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Thread started 07/10/08 5:23pm

SirPsycho

<<<<<<<VAN HUNT ARTICLE>>>>>>>

...this may or may not have been posted earlier, but i know some will be happy to read it cool




Dispatches From the Battlefield: An Interview With Van Hunt

[30 June 2008]
Van Hunt recorded one of the best albums of 2008: Popular. The only problem is you're not going to hear it.
by Christian John Wikane


If it were up to Van Hunt, he’d perform with the Stooges and Gang of Four. “I think I’m a punk rocker at heart”, he muses backstage at the very un-punk B.B. King’s, in the heart of Times Square. “I just love the aggression in that music.” Van Hunt dismantles a whole host of assumptions about his music, primarily that he is not the answer to the church-schooled soul men of generations past. “For some people, man, they see my face on the cover and they’re like, ‘Oh I know what this is. It’s some soul music.’” If anyone is expecting Sam Cooke or Otis Redding at a Van Hunt concert, they’d best look elsewhere.

It’s only a few hours before show time and Hunt is the epitome of calm, despite the torrent of rock and funk he will soon unleash onstage. “Lately, I feel like I’m going to war. I feel aggressive for some reason,” he says, dressed, appropriately, in a button down, military-green jacket. His career has been a war of sorts: war with being pigeonholed, war between commercial and creative success, war with embodying an image fabricated by the industry machinery. Hunt has probably even waged war with himself but only to be more truthful in his art. The occasion of Hunt’s latest venture onto the battlefield is a pre-release tour for his third album, Popular. Beneath the bravado is a musician whose personal standards of excellence propelled him to create a work of music that stands confidently apart from anything else. It’s that exceptional.

The only problem is Popular did not appear online or in stores on January 15, its release date. Add Blue Note to Hunt’s list of purple hearts.

The backstory is this. In 2007, Hunt shifted from Capitol to Blue Note within the EMI-owned family of labels. His first two albums, Van Hunt (2002) and On the Jungle Floor (2006), were both met with critical success, but sales were modest by comparison. Presumably, Blue Note was meant to be a promising alternative for the L.A./Atlanta-based musician, and at first it was. A four-song EP entitled The Popular Machine surfaced online in August 2007 and generated some healthy buzz. A pair of key cuts from Popular, “Turn My TV On” and “The Lowest 1 of My Desires”, and two acoustic tracks found Hunt working without any apparent creative boundaries or interference from the label. Yet, despite five months of promotion and touring, Blue Note and Hunt parted ways only weeks before Popular‘s slated street date.

Tension could be detected in late 2007 at the B.B. King’s show, the occasion where I met and spoke with Hunt. Representatives from Blue Note sat at a reserved table towards the rear of the venue during his set, far removed from the wildly responsive audience who stood and shouted throughout the performance. Mid-way through the show, Hunt called out, “Is Blue Note here?” and quipped to the audience, “They’re the ones sitting down over there in the back.” There was clearly a disconnect between the kind of audience that shows up at Hunt’s shows, and the kind of label Hunt was on. He belonged neither to the label’s group of pop-oriented acts like Norah Jones, Amos Lee, Elisabeth Withers, and Suzanne Vega, nor to the straight-ahead jazz acts that round out Blue Note’s roster.

It appears that Hunt needs some explaining to the record industry, because the fans get him even if the executives do not (or more specifically, they don’t know how to profit off his music). At the time of our chat, Hunt hadn’t yet parted with Blue Note, but he offered a candid explanation about his art, creative process, and who exactly listens to his music.

“Most artists say that they want to make the ultimate statement,” Hunt suggests. “I certainly do, but I don’t mind people seeing all of the things that I would consider imperfections, because, quite honestly, I feel like they’re better than anything else they’re gonna hear.” In print, Van Hunt’s words might come across as arrogant. In person, his manner is very matter-of-fact. He’s self-taught on just about every instrument he plays, so there is substantial talent to be reckoned with. His first two albums showcased a unique fusion of rock, funk, and soul, but were by no means indicative of his entire range.

