Neo soul

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Neo soul (sometimes called progressive soul)<ref name="Ross">Ross, Sean. "After a False Start, The Neo-Soul Genre Picks Up Steam on the Mainstream Track Template:Webarchive". Billboard: May 8, 1999. Retrieved November 2, 2011.</ref> is a genre of popular music. As a term, it was coined by music industry entrepreneur Kedar Massenburg during the late 1990s to market and describe the style of music that emerged from soul and contemporary R&B. Evolving from soul music, neo soul is distinguished by a less conventional sound than its contemporary R&B counterpart, with elements ranging from funk, jazz fusion, hip hop and rock. It has been noted by music writers for its conscious lyrics.

Neo soul developed during the 1980s and early 1990s, by Black-Americans in the United States, as a soul revival movement. It earned mainstream success during the late 1990s, with the commercial and critical breakthroughs of several artists, including D'Angelo, Maxwell, Erykah Badu, and Lauryn Hill. Their music was marketed as an alternative to the producer-driven, digitally approached R&B of the time, although many of them were ambivalent about the term.

Since its initial mainstream popularity and impact on the sound of contemporary R&B, neo soul has been expanded and diversified musically through the works of both American and international artists. Its mainstream presence declined during the 2000s, although newer artists emerged through more independent means of marketing their music. In his book The Essential Neo Soul (2010), music journalist and culture critic Chris Campbell writes that, while the genre has been "woefully misunderstood", there is "a historical and social relevance that validates its designation as the current face of alternative progressive soul music (in both underground and overground circles), complete with a distinct origin and developmental evolution".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> According to Mark Anthony Neal, "neo-soul and its various incarnations has helped to redefine the boundaries and contours of black pop."<ref name="Neal">Neal, Mark Anthony (2003). "Songs in the Key of Black Life: A Rhythm and Blues Nation Template:Webarchive". Routledge: pp. 117–118. Retrieved November 2, 2011.</ref>

Etymology

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As a term, neo soul was coined by Kedar Massenburg of Motown Records in the late 1990s as a marketing category following the commercial breakthroughs of artists such as D'Angelo, Erykah Badu, Lauryn Hill, and Maxwell.<ref name="shapiro3">Template:Cite book</ref> The success of D'Angelo's 1995 debut album Brown Sugar has been regarded by several writers and music critics as the inspiration behind the term's origin.<ref name="shapiro3"/><ref name="Kot">Kot, Greg. "Dusting of Old King Soul Template:Webarchive". Chicago Tribune: 1. July 21, 1996. Retrieved November 2, 2011.</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="Mitchell">Mitchell, Gail. "Soul Resurrection: What's So New About Neo-Soul? Template:Webarchive". Billboard: 30, 36. June 1, 2002. Retrieved November 2, 2011.</ref> In a 2002 interview for Billboard, Massenburg said that genre classifications are often unpopular because they may be suggestive of a short-lived trend. However Massenburg felt there was a need to market artists of the genre for listeners to have an understanding of what they were listening to.<ref name="Mitchell"/>

In a 2010 article for PopMatters, music writer Tyler Lewis said that neo soul has been received with much controversy: "Given the way black music has been named by (usually) outsiders ever since the blues, the reaction to the name by artists who ostensibly fit into the 'neo-soul' category represents a wonderful example of black self-determination in an industry that is still defiantly wedded to narrow definitions and images of black folks."<ref name="Lewis">Lewis, Tyler (September 28, 2010). Review: Airtight's Revenge Template:Webarchive. PopMatters. Retrieved September 28, 2010.</ref> Jason Anderson of CBC News compares the etymology of neo soul to that of "new wave" and comments: "neo-soul is still an effective tag to describe the mix of chic modernity and time-honoured tradition that distinguished the genre's best examples. Neo-soul artists tried to look both backward and forward, acting in the belief that a continuum might exist."<ref name="Anderson">Template:Cite news</ref>

