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Reply #540 posted 12/27/10 10:17pm

neoretro7

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I will miss Lady T Her music is timeless and everlasting

A true R&B pionner who never compromised her image and love for R&B just to tryo to fit in

we need more R&B purists like her

There are some around but not enough

My favorite songs well to many but i love Aladdin's Lamp, Deja Vu, Cassanova Brown, Happy, If I Were A Bell,and Cupid was a Straight Shooter

***The first Ivory soulful woman who came before Lady T was Timi Yuro

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Reply #541 posted 12/27/10 10:18pm

KCOOLMUZIQ

[img:$uid]http://pic80.picturetrail.com/VOL2084/9118410/23615037/394259818.jpg[/img:$uid]

( my Fav all time pic of Teena)

I speechless .Just too distraght to speak on it. I always felt Teena was the female Prince. My heart is very broken.

eye will ALWAYS think of prince like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. eye mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that prince wasn't of this earth, eye would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. prince
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Reply #542 posted 12/27/10 10:25pm

PurpleDiamond2
009

Im listening to all these hits man, they are really good. nod

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Reply #543 posted 12/27/10 11:01pm

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

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Damn, the mods are sleeping! STICKY! pissed

2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #544 posted 12/27/10 11:25pm

Identity

TonyVanDam said:

Too many patients and NEVER enough doctors. That's a damn shame. disbelief

I read that meds can control seizures in most sufferers.

I hope she didn't unwittingly hasten her death by adjusting the dosage without a doctor's approval. I inferred that because of the comments made by Roland Martin.

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Reply #545 posted 12/27/10 11:43pm

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

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The thing I love about this whole thread is by and large, overwhelmingly in the high 90%tile, the fans of Teena are united.

She got old and fat....so fucking what.

She sang with a junky.....so fucking what.

She is the ivory queen of R&B.....so fucking what.

The fact that we are all here, of all races loving THE BEJEEZUS OUT OF HER says EVERYTHING! love

2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
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Reply #546 posted 12/28/10 12:18am

noimageatall

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SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

The thing I love about this whole thread is by and large, overwhelmingly in the high 90%tile, the fans of Teena are united.

She got old and fat....so fucking what.

She sang with a junky.....so fucking what.

She is the ivory queen of R&B.....so fucking what.

The fact that we are all here, of all races loving THE BEJEEZUS OUT OF HER says EVERYTHING! love

clapping hug

"Let love be your perfect weapon..." ~~Andy Biersack
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Reply #547 posted 12/28/10 12:22am

Timmy84

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

The thing I love about this whole thread is by and large, overwhelmingly in the high 90%tile, the fans of Teena are united.

She got old and fat....so fucking what.

She sang with a junky.....so fucking what.

She is the ivory queen of R&B.....so fucking what.

The fact that we are all here, of all races loving THE BEJEEZUS OUT OF HER says EVERYTHING! love

nod

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Reply #548 posted 12/28/10 2:05am

noimageatall

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This sucks... sad

Teena Marie Tickets

Date / Time Artist Venue Town/City Seetickets Viagogo
Feb 25, 2011 19:00 Teena Marie Indigo2 At The O2 London

Buy Teena Marie Tickets
from £36


Feb 26, 2011 19:00 Teena Marie Indigo2 At The O2 London

Buy Teena Marie Tickets
from £36

"Let love be your perfect weapon..." ~~Andy Biersack
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Reply #549 posted 12/28/10 2:17am

sugartuff

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May you rest in peace, my beautiful queen, Teena Marie rose
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Reply #550 posted 12/28/10 4:47am

TonyVanDam

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allsmutaside said:

Berry Gordy has shared his feelings on Teena's passing.

Gordy stated:

I am horrified by the sudden death of my darling Teena Marie. She was my “baby,” always true to herself, always true to her heart. When I first auditioned her she was so awesome she blew me away. She had so much soul – the only thing white about her was her skin. She was a powerhouse performer, writer, producer and arranger. Anyone who ever saw her perform, alone or with Rick James, will never forget how exciting music can be.

