the hairykat tracklist: amor on-dawn richard
Dont worry HairyKats I'm getting my hair done today so you'll def get a new blog about some new hair do's but I had to comeback for another round of the tracklist because I'm uber excited about this one.
While doing my usual new music search Monday night I came across the Dawn Richard-EP titled Amor On. Its 10 songs. My nosey self decided to check the label it was under and of course Bad Boy was not listed. Shocker? Nope! Its the Bad Boy way! Check Mase, 112, Day 26, must I go on...the only one still on Bad Boy, is well Diddy.
Anywho, if you loved the sound of Last Train of Paris you'll def love this EP. Its ecclectic, rhythmic, yet melodramitc. I love it! Its uptempo base beats track after track to lyrics that are heartfelt and soulful makes for one good EP. Hey if this is an EP what is her album gonna sound like? Sheesh.
This woman has definetly created her own genre, her own sound! Guess that Last Train to Paris was real...Dirty Money aint coming back! But Dawn Richard is here!
Check out the single-Bomb from Dawn Richard's Amor On EP and an interview courtesy of Necolebitchie.com
"We were formally introduced to Dawn Richard over six years ago when she auditioned for Diddy’s MTV Making The Band. Since then we’ve witnessed the ups and downs of her career, as she joined and parted ways from Danity Kane and recently from Dirty Money and her label Bad Boy. Now she’s an independent, solo artist on the grind putting out hot new music in the form of an EP, titled ‘Armor On’. Earlier this week, the new project soared to #1 on the R&B /Soul iTunes charts within three hours of it’s release. Get it bish!
This morning, Dawn stopped by Power 105.1′s ‘The Breakfast Club’ and dished on why she left Dirty Money and Bad Boy. She also discussed what happened to her 5 year relationship with ex- Qwanell “Que” Mosley (formerly of Day 26), why she didn’t collaborate with Dirty Money’s Kalenna after Dirty Money disbanded and if the music industry is ready to take a risk on a ‘Brown Girl’. Basically, all of the questions you wanted to know, she answered.
Check it below:
On closing the Dirty Money chapter and Leaving Bad Boy
Puff was done. He decided to be done so I was like alright, what I got to do next? I’m not going to sit around too long. Puff got a lot of ventures going on and he never really gave a reason but once somebody tells you, “The boss says it’s done” you have to have the next chapter done.We did tour, and we were having a great time. And I think when it came to sales—I don’t really know what it really was, but when he decided it [was over], it was time to make a decision on what I was gonna do. So when it came time to meet with him, I said, “Okay, so what’s the plan?” And he was like “I don’t know if we’ll be able to put you out til like maybe two years from now.” Cuz they got artists that have been waitin! And you can’t just [jump in front], and I wasn’t a solo artist before then. So he would have to explain that to Jimmy [Iovine and] that would take a long time. And he was like, “I don’t think you want to wait.” And he was right, I didn’t. So I asked if I could be released, and he talked to Jimmy, and said “I talked to Jimmy and told him if we let you go, it might be a mistake. But if Jimmy doesn’t have the space right for you, then I’ll let you go.” And I gave him six years. I love him, and I’m grateful for that let go because people didn’t expect it.On if people said ‘I Told You So’ when she got the phone call from DiddyOn if she owes him anything (a piece of her publishing, etc)
Yeah, but I had faith in him because I know there was a mutual respect. I went hard and I made sure that he respected me as an artist and he gave me the opportunity more than once. Everybody’s story is different but for me, he let me go and it was a good look and I respect him for that and I will always respect him for that because he could have did me dirty. I wouldn’t have to say anything about it but instead he did the noble thing and I think that’s what separates – For me, in my book- makes him great.
No, I don’t owe him anything, I’m clear. He let me go.
On Why She Didn’t Collaborate With Kalenna
I think you have to have a group of people who want to work together and I think with being with Puff and that whole situation it’s very hard for women to be like “Let’s go and conquer the world together” when you have all those parts playing together. I think Kalenna is going through her vibe and I think she’s super dope. For me, I don’t have time to wait for people to rock with me. If you rock with me, rock with me. If you don’t, let’s go get this money.On her relationship with Kaleena
We were cool and honestly that’s what I was most proud of because I didn’t want to do this thing again and do the whole girl thing all over again. I was very skeptical of that but she was real cool and it became, ‘let’s be friends’. We were like three business partners, because what we were doing – we would go in these meeting and see Timberland and Swizz and we would play songs for them and we were being respected. It was something that for me I was excited about because that was always the goal.On her relationship with Q
We’re not together anymore. I think for me, I just have to make the right choice about what’s good for me. I’m a good woman and you just have to make sure you get respected the right way. I wish him the best and he’s really cool.Did he cheat on you?
No, it’s cool.Were you heartbroken over that?Do you address it with your music it at all?
Yeah, but it’s all good. I’m a woman…things happen. This is real life. Bad things happen, but it’s about moving on. I’m off it, and that’s why I don’t even explain it because I don’t want to talk about it.
I address my relationship with the music industry in this EP, and I think people can relate to it in their relationships. For me, I relate to the situation to what I have because that was a deeper situation for me. It’s just more honest.
Did you and Q really have a serious relationship or did it seem like it was for television?Are you in a relationship or dating now?
No, it was real. I’m from New Orleans. The whole put cameras in my face, that’s not what I would want for myself. I don’t want a public relationship. I’ve never been that person. I fell for somebody, I tried to hide it at first, but they saw it. I didn’t even want to. So, that’s what makes it sucky because it was genuine.
I’m dating, but right now I don’t have time to do nothing but do this music because I’m damn near doing this project by my damn self. Shout out to the two, five and six people that’s rocking with me.
But you still need to have sex.
Shout out to that! I do, but I also need this check so that’s more important. You can have a lot of sex when you’re rich.
On her EP title ‘Armor On’
I think R&B is great right now where it’s at, but I think it’s real linear and I want to push people to have a concept–a conceptual R&B album, which they don’t really have a lot of these days. So for me, my journey was, I went out into the world and I thought everybody was cool. In reality, it’s not. A lot of people don’t know that, so I’d rather put the ‘Armor On’ as a title and make it the concept of, ‘ if you put that on and you go out into the world there’s nothing you can’t do’. So every record is aggressive. It feels like you’re going to battle.
On What She Was Told When She Shopped Her Project Around
They said this is the most complex and innovate thing. The thing is, it’s a risk. We’re not going in that direction. Or it’s too risky to go in that direction. Or this is super dope. I’m a fan.People are scared because it’s dying right now. People aren’t buying records. So why would you take a risk on a brown girl? There’s no real brown girl that are considered pretty right now poppin’ in the game for real. Dark-skinned girl. Kelly Rowland…There are, but I’m talking about in that pop–that cross-over world isn’t allowing it. So for someone to come in who’s R&B/Soul then try to crossover pushing the limits with this innovative sound. So I had to prove it with the numbers.On if someone came to her and said, “I’m about to sign to Bad Boy”, what advice would she give to them
That’s not my place to give them advice. I didn’t get a booklet. Nobody told me. Figure it out. That’s what makes the experience great. You can say what you want, six years at Bad Boy –they must have done something right because at the end of the day, alone I got this. At the end of the day, somebody was professing and they are bread crumbs being spilled so it was up to me to figure it out. At some point, somebody did a good job somewhere."
Comments
Post a Comment