Jump to content


Photo
- - - - -

Greg Wilson Article


  • Please log in to reply
3 replies to this topic

#1 paulh202

paulh202

    I said, "No, No, No"

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 140 posts

Posted 04 September 2011 - 12:31 AM

Just thought I'd share this article written by a well respected DJ friend of mine with his view on this tragic loss and how he differentiates between artists and singers.

It really hit home with me how rare it is to have witnessed a true artist like Amy in a world ruled today sadly by manufactured music.

This cuts me up every time I read it.


Amy Winehouse

by Greg Wilson on 25. Jul, 2011



Last Saturday evening I was in my hotel room in Ghent, Belgium, trying to catch up on some sleep before a gig there that night. I was awoken by the ringing of the phone, it was someone from the event letting me know what time they’d pick me up to take me for my soundcheck. No sooner had I closed my eyes to grab a couple more hours than my wife, Tracey, called me to break the news that Amy Winehouse had been found dead. Like many others that day I was shocked but not surprised, her death, at just 27 years of age, being something of a self-fulfilling prophecy, many journalists having written her obituary long ago in readiness for this tragic eventuality.

Although she only released two albums, she isn’t out of place amongst the music greats – the excesses of her personal life made her the subject of much media scrutiny, and often ridicule, but you couldn’t deny that voice, not to mention the poignancy of the songs she wrote, songs that weren’t just clever words and music, but had clearly come from direct experience – you knew she’d lived every word and every note, the mark of a true artist.

By contrast, I remember that it used to bug me when I went into HMV and looked through the Soul CD's to find Joss Stone, a UK contemporary of Winehouse’s, racked alongside the likes of Otis Redding, Aretha Franklin, Marvin Gaye etc. Soul music, to my mind, isn't a style of music, but something that goes deeper than a mere genre classification, something born of struggle. The songs didn't have to reflect this directly in their lyrics, although many did - it was about the emotion in the performance. It's music brought forth, sometimes torn from the heart - from the soul.

Joss Stone is a talented girl with a fine voice. She's obviously grown up listening to Aretha, and Whitney, and other Soul legends, and has assimilated their vocal style. The marketing people positioned her firmly in this tradition, and her record company brought in authentic Soul musicians from back in the day to reinforce her credibility in this direction, her debut album entitled ‘The Soul Sessions’. But this doesn't make her a Soul singer - she's a Pop star who sings in a Soul style. Soulful isn’t something you learn to be, it’s something you either are or you’re not – Stone’s ‘Super Duper Soul’ but a sanitised version of the real thing.

Amy Winehouse, however, very much sung from the soul. I'm pretty sure she understood that in order to find her muse she had to open up the darker corners of herself. Drugs and alcohol were central to her story, only recently she made a sad spectacle of herself in Belgrade, the great singer reduced to an incoherent wreck before an increasingly irked audience who'd paid their money and expected a performance. They got one, just not what they'd bargained for. Instead they witnessed the swansong of a turbulent artist whose destructive brilliance eventually extracted its toll.

As they say, she lived fast and now she's died young - her legend is assured, and she takes her place alongside Brian Jones, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison and Kurt Cobain, all of whom also left this mortal coil at the same age of 27. The press quickly picked up on this fascinatingly morbid fact, but there’s no hyperbole here, for Amy Winehouse was one of the few artists of the modern era who can be spoken about in the same breath as the aforementioned icons.

Greg Wilson.

#2 pearljo

pearljo

    ♪♫♫ vaginal bleeding

  • Members
  • PipPipPipPipPip
  • 7,242 posts

Posted 04 September 2011 - 12:40 AM

i've never thought of whitney as a soul legend.

#3 ladyamy

ladyamy

    No Greater Love Than What I Feel For You

  • Members
  • PipPipPipPip
  • 1,191 posts

Posted 04 September 2011 - 12:56 PM

I don't like it.
I’m a firm believer that we all meet up in eternity

#4 paulh202

paulh202

    I said, "No, No, No"

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 140 posts

Posted 04 September 2011 - 06:07 PM

Everyone has their own opinion which I respect




0 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users