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The London Letters
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Red Clay Chronicles
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Afro Strut (import)
Will.I.Am
Songs About Girls    
 
+ CD REVIEW: WILL.I.AM - SONGS ABOUT GIRLS
 
 By contributing writer Ben J. Brown Jr.
Ben J Brown Jr

Will.I.Am, frontman for the international hit group The Black Eyed Peas is like the Raphel Saadiq of hip hop for me. Funky, soulful, and willing to push the boundaries of his own sound, Will never lets me down when it comes to doing music that you can easily sing and dance to.  So when word of his third solo album was out, I was more than willing to snag "Songs About Girls". As frontman and producer for the world famous Black Eyed Peas, Will.I.Am has made a career for dropping light hearted pop-styled hip hop that has had him produce and collaborate with the likes of Talib Kweli, Michael Jackson, Sergio Mendes, Justin Timberlake, Mariah Carey, and so many more.
 
Set as a personal score to his own personal romance story, Will takes his sound to various funky and diverse realms that he wasn't quite able to pull of within The Peas. Just like his work with the Black Eyed Peas, though, this is far from your ordinary hip hop album. Will still manages to blend rhythms and styles in a way that will keep your heart and soul on the dance floor.
 
Newcomers to Will's solo sound will find that he is a mix of what hip hop did when it first hit the scene which is rock a party and have fun. Will's comical and somewhat simplistic lyricism blends perfectly with his eclectic taste in music. In a way, he stretches the sound of hip hop much like K-Os (Canadian emcee) does by crafting albums that display his production skill and reflect his creative identity. As he drops his lyricism, he also flexes his vocals often enough to make you forget that this is hip hop. Rather your feet and move in appreciation of Will's amazing ear for music that makes you move. One thing is for sure, Will is a long way from his days when he hit the music scene under Easy-E's Ruthless Records in the late eighties.
 
Even though he pushes the typical 'sound' for hip hop in general (sampling), this album is not too far from the stylings and lyricism that he usually displays with his various collaborations and The Black Eyed Peas. These similarities can be found on tracks like "I Got It From My Mama" and "Make It Funky". Undeniably dance tracks, both songs are blends of "My Humps" without the hypnotizing chorus. Then Will takes a page from his work with Sergio Mendes and drops an upbeat electro-Carribean jam in "One More Chance".
 
Meanwhile, Will takes it closer to the electronica-Jamiroquai side of things with tracks like "Get Your Money" and "Impatient". Both have more of an acid jazz feel and will keep you moving.
 
This is not to say that Will doesn't smooth it out to woo the ladies though. Tracks like "Ain't It Pretty" blends his comical flow with cooled out, silky smooth rhythm that blends harmonies and guitar riffs that will have you singing the "woman adoring" lyrics and swaying to the beat.
 
Still, the theme throughout this album is truly a dedication to love lost. As you progress through his adventurous effort, you'll notice that Will spends a lot of time adoring and wooing that special someone. He sorts through a number of situations where he speaks honestly about the raw lust and attraction mixed with that moment of appreciating good love after it is lost. As if he wanted to summarize the entire relationship and aim of this sonic story, Wil blended elements of The Police and Prince to explain things in "Invisible".
 
So clear your living room floor, turn your bed into a dance floor, and tape that picture of that ex-girlfriend that you wish you hadn't lost on the door or wall. Then bust out your best 'I'm singin to you gurl' moves as you groove with Will.I.Am and a few "Songs About Girls"!
 
 
Songs About GirlsBen J Brown Jr's
ProjectVIBE Rating
Not Bad At All
 
 
 
 
 
 
+ ABOUT
WILL.I.AM

First thing’s first. The Black Eyed Peas are not breaking up. will.i.am, frontman and producer behind the multi-platinum group, wants to get that out of the way right from the start. “We’re not going anywhere,” he says, by way of introducing his new solo album, SONGS ABOUT GIRLS. “I made the choice in high school to be with a crew and that’s never going to change. It was just really important for me to try some things out on my own, with my own artistry and imagination.”

Indeed. will.i.am has helped steer The Black Eyed Peas into one of the most popular groups in music. They have sold 18 million albums worldwide, have won three Grammy awards and have been nominated for 10 total. The group, though, is a partnership amongst four people. “A will.i.am solo album is a different entity. It’s not a Peas record.”

On his own, will.i.am has established himself as one of music’s top producers. He has collaborated on tracks with Justin Timberlake, John Legend, Kelis, Nas, The Game, Mariah Carey, Whitney Houston, Michael Jackson, Sergio Mendes, Carlos Santana, The Pussycat Dolls, Busta Rhymes and fellow Black Eyed Pea, Fergie. He has developed into a highly revered, sought-after musician, songwriter and producer. So when it came time to work on his solo material, will.i.am not only had a blank canvas on which to work, but a palette of A-list talent to team up with.

