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Labelle, Labelle reunion

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Title: reunion
Release date: 21 October, 2008
Record label: Verve Records
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Official website: Verve Records
Wikipedia: Labelle

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    Labelle, the formidable trio of Sarah Dash, Nona Hendryx and Patti LaBelle, have christened the title of their first full-length studio album in over 30 years 'Back to Now.' The album is set for release by Verve Records on October 21st and features production by Gamble & Huff, Wyclef Jean, and Lenny Kravitz. Reflecting on this journey Hendryx says, "It's as if we never stopped. The thread just continues." LaBelle admits, "We have a sound like no one else has" and Dash adds, "This new album definitely represents Labelle today." There are reunions and then there are reunions... Embodying one of music's most enduring one-word brand names, and boasting a genre-defying legacy that has successfully spanned three generations, our era's most influential female powerhouse is about to show a stifled music industry how to really turn it out. Labelle is back! Patti Labelle, Nona Hendryx, and Sarah Dash, R&B's most original and formidable trio are reuniting via Verve Records to deliver their first full length studio album in more than 33 years. The new CD, to be completed in June and on course for a global unveiling in the fall of 2008, is being produced by a trio of icons equally up to the task - cutting edge funk rocker Lenny Kravitz and 2008 Rock’n’Roll Hall of Fame inductees Gamble & Huff.

    Transforming themselves from the classic-style 1960s girl group Patti La Belle and the Bluebelles (with a young Reggie Dwight aka Elton John on piano for one UK tour) into what one writer coined as 'the genre-bending rock supernova' of the 1970s, the innovative trio deftly combined glam rock, soul, funk, pop and gospel into a brash amalgam of breakthrough Labelle stalwarts such as “You Turn Me On,” “Can I Speak to You Before You Go To Hollywood?,” “What Can I Do For You?” and the groundbreaking “Lady Marmalade.” Labelle redefined the creative arc of the girl group, celebrating their three distinct personalities by donning outrageous costumes and addressing controversial issues in song and demeanor, shunning the cookie-cutter stereotypes that plagued most female singers of the era. The group continually pushed gender boundaries in music of black origin, opening up for rock icons such as The Who and the Rolling Stones as they revolutionized the roles women played in R&B, rock n' roll, and even fashion.

    Often cited as a key influence for a new generation of female trailblazers, such as Erykah Badu and Christina Aguilera, (the 2001 Missy Elliott-produced remake of “Lady Marmalade” featuring Aguilera, Mya, Pink, and Lil' Kim snagged MTV's Video Of the Year, among other awards) the distinctive new songs – many crafted by Labelle’s own Nona Hendryx -- also reflect the growth, wisdom and healing that exemplifies their individual storied paths after going their separate ways more than 32 years ago (there have been several special events and live reunions since).

    Braced, as always, by their trademark vocal firepower, the 2008 version of the supergroup still relies on their expansive range, show-stopping sense of theatricality, and as Nona puts it - their innate ability “to “pull together as sisters and 'Labelle-ize' the music and the vibe and the spiritual side of what we do like nobody else on the planet.”

    Concocting an energized blend of uptempo songs and heart-wrenching ballads, the new CD includes the mesmerizing “Candlelight,” the driving “System,” the scorching “Superlover,” and the more traditional big ballad “Living Without You”. These songs go to create an edgy and fan-pleasing album that once again finds Labelle embarking on a riveting musical narrative.

    “The thread that always runs through is that we're sisters and we'll always be sisters,” declares Patti; a connection between the three that may have frayed now and then over the years, but always remained 'unbreakable.' It was Nona who tapped eclectic rocker Lenny Kravitz for initial production duty on the new disc. “We're friends and admirers of each other's work. We talked to him about the idea of us getting together and invited him to a session. He showed up that day at 5:00 and we haven't stopped working.”

    Where Kravitz represents the next-generation appeal of the Labelle magic, legendary songwriters/producers Gamble & Huff were part of the Philadelphia/New Jersey nexus that gave birth to the most popular soul sounds of the 1970s (O'Jays, Teddy Pendergrass, Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes, and others). In fact, Kenny Gamble grew up with Patti on the same Philadelphia street and their friendship throughout the years opened the door for Kenny to help launch the Labelle reunion.