My heart goes out to her sweet, sweet daughter, Alia Rose, her family, friends and fans.

Teena Marie will always be a part of the (sometimes dysfunctional) Motown family. We will all miss her.

Berry Gordy

Founder of Motown


There, now THAT'S^ more honest! nod

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Reply #551 posted 12/28/10 6:45am

silverchild

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sugartuff said:

Love the pictures! biggrin

Check me out and add me on:
www.last.fm/user/brandosoul
"Truth is, everybody is going to hurt you; you just gotta find the ones worth suffering for." -Bob Marley
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Reply #552 posted 12/28/10 6:45am

Peacefulwild

KCOOLMUZIQ said:




( my Fav all time pic of Teena)



I speechless .Just too distraght to speak on it. I always felt Teena was the female Prince. My heart is very broken.



:yeahthat:

cry cry cry
Heal the body
Clear the mind
Open the heart
Free the spirit.
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Reply #553 posted 12/28/10 6:54am

vainandy

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johnart said:

vainandy said:

I was at a party last night and someone told me that Teena Marie was dead and I told them to stop lying. Then another person told me, and another, and another. I still didn't believe them because I know it only takes one person to start a rumor and it will spread like wildfire. I just thought it was a sick rumor that started in our little circle but I made sure to check the org this morning as soon as I woke up and I see it's true.

This is just too unbelievable. What happened? She wasn't old and to the best of my knowledge, I've never heard of her doing any drugs. I just can't imagine how she died out of the blue. She wasn't killed by anyone was she? I mean, I'm just trying to understand how she just suddenly died with no warning.

Not only did she have some wonderful music, especially her earlier Motown albums, but this woman was a huge part of who I am as a person. Prince was someone I looked up to growing up as a role model when dealing with my gay side and absolutely not giving a damn what anyone thought of it, and Teena Marie was my role model dealing with my "black" side. This woman came out in 1979 on the heels of the disco era and when disco "died" the very next year and white artists were abandoning black music and the majority of the white general public was having absolutely nothing to do with black music whatsoever, this bad ass white woman continued throwing down hard, funky, and black. This woman could have been much more successful than she was but she didn't give a damn, she came in through the black door and stayed in it. She crossed over one time in 1984 and I really don't think she purposely tried to crossover, it just happened. You don't find too many black artists with the strength to throw the finger at crossing over but this woman was white and she absolutely didn't give a damn. She was well loved by the black audience and she loved them right back. As many people have said before..."Teena Marie ain't white, she's just light skinned"....that definately was true. She was a HUGE role model for me when I was growing up dealing with whites that didn't understand me and hated me and will always continue to be a role model for me. This is a huge loss and I still can't believe it.

hug

hug I just saw your picture with Teena Marie. I'm a jealous bitch right about now. wink

Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #554 posted 12/28/10 6:57am

vainandy

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PositivityNYC said:

johnart said:

hug

sad vainandy, she suffered a couple of seizures last month

her daughter, Alia Rose, found her in her bedroom already gone, either late Christmas night (also her 19th birthday) or the next morning, Dec 26th

she'd had a prescription drug abuse problem.. got addicted to Vicodin trying to deal with Rick James' death, in 2004 I think, and had kicked it -- but speculation is that it may have been another seizure, but doesn't appear to be foul play

Teena'd been tweeting the night before the news broke, less than 24 hrs before... so crazy/sad/unexpected.... neutral

one obituary: http://news.yahoo.com/s/a...eena_marie

Thanks. I knew there had to be some type of explanation.

Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #555 posted 12/28/10 6:58am

vainandy

avatar

TonyVanDam said:

vainandy said:

I was at a party last night and someone told me that Teena Marie was dead and I told them to stop lying. Then another person told me, and another, and another. I still didn't believe them because I know it only takes one person to start a rumor and it will spread like wildfire. I just thought it was a sick rumor that started in our little circle but I made sure to check the org this morning as soon as I woke up and I see it's true.

