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BIOGRAPHY
WYCLEF
JEAN
Wyclef Jean's extraordinary musical talent has
brought him wealth and fame and taken him all over the world. He's been a member
of the biggest-selling rap group in history, he's a multi-platinum hit-making
solo artist; and he's produced for, and collaborated with, an incredibly diverse
array of musical superstars. But throughout his entire career, Wyclef Jean has
never forgotten where he's come from, the places that nurtured his character and
creativity as a young man: his native Haiti, where he lived until age nine, as
well as the projects of Brooklyn and the streets of Jersey.
On
Masquerade, his third solo album, Wyclef focuses his considerable lyrical and
musical skills on life in the hood: past, present, and future. There are vivid
tales of his childhood and his struggles as a young immigrant on the mean
streets of New York, serious messages to the youth wrongly enamored of thug
culture, and pleas for peace and love in the future--all backed by the eclectic
and unpredictable sounds we've come to expect from a Wyclef Jean CD. Hardcore
hip-hop beats, R&B funk, slow jams, and uptempo reggae--they're all here,
sometimes all in the same track. Masquerade represents the next step in the
musical development of an artist who's known unalloyed success since first
stepping onto the scene nearly ten years ago, and who shows no signs of slowing
down.
Wyclef Jean, of course, first hit it big as a prime mover in the
groundbreaking Fugees, whose 1996 masterpiece The Score stands as one of the
most influential records in hip-hop history. On that album, Wyclef pioneered a
production style that became virtually unavoidable throughout the rest of the
'90s: real life street hip-hop seasoned with a radio-friendly musical, lyrical
and vocal sophistication. The Score sold more than 11 million copies worldwide,
won two Grammys (including Best Rap Album), and paved the way for the successful
solo careers of all three of its members. In 1997, Clef released Wyclef Jean
Presents the Carnival, a double-platinum album that featured the emotionally
powerful hit single "Gone Till November," which earned him a Grammy nomination
in the Best Male R&B Vocal Performance category.
Clef's second solo
CD, The Ecleftic -- 2 Sides II A Book, was even more musically adventurous than
his previous work, from the booty-shakin' "Dirty South" to the
socially-conscious neo-protest ballad "Diallo" to the R&B smash "911" which
found Clef dueting with Mary J. Blige. In addition to his solo work, Clef found
time to collaborate with Whitney Houston on her smash "My Love Is Your Love" and
Carlos Santana on his chart-topping hit, "Maria Maria". More recently, Wyclef's
worked with Mick Jagger and Sinéad O'Connor on their latest releases, as well as
collaborations with U2, Destiny's Child, Michael Jackson, and Rita Marley.
The spiritual element that's always been crucial to Wyclef's music is
immediately apparent on "Peace God," the first track of Masquerade. Clef calls
this his "Crouching-Tiger style": a Far East flute is looped over a hip-hop
drumbeat while Clef rhymes in praise of God and against false idols made by man.
Whether adopting the persona of the Preacher's Son or a Thug Angel, Clef has
always illuminated ghetto reality as he sees it, taking on the tone of a wise
older brother rather than a strident preacher. "The PJs" is an ode to the
projects Clef grew up in and the lessons he learned there: "Gotta make noise for
the PJs/I wrote my first rhyme in the PJs/You can hear it in my speech, I'm from
the PJs." This is a playful tribute to the harder life he's left behind as well
as a reclamation of his status as a hip-hop artist, first and foremost.
There's no other musician today who seems so natural in so many
different genres. "Masquerade" is a hardcore posse track featuring M.O.P., but
while other producers might be content to just let the beat run, Clef brings on
accomplished Israeli violinist Miri Ben-Ari to provide an unexpected coda to the
track. Proving that he not only has an ear for music but also an eye for talent,
"One Last Chance" is a soul ballad with Clef on acoustic guitar dueting with
velvet-voiced Claudette Ortiz of City High. "Daddy" is one of the saddest songs
you're ever likely to hear--reminiscent of 2Pac's classic "Dear Mama"--a rap
that Clef dedicates to his recently departed father. "What A Night" remakes
Frankie Valli's 1976 disco hit into a soul/hip-hop blend where Clef tells a
little of his amazing life story and details his many accomplishments. On
"Knockin' On Heaven's Door," Wyclef reworks the Bob Dylan classic, in Clef's
version the lyrics are transformed into a lament on unnecessary death occurring
in the ghetto and thro
ughout the world.
Masquerade is the kind of
album that only Wyclef Jean could make--from rock to rap to soul to reggae, Clef
is a living embodiment of the different styles and genres that comprise
contemporary popular music. Producer, arranger, composer, musician, rapper,
singer, and showman--Clef is that rare artist who not only does all these
things, but does them incredibly well. There's only one Wyclef Jean and
Masquerade secures his place as one of the most versatile, talented, and
accomplished musical artists we've got.