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    Bruno Mars Responds to Cultural Appropriation Accusations

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    The ‘That’s What I Like’ hitmaker addresses the accusations in an episode of ‘The Breakfast Club’, telling host Charlamagne Tha God that his music ‘comes from love’

    Mar 6, 2021
    AceShowbiz – While his music is critically acclaimed, Bruno Mars has faced accusations of cultural appropriation throughout his career. The “Versace on the Floor” singer has finally addressed the matter during his appearance on “The Breakfast Club” interview alongside his Silk Sonic teammate Anderson .Paak.
    “People love to accuse you of being a cultural thief, which I find interesting because you are a person of color,” host Charlamagne Tha God said to the biracial singer. “What would you say to those people?”
    Sharing that he has always given credit to the funk, R&B and pop artists who appeared before him, Bruno responded, “I would say: You can’t look at an interview, you can’t find an interview where I’m not talking about the entertainers that’ve come before me. And the only reason why I’m here is because of James Brown, is because of Prince, [Michael Jackson]–that’s the only reason why I’m here.”

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    The “24K Magic” artist went on to say, “I’m growing up as a kid, watching Bobby Brown [and] saying, ‘OK, if that’s what it takes to make it, then I’ve got to learn how to do the running man, I’ve got to learn how to do the moon walk.’ That’s it.” Bruno also insisted that “this music comes from love, and if you can’t hear that, then I don’t know what to tell you.”
    He further noted that it was totally normal for musicians to learn something from artists who came before them. “What is the point if us, as musicians, can’t learn from the guys that’ve come before us? What did they do?” he questioned.
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    When asked if the criticism made him upset, Bruno said, “It comes with the gig. And there’s real merit to what people are saying about Black entertainers not getting their flowers, and I’m championing with that, I’m with that … I understand, but it’s just Twitter.”

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    Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paak Debut Silk Sonic's First Single

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    The pair have launched ‘Leave the Door Open’, their first single as a duo, as they are gearing up for the release of their upcoming debut studio album titled ‘An Evening With Silk Sonic’.

    Mar 6, 2021
    AceShowbiz – Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paak have released Silk Sonic’s first single, “Leave the Door Open”.
    The pair have teamed up to record an album called “An Evening With Silk Sonic”, and the first tune from the record – which also features “special guest host” Bootsy Collins – is out now with a music video, which sees them dripping in pieces from Bruno’s Lacoste x Ricky Regal Collection.
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    The “Finesse” singer has just teamed up with Lacoste to launch his new lifestyle brand, Ricky Regal.
    “Inspired by a lust for life and an entrepreneurial Midas touch, the collection bridges Bruno’s enigmatic personality and distinct style with Lacoste’s iconic blend of sport and luxury,” the company said in a statement.

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    Teasing the new single and record from his new outfit, Bruno previously tweeted, “We locked in and made an album. The band’s called Silk Sonic. First song drops next Friday 3/5. (sic)”
    Rapper Anderson tweeted, “WE MADE AN ALBUM!! YALL GET THE FIRST SONG NEXT FRIDAY 3/5!! ROCKET EMOJIS AND ALL THAT!!! (sic)”
    The pair are no strangers to working together, after they toured with each other on the 35-year-old singer’s “24K Magic World Tour” in 2017.
    Bruno hasn’t dropped an album since 2016’s “24K Magic”.
    Details of their upcoming collaborative album are still sketchy, but there was speculation that the pair had worked on new material with Chic guitarist Nile Rodgers and a member of Disclosure after a video emerged on social media of the quartet at the famous Abbey Road Studios in London.

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    Drake Releases Three New Songs From 'Scary Hours 2'

    WENN

    The ‘Scorpion’ star has delighted his loyal devotees as he releases three tracks from a follow-up to his 2018 mini album ‘Scary Hours’ to tide fans over his next studio installment.

