360° of Soul...and then some
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Teena Marie had faced adversity in her life before but nothing prepared her for the tidal wave of calamity that engulfed her over the last five years. Her last album, Sapphire (2006), lost steam after the New Orleans-based Cash Money label that released it struggled to survive Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath. While staying at a hotel, a picture fell off the wall and struck her in the head. A Sub-Zero refrigerator (typically 7 feet tall and 500 pounds) fell on her (barely 5 feet tall). She had a seizure at the 2008 Essence Festival. Beyond physical afflictions, she endured the loss of her musical soul mate, one-time lover, and longtime friend, Rick James, who died in August of 2004. “For a while I thought I was cursed,” Lady Tee told me on the eve of the release of her thirteenth album,
The result of this spiritual journey is her most appealing album in years. Congo Square finds Teena Marie sounding as contemporary as ever on cuts like the sultry “The Pressure,” “Baby I Love You,” and “Milk N’ Honey” while channeling old school R&B vibes on tracks like “Can’t Last a Day” (featuring Faith Evans), “Lovers Lane,” and “Marry Me.” She brings old school R&B and Hip Hop veterans MC Lyte, Howard Hewitt, and Shirley Murdock along for the ride and then heads over to jazz central for the title track, “Congo Square” (featuring George Duke) and “Harlem Blues.” On the way, she treats long time fans that grew up on the lyrical intricacies and throbbing beats of hits like “Behind the Groove” and “Square Biz” to a slice of guttural funk on “Ear Candy 101.” Indeed, Congo Square is both a musical education for the listener and the foundation for Marie’s creative rejuvenation.
The revelation of her family’s connections to
Marie saw this same kind of thing play out in her hometown of Venice, California where she grew up a few blocks away from Oakwood, a neighbor predominantly populated by poor Blacks. During the Sixties, these residents were all that stood in the way of the kind of commercial development that could fit nicely with the rest of
The two locales that resonate deeply with Teena Marie sound strikingly similar. The thousands of people who have remained in or returned to New Orleans are fighting to stay in trailers, rebuild homes, reunite families, and stay alive amidst soaring murder rates, racial tensions between blacks and Latinos, and scarce jobs. It did not take a massive storm to reveal the fissures in Oakwood as it did with Hurricane Katrina and
Clearly, it
riles Marie that the city that serves as
Motown and the King of Punk-Funk
By that time, Motown had moved from
The fact that Motown did not know what to do with Teena Marie up until that po
int had little to do with the fact that she was white. There had been other white artists on Motown. It had everything to do with chemistry and together Teena and Rick had it. Still, Gordy hedged his bet and declined to put Teena’s picture on the album cover, a decision she took in stride. “I probably wanted my picture on the cover but was more into the fact that I was working with Berry Gordy and he was a brilliant genius,” she says today. Laughing, she says, “I was like ‘whatever Mr. Gordy wants to do is cool with me.’ He was like ‘Let’s let this music stand on its own and then we’ll show them the picture later.’ I don’t know if it worked or didn’t work but people loved it.” The album hit #18 on the R&B album chart. “I’m Just a Sucker for Your Love,” a duet between Marie and James, hit #8 on the R&B chart in June of 1979.
While Wild and Peaceful undoubtedly bears James’ fingerprints it is no less a Teena Marie album. Far from being James’ protégée, Teena immediately distinguished herself with the beautiful ballads “Turnin’ Me On” and “Déjà Vu (“I’ve Been Here Before)” and then declared “I’m Gonna Have My Cake (and Eat it Too)” on the jazz-infused song of the same name (co-written by Teena).
Teena moved from ingénue to enchantress with her second album, Lady T, released in 1980 and produced with Richard Rudolph, best known for his work with his wife, the late Minnie Riperton. It opens with “Behind the Groove,” a tour de force that radiates with throbbing bass, irresistible percussion, luscious horns, and vocals that cast a spell on listeners. The track only went as far as #21 on the R&B chart but its impact, like the album that spawned it, was so much greater. Teena wrote or co-wrote all of the album’s songs save one (“Now That I Have You,” originally intended for Riperton). She moved from the swinging funk of “You’re All the Boogie I Need” to the breezy “Why Did I Have to Fall in Love with You” with ease. She also co-produced the album with Rudolph. Moreover, on the album’s cover was the shimmering image of style and grace that was Lady Tee. If Wild and Peaceful was a debut then Lady T was an announcement that Teena Marie was for real.
