this version of Wonderful World, but the Letterman one looks great too.)

"Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced." - James Baldwin
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Reply #4 posted 07/15/17 11:10pm

anc282

deebee said:

Coming soon: 'Introducing the Hardline According to Terence Trent D'Arby - 30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition'

Featuring:

** 2017 remaster of the classic album. Mixed by a work experience student from an original cassette copy, this new master has been specially enhanced by the 'loudness' button of a 1989 Hitachi hifi to give the listener the impression of facing a sonic onslaught by U.S. Special Forces whilst cowering in the compound of General Manuel Noriega.

** Four complete discs of Shep Pettibone remixes of 'If You All Get To Heaven' (including hard to find 'Prayer For My Camel House Version', 'Camel House Extended Mix', and 'One More Hump Camel Dub').

** Acappella version of 'As Yet Untitled'.

** 68-page booklet of TTD's extensive, free-associative 'spiritual reflections' on the album, his recent work, something about some timelords, and how he'd definitely have been more successful if Michael Jackson hadn't been such a massive c**t.


[Edited 7/15/17 7:06am]

Oh, OK... that was a joke. lol Very good.

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Reply #5 posted 07/16/17 2:51am

deebee

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anc282 said:

deebee said:

Coming soon: 'Introducing the Hardline According to Terence Trent D'Arby - 30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition'

Featuring:

** 2017 remaster of the classic album. Mixed by a work experience student from an original cassette copy, this new master has been specially enhanced by the 'loudness' button of a 1989 Hitachi hifi to give the listener the impression of facing a sonic onslaught by U.S. Special Forces whilst cowering in the compound of General Manuel Noriega.

** Four complete discs of Shep Pettibone remixes of 'If You All Get To Heaven' (including hard to find 'Prayer For My Camel House Version', 'Camel House Extended Mix', and 'One More Hump Camel Dub').

** Acappella version of 'As Yet Untitled'.

** 68-page booklet of TTD's extensive, free-associative 'spiritual reflections' on the album, his recent work, something about some timelords, and how he'd definitely have been more successful if Michael Jackson hadn't been such a massive c**t.


[Edited 7/15/17 7:06am]

Oh, OK... that was a joke. lol Very good.

razz

You know we'd only be disappointed....

"Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced." - James Baldwin
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Reply #6 posted 07/16/17 6:36am

leecaldon

It would be nice though, if this got some special edition treatment

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Reply #7 posted 07/16/17 12:42pm

Germanegro

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Nice writeup on this TTD classic debut album and his major-label trajectory. Good to see it. I'll always disagree with the characterization of his recording/production style of his post-major label output--I'd call it refreshingly simpe and unfettered, rather than "dated." That is according to preference, of course.

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Reply #8 posted 07/16/17 12:55pm

Germanegro

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deebee said:

Coming soon: 'Introducing the Hardline According to Terence Trent D'Arby - 30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition'

Featuring:

** 2017 remaster of the classic album. Mixed by a work experience student from an original cassette copy, this new master has been specially enhanced by the 'loudness' button of a 1989 Hitachi hifi to give the listener the impression of facing a sonic onslaught by U.S. Special Forces whilst cowering in the compound of General Manuel Noriega.

** Four complete discs of Shep Pettibone remixes of 'If You All Get To Heaven' (including hard to find 'Prayer For My Camel House Version', 'Camel House Extended Mix', and 'One More Hump Camel Dub').

** Acappella version of 'As Yet Untitled'.

** 68-page booklet of TTD's extensive, free-associative 'spiritual reflections' on the album, his recent work, something about some timelords, and how he'd definitely have been more successful if Michael Jackson hadn't been such a massive c**t.


[Edited 7/15/17 7:06am]

This would be the model industry anniversary reissue package, wouldn't it? Ha on the booklet--too jokey. They'd let his Michael Jackson rant go just as far as his "greater-than-Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Heart's Club Band" rant went. It's already much better to read about that stuff on his SanandaMaitreya.com site.

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Reply #9 posted 07/16/17 2:35pm

HuMpThAnG

a great debut album music

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Reply #10 posted 07/16/17 5:15pm

leecaldon

Germanegro said:

deebee said:

Coming soon: 'Introducing the Hardline According to Terence Trent D'Arby - 30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition'

Featuring:

** 2017 remaster of the classic album. Mixed by a work experience student from an original cassette copy, this new master has been specially enhanced by the 'loudness' button of a 1989 Hitachi hifi to give the listener the impression of facing a sonic onslaught by U.S. Special Forces whilst cowering in the compound of General Manuel Noriega.

** Four complete discs of Shep Pettibone remixes of 'If You All Get To Heaven' (including hard to find 'Prayer For My Camel House Version', 'Camel House Extended Mix', and 'One More Hump Camel Dub').

** Acappella version of 'As Yet Untitled'.

** 68-page booklet of TTD's extensive, free-associative 'spiritual reflections' on the album, his recent work, something about some timelords, and how he'd definitely have been more successful if Michael Jackson hadn't been such a massive c**t.


[Edited 7/15/17 7:06am]

This would be the model industry anniversary reissue package, wouldn't it? Ha on the booklet--too jokey. They'd let his Michael Jackson rant go just as far as his "greater-than-Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Heart's Club Band" rant went. It's already much better to read about that stuff on his SanandaMaitreya.com site.

I genuinely can't tell if you're in on the joke or not!

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Reply #11 posted 07/17/17 12:04pm

Germanegro

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leecaldon said:

Germanegro said:

This would be the model industry anniversary reissue package, wouldn't it? Ha on the booklet--too jokey. They'd let his Michael Jackson rant go just as far as his "greater-than-Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Heart's Club Band" rant went. It's already much better to read about that stuff on his SanandaMaitreya.com site.

I genuinely can't tell if you're in on the joke or not!

lol Ha. I acknowledge that that deebee was being jokey! lol Still, the cotnent teased-about in his fictional booklet description does exist on the Sananda site-- did my mention of its existence contribute to your confusion?

>

There may be a few folks around who wonder what might have occured career-wise had TTD kept his name and continued on with the major labels. Perhaps after the newly-minted Prometheus and Pandora album hits the market, the 30th anniversary of his debut album may inspire him to go in on a project of doo-wop and soul tracks to satisfy that set of admirers who love his skill in that genre. Wouldn't that be cool?

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Reply #12 posted 07/17/17 3:21pm

AlexdeParis

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Can't forget the b-side "Elevators and Hearts," one of my favorites

"Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis
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Reply #13 posted 07/17/17 3:32pm

MickyDolenz

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You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #14 posted 07/18/17 5:26am

leecaldon

Germanegro said:

leecaldon said:

I genuinely can't tell if you're in on the joke or not!

lol Ha. I acknowledge that that deebee was being jokey! lol Still, the cotnent teased-about in his fictional booklet description does exist on the Sananda site-- did my mention of its existence contribute to your confusion?

>

There may be a few folks around who wonder what might have occured career-wise had TTD kept his name and continued on with the major labels. Perhaps after the newly-minted Prometheus and Pandora album hits the market, the 30th anniversary of his debut album may inspire him to go in on a project of doo-wop and soul tracks to satisfy that set of admirers who love his skill in that genre. Wouldn't that be cool?

That would be awesome. Too much of his music in the last in the "Post-Millennium Rock" era has sounded samey, with some notable exceptions such as "Has It Been Too Quiet/" on Nigor Mortis and the opening 3 tracks on "Return to Zooathalon". They made me realise what is still possible.

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