    Mar 6, 2021
    AceShowbiz – Drake has released three news songs on “Scary Hours 2”.
    After teasing a follow-up to his 2018 EP “Scary Hours”, the hip-hop superstar has delivered three new tracks on the sequel: “What’s Next”, “Wants and Needs” featuring Lil Baby, and “Lemon Pepper Freestyle” with Rick Ross.
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    Fans are currently awaiting a release date for the rapper’s upcoming album, “Certified Lover Boy”, which he delayed to focus on his recovery from knee surgery.
    The LP was set to arrive in January (21), but he decided to push back the release because all of his “energy” went into healing from the operation he had last year.
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    In a statement to fans on his Instagram Story, Drake wrote, “I was planning to release my album this month but between surgery and rehab my energy has been dedicated to recovery.”
    “I’m blessed to be back on my feet feeling great and focused on the album, but CLB won’t be dropping in January. I’m looking forward to sharing it with you all in 2021. (sic)”
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    So far, the Grammy-winner has released the lead single, “Laugh Now Cry Later”, featuring Lil Durk.
    Drake previously admitted he expects some people to “hate on” his new record like they did 2016’s “Views”.
    Responding to a fan who said “Views” “be hittin’ different” four years later, Drake replied, “They hated on Views just like they will CLB (Certified Lover Boy) but it’s music to evolve to.”
    Drake’s last studio album was 2018’s “Scorpion”.

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    Justin Bieber Robs a Bank for Love in 'Hold On' Music Video

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    ‘The song is just a hopeful record of just holding on,’ the ‘Love Yourself’ hitmaker explains the song, which will be included in his upcoming sixth album ‘Justice’.

    Mar 5, 2021
    AceShowbiz – Justin Bieber has finally released the music video for his latest single “Hold On”. Unveiled on Thursday, March 4, the visuals sees the Canadian heartthrob being on the run after robbing a bank to save the love of his life.
    The video, which is directed by Collin Tilley, opens with Justin trying to escape from police as he rides a motorbike. Later, the scene cuts to him suffering a gunshot wound.
    In the flashback scene, it is revealed Justin’s girlfriend is having a deadly disease. Struggling with the medical bills, Justin is forced to commit a crime by robbing a bank. However, his plan doesn’t work out because authorities arrive before he can flee the scene.

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    “I need you to hold on/ Heaven is a place not too far away/ We all know I should be the one to say we all make mistakes/ (We all make mistakes),” Justin sings in the chorus. “Take my hand and hold on/ Tell me everything that you need to say/ Cause I know how it feels to be someone/ Feels to be someone who loses their way.”
    “The song is just a hopeful record of just holding on, because a lot of us want to give up at times,” Justin explains the song, which will be included in his upcoming sixth album “Justice”. “There’s a lot to look forward to. There’s a lot we can’t control sometimes, but there’s always hope.”
    Elaborating the new direction that his music will take with his next album, the husband of Hailey Baldwin shares, “In a time when there’s so much wrong with this broken planet we all crave healing and justice for humanity. In creating this album my goal is to make music that will provide comfort, to make songs that people can relate to and connect to so they feel less alone.”

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    Tory Lanez's New Album 'Playboy' Comes 'From a Place of Hurt and Vulnerability'

    Dubbed an RnB capsule, the newly-released project, which features a Chris Brown-assisted track, captures the Canadian artist’s ’emotions caused by a breakup that left him vulnerable.’

    Mar 5, 2021
    AceShowbiz – Tory Lanez shows his vulnerable side in his new album “Playboy”. Dubbed an R&B capsule, the seventh studio album from the Canadian artist just dropped on midnight Friday, March 5 and he describes the creative process behind the project in a press release.
    “Emotionally, I was able to flow creatively. Some of my best creations come out when I’m vulnerable,” he explains. “This is me being as honest as I can be on a record. For the first time in a long time, I was writing R&B from a place of hurt and vulnerability, Unlike a lot of my other R&B which is based on the pure vibe and catchy melodies.”
    Lanez additionally reveals his objective with the album, “I want my listeners to walk away with an understanding of how my emotions are and I want them to understand that this is an honest depiction of how I feel about relationships and people that are close to me.”
    Off the twelve tracks in the album, “Deceiving Eve” is perhaps the best to convey Lanez’s emotions as it is the song he felt the most vulnerable of the project. The album also also features “Feels” as the lead track. Featuring R&B crooner Chris Brown, the song is described as a seductive ballad that showcases the two singers rhapsodizing over bedroom antics.
    Breezy also appears in the music video directed by Christian Breslauer, which was released on February 20. On working with Brown, Lanez says, “Me and my Bro are not playing. This song is kicking off my new capsule ‘PLAYBOY’. This is one of my favorite bangers to date. It’s R&B season.”

