Page 8 August 9, 2000 (Ebe |Jortlaxib (Obsertu'r Focus Music D’angelo from page 5 beginnings o f self-taught skills on a variety o f vintage keyboard & piano playing at the age o f five are complemented on Voodoo with Charlie Hunter (whose guitar forms the crux o f the winding grooves o f “The Root”, jazz trumpeter Roy H arg ro v e, A h m ir (? u e stlo v e ) Thompson, Method Man & Redman (who can be heard on the off-kilter bounce “ Left and Right”) and Gram m y A w ard winning artist Lauryn Hill. “Lauryn is a beautiful spirit,” D ’Angelo says. “Very warm. W hen w e did ‘N othing Even M atters’ (which appears on Hill’s Miseducation O f...) it was just a natural thing.” If you wondered why D ’s project has a seemingly rough-cut studio sound to it, is because, D ’ says “Voodoo was recorded live with no overdubs, and often what is on the finished project is how it unfolded artist, a very long time. On the five-year hiatus as well as the concept o f Voodoo, D stated “The main thing is that I really just wanted to make the best album that I could make. I basically wanted to be able to sit down and write some nice songs and it takes time to do something like that. You just can’t throw sniff together. 1 know it has been a while but I need the time to get it together as to what I was going to do and how I was going to do it. I felt some o f the pressure to follow up Brown Sugar and I tried not to think about that. I w anted to concentrate on what I was doing, and to get it back on the love o f music and writing that I had even before 1 signed a contract. So if in the studio.” From 1995’sBrow nSugarto2000’s Voodoo, lyrical souls o f artist like James Brown, Sly and The Family Stone, Hendrix and the Ohio Players are creatively crafted throughout D ’s personal style. As well as, from day one, com pared to Stevie Wonder and the late Marvin Gaye, D ’Angelo’s natural talent to stray away from the norm o f over-doing a project will last him, like this Art Museum from page 4 Elizabeth Cole Butler Collection. Other galleries, eight in all, will present the art o f other Native American cultural groups and pre- Columbian art from Central and South America. Two additional galleries, featuring work from our own region. Western Oregon and the Columbia Plateau, are located on the third floor. The Museum is pleased to dedicate this new center o f le a rn in g in h o n o r o f T he C onfederated Tribes o f Grand Ronde. The C enter for N orthw est Art celebrates the history and culture of the Northwest by featuring both permanent andchanging exhibitions that focus on the regions’ visual history, and draw s from the A m e ric a n , C o n te m p o ra ry , Photography, and Prints and Drawings collections. Together, th ese v a rie d h isto ric a l and contemporary works provide a visual narrative o f the region and help foster a sense ofplace and an u n d e rsta n d in g o f w hat is distinctive about art created in the N o rth w e st. T h ro u g h the generosity o f Arlene and Harold Schnitzer, who have committed their significant collection o f regional art to the Museum, we are able to bring these collections to the forefront. Commissioned specifically for the C e n te r is a tw o -sto ry -ta ll installation piece by Northwest glass artist William Morris, funded by a gift from Leonard and Lois Schnitzer. This major acquisition, consistin g o f 400 individual blown-glass pieces, will illuminate the art on view in the surrounding g a lle rie s. T he g a lle rie s are arranged chronologically with earlier work being presented on the third floor. The fourth floor, with its skylights and expansive space, offers a dramatic setting for large-scale contem porary paintings and sculpture. Inaugural W eekend will begin on Saturday, August 19. Enjoy artist dem onstrations, gallery tours, hands-on art activities and other special events. D on’t miss the wizardry o f Michael Curry’s giant puppets. Watch the magic o f a 14- fo o t prim a b a lle rin a d ancing through the air accompanied by a towering Kenyan warrior. Enjoy the d az z lin g beau ty o f m am m oth butterflies. The Lions o f Batucada, a highly e n e rg iz e d B ra z ilia n -sty le d marching samba ensemble will also perform. Put your name on the Signature Project - an exciting new multi-media show presented by Irish a rtis t P a tric k D unning. An enormous painting, 76’ X 36’, is being created by joining together L. _ y the signatures o f over one million people form different cultures and backgrounds, and yours can be included! Sunday, August 20 is Oregonian Day. On Sunday, enjoy a special performance by the Oregon Trail Band at 2 pm. Voices fro m the O regon Trail is comprised o f popular songs, fiddle tunes, hymns, humorous tales and marches from the mid- 1800’s. Throughout the day, enjoy artist demonstrations, gallery tours, D an’l B ’ loon the balloon artist, the Signature Project, Lions o f Batucada, art activities, and more. there’s one reason why I took such a long time in between records is because I wanted to keep that purity, to keep my motivation for why I make music pure.” So here D ’ is, with his sophomore release titled Voodoo. And for a working definition o f voodoo, voodoo is: a charm, spelt, orfetish re g a rd e d by th o se as having magical powers. Is it a coincidence that this artist ev o k es m usical and p h y sic a l emotions, lyrically ? It could be a coincidence. But who says that it has to be a bad thing for an artist to know that he has it and knows how to, and I must say, hum bly, but oh so w ell, confidently, flaunts it. 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