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- <text id=90TT0643>
- <title>
- Mar. 12, 1990: Profile:Tracy Chapman
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Mar. 12, 1990 Soviet Disunion
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 70
- Singing For Herself
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Armed only with her voice, her guitar and her conscience, Tracy
- Chapman has helped make protest music fashionable again
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Stengel
- </p>
- <p> Tracy Chapman is serious about her smile. She does not
- bestow it lightly. Laughter, the same story. She covers her
- mouth when she laughs, as though to hide the fact that she is
- tickled about something. "If there is some major misconception
- about me," she says very seriously, "it is that I'm always
- serious." And then, a brief smile.
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>"Be careful of my heart</l>
- <l>I just lost a little faith</l>
- <l>When you broke my heart"</l>
- </qt>
- <p> She is smaller and more delicate than she appears in
- pictures, her voice higher and more nasal than on her records.
- There is a solidity about her, a muscular spirituality. Her
- element is earth, not air. A master of silence, she does not
- talk about what she doesn't know. Mostly, she is wary,
- skeptical.
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>"All you folks think you run my life</l>
- <l>Say I should be willing to compromise</l>
- <l>I'm trying to protect what I keep inside"</l>
- </qt>
- <p> No one imagined that Chapman would be so big a success so
- soon. In 1988 Elektra Records released Tracy Chapman, eleven
- spare, well-crafted folk songs by a 24-year-old Tufts University
- graduate. Some were about unrequited love, yes, but others spoke
- of homelessness, racism and revolution. The album became
- Billboard's No. 1 pop album and sold 10 million copies. Chapman
- won three Grammy Awards, including Best New Artist. Last year,
- on the Amnesty International tour, she crisscrossed the globe
- with Sting, Bruce Springsteen and Peter Gabriel, performing
- before stadiums of cheering fans on five continents. In May she
- will begin an American tour.
- </p>
- <p> Some have found her popularity mystifying. An earnest black
- folk singer in jeans and a T-shirt? Yet it was really very
- simple, according to saxophonist Branford Marsalis, who has
- played with Chapman. "People were so used to hearing
- imperfection," he says, "they were bowled over by perfection.
- People were ready to hear music again." And there is that voice,
- a rich contralto that seemed to come from a hundred miles away.
- A sweet, sad, wise voice that haunted almost all who heard it.
- A voice that seemed to know things that they didn't. A record
- to be played alone and late at night.
- </p>
- <p> Chapman quickly became a cultural icon. Her short, spiky
- dreadlocks signaled a move away from pop glitter. Her music,
- pared down, almost willfully naive, was an antidote to the
- synthesized sound of the 1980s. In an age when pop singers
- seemed more like musical M.B.A.s than recording artists, she
- seemed genuine. Her politics were mushy headed and
- self-righteous, yet she was an urban folk singer without the
- fragility of the genre.
- </p>
- <p> Crossroads, Chapman's second album, has been out for five
- months and has sold 4 million copies. Again there are songs
- about poverty and the underclass, but Crossroads is darker, more
- self-involved than the first album. It is less concerned with
- the political battles of the world than the emotional conflicts
- within herself. We hear the voice of a young woman who gives
- more than she gets to lovers who take more than they give.
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>"I'd save a little love for myself</l>
- <l>Enough for my heart to mend"</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Turn on the radio these days, and you are more likely to
- hear a pop singer railing against homelessness than one urging
- you to get down and party. Protest music has made a comeback,
- and Chapman is partly responsible. Her first album showed that
- social concern sold. Now singers known more for their commitment
- to sequins than their dedication to social policy are decrying
- acid rain.
- </p>
- <p> Chapman does not criticize others for a trendy embrace of
- social concern. "I don't know that it's fair to question
- people's motives," she says, choosing her words carefully. "Even
- if people are doing it simply because they think it's
- commercial, I don't know that that's a bad thing. It can
- encourage action. If music can do anything, I would hope that
- it might make people more compassionate."
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>"Hunger only for a taste of justice</l>
- <l>Hunger only for a world of truth"</l>
- </qt>
- <p> She sang not long after she could talk. Chapman grew up with
- her mother and one sister in a mostly black, working-class
- neighborhood in Cleveland. Her father and mother divorced when
- Tracy was four. Her mother always listened to the radio when she
- was home: Marvin Gaye, Gladys Knight, Mahalia Jackson, mostly
- rhythm and blues.
- </p>
- <p> Chapman was a quiet child and liked to be by herself. On her
- way to school, she made up songs for her sister and their
- friends. Her first ambition was to play the drums, but her
- mother feared that they would be too noisy and bought her a
- tinny $20 guitar. The instrument harmonized with her soul.
- School and the neighborhood, she says, were rough. The local
- high school had a metal detector at the door. "At times, it was
- a terrifying place to be." To say she wanted to get away is an
- understatement. "No desire to stay," she says. "And no desire
- to go back."
- </p>
- <p> She won a scholarship for gifted minority students and went
- off to the Wooster School in Connecticut. It was her first
- glimpse of white, upper-middle-class life, and she found aspects
- of it dismaying. "It was difficult because a lot of students
- there just said very stupid things," she recalls. "They had
- never met a poor person before. In some ways, they were curious,
- but in ways that were just insulting. How many times as a black
- person are you asked to explain to a white person what racism
- is or what it means to be black?"
- </p>
- <p> She was a fine athlete, star of the basketball team and
- captain of the varsity soccer team. But it was music that moved
- her. She wrote songs all the time. Friends remember her singing
- Talkin' 'bout a Revolution during her junior year. Her 1982
- yearbook from Wooster predicts, "Tracy Chapman will marry her
- guitar and live happily ever after."
