Sunday 16 January 2022

HELEN FOLASADE ADU A.K.A. SADE, THE NIGERIAN VOICE

Today, The Grandma has been listening to music. She has chosen Sade, the Nigerian-born British singer who was born on a day like today in 1959.

Helen Folasade Adu, in Yoruba Fọláṣadé Adú, born 16 January 1959, known professionally as Sade Adu or simply Sade is a Nigerian-born British singer, songwriter, and actress, known as the lead singer of her eponymous band.

One of the most successful British female artists in history, she is often recognised as an influence on contemporary music. Her influence on music was recognised in the UK with an award of the Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 2002, and was made Commander in the 2017 Birthday Honours.

Sade was born in Ibadan, Nigeria, and brought up partly in Essex, England, from the age of four. She studied at Saint Martin's School of Art in London and gained modest recognition as a fashion designer and part-time model, prior to joining the band Pride in the early 1980s.

After gaining attention as a performer, she formed the band Sade, and secured a recording contract with Epic Records in 1983. A year later the band released the album Diamond Life, which became one of the best-selling albums of the era, and the best-selling debut by a British female vocalist.

In July 1985, Sade was among the performers at the Live Aid charity concert at Wembley Stadium, and the following year she appeared in the film Absolute Beginners. Following the band's third and fourth albums, Stronger Than Pride (1988) and Love Deluxe (1992), they went on hiatus after the birth of Sade's child, while the singer experienced widespread media coverage for unsubstantiated claims of mental health and addiction problems.

After a spell of eight years without an album, the band reunited in 1999, and released Lovers Rock in 2000. The album departed from the jazz-inspired inflections of their previous work, featuring mellower sounds and pop compositions. The band then underwent another hiatus, not producing music for another ten years until the release of Soldier of Love. Following that album's release, the band entered a third period of extended hiatus, and have only released two songs Flower of the Universe for the soundtrack of Disney's A Wrinkle in Time, and The Big Unknown as part of the soundtrack for Steve McQueen's film Widows since.

More information: Sade

Helen Fọláṣadé Adu was born on 16 January 1959 in Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria, but is a native of Ekiti State. Her middle name, Folasade, means wealth confers a crown. Her parents are Adebisi Adu, a Nigerian lecturer in economics of Yoruba background, and Anne Hayes, an English district nurse; they met in London, married in 1955, and moved to Nigeria.

When Sade was four years old, her parents separated. Anne Hayes then returned to England, taking Sade and her elder brother Banji to live with their grandparents near Colchester, Essex.

When Sade was 11 years old, she moved to Holland-on-Sea, Essex, to live with her mother. After completing her education at Clacton County High School and Colchester Institute at the age of 18, she moved to London and studied fashion design at Saint Martin's School of Art.

The New Yorker described Sade's voice as a grainy contralto full of air that betrays a slight ache but no agony, and values even imperfect dignity over a show of pain, a deeply English quality that makes categorising the artist's voice difficult.

Her voice was described by the BBC as husky and restrained and compared to singer Billie Holiday. BBC called her songwriting sufficiently soulful and jazzy yet poppy, funky yet easy listening, to appeal to fans of all those genres.

Sade has been called a pop star. With the musicians in her band, Sade, The New Yorker wrote, created one of the most profitable catalogues in pop; the band's easy sound backing songs exploring the heavier lifting inside love: commitment, consistency, friendship. Her success has been attributed to a combination of her unique beauty, seemingly indefinable origins, and mysterious persona.

More information: The Guardian Nigeria


 Once a song's out there, it's no longer mine.
And that's the whole purpose of music: to belong to people.

Sade Adu

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