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Lovers Rock is the first collection of new work by Sade in eight
years. But it's a record that says less about those years gone by
than the promise and vitality of the here and now. It's an album
that's by turns moving, elegiac and beautiful. Like the tender,
acoustic guitar-driven first single, 'By Your Side', a song about
the tensile strength of love, it is music stripped back to its essential
elements: voice, melody, and meticulously arranged instrumentation.
The result is a record of bare, sometimes startlingly, immediacy.
But then Helen
Folasade Adu is a woman who has never had anything to hide. Born
in Ibadan, Nigeria and raised in Colchester, Essex, where she moved
at 4 after her English mother separated from her Nigerian father,
she's spent her life trying to do what feels right, honest and true.
Because by comparison nothing else has seemed as important. When
she was growing up, Sade would listen to soul artists like Curtis
Mayfield, Donny Hathaway and Marvin Gaye. Singers uniquely attuned
to the complex sensibilities of heartache and hope, who were skilled
enough to create from those feelings, something lasting and transcendent.
Still she didn't think about singing herself. Rather, she studied
fashion at St Martin's art college, only signing on as vocalist
when a couple of old school friends started a band "until they found
a proper singer". From there to singing with early Eighties Latin
funk collective Pride, she discovered a rare delight in songwriting.
It was while she was with that group, Sade co-wrote 'Smooth Operator'
with Ray St. John, and it was from there that Sade abandoned diffidence
and finally stepped centre stage to form her own group with fellow
Pride members Stuart Matthewman, Andrew Hale and Paul Spencer Denman.
In 1984 their
first single 'Your Love Is King' became a top ten hit. And quite
abruptly Sade herself became an icon. If during the Eighties, she
seemed to embody newly discovered values of aspiration and elegance,
there was, and remains, something more fundamental to account for
Sade's popularity. Her music has a resilience that belies its apparent
softness. It stays in the heart and in the head long after the last
notes have fallen silent, in the same way that the embers of a love
affair never truly go cold. That's why, just a year after the first
single, she became one of the few recording artists ever to appear
on the cover of Time magazine. Because from the very beginning her
music transcended the pop moment.
Indeed, with
the release in 1984 of her debut 'Diamond Life', Sade was speaking
to a global audience. Featuring hit singles 'Your Love Is King',
'Smooth Operator' and 'Hang On To Your Love' , the album spent 98
weeks on the UK charts and 81 weeks on the Billboard charts. Sade
received a BPI award for Best Album and a Grammy for Best New Artist.
After 'Diamond Life' came 1985's 'Promise', the rich, evocative
second album that yielded hits such as 'Is It A Crime' and 'The
Sweetest Taboo', which has become one of the most played songs in
radio history. Like it's predecessor, this too was an international
multi-platinum success.
Yet the paradox
of true artistry is that it makes the very difficult appear instinctive
and easy. That's why art is so compelling. Because the finished
work is so dazzling that it demands a leap of imagination to picture
the struggle that's gone into it's conception. This is why Sade,
who has never allowed her music to be anything less than immaculate,
tantalises audiences so. Throughout her career, there has been intense
public curiosity about Sade's private life, as though its uncovering
will reveal how she comes to make such compelling music. But modern
celebrity culture, with its prurient demands for increasingly intimate
revelations, has its perils. And sensing these from early on, Sade
has tried simply to remain true to herself by only doing interviews
and only making music when she has something to say. Wary of the
press clamour that was building in the Eighties, the singer relocated
temporarily to Madrid, although she strongly refuted "the myth that
I'm a shy, reclusive diva. I'm not shy or reclusive. I just spend
my time with people rather than journalists."
Three years
later, she reconvened the group to record 'Stronger Than Pride',
the 1988 hit album which produced memorable singles like 'Paradise',
'Love Is Stronger Than Pride' and 'Nothing Can Come Between Us'.
In the album's wake came a pan-continental tour across Europe, Australia
and Japan that included Sade's first full-scale arena tour of America.
Throughout their history, the group have always attracted a diverse,
multi-racial audience who are drawn by the band's open-minded approach
to music. Sade have created dance floor classics, songs for film
soundtracks, radio favourites and late night love anthems, at the
same time refusing to be classified simply as a pop group, an r&b
act, a soul band or anything else as one-dimensional. Instead, like
the multi-cultural London streets the group hails from, their music
has thrived by embracing diversity as a guiding principle.
In 1992, Sade
released 'Love Deluxe', a bold, emotionally honest album that won
huge critical and commercial acclaim. I n America it spent 90 weeks
on the Billboard charts, while the single' No Ordinary Love' , featured
prominently in the Robert Redford movie Indecent Proposal. In 1994
came the 16 track 'Best Of Sade', but now, eight years since her
last new work and after 40 million record sales, she releases 'Lovers
Rock'. Stripped down and subtle, it is a deceptively simple record
that showcases Sade's remarkable talent as a writer of songs that
bear a hallmark of enduring refinement. From the spare, acoustic
'Sweetest Gift' to the poignant 'All About Our Love' and the moving
'Slave Song' , this is an album of warmth and intimacy and sensitivity.
On 'Lovers Rock', as she has done with earlier albums, Sade continues
to describe the secret murmurs of the heart's desire, remaining
true to herself in her work by always reaching further, always stretching
higher.
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