Characteristics

The term received widespread use by music critics and writers who wrote about artists and albums associated with the musical style.<ref name="Mitchell"/><ref name="Ross"/> African American studies professor Mark Anthony Neal has described neo soul as "everything from avant-garde R&B to organic soul ... a product of trying to develop something outside of the norm in R&B".<ref name="Burch">Template:Cite news</ref> According to music writers, the genre's works are mostly album-oriented and distinguished by its musicianship and production, incorporating "organic" elements of classic soul music with the use of live instrumentation, in contrast to the more single-oriented, hip hop-based, and producer-driven sampling approach of contemporary R&B.<ref name="Mitchell"/><ref name="Ratliff"/><ref name="Farley"/> Neo soul also incorporates elements of electronic music,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> jazz fusion, funk, rap, gospel, rock, reggae, and African music.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In her book Musical Rhythm in the Age of Digital Reproduction, music author Anne Danielsen wrote that neo soul toward the end of the 1990s exhibited a musical development that was part of "a remarkable increase in musicians' experimentation with and manipulation of grooves at the microrhythmic level – that is, the level in played music that is usually understood in terms of phrasing and timing."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Common (shown in 2003) wore knit caps fashioned in the style of Marvin Gaye.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Noting that most of the genre's artists are singer-songwriters, writers have viewed their lyrical content as more "conscious-driven" and having a broader range than most other R&B artists.<ref name="Ehrlich"/><ref name="Mitchell"/><ref name="Farley"/> AllMusic calls it "roughly analogous to contemporary R&B."<ref name="genre">[[[:Template:AllMusic]] Genre: Neo Soul]. AllMusic. Retrieved April 26, 2010.</ref> Dimitri Ehrlich of Vibe said that they "emphasize a mix of elegant, jazz-tinged R&B and subdued hip hop, with a highly idiosyncratic, deeply personal approach to love and politics".<ref name="Ehrlich"/> Music writers have noted that neo soul artists are predominantly female, which contrasts the marginalized presence of women in mainstream hip hop and R&B.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Jason Anderson of CBC News called neo soul a "sinuous, sly yet unabashedly earnest" alternative and "kind of haven for listeners turned off by the hedonism of mainstream hip-hop and club jams."<ref name="Anderson"/> Neo soul artists are often associated with alternative lifestyles and fashions, including organic food, incense, and knit caps.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

According to music writer Peter Shapiro, the term itself refers to a musical style that obtains its influence from older R&B styles, and bohemian musicians seeking a soul revival, while setting themselves apart from the more contemporary sounds of their mainstream R&B counterparts.<ref name="shapiro3"/> In a 1998 article on neo soul, Time journalist Christopher John Farley wrote that singers such as Hill, D'Angelo, and Maxwell "share a willingness to challenge musical orthodoxy".<ref name="Farley">Farley, Christopher John. Music: Neo-Soul on a Roll. Time. Retrieved May 9, 2010.</ref> Miles Marshall Lewis commented that 1990s neo soul "owed its raison d'être to '70s soul superstars like Marvin Gaye and Stevie Wonder", adding that "in concert, Erykah Badu and D'Angelo regularly covered Chaka Khan, the Ohio Players, and Al Green, to make the lineage crystal clear."<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> In citing Tony! Toni! Toné! as progenitors of the genre, Tony Green of Vibe viewed that the group pioneered the "digital-analog hybrid sound" of neo soul and "dramatically refreshed the digitalized wasteland that was R&B in the late '80s".<ref name="Green">Green, Tony. "Props: Tony! Toni! Tone! Template:Webarchive". Vibe: 168. May 2003. Retrieved November 2, 2011.</ref> Neo soul artists during the 1990s were heavily inspired by the eclectic sound and mellow instrumentation of Gil Scott-Heron's and Brian Jackson's collaborative work in the 1970s.<ref name="Bordowitz">Bordowitz, Hank. "Gil Scott-Heron Template:Webarchive". American Visions: June 1, 1998. Retrieved November 2, 2011.</ref> All About Jazz cited Jackson as "one of the early architects" of the sound and his early work with Scott-Heron as "an inspirational and musical Rosetta stone for the neo-soul movement".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Clear

History

Early 1990s: Stylistic origins

Template:See also Neo soul originated in the early 1990s, with the work of musical acts such as Tony! Toni! Toné!, Terence Trent D'Arby and Mint Condition, whose music deviated from the conventions of most contemporary R&B at the time.<ref name="Ehrlich" /><ref name="Mitchell" /><ref name="Farley" /><ref name="Green" /> Tony! Toni! Toné!-member Raphael Saadiq later embarked on a solo career and produced various works of other neo soul artists. Some artists that further popularized this sound during the early 1990s included Zhané, Groove Theory, Joi, Tony Rich, and Me'Shell NdegéOcello.