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    Ahead of the “Playboy” release, Lanez debuted three unreleased tracks as non-fungible tokens (NFTs) through a collaboration with leading blockchain company Bondly.Finance. This unorthodox approach pairs rare digital art with music where fan’s and NFT collectors are able to prove ownership of these items through the blockchain.
    By taking this approach, Lanez becomes the highest streamed, independent artist to release full songs as NFT’s prior to the album’s release on other digital platforms. “This album is one of the biggest releases of my career, so I had to make the release strategy bigger than ever,” says Lanez. “This meant getting the tracks to my superfans early before the album hits on Friday. So I’m dropping my first NFT, allowing 450 fans to get 3 unreleased tracks from my discography and a chance to meet and hang out with me digitally.”
    The three songs include two from his upcoming album “Playboy” and one from his yet to be announced 80’s themed album.
    “Playboy” is available for stream and download here.

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    Henry Goldrich, Gear Guru to Rock Stars, Is Dead at 88

    AdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyHenry Goldrich, Gear Guru to Rock Stars, Is Dead at 88The owner of Manny’s Music in Manhattan, he brought wah-wah to Hendrix and Clapton and connected musicians with equipment that helped define their styles.Henry Goldrich in an undated photo in front of his store, Manny’s Music, which until it closed in 2009 was the largest and best-known of the cluster of music shops on West 48th Street in Manhattan.Credit…via Ian GoldrichMarch 4, 2021, 6:29 p.m. ETWhen asked about his musical ability, Henry Goldrich would often demur, “I play cash register.”His stage was Manny’s Music in Manhattan, where Mr. Goldrich, the longtime owner, supplied equipment to a generation of rock stars. But even though he sold instead of strummed, Mr. Goldrich secured an important role in rock by connecting famous musicians with cutting-edge equipment.“To these guys, Henry was the superstar,” his son Judd said. “He was the first guy to get gear they had never seen before.”Mr. Goldrich died on Feb. 16 at his home in Boca Raton, Fla. He was 88.His death was confirmed by his other son, Ian, who said he had been in frail but stable health.Manny’s, which closed in 2009 after 74 years in business, was long the largest and best-known of the cluster of music shops on the West 48th Street block known as Music Row.It was opened in 1935 by Mr. Goldrich’s father, Manny, and it was a second home for Henry since his infancy, when the shop’s clientele of swing stars doted on him. Ella Fitzgerald would babysit for him in the shop when his parents went out for lunch, Ian Goldrich said.By 1968, when his father died at 62, Henry Goldrich had largely taken over operations and had turned the shop into an equipment mecca and hangout for world-renowned artists.He did this by expanding its inventory of the latest gear and by solidifying connections with suppliers that helped him consistently stock high-level instruments and new products.Mr. Goldrich sold guitars to Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Pete Townshend and many others. He was not happy about Mr. Townshend’s penchant for smashing them.Credit…Chester Higgins Jr./The New York TimesAt a time before rock stars were lavished with the latest equipment straight from the manufacturers, Manny’s was favored by top musicians searching for new gear and testing out new equipment.These included two guitar gods of the 1960s, Jimi Hendrix and Eric Clapton — to whom, Ian Goldrich said, his father recommended the wah-wah pedal, an electronic device that immediately became a staple of both musicians’ approaches. He added that Hendrix would buy scores of guitars on credit and have Mr. Goldrich fine-tune them to the guitarist’s demanding preferences.Many rock and pop classics were either played or written on instruments sold by Mr. Goldrich.John Sebastian, founder of the Lovin’ Spoonful, recalled in an interview how Mr. Goldrich in the mid-1960s helped him select the Gibson J-45 he used on early Spoonful recordings like “Do You Believe in Magic?”Mr. Goldrich similarly matched James Taylor with a quality Martin acoustic guitar early in his career, his son Ian said. And Sting used the Fender Stratocaster Mr. Goldrich sold him to compose “Message in a Bottle” and many other hits for the Police before donating it to the Smithsonian Institution.The photos on the Manny’s Wall of Fame constituted a Who’s Who of popular music. Credit…Chester Higgins Jr./The New York TimesIn 1970, he sold the Pink Floyd guitarist David Gilmour the 1969 black Stratocaster he played on many of the band’s seminal recordings. It sold at auction in 2019 for a record $3,975,000.Pete Townshend of the Who would order expensive electric guitars by the dozens from Mr. Goldrich, who was not happy when he heard about the guitarist’s penchant for destroying his instrument onstage for theatrical effect.