Shemekia
Copeland ( US )
Shemekia Copland er ein av dei verklege store kvinnelege
bluesartistane i verda i dag. Ho
er ung og framfører alle typar blues og soul på ein fyrrig måte.
Ho er alt ei ekte blues diva, sjølv om ho berre er 28 år.
Ho har alt ma. vunne tre W. C. Handy Blues – prisar og har
vore nominert til Grammy Prisen.
Dette ”fyrverkeriet” av ein artist har stått på scenen
m.a. saman med store artistar som BB King, Ruth Brown og Dr. John og
gjort stor suksess. I løpet
av sitt unge liv har ho alt etablert seg blant dei beste blues –
soulsongarane. Mange
blueselskarar har samanlikna henne med store artistar som Etta
James, Koko Taylor, Aretha Franklin og Ruth Brown.
Det er ikkje mange som blir før dei er fylt 30 år.
Ho er fødd i Harlem i New York i 1979 og far hennar var den kjende
Texas-bluesgitaristen Johnny Clyde Copeland.
”Far visste frå alt
då eg var baby at eg skulle bli songar, men eg blei ikkje klar over
det før eg var ca. 15 år.”
– har Shemekia sagt fleire gonger.
Då ho alt som 18 åring ga ut sin første CD ”Turn
The Heat Up” – starta ho på ei kometaktig karriere.
Ho blei straks utpeika som eit uvanleg talent.
Kort
biografi
When singing sensation Shemekia Copeland first appeared on
the scene in 1997 with her groundbreaking debut CD, TURN THE HEAT
UP, she quickly became, at 18 years old, a roots music superstar.
Critics from around the country celebrated Shemekia's music as fans
of all ages agreed that an unstoppable new talent had arrived.
Shemekia released two more CDs: 2000's Grammy©-nominated WICKED and
2002's TALKING TO STRANGERS (produced by Dr. John), and in that
short period of time, collected five Blues Music Awards, a Grammy©
nomination, five Living Blues Awards, and was honored with the
coveted "Talent Deserving Wider Recognition" Award by the
DownBeat Critics' Poll. Rock legend Robert Plant called her
"the next Tina Turner." Shemekia has already had a
lifetime's worth of career highlights, including performances on
national television, appearances in films, and sharing stages with
some of the biggest names in the music world.
But all of this popular attention has only been a precursor for what
is to come. Her new CD, aptly titled, THE SOUL TRUTH, is the
funkiest, deepest, and most exciting statement yet from the woman
CNN calls, "a legend in the making." Produced by renowned
Stax guitarist Steve Cropper (who also adds his stellar guitar
playing to the CD), the album is steeped in the spirit of classic
Memphis soul but, at the same time, is a contemporary and
up-to-the-minute slice of life. Featuring Shemekia's powerful,
emotional vocals over a blistering band with horns punching in all
the right places, THE SOUL TRUTH is a tour-de-force of rock,
soul and blues. From the funk and fervor of Breakin' Out to the
timely question of Who Stole My Radio? to the rock-powered Givin' Up
You, THE SOUL TRUTH tells it like it is, with deep emotion,
forceful beats and music that is satisfying, original and memorable.
Born in Harlem, New York in 1979, Shemekia came to her singing
career slowly. "I never knew I wanted to sing until I got
older," says Copeland. "But my dad knew ever since I was a
baby. He just knew I was gonna be a singer." Her father, the
late Texas blues guitar legend Johnny Clyde Copeland, recognized his
daughter's talent early on. He always encouraged her to sing at home
and even brought her on stage to sing at Harlem's famed Cotton Club
when she was just eight. At that time Shemekia's embarrassment
outweighed her desire to sing. But when she was 15 and her father's
health began to slow him down, she received the calling. "It
was like a switch went off in my head," recalls Shemekia,
"and I wanted to sing. It became a want and a need. I had to do
it."
Shemekia's passion for singing, matched with her huge, blast-furnace
voice, gives her music the timeless power and heart-pounding urgency
of a very few greats who have come before her. The media has
compared her to a young Etta James, Koko Taylor, Aretha Franklin and
Ruth Brown, but Shemekia - who was raised in the tough, urban
streets of Harlem - has her own story to tell. Although schooled in
Texas blues by her father, Shemekia's music comes from deep within
her soul and from the streets she grew up on, where a daily dose of
city sounds - from street performers to gospel singers to blasting
radios to bands in local parks - surrounded her.