But SONGS ABOUT GIRLS is not a cavalcade of other people’s talents.

“I wanted to be my own man and do my own thing and really try out some ideas that have been bubbling in my head.”
“I didn’t want to come out and say, ‘Hey, I’m a producer and here are all my friends,’” he explains. “I wanted to be my own man and do my own thing and really try out some ideas that have been bubbling in my head.”

Indeed, SONGS ABOUT GIRLS is a musically adventurous album that is solely from the funky, eclectic brainchild of will.i.am taking inspiration from a range of sounds from around the world. It is also a conceptual album, with a story rooted in will’s own personal evolution. While on the surface SONGS ABOUT GIRLS could be interpreted as an ode to the female gender, it is actually an album inspired by a longtime personal romance. “It’s about one particular relationship that, reflecting on it, I was really sorry how it ended up," will explains. "It was just me being a young dude making dumb decisions. But I was just growing up into a man, learning how to juggle a career with a relationship."

SONGS ABOUT GIRLS follows the story of a burgeoning hip-hop producer who meets and then falls in love with a girl. That producer gets led astray by the temptations of fame and lust and ends up losing his girlfriend. In the process, he learns to appreciate what he had. "The girl this is about knows who she is. It was a relationship that lasted for 7 years. This is the person I was with when we first started The Black Eyed Peas when we were broke. She took us to open mics; she worked at (influential hip-hop record store) Fat Beats. She was a backpacker just like we were backpackers."

In many ways, the making of SONGS ABOUT GIRLS served as therapy for will. “It was a way to get closure from something that had been lingering in my soul for many years,” he says. “I've made a lot of mistakes in my life and hurt a lot of people I've loved. I have no regrets, really, because I've learned from those mistakes but I'm sad I hurt these people along."

Scoring that narrative is vibrant musical soundtrack that draws from a number of different styles of music, and what will leap out first is how musically bold SONGS ABOUT GIRLS is. It is not just a hip-hop album but takes influences from European club sounds and house music, old-school soul and Brazilian Baile funk. It is a flurry of styles that can only come from a vivid creative mind. “It’s not what I can’t do with The Black Eyed Peas, it’s what I haven’t done with the Peas yet,” says will.i.am. “I’ve hinted at some of these styles on Peas songs before but this takes it a little farther and opens up the possibilities of what we’ll be able to do in the future.

“It's as if I was to score what's on a guy's mind.”
Set to a clubby, electronic bounce and with echoes of 8-bit video game sound effects, "I Got It From My Mama," the first single, is a fun rumination on the subject of genetics, on how girls with certain attributes can owe their spectacular assets to their mothers, will explains. “It's as if I was to score what's on a guy's mind.”

"Get Your Money" is a minimalist dance song that would sound right at home in a New York club circa 1978, with its Electro punk upbeat swing. "Donque" is an electroclash-like club joint that features Snoop – the only big-name guest to grace SONGS ABOUT GIRLS. "Listening to that song and those kinds of dance beats, you'd never expect Snoop to be on it," says will. "I called him up and said that I was all inspired by a lot of what I was hearing on the road in Europe and he felt me on it.”

will himself sings over a smooth, Carribean Tropical beat on "One More Chance," something he was inspired to do by two of his peers, Common and India Arie. "A couple of years ago I was doing a show in Atlanta, just freestyling on the mic, and some of what I was doing was half-rapping, half-singing," will remembers. "India Arie told me, 'you know how to sing' but I didn't really believe her. I thought she was being funny. Then Common told me I had a good ear for tune and tone. And it just gave me the confidence to do a song like this."

That sort of adventurous spirit is what flows throughout SONGS ABOUT GIRLS. will has previously released two compilations of production projects on British label BBE Records but SONGS ABOUT GIRLS is the first effort outside of the Peas to really harness all his creative energies. Indeed, the process of creating this album has re-ignited a lot of his creative spirit. “It really made me aware of how much is possible musically,” he says. will shot an accompanying movie for SONGS ABOUT GIRLS, set in Brazil. He has plans to do anther solo album that will serve as that movie’s soundtrack. And he will soon go back into the studio with apl.de.ap, Taboo, and Fergie for the next Black Eyed Peas album.

Says will: “It’s really this incredible thing to create for a living and I’m very appreciative of that fact. I mean, how cool is that?”

bio taken from http://will-i-am.blackeyedpeas.com/

 


 

 
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