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Thread started 08/22/07 11:58am

vainandy

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Here's the best article I've ever read about Shitney.

http://www.classicwhitney.com/newsfile/reports/articles/independent_houston_15sep2002.htm

Independent, Houston...

Independent: Houston we have a problem

Whitney had it all. The looks, the heritage and that elemental voice. So where did it all go so wrong? Mark Simpson on the diva who fell to earth

15 September 2002

I was never a fan of Whitney Houston – it wasn't necessary. Whitney was something that simply happened to you, whether you took notice or not, like the weather – though if Whitney was the weather, it was always very, very sunny. Whitney was so blindingly, scorchingly successful in the 1980s and early 1990s, that she was pop music. She was the mainstream air that we all breathed, or at least the air that MTV, car and workplace radios conducted into our heads. Her debut album went double-platinum overnight. She then collected seven consecutive US number ones, outstripping the Beatles and Elvis. Not bad for a skinny 22-year-old black girl from New Jersey.

But then, as we were told over and over again, Whitney wasn't just any skinny black girl from the wrong side of the Hudson: she was Soul Aristocracy, the daughter of Cissy Houston (acclaimed singer with The Sweet Inspirations, backing vocalist for Elvis), goddaughter of Aretha Franklin and niece of Dionne Warwick. But for all this pedigree, her Nefertitian looks and a voice like a fifth element that made earth, wind, fire and water seem insubstantial by comparison, the most striking, and possibly most irresistible, thing about Whitney has always been that it is very difficult to believe that she bothers to mean any of the words she sings, however well she sings them.

Except, that is, for one word, "I". When Whitney sings the personal pronoun you are left in no doubt that this word means something very special indeed. Which is why her ballads are so funny and so terrifying all at once: "The grea-test love of all is hap-pen-ing to meeeee!''. This is also why the country singer Dolly Parton's earlier interpretation of "I Will Always Love You" with its delicate, charming masochism had more soul than Whitney's bullet-proof Kevlar version worn in The Bodyguard (1992), the massive popularity of which confirmed her status as the world's No 1 superstar (and favourite taped singer at funerals).

Mind you, the supersonic nuclear blast-wave of Ms Houston's version – "Iaeyaeyaeyaeyae!" – just flattens everything before it. Whitney's voice didn't need any soul; it was pure Will. Whitney is speaking a frightening truth here about romantic love: it's a form of egotism. "I will always love you" is a stalking, psychotic declaration of a love for one's own ability to love, regardless of all obstacles, such as, say, the beloved's indifference. In fact, next to Ms Willpower's transcendent egotism, that other bullying Mistress of the 1980s, Ms Blonde Ambition, is just a goofy backing dancer who got lucky.

But now, 10 years on, Whitney's ego isn't quite what it used to be. Nor is she, it turns out, quite so invulnerable. In the last decade she has suffered a legion of personal and professional disasters as messy as she used to be squeaky clean, and appears to be struggling with an alleged drug habit that many worry could overwhelm her completely.

But all this means she's now interesting! And for something other than the sheer scale of her success and the preternatural power of her voice (which, it is rumoured, may anyway not be what it used to be).

A Channel 4 documentary, Whitney Houston: The True Story, broadcast this Tuesday, examines the rise and fall and rise – and possible final fall – of the Whitney Empire of the Ego, though, as you might hope, the programme focuses rather more on the fall, which pride seems, rather satisfyingly, to have gone before. The photographer for the cover of I'm Your Baby Tonight recounts how Whitney kept her the rest of her staff waiting on set 12 hours, and when she finally showed there was no apology, explanation or even embarrassment. A promoter recalls how a concert was cancelled 15 minutes before it was due to start. "There was no explanation and no suggestion of it being rescheduled," he whines, like the mere mortal he is.

However, for those prone to the German vice (i.e. most of us) there's plenty of shameful joy to be had. We hear about the jeers she received at the Soul Train Awards in 1989 from a black audience who felt she was too "white". The violent, co-dependent but enduring marriage to "bad-boy" rapper Bobby Brown. The marijuana drug-bust in 2000 and her reported indignation that the drug laws might apply to her. The persistent accusations of lesbianism, even from her own husband. Her wraith-like appearance at the Michael Jackson anniversary concert in 2001. Her removal from the Academy Awards Ceremony in the same year by her old friend Burt Bacharah for allegedly forgetting the words to her songs (including "Over the Rainbow"?).

And perhaps most poignant of all, the Spin magazine journalist who witnessed a dazed-looking Ms Houston playing the piano – in a room which had no piano, and who opines that "the general consensus seems to be that she's a complete junkie... There are [false] stories every day about her having died, being on the brink of dying, having just checked in to hospital..."

Alas, with the exception of Whitney's make-up artist who is touchingly loyal, there is a shortage of members of her inner circle dishing the dirt or anything at all. But then, as one forthright American female journalist puts it, "She's the cash cow. Nobody wants to upset her." The producer Sam Kingsley explains: "A number of people close to Whitney, including Whitney's former manager, did agree to be interviewed but when they realised she hadn't given her royal assent they quickly withdrew."