    Such foundational strengths anchor the new album, eliciting the same kind of confidence that enabled Labelle to break the mold back in the 70s, with each member eventually taking flight in inspired solo careers that accentuated their respective gifts. Patti went on to sign with Gamble & Huff's Philadelphia International Records in the early ‘80s, releasing the seminal album I'm In Love Again that cemented her long and acclaimed solo career. Her subsequent duet with Michael McDonald, “On My Own,” soared to #1 on the charts, with scores of hits and an impeccable live reputation rounding out more than two decades of acclaimed releases, TV and film appearances, sold-out shows across the globe, and multiple awards, including her April 2008 Humanitarian Award presented in New York by the “We Are Family Foundation” chaired by Nile Rodgers. Patti is currently working on a new line of spices, writing her third cookbook which will be out in September along with an instructional cooking DVD.

    Nona and Sarah (both hailing from Trenton, NJ) have also sustained compelling and highly successful individual careers. Sarah Dash has collaborated with such notable artists as Nile Rodgers and the Rolling Stones, (she even sang back-up on the Steel Wheels tour). Sarah also drew raves as a celebrated fixture of Keith Richards' solo outfit The Expensive Winos. She too, has written for the stage and is currently penning her autobiography. Her recent appearance in San Francisco's hit interactive theatre presentation, Teatro Zinzanni, seamlessly blended her commanding performing style with European cirque, opera, and musical theatre. During her thirteen-week stint on the waterfront at Zinzanni, Sarah broke all previous attendance records. The role of the “chanteuse” had previously been performed by Joan Baez and R&B sensation Thelma Houston.

    Nona's acclaimed songwriting and producing talents include collaborations with such diverse artists as Dusty Springfield, Talking Heads, Prince, and Peter Gabriel - to name a few. Her solo recordings have garnered top ten hits including “Bustin' Out,” “Why Should I Cry?” and “Transformation.” Branching out into the worlds of film, TV and theatrical music has brought her even more acclaim, including Drama Desk and Emmy award nominations. Her amazing versatility is demonstrated on projects ranging from a song for a Disney-animated children's TV special (“People”), to 11 new songs for the Roundabout Theatre's off-Broadway smash hit “Blue” (a 'play with music' by Charles Randolph Wright, starring Phylicia Rashad), to music and vocals for Paul Haslinger's score of the soundtrack for the award-winning Showtime series “Sleeper Cell”, and songs for the upcoming feature film, “Mama I Want to Sing,” featuring Patti LaBelle. A new feather in Nona's cap will be starring as The Acid Queen in a major stage production of “Tommy” in Los Angeles this June. After that, she and her band will join Cyndi Lauper's 'True Colors' tour on the West Coast.

    Labelle's long-awaited return to the studio signifies yet another chapter in the historic legacy of the group. But all three members are quick to assert it's not the final curtain. There will be a tour. After all, the live component of Labelle has often been cited as their most unforgettable dynamic. “We're going to bring to the fans everything they've been asking for. We haven't lost our edge,” assures Nona. “I feel we're better because of everything we've gone through,” seconds Sarah. For a group whose roots indeed go all the way back to opening up for icons such as James Brown and Otis Redding, leave it to Patti to wrap it up - true Labelle style. “I think all you gotta say is 'we're here.' We're like that caged bird. If you love it, you open the door and let it fly because you know it's going to come back stronger. Well, we're back, baby. Anyone that knows Labelle knows we don't know how to hold anything back.”

    biography
    “I didn’t know if we still had it but we have a sound no one else has...”  Patti LaBelle

    “It’s as if we never stopped. The thread just continues...”  Nona Hendryx

    “It’s a sound piece of music - this new album definitely represents Labelle today...”  Sarah Dash

    In the history of female groups, none has ever achieved the longevity, or experienced the kind of creative evolution, that Patti LaBelle, Nona Hendryx and Sarah Dash have.  Since their original formation at the dawn of the girl-group era as The Bluebelles (with then-fourth member Cindy Birdsong) in 1961, through their incarnation as R&B powerhouse (Patti LaBelle & The Bluebelles), and on to their pioneering years as the unprecedented rock-soul-funk trio Labelle, Hendryx, LaBelle and Dash have remained peerless. 

    These three women spent fifteen years together with a consistent commitment to bringing energy, excitement and soul power to live performances, and cutting-edge innovation to a series of classic albums until 1976, when they separated without fanfare to pursue individual goals and aspirations.  Thirty-two years later, with the release of a brand new Verve Records album (featuring such top notch producers as Lenny Kravitz, Gamble & Huff, and Wyclef Jean), the aptly titled Back to Now, Labelle is back on center stage.           

    Formed out of the merging of two Philadelphia/New Jersey-based groups in 1960, Patti LaBelle & The Bluebelles were imaginative and innovative from the start, choosing to interpret standards and classics such as “You’ll Never Walk Alone,” “Danny Boy” and their ultimate showstopper “Over The Rainbow” with soaring vocals and unique harmonies.  Following their ’61 hit, “I Sold My Heart to the Junkman,” the original quartet toured extensively, bringing audiences to their feet at such venues as The Apollo in New York, The Uptown in Philadelphia and The Regal in Chicago. 