NdegéOcello's 1993 debut album Plantation Lullabies was later credited as the beginning of neo soul;<ref name="Easlea">Template:Cite web</ref> according to Renee Graham of The Boston Globe, it was "arguably the first shot in the so-called 'neo-soul' movement".<ref>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore</ref> The success of Tony! Toni! Toné!'s 1993 album Sons of Soul was also viewed as a precursor to the soul music revival in the mid-1990s.<ref name="Coker"/><ref name="Stanley"/> Cheo Hodari Coker said in 1997 that the album "largely sparked the soul music revival that has opened the door for a new generation of singers who build on the tradition of Marvin Gaye and Stevie Wonder".<ref name="Coker">Coker, Cheo Hodari (January 12, 1997). Time to Jam—or Jam? – Los Angeles Times . Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 25, 2011.</ref> Allmusic editor Leo Stanley wrote that by the release of Tony! Toni! Toné!'s follow-up album House of Music in 1996, "their influence was beginning to be apparent, as younger soul singer-songwriters like Tony Rich and Maxwell began reaching the R&B charts. Like Tony! Toni! Toné!, Rich and Maxwell relied on traditional soul and R&B values of songwriting and live performances, discarding the synth-heavy productions of the late '80s and early '90s".<ref name="Stanley">Stanely, Leo (August 1, 2003). House of Music – Tony! Toni! Toné! | AllMusic: Review Template:Webarchive. Allmusic. Retrieved June 24, 2011.</ref>

A few hip hop groups are cited as well. Malcolm Venable of Vibe highlights the early work of hip hop band The Roots, who used live instrumentation, as a precursor to neo soul's commercial breakthrough in the mid-1990s.<ref name="Venable">Template:Cite journal</ref> Kierna Mayo, former editor-in-chief of Ebony, said that alternative hip hop group A Tribe Called Quest's early 1990s albums The Low End Theory and Midnight Marauders "gave birth to neo-everything  ... That entire class of D'Angelo, Erykah Badu, Maxwell, and Lauryn Hill".<ref name="vv">Template:Cite news</ref>

Mid–late 1990s: Mainstream breakthrough

Maxwell, one of neo soul's original successes, in 1998

In 1995, former corporate marketer turned artist manager Kedar Massenburg established the record label Kedar Entertainment Inc., through which he released the breakthrough neo soul recordings of artists such as Badu, D'Angelo, and Chico DeBarge.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Music journalists have specifically credited the successes of D'Angelo's Brown Sugar (1995), Maxwell's Urban Hang Suite (1996), Badu's Baduizm (1997), and Hill's The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill (1998) with shaping and raising the neo soul movement to commercial visibility into the late 1990s.<ref name="shapiro3"/><ref name="Ross"/><ref name="genre"/><ref name="Huey">Huey, Steve. [[[:Template:AllMusic]] Maxwell: Biography]. Allmusic. Retrieved March 30, 2009.</ref><ref name="Nelson">Nelson, Trevor. Radio 1 Listeners Top 50 Albums of 1993–2003. TrevorNelson. Retrieved March 30, 2009.</ref><ref name="Harvilla">Harvilla, Rob. Maxwell Returns. So Do the Giant Panties Template:Webarchive. The Village Voice. Retrieved March 31, 2009.</ref> According to Farley, D'Angelo's album "gives a nod to the past, ... mints his own sound, with golden humming keyboards and sensual vocals and unhurried melodies ... His songs were polished without being slick and smart without being pretentious", while Badu "brought an iconoclastic spirit to soul music, with her towering Afrocentric headwraps, incense candles, and quirky lyrics".<ref name="Farley2">Template:Cite book</ref> Baduizm sold nearly three million copies and won Badu two Grammy Awards.<ref name="Ryzik">Template:Cite web</ref> Hill's Miseducation album featured her singing and rapping, with deeply personal lyrics,<ref name="Farley2"/> and was one of neo soul's primary successes,<ref name="Ross"/> achieving massive sales, critical acclaim, and five Grammy Awards.<ref>Raftery, Brian (November 1, 2001). Biography: Lauryn Hill Template:Webarchive. Allmusic. Retrieved March 5, 2011.</ref> The 1997 film Love Jones capitalized on neo soul's success at the time with its soundtrack album, which impacted the Billboard charts and featured artists such as Hill, Maxwell, The Brand New Heavies, Me'Shell NdegéOcello, Groove Theory, and Dionne Farris.<ref name="Graham">Graham, Renée (November 14, 2003). Boston.com / A&E / Music / Soul searching Template:Webarchive. The Boston Globe. Retrieved March 6, 2011.</ref><ref>Promis, Jose F. (August 1, 2003). Love Jones – Original Soundtrack Template:Webarchive. Allmusic. Retrieved March 6, 2011.</ref>

D'Angelo, pictured in 2012, was a major figure in neo soul music, with his 2000 album Voodoo being particularly influential.