For the fortunate few who’ve heard promo copies of Popular, it’s clear that Hunt cemented that fusion while adding a bunch of new ingredients. He explains the arch of his three albums (and already-recorded fourth album) this way:

“I try not to repeat myself melodically, chordally, lyrically. I like the first record just because it’s akin to, for lack of a more pleasant phrase, taking a shit. It’s just something that’s in you and it’s got to come out, whether it stinks or smells like cherries. The second record was like cooking. ‘Are you going to be a chef or are you just going to go in and microwave something?’ It was like, okay, I want to be a chef, so let me go ahead and throw this shit together. As it turned out, I made a pretty good meal, but I was not quite a chef. The third record was, ‘You’re close to being a chef now, but what are you really?’ I discovered that I’m an explorer, I’m a philosopher, I’m a musician. The third record was born out of the beginning of that process. The fourth record, I’m hoping, is that statement: Me, as an explorer/philosopher/musician.”

If Hunt is an explorer, then Popular contains a treasure trove of discoveries. Blue Note may have no plans to release Popular, but the brilliance of the album necessitates discussion. Popular is by no means conventional sounding, or even as instantly accessible as Hunt’s first two albums, yet it sounds like Hunt is truer to his muse, sonically and lyrically.

The polyrhythmic funk of “SNM”, “Ur Personal Army”, and “Blood from a Heart of Stone” illustrates how a swirl of sounds coalesces inside Hunt’s musical mind. How does he even conceptualize such elaborately structured grooves? “These things, honestly, they come to me pretty complete. The words, the melodies, the chords, the layering, the polychords, the rhythms, the polyrhythms—they’re always there. It’s just a matter of what I pay attention to. Sometimes I choose to ignore it just because it would drive [me] crazy. I could literally be creating all day.”

The songs themselves don’t fit into any thematic scheme, despite the tasty possibilities the notion of “popularity” presents across a whole album. (The dynamics between Van Hunt and Blue Note, however, present a whole different subtext about the notion of what is popular.) People aspire for popularity in a culture where MySpace hits are a fatuous measure of “friends”. It’s not uncommon for someone to broadcast the minutiae of their lives on YouTube and yearn for some sort of affirmation from strangers in the comments section. Hunt pinpoints the root of this need on “Popular” in the line, “You fear that no one will know your name”. The tune itself was written about ten years ago, long before the social networking phenomenon. Initially, “Popular” wasn’t a critique on society, but rather Hunt’s dialogue with a kid in Anytown, USA. Count Bass D (who guests on the track) encouraged Hunt to revisit and record the song for the album.

Hunt uncovered other layers of meaning in the song, primarily the idea that the importance of popularity amongst one’s peers is a driving force behind certain behavior. He explains, “I don’t know very many people who don’t yearn to be accepted, maybe except for myself. I’m in a business where I have to be accepted in order to make a living. I have close friends who would say that I, too, need the validation that comes from putting a record out and receiving a good response from it. They may be right.”

Good responses from listeners, not voluminous record sales, are enough of a validation for Hunt, though that wasn’t always his mindset. Even with a million dollar marketing and promotion budget, On the Jungle Floor was hardly worked for all its worth by Capitol. The label’s inabilities to break the album made Hunt seriously re-evaluate his priorities. The sober perspective he now has on his career, and the fact that acceptance doesn’t necessarily translate to a chart-topping album, is the backbone of “N the Southern Shade”. The tune suggests that the rock star life is better left behind. He qualifies success quite differently:

“I alleviate any pressure for myself by using my own measurement for success, which is, ‘Can I take what’s in my mind and lay it down, put it at the tips of my fingers?’ That, for me, is the only criteria that I need. If somebody buys a shitload of records, that would be great. If they don’t, then I’m going to have to make it some other kind of way just to feed my son and myself. I feel [success] everyday because I’ve made three albums and now I’m working on a fourth. I do want it heard by as many people as possible. Ten million ‘no’s’ to get a million ‘yes’s’ would be all right for me.”

Unfortunately, Popular won’t have the opportunity to be heard by anywhere near a million listeners, unless EMI sells the album back to Hunt for a reasonable price so he can release it himself (or an underground bootleg campaign kicks in). The Popular Machine EP, still available online, gives the curious and the already converted a taste of the album’s flavorful brew.

The new-wave punch of “Turn My TV On” contains one of Hunt’s freakiest grooves. “Everyone loves a stranger / But nobody wants the danger”, he warns. From the perspective of the character Hunt portrays, the drama and the lack of control over situations in the real world are insurmountable risk factors, so he sits at home in his underwear. He insulates himself with his TV and computer, the passports to all his desires. His world, the “new world”, is one of message boards and websites where any TV channel can transport someone to their fantasy and anyone with a web profile can become a celebrity. Even when propositioned to meet in the “real world”, he declines, replying, “Like most things a good time looks better from a distance”. About that character, Hunt says, “That person in ‘Turn My TV On’ probably wants nothing more than to interact with somebody. At the same time, if I ran across that person, I don’t think that I would urge them out into the world to go and fall in love.” The juxtaposition between the thrill of the “new world” and the danger of the “real world” is the core of the tune’s shifty chords and Hunt’s breathless intonation.