Lady T matched the chart success of its predecessor (#18 R&B) and just missed the Top 40 of the pop album chart. Yet, people were taking notice of the color of her skin as much as they were her music. While Marie downplays any conscious attempt to defy racial categorization, race was clearly on her mind. She sang about “rainbow colored people happy as can be” on “Déjà Vu (“I’ve Been Here Before)” from Wild and Peaceful and how “it would be bliss if we were color-free” on “Too Many Colors” from Lady T. If scientifically black is the absence of color and white is the combination of all colors then it is fitting that Marie planted herself right in the center of the spectrum. Culturally and musically, she was bridging two worlds. “I don’t think people should be restricted to singing a certain kind of music,” she says straightforwardly. “All black people don’t just love soul music. Some of the greatest opera singers in the world are African American females. So what – they’re not supposed to sing opera because they’re black? That doesn’t make any sense to me. That’s what’s in their hearts, that’s what’s in their soul… Music is a reflection of the soul that we have.”
Handling all songwriting and production in a bid to show Motown the depth of her talent, Teena put all of her s
oul into her next album, 1980’s Irons in the Fire. The album opened with a pulsating bass line that ushered in “I Need Your Lovin’,” a sumptuous track replete with string orchestration, piano, and horns. Beyond showing her technical prowess, Irons in the Fire was a meditation on the dialectical nature of love. On “I Need Your Lovin’,” Teena eschews the pursuit of material security in favor of love’s spiritual bonds. “Chains” finds her in ecstatic bondage to all-consuming love. On the lush title track, she calls out for a divine hand in coping with the vagaries of romance. At the same time, “Irons in the Fire” gives voice to her defiance toward the naysayers who said she couldn’t have it all – a self-directed career, passionate love, and unity with a higher power. She carries this theme over to “You Make Love Like Springtime,” a track infused with Latin-jazz that evokes Marvin Gaye and thanks God for the rejuvenating power of romantic love.
This love gave Lady Tee such a head rush that she couldn’t stop singing about it. 1981’s It Must Be Magic celebrated the mystical power of love on the album’s title track, “365,” and the masterpiece “Square Biz.” “Square Biz” is a dance floor declaration of real love wrapped in funk. Yet It Must Be Magic also acknowledged the pain of love, particularly unrequited love, on songs like the fervently hot-blooded “Portuguese Love,” and achingly blue “Yes Indeed.” That same year, Teena recorded “Fire and Desire” with Rick James for his album Street Songs. Though it was never released as a single, the song became a staple on Quiet Storm radio and an affirmation of Rick and Teena’s intense love affair. When they performed the song at
James’s charisma was matched only by his audacity and Teena was able to see these sides of the King of Punk Funk both on-stage and off. In 1980, Prince opened for James on the Fire It Up tour. James complained that Prince stole his stage moves and according to Marie, Rick paid Prince back by stealing his gear. “Back then people weren’t really programming their own synthesizers,” says Teena. “Prince – you know – he’s a genius… he was one of the only one’s who could really do that – probably him and Stevie [Wonder] were the only one’s really doing it…[Prince] was programming all his synthesizers and setting the presets with his own sound and …at the end of the tour [Rick] took [Prince’s] synthesizers.” Teena cannot help but chuckle as she recounts the story. “He took them to
Teena later found herself wedged between the two future legends when she went on the road with Prince. “We were on the Dirty Mind tour together… [Prince and I] never had a problem. We would kick it…neither one of us drank so after the concerts we’d go and sit and have our little orange juice or whatever. He had a lot of respect for me. There were some nights that I would come on stage and I would kick his butt, you know, and [afterwards] he’d walk by me and go “Whew! I have to work hard tonight’ and there were some nights that he would come by and say ‘I whooped you! I whooped you tonight!’ so it was really awesome and he’s always been really wonderful to me.”