“It was good business,” Ian Goldrich said, “but my father was annoyed that Pete was breaking all the guitars he was selling him.”Unlike many of his flamboyant rock-star customers, Mr. Goodrich always dressed conventionally in a sport coat and kept a blunt demeanor that put his customers at ease.“He had a gruff personality; he treated them all the same,” Ian Goldrich said. “He’d tell Bob Dylan, ‘Sit in the back and I’ll be with you in a minute.’”There was the day in 1985 — it was Black Friday, and the store was packed — that Mick Jagger and David Bowie stopped by together, creating a commotion that halted sales. An annoyed Mr. Goldrich quickly sold them their items and rushed them out.“My father was like, ‘What are you guys doing here today?’” Ian recalled. “He didn’t throw them out, but he was not happy.”When the band Guns N’ Roses asked to shoot part of the video for their 1989 hit “Paradise City” in the store, Ian Goldrich recalled, his father agreed only reluctantly, saying, “OK, but we’re not shutting down for them.”Ever opinionated, Mr. Goldrich told Harry Chapin in 1972 that his new song “Taxi,” at nearly seven minutes, was too lengthy to be a hit. (It reached the Top 40 and is now considered a classic.) And he told Paul Simon, who as a boy had bought his first guitar at Manny’s, that he thought Simon and Garfunkel was a “lousy name” for a group.But he also advised new stars in a fatherly way not to squander their newfound wealth.“He’d take them aside and say, ‘You’re making money now — how are you going to take care of it?’” Ian Goldrich said.From left, the singer Richie Havens, the singer and radio host Oscar Brand and Mr. Goldrich at a celebration of Manny’s Music’s 50th anniversary at the Rainbow Grill in 1985.Credit…Marilyn K. Yee/The New York TimesHenry Jerome Goldrich was born on May 15, 1932, to Manny and Julia Goldrich, and grew up in Brooklyn and in Hewlett on Long Island. After graduating from Adelphi College, he served in the Army in Korea in the mid-1950s and then went to work full time at Manny’s.His father opened the store on West 48th Street, a location he chose because it was close to the Broadway theaters and the 52nd Street jazz clubs, as well as numerous recording studios and the Brill Building, a hub for music publishers. In 1999, Mr. Goldrich sold Manny’s to Sam Ash Music, a rival store, which largely retained the staff until Manny’s closed in 2009.In addition to his sons, Mr. Goldrich is survived by his wife, Judi; his daughter, Holly Goldrich; seven grandchildren; and a great-granddaughter.Mr. Goldrich often used his celebrity clientele to market the store. “He recognized value of these people being in the store and it made the business, certainly,” his son Judd said.When a young Eric Clapton, then with the group Cream, was stuck in New York without the money to fly home to England, he offered his amplifiers to Mr. Goldrich to raise funds.“He said, ‘I’ll buy them from you as long as you stencil them with the Cream logo,” Ian said.Then there was the store’s Wall of Fame, thousands of autographed publicity photos of famous customers that constituted a Who’s Who of popular music. Mr. Goldrich helped cultivate the photos, many of which were inscribed to him, and often kept his staff from stacking merchandise in front of them.Mr. Taylor, in a video interview, described being mesmerized by the photos as a teenager and being proud when his own was added. “It was sort of an inside thing, not as celebrated as a Grammy or a gold record or a position on the charts,” he said. “But definitely you had arrived if you were included on that wall.”Mr. Goldrich became close friends with many musicians, including the Who’s bassist, John Entwistle, who attended Judd’s bar mitzvah in New Jersey and hosted the Goldrich family at his Gothic mansion in England. Ian remembered the band’s drummer, Keith Moon, sitting on his father’s lap while drinking cognac at a screening of the film “Tommy.”In a video interview, Mr. Goldrich described selling the violinist Itzhak Perlman an electric violin. When Mr. Perlman tried bargaining, Mr. Goldrich parried by asking if he ever reduced his performance fee.“He said, ‘It’s different, I’m a talent,’” Mr. Goldrich recalled. “I said, ‘I’m a talent in my own way, too.’”That talent was palpable to Mr. Sebastian when he asked Mr. Goldrich to allow him to test out his stock of Gibson acoustic guitars in a merchandise room.“Henry’s famously prickly demeanor receded slightly,” Mr. Sebastian recalled, and he agreed to open early the next morning to allow him in.“He knew exactly what I wanted,” he said. “And I’ll be damned if I didn’t catch Henry smiling as he made out the bill.”AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