    Signed to Atlantic Records by legendary executive Jerry Wexler, the group cut two albums (the first of which included their version of “Groovy Kind Of Love”) without major chart success.  With the departure of Birdsong to join The Supremes, the remaining three were in need of a radical change to survive changing musical times as the ‘70s dawned.  Recalls Sarah Dash, “I wrote to Vicki Wickham [the producer of the British television show, Ready Steady Go! on which the group had appeared in 1965] and told her we needed management. She came to a show we did at The Apollo.  We knocked the audience down to the ground that night!  She said, ‘I have some ideas…’ 

    Wickham brought Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp (the management team for The Who) of London-based Track Records and the group signed with the label, moving to the U.K. for a period of nearly six moths, trying different musical concepts and approaches at Wickham’s suggestion.  Notes Patti, “What we were doing was kinda corny.  We knew we needed to make a big move.  I was afraid of change…but when it happened, it was a welcome change.”  For Nona, “It was time to get out of the old and into the new. I’m always looking for change so I was excited and interested in discovering something new.”        

    When the newly-named trio Labelle returned to the U.S., the bouffant wigs were replaced with Afros, sequined gowns with jeans.  Their 1971 debut set for Warner Brothers included material such as The Rolling Stones’ “Wild Horses” and Carole King’s “You’ve Got A Friend” as well as tunes by Laura Nyro and new compositions by all three group members.  The same year, Labelle teamed with Nyro for her groundbreaking album It’s Gonna Take A Miracle, produced by Kenny Gamble & Leon Huff, which featured much-loved songs of the ‘50s and ‘60s. 

    A national tour opening for The Who was followed by a second Warners album (Moonshadow) and by the time Labelle signed with RCA in 1973 (for the one-off Pressure Cookin’ album), the trio had traded in jeans for silver space suits and feathers. Working with New York designers Larry LeGaspi and Richard Erker, Labelle visually bridged the chasm between R&B and glam rock. Labelle’s stage show was revamped: audiences were treated to Patti and Nona flying down from the ceiling and Sarah rising from the floor, bringing a combination of drama, power and high octane soulful vocalizing to the most diverse of crowds, culminating in a SRO show at New York’s Metropolitan Opera House in 1974.

    That year, Labelle signed with Epic Records.  Working with famed producer Allen Toussaint in New Orleans, the group created a breakthrough album with Nightbirds, spurred on by the across-the-board international success of the hit single “Lady Marmalade” (covered in 2001 by Christina Aguilera, Mya, Lil’ Kim and Pink). Whether on Rock Concert or Soul Train, in Rolling Stone or Jet,” Labelle’s futuristic blend of soul and rock found favor with audiences coast-to-coast.  Featuring a number of tailor-made, distinctive compositions by Hendryx (such as “Going Down Makes Me Shiver” and “Messin’ With My Mind”), two strong albums in the form of 1975’s Phoenix and 1976’s Chameleon followed. 

    As all three agree, “Everyone had different directions they saw for themselves…”. Patti, Nona and Sarah forged individual pathways.  Always remaining friends and staying in touch, the trio came back together in 1995 to record the No. 1 dance music hit “Turn It Out” for the movie, To Wong Foo, Thanks For Everything, and came together in 1999 (with Cindy Birdsong) to receive a prestigious R&B Foundation Pioneer Award. 

    After Nona found a song that was a tribute to civil rights leader Rosa Parks, “I asked Pat about us doing it as a group. Pat’s been talking about us getting back together for thirty years!  I said, ‘we should either stop announcing it…or do it!’”  For Patti, the idea of coming back together to record and tour was all about timing: “Every time it came up, I was working.  I knew it was long overdue but each time, I was not ready to do it and I had so many things on my plate. My manager Damascene Pierre Paul kept asking me to do do this; he was begging me and finally, I gave in.  Then I said, ‘I don’t want to half-step…I will make time to do this.” Adds Sarah, “We’d been talking about it and we had a meeting in 2007 to see what we could put in motion. We never did a farewell tour.  We just stopped.  This is a way of bringing completion for the fans who were with us from the beginning.” 
           
