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Thread started 05/10/13 11:54am

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Q & A With Babyface




May 10, 2013

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From jamming with funk forefathers to helping break new jack swing and cofounding legendary '90s R&B label
LaFace Records with partner Antonio "L.A." Reid, the man known by the name Babyface has spent three decades creating and shaping pop music.


Now 53, Kenneth Edmonds is working on a new album by Aretha Franklin and touring.


We spoke with Mr. Babyface about the current state of R&B, as well as Trey Songz, Chris Brown, Frank Ocean, and being nicknamed by Bootsy Collins.


Was Bootsy Collins really the first one to call you
Babyface? That's like being nicknamed by the God of Funk.


This is true [laughs]. It was an honor.


How did you finally get the handle?


Sometime between 1984 and '85, our band, the Deele, was between albums. And in the meantime, we were going around helping out with doing demos. So we got into the studio with Bootsy in Cincinnati. He would always grab new talent, mess around with them, and see if he could come up with something. And that's kind of what was going down.


I wasn't really that involved. I was just one of the guys in the band. But one day when I walked into the studio, Bootsy, out of nowhere, yelled, "Yo! What's up, Babyface?" And everybody started cracking up. It was a joke. So I didn't like it.


Back on the road with the Deele, Dee [Darnell Bristol] would introduce me and say, "That was Kenny Edmonds! Give it up for Kenny Edmonds!" And everybody would be like, "OK." But then one night, he decided to pull a joke on me. So after I finished the song, he goes, "Scream for... Babyface!" And after that show, I had a whole collection of girls coming back to find Babyface. And so it stuck.


After 30 years, working with legends such as Bootsy and Whitney and Aretha, what do you think of the current scene? From Trey Songz and Chris Brown to Frank Ocean, how would you rate the latest generation?


I think it's getting better. But there was a point in the history of R&B when you could name more than three people. And there just aren't a lot of current artists you can use to make comparisons. So the scene has got to grow.


In general, though, music is changing and improving. It happens in different genres too. You've got the Lumineers, which I love. And Fun., which I love. And then Alabama Shakes, which is incredible. These are artists who are coming for real. They're dead serious — nothing trendy about it, just straight music. It might be a little old school, but it doesn't matter where it comes from, because it feels good.


So what's holding R&B back?


For a long time, we've had a tendency to go for the trend. And for radio's sake, you do have to fall within certain guidelines. Because if you don't, it's very hard to break through.


Labels are guilty of it and artists are guilty of it too, where we kind of just keep giving you the same thing. So any act that really goes toward left field has a hard time, especially in R&B. And recently, it's gotten even harder.


It used to be there were a number of different kinds of R&B artists who weren't anything like one another. But that's not as likely today because a lot of the record companies just aren't willing to take the chance. They don't want to put the money behind it. They don't want to stand behind the artists in the same way anymore.

These days, you've got to break the music yourself. And if you don't break it yourself, then it's just, "Sorry."


How can young musicians make that break for themselves?


The key is live performance. In R&B, there are very few artists interested in picking up a guitar or getting on the drums or even having a band.

Take Alabama Shakes. They're a band. So they can go out and do a show and create their audience. Or take Frank Ocean. He did it on the Internet. And that's another way and a new way.


But traditionally, if you were in a band, you could go out and you could work. That's also how you mastered the trade. So by the time your 15 minutes arrived, you were actually ready for your 15 minutes. And that's how 15 minutes of fame can turn into a lifetime.




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Reply #1 posted 05/10/13 3:12pm

SoulAlive

In R&B, there are very few artists interested in picking up a guitar or getting on the drums or even having a band.

Take Alabama Shakes. They're a band. So they can go out and do a show and create their audience. Or take Frank Ocean. He did it on the Internet. And that's another way and a new way.


But traditionally, if you were in a band, you could go out and you could work. That's also how you mastered the trade. So by the time your 15 minutes arrived, you were actually ready for your 15 minutes. And that's how 15 minutes of fame can turn into a lifetime.

he speaks the truth nod

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Reply #2 posted 05/10/13 3:41pm

Cinny

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But traditionally, if you were in a band, you could go out and you could work. That's also how you mastered the trade. So by the time your 15 minutes arrived, you were actually ready for your 15 minutes. And that's how 15 minutes of fame can turn into a lifetime.

This part resonated with me. Bars/pubs/clubs used to actually pay bands to play the hits, but now the only people who get gigs are DJs.. and not even good DJs! But the point is, a lot of "bands" never get the opportunity to gig and perform like they used to.

This could be the reason there are less real bands. How can you justify an interest you can't get any work for?

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Reply #3 posted 05/10/13 4:27pm

TD3

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But a lot musician's can't make a living playing live music.... ironic but true. If we are speaking of R&B I think we are still speaking of the black community, the live music scene is DEAD.

==========================================

[Edited 5/10/13 16:28pm]

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Reply #4 posted 05/10/13 5:23pm

KCOOLMUZIQ

I miss the 80's & 90's those were the best rnb concerts ever. Now only old school acts are worth paying to see...

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 #5 posted 05/10/13 5:30pm

Timmy84

TD3 said:

But a lot musician's can't make a living playing live music.... ironic but true. If we are speaking of R&B I think we are still speaking of the black community, the live music scene is DEAD.

==========================================

[Edited 5/10/13 16:28pm]

If it's dead, we helped to kill that shit...

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Reply #6 posted 05/11/13 1:57am

LEWISTAYLORFAN

My friend was a projege of babyface.

His first album was inspired by Lewis Taylor Steely Dan and The Beatles.

Thru Baby face he got fans of Stevie Wonder and Lamont Dozier.

Too bad his debut was not released in the UK.

He got to no 1 in Japan.
It gets so salty baby (bittersweet by Lewis Taylor)
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