R&B soul singer
Kenny Lattimore will be appearing at Lehman Center for the Performing
Arts in the Bronx, on Saturday, March 26 at 8:00 pm wherein he is
sure to sing songs from his new CD “Anatomy of a Love Song.” He
will share the Lehman Center stage with the group Dru Hill who are
celebrating their 20th
Anniversary and vocalist Jon B.
This writer spoke
with the Washington, DC, born singer, whom after a delay of seven
years, has returned to the stage not only via music, but he has also
been exercising his considerable talent through Lolita Snipes gospel
stage play “Lolita Snipes' Head Over Heels.”
“Yes, I am
presently doing the play entitled “Lolita Snipes' Head Over Heels,”
and I'm having fun doing it. It's a gospel-styled play that is a
great departure from the concert stuff I have going on. It adds
diversity and another dimension to me,” said Kenny.
Dubbed a “modern
soul man,” by the New York Times, the Grammy Award-nominated
singer/songwriter has climbed the charts over the years with hits
like “For You,” “Never Too Busy,” “Days Like This,”
“Weekend” and “If I Lose My Woman. Also, his latest “Love Me
Back” is climbing the charts. Kenny personally wrote the song,
“You're My Girl” featured on his current CD “Anatomy of A Love
Song.”
“Music
is so powerful but objective. It affects our lives in various ways
so as a result you get different reactions from people. I did
surveys to see if the new album “Anatomy of A Love Song,” was
musically appealing across the board. When I got a consistent
reaction from people, even if they were not familiar with the Kenny
Lattimore brand, I noted it was something about the melody of the
song that appealed to folks. My music has a spiritual undertone
because the message in my music is about real love, godly love. The
sacrifice of it and the purity of it,” explained Lattimore. He
continued, “These days those in control of exposing music to the
public are choosing music based on research, numbers and advertising
dollars. Things that have nothing to do with the human experience or
real passion. Instead they go for the lowest common denominator.
They want people to think what they want them to think and feel what
they want them to feel. I am not used to that. If you are
constantly pumping something into people's heads it starts to affect
people spiritually and psychologically.”
Kenny talked about his son, Kenny Jr. “I am about to have a teenager on my hands. He is about to enter high school,” chuckled Kenny whose son's birth date and Kenny's birthday are the same. “I have been teaching my son about responsibility and respecting authority. I love being my son's dad. I look at him and see him as a version of me so I watch his spirit soar. He is a sponge, an open book and very unafraid. The younger me was very shy. My son is my ray of hope. I want him to be a great man. He recorded his first song last summer. He has the music in him. I have allowed him to explore. He has done acting, track, also been in the junior Olympics. I make sure he is exposed to great things.”
Kenny
wrote You're My Girl.
“ For me, every song comes differently, You're
my Girl, came to me as
a music track initially. When I heard the music, it took me back to
my childhood reminding me of a Marvin Gaye and Ron Isley kind of mix.
The guitar part reminded me of the Isley Brothers. But the grove
reminded me of “You Sure Love To Ball” by Marvin Gaye. I
combined all those thoughts together and came up with the idea of
“You're My Girl.” I write a little less these days because I
have had to become a different type of entertainment executive for my
own sake. That is where my own label Sincere Soul Records has come
from and my touring company KL Entertainment Group. I am running
these companies and understanding how to brand myself and place
myself in the industry with this new age.”
Lattimore
talked about why he started his own music company and went his own
way musically. “I grew tired of music executives telling me to be
someone else. I have been in the business for 30 years. This year is
my 20th
year as a solo artist. So now I know who I am.” explained the
sensitive singer. “For marketing purposes, others have tried to
make me into something different. These people were confused about
whether I'd be successful in the music industry...which had nothing
to do with whether I could sing or not but what I chose to sing. My
stance is to sing positive music. Coming from the church, I felt a
responsibility to be authentic in my music which was birthed and born
in me from the spirit and from my intellect. Some people sent a
particular message to me at the time I came into the business that
they didn't get my musical stance. They said things like aren't Black
men these thugs or one dimensional...assuming Black men were about
sex and being thugs. It was a difficult time for me. I felt judged
as an African American man by folks who were not African American.
It was like they thought African Males cannot be sensitive or
diverse. I know Hip hop sells faster and executives want to make
money, but people still want diversity and romance. Love never goes
out of style.”
Fans
can get Kenny Lattimore's CD “Anatomy of A Love Song” on
Amazon.com, and Kennylattimore.com. For tickets to the March 26th
show, call 718-960-8833
or
go online via www.LehmanCenter.org.
You
can catch my Topically Yours show with Kenny Lattimore via
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/blakeradio/2016/03/18/topically-yours--kenny-lattimore

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