| "Jaguar
Wright is the type of artist that comes along once in a blue moon and completely
changes the game. The power and fullness she delivers with her music is a fresh
relief from her soft and smooth peers. This is definitely grown folks music..." |
|
Tirrell
D. Whittley
General Manager
LiquidSoulRadio.com |
|
This
is Grown Sh*t: Jaguar Wright is Unplugged
by Mark
Anthony Neal
PopMatters Columnist and Music Critic
PopMatters.com
"Yeah
I'm black and I wear braids sometimes. I'm more neo-soul than Blu Cantrell
or Faith Evans or Usher! Those motherf*ckers sing R&B -- they don't sing
soul music . . ."
Jaguar Wright (City Paper, 31 January 2002)
As always there's
the buzz and since the debut of the Okayplayer
site in early 2000, everything remotely connected to the site and its flagship
artists The Roots, generates its own self-contained promotional campaign.
The critical success of Common's Like Water for Chocolate and the debuts of
both Jill Scott and Bilal are the best testaments to the site's influence.
And such was the case with Denials, Delusions, and Decisions the oft-delayed
debut by Jaguar Wright. But Wright acquired buzz in ways never expected due
to a "controversial" collaboration between the Roots and Jay-Z as
Wright served as the primary backing vocalists during the Jay-Z's recent Unplugged
performance. The highlight of Jigga's performance was an inspired version
of "Heart of the City (Ain't No Love)" as the song taken to new
heights by his vocal exchange with Wright. Wright come off as tame during
the song first chorus (taken straight from Bobby "Blue" Bland's
classic version), but decides to take it to church on the second chorus as
Jay can be heard in the background "ok, I feel ya, ma". That moment
helped transformed the listening studio into the church of 'Hova and Jaguar
into a High Priestess. The latter exchange of "Ain't No" by the
two is about as soulful and moving as hip-hop has ever allowed itself to be.
Even the so-called "Queen of Hip-hop Soul" had to up her game when
she joined Jay on stage for a rendition of their classic "Can't Knock
the Hustle."
While Jay Z,
Nas and The Roots are exchanging crossfire -- instigated by New York's HOT
97 (Vibe Magazine style) -- Jaguar Wright took the opportunity to come up
in the world. The day after the performance debuted on MTV 2, everybody was
asking, who was that "chick" with Jigga. The 24-year-old Wright
has been in the game for about a decade getting an early start as an MC in
the group Philly Blunts. But her real opportunity came in 1999 at a Black
Lilly performance (a browned-skinned and Philly-blunted Lillith Fair) were
she was the opening act for a set that included The Jazzy FatNastees, Res
and Jill Scott all backed by The Roots. Months later Wright was writing and
singing hooks for The Roots, including the hook to "What Ya Want"
(a song initially intended for Blige) the lead single from the soundtrack
for the Best Man. When Wright joined The Roots for a performance of the song
on Chris Rock in late 1999, it was clear that she was gonna be a fo' real
deal.
With Denials,
Delusions, and Decisions Wright delivers the "fo' real deal" with
a style liberally informed by fo' real Soul (mack) Divas like Millie Jackson,
Betty Wright, Etta James, and Patti Labelle. Wright's style is like one of
them defiant, smack talking 12-year-old shorties whose hell-raising in the
playground changes the world and perspectives in the real-time of the grown
world and if Jaguar Wright is anything, she is a grown woman. As she notes
in the same City Paper piece quoted above, "I make cussin' sound natural.
I'm not vulgar. I make grown-folks music; I don't make music for kids. It's
grown language, talking 'bout grown shit for grown people." Such is the
case with the two tracks that form the artistic soil of Denials, Delusions,
and Decisions.
"Same Sh*t
Different Day" (parts 1 & 2) recall the brilliantly surreal and mischievous
themes of D'Angelo's "Shit, Damn, Motherfucker" (Brown Sugar, 1995)
or Common's "A Film Called Pimp". "Same Shit Different Day"
(part 1), co-produced by the Soulquarian maestro keyboardist James Poyser
drop a melodic nod to old-school Philly-ites Hall and Oates and their unforgettable
"Sarah Smile." The title is reference to one of those tried and
true ghetto folkisms -- don't matter the day, shit's still the same. In this
context Wright is fretting about the love-trio that she wants no part of ("you
did shit (but we both agree)/and your not you (and she's not me)/I fell like
(I've been abused)/I mean it's like (hand me down shoes) . . . I feel divorced
on my anniversary." It's still the same "shit' on part 2, but quite
a different day as Wright gets her rapid flow all up in the other woman's
ass with lyrics like "why I got to be the bigger woman/ when these bitches
know they got that shit coming/Fuck what's wrong and what's right/I'm fuckin'
up this bitch tonight". Like Jill Scott's spoken introduction to "Getting
in the Way" on her recent live disc, counters the general perception
that "neo-soul" is inherently peaceful and "positive."
As the background vocalist sing "you got to think about what people will
say," Wright instead defiantly asserts that she "ain't takin' this
shit no more." However defiant Wright is in either version of the song,
she is forced to accept the feeling that her life "ain't shit" without
her man.
The themes of
infidelity and the "other woman" also frame the brilliant "What
If" which was one of the songs that Wright performed during her first
appearance at Black Lily in 1999. Produced by Scott Storch, "What If"
is a smoothed out diatribe that places the blame for her condition firmly
on her wandering man she laments "I got all the right questions/and you
got all the wrong answers/And I got all of the sadness/And you got all of
the laughter." Trying to bring some meaning to her situation she admits
that she can't "blame it love, it's common sense it plays its part/Can't
blame it on you, 'cause you don't rule my heart/Can't blame it on her, 'cause
she can't be that smart."
Wright and producer
Storch drop a nod to Rufus with Chaka Khan ("Tell Me Something Good")
on "2 Too Many" another song dealing with infidelity. Roots front-man
Black Thought makes two cameos on the tracks "Ain't Nobody Playin'"
and "I Don't Know." Like fellow chanteuse Keke Wyatt, who tackled
Patti Labelle's classic "If Only You Knew" on her debut Soul Sista,
Wright also pays tribute to Labelle with a competent, if uninspiring version
of "Love, Need, and Want You" a lesser known gem from the same recording
that featured "If Only You Knew."
Other standouts
on Denials, Delusions and Decisions include "Self-Love" and "I
Can't Wait". The latter track features Bilal in a freaky bit of creeping
("here I am drawers in hand/housewife going, think she won't be back
'till 10am"). Written by Wright with James Poyser and Ed King, the song
recalls Prince's Purple Rain, period, specifically tracks like the legendary
b-sides "Erotic City" and "17 Days". The damn near 10-minute
"Self-Love" is an exploration of self and community. In one extraordinary
segment Wright sings, "life it passes you by and if don't get up off
you ass/I'm telling you its gonna fly, the time's gonna fly/and you'll find
yourself about 50 years old and sitting up on a porch with your grand-kids/but
you what man, you ain't got shit to tell them . . . and you ain't got shit/your
shit fucked up." Towards the end of the song Wright laments "It's
real simple . . . get up off of your ass/forget the past, and remember that
the future is the only thing you fuckin' got, so run with that shit."
The song taps into a mood found also in the recent music of De La Soul and
The Dungeon Family, (specifically the track "Rollin'" where the
Goodie Rev. Cee Lo sings "Until you're really ready to say fuck your
fears, you are not alive"), where the events of 9/11 have brought so
many within the post-soul and hip-hop generation in touch with mortality in
ways that "do OGs go to heaven?' posturing of the 1990s only hinted at.
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