This is just too unbelievable. What happened? She wasn't old and to the best of my knowledge, I've never heard of her doing any drugs. I just can't imagine how she died out of the blue. She wasn't killed by anyone was she? I mean, I'm just trying to understand how she just suddenly died with no warning.

Not only did she have some wonderful music, especially her earlier Motown albums, but this woman was a huge part of who I am as a person. Prince was someone I looked up to growing up as a role model when dealing with my gay side and absolutely not giving a damn what anyone thought of it, and Teena Marie was my role model dealing with my "black" side. This woman came out in 1979 on the heels of the disco era and when disco "died" the very next year and white artists were abandoning black music and the majority of the white general public was having absolutely nothing to do with black music whatsoever, this bad ass white woman continued throwing down hard, funky, and black. This woman could have been much more successful than she was but she didn't give a damn, she came in through the black door and stayed in it. She crossed over one time in 1984 and I really don't think she purposely tried to crossover, it just happened. You don't find too many black artists with the strength to throw the finger at crossing over but this woman was white and she absolutely didn't give a damn. She was well loved by the black audience and she loved them right back. As many people have said before..."Teena Marie ain't white, she's just light skinned"....that definately was true. She was a HUGE role model for me when I was growing up dealing with whites that didn't understand me and hated me and will always continue to be a role model for me. This is a huge loss and I still can't believe it.

I've happy you received my orgnote.

If I'm not mistaken, Lovergirl was the first and only time Teena had a video on MTV, mostly because it's a rock track. Apart from that, her videos were on BET just like all of Rick's videos! cool

Yeah, I saw your orgnote flashing just as I had entered this thread yesterday. You know how I feel about Teena Marie. Thanks.

Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #556 posted 12/28/10 7:06am

banks

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Teena Marie's talent set her apart from pop divas

NEWS POP MUSIC CRITIC

Published:December 28, 2010, 8:03 AM

Teena Marie proved that the music doesn't care what color your skin happens to be.

Throughout her career, the influential R&B singer and musician crafted funky hits that acknowledged no color barriers, and appealed to listeners from what were conventionally considered opposing corners of pop culture.

To the point where her first hit, "I'm Just A Sucker For Your Love," was often considered to be the work of an African-American artist. The fact that it was issued without a picture of its creator adorning it did nothing to disabuse listeners of such a notion.

Marie -- born Mary Christine Brockert -- passed away on Sunday at the age of 54. She'd suffered a grand mal seizure a week previous, according to an Associated Press report, and had commented publicly on an ongoing battle with prescription drugs over the last few years, but authorities Monday were attributing her death to natural causes.

What was never natural was the magnitude of Marie's talent.

Though her influence is most present and accounted for in the work of contemporary R&B/pop/hip-hop divas who are much more singers, performers and stars than they are musicians, the former Mary Brockert was an able guitarist, keyboardist and percussionist who could also write, arrange and produce records with consummate skill. She is now celebrated for her singing abilities, and rightly so. But Marie had much more in common with self-contained music machines like Prince than she did with any of her peers in the disco era from which she emerged.

This set her apart at the time, and continues to do so now.

The late funk/soul icon and Buffalonian Rick James was one of the first prominent musicians to take note of Marie's abundant talent -- despite the fact she'd signed a development deal with Berry Gordy's Motown Records in 1976, and had been demoing songs in obscurity for a few years by the time James happened upon her. James took Marie under his wing, produced her debut, "Wild and Peaceful," and dueted with her on that album's "I'm Just A Sucker For Your Love," which made it to No. 8 on what was then called the "Black" Top 40 chart. Until she showed up in the flesh with James on a 1979 episode of television's immensely popular "Soul Train" to perform the song, very few listeners knew the color of her skin.

Once they heard what Marie was capable of, few of those listeners seemed to care what color she was. For them, Marie was the perfect blend of soul, funk, a slightly lascivious sexuality, and the counterpoint of silky smooth vocals and rough, raunchy rhythms that would come to define hip-hop some 20 years later.

