Four-time
GRAMMY nominee and multi-platinum selling sax-man Boney James continues his
artistic evolution with the dynamic futuresoul. Fusing his love for vintage
soul music with his mastery of modern production, Boney has created another
genre-bending work following on the heels of his 2014 GRAMMY-nominated album
The Beat.
“The forms
I’m working with are rooted in my early influences,” says James, dropping names
like King Curtis, the Stylistics and Earth, Wind & Fire. “But recently I’ve
been listening to contemporary artists like Tinashé, Sam Smith and Ellie
Goulding, and I’m inspired by the sound of their recordings. The production is
so cool and evocative. As I started the new record, I was in my backyard studio
messing around with this “gearhead” stuff I’ve collected. Ideas started flowing
and it sounded like modern soul music to me. I thought to myself, ‘What is
this?’… And then it hit me: ‘futuresoul.’”
His 15th
CD, futuresoul contains 10 original songs produced and written or co-written by
James. Released by Concord Records May 4, 2015, futuresoul features vocalist
and Mint Condition frontman Stokley on “Either Way,” a collaboration enabled by
Twitter. Says James, “Like my recent duet with Raheem DeVaughn, I was able to
meet Stokley on Twitter and send him the music for this track. He wrote the
brilliant lyric and sent me a finished vocal all via email!”
Also
featured is rising-star trumpet player Marquis Hill (2014 winner of the
prestigious Thelonious Monk International Trumpet Competition) on the plaintive
“Far From Home.”
Other
notable collabs on the record are title-cut “futuresoul,” co-written and
co-produced by neo-soul mainstay Dwele, and “Drumline” and “Watchu Gon’ Do
About It?” with co-writer/co-producer Jairus Mozee (Anthony Hamilton, Robin Thicke).
futuresoul
is the follow-up to The Beat (2013), nominated for the GRAMMY for Best Pop
Instrumental Album, which prompted The New York Times to praise “The relaxed
charisma of Mr. James’ tone…”
The
‘analog’ tone of the sax combined with the ‘digital’ sounds of modern
production contribute to the sonic tension that fuels futuresoul.
Born in
Lowell, Mass. and raised in New Rochelle, NY, Boney became seriously interested
in music in the mid ‘70s, a very vibrant and freewheeling period for popular
music. “You could hear different genres all over the radio. It was a great time
to be a young musician.”
Following
early pro gigs, (including sideman stints with Morris Day, the Isley Brothers,
Randy Crawford and Teena Marie) James released his debut album as a leader,
Trust, in 1992.
Over the
following 23 years James has racked up sales of more than 3 million records,
four RIAA gold albums, four GRAMMY nominations, a Soul Train Award, nominations
for two NAACP Image Awards and 10 CD’s atop Billboard’s Contemporary Jazz
Albums chart. In 2009 Billboard magazine named him the #3 Contemporary Jazz
Artist Of The Decade (trailing just Kenny G and Norah Jones).
What’s in
the future for futuresoul? Already making inroads at radio with the funky
“Drumline” and the sultry “Either Way,” Boney will hit the road mid 2015 and
continue touring throughout 2016.
Known for
blurring the lines between genres, with futuresoul, Boney is doing the same
between eras.
Let’s just
call it “retro music for a modern age.”
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