Thursday, January 27, 2011


In Remembrance of Teena Marie
By Shelah Moody
Photo of Teena Marie and Shelah Moody by Carmelita Harris

"Beautiful ones, gone on to soon, where did you go, back to the moon, to the stars where angels host, and  to the one who loves you most…talking ‘bout eternity” --Teena Marie, “Makavelli Never Lied,” from the 2004 album, “La Dona.”
On Dec. 26, the music world lost one of its finest voices, Mary Christine Brockert, also known as Teena Marie. She was 54, gone too soon. She was found by her beloved teenage daughter, Alia Rose, whose birthday is Dec. 25, Christmas Day.
It was indeed a sad day for her fans around the world.
I’ve always felt bonded with Teena Marie through her music. I first heard Teena Marie’s mellifluous soprano voice on the radio while visiting my grandmother in Marin County, CA as a teenager.
Since I knew so little about Teena Marie’s personal life (other than she was a white woman who sang like a black woman and was embraced by the African American community), was able to focus intently on the quality of her artistry and production.
When I first heard “Square Biz,” in 1981, I was hooked. I would sit by the radio for hours listening to KSOL on lazy summer afternoons waiting for “Square Biz” to come on so that I could make my own mixed (cassette) tapes. .
I loved “Square Biz,” the joyful, boisterous, syncopated rhyme, which earned Teena Marie the title as the first successful female rapper. I realized that Teena Marie was giving us the straight talk—the 'square biz' of who she was all about and I identified with her as a person. Like myself, Teena Marie was into poets Nikki Giovanni, Maya Angelou and jazz artist Sarah Vaughn. She even liked one of my favorite foods, hot water cornbread! I did not know what a “cat daddy” was back then, but I know now! (According to the Urban Dictionary, a cat daddy is dude over 55 who can still 'get it'! ha ha).
My cousins and I would hold competitions as to who could remember all of the words to “Square Biz.” When she sang her ballad “Portuguese Love,” literally 'blowing the song out of the water; I yearned to sail off to distant lands.
Ironically, Teena Marie died in Pasadena, CA, the city where I was born.
For Teena Marie, soul was an inborn concept. She grew up in the Venice Beach area of Los Angeles, four blocks from a predominantly black community dubbed 'Venice Harlem' which was the inspiration behind many of her songs. She played piano, percussion and guitar and began singing professionally at age 8. Marie’s early musical education came from the Sarah Vaughan, Nancy Wilson, Tony Bennett and Frank Sinatra recordings her parents played at home. While attending Catholic school, Marie studied classical artists such as Schubert and Mozart. She remembers being riveted to a hallway locker after hearing Al Green's voice on the radio for the first time in high school.
In her early 20s, Marie landed a job at Motown Records, where she met her friend, lover and mentor, Rick James, who wrote and produced her debut album, "Wild and Peaceful," in 1979.
In 2005, I had the pleasure of interviewing Teena Marie over the telephone while on staff at the “San Francisco Chronicle,” soon after the release of her Grammy nominated album, “La Dona” dropped. Marie was scheduled to appear at the Eighth Annual KBLX Stone Soul Picnic, featuring the Gap Band, the Whispers, Angie Stone and Ledesi, at Cal State East Bay , Pioneer Amphitheater in Hayward , CA .
Our interview also took place in several months after Rick James died in 2004. Rick James and Teena Marie's steamy duet "Fire and Desire," from James' 1981 "Street Songs" album, is still one of her most popular songs. Although Marie and James broke up in the early '80s, they remained friends.
Marie’s emotions were bittersweet at the time. She found comfort in Alia Rose.
"I've been up and down," said Marie.  "I'm getting better as the days go by. But sometimes, I still have real bad days. We were very close, and Rick was a part of my life for a long time. So, I'm sure I'm gonna have my bad days for quite a while. Basically, I've always been a very happy person. I have a wonderful daughter, and life goes on."
Marie, has influenced a new generation of artists including Nicki Minaj, Ledisi, Missy Elliott, Lauryn Hill and the Fugees, who sampled her ballad "Ooo la la La" on their 1996 hit "Fu- Gee-La." Marie took pride in her mentorship role. Alia Rose, aka Rose LeBeau, appeared in a duet with her mother on the track “ Milk N' Honey” on Marie’s final album, “ Congo Square ” recorded in 2009. Like mother like daughter, Alia Rose demonstrated some of Marie’s  legendary jazz sensibility and rapping skills.            Marie was so open and down to earth during our phone conversation that at some point, I suggested that she and dancehall  DJ Sean Paul (who is part Portuguese) might consider  a remix of “Portuguese Love.”  
“That’s a good idea,” she said. “You know? That’s a really good idea!”
After our interview, Marie invited me to come back stage at the Stone Soul Picnic and say "hello" in person. I told her I would bring her a gift, since her music meant so much to me.
“No, honey, just bring yourself,” she said.
Although members of the media have dubbed her the Ivory Queen of Soul. I do not like that title, 'cause I believe that soul transcends the boundaries of race and ethnicity.
When I saw Marie perform live for the first time at Pioneer Amphitheater, I discovered that she was also a girl who rocked, playing the guitar on many of her tracks including “I Need Your Lovin” and “Behind the Groove” and stepping out in the audience (with security in tow) to serenade them with her elegant cover of “If I Were a Bell.” Her beloved Alia Rose always stood in the wings watching her perform and almost serving as he mother’s protector and guardian.
During our interview, Marie, a regular on the Stone Soul Picnic circuit, reflected on her experience performing in the Bay Area as well as her musical ministry.
"The Bay Area, to me, is the same as Philly,” said Marie. “It's just exciting to see smiling faces. You hear certain music and it reminds you of certain times. I think that God put me on Earth to bring a lot of people together through music and to let them know that you don't have to be a certain color to sing a certain way. You can be a black woman and sing opera like Marion Anderson. It's just really about feeling and spirit and soul. I've been able to project mine and make people happy. That was my destiny, I believe."
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Monday, January 17, 2011