Marie dueted with James again, on the latter's massively successful "Street Songs" album (1980) and its hit single "Fire and Desire." Then she set off on her own, releasing a string of adventurous pop-funk-R&B albums to varying degrees of commercial success, until she embarked on a hiatus in the '90s. During that time, her work started cropping up as sampled material in hip-hop songs, and was name-checked as an influence by artists as diverse as Sheila E. and the Fugees.

Marie should be remembered as an irreverent, proud, deeply talented and immensely groundbreaking artist. Much is likely to be made of the fact that she refused to acknowledge color barriers, and rightly so -- Marie was one of the first white singers to land a contract on Motown, previously the proud home of African--American soul and R&B alone.

Later, she'd become one of the most outspoken female artists in pop when she left Motown on the grounds that they were holding her to her contract while simultaneously refusing to release her new music. When the label sued her, she countersued, and won. The resulting new limits on recording artist contract-length, and concurrent increase in wage caps, became known as "The Brocket Initiative."

Today, you can hear Marie's influence in the work of pop divas like Beyonce, Rhianna and Keri Hilson; you can spot her significance in the soul-pop offerings of Mary J. Blige and Christina Aguilera; the marriage of pop melody and hip-hop groove that defines today's commercial pop owes a debt of gratitude to Marie's collected works, which prefigured such a development.

None of this is as important as the simple fact that Teena Marie was a serious musician who seized control of every aspect of record-making with equal measures of zeal and talent. In an era when singers often leave production, performance and composition to a team of industry professionals, she stands as an icon of hands-on artistry and a monument to the spirit of the independent musician.

jmiers@buffnews.com

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Reply #557 posted 12/28/10 7:16am

johnart

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banks said:

Today, you can hear Marie's influence in the work of pop divas like Beyonce...

jmiers@buffnews.com

When Bey's Deja Vu came out I was like eek THAT IS STRAIGHT UP A TEENA JAM and instantly loved the song because of that. I always thought she should've had Teena guest on that rather than her husband. fart

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Reply #558 posted 12/28/10 7:19am

johnart

avatar

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

The thing I love about this whole thread is by and large, overwhelmingly in the high 90%tile, the fans of Teena are united.

She got old and fat....so fucking what.

She sang with a junky.....so fucking what.

She is the ivory queen of R&B.....so fucking what.

The fact that we are all here, of all races loving THE BEJEEZUS OUT OF HER says EVERYTHING! love

Holler-loojerz! hammer

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Reply #559 posted 12/28/10 7:31am

vainandy

avatar

johnart said:

vainandy said:

For someone who doesn't like her, you've definately given her the highest compliment possible.

It doesn't matter if she was the Queen of MF Riverdance.
What kind of trollish ass has to take the time to make stupid ass (incorrect or not) corrections on a R.I.P. thread?

Shoo! fart

From his repeated comments about Rick James being disco....I think he even mentions Cameo being disco in one of his posts also...., his overall hate for disco, his posting style, and the fact that he's only been an org member for about a month, I think he may be riverpoet under a new alias org account. Everyone remembers riverpoet (if that's him), he came up in the Michael Jackson thread after his death doing the same exact thing in the same posting style.

Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #560 posted 12/28/10 7:37am

silverchild

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Some rare videos:

Teena in her studio...during the recording of her last album, Congo Square:

The photoshoot for the Congo Square album:

One of my favorite Teena performances...at the Sinbad Funk Festival in '98:

Check me out and add me on:
www.last.fm/user/brandosoul
"Truth is, everybody is going to hurt you; you just gotta find the ones worth suffering for." -Bob Marley
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Reply #561 posted 12/28/10 7:41am

TonyVanDam

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vainandy said:

johnart said:

It doesn't matter if she was the Queen of MF Riverdance.
What kind of trollish ass has to take the time to make stupid ass (incorrect or not) corrections on a R.I.P. thread?