    The result of what Nona likes to call the trio’s “re-ignition” is a bold new album which embodies everything Labelle has ever been. With the group’s ever-distinct harmonies and high octane vocals, LaBelle, Hendryx and Dash bring something new and fresh to their latest work.  Producers Lenny Kravitz, Gamble & Huff and Wyclef bring out the best in the trio.  “I had just seen Kenny and Leon receiving their induction into The Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame and Pat performed “If You Don’t Know Me By Now,” recalls Sarah. “I called Kenny and asked if he would meet with us.”  Nona brought Kravitz to the table: “We're friends and admirers of each other's work. We talked to him about the idea of us getting together and invited him to a session. He showed up that day at 5:00 and we haven't stopped working since."

    “Working with Lenny was a blast!” says Patti.  “He played every instrument, even sang all the leads on the tracks.  That’s how good he is.  Kenny and Leon are like brothers to me. I trust them and they let me take credit for being myself.”  Notes Nona, “Working with Lenny, Wyclef, and Kenny & Leon was meant to be.  I really think the music led us to the people who would understand the new Labelle credo 'back to now'.  The past and the present, existing in the now!”  Adds Sarah, “Lenny reminds me of the newness of today. I learned a lot from him. I really saw his vision for us, and Kenny& Leon and Wyclef took the old and brought us right up to today.”

    The songs are a perfect fit: “Without You,” began as an original idea from Nona: “The initial impetus for writing the song was as an ode to Labelle.  You could hear it as a traditional love song or as the sentiment behind our re-ignition as a group.”  Kenny Gamble “had an idea for another section for the song,” says Nona, while Patti added her input to the song (“from the first time I heard it, I loved it”).  The final result: a dramatic, intense ballad in the best tradition of Labelle, building and building with soaring vocals.

    “Our audiences came to expect all three of us to sing lead on different songs,” says Sarah. “That made us unlike any other female group. That’s what we do on ‘System’.”  It is, Nona says, “an old song, something we performed thirty years ago that was intended for our next Labelle record in 1977. It means more today than it did even then. I love the rugged track Lenny created for it, reflecting the aggression that the ‘system’ represents.”  Patti: “It’s about what’s happening now.  It’s about the lies that have been told. It’s about not doing what the system tells you but about following your heart…”

    Other album highlights include “Candelight,” a Hendryx original (“That’s old-styled Labelle!” says Sarah), “Super Lover,” a Hendry/Celli collaboration, and two G&H productions:  : a rocking version of Mother’s Finest’s “Truth Will Set You Free” and a dance classic cover of Sylvester’s “You Make Me Feel Mighty Real.”  Nona remembers, “I worked with Joyce Kennedy (of Mother’s Finest) with the ‘Daughters Of Soul’ tours I did in Europe and Asia.  “Truth Will Set You Free” was a great song from a great band and I felt it was something we could do.”  For the dance floor, what better choice than reviving a song made famous by a dear friend: Sarah smiles, “What can I say?  Sylvester was an icon. I loved doing this.  I got use all aspects of my vocal range on this track.” As Patti says, “It ain’t nothin’ but a jam. It’s gonna make you dance like a fool.”

    Labelle, known for delivering a potent message-in-song have been given the perfect vehicle, courtesy Gamble & Huff with “Tears For The World,” a new 2008 classic, sweeping, driving, thought-provoking.  Patti recalls, “I was in Kenny’s office. It wasn’t raining that day but it felt dark.  Sarah had just shown me her diary in which she had written ‘Let’s pray.”  Nona, “After he heard Pat talking, Leon (Huff) went away and came back with the song.  It talks about all the things we want to change.” 

    Concludes Nona, “Our new album is like going home and eating your Mom’s cooking, if your Mom was a good cook, that is!” Labelle sings of change, of love, of sex. A genre-shattering  female trio who had social, musical and political statements to make in the ‘70s, re-emerge with the same kind of triple-threat power, bringing it all back to now.

    IN BETWEEN...
    Post-Labelle ’76 to now...

    SARAH DASH:  With the 1978 release of her self-titled solo debut album for Kirshner Records, the songstress made an immediate impact on the international dance music world via the club and chart hit, “Sinner Man.”  In 1983, “Low Down Dirty Rhythm” (on Megatone Records) gained momentum as a dance hit; by the end of the ‘80s, Sarah had recorded an album for EMI (which included Sarah’s memorable version of the Gaye-Terrell tune, “You’re All I Need To Get By”) and had begun working with Keith Richards of The Rolling Stones.  An international tour with Richards and a national U.S. tour with his band X-pensive Winos followed, with appearances on two of his albums (Live At The Hollywood Palladim” and Main Offender) and on The Rolling Stones’ Steel Wheels album in 1989.  In the early ‘90s, Sarah developed her own one-woman show, “Dash Of Diva,” performing at different club venues; offstage, she began developing herself as a motivational speaker at juvenile homes and churches as well as working with organizations for homeless mothers.  In 2007, she garnered rave reviews for her performances in San Francisco’s famed ‘Teatro Zinzanni’ as ‘Duchess Of Del Capri’ and away from the spotlight, Sarah also began managing properties owned by her father in her hometown of Trenton, New Jersey, restoring her original childhood home and developing the Sarah Dash School Of Music And Arts,’aimed “at both children and seniors.”  Sarah’s guest credits include a diversity of artists: Doctor York, Alice Cooper, the Marshall Tucker Band, the O’Jays, Wilson Pickett and Bo Diddley.

