BIO
After
spending the last three years of his career traveling to towns big and
small, meeting with and performing for people of all sorts, Carl
Thomas has taken some profound social notes. "In the
years since my last album, Emotional, there's been a lot of
serious things happening in the world and I don't think people feel as
safe as they once did," the R&B singer postulates.
"People have lost a sense of security. So what I'm trying to do
is get back to the business of feel good music."
But by "feel good," Carl
means to strike people much deeper than merely on the surface; no,
what the passionate crooner seeks to do this time with his new Bad
Boy Records CD, Let’s
Talk About It is massage souls. He believes that music,
like the variety of sultry and surprisingly upbeat soul found on Let’s
Talk About It, will serve to free folk from the weight
of anxiety and tension they face.
Undoubtedly,
many real Carl
Thomas fans may find themselves doing just that, once they
embrace the understanding passion of "Make
It Alright" or the gentle, acoustic guitar glide
of "Let
Me Know." Unlike
the last go round, Carl
has been able to put his production talent to work on Let’s
Talk About It, the results are nothing short of
magnetic. And his honesty as a songwriter who focuses on themes of
love is transformative.
“We
all have a higher and lower nature. And so I'm trying with this music
to reflect my higher. I'm
not going to pretend that I've only sat on one side of the
fence." This time
there is such a personal effect from Carl's
songwriting and production that a few listens draw one in so close you
feel as though you can reach out and touch him.
Along with members of his newly founded production team Thom
Tunes, (Elijah
“Veto” Harris & Milton Thornton), Carl
produced and co-wrote half of the CD including the sensual "Baby
Maker" and "Dreamer,"
a pretty self-reflection filled with poetry.
I
used to love to dream out loud/stand in the middle of an open crowd/
and everybody would see me/ but I was just a little project child?
Let’s
Talk About It also includes production by The
Hit Men (P.
Diddy, Mario “Yellow Man” Winans & Deric “D-Dot” Angeletti)
and Mike
City.
Until
this song, it was hard to imagine Carl
as the Chicago-born man-child destined to reshape R&B, but this
kind of writing proves his depth and colorful vision.
"These songs were the ones I just had to get off my
chest," Carl
acknowledges. "And it was really very different to take complete
responsibility of them. It wasn't just about going into a booth. I had
to nurture these."
In
fact, nurturing is second nature to Carl
who now has a 4-year-old son.
And it is this passionate relationship with his child, that has
propelled his music to even greater heights. Carl
has always been a thoughtful musician, yet fatherhood has sparked even
deeper feelings, thoughts that have forced him to challenge the urban
music status quo. "What's wrong with talking about things that
affect the world and how it connects to music? Nothing." Carl
affirms. "The way things are have little or nothing to do with
the way things should be. As much as music can elevate, it can
pervert. And to an
extent, music has perverted the minds of our children. That's
something we have to admit. So, I say to myself, why not present
another option?
Carl’s
music adds a beautiful element to the Bad
Boy roster and his creative marriage with producer and Bad
Boy CEO Sean
"Puffy" Combs is flourishing.
In fact, that union is better than ever Carl
says, and has added unique touches on the new CD that is sure to stir
the senses of an even wider audience. Let’s
Talk About It’s first single, the catchy, "She
Is," is one of Puffy's
productions and it's a song one can't help but move to. "I'm a
lot more concerned about people dancing to my music than I was last
time," the once balladeer-only continues. “It's the importance
of the dance release, that's really good for the soul."
It
is this kind of introspection Carl
prides himself in. It's what he believes sets him apart from the slew
of contemporary R&B singers on the scene. "My belief system
is a little different than a lot of men. I believe there is a Divine
Universal Order and when you make decisions outside of this divine
order, your humanity comes into question. I'm deeply concerned with
fair play and I try to approach song writing in the same, balanced
manner. How I feel about my place in life affects everything it
directly affects my music. Yeah, at times I am a sentimental
sap-sucker. I can't help that. But many of the songs I write are not
about me at the present time. Many of the songs are about the me I'm
trying to be."
And
just who exactly is this new Carl
Thomas trying to be? Carl
is planted firmly in the tradition of the soulfulness you've come to
know from him. The concept of Let’s
Talk About It, is about becoming aware of how we react
to different situations we are presented with in life, he affirms.
"More than anything, this music is about learning from ourselves,
touching our own souls, about being proactive and not being afraid to
talk about it."
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