Artists
Brian McKnight
He is practically in a category all his own: since the beginning
of the ‘90s, virtually no other solo black male multi-platinum
singer, songwriter, producer and musician has enjoyed a decade-long
career so filled with accomplishment and achievement. Celebrating
his tenth-year as an across-the-board hitmaker, FROM THERE TO HERE
is a testament to the unparalleled impact Brian McKnight has made
in the world of contemporary music. While ballads like ”Love
Is,” his certified gold Top 5 1993 duet with Vanessa Williams
and 1997’s R&B chart-topping “Anytime” established
his mainstream appeal, Brian McKnight has managed to always stay contemporary
via hits like “You Should Be Mine” and “The Only
One For Me” (both included in 1997’s three-million-selling
ANYTIME album).
The New York-born, Los Angeles-based McKnight simply smiles at the
suggestion that his all-encompassing artistry has been somewhat downplayed,
while the focus has been on his instantly-recognizable vocal style: “Hey,
I just do what I do. I started out as a musician and a songwriter.
In fact, it was the first song I wrote with (collaborator) Brandon
Barnes (“The Way Love Goes”) that got me a recording contract.
The first impression anyone got of me was as a songwriter who sang,
not as a singer who wrote songs.” That love of writing remains
a constant: “I write something every day,” Brian says. “The
joy of my work is creating something from nothing and at any given
time, I might have four or five ideas going…”
FROM THERE TO HERE is filled with McKnight-penned and produced gems
from his very first single, 1992’s “The Way Love Goes” to
2002’s “Love Of My Life” (from Brian’s most
recent SUPERHERO album). In addition to featuring Brian’s charted
hits – from 1994’s “Crazy Love” (Brian’s
inspired cover of the Van Morrison classic, used in the movie “Jason’s
Lyric”) to “6-8-12” (a key cut on the three-million
selling Motown album BACK AT ONE), FROM THERE TO HERE includes “Love
Is” (from “Beverly Hills 90210”); 1994’s “I’ll
Take Her,” a Top 20 single for rap act Ill Al Skratch; and the
gospel influenced "Home." Two brand new songs have also
been added to the album: “Let Me Love You,” (Brian wrote
and produced?) and "How I Do," produced by Mario Winans.
The release of FROM THERE TO HERE gives the ever-busy father of two
a chance to stop and reflect on a decade of non-stop activity that
has netted him an American Music Award (as “Best R&B Male
Solo” in 2001 for BACK AT ONE), an NAACP Image Award (as “Outstanding
Artist” in 2000) and a 1999 Soul Train Music Award (“Best
Male Solo Artist”) along with a 1996 Emmy nomination for “Every
Beat Of My Heart,” and multiple Grammy, MTV Music Video and
Blockbuster Award nominations.
Early on, Brian learned about the workings of the industry after
he signed with Wing Records in 1989 when the label was helmed by veteran
executive Ed Eckstine, who had worked with Quincy Jones for many years.
Prior to that, Brian - a trained musician whose brother Claude is
a member of Take 6 – had been diligently writing songs in Huntsville,
Alabama. “The turning point came when I start writing with Brandon
Barnes. He was the man who taught me everything I know about song
structure and songwriting. We met when I was at a local mall to pick
up a check for a jingle I had done. He happened to be in the writer’s
room so I guess it was serendipity that brought us together. From
that day on, we were writing three or four songs every day. Brandon
came from a funk-soul background, I was more into jazz. The idea was
to send out a demo that would be a springboard to get songs placed.
We weren’t aiming for a record deal.”
Once the tape landed on the desks of a few executives in Los Angeles,
Brian was asked to do a couple of showcases. “They liked that
I was self-contained, that I wrote, sang, played. They wanted to do ‘development’ deals
with me and then, Sam Sapp who worked with Ed Eckstine heard my tape.” Eckstine
immediately met with Brian and signed him shortly thereafter. The
process of making his all-important first album took almost three
years. “I credit Ed for having the foresight and sticking with
me but at the beginning, it was very frustrating. I wanted a record
out! Around the same time I got my deal, I got married so it was difficult
because advances from record companies only last so long.”
The pressure was eased somewhat when labelmate Vanessa Williams heard
some of Brian’s work and asked him to produce several tracks
on her 1991 multi-platinum “Comfort Zone” album. “While
I was working with Vanessa, I was tweaking my own album. We must have
cut fifty songs for my first record and it was mindblowing for me,” he
recalls. “I was in real state of the art studios for the first
time."
Brian’s self-titled album was issued in July 1992, just a month
after “The Way Love Goes” landed on the R&B singles
chart. Receiving standing ovations and garnering support from the
media at incredible industry showcases he did throughout the U.S. – where
he would simply accompany himself on the piano – Brian quickly
became an industry favorite at a time when rap and hip-hop was becoming
the dominant focus in the world of black music. Brian’s soulful
authenticity was refreshing, harkening back to another time and place
when the art of the singer-songwriter held sway. “I guess I
was the bridge from ‘there’ to ‘here,’” he
considers. “I came out just on the cusp of when things were
changing.”