For James, however, it was a different story. “I don’t think Rick really liked the fact that [Prince and I] were friends but you know….The rivalry to me as I look back on it – it was really Rick. It wasn’t really Prince. It was more Rick than anything. I never really saw Prince feeding into it too much. It really actually saddened me because I think the two of them would have made some amazing music together. It would have been ridiculous…but you know…it was what it was…I’m not really sure why it started. Rick always said it was because Prince snubbed his mother.” Indeed, James claimed that Prince had insulted his mother at the 1982 American Music Awards by refusing to give her an autograph. The mood should have been celebratory – Teena was nominated for Favorite Soul R&B Female Artist and Rick won Best Soul/R&B Album for Street Songs – but Rick was having none of it. Backstage, Prince’s manager at the time (the late Steve Fargnoli) hastily arranged for Prince to apologize but James ignored him. Even today, Teena views the story skeptically. “I really find that hard to believe and if it did happen, I don’t think it was intentional because Prince just isn’t that kind of guy. So it could have just been unintentional where she was around and he didn’t see her, you know what I’m saying? And Rick really knew how to take stuff and run with it…but from everything that I know [Rick] really, really did like [Prince’s] music….” Laughing, Teena adds one more caveat: “Although he would never admit to it. He would never admit to that.”
Rick did admit his love for Teena at the end of “Portuguese Love” and they sounded like soul mates on “Happy” from James’ 1982 album Throwin’ Down. However, James just could not hold himself back from other women and dangerous pursuits. Teena’s next album, Robbery (1983) chronicled their affair from start to finish. On Robbery, Teena sounds shell-shocked and vulnerable. She’s been played by the ultimate playboy. “Shadowboxing” picks up where “You Make Love Like Springtime” and “Portuguese Love” left off only this time instead rejoicing in rapturous love Teena finds herself fighting with a lover who’s already gone. On the song “Casanova Brown,” she declared the affair was over and pleaded for them to remain friends. Their lives would remain intertwined right up until James’ death. James’s sister managed Teena for a time and played in her band. James’ brother served as her bodyguard and another brother handled her legal work. Teena sang at the funeral service for Rick’s mother, Betty Gladden, in 1991.Teena and Rick recorded together on several occasions over the years. Nothing had quite the energy of “Fire and Desire” but songs like “Call Me,” and “Once and Future Dream” (both from 1988’s Naked to the World) and “I Got You” (from 2004’s La Doña) reminded audiences of the pair’s undeniable chemistry. Teena was there as Rick endured addiction and prison in the 1990s and they toured together right up until a few months before his death in August of 2004. Five years later, the pain of losing Rick a second time sounds as fresh as ever. “I guess that if Rick and I had stayed together as a couple I think that a lot of things would have been different,” she says now. “I think he probably still would be here.”
Epic Hits and the Passion Play
Robbery could have also referred to Teena’s strained relationship with Motown Records. She had delivered three smash hits to Motown within a year – “Behind the Groove,” “I Need Your Lovin’” (#9 R&B), and “Square Biz” (#3 R&B). Both Irons in the Fire and It Must be Magic had hit the top ten of the R&B album charts and the top 40 of the pop album charts. By 1982, she had earned the first of her three Grammy nominations for Best R&B Vocal Performance by a Female and her total sales were approaching a million. Yet, while Motown was earning millions of dollars from sales of Teena Marie’s records Teena was only earning a hundred dollars a week from the label. In May of 1982, she told Motown she would not record for the label any more and sued the label for the money she was due. Motown responded with a lawsuit claiming breach of contract and seeking to stop her from recording for another label. Officially, Teena’s contract with Motown was not due to expire until April 1983. Still, record executive Larkin Arnold signed her to Epic Records in November of 1982. Motown was able to win an injunction that stopped Teena from releasing a new album through Epic. Yet, Teena persevered and prevailed. Despite Motown’s delaying tactics, the court proceedings revealed that Teena was the victim of the record industry’s standard operating procedures. She was discouraged from reviewing her contract. She had no lawyer present when she signed the contract in 1976. Motown had not paid her like a star when they signed her nor had they compensated her with royalties appropriate for an artist who had achieved her level of success. Therefore, the court ruled, Motown could not cry foul when Teena breached the contract’s exclusivity clause to sign with Epic. Robbery was finally released in late 1983 and the case was ultimately settled in September of 1984. Initially, there were bitter feelings all around and Gordy and Marie would not reconnect until 1995 when he attended one of her shows. Yet Lady Tee is a testament to the adage that time heals all wounds. In 2007, she sang at the ceremony dedicating “
Teena’s Motown heritage paved the way for some of her boldest experiments and biggest successes at Epic. Robbery played off the burgeoning electronic funk-rock movement led by Prince’s 1999 and Purple Rain. 1984’s “Lovergirl” was a crossover smash that reached #4 on the pop charts and propelled Starchild to half a million in sales. 1986’s Emerald City opened with P-Funk’s Bootsy Collins and closed with the lush jazz of “Sunny Skies.” 1988’s Naked to the World featured the wicked funk of “Surrealistic Pillow” and “Trick Bag,” and her first number one (R&B) single, “Ooo La La La” (later sampled by the Fugees on their 1996 hit “Fu-Gee- La”). 1990’s Ivory hit with the new jack swing of “Here’s Lookin’ at You” (#11 R&B) and the soulful ballad “If I Were a Bell (#8 R&B).