He dives into the depths of carnal cravings on “The Lowest 1 of My Desires”, the second track from The Popular Machine that was also intended for release on Popular. The music and lyrics are intense. The guitar riffs are aggressive, and the delivery of Hunt’s message—“I wanna fuck you, baby”—is imbued with sexualized hunger. It’s probably the one song in his catalog that has the most polarizing effect on listeners: those who dig its explicit nature and those who do not.

The two extremes are not lost on the song’s writer. Even one of Hunt’s friends attended a show of his in Atlanta and was disturbed by the so-called “fuck you” song. “I think that’s the general reaction from people who feel uptight about something in their lives,” Hunt observes. “I feel like if you don’t like my music, then there’s something going on with you. It’s honest and there’s not much bullshit on there. I thought it was a beautiful period to put on that sentence. I thought, ‘I wanna fuck you’ was perfect after saying so many other things that were poetic.”

Another dividing factor among Hunt’s listeners is the way his music has evolved since Van Hunt. Fans who liked the marriage of contemporary and classic R&B gravitated most towards his debut. When Hunt started laying on more guitar licks, some listeners did not applaud. Shortly after “Turn My TV On” debuted on iTunes, one commentator even wrote, “While I loved his first album, and grew to like his second album, all this upbeat dance funk is not my cup of tea. I’m not into Van Hunt’s new style ... sorry”. That kind of listener is very familiar to Hunt. “I know exactly what songs that person likes,” he says. “They like ‘Seconds of Pleasure’ and ‘Down Here in Hell With You’ and that’s it. I know that person. I meet them all the time. They think that the white establishment has gotten ahold of me and is convincing me to put out all this pop music. I’m gonna be myself no matter what’s going on.”

Because Hunt excels in rock music, the temptation is to group him into the “black rock” category. The idea of such a category exists way outside Hunt’s orbit. Though he doesn’t think in terms of being a “black rock” musician, he hopes that his music inspires the movement. “I feel like I’m out here and I write good music and honest lyrics,” he affirms. “If you have a movement, Van Hunt should be the symbol of your movement.” He continues:

“I think people do a lot of absurd things to keep them from the real issues, which is, ‘How good are you?’ Are you as good as you want to be, and if not, then your ass needs to be practicing. To me, if you’re going to pick up the guitar, you need to be as good as George Benson. If you’re gonna sit down and play the piano, you need to be Herbie Hancock or better, and of course I sit there, and it’s good, but it ain’t Herbie Hancock. I’m caught in this weird world where I really want to practice, but I have records that are out there. I have to make a living. The next statement I make has to be me as a musician on par with the masters.”

Had Popular been released, audiences could hear just how completely Hunt immersed himself into the project, even at the expense of mass approval. He resides, almost stubbornly, outside of any one genre, and that’s largely part of his appeal. Perhaps this was Blue Note’s ultimate challenge: how to market an artist whose scope is well beyond the confines of any prescribed box.

Despite the fall out with Blue Note, Hunt is in no way abandoning music. His MySpace page is regularly updated with new tracks and demos. There is absolutely no censor in his creative process. “I call myself a creationist,” he says. “I’m sure some people will tell you that you need resistance, melodrama. I don’t really need anything, honestly. A good night’s sleep, a little time alone, and I feel like I can create a world.” The world he created on Popular is probably the most musically gratifying, if challenging, environment one could experience right here and now.

This century’s fiercest musical artisan is already onto other missions. He was in the middle of recording tracks for a fourth album at the time of our conversation, and is most likely onto a fifth. The difference now is that Van Hunt is no longer tethered to a label. A punk-rocker at heart, a funk-master in style, this soldier has won the battle.


http://www.popmatters.com...-van-hunt/
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Reply #1 posted 07/10/08 7:24pm

paligap

avatar

Kool! Thanks for the Article!!!!!

"Popular" should have been released- It's a shame---
this is the album that won me over, and of course, they decided not to release it....figures....

