- 136 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
D'Angelo's Voodoo
About This Book
Voodoo, D'Angelo's much-anticipated 2000 release, set the standard for the musical cycle ordained as "neo-soul, " a label the singer and songwriter would reject more than a decade later. The album is a product of heightened emotions and fused sensibilities; an amalgam of soul, rock, jazz, gospel, hip-hop, and Afrobeats. D'Angelo put to music his own pleasures and insecurities as a man-child in the promised land. It was both a tribute to his musical heroes: Prince, Sly Stone, Marvin Gaye, J Dilla...and a deconstruction of rhythm and blues itself. Despite nearly universal acclaim, the sonic expansiveness of Voodoo proved too nebulous for airplay on many radio stations, seeping outside the accepted lines of commercial R&B music. Voodoo was Black, it was definitely magic, and it was nearly overshadowed by a four-minute music video featuring D'Angelo's sweat-glistened six-pack abs. "The Video" created an accentuated moment when the shaman lost control of the spell he cast.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Halftitle Page
- Title Page
- ContentsÂ
- Track Listing
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Text
- What Is Past Is Prologue
- 1 The Spell Is Cast
- 2 Home Cooking
- 3 Finding the Groove
- 4 The Means of Survival
- 5 The Feminine Mystique
- 6 Video (Almost) Killed the R&B Star
- 7 Radio Silence
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Imprint