Angie Stone
12 July 2002 | Statenhall | 23:00 - 00:15 |
Line-up:
Angie Stone, Christopher Morgan, Jamal Peoples, Kemba Francis, Kenny Seymour, Larry Douglas Peoples II, Larry Peoples, Reginald Hines, Tenita Dreher, Terry Lee Taylor.
About Angie Stone
Religion, roots, emotion, love and reality come together in the
music made by soul diva Angie Stone, both on stage as on her two
albums 'Black Diamond' and 'Mahogany Soul'. Together with her
'sista's' backing vocals she provides soul second to none: an
unparalleled voice, unconcealed themes coming straight from the
heart, good melodies and catchy refrains. To make you feel real,
real hot. As a young girl South Carolina-born Angela Brown Stone
listened to soul music of Curtis Mayfield, Marvin Gaye, Donna
Hathaway, Roberta Flack, Aretha Franklin and The Temptations. Her
father, himself a member of a gospel choir, takes her to
performances by famous gospel choirs that Stone thoroughly enjoys.
In those same gospel choirs she later develops her sense of rhythm,
timing and swing, which helps her in her later self-teaching of
piano and saxophone lessons. When she reaches the age of fourteen
she is part of rap crew The Sequence, and with them she records a
few albums in the eighties. A leading lady of formation Vertical
Hold, at the beginning of the nineties, she has a modest hit with
R&B-song 'Seems Your Much Too Busy'. During these years she
meets the younger and then still unknown vocalist D'Angelo, and
with whom she has her second child. She is of great influence on
his remarkable debut 'Brown Sugar', in the meantime coaches the
voice of Mary J. Blige and sings and plays the saxophone with Lenny
Kravitz. His cousin, Gerry DeVaux, a well-known producer, later
makes out a case for Angie's solo-career. The kind of music made by
Angie Stone and sister vocalists like Jill Scott, Macy Gray and
India Arie are known as New Classic Soul, a.k.a. Nu-Soul. Old soul
with new elements added (like Hip Hop and Spoken Word), in the
footsteps of the greatest soul-legends.