
Calvin Richardson
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Calvin Richardson
2:35 PM
Courtesy of Hollywood Records
You put the CD into your player and from the opening bars of ”Keep On Pushin’”
you might think that you had found a great Sam Cooke or Bobby Womack album, one
of those wonderful records from the ‘60s or ‘70s that your folks played all
weekend long, back in the day. It’s understandable that you might consider that
the singer you’re hearing is - at the very least - a contemporary of those
legendary R&B pioneers: he has that same honesty, the same sanctified sound, the
realness that made Cooke, Womack and others like Donny Hathaway and Marvin Gaye
such revered figures in popular music.
But it’s none of those esteemed artists: it’s Calvin Richardson, very much a man
of today, a super-talented singer, songwriter and producer. His Hollywood
Records’ debut album, “2:35PM” isn’t just another record that fits neatly into
the now-fashionable ‘neo-soul’ category: rather, it’s proof positive that Calvin
is truly continuing the tradition of real soul music at its best..
In much the same way that the soul men of yesteryear might testify about their
own music, Calvin Richardson explains that the songs on his new album are
“snapshots of my life. Before I wrote a song, I lived it. The same is true even
of the songs I didn’t write: I lived the experiences in every one of the tunes
on my album.”
Perhaps the best example of how Calvin lived the material on his album is the
title itself. While Calvin was pushing hard to finish up in the studio, his son
Souljah was born. The completion of the album and the birth of his son were so
intertwined that Calvin settled on “2:35 PM,” the moment that Souljah came into
this world.
Songs like “Put My Money On You” (produced by Young RJ) and “Cross My Heart”
(produced by Mike City) are lyrically positive affirmations of emotions and
feelings Calvin can reference in his own life. ”Got To Move,” was written by
Calvin with producers Jake and Trev and recorded at fellow singer-songwriter
Tyrese’s studio in Los Angeles: “Lately Tyrese has been like a mentor for me,
helping me with the bumps in the road that come with working in the music
business,“ Calvin explains. “We’re good friends and I was hanging out at his
house when the producers were working with him on his album. They played me a
track…and next thing, I was recording the song…”
Other standouts on “2:35PM” include “Not Like This” (produced by hitmakers The
Underdogs) and “She’s Got The Love,” co-written and produced by Raphael Saddiq.
Saddiq’s recent Grammy-nominated album featured two songs co-written with Calvin
who toured with Saddiq in 2002. Another guest spot on the album is Detroit rap
trio Slum Village who appear on “You Got Me High.”
In 1999, Richardson released the critically-acclaimed “Country Boy” on Universal
Records. A culmination of a long period of dedication and dues paying spent
honing his craft as a singer and songwriter, “Country Boy” reflected Calvin’s
history as a young man nurtured on gospel music and exposed to R&B during his
formative years. The fifth of nine children, Calvin was born in Monroe, North
Carolina. “My mother had a local gospel group called The Willing Wonders and I
was the youngest member,” Calvin recalls. “I always knew I wanted to have a
career in music.” Calvin’s musical influences were all around him. In his teens,
Calvin befriended two hitmakers that were also in Gospel groups in Monroe: K-Ci
and JoJo Hailey of Jodeci. Their success spurred Calvin on and made him go after
his dream.
“2:35PM” truly bridges the gap between old and new school R&B: the first single
from the album, ”Keep On Pushin’” is reminiscent, Calvin notes, “of Sam Cooke’s
classic ‘A Change Is Gonna Come’ - although the song itself is about something
different lyrically. It’s about something many people go through - messing up in
a relationship! But Sam, he’s one of my early influences - along with Otis
Redding, Charlie Wilson (of The Gap Band), Bobby (Womack), Marvin (Gaye) and
Donny (Hathaway)…”
On “2:35PM,” Calvin meshes those influences with his own innate vocal skills and
the result is an album that refreshingly reflects musical and lyrical honesty.
The final cut on the album, “Your Love Is,” written and recorded spontaneously
at the very end of Calvin’s last session for the CD, typifies Calvin
Richardson’s fusion of traditional and contemporary R&B: “I want to go beyond
the ‘neo-soul’ movement,” he says with a smile. “People try to mix soul music up
with other elements but this is the real thing. I’m just doing what I do the way
I learned it!”