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Keeping Soul Alive Is No Picnic - Read This Article! There was a time, not long ago, when the term "soul music" was
verboten on commercial radio. In the mid-'80s, then-popular local R&B FM station KSOL dropped its "K-Soul" IDs and forbade announcers to say the word on the air. Billboard magazine, the record industry bible, called its charts for African American popular music "soul" from 1969 to 1982, then switched the designation to "black" before settling in 1990 on "R&B," a short form of the tag "rhythm and blues" coined in 1949 by Billboard staff writer Jerry Wexler. Soul -- a style influenced by African American gospel music that was pioneered in the late 1950s by such performers as Ray Charles and Sam Cooke - - refuses to go away, however. It continues to be felt in the music of contemporary R&B singers like Usher and Alicia Keys, whose songs are heard alongside hip-hop hits on youth-oriented "urban" stations, including KMEL in San Francisco. And radio programmers have created the term "neo-soul" for the music of vocalists such as Jill Scott and Angie Stone, whose current R&B is more deeply rooted in classic, or "old-school," soul. Stone, who performs Monday afternoon as part of the eighth annual KBLX Stone Soul Picnic at Cal State East Bay's new Pioneer Amphitheatre, doesn't care for the neo-soul tag. "There's nothing new about soul music other than the parties who are chosen to take on the legacy of keeping the music alive," Stone says. "I do get played every now and then (on urban radio), but I may not get played as much because they want to throw me in that 'neo' bag." Stone made her recording debut in 1979 with the hit "Funk You Up" with the Sequence, a trio of teenage women from Columbia, S.C., whose mix of rapping and singing predated that of TLC by a dozen years. She's been straddling the line between soul and hip-hop ever since. After re-emerging as a solo singer six years ago, Stone has featured such guest rappers as Eve and Snoop Dogg on her albums. Still, she hasn't gotten as much play from urban stations as she'd like. "They've made hip-hop pop," she complains. "They found a way to appeal to the children, and the parents spend the money to buy the records. That's great from a commercial standpoint, but what is bad about it is they're not getting the grit and grime of what real, real soul music is about." Stone and other contemporary soul artists have found a welcome mat at so- called adult contemporary stations such as San Francisco's KBLX that mix current music with R&B oldies from the '70s onward. "She has very much what audiences today consider an old-school approach," KBLX program director and early morning weekday DJ Kevin Brown says of Stone. The FM station dubs its music format "smooth R&B" and doesn't use the term "soul," except for veteran Bay Area DJ Bob Jones' weekly "Classic Soul Sunday" oldies program. Stone doesn't tell her age. Neither does Ledisi, a former Oakland resident now living in New York whose self-released 2000 debut CD "Soulsinger" didn't get played on KBLX -- Brown says he was unaware of it -- though her recording of "My Sensitivity (Gets in the Way)" from the various-artists Luther Vandross salute album "Forever, for Always, for Luther" on GRP Records has been getting major spins from the station since its release last summer. Teena Marie, headliner of this year's KBLX Memorial Day concert, isn't shy about giving her age -- she's 49 -- though she says it has served to keep her recent recordings off urban radio. The Santa Monica-born singer, songwriter and producer scored a string of R&B hit singles from 1979 to 1981, including "I'm a Sucker for Your Love," "Square Biz," "Lovergirl" and "Ooo La La La," many of which crossed over to the pop charts. Her current CD, "La Dona" on the Cash Money Classics label, has sold more than 450,000 copies since its release a year ago, in great degree because of play on adult contemporary radio stations. "Crossover used to mean black to white," says Teena Marie, the most successful white soul singer in the history of R&B. "Now crossover is adult contemporary to the younger stations. Some of them played 'La Dona,' but the majority of them play rap music now. I was just nominated for a Grammy in the same category as Alicia Keys, Angie Stone, Jill Scott and Janet Jackson, but a lot of the radio stations were telling the record company, 'Oh, she doesn't fit our demographic because of her age.' " The Whispers, a soul vocal quartet fronted by Wallace "Scotty" Scott and his identical twin, Walter, are the senior act at the KBLX Stone Soul Picnic. They cut their first record in Los Angeles in 1963 and relocated to the Bay Area three years later after the success of an engagement at a San Francisco club called Little Bo Peep's that had been booked by then-KDIA disc jockey Sly Stone. After hitting the big time -- topping the Billboard R&B chart in 1980 with "And the Beat Goes On" and again in 1987 with "Rock Steady" -- they moved back to Southern California. The group, whose oldies are staples of adult contemporary radio, is planning to release an album this summer. It will be the Whispers' first recording in eight years, but they're not much concerned about urban radio play. "Radio now considers us almost dinosaurs," Scotty says. "We probably work more now that we did in our heyday because there's an old-school station like KBLX in every major city around the country. Our demographic is anywhere from 30 years old to 65 or 70. Our attitude is that if there are some young people who like our stuff and want to buy it, by all means, please. But that's not who we're shooting for. We're going for the people who have supported us all these years." | |
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