After a brief marketing downturn, neo soul gained more mainstream popularity in 1999 with commercial successes by Hill, Maxwell, Eric Benét, Saadiq, and Les Nubians.<ref name="Ross"/> It impacted mainstream radio while influencing contemporary R&B acts, such as R. Kelly and Aaliyah,<ref name="Farley2"/> to incorporate some of its textural and lyrical elements.<ref name="Ross"/> In Kelly's song "When a Woman's Fed Up" (1998), the singer incorporated a more soul-based sound and referenced Badu's 1997 song "Tyrone" in the lyrics.<ref name="Ross"/> Other female artists broke through with their debut albums, including Macy Gray, Angie Stone, and Jill Scott.<ref name="genre"/><ref name="allhiphop">Template:Cite web</ref> Although Scott's album Who Is Jill Scott? Words and Sounds Vol. 1 would not see release until 2000, she co-wrote and sang on "You Got Me" (the 1999 hit single by hip hop band The Roots) and received further exposure as a supporting performer on the band's tour that year. "Thanks to her stint on 'You Got Me' and subsequent live shows", Joel McIver wrote, "Scott can be credited as the first female artist to emerge in Erykah Badu's wake who could seriously claim to have challenged her superiority at the top of the neo-soul tree".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

During the late 1990s and early 2000s, the musical collective Soulquarians—consisting of such artists as D'Angelo, The Roots, Erykah Badu, Bilal, Mos Def, Common, James Poyser, J Dilla and Q-Tip—contributed significantly to the neo soul movement with what Greg Kot described as its members' "organic soul, natural R&B, boho-rap".<ref name="Kot2">Kot, Greg. "A Fresh Collective Soul? Template:Webarchive". Chicago Tribune: 1. March 19, 2000. Retrieved November 2, 2011.</ref> The collective developed through the production work of The Roots' drummer and producer Questlove.<ref name="Venable"/>

Early 2000s: Height of hype

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Although she rejects the term, Erykah Badu has been called "the first lady of neo soul" and "the queen of neo-soul".<ref>Jansen, Steve (May 28, 2009). First Lady of Neo-Soul – Page 1 Template:Webarchive. Phoenix New Times. Retrieved March 6, 2011.</ref><ref>Kinnon, Joy Bennett (July 1997). "Home Brew: Erykah Badu Template:Webarchive". Ebony: 36–37. Retrieved November 2, 2011.</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Ryzik"/>

In 2000, D'Angelo released his second album Voodoo, serving as a further alternative to the mainstream of late 1990s R&B and hip hop, as neo soul reached its apex in the new decade.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> A production of the Soulquarians,<ref name="Kot2"/> it was an exemplary creative milestone of neo soul.<ref name="Anderson"/><ref>Neo-Soul's Familiar Face; With 'Voodoo,' D'Angelo Aims to Reclaim His Place in a Movement He Got Rolling. The Washington Post. Retrieved March 6, 2011.</ref> Ben Ratliff of The New York Times called the album "the succes d'estime that proves the force of this new music: it is a largely unslick, stubbornly idiosyncratic and genuinely great album that has already produced two hit singles".<ref name="Ratliff"/> The year also saw Badu's second album Mama's Gun, by which time the singer had been dubbed by writers as "the queen of neo-soul",<ref name="Ryzik"/> although she said of the honorific title, "I hated that because what if I don't do that anymore? What if I change? Then that puts me in a penitentiary."<ref name="Ryzik"/> Scott's first album Who Is Jill Scott? sold millions worldwide and proved one of the genre's significant releases.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

