Meet The Stars of the UK Soul Renaissance
Newspaper article discusses the future of UK soul
From The Guardian newspaper's website: The summer of soul meets the stars of the UK soul renaissance...
I'm puzzled by the article - possibly just in the dark. Possibly, I'm at an age where I'm way outside the target audience. And the only thing I know about what's hip is in the future possibilities of hip replacements. Do bear with me...
From the article:
QuoteAcross the UK, a fresh wave of writers and performers are rebooting soul music for the post-grime era.
Must admit, I don't actually know what the "post-grime era" is (guess it must be my age - or ignorance - or both), but here we go...
In-the-know writer (Blues and Soul, among many others), presenter and photographer Johny Pitts says that:
Quote...as a soul music lover, I was out of sync with the period during which I came of age; nothing was less cool in Britain in the first decade of the 21st century than soul music. It may not be the most dangerous of genres, but I love soul’s wisdom; in the States, they sometimes call it “grown-folks’ music”...
Next up, he says that...
QuoteI owe soul music my life, literally. I’m a northern soulchild, the product of a touring African American musician from Brooklyn and a white English mother from a working-class part of Sheffield, who met at a northern soul club in the early 1970s. By the time I was old enough to go outout, however, gone were the hitched rides to Wigan Casino to see Wilson Pickett live, gone was the unselfconscious dancing until the early morning to Jackie Wilson.
Ok, nice sincerity... but did the Wicked Pickett perform at the Casino? Just asking. I never went there. And then:
Quote...and like soul got my mom’s generation of Brits through tough times as steelworkers or miners, perhaps it can once again offer consolation in the darkness.
Interesting statement. Personally, I find it difficult to understand that "soul" isn't a part of everyone's lives anyway.
What follows are interviews with various groups/performers representing the "new wave of soul". In reading them, I feel incredibly out of touch, and can't say that I even associate with the artists.
Is it age - is it that "soul music" really has moved on that much since its heyday of nigh-on 60 years ago - or is it a case of us not just getting into the modern day sense of what "soul" really means musically?
Full article here:
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