| Ledisi
wanted to make a few bold artistic changes this time out. But just
before she started work on her sophomore Verve release, Turn Me
Loose, she hit a wall. The singer-songwriter had a bad case of writer's
block that stretched for six months. Ledisi was petrified as she
tried to figure out how to follow up her 2007 Verve debut, Lost
& Found. The album garnered strong reviews and two Grammy®
nominations, including one for best new artist. "It was the
pressure of coming back after all the success with Lost & Found
and trying to figure out, 'Who am I? Who is Ledisi now?'" says
the New Orleans native. "Before, I wondered do people get me.
Now it's like, 'Ok, we know you. What are you gonna do now?'"
A friend gave Ledisi an album to check out, hoping the music would
start the creative juices flowing again. It was Buddy Miles' 1970
soul-rock classic, Them Changes. "I had never heard it before,"
Ledisi says. "Once I heard it, I wanted to be able to be free
on the new album. On my previous album, I was contained a little
bit. But I said on my next project that I was going to be off the
chain vocally. I promised to be more honest and talk about stuff
that people don't like to talk about. I've always done that. But
on this album, I went for everything. "Inspired by the freewheeling
music of Buddy Miles, Ledisi now had a direction. But she decided
to push herself even further by reaching out to different collaborators,
something she hadn't done before.
"Usually, I just
come in, like 'I want this. Take that out,'" Ledisi says. "This
time, I laid back a little more and that was new for me. I wanted
to go for the ride. It was frustrating, because everybody had
different energies and I had to adjust. They weren't crazy. I felt
crazy," she says, laughing. "But I made myself go through
the different changes." Acclaim from Lost & Found boosted
Ledisi's profile in the industry. So she was able to secure some
of urban music's most respected producers, including Grammy®
winners Raphael Saadiq and Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis.
She also reunited
with producer Rex Rideout, who contributed greatly to the sound
of Lost & Found. But for Turn Me Loose, Ledisi didn't want to
play it safe. With help from the four other producers (Ivan &
Carvin, Chief Xcel, Chucky Thompson & Fyre Dept), the artist
braided brilliant strains of the different sounds she loved while
growing up in Oakland, Calif. Rock, blues, classic soul, funk and
hip-hop are all fused together throughout Turn Me Loose. Ledisi
often merges the old with the new. The funky title track, for instance,
updates the sassy grooves of vintage Stax. As a tribute to Buddy
Miles, Ledisi does a cover of "Them Changes" as a bonus
track on the new album. The artist flirts with different genres
throughout, but her elastic, Chaka Khan-influenced vocals still
anchor everything. The approach comes close to matching the let-it-all-go
energy of her stage shows. The process of working with different
collaborators was challenging initially but ultimately rewarding.
"Every step I made, I fought it," Ledisi says, shaking
her head. "But I still made the step. I never wrote songs with
different people. But what I found is that it's nice. Where I left
off, somebody else took over."
On working with
Chucky Thompson, perhaps best known for his productions with Mary
J. Blige, on the edgy "Everything Changes": "Chucky
is like a music box. You can just open him up and all kinds of styles
pop out. It was like working in somebody's basement. I love his
whole connection with streets and what folks are listening to in
the clubs."
On
working with the legendary Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis on the passion-drenched
"Higher Than This": "When you work with them, the
song is custom-made to your body and spirit. I feel like I went
through college of music and graduated." Lost & Found may
have been Ledisi's well-received introduction to the mainstream,
and Turn Me Loose is sure to break even more ground. But she is
far from an overnight sensation. Born in New Orleans, Ledisi Young
(her given name meaning "to bring forth" in Nigerian)
has been singing professionally for much of her life. She started
at age 8, fronting the New Orleans Symphony Orchestra. Her mother,
also a singer who performed in local bands, was an early inspiration.
Ledisi's family relocated to Oakland, California, and it was there
that she seriously pursued a career in music.
The artist later
formed her own band, Anibade, whose sound mixed classic soul and
hard-hitting funk with jazzy overtones. She eventually released
two indie albums: 2001's Soulsinger and 2003's Feeling Orange But
Sometimes Blue. Both became underground sensations and led to opening
dates for the likes of Chaka Khan.
Although Ledisi
was a seasoned artist before joining Verve, she says she is still
finding herself musically. Turn Me Loose is a turning point in her
artistic evolution. "During the making of this record, I was
asking myself, 'How do I maintain the listeners I have now and be
myself as I today? That was the struggle. But I knew I needed to
stretch myself and be more open to different people."
After Turn Me
Loose was completed, Ledisi had a personal epiphany. "You know,
I realized that I'm never gonna fit into a box and it's OK, "the
artist says. "All I need to do is focus on my music and just
go with it. Go with that freedom voice, the voice that goes, 'Ahhhh.'" |