Shoo! fart

From his repeated comments about Rick James being disco....I think he even mentions Cameo being disco in one of his posts also...., his overall hate for disco, his posting style, and the fact that he's only been an org member for about a month, I think he may be riverpoet under a new alias org account. Everyone remembers riverpoet (if that's him), he came up in the Michael Jackson thread after his death doing the same exact thing in the same posting style.

As Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson would say, "It doesn't matter what his name is". THAT troll was nothing but a trouble maker. He/she had the nerve to say that Teena was not a soul artist.

Doesn't that fool know that the late Teena Marie sung more soulful than Whitney Houston ever did in her whole career?!?

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Reply #562 posted 12/28/10 7:43am

johnart

avatar

TonyVanDam said:

vainandy said:

From his repeated comments about Rick James being disco....I think he even mentions Cameo being disco in one of his posts also...., his overall hate for disco, his posting style, and the fact that he's only been an org member for about a month, I think he may be riverpoet under a new alias org account. Everyone remembers riverpoet (if that's him), he came up in the Michael Jackson thread after his death doing the same exact thing in the same posting style.

As Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson would say, "It doesn't matter what his name is". THAT troll was nothing but a trouble maker. He/she had the nerve to say that Teena was not a soul artist.

Doesn't that fool know that the late Teena Marie sung more soulful than Whitney Houston ever did in her whole career?!?

The thing is that he/she probably full well knows this.

He/she is sittin there jizzin themselves at the fact that we're discussing them. jerkoff

That's what lame trolls do.

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Reply #563 posted 12/28/10 9:23am

PositivityNYC

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johnart said:

vainandy said:

For someone who doesn't like her, you've definately given her the highest compliment possible.

It doesn't matter if she was the Queen of MF Riverdance.
What kind of trollish ass has to take the time to make stupid ass (incorrect or not) corrections on a R.I.P. thread?

Shoo! fart

it made its own thread.. http://prince.org/msg/8/349658 rolleyes hmph!

Hag. Muse. Web Goddess. Taurean. Tree Hugger. Poet. Professional Nerd. Geek.
"Resistance is futile." "All shall love me and despair!"
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Reply #564 posted 12/28/10 9:38am

Wowugotit

I've been on a Teena kick since I learned of her death. I cannot stop listening to her music. I will miss her so much!

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Reply #565 posted 12/28/10 9:51am

Identity

728huey said:

Hey mods! This thread has gotten so many responses, it deserves a sticky. stickpoke typing

Your request went unanswered by the mods because evidently they went on holiday break at the same time.

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Reply #566 posted 12/28/10 9:56am

NoVideo

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me too... i've been listening to her like crazy, and discovering alot of stuff i'd never listened to before. She had far deeper catalogue of great music than i thought. I think with her passing, and the media attention, more people will discover more of her work.

Wowugotit said:

I've been on a Teena kick since I learned of her death. I cannot stop listening to her music. I will miss her so much!

* * *

Prince's Classic Finally Expanded
The Deluxe 'Purple Rain' Reissue

http://www.popmatters.com...n-reissue/
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Reply #567 posted 12/28/10 10:01am

banks

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Wowugotit said:

I've been on a Teena kick since I learned of her death. I cannot stop listening to her music. I will miss her so much!

Me too.... One of my favorites is "Stop The World"

Late last night I couldn't stop the tears from falling
Seems like I was crying all night long
Me baby gone away and left me blue
And there's not a lot that me can do
No there's not a lot that me can do

I remember playing this song over and over and my mom's said

Kevin... If you play that song one more time i'm gonna Stop Your Breathing...

lol

[Edited 12/28/10 10:04am]

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Reply #568 posted 12/28/10 10:02am

Identity

[img:$uid]http://i54.tinypic.com/117d1dg.jpg[/img:$uid]

Appreciating Teena Marie: The Ivory Queen of Soul Made R & B Colorless

December 28, 2010

by Gerrick D. Kennedy

Link

It’s impossible to lend an ear to today’s crop of R&B divas without hearing just a little bit of Teena Marie.