Notice how a lot of the best stuff around just isn't getting released? From Kamal The Abstract and Bilal's Love For Sale, to Stuart Zender's AZUR project, and Van Hunt...the list goes on.....




...
" I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout
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Reply #2 posted 07/10/08 7:34pm

SirPsycho

paligap said:

Kool! Thanks for the Article!!!!!

"Popular" should have been released- It's a shame---
this is the album that won me over, and of course, they decided not to release it....figures....

Notice how a lot of the best stuff around just isn't getting released? From Kamal The Abstract and Bilal's Love For Sale, to Stuart Zender's AZUR project, and Van Hunt...the list goes on.....




...


i have all of em except that one, but judge by the list, i'll have to "get" that one before the night is over...
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Reply #3 posted 07/10/08 7:35pm

CosmicDancer

'This century’s fiercest musical artisan'

I want to Throw Up ! ill
There's so much Bullshit in this article its ridiculous rolleyes
[Edited 7/10/08 19:37pm]
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Reply #4 posted 07/10/08 7:46pm

bsk3601

... ladies and gentlemen please take your seats ...
genuine fans & well-wishers on the right ... haters on the left.
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Reply #5 posted 07/10/08 7:51pm

SirPsycho

CosmicDancer said:

'This century’s fiercest musical artisan'

I want to Throw Up ! ill
There's so much Bullshit in this article its ridiculous rolleyes
[Edited 7/10/08 19:37pm]


all i wanna know is if you've heard "The Popular Machine" in it's entirety...

we dont even have to go further...just nod or disbelief
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Reply #6 posted 07/10/08 11:29pm

popgodazipa

avatar

Here is my thing about Hunt. I have all of his albums..On the Jungle Floor is my Fav and I thought Popular had it's moment. Now from the outside looking in his approach toward the music industry is radical. In the sense that he shakes up their sensibilities of what is norm and what the public will readily accept. I get the need for an artist to create without boundaries. So I am in no way suggesting that Van conform and capitulate to whatever the boys and girls in the A&R department would have him do. He has to reinvent his image as rebel and stand as an innovator within the current constructs of the industry. He will have to sacrifice a bit of his bravado and sharpen his public image a bit. Good music should always be enough leverage in the end, but it must be contained and fashioned in a form that is both palatable to the public and the industry. Good luck Mr. Hunt..
[Edited 7/10/08 23:30pm]
1 over Jordan...the greatest since
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Reply #7 posted 07/11/08 2:50am

SPYZFAN1

Great interview. And I strongly agree with his Benson/Hancock statements. I thought I was the only one who thought that.
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Reply #8 posted 07/11/08 5:10am

CosmicDancer

nod
My reason for saying what i said is...
how the hell can a tricycle expect to be compared with a huge ass truck ?
come on..confused
Prince can talk like that !
Stevie can talk like that !
James Brown could talk like that !
HENDRIX could talk like that...
Sly Stone, Curtis, even D'angelo can somewhat talk like that...
and If we are talking about pure star quality and REAL ability to move masses of people even Lenny can kinda talk like that...
VAN HUNT?!?!?!
come on..confused
how many albums has he released...? and how many people that dont actively search out new/underground/obscure artists even know him..? or can even hum one of his tunes...?
come on..confused

SirPsycho said:

CosmicDancer said:

'This century’s fiercest musical artisan'

I want to Throw Up ! ill
There's so much Bullshit in this article its ridiculous rolleyes
[Edited 7/10/08 19:37pm]


all i wanna know is if you've heard "The Popular Machine" in it's entirety...

we dont even have to go further...just nod or disbelief

[Edited 7/11/08 5:18am]
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Reply #9 posted 07/11/08 5:21am

midnightmover

CosmicDancer said:

nod
My reason for saying what i said is...
how the hell can a tricycle expect to be compared with a huge ass truck ?
come on..confused
Prince can talk like that !
Stevie can talk like that !
James Brown could talk like that !
HENDRIX could talk like that...
Sly Stone, Curtis, even D'angelo can somewhat talk like that...
and If we are talking about pure star quality and REAL ability to move masses of people even Lenny can kinda talk like that...
VAN HUNT?!?!?!
come on..confused

falloff lol lol
“The man who never looks into a newspaper is better informed than he who reads them, inasmuch as he who knows nothing is nearer to truth than he whose mind is filled with falsehoods and errors.”
- Thomas Jefferson
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Reply #10 posted 07/11/08 6:02am

