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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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90
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<text>
<title>
(Mar. 12, 1990) Profile:Tracy Chapman
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Mar. 12, 1990 Soviet Disunion
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
PROFILE, Page 70
Singing For Herself
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Armed only with her voice, her guitar and her conscience, Tracy
Chapman has helped make protest music fashionable again
</p>
<p>By Richard Stengel
</p>
<p> Tracy Chapman is serious about her smile. She does not
bestow it lightly. Laughter, the same story. She covers her
mouth when she laughs, as though to hide the fact that she is
tickled about something. "If there is some major misconception
about me," she says very seriously, "it is that I'm always
serious." And then, a brief smile.
</p>
<qt>
<l>"Be careful of my heart</l>
<l>I just lost a little faith</l>
<l>When you broke my heart"</l>
</qt>
<p> She is smaller and more delicate than she appears in
pictures, her voice higher and more nasal than on her records.
There is a solidity about her, a muscular spirituality. Her
element is earth, not air. A master of silence, she does not
talk about what she doesn't know. Mostly, she is wary,
skeptical.
</p>
<qt>
<l>"All you folks think you run my life</l>
<l>Say I should be willing to compromise</l>
<l>I'm trying to protect what I keep inside"</l>
</qt>
<p> No one imagined that Chapman would be so big a success so
soon. In 1988 Elektra Records released Tracy Chapman, eleven
spare, well-crafted folk songs by a 24-year-old Tufts University
graduate. Some were about unrequited love, yes, but others spoke
of homelessness, racism and revolution. The album became
Billboard's No. 1 pop album and sold 10 million copies. Chapman
won three Grammy Awards, including Best New Artist. Last year,
on the Amnesty International tour, she crisscrossed the globe
with Sting, Bruce Springsteen and Peter Gabriel, performing
before stadiums of cheering fans on five continents. In May she
will begin an American tour.
</p>
<p> Some have found her popularity mystifying. An earnest black
folk singer in jeans and a T-shirt? Yet it was really very
simple, according to saxophonist Branford Marsalis, who has
played with Chapman. "People were so used to hearing
imperfection," he says, "they were bowled over by perfection.
People were ready to hear music again." And there is that voice,
a rich contralto that seemed to come from a hundred miles away.
A sweet, sad, wise voice that haunted almost all who heard it.
A voice that seemed to know things that they didn't. A record
to be played alone and late at night.
</p>
<p> Chapman quickly became a cultural icon. Her short, spiky
dreadlocks signaled a move away from pop glitter. Her music,
pared down, almost willfully naive, was an antidote to the
synthesized sound of the 1980s. In an age when pop singers
seemed more like musical M.B.A.s than recording artists, she
seemed genuine. Her politics were mushy headed and
self-righteous, yet she was an urban folk singer without the
fragility of the genre.
</p>
<p> Crossroads, Chapman's second album, has been out for five
months and has sold 4 million copies. Again there are songs
about poverty and the underclass, but Crossroads is darker, more
self-involved than the first album. It is less concerned with
the political battles of the world than the emotional conflicts
within herself. We hear the voice of a young woman who gives
more than she gets to lovers who take more than they give.
</p>
<qt>
<l>"I'd save a little love for myself</l>
<l>Enough for my heart to mend"</l>
</qt>
<p> Turn on the radio these days, and you are more likely to
hear a pop singer railing against homelessness than one urging
you to get down and party. Protest music has made a comeback,
and Chapman is partly responsible. Her first album showed that
social concern sold. Now singers known more for their commitment
to sequins than their dedication to social policy are decrying
acid rain.
</p>
<p> Chapman does not criticize others for a trendy embrace of
social concern. "I don't know that it's fair to question
people's motives," she says, choosing her words carefully. "Even
if people are doing it simply because they think it's
commercial, I don't know that that's a bad thing. It can
encourage action. If music can do anything, I would hope that
it might make people more compassionate."
</p>
<qt>
<l>"Hunger only for a taste of justice</l>
<l>Hunger only for a world of truth"</l>
</qt>
<p> She sang not long after she could talk. Chapman grew up with
her mother and one sister in a mostly black, working-class
neighborhood in Cleveland. Her father and mother divorced when
Tracy was four. Her mother always listened to the radio when she
was home: Marvin Gaye, Gladys Knight, Mahalia Jackson, mostly
rhythm and blues.
</p>
<p> Chapman was a quiet child and liked to be by herself. On her
way to school, she made up songs for her sister and their
friends. Her first ambition was to play the drums, but her
mother feared that they would be too noisy and bought her a
tinny $20 guitar. The instrument harmonized with her soul.
School and the neighborhood, she says, were rough. The local
high school had a metal detector at the door. "At times, it was
a terrifying place to be." To say she wanted to get away is an
understatement. "No desire to stay," she says. "And no desire
to go back."
</p>
<p> She won a scholarship for gifted minority students and went
off to the Wooster School in Connecticut. It was her first
glimpse of white, upper-middle-class life, and she found aspects
of it dismaying. "It was difficult because a lot of students
there just said very stupid things," she recalls. "They had
never met a poor person before. In some ways, they were curious,
but in ways that were just insulting. How many times as a black
person are you asked to explain to a white person what racism
is or what it means to be black?"
