I CMTCftTAINMENT fatti LaBelle Teams With Big Daddy Kane the heels of last year’s best ing holiday album This Christ Patti LaBelle, the queen of ■ and soul, has iust completed ! newest album for MCA Rec a, Buntin'. Due for release in jaS^October, Burnin' features a n’ assortment of solo sizzlers 'spectacular duets, including »l!aborations with rapper Big Dadfty Kane, pop supersta? Mi chael Bolton, the velvet-voided Lu ther Vandross, soul sister Gladys fcnight and, for the first time in 15 years, a reunion with Nona Hen dryx and Sarah Dash, Patti’s for mer partners in the ground-break lag musical group LaBelle. '"Between recording, acting and {darning up with same good pals in tie music world, the diva extraor dinaire has certainly had her fiands full. As summer gives way to fall, Patti has just completed shooting the video for “Super woman,” a smash team-up with Gladys Knight and Dionne War wick, and is in the midst of taping new episodes of the NBC-TV hit series “A Different World,* repris ing her role as Dwayne Wayne’s mom, Adele. In the past season, Patti made several appearances on that program, starred in a special production of the Truman Capote/ Harold Arlen musical “House of Flowers,” joined Bob Hope as he welcomed home the troops from Kuwait, and returned to her church roots in the critically ac claimed PBS special “Going Home to Gospel with Patti LaBelle.” In addition to working double time on her own new album, Patti took time to record duets with some of her best friends in the business, including Ronnie Milsap and Michael Bolton, and joined her “Sisters in the Name of Love” co stars, Gladys Knight and Dionne Warwick, to record “Superwoman” for Knight’s new album. On a more personal but equally important note, Patti served as the My Tune by Obataiye B. Akinwole I' -- *; It’s a small world after all. Re cently I talked with a co-worker Who made my day. It seems that While traveling through North parolina some years ago he hap pened upon a radio station that :ked his socks off.” The sta tion was WAFR-FM, a now-de ftmct African-American public ra dio station in Durham that was devoted entirely to the preserva tion of African-American music ^mostly jazz), literature, and thought. *] Before WAFR, I remember the perfect for the listeners as they niehed through stores and offices. No one ever heard the music but it Was always there. It’s almost like listening to the radio these days. The same monotony is played hour after hour, day after day. That is why at the age of 10, I bought jazz $bums when my friends were buy ing Motown. But then I bought Motown also. You should ask my wife how I feel about Gladys knight and the Pips. I liked Euro pean classics and enjoyed listening to the music of other cultures of the world. You see, I liked music then and I like it now. I’ve often wondered why Afri can-American musicians are ap preciated more in Europe and the rest of the world than in America. Hiven European classics are appre ciated more elsewhere than here, the reason is that most other cul tures are brought up on a diet of Variety. One should always appre piped-in music of the ’60s. It was date one’s own. But, appreciation of oneself begets appreciation of others. Even radio stations in other countries play all types of music. Michael Jackson, John Col trane, and Quincy Jones are as famous in the rest of the world as they should be here. It is not un usual to hear a Bud Powell piece followed by Chopin followed by James Brown in Europe. Music is more universal. Have you ever no ticed that our African brothers and sisters learn several languages and/or dialects? For the most part, rap is an American thing. It is in teresting to note that record execu tives spend billions of dollars pro moting non-musirians while the likes of Gene Harris and Ray Brown play clubs across the coun try to make a living. I cannot say that rap has no redeeming value, but I will say that our priorities are misplaced. Real musitians don’t play pack aged music. They feel. Music to them is more than cramming 20 years of work into three minutes of nothing. Their music has passion. When Horace Silver released “Peace,” we all felt the prayer. Of course his music has structure. Probably more structure than most music as we know it. So, what do we have today? Songs that repeat the melody 1,000 times. We can handle more than that, can’t we? Our attention spans are long enough to manage more complex musical thoughts, aren’t they? You make the call the next time you listen to good music. SEXY MLLADS-KaNfe Sweat. tfee ptothMaa-aala| racer** artist wfceea Miy MM km MM feta a tawsrtte mimi Mania Sstoacre, Mwfen an •1 *BeayfJet Shawcasa” wfeat antes hfea “swaat," and sets tfea racard iM|fet ar :wtotfearfeaahaa|ad Ids aaiaa to SIMs career PATTILABELLE spokeswoman for the National