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    Adam Levine Says Maroon 5's New Album Is 'Finished, Mastered, and Delivered'

    WENN

    The former judge of ‘The Voice’ talks about his band’s next studio installment, confirming that the new album is done and is expected to come out sometime soon.

    Mar 5, 2021
    AceShowbiz – Maroon 5’s new album is “done.”
    Frontman Adam Levine has confirmed the “Sugar” hitmakers finished their follow-up to 2017’s “Red Pill Blues” amid the COVID-19 pandemic and teased it’s “not far off” being released.
    “I’m going to tell you right now that the album’s done,” he grinned. “And I can tell you it’s finished, I can tell you it’s been mastered, and I can tell you it’s been delivered, but I can’t tell you when it comes out. But it’s not far off, I’ll just say that.”
    The pop star admitted 2020 was “a strange year to make an album” and he struggled to get “fired up” in the beginning, but once he started focusing on just writing songs, things took off quickly.

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    On making the record in quarantine, he told Zane Lowe on Apple Music 1, “I couldn’t really be fired up the way I normally was. So I had to just kind of experiment and then try different things. And doing it all at home, and balancing everything with helping family out, and there were a lot more variables than I think … We’ve all been facing a lot more variables and unknowns over the past year, so it was a strange year to make an album. “But once we got into the rhythm of it, it was pretty easy, because I just kind of immersed myself in it, and once I kind of got lost in the process of just continuing to write songs. And it was like that’s always how it is, man. Once you get started and the snowball rolls, it’s just you’re there.”
    Maroon 5 have just dropped their collaboration with rap sensation Megan Thee Stallion, “Beautiful Mistakes”, and Adam hailed the “Savage” hitmaker for bringing “a more epic kind of climax” to the song, which sees her show off her vocal talent as well as rapping skills.
    “I told her that when we finally met up, because obviously everything was done separate,” he explained. “And when we actually saw her in person, and we shot the video together, I told her. I was like the little break where you go to the melodic thing, to be honest, it actually shows this new kind of branch of what she does, and this new versatility that she’s going to show everybody right now. And I was so, I remember when I heard it, I was like, oh, that’s big. That’s a side of her I had never really heard yet. Well, it’s one of those great songs that I think kind of continues to build. And the way she built her part was just, it couldn’t have been a more epic kind of climax for the song. I mean, it really is absolutely perfect. So, I mean, what she did was just miraculous, and it brought the song to a whole new level.”
    Listen back to the full interview on Apple Music 1 now.

