Ledisi @
the Jazz Cafe, London
7 March 2003
Click an image to enlarge.
Biography
Singer/songwriter Ledisi (pronounced led-duh-see). Ledisi (meaning
to bring forth in Nigerian) was born in the Big Easy where she sang
with the New Orleans Symphony Orchestra when she was eight years
old and spent many adolescent hours watching her mom perform with
a local R&B band, often in a nearby park. After the family relocated
to Oakland, CA, Ledisi followed her mothers’ lead and sang
in a local band but left to form her own group and identity. She
is most noted for her continuous performances in Beach Blanket Babylon,
a long running San Francisco-based cabaret that features song parodies,
celebrity impersonations, and enormous hats; she got the gig after
being nominated for a Shellie award in 1990 for her role as Dorothy
in a local version of the Wiz.
Ledisi later formed ‘Anibade’, Ledisi’s middle
name, which depending on what you read means “to bring forth
luck” or “my mother is great” in Yorubu. Band
members included Sandra Manning (keyboards and chief songwriter)
Cedrickke Dennis (guitar) Nelson Braxton (bass) Wayne Braxton (saxophone)
and Tommy Bradford (drums). The group built a hot reputation in
the Bay area at Bruno’s, the Black Cat, and Rasselas (local
clubs). Fans kept asking about a record so the band cut a demo,
“Take Time,” that radio station KMEL aired and got a
good response; the stroke prompted Ledisi to seek a deal with the
major recording companies, all who praised and turned them down
in the same breath. Frustrated, but not thwarted, they cut the critically
acclaimed album “Soulsinger” and released it on LeSun
Records in 1999 (owned by Ledisi and Sandra Manning), January 1,
2000. "Papa Loved to Love Me" - a personal account of
a father sexually abusing his daughter - is one of the CD's most
riveting and controversial tracks.
A breakthrough for Ledisi at urban adult contemporary radio occurred
upon the release of the 2004 all-star collection Forever, For Always,
For Luther - a salute to Luther Vandross. On this album, released
by Verve Records via its GRP subsidiary, Ledisi covered the R&B
master's “My Sensitivity (Gets in the Way)” with such
tangy passion that yet another layer of audience began to wonder,
“Who is this exciting new talent?” It was at this point
that Verve - which had passed on signing her in the past - began
to reconsider this versatile talent. But the process took two years.
Composer/keyboardist Rex Rideout produced Ledisi's Vandross cover,
was instrumental in guiding her through the delicate transition
from independent firebrand to major label artist. A veteran who
has worked with pioneering soul-jazz greats from Roy Ayers to singer
Angela Bofill, he understood what would be required from all involved
to make Ledis’'s re-launch a success. Rideout explains:
“When I met Ledisi, I was floored by her. Watching her
in the studio is like watching a performance. There’s a whole
lot of music in this woman. The challenge has been finding the right
voice for her - with enough of the fire that got her here yet chilled
enough to take her further. That process will give her a solid foundation
in the mainstream community. I told Verve, ‘Ledisi will be
legendary.’ It's her time.”
Ledisi took the initiative to bring her artistry to the next level.
She left all she was comfortable with in her Northern California
support system to take a leap of faith on Broadway. She explains;
“Living in New York, I was doing things I’d never
done before. In Oakland, I had a house and a car. In New York, I
had a sleeping bag on a floor in a friend's apartment and had to
walk everywhere!”
But the independent move paid off. She wound up being pivotal to
the writing and production of the music and characters during the
workshop stage of Oprah Winfrey’s Tony-winning stage adaptation
of ‘The Color Purple’. Ledisi also understudied Tony
Kushner/George C. Wolfe's off Broadway production “Caroline
or Change.” All the while she was writing and cutting demos
in her dressing room, then flying to L.A. - initially at her own
expense - to record them properly.
Ultimately, Ledisi created the album “Lost and Found”
her way - mixing old and new friends in familiar and fresh aural
environs. The story was completely unscripted, unfolding in a way
she proudly describes as “organic.”
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