Mong

The fortunate few who've heard Popular? With the amount of copies on eBay, surely everyone's heard it by now.
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Reply #11 posted 07/11/08 7:54am

SirPsycho

CosmicDancer said:

nod
My reason for saying what i said is...
how the hell can a tricycle expect to be compared with a huge ass truck ?
come on..confused
Prince can talk like that !
Stevie can talk like that !
James Brown could talk like that !
HENDRIX could talk like that...
Sly Stone, Curtis, even D'angelo can somewhat talk like that...
and If we are talking about pure star quality and REAL ability to move masses of people even Lenny can kinda talk like that...
VAN HUNT?!?!?!
come on..confused
how many albums has he released...? and how many people that dont actively search out new/underground/obscure artists even know him..? or can even hum one of his tunes...?
come on..confused

SirPsycho said:



all i wanna know is if you've heard "The Popular Machine" in it's entirety...

we dont even have to go further...just nod or disbelief

[Edited 7/11/08 5:18am]


you have your right to an opinion even if it differ's the journalist, so i'll leave it at that. i've been a music fan (and on this site) long enough to know where this is headed. i just wanted to get the article to the folks on here who share my enthusiasm with the direction this brother is taking. thanks for answering my question tho
[Edited 7/11/08 7:56am]
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Reply #12 posted 07/11/08 8:14am

bsk3601

CosmicDancer spewed:

a lot of hate


What I truly don't get is that if folks expect the state of music, especially black music, to change then how can you get your panties in a bunch over the words of words of an artist whose trying to be him/herself outside of the norm of an industry that's on life support. We can talk in circles about "so and so" is no Jimi, Stevie, Prince or Marvin. However, when you've got someone who is trying to channel and bring certain elements of musicians back to the table, how do you expect to ever hear artists creating shit like that again. When it comes to soul and R&B a lot of people on this forum are so quick to shit on that bohemian, retro, throwback material. Creativity was normal when everybody was doing it (i.e EWF, P-Funk, Prince, Stevie) and they had their labels supporting artist development. I'm a firm believer that you won't know where your going if you don't know where you've been. Everything is going to have to come back full circle eventually. But people like you make it hard as hell for any who's trying to come up... not just the Van Hunts.

By no means am I trying to convert folks who are not fans of the Van Hunts, D'Angelos, Badus, Saadiqs and Rootsessess of the world. If their music is not your cup of tea, it's just not enjoyable to you. But don't expect music to change when everytime one of these cats releases something or speak you shit on them for not living up to the standards of one of your legends that you uphold so dearly (rightfully so, I might add)
[Edited 7/11/08 8:17am]
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Reply #13 posted 07/11/08 8:23am

Stymie

bsk3601 said:

CosmicDancer spewed:

a lot of hate


What I truly don't get is that if folks expect the state of music, especially black music, to change then how can you get your panties in a bunch over the words of words of an artist whose trying to be him/herself outside of the norm of an industry that's on life support. We can talk in circles about "so and so" is no Jimi, Stevie, Prince or Marvin. However, when you've got someone who is trying to channel and bring certain elements of musicians back to the table, how do you expect to ever hear artists creating shit like that again. When it comes to soul and R&B a lot of people on this forum are so quick to shit on that bohemian, retro, throwback material. Creativity was normal when everybody was doing it (i.e EWF, P-Funk, Prince, Stevie) and they had their labels supporting artist development. I'm a firm believer that you won't know where your going if you don't know where you've been. Everything is going to have to come back full circle eventually. But people like you make it hard as hell for any who's trying to come up... not just the Van Hunts.

By no means am I trying to convert folks who are not fans of the Van Hunts, D'Angelos, Badus, Saadiqs and Rootsessess of the world. If their music is not your cup of tea, it's just not enjoyable to you. But don't expect music to change when everytime one of these cats releases something or speak you shit on them for not living up to the standards of one of your legends that you uphold so dearly (rightfully so, I might add)
[Edited 7/11/08 8:17am]
mushy kiss2
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Reply #14 posted 07/11/08 9:43am

Bishop31

avatar

I liked the article. But it lost me when it had that outragious statement "This century’s fiercest musical artisan is already onto other missions."

