All right.... I finally decided to say a few words on this album. | |
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Yes, he does seem rather more grounded in that clip than in the interview - and that's a bit reassuring, frankly. Perhaps talking about his past sets him spinning into his rococo ramblings more than other subjects. I do maintain there's something not quite right if one can only deal with one's personal history in the distantiating language of 'Mount Olympus' and 'crucifixion' and 'petitioning a new psyche' - as that's all grandiose fantasy. I do mean that sympathetically, though, rather than judgmentally. Whatever gets you through the night, as they say. I can only guess that there's painful things in there that are hard to face. "Not everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced." - James Baldwin | |
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Amen to that, and, well, we all have our frequency that eventually falls in line with the rhythm of the universe. Yes--I seem to be taking on our subject's own tone! He's a creative one in the spectrum of humanity, so you can expect the guy to be a bit more inward-focused in his processing while taking in all the reality. His selection of language in telling his story is a trademark, and while for him it blunts harsh thought and romanticizes the rememberance, for true it can leave the impression for the random listener of rococo hyperbole. > The point to Sananda's presentation is that there will never be a situation for long where everything is "all right" in this life if you're living a full one, but we keep moving and finding our way through it. I encourage you to check the full interview series for the best elucidation of the pair's conversation. It it entertaining at the very least! I've come to find that Sananda's brand of "craziness" is worth my own attention for that aspect alone, if not for its instructiveness. | |
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The Sphinx (as in the Greek visage), it is ready to devour you!
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i slept on this guy when he was big...wasnt feeling the music behind wishing well or sign my name...but damn, this dude has a magic voice...and he still sounds strong...ive gone back and read alot of stuff and watched alot of video and interviews with this cat...he just came out at the wrong time, when Prince and Michael Jackson had the black idol sppts locked up, there was no more room for the attention this cat should have gotten , if not for his vocal ability alone...i had always overlooked him and jokingly referred to him as Prince and Michael's son...he may have looked that way on the surface, but this man can sing for real... | |
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Luisa Corna sings "I wanna lose my Monistat" in the intro to "It's Been a Long Time." > The song brings serious funk--puns get to flying all around, and she sings the same thing over again to compliment Sananda singing "I wanna lose my mind instead." > Why'd that lyric get chosen to begin the song, I wonder? A psychedelic funk salute, I guess? A nod to feminine pharmaceutical blues? Care to discuss? | |
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Only a couple of days left before the official major release of Prometheus & Pandora. > Good time to post the latest single "Zebra."
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My impression too. I can't imagine he is winning many new customers in this 'freedom' era...which sounds less free and more boring and mundane than ever. Words I'd never use for the Great Old Work.
That said, I can't comment on any recent work, nor do I want to listen. It was clear to me years ago that this guy's freedom has done nothing for his artistry.
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His 1st album went multi-platinum. But by the time his 2nd album came out, New Jack Swing had blown up and TTD's sound was less likely to be played on R&B stations. Bobby Brown was the big crossover star for NJS. Bobby got the theme song for the 2nd Ghostbusters movie and helped an unknown singer like Glen Medeiros get a hit single. A lot of established acts released NJS records and songs at the time, even Boy George. TTD's 2nd album didn't really have that sound like Tony! Toni! Toné! and Al B. Sure! did. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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Ha--I didn't know that Bobby Brown did the second Ghostbusters soundtrack! This was also around the time that Grunge made its debut, or shortly thereafter)--Album Rock, next phase--and Sananda suggests that while the industry was also picking up that sound and promoting it that his own promotion got a bit sidelined. The TTD stuff was sounding great, but seemed to get the sideline.There weren't a ton of listeners post--The Hardline. His style appears to have been co-opted by other musical styles of the times. > Thankfully he doesn't try to do much repeating of what he had done in those days. Nice efforts, but one must move on down the road with one's expressions. It'll be interesting to hear what comes next, if there's a chance. | |
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MickyDolenz said:
His 1st album went multi-platinum. But by the time his 2nd album came out, New Jack Swing had blown up and TTD's sound was less likely to be played on R&B stations. Bobby Brown was the big crossover star for NJS. Bobby got the theme song for the 2nd Ghostbusters movie and helped an unknown singer like Glen Medeiros get a hit single. A lot of established acts released NJS records and songs at the time, even Boy George. TTD's 2nd album didn't really have that sound like Tony! Toni! Toné! and Al B. Sure! did. You have a point, but 1989 was also the year that Lenny Kravitz' debut album came out. Living Colour and The Family Stand were also popular back then, so there certainly was a market for black rockers. | |
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2freaky4church1 said: How does he make money? I wish I could say: from touring. It's been 15 years since I saw him live! I would love it if he'd hit the road again! | |
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One suggestion--check Sananda's new song on the new album, "Rhinocerous." He's free and he's running! A follower of the work's progression might enjoy that one--I do. > I too enjoy hearing the cool older tunes, they're part of what makes the guy great, but I've grown not to enshrine them as lesser and alternative works have their place along the scale of a career.
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Rhinocerous... Zebra... Giraffe... It's like he's building a musical zoo! | |
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I'm hip--I love the theme of the African wildlife! Large, powerful, unique beasts of the great continent. | |
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