From
her name to her music to her mission to the
circuitous path that brought her to legendary
Verve Records for
her third album, Lost and Found,
Ledisi is a galvanizing, all-natural wonder.
Wherever she goes, she wows and astounds.
This year, during a gala Songwriters
Hall of Fame ceremony, an A-list of
show business veterans could hardly wait
for Ledisi's rapturous rendition of "Unchained
Melody" to end before lavishing her
with thunderous applause. In 2006, before
a rapt contingent of music business mavens
at the Urban Network conference,
Ledisi - wedged between a hip hop act and
a tweety bird - brought an audience of astute
professionals to its feet with an amazing
a cappella performance of the Beatles' "Yesterday." Then
there was the PBS televised tribute to Ella
Fitzgerald, "We All Love Ella," where
no less than Quincy Jones introduced
her to the stage (adopting her as his goddaughter)
where she proceeded to belt out a show-stealing
version of "Blues in the Night" that
she later recorded for the companion CD with
the great Phil Ramone producing.
Singer/songwriter Ledisi
(pronounced led-uh-see and adopted from
the word that means "to
bring forth" in the Yoruba language
of Nigeria) is the epitome of the performer
that - after she earns a standing ovation
- people stare wide-eyed and mumbling, "Where
has she been all this time?" The lady
will tell you - in a voice of equal parts
sweet, slightly weary yet triumphant - "Here...all
along."
Three years in the making, the 16-track Lost
and Found (for which Ledisi co-produced
all of the songs with veterans Rex
Rideout, Jamey Jaz and Mano
Hanes, newcomer Lorenzo
Johnson and longtime collaborator
Sundra Manning) is the album destined
to usher a deserving talent into some well-earned
limelight. Overflowing with deeply touching
songs of love and life, the CD cuts a swath
through intimate snapshots of relationships
that linger in the mind long after the
last note has been sung.
Emotions swing from
the soulful swoon of falling in love with
your "Best Friend" to
a liberating acknowledgement that it's time
for lovers to throw in the towel on the insanely
hooky "I Tried" (featuring Earl
Cooney on guitar - the chorus reads: "I
tried, you tried / We tried…Time
to move on!"). "In the Morning" flows
like an old R&B LP a la Stevie
Wonder or Barry White,
expressing a woman's need for love after the
lovin'. On the more contemporary side are "Joy" and "You & Me" that
telegraph the bliss of being truly connected
to someone. And the smoothly hip hop-spiced "Think
of You" is so reverent that it really
couldn't be about anything else but loving
The Lord.
The first single from Lost and Found is
the moving "Alright," reassuring
words of comfort, self love and survival
that everyone can relate to. "'Alright'
came from me just being tired from the ups
and downs of my journey," Ledisi shares. "It
came during a great low as well as a great
high in my life. I was trying to stay positive
and feel like, no matter what, things were
gonna be alright. Before I signed with Verve,
I was writing and recording songs with no
idea where the money would be coming from
to pay for all of it. It was tough."
Already respected and adored from the cutting
edge of today's black music underground,
Ledisi has been one of its most inspiring
independent spirits. Frustrated at the lack
of interest she was getting from major record
companies, Ledisi and her friend Sundra Manning
launched LeSun Records in 1999 with Ledisi's
debut project, Soulsinger.
She had ears and necks turning with earthy
jams like "Get Outta My Kitchen" and "I
Wantcha Babe," but what was most striking
was the uncompromised manner in which she
covered touchy taboo material such as "Papa
Loved to Love Me" (incest) and "Coffee" (domestic
violence). Diane Anderson-Marshall of One
World magazine marveled that Ledisi
was "iconoclastic...to a fault."
Following her 2002 sophomore CD Feeling
Orange but Sometimes Blue -
which contained her singular approach
to jazz for the new millennium - Ledisi's
voice took center stage. Like Chaka
Khan without sounding anything
like her, Ledisi's is a voice that always
reflects a reservoir of strength even
in the most tender of moments. And women
related to it in no uncertain terms.
Valencia Stewart in Savoysang
her praises, "It's easy to mistake
one of Ledisi's electrifying performances
for a sanctified church meeting." Joyce
E. Davis in Upscale wrote, "Her
voice reaches and aches...wallows and
resonates...the girl is just plain ol'
bad!" And lest you think the men
were unmoved, J. Freedom du Loc mused
in Vibe, "she's an emerging
singer with a serious jazz jones...miscast
in a post-millennial musical climate."
A breakthrough for Ledisi
at urban adult contemporary radio occurred
upon the release of the 2004 all-star collection Forever,
For Always, For Luther - a salute to
soul music legend Luther Vandross.
On this album, released by Verve Records
via its GRP subsidiary, Ledisi covered the
R&B master's "My Sensitivity (Gets
in the Way)" with such tangy passion
that yet another layer of audience began
to wonder, "Who is this exciting new
talent?" It
was at this point that Verve - which had
passed on signing her in the past - began
to reconsider this versatile talent. But
the process took two years.
Composer/keyboardist Rex
Rideout,
who produced Ledisi's Vandross cover, was
instrumental in guiding her through the delicate
transition from independent firebrand to
major label artist. A veteran who's worked
with pioneering soul-jazz greats from player
Roy Ayers to singer Angela Bofill,
he understood what would be required from
all involved to make Ledisi's re-launch a
success. "When I met Ledisi, I was floored
by her," he states. "Watching her
in the studio is like watching a performance.
There's a whole lot of music in this woman.
The challenge has been finding the right
voice for her - with enough of the fire that
got her here yet chilled enough to take her
further. That process will give her a solid
foundation in the mainstream community. I
told Verve, ‘Ledisi will be legendary.’ It's
her time."
Ledisi took the initiative
to bring her artistry to the next level.