I see where Cosmic Dancer is coming from. Statements like this just don't sit right for an 'Unproven' artist. Van Hunt hasn't yet proved he can really be a Legend in this industry. That remains to be seen. Lawd knows this Music Industry needs a change. wink
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Reply #15 posted 07/11/08 9:45am

bsk3601

Bishop31 said:

I liked the article. But it lost me when it had that outragious statement "This century’s fiercest musical artisan is already onto other missions."

I see where Cosmic Dancer is coming from. Statements like this just don't sit right for an 'Unproven' artist. Van Hunt hasn't yet proved he can really be a Legend in this industry. That remains to be seen. Lawd knows this Music Industry needs a change. wink


Statements like what?
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Reply #16 posted 07/11/08 9:46am

AlexdeParis

avatar

CosmicDancer said:

'This century’s fiercest musical artisan'

nod Hell MFin' yeah! headbang
"Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis
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Reply #17 posted 07/11/08 9:47am

Bishop31

avatar

bsk3601 said:

Bishop31 said:

I liked the article. But it lost me when it had that outragious statement "This century’s fiercest musical artisan is already onto other missions."

I see where Cosmic Dancer is coming from. Statements like this just don't sit right for an 'Unproven' artist. Van Hunt hasn't yet proved he can really be a Legend in this industry. That remains to be seen. Lawd knows this Music Industry needs a change. wink


Statements like what?


"This century’s fiercest musical artisan .."
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Reply #18 posted 07/11/08 9:50am

bsk3601

Bishop31 said:

bsk3601 said:



Statements like what?


"This century’s fiercest musical artisan .."


Oh... okay... what the journalist wrote.
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Reply #19 posted 07/11/08 9:52am

JackieBlue

avatar

Thanks for the article. I can't wait for the next album.
Been gone for a minute, now I'm back with the jump off
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Reply #20 posted 07/11/08 9:53am

Bishop31

avatar

bsk3601 said:

Bishop31 said:



"This century’s fiercest musical artisan .."


Oh... okay... what the journalist wrote.


Yes, that's the only thing that kinda went a bit to far IMO. I just felt it was a bit premature to annoint him that tpye of title. lol
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Reply #21 posted 07/11/08 10:31am

CosmicDancer

Bish...You know where Im comin from..
I have no HATE for anybody trying to do something of value...
I do hate Bullshit ! and its total bullshit to call some dude
"This century’s fiercest musical artisan' ..
that..
(for whatever reasons)
just cant seem to come off special enough to be one of the Big Boys he's constantly referencing..and being compared to..

my issue as well was more with the ignorant journalist..
"This century’s fiercest musical artisan .." MY ASS!!!

If people here think of a dude such as Van hunt as
'Mr Super heavy musical Cat'
...then more power to them...I personally know many humble dudes that will kick his ass as a player/singer/ and writer..
Im not even going to discuss stage presence.


Bishop31 said:

bsk3601 said:



Oh... okay... what the journalist wrote.


Yes, that's the only thing that kinda went a bit to far IMO. I just felt it was a bit premature to annoint him that tpye of title. lol
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Reply #22 posted 07/11/08 10:39am

CosmicDancer

I think the article is great..and I appreciate you sharing it with us...
my #1 issue is the fact that the Journalist obviously knows nothing..and obviously doesn't get a chance to write too many articles with REAL Badass Musicians..because Van hunt aint all that !
I have every album and the best compliment I can give him is he does a few cute Curtis and Sly impressions.


SirPsycho said:

CosmicDancer said:

nod
My reason for saying what i said is...
how the hell can a tricycle expect to be compared with a huge ass truck ?
come on..confused
Prince can talk like that !
Stevie can talk like that !
James Brown could talk like that !
HENDRIX could talk like that...
Sly Stone, Curtis, even D'angelo can somewhat talk like that...
and If we are talking about pure star quality and REAL ability to move masses of people even Lenny can kinda talk like that...
VAN HUNT?!?!?!
come on..confused
how many albums has he released...? and how many people that dont actively search out new/underground/obscure artists even know him..? or can even hum one of his tunes...?
come on..confused


[Edited 7/11/08 5:18am]


you have your right to an opinion even if it differ's the journalist, so i'll leave it at that. i've been a music fan (and on this site) long enough to know where this is headed. i just wanted to get the article to the folks on here who share my enthusiasm with the direction this brother is taking. thanks for answering my question tho
[Edited 7/11/08 7:56am]
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Reply #23 posted 07/11/08 10:46am

guitarslinger4
4

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CosmicDancer said:

I think the article is great..and I appreciate you sharing it with us...
my #1 issue is the fact that the Journalist obviously knows nothing..and obviously doesn't get a chance to write too many articles with REAL Badass Musicians..because Van hunt aint all that !
I have every album and the best compliment I can give him is he does a few cute Curtis and Sly impressions.




