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It is rare that
a stranger can describe your feelings with startling accuracy. A
voice that articulates what is most difficult to express and
makes it beautiful. Lyrics that tender love without cliché, pain
that smoulders, passions unbridled and the hope that your heart
will triumph its inhibitions. Surprisingly, the insight is not
unsettling; your exposure begets peace. Your heart has found an
emotional companion that demands nothing but your honesty. Only
vulnerability will allow you to form the connection that
transcends the physical. My kindred spirit is a woman whose
talent could only be a product of lessons hard-learned and
blessings greatly appreciated. Her name is Sade… and she sings
to transform the ethereal to the tangible.
Helen Folasade Adu was born in 1959 to an
English mother and a Nigerian father. Aptly dubbed Sade, which
means “sweetly singing”, this Nigerian born icon originally
pursued a career in fashion design studying at St. Martin’s
College. Ironically, Sade only began singing as a favor
to friends who were searching for a permanent vocalist. A fan of
Curtis Mayfield, Marvin Gaye and Donny Hathaway, Sade studied
music’s prodigal talents finding her niche in an unduplicated
sound. She soon splintered from an early 80s Latin funk band
called Pride and along with saxophonist Stewart Matthewman,
bassist Paul Spencer Denman and keyboardist Andrew Hale became “Sade.”
In 1983, Epic sought to sign a solo recording
deal with Sade who was able to successfully convince the label
that “Sade” was a moniker for the whole band (for the duration
of their career, most of their audience would never realize that
“Sade” referred to more than the sophisticated singing beauty).
This was the beginning of a 10-year run where Sade – the group
and specifically, the woman – would release 4 albums, perhaps
peerless in their emotional depth and humanity.
Musically,
the 80s gave birth to a number of talents and divas. And while
Janet Jackson and Whitney Houston are undeniably legendary,
their projects are dated by the eras in which they were
produced. Sade is an exception. Against a backdrop of big hair
and neon colors shimmied a mellow nightingale whose voice could
almost be accused of monotony. This was on full display when the
group released “Your Love is King” in 1984, the first single
from the debut album Diamond Life, launching their
meteoric rise to success. Diamond Life spent 98 weeks on
UK charts and 81 weeks on Billboard earning Sade the Grammy for
Best New Artist. The very next year, Sade followed that critical
and commercial success with Promise, most well known for
“The Sweetest Taboo” and “Is It A Crime”. The latter is
my favourite song. As a visual songwriter, Sade narrates
using unusual imagery and metaphors. The analogies are not
obvious and often open to personal interpretation. The
emotional charge that pervades "Is It A Crime" seems
uncharacteristic but, as in life, every emotion is tuned to its
own frequency. In an effort to persuade a lost love to return,
she belts, "my love is wider/ wider than Victoria Lake/ my
love is taller/ taller than the Empire State/ it dives/ it
jumps/ and ripples like the deepest ocean/ I can't give you more
than that/surely you want me back..."
After 2 huge albums, Sade was developing a unique sound in stark
contrast to what prevailed in those days. She was a paradigm of
cool in a signature ponytail and hoop earrings, melodically
emoting over syncopated percussion, persistent electronic
guitar, subtle keyboard chords and whaling horns. And unlike her
peers, Sade’s maturation has never been extreme or abrupt. This
includes Stronger Than Pride (1988), Sade’s first album
that was entirely self-produced. It hit the world’s stage
prompting a pan-continental tour across Europe, Australia and
Japan. Sade followed Stronger Than Pride with the
evocative Love Deluxe (1992) and then Lover’s Rock
(2000), a mesmerizing and mature album that recaptured her fans’
attention after an 8-year hiatus and nearly 20 years after their
debut. The nearly imperceptible shifts in sound throughout this
tenure denote progression without venturing far from her base.
Sade’s music is the blueprint for consistency without
complacency.
Although
talent recognition is important, commercial success is hardly the measure of a true artist. By ascribing sound to feelings, musicians have the potential for immortality. The capacity to create is afforded only to those with the depth of understanding that refuses to belittle human experience with trite composition. The genius of every Sade song lies in its accessibility. Poignant but uncomplicated, the lyrics are centre-stage shadowed only by the captivating contralto of their author. Too often people mistakenly dismiss the music as sad.
But reducing Sade’s music to one component is like seeing only
the thorns of the rose. You are missing the experience, the
sweetness of honestly recanting life’s complexity. Indeed there
is sadness so elegantly penned that your personal experience
assumes a new perspective of beauty and grace; Sade speaks about
that which is common to everyone… the journey of love. Every
song is a sonnet of truth. So much so, that Sade has long since
been recognized as the premier emotional therapist for women of
every generation. The music is a safe harbour for hearts
weathered by the storm. The best free advice: the voice of a
friend echoing your feelings. Fortunately, emotions are not
gendered so the insight is not reserved for her female fan base.
Anyone can heed the admonition in “Hang On To Your Love”,
stressing the importance of salvaging your relationship. One
emotional freefall is an adequate introduction to the
understanding that “Love is Stronger Than Pride”. The accuracy
of her description of true love in “Kiss of Life” signifies an
intimacy of experience matched by very few artists. Moreover,
nearly every album has at least one song addressing relevant
social issues. “Pearls” recants the plight of a Somalian woman,
“Feel No Pain” explores the problem of unemployment and “Why
Can’t We Live Together” is a plea for peace.
H.A. Overstreet wrote, “I have my own
particular sorrows, love’s delights and you have yours. But
sorrows, gladness, yearning, hope, love, belong to all of us, in
all times and in all places. Music is the only means whereby we
feel these emotions in their universality.” Every Sade CD is a
testament to Overstreet’s contention. Sade’s refusal to
participate in the celebrity circus provokes intense curiosity
from her audience. Swaddled in mystery, the smoky chanteuse has
forged a unique bond with her fans. In the absence of tabloid
overkill, her exposure is arguably more vulnerable. It is pure
and honest and limited to omissions of significance. The music
speaks for itself; you need only listen.
Timeless in style and meaning, the sound is
still current decades later. It is the meticulous combination of
timing, delivery, cadence and instrumentation that engenders the
masterpiece. We are not isolationists; it is the interplay of
the physical, spiritual, mental and emotional that defines us
and Sade is holistic in their contribution. It’s no wonder that
Sade has sold over 40 million albums worldwide and enjoyed both
critical and commercial acclaim without sacrificing the love of
one of the most devoted audiences in the music industry. As
strange as it may seem, when I realized that I missed the
Love Deluxe tour for want of money and a misplaced desire to
be economical, I cried. I mourned the lost meeting, the chance
to see a woman so much like myself that she feels like family.
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