Shangri-La, gone forever, right? No way. Here are four old
school classics -- all made in the last dozen or so years -- that deliver on
that R&B promise. Listen up.
This millennial release was Scott’s debut and it established
her as R&B royalty with a debt to Gil Scott Heron and spoken word artists
like The Last Poets. This is the sound
of “Neo-Soul” before it got swept up in the tidal wave of hip-hop, but it’s
gritty all the same. “Getting’ In The
Way” has this classic refrain: “You better back down before you get smacked
down; you better chill.” Don’t mess with
Jill.
Angie Stone, Black
Diamond
Black Diamond dropped a year before Scott’s debut and while
it is steeped in hip-hop (think TLC’s
Waterfalls from the same era), there’s
not a rapper in sight. Ironic, since Stone
broke out first as a rapper, but here she’s a damn soul queen singing her way through
this set of tightly produced R&B gems and a brilliant cover of Marvin
Gaye’s “Trouble Man.” You’ll get the idea from “No More Rain In This Cloud,”
which would have been at home on Ann Peebles’ 1974 classic I Can’t Stand the Rain.
Betty Wright & The Roots, Betty Wright – The Movie
Fast forward to 2011 and the album that Betty Wright, the
“Clean Up Woman,” made with The Roots.
Ignore the title; there’s no movie, just “grow folks’ music” (as she
calls it) to luxuriate in. But what
music! By now the rappers are ubiquitous
(Lil Wayne and Snoop drop by here), but Betty more than holds her own with
tracks that have the deep groove of her original Miami hits. Check out "In the Middle of the Game." There’s no “neo” about this soul.
Robert Glasper Experiment, Black
Radio
I saved the best, most adventurous, for last. Glasper is a jazz
pianist with an impeccable pedigree (outings with Blanchard, Hargrove and
McBride) and a conviction that “jazz needs a big ass-slap,” to re-energize
it. And in 2013, this Grammy winning
disc did some of the same ass-slapping that Herbie Hancock and Donald Byrd did with
Headhunters and Black Byrd. Start with “Afro Blue” with Eryka Badu sitting in. But don’t stop there; stream the whole ass-slapping
thing.
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