The BRIAN McKNIGHT album did not have an immediate impact but serendipity
stepped in once more, this time in the form of “Love Is,” a
duet Brian recorded with Vanessa Williams for the then-popular television
show “Beverly Hills 90210.” He remembers, “I recorded
the song reluctantly. Here I was this black guy singing a pop song – and
it was a song someone else had written! I didn’t want to have
my first success with someone else’s song.” As it turned
out, the response to the single laid the groundwork for the release
of “One Last Cry” in June 1993. “That was another
song I didn’t want to record!” Brian says. “I had
originally planned the song for one of those real pop songstresses – you
know, a Bette Midler, someone like that who could sing this brokenhearted,
sad song. Ed (Eckstine) was the one who really had the vision for
what the tune could especially after “Love Is.” When “One
Last Cry” started taking off, I breathed a sigh of relief…and
at the same time, I got my first real taste of celebrity, of being
recognized and signing autographs wherever I went. It was a little
overwhelming, a lot to deal with, especially since I had a family.
It was hard on them, hard on me.”
Brian says he “rode the wave” and enjoyed being able
to turn to all those naysayers who had doubted that a self-contained
black male singer, songwriter, musician and producer could make it
at a time when the industry was so focused on selling music to a teen
generation. Validation came with the platinum status of the BRIAN
McKNIGHT album but following it was, by Brian’s own admission,
no easy task. “I ended basically writing a record that followed
the feel and flavor of songs like “One Last Cry.” It was
clever and I used my classical music and technical training and I
kinda got all the stuff out of my system with the I REMEMBER YOU album.” Fortunately,
one track – “Crazy Love,” originally cut by Van
Morrison – was used for the 1995 movie “Jason’s
Lyric” and ended up as the centerpiece for I REMEMBER YOU along
with the hit singles “On The Down Low” and “Still
In Love,” propelling the album to gold status.
“I was on the road, building a name for myself at this point,” Brian
notes. “Riding bus, hanging out with the crew and the band,
those were good times. We played whatever we wanted, we had so much
fun.” At the same time, Brian’s recording career was undergoing
change with the departure of executive Eckstine from Mercury Records.
While Brian’s music – influenced by the work of such soul
legends as Wonder, Gaye, Mayfield and others – had found favor
with music buyers, the emergence of the so-called ‘neo-soul’ movement
(with artists like D’Angelo and Maxwell) was now becoming the
focus, particularly at black radio. He reflects, “I remember
that with the release of my second album, I thought it was me trying
to rule the world! As it turned out, with all that was happening with
musically at the time, it felt more like I was in a decline.”
As it turned out, any concern for a downturn in his career quickly
abated with the 1997 release of ANYTIME. The album’s first single, “You
Should Be Mine” featuring rapper Mase and produced by Sean “Puffy” Coombs
was a major R&B hit, immediately expanding Brian’s audience
to a younger demographic. The title track became the follow-up and
record buyers who had been supporting Brian since his first release
were instantly satisfied that he was still producing and creating
his own distinctive brand of contemporary soul music. “Anytime” became
a No. 1 R&B and Top 10 pop hit, pushing sales of his third album
to three million copies. “It was a calculated move,” Brian
says. “I was asking myself the question, ‘how can I have
it all?’ Hip-hop was so prevalent and I wanted to see how I
could be the cool with that audience. That’s when we called
Puff Daddy and decided we’d make the kind of record we made
with “You Should Be Mine.” I found out I could be commercial
at that end of the spectrum…and then we came back with the
single “Anytime” and just killed ‘em! Before I did
the ANYTIME album, I was at the lowest point of my career; after that,
my feet came right back to the ground. I understood that what I needed
to do was to please my fans, make music that would get on the radio
and please myself at the same time.”
Candidly, Brian admits that the enormous success of ANYTIME “made
it difficult to prioritize. My second son Niko was born after the
release of my second album and my first on Brian Jr. was almost ten.
I had finally begun to achieve being where I thought I should be with
my career but there were not enough hours in the day. I was doing
major tours, there were a lot of pitfalls I hadn’t encountered
before.” While struggling with the balance between his personal
life and a career that was in its ascendancy, Brian never lost sight
of his one constant love -- “it didn’t matter how many
records I sold or how successful I became, I knew I was never going
to get away from writing songs.”