Cancer Institute to help alert women to the importance of early breast cancer detection. Worl«ng to defeat breast cancer, which claimed the lives of Patti’s mother Po’ Broke And Lonely Create “The Sex Is On” Summer’s here, and "The Sex is On”—at least if you’re Ruthless/ Epic recording artists Po’, Broke and Lonely, creators of “The Sex is On,” an irresistible new single from the best-selling Deep Cover soundtrack. It’s the third track from Deep Cover, which has al ready spun off Shabba Ranks' top 10 R&B smash, “Mr. Loverman,” and the anthemic rap title hit “Deep Cover” by Dr. Dre and Snoop Doggy Dogg. "The Sex is On” is also included on Po’, Broke and Lonely’s Ruth less/Epic debut album, No Money, No Honey. The album was pro duced by group member Chris “The Glove” Taylor for Underglove Ltd., with Ruthless Records’ Dr. Dre and Eric “Eazy-E” Wright as executive producers. No Money, No Honey also includes top-shelf Po, Broke and Lonely originals like “Your Eyes,” “9 Litres of Love,” and “No Money, No Honey,” as well as the L.A.-based group’s pas sionate updates of black love-man classics by Barry White (“I’m Gonna Love You Just a Little More, Baby”) and Stevie Wonder (“All in Love is Fair”). After several years of sometimes hard-won music business experi ence, Chris Taylor met Michael Lynn Stephens and formed an R&B group called Exile. "Although we continued to write songs,” Chris say8, “we never had a vocal ist capable of really fitting into our groove.” Chris was producing tracks for a local rapper when he met R.C. (Ruben Cruz Monge), a promising but unpolished singer. “Originally R.C. was going to be a solo artist, but with so many male soloists out there, he might’ve gotten lost in the shuffle. I suggested he join my group in stead.” Chris, Michael and R.C. made a great creative combination when they began writing and cut ting demos together. In the sum mer of 1990, they met Dr. Dre of Ruthless records at a party. A mu tual friend told Dre about Po, Broke and Lonely; he asked to hear their demos, liked what he head, and promptly offered a deal. Four months later, No Money, No Honey was finished. “PBL is to tally self-contained,” says Chris proudly, “and we believe our music can please almost anyone.” and three sisters, is a cause to which the caring singer is very much dedicated. She also contin ues to serve as national spokes woman for the Black Health Re search Foundation, an organiza tion dedicated to battling prema ture death among African-Ameri cans. Perhaps more than any other artist in the history of popular music, the distinctive Patti La Belle has been true to herself in every varied phase of her musical career. In the 1960s, she led the superstar “girl group” Patti La Belle and the Bluebells; in the ’70s, she was the driving force of rock’s first all-female band, La Belle; and in the ’80s, her talent as a solo artist dominated the music scene. Patti LaBelle has had nu merous hits, from “Down the Aisle” and “Danny Boy” with the Bluebells, to “Lady Marmalade” and “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised” with LaBelle, to her solo triumphs, “New Attitude,” “Stir It Up* and “On My Own." LaBelle’s shimmering talent can be consistently counted on, but itfs difficult to predict what she, with her passion for fashion, will wear next or what she will do with her remarkably versatile, flamboyant hair. And it’s virtually impossible to imagine what spoken-from-the heart musings she will utter, be* cause no matter what she's doing—an SRO tour like the re* cent Michelob Class Act Tour, a television special such as the an nual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, a top-drawer movie like A Soldier’s Story or the USA cable dramatization of the Delta Air lines crash, “Fire and Rain," or championing adoption, another of her favorite causes (she was re cently honored by the National Adoption Center)—fans can al ways depend on Patti LaBelle to be unabashedly Patti: caring, good-natured, straightforward. SOULFUL SINGERS-Eddie and Gerald Levert, the soulful singers who topped music charts with their ballad “Baby Hold Onto Me,” are discussing whether or not their first recorded father and son duet wM be their last Lil Louis Speaks Of ‘Justifiable Pride’ In Long-Awaited New Album “I had to be sure that 1 loved ev ery song on this album, and I do.” Epic recording artist Lil Louis is speaking with justifiable pride about his long-awaited new album, Journey with the Lonely. Refusing to bow to commercial trends in dance music, the Chicago-born, New York-based producer/song writer/singer has steadfastly fol lowed his own creative path. The result: the No. 1 club smash, “Club Lonely,” and a richly diverse al bum unique in dance music by vir tue of its eclecticism, simplicity and soul. “I don’t really consider this