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Other successful performers marketed as neo soul at this time included Bilal, Musiq Soulchild, India.Arie, and Alicia Keys, who broke through to broader popularity with her debut album Songs in A Minor (2001).<ref name="Ehrlich"/><ref name="genre"/><ref>Seymour, Craig (February 2002). "The Re-Energizers Template:Webarchive". Vibe: 68–73. Retrieved November 2, 2011.</ref> According to AllMusic biographer Andy Kellman, although Bilal may have been the "one R&B artist for whom the neo-soul categorization seemed limiting", his 2001 debut album 1st Born Second was an "exemplary" release for the genre and a top-10 R&B chart success.<ref name="AM">Template:Cite web</ref> Hip hop acts such as The Roots and Common, also associated with the Soulquarians,<ref name="Kot2"/> released albums that incorporated neo soul: Phrenology (2002) and Electric Circus (2003).<ref name="allhiphop"/> Commenting on neo soul's hype, Daphne Brooks wrote in 2004, "The increasing attention paid to heavily hyped 'neo-soul' artists such as Jill Scott and Indie.arie ... suggest[s] that cultural memory is now recognized as a marketable aesthetic strategy of expression in contemporary pop."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

2010s–present: Late period

Raheem DeVaughn performs socially conscious and love-themed songs, and has been compared to Donny Hathaway and Marvin Gaye.<ref name="Dinsmore">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Since its original popularity, neo soul has been expanded and diversified musically through the works of both American and international artists.<ref name="Ratliff">Ratliff, Ben. Out of a Rut and Into a New Groove Template:Webarchive. The New York Times. Retrieved May 9, 2010.</ref> The more popular neo soul artists of the 2010s included Aloe Blacc, Maxwell, John Legend, Anthony Hamilton, Amy Winehouse, Justin Timberlake, Chrisette Michele, Leela James, and Raheem DeVaughn.<ref name="allhiphop"/><ref name="Nero">Nero, Mark Edward. Neo-Soul: What Is Neo-Soul? Template:Webarchive. About.com. Retrieved March 5, 2011.</ref> DeVaughn has described himself as an "R&B Hippy Neo-Soul Rock Star", viewing it as a reference to his eclectic musical style.<ref name="Dinsmore"/> In its 2010 issue on critical moments in popular music, Spin cited D'Angelo's Voodoo and its success as a turning point for neo soul: "D'Angelo's pastiche of funk, carnal ache, and high-minded, Afrocentric rhetoric stands as neo-soul's crowning achievement. So unsurpassable that it'd be eight years before we'd hear from Erykah Badu and Maxwell again, while Hill and D'Angelo remain missing. But Alicia Keys, John Legend, and Cee-Lo picked up D's mantle and ran with it".<ref name="Spin">Template:Cite journal</ref> Evan Rytlewski of The A.V. Club discerns "a line of revelatory, late-period neo-soul albums" with the releases of Maxwell's BLACKsummers'night (2009), Badu's New Amerykah Part Two (Return of the Ankh) (2010), Bilal's Airtight's Revenge (2010), Aloe Blacc's Good Things (2010) and Frank Ocean's Channel Orange (2012).<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In the 2010s and 2020s, other neo soul acts included Tyler, The Creator,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Fitz and the Tantrums,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Mayer Hawthorne,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats,<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Sol Chyld and Amos Lee.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In August 2019, Okayplayer journalist Keith Nelson Jr. published a piece highlighting 11 recording artists who are "on the precipice of pushing neo-soul forward" into its third decade of existence: Steve Lacy ("cut from the abstract neo-soul cloth of Frank Ocean where you're just as likely to have a jam session as you are to hear philosophical quips"), Mahalia ("singer-songwriter, with honeyed vocals ... songs of love and anguish typically exist in narratives, similar to Jill Scott, who paved her path"), Adrian Daniel ("experimentation and vulnerability that is reminiscent of fellow Brooklynite Maxwell"), VanJess ("sister duo float between the soulful chemistry of Floetry and the unapologetically assertive of City Girls ... artful sexual empowerment"), Donovan ("avant-garde singer and instrumentalist ... bedroom intimate vocals and [emotive] production"), Ari Lennox ("can make Tinder plights sound rich with soul ... akin to Erykah Badu"), Marco McKinnis ("Anthony Hamilton meets D'Angelo ... hazy ambient sounds"), Baby Rose ("exquisitely guttural voice makes [love] palpable"), Kyle Dion ("a register so high it sounded like tearful begging"), Lucky Daye ("his love odes are imbued with a Raphael Saadiq-esque adventurousness"), and Iman Omari ("a faint Bilal tinge ... music that leans heavy on a jazz/hip-hop").<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

See also

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References

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Further reading

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