The task of any great artist
is to create days of future past, to make memories that will be looked
back upon one day with fond nostalgia. Heartfelt songs that invoke love,
play, heartache and reconciliation tend to stand that particular test of
time when it comes to R&B music. Due to pass that test with flying
colors is TVT Records’ new singer/songwriter Teedra Moses, whose debut
album Complex Simplicity harks back to the sassy, playful 1980s
tunes of Cherrelle while blending in her own new millennium brand of
soul.
The magnetic Teedra Moses
doesn’t shy away from expressing her emotional vulnerability,
describing a crush from afar on "Be Your Girl," while
alternatively tackling the other side of the game on her mid-tempo
lamentation "You'll Never Find (A Better Woman)"—where she’s
in love with a man more concerned with finance than romance. "I
wrote it in a way for women in the projects to get it, as far as it
comes off like this guy might be a drug dealer," says Teedra.
"I wrote it that way purposely just to catch that audience, ’cause
that’s what that song was supposed to be, a really street song. It’s
dealing with an experience I had with a man who was really concerned
with getting his money right. I didn’t need the money, I didn’t need
any of those things. I just needed [him]."
Appropriately enough,
Teedra Moses and her partner-in-crime producer Pauli Pol met at the tail
end of a bittersweet romance like those sprinkled throughout Complex
Simplicity. Best known for his production on Black Eyed Peas debut
single "Joints & Jam," Pauli Pol was referred to Teedra
Moses by a mutual friend as she prepared to put behind her days as an
assistant stylist to the stars in pursuit of her singing dream. "[Pauli]
did the entire album with me because I wanted it to be something really
personal and a union, like a marriage, not all over the place,"
says Teedra. The finished product—executive produced by both Pauli Pol
and Teedra Moses herself—is exactly the seamless combination she
intended; though made up of a variety of different feelings and moods,
their unity of vision shines through.
With an album inspired
overwhelmingly by her own direct personal experiences, Teedra Moses
harbors no regrets over her ride to success. Since her beginnings, born
and raised in New Orleans, her life has been grist for the creative mill
that produced Complex Simplicity: a labor of love and the
realization of a lifelong dream. "Some things you feel you have to
stick with, [but] it doesn’t
give you any
fulfillment," says Teedra. "With singing, creating music gives
me a fulfillment that I knew I wouldn’t find in anything else. So I
just decided to stop short in styling and start pursuing music."
Teedra Moses crafts her
songs just left of a hip-hop soul center, though upon hearing her
self-esteem ode "Doing You," fans of golden-age rap will crack
a smile at the familiar snatches of Eric B. & Rakim’s "My
Melody" running throughout. If anything, Teedra Moses resurrects
the
keeping-it-real,
girl-next-door style of R&B stylists from the 1980s, with now-school
additions like MCs Jadakiss (on "Better Woman") and Lil Jon
("Ooh Wee"). Ask about her influences and Teedra will respond
rapidly. "People like Teena Marie, Patrice Rushen, Caron Wheeler.
And the chick that sings, ‘Object of My Desire.’ " Starpoint,
you might answer. "That’s like my favorite song! My mom passed
not long ago and it made me very nostalgic for youthful things. I’m
just remembering that music. I can’t honestly say I listen to it a lot
right now. But it really moved me; that’s where I’m thinking right
now."
Raised by her
gospel-singing mother in New Orleans, Teedra Moses moved with her to
California, upon her parents’ separation. Though her brother and two
sisters were not inclined to pursue music, her mother was once a
successful gospel singer on the church revival circuit in the South.
Teedra Moses must, in turn, be inspiring to her siblings catching
earfuls of tunes like "Caution" and "For a Lifetime"
blaring from the speakers in the home in Los Angeles. "I think if I
never came to California, I wouldn’t be as refined about how I am
ghetto," Teedra laughs, "like in the way I write. Because L.A.
is a little bit more polished place. You adjust yourself with your
environment. I love L.A., and it’s like the sunshine and all that
makes you wanna be artsy."
Artsy perhaps, but never
pretentious or affected; that’s just not Teedra Moses’s style.
Having transcended humble beginnings writing brand-new lyrics to
favorite songs ("I started out writing over [Prince] music that I
liked, but then I started to just write songs and make the music in my
head") and emceeing at family homecomings ("I used to rap
exactly like Rakim, study his raps, write his words down and get his
flow down pat!"), Teedra Moses has found her voice and is more than
prepared to share it with the world.
But why Complex
Simplicity? "Because I feel like it’s the best way to explain
myself, my music, my experiences in life. Everything about me, I feel
like it’s complex simplicity. I’m truly blessed. I’m the simplest
person on the planet but everybody that knows me doesn’t feel the same
way."
However you cut it,
Teedra Moses and her music are simply beautiful, and there’s nothing
complex about that…
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