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Who Was The Pre-Cursor Act To Mid-90s Neo-Soul After talking to a friend, and our love of Maxwell and neo-soul in general. The statement sorta came up, that Sade was really a preamble to the neo-soul genre. We've often talked about how Janet's "Nasty" was arguably the first New Jack Swing song. Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Keith Sweat and Al B Sure | |
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Prince with Come, I m sorry. | |
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. Lenny Kravitz (It ain't over till it's over)? . | |
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Sade sounds about right | |
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Yeah Sade was the first I would say. She had a diffeent style of soul that was more jazz and blues influenced like Anita Baker too. Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Sade certainly is an influence, I would think
Some of the Acid Jazz acts in London also pointed the way to Neo Soul. Young Disciples, Snowboy, Brand New Heavies, James Taylor Quartet, Mica Paris, D*Note, ... | |
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Oh my God, I would definitely say Anita Faker was the first I heard. She was even more boring than Shitney Houston who was more crossover adult contemporary....but hey....when you kill funk, it opens up the doors for something even more boring than adult contemporary to take over also. . I don't agree about Sade though. When I hear stuff like "Is It A Crime" or "Your Love Is King", I think of sexy jazzy after midnight stuff from the 1970s like "Moondance" and "Midnight At The Oasis". I envision a beautiful high class call girl meeting her clients in a lounge after midnight before going to a high class hotel. When I hear Anita Faker, I envision a woman in a full cut dress, below the knees, possibly homemade, meeting men a church socials and inviting them over for Sunday dinner with her whole family while watching the kids run around and play in the back yard..... Oh, and I almost forgot, and if you went through her record collection, you probably wouldn't find any funk, disco, rock, or fun type of music whatsoever. Andy is a four letter word. | |
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I used to see Sade put in the "sophistipop" category with others like Swing Out Sister, Basia, Everything But The Girl, Blow Monkeys, etc. That originated with 1960s acts like The 5th Dimension, Dionne Warwick, Burt Bacharach, & Rotary Connection. I think Sade (& the 1990s "acid jazz" groups) have more in common with 1970s smooth jazz/soul jazz than neo-soul. Like the stuff on CTI Records in the late 1960s through to the 1970s & acts like The Blackbyrds, Roy Ayers, Pleasure, & early Al Jarreau. 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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I only like a handful of songs by her but I could never listen to a whole album.
Sweetest Taboo Nothing Can Come Between Us No Ordinary Love
But those songs would work well just as a slow cut inbetween the fast songs...not when ALL of the songs are slow. Growing up she might have been the first time I heard something jazzy being beloved by all groups of people Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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I've always felt like "The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker" was the first neo-soul song. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Lonnie Liston Smith got to be a big influence on neo soul .Curtis Mayfield as well | |
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It was that chick, started with C, Cherie or Chantelle something, I can't remember. I'm afraid of Americans. I'm afraid of the world. | |
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My picks for precursors to neo-soul: . 1. Sade 2. Prince [some tracks from the Parade & SOTT era] 3. Tony Toni Tone 4. Tracy Chapman [?!?] | |
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. THAT^ and Slow Love. | |
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Cinny said:
. Cinny said:
. I fully understand that Lenny Kravitz is not a pure soul act. But when his first two albums came out, his organic and soulful sound was quite a revelation after the synth dominated productions of the 80s. Of course, Prince did a retro thing too a few years earlier with ATWIAD, but I think Lenny's first two albums really opened the eyes and ears of a large new (young) audience, and it brought back the desire for music played with traditional instruments and produced in a classic, analog way. Plus add to that his funky and streetwise image, inspired by the 60s artists, while his voice, especially on some of his ballads, surely brought back memories to Marvin Gaye and Curtis Mayfield. So, in conclusion, Lenny may well have been an influence on people like D'Angelo and Maxwell. Also, Lenny had prior to her solo career already worked with Angie Stone, another notable neo-soul artist (who herself also had been active long before the neo-soul wave took off). . But I also think, like many here, that Prince also was a huge inspiration for the neo-soul movement. Maybe much more than the British acts mentioned in this thread. In the 90s, it seemed that acts like BNH, Omar, Carleen Anderson, Young Disciples, and so on, were coming up at the same time or a bit earlier as their US counterparts, but it felt a bit like two separated scenes. Surely, there were some Americans involved in the UK, like Carleen and Jhelisa Anderson and Siedah Garrett, but it mainly seemed a British/European thing. The early start of the Acid Jazz movement, in the 80s, had it's roots in a long soul revival tradition in the UK, with the Northern Soul parties, and later bands like Working Week and Sade. And maybe, this new appreciation for 60s and 70s soul music, and it's associated music production styles, in one way or another, may have contributed globally to the shaping of the music a few decades later. Ultimately, some of this spirit may have found its way into the music of Acid Jazz-inspired bands in the US, such as Brooklyn Funk Essentials, Jazzmatazz and the whole Native Tongues hiphop scene, which in return where important precursors of the neo-soul movement. But likely, the American neo-soul artists were too proud to acknowledge their British collegues as an influence in "their" music and identity, especially when this influence was not too obvious. In the end, soul and jazz are among of the few original truly American music styles, and that is why influences from outside the US could be overlooked or undervalued. . [Edited 1/15/22 3:54am] | |
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Digable Planets | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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http://hiphopandpolitics....e-planets/
Lots of people who were listening to it at the time felt like their jazz fusion r&b sound was the precursor to neo soul.
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jazzz said: . Lenny Kravitz (It ain't over till it's over)? . No. Both him and TTD were way too much into rock music to pave the way for neo soul. And It Ain't Over has more of a 60s feel. And this is also the reason why I liked Erykah Badu and Maxwell and D'Angelo at first, but got tired of them pretty quickly: it's all slow soul music, in other words, more of the same. If you take any of this seriously, you're a bigger fool than I am. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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What about tony rich? | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
Just read something about him having a neo soul sound on his album and when writing for others before, so thought of this thread | |
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I would say Frankie Beverly and Maze, for sure, among others. Maybe even Earth, Wind & Fire to a lesser extent. Prince as well, as he was all over the map musically and many tracks on SOTT alone omit vibes of neo-soul. [Edited 1/22/22 13:58pm] | |
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