Many record companies would kill for five straight top 30 albums by an artist, yet, after Ivory Teena Marie found herself in the most unexpected of situations – dropped from Epic. By this time, Sony Corp. had bought Epic’s parent company, CBS, and Larkin Arnold had left the company to start his own firm. Teena was down but not out for the count. In 1994, she released Passion Play independently. The album counted Larkin Arnold and Rick James’
sister, Penny, as executive producers, and featured Lenny Kravitz, who had just come off the hit “Are You Gonna Go My Way.” On Passion Play, Teena Marie sounds like a woman in love. The album has a quiet storm eroticism that is both classy and commercial. The album had no shortage of potential hits. “Warm as Momma’s Oven,” “Main Squeeze (with Kravitz on backing vocals), and “Sweet on You” were as funky and contemporary as anything Marie had recorded in her career. “Wild Horses” is a rapturous power ballad. “Hypnotized” features old school male background vocalizing that makes listeners nostalgic for the Stylistics, the O’Jays, and the Spinners. Teena serenades listeners in Spanish on “Petty Man,” a sensuous ballad wrapped in Flamenco-like acoustic guitar. However, poor distribution doomed the album’s chances for commercial success and neither the album nor any of its singles charted. This makes Passion Play something of a lost treasure on par with the Beach Boys’ Smile, and Prince’s Black Album. “It was just a nightmare,” recalls Lady Tee. “It’s one of the best albums that I’ve ever done and most people have never even heard it. To not be able to have a distributor that was powerful enough for a ‘Teena Marie’ was a travesty because the record just is that good.”
Motherhood and the Milk and Honey Land
It would be ten years before the world enjoyed a new Teena Marie album. While she toured regularly in the interim, her focus was on raising her daughter, Alia Rose (who now goes by the professional name Rose LeBeau). Listening to Marie talk about her daughter makes it clear that motherhood is the most satisfying aspect of her life and the most important piece of her legacy. “I’m not just passing [on] music. I’m passing [on] who I am… I’m passing [on] integrity… I’m passing [on] milk and honey,” she says echoing the name of a track she and Rose perform together on Congo Square. “Milk and honey is biblical. I can give my daughter jewels, I can give her diamond rings but the things that sustain her through her life – things that I’ve taught her – [are] what I can really give her.” Now Rose is about to record her own album with New Orleans based hip-hop label, Cash Money Records, the same label that put Teena Marie back in record stores after her ten-year absence.
She had completed a new album in 2001 when she received a call from the Cash Money team about making her the centerpiece of its new classics division. The association confounded many industry watchers but the move proved to be a shrewd one. Teena maintained creative control of her music, and Cash Money’s deal with Universal guaranteed the distribution an artist of her stature deserved. 2004’s La Doña debuted at #6 on the Billboard 200 album chart and sold half a million units. Both “Still in Love” and “Ooh Wee” (from 2006’s Sapphire) were top 40 hits. When she parted ways amicably with Cash Money she could have gone the independent route again, something many veteran artists are doing in the Internet age. However, the Passion Play debacle made her uneasy about doing everything on her own. Instead, she signed with another legendary soul label, Stax, which has solid distribution through Concord Music Group.
Her approach to
By now, anyone would be a fool to bet against Lady Tee.
And hopefully she has seen the end of the bad juju that followed her around before
Special thanks to
The most any artist can hope for is to have a body of work that stands the test of time. For the musician and performer, this hope lies in songs that display longevity and excursions that stretch the artist and challenge the audience’s conception of that artist. Teena Marie – Lady Tee – is such an artist. She is a pioneer, a living legend, and an unsung hero in the realms of funk, soul, R&B, jazz, rock, and rap.