    NONA HENDRYX:  The first member of Labelle to release a solo album (a self-titled set on Epic Records in 1977), Nona established herself as multi-genre artist through a series of cutting-edge albums in the ‘80s and ‘90s that focused on her expansive talents as a songwriter and distinctive vocalist capable of delving into rock, dance, alternative and R&B realms.  Her critically-acclaimed three ‘80s albums for RCA (Nona, The Art Of Defense and The Heat) yielded a number of charted singles and key album cuts including “Keep It Confidential,” “I Sweat (Goin’ Thru’ The Motions)” and “Transformation”); her collaborations with the Talking Heads, Arthur Baker, Prince, Peter Gabriel, Dan Hartman and Bill Laswell and Material, guest appearances on albums by Rick Springfield and Yoko Ono among others and songwriting credits on records by Dusty Springfield, Jefferson Starship and Nnenna Freelon have contributed to her impact as an artist without musical boundaries. Nona’s 1987 album Female Trouble included the hit “Baby Go-Go” and notable tracks, “Why Should I Cry?” and “Winds Of Change,” a tribute to Nelson Mandela; while the follow-up Skin Diver (a progressive set for Private Music) is now the subject of a multi-media cyber musical on which Nona is working with collaborator Charles Randolph Wright, with whom she worked on the ‘play with music,’ “Blue,” starring Phylicia Rashad, which earned Nona a Drama Desk nomination.  Recent activities have included a collaboration with David Byrne on a song for keyboard wizard Bernie Worrell’s album; a song on the upcoming Mama I Want To Sing movie soundtrack.  and an appearance as The Acid Queen in The Who’s “Tommy” in Los Angeles . The Grammy® and Emmy-nominated Hendryx has toured extensively and in July joined Cyndi Lauper's True Colors tour, which helps to raise awareness of the discrimination the GLBT community still faces. Nona is active with her own independent label, Rhythmbank, and has developed a futuristic one-woman multimedia show with an “Audio Tutu,” a visual and self-contained costume complete with amplifiers, microphone, iPod and speakers.

    PATTI LABELLE:  Signed with Epic, Patti’s 1977 eponymous solo album included a song that has forever been identified with her in the form of “You Are My Friend.”  It was the first of some thirty singles that have made the charts since then, including most notably “If Only You Knew,” Patti’s 1984 No. 1 R&B hit (recorded for Gamble & Huff’s Philadelphia International Records), “New Attitude,” the 1986 across-the-board pop/R&B No. 1 single “On My Own” (a duet with Michael McDonald), “If You Asked Me To,” “Somebody Loves You,” “Yo Mister,” “When You Talk About Love” and “Right Kind Of Lover.”  The two-time Grammy® winner has had twenty charted albums, most recently the reissue of 1982’s Live In Washington DC.  Beyond her success as a major recording artist and consistently popular live performer, renowned for her energy-packed dynamic shows, Patti LaBelle has worked in all facets of the entertainment industry.  She starred on Broadway in the ‘80s in a revival of Your Arms Too Short To Box With God and in the musical House of Flowers, on the silver screen (1984’s A Soldier’s Story, 2006’s Idlewild), had her own television series (Out All Night and Living It Up), received six honorary doctorates, and written a best-selling autobiography (1995’s Don’t Block The Blessings, which detailed her personal challenges with the loss of her mother, three sisters and a best friend to diabetes and cancer as well as the loss of her father to Alzheimer’s disease; and her own 1994 diagnosis with diabetes and subsequent work as a spokesperson for the American Diabetes Association).  A multi-faceted entrepreneur, Patti’s most recent projects have included her own wig line (The Patti LaBelle Collection); a new line of products branded Patti LaBelle-The Good Life which include five signature hot sauces and relishes; and her fifth book (and third cookbook), “Recipes For The Good Life” and an instructional DVD.  A renowned humanitarian, Patti has given time and energy to such causes as adoption, foster care, Big Sisters and the United Negro College Fund.

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