JJ Grey and Mofro open for Raphael Saadiq for the Twilight Series second week of summer concerts.
Gates open at 5 pm. Music starts at 7 pm.
7:00 pm- JJ Grey & Mofro
8:30 pm- Raphael Saadiq
Born in Oakland, CA, in spring 1966, Raphael Saadiq (born Raphael
Wiggins) started playing music at age six. He played bass at church and
school and enjoyed his place on-stage at various local hometown events.
After high school, Saadiq won a chance to join Prince and Sheila E. on
the Parade tour. Such an experience inspired Saadiq to do his own thing,
and before the '80s came to an end, he formed Tony! Toni! Tone!
Saadiq went under his birth name of Wiggins while in Tony! Toni! Tone!
and was joined by his brother, Dwayne Wiggins, and cousin Timothy
Christian. Tony! Toni! Tone! made their debut with "Little Walter" in
1988. Two years later, they were mega-stars thanks to the success of
their second album, The Revival. The ballad "It Never Rains (In Southern
California)" and the club-friendly "Feels Good" were major hits and the
band eventually sold six million albums. However, Saadiq left the group
at the height of its fame.
A solo career was in the works by the time the mid-'90s rolled around.
Two singles for movie soundtracks -- 1995's "Ask of You" from Higher
Learning and "Me & You" from Boyz N da Hood -- were Saadiq's proper
solo introduction, but not exactly satisfying. He was used to being part
of a band, so a solo career made him a bit apprehensive. Saadiq bowed
out for some normalcy over the next few years.
Lucy Pearl was Saadiq's next project, where he joined with En Vogue's
Dawn Robinson and Ali Shaheed Muhammad of A Tribe Called Quest for a
short-lived super-group. Saadiq also had his hand in producing material
for the likes of Macy Gray, TLC, the Roots, and D'Angelo. In 2000, his
song "Untitled" won D'Angelo a Grammy. Inspired by his new "gospedelic"
approach, he captured a new sound for himself while recording material
between Oakland and Sacramento. The end result was Instant Vintage,
which earned five Grammy nominations in 2003. The blaxploitation
era-referencing Ray Ray and the '60s-flavored The Way I See It followed,
respectively, in 2004 and 2008; the latter was nominated for three
Grammys. Stone Rollin' was released in 2011, just after Saadiq and his
band of the same name backed Mick Jagger for a Grammy Awards perfomance
of Solomon Burke's "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love." The album
maintained Saadiq's streak of throwback-oriented releases. MacKenzie
Wilson, Rovi

No comments:
Post a Comment