- </p>
- <p> During her freshman year at Tufts, she won a talent contest
- by singing Baby Can I Hold You?, which appears on her first
- album. She majored in anthropology, but her real discipline was
- being a troubadour. She played in coffee shops, churches, sang
- in Harvard Square and developed an ardent following. In those
- days, she talked when she performed, telling stories, explaining
- the genesis of certain songs. Chapman went from college student
- to recording artist after a classmate persuaded his father,
- Charles Koppelman, co-founder of SBK, a major music-publishing
- company, to listen to her music. Chapman needed a producer; many
- heard her tape and passed, thinking it too uncommercial. But
- music producer David Kershenbaum fell in love with her voice.
- "The timbre of it," he says, "is rare to find. It instantly
- disarms you. She's able to sit there and produce an almost
- flawless performance. Normally today's producers take tracks and
- build them and then put in the voice. We wrapped the tracks
- around the voice."
- </p>
- <p> Today Chapman is less than thrilled about fame. "I guess if
- there were some way to choose what I wanted or didn't want from
- what my success has brought me," she says, "I would choose not
- to have the celebrity. I don't think I'm very good at it." She
- isn't. She doesn't like getting fussed over. When strangers
- approach her, she is often cool to the point of brusqueness. All
- she divulges about her private life is that she recently moved
- to San Francisco and lives there in a rented house with her
- sister.
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>"They're tryin' to dig into my soul</l>
- <l>And take away the spirit of my god"</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Her performance style reflects her reticence. There is no
- chatter, no dancing, no fireworks. Yet she is capable of
- creating an intimacy with the audience that more gregarious
- performers cannot duplicate. At an outdoor concert for the
- homeless in Washington this fall, she stood atop a six-story
- platform facing 40,000 people. When she played the first few
- bars of Fast Car, the fidgety audience grew quiet, as though she
- were singing a lullaby to a baby.
- </p>
- <p> Chapman is one of a handful of black recording artists whose
- music directly addresses blacks' concerns. Yet her audience, the
- people who buy her records, are by and large white,
- upper-middle-class baby boomers. She says she is speaking to and
- for the disenfranchised, but they do not listen to her.
- </p>
- <p> Urban contemporary radio stations, or what people in the
- record business call "black stations," rarely play her music.
- A Chapman tune on an urban contemporary station is about as
- common as a rap song on classical radio. This is primarily
- because it does not fit into the dance-and-funk formula of those
- stations. But Chuck D., a member of the controversial rap group
- Public Enemy, says the reasons have less to do with genre than
- with soul. "Black people cannot feel Tracy Chapman, even if they
- got beat over the head with it 35,000 times," he told Rolling
- Stone. The implication is that her music is too precious, too
- bland, too white.
- </p>
- <p> But Salim Muwakkil, an editor for the Chicago biweekly In
- These Times, who has written about Chapman, says blacks are
- uncomfortable with her not because she's too white, but because
- she's too black. "There's a reverse prejudice in the black
- community," he says. "The Michael Jackson syndrome is strong.
- She refuses to disguise her racial characteristics. Blacks are
- uncomfortable with the lack of glitter." At the same time,
- critics have suggested that Chapman is merely penance music for
- yuppies; listening to her songs on their CDs is a way of
- assuaging guilt about their own materialism.
- </p>
- <p> This kind of talk hurts Chapman, though she tries to conceal
- it. "There are people who have gone as far as to say that I'm
- not black or not part of the black musical tradition," she says.
- "I don't have a problem with so-called black music as it is
- today, which is mostly dance music, R. and B., and rap music.
- But I don't think things are that way because that's the only
- music that black people can respond to. I think the reason I
- don't get played on black radio stations is because I don't fit
- into their present format. And they're not willing to make a
- space for me. I'm upset by what has been said because it doesn't
- speak well of black people. You know, it basically says black
- people don't respond in a cerebral manner to music, and that's
- just not true."
- </p>
- <p> Chapman belongs to the tradition of black intellectuals
- caught between the mainstream black audience that ignores them
- and an elite white audience that supports them. Writers and
- artists of the Harlem renaissance in the 1920s and black poets
- from Langston Hughes to Amiri Baraka have often complained that
- their principal audience and patrons were white liberals. "It
- hurts you when your own people don't appreciate what you're
- doing," says Henry Louis Gates, a Cornell University professor
- of English. "John Coltrane heard that. Charlie Parker heard
- that. I think that's the most painful feeling for a black
- artist."
- </p>
- <p> She is trying to protect what she keeps inside. She wants
- the music to speak for itself, while her manager and record
- company would like her to be more outgoing. "I think I write
- songs better than I give interviews," she says. She's right.
- </p>
- <p> Chapman has written hundreds of songs, more than she cares
- to acknowledge. She keeps the lyrics and a chord chart in a
- notebook, and often makes a cassette. "There are lots of things
- that you never show anyone else. But they're basically exercises
- that teach you something about writing."
- </p>
- <p> "I'll save my soul, save myself. "
- </p>
- <p> "When I was a kid and I'd listen to records," she recalls,
- "I used not to be able to understand what they were saying. I
- thought they had done that purposely. So when I would play my
- songs, I would sing so you couldn't necessarily understand the
- lyrics." She laughs. "When I was playing for my sister and
- mother, they would say, `I couldn't understand what you are
- saying.' Then I explained to them that I thought it was supposed
- to be that way. But I realized at that point that if I felt that
- what I was saying was important, then it should be clear."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-