AFROSOLO THEATRE COMPANY PRESENTS BARITONE LAWRENCE BEAMEN

AFROSOLO THEATRE COMPANY PRESENTS

HARMONY & MELODY: A CELEBRATION OF BLACK HISTORY
(A Concert featuring Lawrence Beamen and The Gold Coast Chamber Players)
February 25 – 26, 2011

San Francisco’s award-winning AfroSolo Theatre Company proudly presents Harmony & Melody: A Celebration of Black History, February 25-26, 2011. Harmony & Melody: A Celebration of Black History will feature the extraordinary bass baritone vocalist Lawrence Beamen (of “America’s Got Talent” fame), performing Negro Spirituals and traditional African American music in collaboration with The Gold Coast Chamber Players (GCCP). 
Harmony & Melody… was conceived by Beamen and GCCP’s founder and artistic director Pamela Freund-Striplen to use music as a bridge towards racial and cultural unity, peace and understanding.   
“We are very excited to host this concert”, said Thomas Robert Simpson, founder and Artistic Director of the AfroSolo,  “it fits perfectly with our desire of using the arts to explore the bonds that unite all people.  We also view the arts as a vehicle to promote dialogue and healing, especially in wake of the Tucson shooting,” he added.  
In addition to the Negro Spirituals, the GCCP will also perform “Panamanian Dances for String Quartet” (1953) by William Grant Still, one of the most important African-American composers of the 20th Century, and the “American” Quartet by Czech composer Antonin Dvorak, who was deeply influenced by African-American Spirituals and by his friendship with one of the earliest  African-American arrangers of religious music and  prolific composer Harry T. Burleigh.
Beamen, a Walnut Creek resident, is a critically celebrated vocalist.  He was asked to sing for Rosa Parks at an NAACP event honoring the civil rights leader.  He has performed for numerous dignitaries, including former President Bill Clinton and Pope John Paul II.  In 2009, Beamen was one of four finalist to compete on NBC's hit show “America's Got Talent” Season 4, where his powerful rendition of "Ole Man River" (from Show Boat) was critically acclaimed.  Beamen’s theater credentials include the roles of deckhand Joe in Show Boat (2007) and Coalhouse Walker in Ragtime: The Musical (2006), and he was honored with Bay Area Critics Circle nominations for both of these roles.  Recently he performed at a ceremony honoring the great African-American singer and activist Paul Robeson presented by the Eugene O’Neill Foundation.   Robeson had a powerful influence on Beamen as a singer.  Dr. Alvin McLean will accompany him on piano.
Since its founding in 1987, GCCP has become recognized for its high quality performances and innovative programming, offering an annual series of concerts that combine 20th Century and standard repertoire chamber music for mixed instrumentation (strings, brass, reeds, piano, voice.)  They were named the “Best Chamber Group in the East Bay” by the Contra Costa Times. Performers will include: Laura Albers, violin (Associate Concertmaster of San Francisco Opera Orchestra); Hrabba Atladottir, violin (Member of the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra); Robert Howard, cello; and Pamela Freund-Striplen, viola (Artistic Director, GCCP).  
What: AfroSolo presents “Harmony & Melody: A Celebration of Black History.” featuring Lawrence Beamen, baritone, and the Gold Coast Chamber Players.
When: Friday, Feb. 25, 8 p.m. and Saturday, Feb. 26, 3 p.m.
Where: African American Art & Culture Complex, 762 Fulton St., San Francisco.  (Free Parking)
Tickets: Early Bird Special: All tickets $15 until Jan. 31; $30 General Admission after Jan. 31, 2011.  
Visit  www.afrosolo.org or call (415) 771-2376 for tickets or more information
Founded in 1993, AfroSolo Theatre Company nurtures, promotes, and presents the experiences of African Americans and those from the African Diaspora through solo performances, and the visual and literary arts. Through these arts, people of all ethnicities are brought together to explore and share the human spirit that binds us all.

