Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 26, 1993, Page 6 and 7, Image 6

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Sade back on track
After a four-)far hiatus, Bade is now on the Love
Deluxe Tour and performs at the Hull Center Feh 27
with nfiening act Me Hhi Me.
Born Helen Foltade Adu in Nigeria 33 years ago.
Bade moved to Great Britain at the age of four. She
grew up listening to hop, soul and folk Her singing
career happened "by chance," she said, as she had
planned to ht‘ a clothes designer before she wos asked
to sing for the tondon hand Pride.
Love I kiln was recorded in Italy during the sum
mer of 1992.
The following is an excerpt from a taped interview
with Bade, released on CD as Interview Deluxe
Q: What's the definition of Love Deluxe?
SAUK: (It is) one of the few luxury things you can't
buy. You tan buy any kind of love, but you can t get
love deluxe.
Q: Listening to Ixive Deluxe, personally I seem to
notice a little bit more stark sound, maybe some
experimentation with strings, cello. Is there, maybe, a
slight departure* musically on this record?
SAUK: I think we approached Love Deluxe sort of
quite blindly in a way, like we did when we made
Diamond Life ... there's a certain amount of inno
cent*. We were quite adventurous. I think we need
ed a break, you know, in order to want to make
another album. 1 think the break, actually, being
away, was good for us all. you know, because it gives
us a chance to realize why you're doing what you do,
and actually want to do what you do, and not just do
it because you're already there and you're on the roll.
It is quit© raw and stark, in the same way that Via
mond Life was. but it's very, very different We've
come a long way since then and changed a lot.
Q: As you well know, it's been said that the songs
of Sade (the singer) are of friendship, love, lost love
Where do theselyrics, or stories, come from?
SADE: Those songs come from inside me, inside
my life. I sort of dig around and find the stories hid
den there somewhere. Sometimes things just come
almost magically into my mind, sometimes I see
something and f'm compelled to write about it, other
times they're just pure fantasy.
Q: Uh. on "Pearls.'' very ... straight to the heart
story. Could you talk about that?
-*SADE: "Pearls” came about because I saw a news
bulletin of a mother collecting grains of rice at the
roadside, you know, scrubbing around in the dirt and
just picking rice that had fallen off a relief truck going
through to the North in Somalia. And what really
struck me when I saw the bulletin was really that that
could have been mo. but it just happens by chance
that I was born in Nigeria. I wasn't born in Somalia.
Really that song was about chances, you know, and
about fate and the fact that we are reaily ... we re like
one huge race and any of us could be bom anywhere,
could be any color, and we re just circumstances of
our birth, really. We are victims of our circumstance.
Q: Is Sade (the (wild) considered soul?
SADE: It's soulful music. It doesn't necessariry
sound like the soul people recognize, but it comes
from inside, and that’s what I consider to he soul
music. I mean, l think a lot of folk and a lot of jazz is
Courtety Pftofeo
On the Love Deluxe Tour, Sede performs Ssturdsy el the Huh Center with opening set Me Phi Me.
soul music. Flamenco, even classical music can come
from Ihe soul. If it gets you there, it's soul music.
Q: Some bands look forward to just going into the
recording studio and making their record. Other
hands live for the live performance. What about Sade
line rwinnir
SAUK: I think when we write soi^s. we re very
conscious of the idea of getting on a stage. One dav
Turn to SAOE. Page 8
iWiiiiliT7iifl>tiiii>'iWfffi1^Mi'>iff|i'i'trin»'i'~lTlwrrr
KAXJTHP»y
Jambay performs In a night ot rnakxHc mayham with a tap* rata*aa party at tha WOW Hall.
Jambay turns on the tape
CULTURAL FORUM — Jambay. that
"technically amazing quartet of jazzy
eclecticism,” is returning to Eugene Sat
urday night to rock the WOW Hall along
with the local reggae band Unshakable
Race.
The show promises to be a night of
"musical merriment and melodic may
hem.” said Eric Peterson, the Cultural
Forum's regional music coordinator.
"Jambay is coming fully prepared to
take Eugene by storm." Matt Butler, the
band's percussionist, said This show will
be the band's first stop on its live tape
release tour. The tape was recorded at the
WOW Hall in October when a sound tech
nician there noticed the above-average
quality of the Iwnd's sound and musician
ship, Butler said.
When the musicians listened to the
tape, they instantly knew they would use
it to get their new music out to the public,
he said.
The show is a first time ever ( o-promo
tion between the University's Cultural
Forum and the Community Center for the
Performing Arts because booking agents
from both places agree Jambay is on the
way to the big-time. Peterson said.
Jambay has been likened to Edie Brick -
ell, the New Bohemians, Crowded House
and Phish, hut the band also defines its
own style, Butler said.
Chris Haugen, one of the hand's gui
tarists. explained this style "Jambay is
what happens when we play together ..our
unique styles and our musical individual
ity all come together to create an inde
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scribahle phenomena."
Adding to the phenomena is the hand's
unofficial fifth member, a multi media
film and light artist Traveling up from
Humbolt County. G.B Ha|im will provide
his choreographed visual input at Satur
day's show
"He completely rounds out the experi
ence." Haugen said "lie clips films
together to heighten the effect of the mush
and to provide a visual jumping off point
for the hand to expand on a musical
theme '
The hand is always excited to play in
Kugene, Butler said, partly because it is
where he and Haugen grew- up and played
in their first hand in 1987.
Turn to JAMBAY. Page 8
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Hockey*
University if
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343-9661
The McKenzie goes Duplex
Classics this week'
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WATCH THE BLAZERS SUNDAY
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Guido'S * 13th & Alder
University Theatre
Second Season Presents
0,
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Ve<vs^l
A comedy by Jon Klein
Join two ex convicts
on a rollicking adventure
as they struggle against
corruption and racial
injustice.
February
24, 25, 26, 27
March
4. 5,6
ARENA THEATER
Villard Hall
University of Oregon
346*4191
DEVELOP & PRINT • 3 COLOR PRINTS
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