You're gonna slag Van for something the JOURNALIST wrote? Also, if that statement I bolded is in fact true, then it's pretty obvious that while you may have HEARD the albums, you haven't LISTENED to them.
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Reply #24 posted 07/11/08 10:56am

namepeace

There seems to be no middle ground on Van. He's either a brilliant artist in his own right, or he's simply a neo-soul poseur. He's not a master, at least not yet. And any darn fool could see that he's not a legend. But even the legends didn't become legends overnight. They evolved over time, and they formed their own sounds by incorporating their own influences and experiences. It's not fair to judge a newcomer against the standards of more accomplished artists, especially ones who actually had reliable outlets for their creative output.

The namesake of this site was dismissed as a Stevie Wonder/EWF clone until his 3rd album. What if Dirty Mind had been shelved by Warners? Van faces specific issues that the others named in this thread didn't have to deal with.

People might have buried him the way they are trying unfairly to bury Hunt now without him having the opportunity to hone his own musical identity. Some of y'all need to hear Popular before you judge. And so do I, for that matter.

Based on what I've heard, he does incorporate Sly, Curtis, Stevie, Prince et al. into his sound. But there are hints of Steely Dan, the Cure, and others in his work. An argument can be made (just an argument, people) that he's a more creative songwriter at this stage of his career than Prince was at a similar stage (i.e., his 3rd album). But to me, Van Hunt sounds like Van Hunt, an artist making interesting music while finding his way.

He ain't for everybody, but that doesn't mean he deserves snide putdowns.

Maybe he'll evolve into a legend in his own right. Maybe he won't. Maybe Popular or a future album could put him on the map as a contender. Maybe not. We don't know.

We're hypocrites if we criticize the state of music today and turn around and dismiss someone trying to give us something different.

And for my twocents, Me'Shell Ndegeocello is our neglected legend-in-waiting and heiress apparent. Not Van or anyone else.

peace
[Edited 7/11/08 10:57am]
[Edited 7/11/08 10:58am]
Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #25 posted 07/11/08 11:11am

bsk3601

namepeace said:

There seems to be no middle ground on Van. He's either a brilliant artist in his own right, or he's simply a neo-soul poseur. He's not a master, at least not yet. And any darn fool could see that he's not a legend. But even the legends didn't become legends overnight. They evolved over time, and they formed their own sounds by incorporating their own influences and experiences. It's not fair to judge a newcomer against the standards of more accomplished artists, especially ones who actually had reliable outlets for their creative output.

The namesake of this site was dismissed as a Stevie Wonder/EWF clone until his 3rd album. What if Dirty Mind had been shelved by Warners? Van faces specific issues that the others named in this thread didn't have to deal with.

People might have buried him the way they are trying unfairly to bury Hunt now without him having the opportunity to hone his own musical identity. Some of y'all need to hear Popular before you judge. And so do I, for that matter.

Based on what I've heard, he does incorporate Sly, Curtis, Stevie, Prince et al. into his sound. But there are hints of Steely Dan, the Cure, and others in his work. An argument can be made (just an argument, people) that he's a more creative songwriter at this stage of his career than Prince was at a similar stage (i.e., his 3rd album). But to me, Van Hunt sounds like Van Hunt, an artist making interesting music while finding his way.

He ain't for everybody, but that doesn't mean he deserves snide putdowns.

Maybe he'll evolve into a legend in his own right. Maybe he won't. Maybe Popular or a future album could put him on the map as a contender. Maybe not. We don't know.

We're hypocrites if we criticize the state of music today and turn around and dismiss someone trying to give us something different.