Funding for the AfroSolo Theatre Company is made possible in part through the support of  the African American Art & Culture Complex, LEF Foundation, San Francisco Grants for the Arts/Hotel Tax Fund, The National Endowment for the Arts and the Zellerbach Family Foundation.
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Tuesday, January 4, 2011

JAMIE FOXX

Jamie Foxx NavyImage via Wikipedia




Born Eric Marlon Bishop on December 13, 1967, in Terrell, Texas Jamie Foxx
was abandoned by his birth parents at the age of seven months. Jamie was
raised by his mother’s adoptive parents, Estelle and Mark Talley. Jamie
was brought up in a strict Baptist Church; he started piano lessons at the
age of five by orders of his grandmother. Jamie was a part-time pianist
and choir leader at Terrell’s New Baptist Church. Jamie was an honor
student at Terrell High School, where he played basketball and football he
played quarterback on the football team. Jamie was the first player in the
school’s history to pass for 1,000 yards.  Jamie received a scholarship to
United States International University, after high school where he studied
Classical music and composition.

 Jamie started out as a stand up comedian, he was dared by a girl friend
it was a good thing he took the dare. Jamie changed his name to Jamie
Foxx after he found out that they let the female comedians perform first.
Jamie chose his surname as a tribute to Redd Foxx. Jamie is truly
multitalented; this was the beginning of his television and film career.
Jamie joined the cast of living color in 1991, as Wanda Wayne the
ugliest, horniest gal in the hood. There was a scene when Wanda was on
the Dating Game, she came out in this Blonde wig blue dress she looked a
mess. Jim Carey was the host. When it was time for the bachelors to meet
her, bachelor number one came around the corner slap her five and said
“what’s up man” bachelor number three came around the corner side stepped
her and started hugging the host and laugh hysterically  because he was
glad he wasn’t picked. The bachelor she did pick Paul Nelson (played by
Tommy Davidson) came around the corner saw Wanda dove into Jim Carey’s
arm swing his hands and feet toward Wanda. Wanda said “why are you
trippin I’m the catch of the day” Tommy Davidson said “somebody needs to
throw your ugly ass back”. I laughed from the start of the scene to the
end and after or every time I thought about it. Every time Jamie was on
as Wanda you always laughed from the beginning to the end. He had his own
sitcom, The Jamie Foxx Show from 1996 to 2001 I use to watch this shows
it was funny but not as funny as his character Wanda. He also had a
recurring role on the sitcom Roc.  In 1992 is film debut was Toys and he
was in a dramatic film role in 1999 Any Given Sunday where he played a
football player. Jamie roles got even better he was featured in the film
Collateral alongside Tom Cruise; he received an Academy Award nomination
for Best Supporting Actor. Jamie played the role of Ray Charles which won
him an Academy Award for Best Actor and a BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a
Leading role. Jamie Foxx is the second male in history to receive two
acting Oscar nominations in the same year for two different movies; Al
Pacino was the first. After this Jamie Foxx was a bankable star in
Hollywood. He played the lead role in the kingdom with Chris Cooper,
Jennifer Garner and Ashraf Barhom. Jamie Foxx star keeps shining on
September 2007 he received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

 Jamie Foxx is not finished yet, this man can sing. Jamie Foxx’s “Slow
Jamz” featured rapper Twista and Kanye West this song went number one on
Billboard Hot 100 single chart. He didn’t stop there he teamed up with
Kanye on his song Gold Digger Jamie sung the hook “I Got a Woman” this
song went straight to number one on Billboard Hot 100 and stayed there
for 10 weeks. Jamie won a BET Award for Best Duet/Collaboration with
Kayne West. Just about everyone loved this song, except for the Gold
Diggers out there I suppose. I like Jamie Foxx Unpredictable album
especially the song he did with Twista “DJ Play A Love Song”. Jamie Foxx
has teamed up with other artists like Mary J Blige, Ludicrous & Field Mob
and Rascal  Flatts. Jamie Foxx has a new album out “Best Night of My
Life”. There are two songs on this album that I like “This Will Be” the
intro and “Living Better Now” because it‘s catchy. 

I like Jamie Foxx, because he can make you laugh and he also can be
serious when he need be. I wish he would put out an album with just him on
it singing, so he can show his talent. I hope we will continue seeing and
hearing a lot more from Jamie Foxx. You can hear songs from his “Best
Night of My Life” on Streetwise Radio.

LM






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