Though she never had the blockbuster commercial success or universal household appeal of some of her peers (Patti Labelle, Anita Baker and Whitney Houston quickly come to mind), Marie -- who died Sunday at age 54 -- left a perhaps more important, and lasting, contribution to R&B than record sales: She made the genre colorless.

Venturing through the self-proclaimed Ivory Queen of Soul’s back catalog, it’s easy to see how everyone from Mary J. Blige to Faith Evans to Alicia Keys got some of their groove. However, Marie’s career was forever highlighted by the fact that she was a white woman singing historically black music -- something that doesn’t even remotely warrant a second guess in today’s landscape of artists of every race tackling any genre and gaining success.

But Marie was always different. Though she never catapulted into the more bankable pop world, she broke ground.

After the Santa Monica-born songstress got her big break at Motown Records in the late '70s, she rode a wave of hits -- "Lovergirl," "I'm a Sucker for Your Love" "Ooh La La La" and "Square Biz" are all required listening -- and Marie was a girl whose debut album, “Wild and Peaceful,” famously opted not to include a photo of her on the cover, out of fear that R&B listeners might not buy or accept her because of her race.

Marie did what at the time was thought to be the impossible: crossing over to black radio and retail stores -- and staying there. She could have easily become a novelty act because of her color, but she didn’t.

And how could she?

Whether you were slow dancing to “Fire and Desire” (a simmering duet with her mentor and frequent collaborator, the late Rick James) in the '80s or a kid digging through their parent's album collection and discovering the upbeat frenzy of “Square Biz,” Lady T found her way into the hearts of every R&B fan.

Unlike some rap purists who downplayed Eminem as he was rising, Marie made it impossible to question her authenticity.

She sang with such passion, conviction and blues that she was often labeled “a black girl trapped in a white woman’s body.” Her extensive catalog is pure R&B, though the girl had funk -- watching her behind the rhythm guitar, keyboards or percussion, she had the swagger of the big boys, including James. But she was all her own.

Her showmanship -- the way she worked the stage with that big brazen hair, seductive dance moves and that voice -- erased any naysayers who might have said that whites couldn’t sing soul.

The Times obituary of Marie mentions a 1981 performance at the Long Beach Arena that seemed to define her standing: "A tiny young woman with a powerful voice, Marie is a terrific singer and, quite frankly, better than nearly all her black competitors."

Current soulful acts such as Amy Winehouse, Adele, Christina Aguilera, Justin Timberlake and Robin Thicke might cite James Brown, Aretha Franklin and Michael Jackson as inspirations into the world of rhythm and blues, but had Marie not crossed over, R&B might not be the embracing, ever-evolving genre that it is today.

In a 1980 interview with The Times, Marie talked at length about how some listeners refused to believe she was white.

"I tell them I'm white, but they think I'm black and I'm trying to pass for white.... This is white skin. I'm not trying to fool anybody.

"I'm a different kind of person. Blacks and whites don't really react in any special way to me. I don't get anything negative from blacks and not really anything negative from whites now. But I will say it was different before I started getting some popularity. I don't think it was prejudice from whites as much as ignorance of something they didn't know much about. You know, I wish I was colorless sometimes."

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Reply #569 posted 12/28/10 10:22am

silverchild

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NoVideo said:

me too... i've been listening to her like crazy, and discovering alot of stuff i'd never listened to before. She had far deeper catalogue of great music than i thought. I think with her passing, and the media attention, more people will discover more of her work.

Wowugotit said:

I've been on a Teena kick since I learned of her death. I cannot stop listening to her music. I will miss her so much!

Yeah I've been on a non-stop Teena kick after hearing of her death. My iPod has been shuffling through hundreds of her songs from all of her albums. I haven't listened to anything else by anyone else since Sunday night. I'm discovering so many hidden gems that were probably overlooked before. Boy oh boy, her catalogue of music was so varied and deep. I still haven't finished listening to her stuff and it's been two whole days later.

Check me out and add me on:
www.last.fm/user/brandosoul
"Truth is, everybody is going to hurt you; you just gotta find the ones worth suffering for." -Bob Marley
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