I remember meeting Teena Marie in 1988. She was promoting her album Naked to the World (Epic, 1988) with an in-store appearance at Tower Records at 66th Street in Manhattan. I waited in line to see the glamorous Lady Tee depicted on the cover of her single “Ooo La La La,” which I held in my hand for her to autograph. When I finally got to the front of the line, I was astonished to see a petite white light of a lady, dressed in white, adorned with blue tinted John Lennon sunglasses and fiery red hair. Teena graciously signed my 45. As she did, I nervously said something like “I want to work in the business behind the scenes setting up events like this for musicians and promoting music.” “Well, then,” said Lady Tee, “You need to talk to Laverne Perry at Epic Records.”
Years later, in 1996, when I was working in the record business at Atlantic Records I attended a party with many other industry professionals. A colleague introduced me to Laverne Perry. Amid the din of music, voices, and glasses, I recounted my Teena Marie moment to Laverne. All she could do was share the biggest smile and give me a giant, gracious hug that said to me”Wow! You remembered!” and “Wow, you made it to where you wanted to go.”
Teena Marie always took me where I wanted to go, at least in my mind. I still vividly remember hearing “Behind the Groove,” “I Need Your Lovin” and”Square Biz” as a child and being moved by the bass, carried by the horns, and transported to Xanadu each time. Is it any wonder that some thirty years later I still hear Lady Tee calling me (“Everybody get up!”)?
Thirty years ago we did not have YouTube and so now I have the chance to catch up on things I missed and relive things I enjoyed. There is Teena on Soul Train in 1980 – a tiny figure wearing a yellow turtleneck blouse and black pants in a sea of young people dancing to “Behind the Groove,” and “I Need Your Lovin’”. There is Teena and her mentor and friend Rick James in Long Beach, California in July 1981 singing “Fire and Desire.” Rick in blazing red towers over Teena in her cool blue outfit. Teena wows the crowd as she keeps pace with Rick’s powerful voice and carries the song through a jazzy vamp that goes toe-to-toe with saxophones. There is the video for1984’s monster hit “Lovergirl” that shows off Teena’s guitar playing prowess, band-leading skills, and frenzied twirling. There is Teena in 1990 belting out “If I Were a Bell” while radio personality and Video Soul host Donnie Simpson looks on in absolute awe and contentment. There is Teena stunning the audience at the 2004 BET Awards as she and Rick James (in his last televised performance) enter from the crowd and sing “Fire and Desire.” James’ voice is shot while Teena’s is golden but nonetheless the performance is devastating. There is Teena displaying her still strong voice during a medley of ballads at the 2008 R&B Foundation Awards where she is recognized for her lifetime contributions to music. She moves across the stage with the swagger of an old school preacher mixing it up with the choir as she lets loose on “Déjà Vu,” “Dear Lover,” and “If I Were a Bell.” As she struggles to catch her breath, the audiences shouts out”Take your time!” as both encouragement to Lady Tee and a plea to her to make the moment last forever. Iris Gordy, Teena’s friend and advocate from the Motown days, presents her award to her. Gordy is Berry Gordy’s niece and announces Teena as “Berry’s baby.” Overwhelmed with emotion Teena accepts her award and says thankfully “Everything I ever asked God to give me he gave me.” She recounts how she asked God to get her signed to Detroit’s world famous Motown Records and that “Detroit came to L.A.”
Teena Marie’s first album, Wild and Peaceful, came out on Motown in 1979. She will celebrate this milestone 30th anniversary with a new album on a new label in 2009. We will celebrate with her as she takes us back to where we were when we first heard “I’m Just a Sucker for Your Love,” “Now That I Have You,” “Square Biz,” “Casanova Brown,” “Lovergirl,” “Lips to Find You,” “Work It,” “If I Were a Bell” “Warm as Momma’s Oven,” “I’m Still in Love,” and”Ooo Wee.” Yet, I sense that Lady Tee has never been one to remain in the past. She learns from the past, enjoys visiting the past, but keeps her eyes fixed on the future, on where her spirit wants to go. And just like she did on “Behind the Groove” she wants to takes us with her. With Congo Square (Stax, 2009) is inviting us to celebrate her history by moving us with new songs and moving us forward with new visions of what is possible through faith, love, and passion.
Courtesy of www.vitarhythms
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