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    The Time-Warped Charm of Valerie June

    Valerie June has built a devoted following by ignoring expectations.Credit…Lelanie Foster for The New York TimesSkip to contentSkip to site indexThe Time-Warped Charm of Valerie June“The Moon and Stars: Prescriptions for Dreamers,” the introspective, quietly hopeful album she made more than a year ago, sounds just right in 2021.Valerie June has built a devoted following by ignoring expectations.Credit…Lelanie Foster for The New York TimesSupported byContinue reading the main storyMarch 4, 2021A fire crackled in a cast-iron stove behind Valerie June. She had a bright carnation in her abundant dreadlocks, a mug of tea, a banjo by her side and an Etta James album propped against an amplifier as she chatted via video about her new album, “The Moon and Stars: Prescriptions for Dreamers.” She had all but finished the music last January, after two years of on-and-off recording, and was expecting at first to release it in 2020. But her label, Fantasy, convinced her that would be a “bad idea,” she said with a laugh.Now, the 39-year-old musician was ensconced at an Airbnb rental house in upstate New York, where she could make music at any time without disturbing the neighbors at her Brooklyn apartment. She had set up instruments, microphones and lights for home recordings and for the livestreamed performances that she’s substituting, for now, for her years of perpetual touring.“It feels so strange,” she said. “It just feels so different to not travel. I value just being alone, but this is way too much.”Although “The Moon and Stars: Prescriptions for Dreamers,” due March 12, arrives in a different era than the one it was made in, it sounds unexpectedly timely. Even before the isolation of the past year, Valerie June’s artistic intuition had led her toward thoughts of stillness, meditation and inwardness. She also completed a book that is due in April under her full name, Valerie June Hockett: “Maps for the Modern World” (Andrews McMeel), a collection of poems, drawings and homilies about consciousness and mindfulness, like “Visualization”: “When you don’t see a path/Before you,/Maybe it’s time to fly.”Valerie June has built a devoted following by ignoring expectations. She is simultaneously rural and cosmopolitan, historically minded and contemporary, idiosyncratic and fashionable, mystical and down-to-earth. She calls her style “organic moonshine roots music.” Her voice has a wayward twang and a sly finesse, while her music wanders amid soul, country, folk, jazz and blues — along with nods, on the new album, to hip-hop and Fela Kuti’s Afrobeat.“Not every song that I write fits a certain genre,” she said. “Songs are teachers — they’re like bosses, basically. They’re like, this is what we want. They have lives and feelings and potentials and desires and dreams. And I have to be the one who’s listening to them and telling whoever it is, what I hear that they want.”She added, “A whole lot of magic has to happen to make music. A whole lot of minds have to see something invisible. The act of making music — that could be spiritual. You’re taking something that’s not physically seen and you’re bringing it from nowhere, pulling it from thin air, so people can experience it.”Valerie June was born in Jackson, Tenn. and grew up in nearby Humboldt. She learned to sing from all the voices around her at church services — young, old, pure, cracked — while she was exposed to the secular music business through her father, a part-time concert promoter. She also dug into the musical history of Tennessee, the Appalachians and the Deep South, from early blues singers like Memphis Minnie to Dolly Parton to the Memphis rap group Three 6 Mafia. Valerie June moved to Memphis as a teenager and began singing with bands and then as a solo act. In 2010 she landed a spot on an online MTV series about Memphis musicians, “$5 Cover.”“Not every song that I write fits a certain genre,” Valerie June said. “They have lives and feelings and potentials and desires and dreams.”Credit…Lelanie Foster for The New York TimesHer reputation spread fast among musicians. She sang featured backup vocals with the country singer Eric Church, the rapper John Forté and the songwriter Meshell Ndegeocello; she released her own recordings, including a bluegrassy EP, “Valerie June and the Tennessee Express,” co-produced by the fiddler Ketch Secor from Old Crow Medicine Show. Dan Auerbach of the Black Keys was a co-producer for her 2013 debut album with a label, “Pushin’ Against a Stone.”By then, she had moved to Williamsburg in Brooklyn, though she rarely stayed in New York City for long. “For basically a decade,” she said, “what I was doing was flying to New York, washing my clothes and going back on the road.” “Pushin’ Against a Stone” and “The Order of Time” from 2017, her first albums released nationally, had the naturalistic sound of musicians playing together in real time. They drew comparisons to expansive stylistic hybrids like Van Morrison’s “Astral Weeks.” But for “The Moon and Stars,” Valerie June decided to incorporate some studio time-warping. She wrote new material and dug into a backlog she estimates at 150 songs; one, the fragile “Fallin’,” dates back to the early 2000s. And with her co-producer Jack Splash — a Grammy-winning Los Angeles producer whose extensive credits include tracks with Kendrick Lamar, Alicia Keys, Jennifer Hudson and Anthony Hamilton — she layered live band recordings with low-fi demos and multitrack experiments.