</p>
<p> She was a fine athlete, star of the basketball team and
captain of the varsity soccer team. But it was music that moved
her. She wrote songs all the time. Friends remember her singing
Talkin' 'bout a Revolution during her junior year. Her 1982
yearbook from Wooster predicts, "Tracy Chapman will marry her
guitar and live happily ever after."
</p>
<p> During her freshman year at Tufts, she won a talent contest
by singing Baby Can I Hold You?, which appears on her first
album. She majored in anthropology, but her real discipline was
being a troubadour. She played in coffee shops, churches, sang
in Harvard Square and developed an ardent following. In those
days, she talked when she performed, telling stories, explaining
the genesis of certain songs. Chapman went from college student
to recording artist after a classmate persuaded his father,
Charles Koppelman, co-founder of SBK, a major music-publishing
company, to listen to her music. Chapman needed a producer; many
heard her tape and passed, thinking it too uncommercial. But
music producer David Kershenbaum fell in love with her voice.
"The timbre of it," he says, "is rare to find. It instantly
disarms you. She's able to sit there and produce an almost
flawless performance. Normally today's producers take tracks and
build them and then put in the voice. We wrapped the tracks
around the voice."
</p>
<p> Today Chapman is less than thrilled about fame. "I guess if
there were some way to choose what I wanted or didn't want from
what my success has brought me," she says, "I would choose not
to have the celebrity. I don't think I'm very good at it." She
isn't. She doesn't like getting fussed over. When strangers
approach her, she is often cool to the point of brusqueness. All
she divulges about her private life is that she recently moved
to San Francisco and lives there in a rented house with her
sister.
</p>
<qt>
<l>"They're tryin' to dig into my soul</l>
<l>And take away the spirit of my god"</l>
</qt>
<p> Her performance style reflects her reticence. There is no
chatter, no dancing, no fireworks. Yet she is capable of
creating an intimacy with the audience that more gregarious
performers cannot duplicate. At an outdoor concert for the
homeless in Washington this fall, she stood atop a six-story
platform facing 40,000 people. When she played the first few
bars of Fast Car, the fidgety audience grew quiet, as though she
were singing a lullaby to a baby.
</p>
<p> Chapman is one of a handful of black recording artists whose
music directly addresses blacks' concerns. Yet her audience, the
people who buy her records, are by and large white,
upper-middle-class baby boomers. She says she is speaking to and
for the disenfranchised, but they do not listen to her.
</p>
<p> Urban contemporary radio stations, or what people in the
record business call "black stations," rarely play her music.
A Chapman tune on an urban contemporary station is about as
common as a rap song on classical radio. This is primarily
because it does not fit into the dance-and-funk formula of those
stations. But Chuck D., a member of the controversial rap group
Public Enemy, says the reasons have less to do with genre than
with soul. "Black people cannot feel Tracy Chapman, even if they
got beat over the head with it 35,000 times," he told Rolling
Stone. The implication is that her music is too precious, too
bland, too white.
</p>
<p> But Salim Muwakkil, an editor for the Chicago biweekly In
These Times, who has written about Chapman, says blacks are
uncomfortable with her not because she's too white, but because
she's too black. "There's a reverse prejudice in the black
community," he says. "The Michael Jackson syndrome is strong.
She refuses to disguise her racial characteristics. Blacks are
uncomfortable with the lack of glitter." At the same time,
critics have suggested that Chapman is merely penance music for
yuppies; listening to her songs on their CDs is a way of
assuaging guilt about their own materialism.
</p>
<p> This kind of talk hurts Chapman, though she tries to conceal
it. "There are people who have gone as far as to say that I'm
not black or not part of the black musical tradition," she says.
"I don't have a problem with so-called black music as it is
today, which is mostly dance music, R. and B., and rap music.
But I don't think things are that way because that's the only
music that black people can respond to. I think the reason I
don't get played on black radio stations is because I don't fit
into their present format. And they're not willing to make a
space for me. I'm upset by what has been said because it doesn't
speak well of black people. You know, it basically says black
people don't respond in a cerebral manner to music, and that's
just not true."
</p>
<p> Chapman belongs to the tradition of black intellectuals
caught between the mainstream black audience that ignores them
and an elite white audience that supports them. Writers and
artists of the Harlem renaissance in the 1920s and black poets
from Langston Hughes to Amiri Baraka have often complained that
their principal audience and patrons were white liberals. "It
hurts you when your own people don't appreciate what you're
doing," says Henry Louis Gates, a Cornell University professor
of English. "John Coltrane heard that. Charlie Parker heard
that. I think that's the most painful feeling for a black
artist."
</p>
<p> She is trying to protect what she keeps inside. She wants
the music to speak for itself, while her manager and record
company would like her to be more outgoing. "I think I write
songs better than I give interviews," she says. She's right.
</p>
<p> Chapman has written hundreds of songs, more than she cares
to acknowledge. She keeps the lyrics and a chord chart in a
notebook, and often makes a cassette. "There are lots of things
that you never show anyone else. But they're basically exercises
that teach you something about writing."
</p>
<p> "I'll save my soul, save myself. "
</p>
<p> "When I was a kid and I'd listen to records," she recalls,
"I used not to be able to understand what they were saying. I
thought they had done that purposely. So when I would play my
songs, I would sing so you couldn't necessarily understand the
lyrics." She laughs. "When I was playing for my sister and
mother, they would say, `I couldn't understand what you are
saying.' Then I explained to them that I thought it was supposed
to be that way. But I realized at that point that if I felt that
what I was saying was important, then it should be clear."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>