The "neo soul" term,
originated by Kedar Massenburg of Motown Records in the late-1990s, is
sometimes looked upon with disdain as nothing more than a marketing
specialization of R&B instead of an honest revival of soul music.
Early works
The genre is considered to have originated with the work of Raphael
Saadiq's band Tony! Toni! Toné! in the mid-1990s, and with D'Angelo's
1995 LP Brown Sugar. Brown Sugar featured elements of classic soul,
inspired by artists such as Stevie Wonder and Donny Hathaway (both
keyboardists, as is D'Angelo), that had not been regularly seen in
modern African-American mainstream music since the mid-1980s. Also, in
1995 came the work of a duo called Groove Theory, which included the
members Amel Larrieux, the singer and Bryce Wilson, the
rapper/singer/producer/actor. In 1997, Motown artist Erykah Badu
released her debut LP, Baduizm, the success of which paved the way for
new Motown chief Kedar Massenburg to shift the direction of much of the
company's output towards Badu's style, which he dubbed neo-soul. The
first neo-soul artist to make a major impact on the mainstream was
Lauryn Hill, whose 1999 The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill LP was a
critical and commercial smash and garnered five Grammy Awards.
Popularization of neo-soul
After Hill's phenominal success, a number of other neo-soul artists
began scoring R&B hits, most notably Macy Gray, Musiq Soulchild,
and India.Arie. Alicia Keys' 2001 LP Songs in A Minor was another
Miseducation-like smash, winning several Grammies and selling
six-million copies and further popularizing the sound, to some critical
disdain. Other major neo soul artists have included Angie Stone, Lucy
Pearl, Floetry, Res, Truth Hurts, and Bilal, all of whom became staples
of R&B radio. The latest major neo-soul artist to emerge is John
Legend, who style bears strong similarities to that of Stevie Wonder.
Lack of mainstream success
In general, neo-soul has remained almost exclusive to R&B outlets
such as urban radio and BET; most of its artists are unfamiliar to
mainstream audiences, and its sound generally focuses on artist
expression rather than pop orientation. While these artists have found
major success in those venues, they generally have yet to crossover to
mainstream American music listeners.
To date, Hill remains the most well-known and consistently successful
neo soul artist from a mainstream, commercial point of view, thanks to
two big pop singles: "Everything Is Everything" and "Doo Wop", both of
which were far more hip-hop oriented, containing rapped verses, than
most neo soul. Hill is also widely known because of her successful
sweep of the 1999 Grammys. Keys, however, is widely known because she
has had the biggest single mainstream neo soul hit to date with
"Fallin'", which contained no rap verse and consequently managed to
cross over not only onto the pop charts, but also onto both the hot and
the soft AC charts.
Towards the turn of the millennium, Macy Gray had a massive urban, pop,
and AC hit with "I Try", making her pretty well-known by mainstream
America. Gray's other singles, while successful in some outlets, failed
to make an impression on the pop charts as "I Try" did. Wyclef Jean's
protégés City High managed two successful singles on the pop charts,
"Caramel" and "What Would You Do", in 2001, which was a time when
hearing hip-hop on pop radio was no longer anything exceptional, as it
had been during Hill's initial success. Because of this, City High did
not receive the same widespread recognition that Hill had three years
earlier; and since City High's singles were more upbeat and rhythmic
sounding than Keys' "Fallen" and Gray's "I Try", they did not cross
over onto the AC charts. As a result, City High, is nowhere near as
well known as either Hill, Gray, or Keys, even despite the group's pop
radio and MTV hits.
The other neo soul artists are hardly known of at all in mainstream
America, having yet to cross over to the mainstream despite the fact
that most have found success with the urban audience, urban radio, and
BET. Most have also found success in America on the music video
channels MTV2 and VH1 Soul. Some, like Maxwell, Erykah Badu, and
D'Angelo are somewhat known by mainstream America for having initiated
the neo soul genre, from critical acclaim, from word-of-mouth
recommendations of their albums, and from other media appearances,
e.g., D'Angelo's performance on VH1's Men Strike Back 2000 and Badu's
role in the movie The Cider House Rules. Only time will tell whether
any of the other neo soul artists begin to crossover into the
mainstream and become household names, or whether the genre remains
predominantly as a sub-genre of music played mainly just on urban radio
stations and BET.
Criticism of the "neo-soul" label
Many musicians who create what is considered "neo-soul" prefer to
disassociate themselves from the tag, due to the term's buzzword-like
usage. These artists argue that many record labels, hoping to cash in
on the success of the "neo-soul" style, simply had A&R departments
take R&B singers, give them a bohemian look, and have them state
Stevie Wonder, Donny Hathaway, or Marvin Gaye as their favorite
artists. Instead of using the "neo-soul" tag, many artists simply refer
to themselves as soul musicians.
List of nu soul artists
- Alicia Keys
- Amel Larrieux
- Amerie
- Angie Stone
- Bilal
- City High
- D'Angelo
- Dawn Robinson
- D.J. Rogers,Jr.
- Donnie
- Dwele
- Erykah Badu
- Glenn Lewis
- Floetry
- India Arie
- Jaguar Wright
- Javier
- Jill Scott
- John Legend
- Koffee Brown
- Lauryn Hill
- Lucy Pearl
- Macy Gray
- Maxwell
- McAlmont & Butler
- Musiq (formerly Musiq Soulchild)
- Raphael Saadiq
- Rashaan Patterson
- Res
- Sunshine Anderson
- Tony! Toni! Toné!
- Truth Hurts
- Tweet
- Van Hunt
- Vikter Duplaix
- Peven Everett