In addition to nurturing his passion as a songwriter, Brian had also
been spreading his creative wings as a producer. By the time ANYTIME
was released in 1997, he had produced tracks for a diverse range of
artists including Az Yet, Philip Bailey, Boyz II Men, For Real, Damion
Hall, Cindy Mizelle, CeCe Peniston, Take 6, Waymon Tisdale, Vesta
and Christopher Williams. In the wake of the multi-format success
of ANYTIME, Brian dueted with Mariah Carey on the song “Whenever
You Call” from the singer’s 1997 smash album “Butterfly” as
well as earning the first two of the string of Grammy Award nominations
he’s earned to date.
In 1998, Motown Records (which had become Brian’s recording
home with the release of ANYTIME) issued the holiday album BETHLEHEM
(which featured Boyz II Men, Dave Koz, brother Claude McKnight, Tim
Miner, Julie McKnight and Brian’s two sons). The same year,
he began planning the 1999 album BACK AT ONE.
“I think of that album as a marker. If ANYTIME was black and
white, BACK AT ONE was like color. The tours got bigger, the audiences
more diverse. I went from playing Radio City Music Hall to Madison
Garden. I remember what a trip it was for my father, who’s a
New York native, to see my name up there at The Garden. By the time
I finished BACK AT ONE, I had built my ‘dream’ house.
With that record, I felt like I really got on track with my career..”
With sales of over three million copies, 1999’s BACK AT ONE
yielded significant singles: the title track which stayed at No. 2
on Billboard’s pop charts for eight weeks; “Stay Or Let
It Go”; and the standout acoustic-flavored “6-8-12.” Commenting
on BACK AT ONE, Brian says, “I approached making the album with
a particular psychology. It was about setting the bar higher creatively.
I don’t ever want to be complacent so it was about challenging
myself, trying to come up with original ideas. As a lyricist, I write
conversationally and while I want the music to be accessible, I also
have to make it interesting for me.”
In 2000, Brian was featured on Motown labelmate BeBe Winans’ “Love & Freedom” album
and as a result, nabbed another Grammy nomination for “Coming
Back Home” (which featured Brian, R&B star Joe and Winans).
Brian continued adding to the ever-growing list of accolades and
awards by becoming the first songwriter to be ranked No. 1 on the
Hot 100 Songwriters, No. 4 on the Country and Tracks Songwriters and
No. 7 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles and Tracks Songwriters with
Billboard’s Songwriters 2000 listings. The following year, he
worked on records with N’Sync (as a producer on the group’s
album “Celebrity”), Alicia Keys (on her auspicious debut “Songs
In A Minor”) and duetted with the legendary Willie Nelson on “Don’t
Fade Away”(a key cut on Nelson’s “The Great Divide” album)
as well as completing work on his sixth album, superhero. In between
sessions for the album, Brian took time to devote to one of his other
life passions, playing basketball. He muses, “Because of some
of the songs I write, people tend to think of me a particular way – this
gentle, sensitive man. I may be that but the concept is that I am
the same guy in person that I am in the music I write when in reality,
there is a difference between the two. I’ve been playing semi-pro
every summer for the past few years and whenever I get out there,
I have to show that I am serious about playing.”
Once again showcasing his multi-faceted musical skills, Brian applied
himself to the production of SUPERHERO and the result was another
hit album that included the key cuts “Still” and “Love
Of My Life.” He observes, “making that record was like
another reinvention for me, like my sound was evolving again. You
could view the album as a diary of the past year of my life and these
songs as a beacon for me to try to reach higher. I had a tremendous
amount of fun making this album and I didn’t get all caught
up in the notion of trying to duplicate past hits or necessarily sticking
to ‘my sound’. This time I said, ‘OK, What can I
do to make things more fun?’” The answer came with cuts
like the title track which was inspired in some part from melodic
but heavy acts like AC/DC, Van Halen and The Who: “People hadn’t
heard that side of me before but I really wanted to show a side of
me that’s different.”
Concert audiences are constantly surprised at Brian’s musical
versatility and while the public perception has been that he is considered
a singer-songwriter, Brian is at heart a musician of the first caliber.
That desire to surprise and confound those who may pidgeon-hole the
highly personable artist and performer extends to other aspects of
his life: confessing that he’s “addicted” to speed
racing, Brian can be found doing 190mph on a motorcycle as part of
a race team he owns. Of course, that’s in between scuba diving
with sharks (“I did that for a program for the Discovery channel
and it was scary the first day but you soon find out that the sharks
are not even interested in you!”); sky-diving (“perfect
for control freaks like me!”); playing golf or bowling, one
of his latest personal passions.
Beyond an aural photograph of a decade in which Brian has constantly
evolved as a creative artist, FROM THERE TO HERE bears witness to
his multi-faceted skills in writing and producing his own work as
well as accompanying himself on a range of different musical instruments
on every one of his six albums. It is such musicality that calls to
mind legendary names from previous decades, such as Stevie Wonder
and Prince, making it hard to identify too many other young African-American
male performers who have had such an impact in the past decade.
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