And for my twocents, Me'Shell Ndegeocello is our neglected legend-in-waiting and heiress apparent. Not Van or anyone else.

peace


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[Edited 7/11/08 11:13am]
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Reply #26 posted 07/11/08 12:14pm

Meloh9

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why is it that there is always somebody saying I know artist personally that are better blah blah blah. tell these mofos to get out their and put out and album, and if they have a album reference it
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Reply #27 posted 07/11/08 12:30pm

NuPwr319

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bsk3601 said:

CosmicDancer spewed:

a lot of hate


What I truly don't get is that if folks expect the state of music, especially black music, to change then how can you get your panties in a bunch over the words of words of an artist whose trying to be him/herself outside of the norm of an industry that's on life support. We can talk in circles about "so and so" is no Jimi, Stevie, Prince or Marvin. However, when you've got someone who is trying to channel and bring certain elements of musicians back to the table, how do you expect to ever hear artists creating shit like that again. When it comes to soul and R&B a lot of people on this forum are so quick to shit on that bohemian, retro, throwback material. Creativity was normal when everybody was doing it (i.e EWF, P-Funk, Prince, Stevie) and they had their labels supporting artist development. I'm a firm believer that you won't know where your going if you don't know where you've been. Everything is going to have to come back full circle eventually. But people like you make it hard as hell for any who's trying to come up... not just the Van Hunts.

By no means am I trying to convert folks who are not fans of the Van Hunts, D'Angelos, Badus, Saadiqs and Rootsessess of the world. If their music is not your cup of tea, it's just not enjoyable to you. But don't expect music to change when everytime one of these cats releases something or speak you shit on them for not living up to the standards of one of your legends that you uphold so dearly (rightfully so, I might add)
[Edited 7/11/08 8:17am]


Whoo! clapping
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Reply #28 posted 07/11/08 12:32pm

SirPsycho

clapping namepeace (and others)... thankyou....


i really didnt want to contribute to a debate that has no ending (seeing as those who like him will like him, and those who don't, will hate him)...nor do i desire to now...but i would like to share some why i support this artist enough to post articles and whatnot, and also things previously mentioned that i can agree with...

namepeace makes a great point about the growth of musicians (namely prince) and how soon we dismiss artists before we've seen what they have to offer...since the conception of the "van vs. lengends" trend, i've often wondered how we overlook prince's intial hurdles and fight against comparison...

yes, we know prince was 17, but that was his "legend" to fulfill, not van's

in fact if you read enough van interviews, he himself is eager to point out that he could NEVER be, nor does he DESIRE to bethe next prince/stevie/etc... if anything van just wants a truer understanding of what van sounds like....i mean shit...he even says it in this article...


i didn't like van at first...i thought the first album was re-hased neo-soul cliches until i revisited years later, but that just goes to show how much i was truly listening....(and for analogies sake, when i first heard innervisions at 12, i thought it was horrible with the exception of "they wont go.." but WE ALL know the what time revealed to me when i truly laid my ear to it)...what remains however (i now own and have consumed all three releases) is the fact that IN MY PERSONAL OPINION van has produced three decent (and, at good moments, challenging) records consecutively, and in an adventurous fashion that (again IN MY PERSONAL OPINON) i havent seen/felt since our boy P


lemme say this again...VAN HUNT IS NO PRINCE


but... the brother is on to something...and this is from someone (as i'm imagining most detracters here can relate to) who is a die-hard stevie lover, dedicated soul and true r&b fan...as well as an artist himself...

[i say that to say...some of us fans aint just pullin shit out our asses....we care about music as much as ya'll do....which is partialy why we can tell van gives a fuck and appreciate his attmpt to seek new territory ]

and i LOVE prince..but i agree with you namepeace...tho prince was (and debatably still is) a "hit machine"....lyrically?...i believe van is a MUCH better song writer (and again i'm talking lyrically) then prince was by his third album.....even if van is the "intermiediate" artist he HIMSELF admits to being whenever an someone lets him...


and on ANOTHER note....i've spoken with dude (emailed him and he emailed me back the very next day, humbly answering everty question i posed...another rare trait in a showman) AND was at the show this journalist attended (a table behind blue note to be exact)...and it was a good show....most who've seen him live (as in.. in person) agree...he aint bad...whether or not the "century" qoute was justified....the writer's assesment of the tracks on popular are very arcurate and signify (in van) an artist who's very aware of his place in things (which cant be said about many contemporary "soul" men)...for these reasons and more i see hope in what this brother is bringing to the table.


i mean...fuck if he aint sly... thats what i listen to sly for. dig?
[Edited 7/11/08 12:45pm]
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Reply #29 posted 07/11/08 12:39pm

ButterscotchPi
mp

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I had a feeling that this convo might turn out this way.
Glad to see that for once some reason is being injected into it.
http://www.facebook.com/p...111?ref=ts
y'all gone keep messin' around wit me and turn me back to the old me......
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