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Teacher-turned-neo-soul-
diva Conya Doss.
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Conya Doss's Boss Poem
By Mark Anthony Neal
SeeingBlack.com Music Critic
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Though the folks at corporate don't seem to know it
yet, "Neo-Soul" is out and real Soul music is in again. This is
not a knock to the Neo-soul denizens and their grand icons, but
just a reminder that the so-called "Neo-Soul" sound was nothin'
more than what Baba Amiri Baraka labeled nearly 40 years ago as
the "Changing Same." (It all flows thru him and if you ain't read
Blues People you don't really get it.) Mosdef, the big labels
moved a gank of music courtesy of the tag "Neo-Soul"Daniel
Gray-Kontar notes that Alicia Keys, Maxwell, India.Arie, Badu, L-Boogie,
D'Angelo, Macy Gray, and Jilly have moved 30 million units between
thembut more than anything, the so-called "Neo-Soul" movement
allowed a few folks to take risks and do "they-own" thang. Sure
there's been some casualities, Dionne Farris and Lauryn Hill to
name just two (we all need to read Nikki Giovanni's "Poem for Aretha"
to truly understand what L-Boogie's breakdown was about). But the
real joys of this moment have come from what is happening just beyond
corporate radars-joints from the likes of Lewis Taylor (who really
jump-started the neo-Soul moment), Fertile Ground (who defy simple
definitions), N'Dambi and Calvin Richardson. Cleveland native Conya
Doss is now likely to join the ranks of these "secret gems" with
the release of her debut A Poem About Ms. Doss.
Doss is the latest of a cadre of folks who have come
out of the Cleveland metro area, including legends like Eddie and
Gerald Levert and most recently Bone Thugs-N-Harmony and "Little
Kelly" (Avant). While Doss has been singing since she was a child
(singing Natalie Cole's "I've Got Love on My Mind" at family gatherings),
she eschewed a formal singing career, instead choosing a career
in education; she is a special education teacher in the Cleveland
pubic school system. Doss had auditioned for and successfully earned
a gig to be a back-up for Gerald Levert (president of the "Pretty
Big Man's Club") while in college, but as she told Gray-Kontar,
"being on the road seemed as though it was going to conflict with
school" so she turned it down. While doing the "teacha, teacha"
thing in a serious way, Doss often visited the studio of producer
Edwin "Tony" Nichols, who has laced "G-love" and a few others over
the year. Coss began co-writing songs with Nichols (he the music,
she the lyrics) shortly thereafter. When Nichols became the head
of the fledgling Cleveland-based label Nu Mecca, Coss became the
label's first signee. A Poem About Ms. Doss is a conscious
attempt to replicate the indie-Soul success of Jill Scott and Hidden
Beach Records. Nu Mecca is distributed by Orpheus Music, which also
distributes Juve's UTP Records and Evander Holyfield's Real Deal
imprint.
The lead single from A Poem About Ms. Doss began
getting airplay in the Cleveland area as early as February of this
year. The song, which borrows riffs from Jilly's "Try," is a classic
morning drive time ditty (intimated in the title) that features
Doss's sassy vocals. Doss sounds a little like L-Boogie on "You
Really Hurt Me" (it's in the pleading and the yearning) which references
Curtis Mayfield's "Give Me Your Love". The two songs, along with
"Feelin' You" are the only musically up-beat tracks on the disc
as Doss's strength lies is her reading of ballads and mid-tempos.
On the sunny "One More Try" and "All Because of You"
Doss flows supplely over the un-intrusive grooves of Myron Davis
and Nichols, allowing her voice a clear forum. In so many of the
projects labeled "Neo-Soul," the music itself has taken center stage
often pushing the vocalist to the background. The prominence of
"Neo-Soul" sound production has allowed many labels to just plug
voices into grooves, creating the context where some marginal singers
have been allowed to flourish at the expense of those who can bring
the spirit when the spirit need to be brought. Nichols wisely employs
the same laid back strategy on tracks like "So Fly" and "Smile Again,"
which, like most of the disc, were co-written by Doss. The only
track where the music does seem intrusive is Doss's over-wrought
re-make of Norman Connors and Michael Henderson's "You Are My Starship."
A shout out for spreading some luv on the classic but a suggestion
to move cautiously on remakes in the future.
The real gems on A Poem About Ms. Doss are
the slow-drag ballads. The "blue-light in the basement" flow of
"Meantime" sounds as if could have been recorded by the Jones Girls
two decades ago. "That's Not Love" riffs from the best of the contemporary
"blue funk" tapping into a soundscape that simultaneously draws
from Dr. Dre, D'Angelo, and Touch of Jazz. Other standouts include
"Heaven," which features vocalist Zero and the interlude "Zoning
in My Dome" which gives the clearest window into Doss spirit and
should have been recorded as a full-length track.
A Poem About Ms. Doss breaks no new artistic
ground but is a solid debut by a vocalist who deserves much more
visibility than a host of folks who get more airplay than their
talents suggest.
-- November 16, 2002

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