“When I was working with Jack,” she said, “I told him certain words and feelings that I want the record to be able to have for people. Spirituality was one, iridescence was one, illuminance was one. Ethereal was one. And magical, fairylike, dreamy, colorful.”From his studio in Los Angeles, Splash said, “Valerie writes like a poet writes. That’s something that very much gets overlooked in contemporary music in the constant quest for hits and success. It’s not often when I get a chance to work with an artist who actually cares enough about the world to want to write those types of things.”They worked on the songs at home and saved up material until they were ready to gather musicians at professional studio sessions. Those tended to be scheduled on nights with a full moon, by “absolute cosmic coincidence,” said Splash. “It was very beautiful though. We felt like the sky was smiling down on us.”Splash connected Valerie June to vintage Memphis soul by bringing in the string arranger Lester Snell, who was a mainstay of the Stax Records studio band and a frequent collaborator of Isaac Hayes in the 1970s; they recorded his ensembles at the renowned Sam Phillips Studio in Memphis. Valerie June also garnered a cameo appearance from the soul singer Carla Thomas, who had mid-1960s hits like “B-A-B-Y” and made duet albums with Otis Redding. On “The Moon and Stars,” Thomas recites an African proverb — “Only a fool tests the depth of the water with both feet” — and then sings along with Valerie June on “Call Me a Fool,” a Southern soul ballad testifying to impulsive love.But the album also includes hypnotic songs like “Within You,” which stays on one chord throughout its five minutes as Valerie June sings thoughts like, “The only truth to know/Is in the letting go.” It’s a sonic assemblage built from a mantra-like acoustic guitar line, tendrils of electric-guitar improvisation, an off-kilter drum-machine loop, wisps of Valerie June’s voice and Snell’s hovering string-section chords.The final track for “The Moon and Stars” was going to be “Home Inside,” a song about a search for peace, which reflects, “I know there is a home inside/Window to soul, where every dream abides.”“You know, the negativity is always going to be there. It’s just, how do you work with it?” Valerie June said. “We all have these seeds of darkness within us and we all have these seeds of light. We get the choice.”Credit…Lelanie Foster for The New York TimesBut during the first months of quarantine in 2020, Valerie June returned to her family home in Humboldt, where her mother still lives. “It was starting to be summer,” she recalled. “I was still out in the country, away from everybody in the world. And all I heard was bird song, day and night. I would wake up and just go out there and record bird song.”Eventually, she decided to give the album a new ending. With her bird recordings, she and Splash layered on keyboards, flutes and the bell tones of a Tibetan singing bowl to make “Starlight Ethereal Silence,” the album’s postscript. “You go into this nature world,” she said, “And you can sit there and let them be the singers — because they’re the best singers — and just be immersed in all of what is around us all the time.”Although the album was finished in 2020, the context of that turbulent year changed the way Valerie June saw her songs. “Smile,” a song that arrives midway through the album, is about a determination to make it through rough times. In 2020, she was listening to the track and watching Black Lives Matter protests and, with the death of the Georgia congressman and civil-rights activist John Lewis, footage from the marches and rallies of the 1960s.“I saw everything that we’re fighting for now, with systemic racism and injustice,” she said. “And I saw this older Black woman sitting on the steps of, like, a sharecropping house or something. Maybe she had been a slave and maybe she had truly known the hard times. And she just started smiling. Because she had done everything. She had fought for freedom. She had tried, you know, and all she could do was smile. And in that smile, there was some joy and some happiness that just couldn’t be taken from her no matter what anyone ever did. And I was like, ‘Oh my God, is that what the song is connecting me to?’”Above all, a willed and unblinking optimism courses through Valerie June’s songs. “One of my lessons for this life is, how can I keep my energy?” she said. “I know darkness. I know the blues. And so how can I use the blues as a fuel for what I wish to say? You know, the negativity is always going to be there. It’s just, how do you work with it? We all have these seeds of darkness within us and we all have these seeds of light. We get the choice.”AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More