house music,” says Louis. “People resdly listen to the messages Fm trying to portray. The people that buy my music understand where Fm coming from. The last album [1990’s From The Mind of Lil Louie] sold as much by word of mouth as by marketing.” Much of Louis’ inspiration for his new songs came “in the middle of the night,” he explains. “I keep a little cheap five-dollar recorder by my bed, wherever I am. At 4 or 5 a.m., m wake up with a song in my head and just hum it into the recorder. “‘Club Lonely* actually came to me in a restaurant in New York. I was watching all the people in there, their different expressions, and it seemed to me that most of them weren’t really happy. You could feel the tension there, like I’d felt so many times in clubs, of people trying to escape or to find what they didn’t have in their lives.” The 10 songs which comprise Journey with the Lonely were all written, arranged, produced and mixed by Ldl Louis; an 11th bonus track, the 7:22 “Jazzmen,” is in cluded on compact discs only. “Over 60 percent of this album was played on acoustic instru ments,” Louis avers. "There’s none of that synthesized, computerized feel. Even programming the drum tracks, I used real drum sounds. I programmed with swing, not just a letter-perfect beat.” Journey with the Lonely features an entirely new cast of supporting personnel, with the exception of lead guitarist Peter Black, who also played on From the Mind... Joi Caldwell is Journey’s principal female lead, and Louis calls her “an angelic voice. Of all the sing ers I auditioned in New York, Joi had the most soul—She was not just another screamer.” Also fea tured are Stephanie McKay, who takes the lead on “You’re My Rea son”; and Barbara Tucker, whom Louis first heard when she was touring with Dee-Lite. Louis’ strong jazz leanings— most evident on “Du U Luv Me,” with its indigo-blue trumpet breaks—come from his father, Bobby Sims, a blues and jazz gui tarist who worked with B.B. King and Bobby “Blue” Bland. “Plus when I was younger,” Louis re calls, “we used to do what we called ‘steppin’,’ just kind of bop pin’ to records by Jimmy Smith, Donald Byrd, Stanley Turrentine, Shirley Scott. “I think of those days often, that’s really where I write from. I was taught that musicians are se riously influenced by what we hear, that nothing great happens that’s totally planned out. I refuse to listen to the radio. I wanted to make sure that on this album, nothing would simply fit the for mat’—whatever that may be.” Lil Louis was bom and raised in Chicago, 111. His nickname is a throwback to his early teens, when he became the youngest club DJ on the hotly competitive Windy City club scene. After high school, Louis studied broadcasting and advertising at Columbia College, but soon re-entered the DJ arena and ultimately opened his own Chicago dance club. American Dance Festival Spotlights Vitality, Style In Latin Movements DURHAM—The American Dance Festival presents a spec tacular triple bill spotlighting the incredible vitality and variety of Latin American modern dance. Costa Rica’s Losdenmedium and Ecuador’s Aulmomonto and Susana Reyss/Moti Deren perform July 16-18 in Page Auditorium. The presentation of this dy namic trio of companies will allow ADF audiences to see an incred ible range of dance—from the poignancy of Susana Reyes and her depiction of Andean women to the awe-inspiring physicality of Losdenmedium's dance-theater to the magical realiam of Aul momonto. Aulmomonto, a troupe led by Miguel Azcue, began as an experi ment for young dancers and choreographers and evolved into a group creating works based on the fusion of different points of view. Losdenmedium, a daringly physi cal group, sates as its goal "a spe cial communication with the pub lic through such elements as hu mor, irony and satire.’* Susans Reyes, a solo choreographer and dancer, performs original works set to music composed and played live by her husband, the guitarist Moti Deren. These performances are made possible with funding from the Rockefeller Foundation. The July 16,17 and 18 perform ances begin at 8 p.m. in Page Au ditorium on the west campus of Duke University. Tickets are $11, $16 and $21 and can be obtained by calling the American Dance Festival Box Office at 684-4444. Poet-performance discussions will follow on all three nights. The American Dance Festival, founded in 1934 in Bennington, Vt., is now in its 15th year in Dur ham. This year’s festival runs through July 25 in Durham to be followed by ADF West, Aug. 1-22 at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City; ADF Seoul, Aug. 1-14 in Korea; and ADF Moscow, Sept. 1-15 in Russia. The festival is a year-round op eration, serving and developing in ternationally the art of modern dance through performances, classes and education projects.