
“A
Woman’s Touch”
Reared on Motown backbeats,
70s groove bands, and gospel wails, multi-talented artist
Angela Johnson has a knack for creating songs that infuse
the classic elements of music’s yesteryear into a
dynamic and contemporary brew distinctly her own.
Her critically-acclaimed solo
albums
They Don’t
Know (2002
Purpose) and
Got To Let
It Go (2005
Purpose) introduced Angela as a soothing soul singer
with a stealth, gut-punching alto and a sensitive songwriter
of deceptively simple melodies that moved listeners from
romantic sways to back-burning sweats.
Her most recent
offering,
A Woman’s
Touch (2008
Purpose) is a single-producer project that furthers Angela’s
evolution as an erudite production talent and continues
a legacy of female musician/producers not seen since
the pioneering days of
Patrice Rushen and
Angela Winbush.
Boasting the crème de la crème of soul
and R&B, from
Rahsaan Patterson and
Eric
Roberson to
Maysa and
Julie
Dexter,
A Woman’s
Touch is more than an indie soul project,
it is an industry event unseen since the timeless producer
albums of
Quincy Jones and
Norman
Conners. When considered
alongside a body of work that includes two solo masterpieces
and two highly-hailed group projects as the lead singer
of the soul-funk band,
Cooly’s Hot Box, Angela’s
fifth studio release is a revealing testament to the
time and commitment Angela has spent honing her multi-faceted
skills to a spit-shined perfection.
To thrive for over 15 years in this bare-knuckle business
of music requires talent, beauty, a strong constitution,
and steely determination—qualities Angela has possessed
since day one. Her enduring career isn’t surprising
to those in the know; Angela’s talents and tenacity
have made it seem destined. As a musical child prodigy
who played piano by age 4 and violin by age 9, it appears
Angela Johnson was born for music. She certainly was
prepped for this glorious—and occasionally brutal
ride—by her upstate New York rearing in the tough
industrial town of Utica, NY. There, as a teenage choir
director and church organist in her Baptist church, Angela
received her first critical training on how to rouse
a crowd through the power of song. Refinement as a musician
and performer came through a fated stint at State University
of New York (SUNY) in Purchase. At SUNY, Angela studied
as a violin major and met her fellow students and future
Cooly’s Hot Box bandmates, including close collaborator
Christian Urich of the cult favorite,
Tortured
Soul.
Several years of singing lead and writing for
Cooly’s
Hot Box produced three dance hits (
What
A Surprise, Make
Me Happy, and
We
Don’t Have To Be
Alone), a doomed label deal with Virgin
Records that still produced Cooly's commendable debut
Take
It, and a much celebrated sophomore project
(
Don’t Be Afraid,
Get On)
under Angela’s current label home,
Purpose
Records,
signaled the end of the Cooly's era.
After departing
Cooly’s in 2004, Angela met the industry as a grown
woman of esteemed talents with an experience earned doctorate
in music business chicanery. The year also found a newly
motivated Angela Johnson determined to show the world
what she could do as an artist, alone.
Since her 2002 solo debut,
They Don’t
Know, and its auspicious follow-up,
Got
To Let Go, Angela Johnson has been
making the kind of honest soul music that has inspired
promoters, music lovers and industry insiders everywhere
to make sure that everyone knows exactly who she
is. With the 2008 release of
A Woman’s
Touch, interest in Angela’s music
has exploded throughout the music scene, from radio
to industry bloggers the word is out.
Even before
A
Woman’s Touch, Angela’s
talents as a singer, songwriter and producer have
been in high demand. With songs featured on HBO’s
The
Wire, UPN’s
Kevin
Hill, FX’s
The Shield,
and WB’s
Roswell,
and a 2005 national TV advertising campaign with
Cooly’s Hot Box for
SBCglobal.net (AT&T/Cingular)
already under her belt, soon everyone will be whistling
an Angela tune.
Madison Avenue aren’t the only ones taking notice
of Angela’s talents. Artists like
Conya
Doss (
Emotions),
Seek (
Journey
Into Day),
Laurnea (
No
Shame), and
Reel People (
Can’t
Stop)
have all sought out Angela Johnson’s unique sound
to grace their projects.
More than an artist’s
musician, Angela’s a proven hit producer and songwriter
with a 2001 top ten, gold selling hit,
“Angel,” for
Japanese R&B superstar,
Double. It’s because
of Angela’s track record for helping talented artists’ deliver
some of their most memorable work that
A
Woman’s Touch track listing reads
like the who’s who of contemporary soul.
On her latest project Angela expertly guides Grammy
award-winning artists like
Gordon
Chambers (
Get
Away) and
Claude McKnight
of Take 6 (
Here
I Stand) through unexpected, tropical soundscapes,
revealing different sides of these familiar talents.
As the writer, producer and arranger of every track of
A
Woman’s Touch, Angela repeatedly
illuminates recognizable artists through the different
lenses of her unique musical kaleidoscope. Whether it’s
pushing
Frank McComb (
Play),
labelmate
Monet (
That’s
Just The Way) or
Eric
Roberson (
Let
Me Know) to move their soulful
sounds to the dance floor or lifting the curtain on her
solo-worthy backing singers
Lisala (
Walkin’)
and
Tricia Angus (
Not
The One) on compositions
that places their ample voices firmly center stage, Angela’s
never predictable. Even when she allows trademark artists
to do what they do best, like
Maysa on
the romantic
“More
Than You Know” or
Rahsaan
Patterson’s funky
“Dream
Flight”, Angela Johnson still manages to
put her indelible stamp on the music.
A Woman’s Touch also
illustrates Angela’s ear for arranging persuasive,
radio-friendly material that would be at home on any
adult contemporary, smooth jazz or progressive soul station.
Catchy duets like Jazzhole front man
Marlon
Saunders (
Wait
On A Maybe) with newcomer
Lenora
Jaye, or Angela’s own vocal collaborations
with band mate
Ernesto Abreu (
Amal)
or
Lisala and
Tricia
Angus (
Crying
Over You) confirm
that independent soul needn’t ever be dull or esoteric
to be good.
Then again, that’s Angela Johnson’s work,
to keep the music simple, yet vibrant to the ear. It’s
the music she’s best at that is perhaps most reflective
of whom Angela is as an artist, wife, mother, and as
a woman: a strong, uncomplicated, uncompromising melody
determined to play all the keys of life. Six years after
the release of her solo debut and countless more steadily
riding the music industry rollercoaster to prominence,
A
Woman’s Touch, parades an artist
at her peak. Still in fighting form with a point to prove,
Angela Johnson is an ever-evolving talent with an unquenchable
desire to feed her listeners that good, soul-nurturing
music their hungry for. Are you ready for another serving?
official website: www.angelajohnson.com -
www.myspace.com/angelajohnson1