She left all she was comfortable with in
her Northern California support system
to take a leap of faith on Broadway. "Living in New
York, "she explains, "I was doing
things I'd never done before. In Oakland,
I had a house and a car. In New York, I had
a sleeping bag on a floor in a friend's apartment
and had to walk everywhere!" But the
independent move paid off. She wound up being
pivotal to the co-writing and production
of the music during the workshop stage of
Oprah Winfrey's Tony-winning stage adaptation
of "The Color Purple". Ledisi also
understudied Tony Kushner/George
C. Wolfe's off Broadway production "Caroline
or Change." All the while she was writing
and cutting demos in her dressing room, then
flying to L.A. - initially at her own expense
- to record them properly.
Ultimately, Ledisi created Lost and
Found her way - mixing old and new
friends in familiar and fresh aural environs.
The story was completely unscripted, unfolding
in a way she proudly describes as "organic." "The
first song Rex and I wrote together ('Think
of You') was done in 20 minutes over lunch," she
states. "Rex made me feel that not
only can I be on the radio, I deserve to
be there. I'd already been writing with
Mano Hanes, this mystical person who
moved up to the Bay from L.A. After he
saw me live at The Conga Room, we hooked
up and wrote several songs, including 'Someday,'
'Today' and 'Best Friend.' Then I met Lorenzo
Johnson at a cookout in Washington
D.C. He invited me to visit his studio
in Maryland where he had all these tracks
just sitting around. When I heard the music
for one, I wrote 'Get to Know You.' We
wrote about 12 songs in four days. None
of these experiences were coincidental."
Reflecting on the theme of Lost
and Found, Ledisi continues, “During
the making of this album, I was in a relationship
but not feeling complete. One day I was
at Rex's house sitting at the piano - which
is a very private thing for me. I never let
anybody hear me play. Rex stopped and asked,
'What is that?' I said 'Nothing...just
this little song I've been working on for
over a year for someone else.' He said,
'Oh, no. That came from straight out of
you. We're going to fix that right now.'" That
song became "Lost and Found (Find Me)," the
CD's title track which Ledisi sings lovingly
accompanied by just Rex at the piano and
Karen Briggs on violin. "I wanted
a Carole King vibe," she
explains. "That song for me is what
'Yesterday' is to the Beatles."
Similarly magical was
the creation of the under-two-minute interlude "We Are One," a
mesmerizing vocal collage sung with acclaimed
soul man Rahsaan Patterson. "I
recorded it during the same session I did
'Devotion' for the Interpretations:
Celebrating the Music of Earth Wind & Fire CD," she
shares. "Out of the blue, Rex played
this melody and I screamed, 'That's a song!'
I wrote the words in the car on the way to
the studio. I called Rahsaan to come sing
with me, but we only had an hour. The lights
were low and we were looking at each other
as we sang... Rahsaan is such an inspiration.
The first time I saw him was on BET singing
'So Fine' live at SOB's. That song sparked
my song 'Kitchen.' I could tell he was an
underdog like me."
Voicing her concern
about the slicker production of her latest
album, Ledisi states, "I
worked hard not to lose the essence of who
I am by trying to fit into a box. We kept
a lot of my first takes because I have to
keep things raw. That's also why my original
partner, Sundra Manning,
had to be on the record." The once inseparable
two-against-the-world had a temporary parting
of the ways. "Running a record company
with just the two of us doing what whole
teams do at a label took a toll on our friendship
and creativity. I felt like everywhere I
looked was somewhere I'd already been. We
just needed a break to reconnect with who
we are individually. Now we're better friends
and business partners. We still own Soulsinger and Feeling
Orange but Sometimes Blue. Once Lost
and Found blows up, we'll re-release
them with better distribution. And we're
still placing songs from our catalog with
other artists (including the poignant piano
and voice piece "Missing You," the
title track of soul veteran Peabo
Bryson's first CD in eight years).
Relating the story of her and Sundra's contribution
to Lost and Found, Ledisi continues, "We
were working on a (unfinished) project called Carnival.
I've always had a fascination with Ferris
Wheels. It's like the world going around
and around with all these people sitting
on it. So we wrote a song called 'Upside
Down,' which is how the world feels to me
right now.” If the world is topsy-turvy
for Ledisi these days, at least her love
life has found solid ground. "The last
song I wrote for this CD is 'The One' which
I did with Rahsaan's writing partner, Jamey
Jaz. It represents where I'm at
now – found - in a relationship
that's way healthier."
The same can be said
of her connection with her new recording
company. "Being on
Verve makes me feel like a class act," she
swoons. "My all-time favorite Verve
album is A Turtle's Dream by Abbey
Lincoln...and anything by Ella!
All the legends were on Verve and most of
them were on the cutting edge. I'm an R&B
artist on a jazz label. That makes no sense
at all to the average person, but it makes
perfect sense to me. Along with my own label,
LeSun, and my new publishing company, LedHed
Music, Verve is the ideal home for me."
"When Sundra and I started," Ledisi
concludes, "our motto was ‘Innovators
For Modern Timeless Music.’ That means
I make my music to be timeless...so it can
never dated."
From singing on Broadway and teaching voice
in Berkeley to performing around the globe,
having the guts to compose and manufacture
her own soul-baring music, and the good fortune
of being born in New Orleans (soul music
central) to two fine singers (and a drummer
for a step daddy to boot), Ledisi extends
from roots any artist would proudly claim. Lost
and Found marks the next level ascent
of a trained, tried and true artist for whom
the underground was a nurturing cocoon. Now…watch
this black butterfly soar.
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Saturday Afternoon
- September 20, 2008 / 1:00pm |
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Arena / Jimmy
Lyons Stage |
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Saturday Afternoon
- September 20, 2008 / 3:30pm |
 |
Garden Stage |
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