SON OF SOUL

By Jeff Lorez, (c) 2008, Soul Music.com

 

Since his debut as lead vocal with family trio Tony! Toni! Toné! two decades ago Raphael Saadiq has proudly worn his musical influences on his sleeve. With the release of his third solo album, ³The Way I See It² on Columbia Records, the low key singer/songwriter/producer is once again mining his record collection for sweet inspiration...

 

There are very few R&B artists from the ı90ıs that are still around and relevant today. The mainstays from that era, Guy, En Vogue, New Edition, TLC, Toni Braxton etc have all seen their flame burn with a brief, stunning effervescence before being reduced in a dramatically short period of time to less than flicker. Why then is Raphael Saadiq still around, still plying his craft and still very relevant to the contemporary music scene? The answer, of course, lies in the music itself. Though Tony! Toni! Toné! with whom the Bay Area born Saadiq sang lead vocals for 4 albums during their stint at Polygram Records won respect to their throwback to R&Bıs halcyon era of the ı60ıs & ı70ıs Saadiqıs solo production flame stayed in the ascendent after the split of the group in the late ı90ıs as became the go to guy for authentic, real soul music music. He may not compete for chart positions with the likes of Timbaland and the Neptunes etc but through work with his own group Lucy Pearl, DıAngelo, Mary J. Blige and Joss Stone, Saadiq has garnered hard core respect from those after some real soul music. His own solo albums, ³Instant Vintage² and ³Ray-Ray² were the kind of records youıd hear playing in cool clothes boutiques or chilled out soul clubs by those in the know.

 

Now in his early forties, somehow Saadiq, who is a keen traveler, fitness enthusiast and horseback rider (he has his own horses near his house ³Trus me itıs not as glamorous as it sounds!²) has remained ageless since the late ı80ıs/early Œ90s. Perhaps itıs his youthful singing voice or generally cool demeanor and the fact that visually the years have hardly had an impact. Also ageless is Saadiqıs latest solo album, ³The Way I See It² is a almost a time capsule that bypasses hip-hop and disco to land fairly and squarely back in the ı60ıs. Perhaps a more fitting title for this album would have been ³Instant Vintage²! Saadiq has made it his business to meticulously retrace the soulful steps of Motown not just with his songwriting but with instrumentation and recording of this album which like its inspiration is as inviting as an oversized armchair near a warm and toasty roaring log fire on a bitingly cold winterıs day.

 

³Iım loving the fact that people are loving the sound of the record and that people are commenting on how different it sounds from everything else that is out there² Saadiq says happily from his LA studio when I mention the production quality.

 

³ I was talking to my engineer Chuck about making my guitar and drums sound the way that Iıve been loving guitars and drums to sound all my life. We looked at tubes, mics, tube equipment, read books on how it happened from the Beatles to Motown to Stax to engineers. I researched it and went out and bought a lot of old gear² he adds.

 

However, the decision to record a totally retro album wasnıt he explains, pre-meditated:

 

³ I donıt have an answer how this album came about. Itıs kinda spooky. All I know is that I was starting it and then turned around and it was done! Even with Tony Toni Tone there were elements that felt like that on certain songs but not the whole record.²

 

Probably the most noticeable sea change for Saadiqıs production career was Mary J. Bligeıs ³I Found My Everything². A glorious slice of soul music balladry that sounds like it could be a cover of classic Aretha.

 

³I feel like Iıve been messinı with this sound forever since we first came out² he says when I mention the Blige song. ³I did a song with Leelah James in that vein that never came out. She was the first one I really tested my drum sounds and everything on. But she never finished it because she didnıt stay in her deal. After that I worked with Mary. The first time I met her was in London at the MOBO Awards back stage and we said should work together. She ended up calling me because she liked ³Instant Vintage². It was still another year that we ever worked. I told her I had a song for her. She came to the studio. I played it for her and she loved it. After that I just went it and did my whole record that way.²

 

Tony! Toni!Toné! were an anomaly in the music business in the ı90ıs because unlike many artists they were a group known and respected simply for their music. Very little actually known or written about their individual members. However, for those who knew the group there were three distinct personalities. Dwayne Wiggins was the outgoing party guy, a social animal that I interviewed on many occasions, once even at his motherıs house in Oakland, California. Raphael, conversely, has always appeared subdued and quiet. Itıs a little sad, though, from a purely outsiders perspective that the two half brothers who spent so much of their lives together hardly get to speak these days.