Real revelations about Whitney's private life are much more likely to appear in the tabloid press which possesses a chequebook large enough to wean embittered confidantes off Ms Houston's monetary udders.

Perhaps no one has more stories and kisses to tell than Robyn Crawford, the childhood girl friend and close business associate assumed by many to have been Whitney's lover since the early Eighties. "She wouldn't speak to us at all," says Kingsley. "She's rumoured to have been given a big payoff, post Bobby Brown, which includes a silence clause."

While Whitney may at her peak have come to represent a will even purer than her voice, it wasn't purely her own. "Whitney" was a product of the ambition and determination of several people. Robyn, an intelligent, shrewd and imposing woman. Her mother Cissy, who never got the recognition for her own talents she felt she deserved (when Whitney's career took off at the stripling age of 22, she reportedly told friends over and over again "and to think we've waited so many years for this to happen!"). And one flamboyant white man – the Svengali president of Arista Records Clive Davis.

Clive signed Whitney when she was just 19. He realised that Whitney possessed a great talent and could be a very successful recording artist but he also realised that she could be much more than that. She could be the biggest recording star in the world.

In Whitney Houston: The True Story, Kenneth Reynolds, marketing director at Arista Records, recounts: "Clive had a formula already. Whitney was just a talent to mould. She had to lose the gospel roots. The early version of 'Saving All My Love' sounded like the new Aretha Franklin. But Clive didn't like it – 'No, it's too black'. Clive also complained that the cover of Whitney's first album made her look 'too ethnic'. He wanted her to look more like everyone else."

So Whitney was put in blond wigs and colourful make-up that made her light-black skin look even lighter (in the video for "How Will I Know" she looks as if she is wearing a basket of dyed poodles on her head). But Clive Davis was proved right – Whitney became huge instead of just successful. She became pop music.

But by the end of the 1980s tastes were changing. Hip hop and R 'n' B, black music that wore its "ethnic" and "street" credentials on its sleeve, was the new pop – in other words, it was what white kids wanted.

Meanwhile, the US black community itself was beginning to resent Whitney's success and what they saw as her "betrayal". Hence her humiliation at the 1989 Soul Train Music Awards, where she was called "Oreo" (an American biscuit which is black on the outside and white on the inside).

Perhaps it's just a coincidence that she ended up marrying the very next act up – rapper Bobby Brown – who had a reception as rapturous as hers had been the opposite. Bobby, known for his partying, seemed an unlikely match for Whitney. But perhaps that was the point. Rather than the nice girl seduced by the naughty Bobby from the Boston projects, "soul aristocracy" Whitney saw Bobby as her ticket to "ghetto fabulousness".

Whatever the truth of this, Whitney began to become known as a party girl and the successful 1998 comeback (sometimes almost singalong) album My Love is Your Love, with guest appearances by a new generation of R 'n' B stars – and a promo video which depicted a 1970s party in the streets of Harlem – succeeded in relaunching Whitney's credibility. However, it seems that there has been a price to pay for Whitney's new fashionability and "improved" blackness – but then, suffering is supposedly good for the soul, and, now it seems, sales.

Whether that price includes, as some maintain, that elemental voice, will become clear with her new album, Just Whitney, scheduled for release at the end of the year. If it turns out that she has finally squandered her talent, it will be sad but perhaps understandable. Such a vast "gift" is undoubtedly also a curse. Squandering it might be the last act of will available to a very wilful lady called Whitney.

Mark Simpson's 'The Queen is Dead' is published by Arcadia (L11.99)


NEWSFILE: 17 SEPTEMBER 2002


My, my, my....what an interesting read. evillol
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #1 posted 08/22/07 12:16pm

banks

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ok... I thought it was new... this article is almost 5yrs old
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Reply #2 posted 08/22/07 12:19pm

vainandy

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banks said:

ok... I thought it was new... this article is almost 5yrs old


It's not new but it's verrrrry interesting. lol
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #3 posted 08/22/07 12:21pm

Empress

vainandy said:



It's not new but it's verrrrry interesting. lol


Not sure what you find so very interesting. Is there anything in this article that you didn't already know?
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Reply #4 posted 08/22/07 12:28pm

vainandy

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Empress said:

vainandy said:



It's not new but it's verrrrry interesting. lol


Not sure what you find so very interesting. Is there anything in this article that you didn't already know?


It's not really something that I didn't already know or assume about the reasons behind the type of music she recorded, the way it sounded, or her choice in a husband, the timing, and reasoning behind it.

I just posted it so other people could see that there have been articles written about it by people who seem to have wondered the same thing I have.
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #5 posted 08/22/07 12:37pm

Empress

vainandy said:



It's not really something that I didn't already know or assume about the reasons behind the type of music she recorded, the way it sounded, or her choice in a husband, the timing, and reasoning behind it.

