Jaheim Bio
Jaheim Hoagland's story is one of struggle, strength and salvation. And on his dynamic
Warner Bros. Records/Divine Mill debut album Ghetto Love, people worldwide-young
and old-will hear and empathize as they view and experience the life of a naïve boy
who is slowly transformed into a focused and tenacious man.
"When I came in the game, I was a newborn. I was blind to everything," says the 21-year-New Jersey native. I took my time and sacrificed things. And a bunch of pieces
came together. It's been hectic, but I made it through the storm."
Ghetto Love is riveting rhythm and blues balanced by hints of hypnotic hip hop beats.
Ghetto Love is Jaheim's soul-searching diary that takes one through the caged-bird
battles of boyhood and on to the experienced, free-soaring wings of manhood. On the
engulfing "Looking for Love," Jaheim's raw vocal prowess flies above a funky and
smooth bassline as he tells of his slow and careful search for love. With a hook
illustrating his lust-filled frustration he sings, "Looking for love in all the wrong
places/been around seen a lot of pretty faces/I know I'm the one for you/Only lying I
would do is in the bed with you." Jaheim explains: "I've been looking for love for a while.
And I got my heart broke once. So it's hard for me to trust again," he says. "All I want is
happiness."
Eventually the songbird does find his sunshine, but not without a fight. The brassy
trumpet punches of "Let it Go," jab straight to the face of the still-emotionally-hooked
ex-boyfriend of Jaheim's new love interest. And as Jah's heat boils, while intensely
crooning of his vow to commit a crime of passion, Missy Elliott's prodigy Lil' Mo lends a
helping production hand to the radio-friendly vibes of "Finders Keepers." "This song is
like I really got to explain it to [the ex-boyfriend] now. I'm like, 'You lost, you had
something good going on, but you wanted to act up and now she's with me. So finders
keepers, losers weepers,'" Jah contends. "That happened to me a long time ago."
But Jaheim does win the female fight and ultimately moves on to keep his love
relationship tight. On the emotionally mature ballad "Waiting on You," Jaheim collaborates
with Ms. Jones to create a wonderful melodic promise of patience and romantic
persistence that will definitely be a serenade for every special woman. And after much
waiting, Jaheim falls in love, telling the world of his fluttering heart on "Remarkable."
Here, songstress and University/Warner Bros. Records artist Terry Dexter joins Jah for
an incredible tribute to life-long commitment. Written by RL from the multi-platinum
R&B trio Next, "Remarkable" will surely be a wedding song for many.
From cheerful dreams of wifeys at home and shorties on the side on tracks like
"Happiness," to opting for monogamy and eternal bonds on the
open-souled realization of "Forever," Ghetto Love illustrates the life and times of a scared youngster turned
fearless adult. Jaheim brings pure, real and simple skill to the music of Ghetto Love.
Jaheim has been singing since he could speak. As a child growing up
in the projects of
New Brunswick, New Jersey, Jah's life was one of tribulation. At the age of two, death
took his father's soul before Jah had a chance to truly know him. Raised in a single
parent household, Jah would grow susceptible to the inevitable ugliness of street-life,
bouncing in and out of trouble, always following and never truly knowing his path. But
music was Jah's saviour and relief from stress. "Singing was my way out," he says. "I
focused on teaching myself how to sing by keeping Luther Vandross in my ear all day
long. Everywhere I go I sing." Other R&B and gospel musical influences filled the ears
of Jaheim's young body and old soul: his one-time professional singing grandfather,
older brother, and notables like Marvin Gaye, Sam Cooke, and Stevie Wonder. These
were mixed with the sounds of poetic hip hop artists like The Notorious BIG, Tupac, and
Mobb Deep. His inspirations echoed through every talent show that Jaheim touched
and won-from Uptown Comedy Jam singing bouts to a three-time winning streak at
The Apollo at the age of 15. It seemed that Jah's vocal triumphs were endless.
But tragedy never ceased to follow and at the age of 17, Jah's mother died. "When I lost
my Mom I thought I lost everything," he says. "But I had to be strong for my little
brother…I'm the strength now." While relentlessly shopping his demo tape and attaining minor singing fame aboard New Jersey Transit trains, he dropped a demo at Newark, New Jersey's Naughty Gear store. It would fatefully fall into the hands of super production wiz kid Kay Gee (who's propelled phenomenal acts like Zhane, Next, and his own group Naughty By Nature to
platinum-plus success). A week later Jaheim was asked to audition for Kay Gee. Two
years later through his company Divine Mill, Kay Gee would help Jaheim sign a deal
with Warner Bros. Records. Now, another two years later Jaheim's Ghetto Love, is
released.
Ghetto Love features Kay Gee as executive producer and is filled with majestic ballads
and uptempo pleasers written by Blackstreet's Eric Williams, Next's RL, Darren and Cliff
Lighty, as well as the power-packed creations of Jaheim himself.
It mixes rambunctious R&B with hardcore hip hop, stylistically portraying the world of a
boy who's witnessed street-stories lived out in view of death, jail, poverty and life-saving
ghetto love. After 19 tracks of the melodic diary of a lost-and-found man, Jaheim comes
to epitomize the meaning of his name: God's wisdom.
"I used to be a sheep with wolves around, but I was born again," he says. "I thought if I
took my time and got right with God first and put Him ahead of everything, He'd bless
me. I know He's got a job for me to do. Like, if I can get everybody to sit down, be quiet,
and listen, I'll touch the whole world." And with Ghetto Love, Jaheim is well on his way
to doing just that.
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