 

³ We barely see each other at all. If we talk Iıll bring him back to Graham Central Stn., Sly, Heatwave because I know thatıs what he loves. When I get around him, thatıs all I really want to talk to with him² he says. ³If heıs in LA and have a mutual friend we may hang out together. Weıve still got love for one another but we both have our own paths and theyıre different now.

 

Another topic I had to bring up was the reason, in the mid-90ıs why Raphael changed his name from his family name Wiggins to Saadiq. At the time much was made about a reported conversion to Islam. Saadiq puts the record straight.

 

³It wasnıt due to an Islamic thing. Iım not Muslim. I liked the name Saadiq and didnıt want to be known as an artist as Raphael Wiggins. I didnıt like the way Raphael Wiggins sounded. Weıre good friends now but at the time we were having issues with the president of Polygram Records and he made a comment, ŒWhoıs gonna want to hear a Raphael Wiggins record?ı later on I thought he might have a point. I saw the name Saadiq and I liked it. Plus me and my brother was in the same business so I didnıt want for us to get confused, where theyıd be like, ŒOh itıs probably one of them Wiggins boys!ı I wanted my own identity².

 

His own identity has brought him a slew of admirers, not least of all many of the artists he grew up admiring himself such as Stevie Wonder, who appears on the album on the standout song, ³Like It².

 

³ When Stevie heard my record he asked me what made me do this. He said in a nice way, ŒPeople have a real short memory and you donıt seem to have oneı.

 

Adds Raphael of their friendship: ³ Iım a Stevie Wonder fan like everyone. Now Iım fortunate to be one of his friends. Over the years weıve worked on different things - ³So Amazing² the Luther Vandross cover which was a duet with Beyonce. We both live by the Taurean Bull. Itıs a little joke we have with each other.

 

³When we got together we talked about the record I just made. Itıs hard for me to talk about my record with him because I want to talk about ³Songs In The Key Of Life² and ³Golden Lady². But I got him to start talking about Motown. He was there as a kid when it all started. Heıs actually a little surprised that he was around so much great music. I donıt think he could take it all in. To this day I get the vibe that he canıt take it all in.

 

Of his own musical ability Saadiq is self effacing and honest: ³ Stevie Wonder would tell me heıd practice for 10 hrs/day sometimes. Take a little break and hop back on the piano. That wasnıt gonna happen for me!

 

Proficient enough to compose on he piano, Saadiqıs first instrument in the bass and itıs learning his craft with that that holds some of his fondest childhood memories.

 

³Those school talents shows were a lot of fun!² he remembers. ³The competition at high school. Sneaking instruments to school. Getting caught when you come home. Tryinı to hide your guitar. I would throw it behind some bushes and my parents would see it and beat my ass! The next day Iıd win the talent show and come home with the faculty staff so I wouldnıt get beat again!

 

³The show was just me playinı bass, rockinı with the crowd. Iıd play along with the 45ıs and start rockinı all different bass lines. It turned into a call and play kind of thing².

 

³Iıve always played drums too and I play guitar but for me to sit down and practice piano 5 hrs a day just wasnıt gonna happen for me. I took lessons for a while but learning all the scales just really bored me.²

 

Itıs not easy to get an broad view of Saadiqıs personality as heıs generally a fairly quiet introverted personality. The sensitive artist personified. However, beneath his cool exterior, his list of people (Sam Cooke, Dorothy Dandridge, Jimi Hendrix, Eddie Kendricks and David Ruffin, John Lennon, Linda Creed, Karen Carpenter, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, John F. Kennedy) he would have wished he could have met reveals his deep passion for both musical and political history. Asked what he would ask some of them, his responses give us a greater window into his personality.

 

³ I would ask John F Kennedy what made him take the political stance he did knowing that there would be so much racism and pressure on him.

 

³Martin Luther King - did he really think that by taking his stance he did, after he passed away did he think that America would stand up as people - all races, not just black and try and do the right thing? Heıd be amazed at whatıs happening now. ³I would keep Malcolm around me and ask him when he was locked up what pointed his focus towards Islam. What made him not fearful of people within his own organization that may be plotting his downfall.²

 

With a tour in the works and healthy buzz around his new album, Saadiqıs profile will noticeably greater this year than in previous. However, reveals that unlike most other producers he isnıt looking capitalize on an upsurge in fame by working on as many projects as possible. His ethos is quality over quantity.

 

³ I donıt really do any of that. Thereıs not an abundance of people calling me to work like that but there are a few quality people that call and it rotates ever year. It keeps me busy and I can be proud of what I deliver.²

 

Click here for full track, to hear clips and order Raphael's "The Way I See It" CD