Erykah Badu uses Apple’s GarageBand to great effect

“Desperate to record song ideas, Grammy Award-winning R&B singer Erykah Badu used to dial her own phone number and sing into the voicemail,” Phil Stewart reports for Reuters.

“That’s until her 10-year-old son took pity on her and explained how to use Apple computer’s [Mac] built-in music recording program, GarageBand,” Stewart reports.

“The result for the self-proclaimed ‘analog girl’ was 72 new songs in three months that ended a dry spell away from the studio. It also led to the diva’s critically acclaimed new album ‘New Amerykah Part One (4th World War),’ which blends soul, funk, hip-hop and blues. Part Two is due out shortly,” Stewart reports.

“Badu sat down with Reuters during her European tour to discuss her return to recording music, the use of new technologies and her fascination with blues legends like Lightnin’ Hopkins,” Stewart reports.

Q: It was your son that taught you how to use (the computer to record music ideas)?

Badu: Garageband? Yes. Because he felt sorry for me. I would get my cell phone and try to remember a song, and he said: “Mom. You don’t have to do that. All you have to do is drag the music into this one track. And then create some tracks to sing on and you can record right now.” And I began to do that and to manipulate the system and to EQ, and add effects and instrumentation and I had an opportunity to write 72 songs in a very short span of time — a three month period, which led me to come in with New America Part One, and then Part Two … because of that freedom, of being able to record and just be wherever. Anywhere.

Full article here.

26 Comments

  1. Mac_ATTY,

    Not sure if this will be received, as it is the end of the day but here goes. Not sure where my credibility was before, or where it’s now, but in all fairness, I have no idea who or what was Outcast. With respect to music, the names tossed around my household are, for the most part, Bach, Haydn, Debussy, Grieg, Tchaikovsky, etc. (you get the point). My children are too small to know any names in contemporary music (still singing Disney movie songs), and most of my friends are of the similar musical tastes (we often swap tickets for the Met or Carnegie Hall).

    As you can see, I cannot say anything of the talent or quality of any of the people you have mentioned; all I know about them is what I have quickly read on Wikipedia, which sadly reinforced current stereotypes. I am sure these people have great talent; as I said, they’d have to, in order to gain that much popularity and acclaim. My comment was, for the most part, social.

    I’m not even sure now what this statement will do to my credibility with you. Also, what is the meaning of “Hey Ya!”?

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