Also in the The R&B Chronicles series
The R&B Chronicles - House and Sinnett
(01:00:11)
From: WHRV
R&B Chronicles host Jae Sinnett features his latest colaboration.
Piece Description
Perhaps more than any other genre of popular American music culture, soul music is the result of the combination and merging of previous styles and sub-styles in the 50's and 60's. At it's inception soul music combined the African American concepts of gospel and blues sensibilities in creating a passionate, soulful and musical presentation of the African American spirit. Rhythm and Blues is itself a combination of blues and jazz and developed in the 40's as small groups of predominately African American musicians built upon the blues tradition which morphed itself into soul music coming into the 50's. "The R&B Chronicles" is a weekly musical biography that will focus on classic R&B and soul music and feature many of the great artists and groups.... such as Otis Redding, James Brown, Aretha Franklin, The Temptations, Stevie Wonder, Ray Charles, Earth, Wind and Fire and many more. "The R&B Chronicles" airs Friday evenings at 7pm on 89.5 WHRV-FM. Hosted and produced by Jae Sinnett.
Broadcast History
Airs Friday evenings at 7 on WHRV 89.5FM
















James Reiss
Posted on June 26, 2009 at 09:58 AM | Permalink
Ah, Michael!
A dozen indie producers may be putting together tributes to the King of Pop even as I key in these words the morning after his death. Until one of these productions is uploaded onto PRX, Jae Sinnett’s piece will fill the gap. His hour-long show on the Jackson 5 is like one of those slow-movement introductions in an old-fashioned symphony that gets going full-blast after a few minutes. Another way of looking at—or listening to—Sinnett’s program is to compare it to the Jacksons in their Garden of Eden—not too far from Gary, Indiana—before everything hit the fan.
Pop-culture historians and diehard fans will of course replay Sinnett’s piece if only to revel in the Jacksonian sweetness of doo-wop, the Motown sound that had gathered strength alongside that of Presley and the Beatles. But the superstar of the Jackson 5, that cutie surrounded by his brothers in the photo on PRX’s home page, stepped as far away from his siblings as his Moon Walk allowed. His song-and-dance routine catapulted him into an orbit we know about but seldom have observed so poignantly.
I don’t need to go into the details of his meteoric rise and fall. America seems to need sacrificial lambs more than enduring lions. Right now we’re still not sure precisely the cause of Michael’s death. Whatever his autopsy turns up, his legacy will transcend it and the gossip that shadowed his life. Even if you forget his androgynous physical appearance and the timbre of his voice—and who can forget these things?—his gifts as a dancer are unforgivable.
Rest well, Michael.