With all this experience under her belt, 16-year-old Shemekia joined
her father on his tours after he was diagnosed with a heart
condition. Soon enough Shemekia was opening, and sometimes even
stealing, her father's shows. "She grabbed the crowd with her
powerful voice, poised and intense," raved Blues Revue at the
time. Eventually, though, it became clear to Shemekia who was
helping whom. "Dad wanted me to think I was helping him out by
opening his shows when he was sick, but really, he was doing it all
for me. He would go out and do gigs so I would get known. He went
out of his way to get me that exposure," recalls Shemekia.
Shemekia stepped out of her father's shadow in 1998 when Alligator
released TURN THE HEAT UP to massive popular and critical acclaim.
Rave reviews ran everywhere from Billboard to The New York Times,
The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune, The Chicago Sun-Times, The
Boston Globe, Emerge and many others. "Nothing short of uncanny,"
said The Village Voice. "She roars with a sizzling hot
intensity," shouted The Boston Globe. She appeared in the
motion picture Three To Tango, and her song I Always Get My Man was
featured in another Hollywood film, Broken Hearts Club. She even
guested on the television program Early Edition.
In 2000 she returned with WICKED. Almost immediately the young
singer was in great demand at radio, television and in the press.
The opening song, It's 2:00 A.M., won the Blues Music Award for Song
Of The Year, and the album was nominated for a Grammy© Award. She
appeared twice on Late Night With Conan O'Brien, and also performed
on National Public Radio's Weekend Edition and the CBS Saturday
Early Show. In November 2001, she appeared on Austin City Limits to
an enthusiastic live audience and on television to millions more old
and new fans all across the country.
With her Dr. John-produced follow-up, TALKING TO STRANGERS, Shemekia
again turned up the heat, with far-reaching material treading the
ground where blues and soul meet rock and roll. The album debuted in
the #1 spot on the Billboard Blues Chart and received critical
praise all around the world. The Associated Press declared, "Copeland
blazes through TALKING TO STRANGERS with fervor and grace. Her
singing can be as thunderous as Etta James and as mellow as Chaka
Khan." Vibe agreed, saying, "TALKING TO STRANGERS is a
masterful blend of ballsy rockers and cheeky ballads." Features
and reviews ran in The Washington Post, Billboard, Essence, Vibe,
USA Today, DownBeat, Ebony and many other national and regional
publications. She appeared on the Late Show With David Letterman (along
with B.B. King), was featured in the Martin Scorsese-produced
concert film Lightning In A Bottle, the PBS television series The
Blues and even opened a show for the Rolling Stones in Chicago.
Shemekia continues to tour the world and to win fans at every stop.
She's played with Buddy Guy and B.B. King, and has shared the stage
with Taj Mahal, Dr. John and Koko Taylor, among many others. She won
the hearts and souls of new fans at the 1998 and 2002 Chicago Blues
Festivals, The North Atlantic Blues Festival, Milwaukee's
Summerfest, The Monterey Jazz Festival, The San Francisco Blues
Festival, The New York State Blues Festival, The North Sea Festival
in Holland, The Montreux Jazz Festival, The New Orleans Jazz &
Heritage Festival, The Lowell Folk Festival, and many others.
One of the many lessons Shemekia learned growing up was the
importance of singing from the heart. "Nobody wants to listen
to someone singing just to earn some money," she says. "You've
gotta sing because you need to do it." Indeed, Shemekia's
soul-satisfying vocals and the lessons she learned from her father,
matched with her inner need to sing, have brought her to audiences
both young and old. "I still listen to Aretha Franklin, Katie
Webster, Trudy Lynn, Etta James, Howard Tate, India Arie and
Angelique Kidjo. But I never try to copy them. They've all inspired
me and helped me become my own person."
With the powerful and radio-friendly songs on THE SOUL TRUTH
and continued non-stop touring, Shemekia will continue to reach fans
across all musical genres. "Shemekia Copeland is a major
talent," raves The Chicago Tribune. "Wonderfully
expressive singing...breathtaking performances that touch the heart,"
adds DownBeat. Throughout THE SOUL TRUTH, Shemekia Copeland
testifies her music to both seasoned music lovers, who appreciate
her musical roots, as well as to new fans, who love her contemporary
attitude. "I want people who love hip-hop to know where it came
from," she told Vibe magazine. "My music is rooted in
blues, but it's different. I'm singing about my era. I'm here and
I'm singing about now and not yesterday." And that's the truth,
nothing but the soul truth.
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