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The diverse sounds that
have been brewing in the
Caribbean island decades on end offer innovative new music with not only
a distinct Jamaican flavor, but everything from gospel, to country, to
contemporary R&B and hip-hop. And it’s out of this
fusion of styles (dancehall, R&B, and singer-songwriter soul) that
sisters Nyanda and Nailah Thorbourne (otherwise known as Brick and
Lace), have been born. No stranger to the music industry in
both the and , the two in their Geffen debut, Love Is Wicked, features
production from the likes of Akon (Universal Records recording artist),
Raphael Saadiq (Mary J. Blige, Tony! Toni! Tone!, Bilal), Tony Kelly
(Sean Paul, Shaggy, Lady Saw, Beenie Man), Full Force (Backstreet Boys,
), and Will.I.Am (Black Eyed Peas).
Raised in
Kingston by a father who is a professional gospel musician and a mother
who sang in the choir, the two always had music around them. “We were
never religious musicians,” explains Nyanda, “But the church is
where we first started singing in front of an audience.” From there
the two began singing and recording together, working their way into the
local dancehall scene as teens. In addition they sought gigs singing
back up for more established acts. Their foray into that world lead to
them eventually performing at Reggae Sunsplash and even opening for
Roberta Flack. Later they were even invited by Lauryn Hill to sing back
ups for her as well as perform on her forth-coming second album.
“Nyanda is the edgy one and Nailah is the more R&B one” says
Nailah, laughing, “But you never know, on any given day it can change
who’s Brick and who’s Lace.” And it’s this dichotomy that yields
their superior songwriting. “We each have different
experiences but we come together and collaborate,” says Nailah, who
actually plays guitar as well, and helped work with their producers on
melodies. “The process of collaboration is really one of my favorite
things, and we try to avoid having firm roles.”
“We have so many influences,” says Nyanda, in a thick, but sweet
Jamaican accent. “We try and learn from them, their melodies and
songwriting, to create something entirely new.” And that’s exactly
what they do, infusing Jamaican rhythms and dancehall styling to
R&B, and coupling it with a ride-or-die-chick aesthetic, the sisters
concoct a delicious pop formula. Songs like “Get That Clear,”
their infectious Akon produced banger and first single, with it’s
syncopated handclaps, and modulated voice on the hook, and “Love Is
Wicked” with it’s tag-team of hard chanting and sensual singing,
exemplify the mesmerizing style. But the girls are more than catchy
hooks and sensual melodies, and no song demonstrates this better than
“Why’d You Lie,” their Full Force produced track which samples the
Simon & Garfunkel classic, “The Boxer.” “All of our songs are
based on experiences that are true to us,” says Nyanda, “We just
take the situations that we’ve been through or that our friends have
been through. Those things are universal and that’s what makes records
like ‘Why’d You Lie’ work.”
The sisters got their break a little over a year ago when they signed
with their current production company, 180 Music, who shopped their
music around the states and eventually signed them to Geffen. “I think
that the girls are incredibly talented, and that goes without saying,”
says their manager Marcus Grant, “Beyond the singing and the
songwriting, both of which they do very well, Brick & Lace are stars
and there is no ceiling to their potential.”
More
on Brick & Lace
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