I just posted it so other people could see that there have been articles written about it by people who seem to have wondered the same thing I have.


Maybe I read this article before somewhere, but none of it surprised me at all.

It's too bad she didn't just stick to singing and didn't try to be a pop star.
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Reply #6 posted 08/22/07 12:52pm

vainandy

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Empress said:

vainandy said:



It's not really something that I didn't already know or assume about the reasons behind the type of music she recorded, the way it sounded, or her choice in a husband, the timing, and reasoning behind it.

I just posted it so other people could see that there have been articles written about it by people who seem to have wondered the same thing I have.


Maybe I read this article before somewhere, but none of it surprised me at all.

It's too bad she didn't just stick to singing and didn't try to be a pop star.


She should have went into acting instead. She could have played a great Mary Poppins. lol
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #7 posted 08/22/07 1:35pm

funkpill

vainandy said:



She should have went into acting instead. She could have played a great Mary Poppins. lol



Actually,

She wasn't a bad actress hmmm
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Reply #8 posted 08/22/07 1:42pm

vainandy

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funkpill said:

vainandy said:



She should have went into acting instead. She could have played a great Mary Poppins. lol



Actually,

She wasn't a bad actress hmmm


I actually enjoyed her in "The Bodyguard". It was a very enjoyable movie and she did a pretty good acting job. It's just too bad she sang those boring ass songs in the movie. lol
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #9 posted 08/22/07 4:24pm

bboy87

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That article made me dislike Clive Davis even more
"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
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Reply #10 posted 08/22/07 8:26pm

phunkdaddy

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vainandy said:



I actually enjoyed her in "The Bodyguard". It was a very enjoyable movie and she did a pretty good acting job. It's just too bad she sang those boring ass songs in the movie. lol


That's what made me dislike the movie even more. She did a good acting job in waiting to exhale. She later became more cocky as the years went by and thought she was the shoo in to get the lead role of dorothy dandridge but we know that role went to perhaps the most beautiful lady in america.
Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint
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Reply #11 posted 08/22/07 8:47pm

VonMarie

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Recent piture of Whitney.....SAD! disbelief
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Reply #12 posted 08/22/07 8:51pm

ThePunisher

I remember walking through the Brookdale Mall with my lady at the time (This had to be mid 80's). We walked past a record store and there was this life sized cardboard cut-out of Whitney in the doorway. I made the big mistake of staring just a little too long because my girl all of a sudden yelled "DAMN N***ER, WHY DON'T YOU TAKE IT HOME AND MAKE LOVE TO IT!!!? WHEWW That was embarrasing.
[Edited 8/22/07 20:53pm]
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Reply #13 posted 08/23/07 12:19am

Justin1972UK

VonMarie said:



Recent piture of Whitney.....SAD! disbelief


That picture's a few years old. She looks a lot better these days.

Mark Simpson's writing is always entertaining. He has a blog here: http://marksimpson.com/blog/
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Reply #14 posted 08/23/07 12:27am

carlcranshaw

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The Jodie Foster and Kelly McGillis story should be mentioned.
‎"The first time I saw the cover of Dirty Mind in the early 80s I thought, 'Is this some drag queen ripping on Freddie Prinze?'" - Some guy on The Gear Page
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Reply #15 posted 08/23/07 6:10am

vainandy

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phunkdaddy said:

vainandy said:



I actually enjoyed her in "The Bodyguard". It was a very enjoyable movie and she did a pretty good acting job. It's just too bad she sang those boring ass songs in the movie. lol


That's what made me dislike the movie even more. She did a good acting job in waiting to exhale. She later became more cocky as the years went by and thought she was the shoo in to get the lead role of dorothy dandridge but we know that role went to perhaps the most beautiful lady in america.


Didn't Halle Barry get that role? Is so, no Shitney can't fuck with her in a million years.
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #16 posted 08/23/07 6:11am

vainandy

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ThePunisher said:

I remember walking through the Brookdale Mall with my lady at the time (This had to be mid 80's). We walked past a record store and there was this life sized cardboard cut-out of Whitney in the doorway. I made the big mistake of staring just a little too long because my girl all of a sudden yelled "DAMN N***ER, WHY DON'T YOU TAKE IT HOME AND MAKE LOVE TO IT!!!? WHEWW That was embarrasing.
[Edited 8/22/07 20:53pm]


I would have taken it home and threw darts at it. lol
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #17 posted 08/23/07 6:20am

vainandy

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VonMarie said:



Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #18 posted 08/23/07 10:34am

bboy87

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vainandy said:

VonMarie said:




more like:

Whitney eating crack flavored cherries
"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world."
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Reply #19 posted 08/23/07 12:51pm

VonMarie

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bboy87 said:

vainandy said:




more like:

Whitney eating crack flavored cherries

She's still lookin' tow-back!!! lol lol lol
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