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BIO
“Both
my grandparents lived in Mississippi about 3 hours from Biloxi and I
spent every summer with them, so I really soaked up that atmosphere and
history. My grandfather had just died and I was really thinking about
him, and in the Deep South the river represents something spiritual. The
song means a lot because it’s so close to home.”
A
gritty, working class city outside of Boston, Brockton is best known as
where legendary fighters the late Rocky Marciano and Marvin Hagler grew
up. Unlike Detroit, Memphis, New Orleans or Philly, Brockton doesn’t
spring to mind when name checking soul music’s breeding grounds. Yet
it’s there that 24 year-old Noel Gourdin first fell under R&B’s
spell and his hometown’s tenacity is the force behind his stunning
Sony Urban Music/Epic Records debut.
Blessed with roughhewn, down-home vocals that hark back to when rhythm
and blues repped for both those components, influences ranging from
hip-hop to gospel and songs that are nakedly emotional and truthful,
Noel Gourdin states his case on his refreshingly heartfelt debut CD.
Featuring production from Kay Gee (Jaheim/Zhané), Raphael Saadiq (D’Angelo/Angie
Stone), Mike City (Brandy/Sunshine Anderson), Dre & Vidal (Jill
Scott), Butta (Usher), Eddie F (Heavy D), RLES and Trackaddix, Noel’s
debut release is soul at its best. Speaking to the vibe he offers, Noel
divulges, “It’s about the emotions of the average man. My intention
is putting my feelings on the track and leaving everything I've got in
the recording booth. I want people to think; this is a man that you can
feel. That you can slow dance with, have a drink with and cry with.
It’s real music that affects your life.”
That’s apparent on the richly
moving “The River.” Produced by Kay Gee, “The River” conjures up
vivid images of family, faith, tradition and the journey towards
becoming your own man. “I had a track, and Noel and his co-writer [Balewa]
said they wanted something that sounded like an old-styled ballad,”
recalls Kay Gee of their seamless creative process. “I said, `Well, I
have the perfect beat for you.’ So, I gave them the beat and they were
like, `Alright…bet.’ Before I knew it, they had written `The
River,’ which is a great record. A lot of people are scared to do one
of those kinds of songs right now, so I think they took a chance and
came up with something great.” “We wanted to make a modern-day Negro
spiritual,” concludes Noel, of the song’s inspiration. “Both my
grandparents lived in Mississippi about 3 hours from Biloxi and I spent
every summer with them, so I really soaked up that atmosphere and
history. My grandfather had just died and I was really thinking about
him, and in the Deep South the river represents something spiritual. The
song means a lot because it’s so close to home.”
Emotions also guide the jazzy
“Hurts Like Hell”, produced by Trackaddix. “That’s a real pride
record. He still loves her but it’s not working out. A lot of fellows
wont admit it, but after they’ve broken up they say, `She’s not
gonna see me crying.’ That’s real.” So too is the sultry
“Summertime,” produced by Dre & Vidal. Featuring lines like
“Just cause it’s cold outside/let’s make it summertime,” this is
a soft and wet ode that Noel calls “just crazy. In some ways the vibe
reminds me of `Let’s Get It On.’” There’s also a hint of a more
contemporary singer – namely, D’Angelo -- and Noel acknowledges the
influence. “I hear the comparison; our voices are similar but you can
tell us apart. I get inspiration from a lot of artists: Marvin Gaye, Sam
Cooke. There’s also a real big Prince undertone. I just filter it all
through my own way of seeing things and hopefully come up with something
hot.” Hot also describes the up-tempo “Clap 4 That,” produced by
Butta. “That’s a `have fun party record’ that I loved doing it.”
The youngest of three kids, Noel grew up singing in church and fully
absorbed his father’s classic soul and older brother’s New Jack
Swing records. From Otis Redding and the Chi-Lites to Teddy Riley and
Jodeci, Noel loved it all, so much so that in middle school he had begun
to write his own songs, drawing from what he’d heard coming up.
“Listening to so much music from so many different eras really helped
me put my style together.”
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