Chaka Khan Keep Your Head Up Download

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Feb 15, 2019 - Brandy, Tamia, Gladys Knight & Chaka Khan 1996. Keep Reachin' (feat. Songwriter Chaka Khan secured her high standing as the frontperson of Rufus. That Rufus could no longer contain their singer and co-songwriter. Check out Keep Your Head Up (Album Version) by Chaka Khan on Amazon Music. Stream ad-free or purchase CD's and MP3s now on Amazon.com. Chaka singing 'Keep Your Head Up' Chaka singing 'Keep Your Head Up' Skip navigation Sign in. Chaka Khan - Keep Your Head Up - Duration: 4:35. EssenceofJazz 16,674 views.

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About Chaka Khan

One of the most dynamic and accomplished artists to debut during the early '70s, singer and songwriter Chaka Khan secured her high standing as the frontperson of Rufus. A multiracial band that skillfully moved across soul, funk, rock, and jazz, they reached the mainstream with the slinking 'Tell Me Something Good' (1974), a Top Five pop hit that won a Grammy, and throughout the decade continuously placed albums within the upper reaches of the pop and R&B charts. As Rufus remained active, Khan launched her solo career with 'I'm Every Woman' (1978), an anthemic crossover disco smash that led to eight additional Top Ten R&B hits. Among those indelible works are 'Ain't Nobody' (with Rufus, 1983) and a cover of Prince's 'I Feel for You' (1984), high-tech productions that did not overshadow the inherent joy and power in Khan's voice. Versatile throughout her five-decade career, Khan has recorded numerous jazz standards, heard in concentrated form on albums such as Echoes of an Era (1982) and Classikhan (2004). Her covers-oriented set Funk This (2007) resulted in two of her ten Grammy awards. After a lengthy recording break, she returned with Hello Happiness (2019), an effervescent EP that ranged from retro-contemporary disco to fluid reggae.
Yvette Marie Stevens was raised in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago's South Side. Surrounded by music as a youngster, she formed her first group, the Crystalettes, at the age of 11. While in high school, she participated in Afro-Arts Theater, a collective that toured with Motown great Mary Wells, and as an eager political activist joined the Black Panther Party. By then, she was known as Chaka Karifi, a name given to her by a Yoruba priest. In 1969, she left the Black Panthers and dropped out of high school, and eventually joined Cash McCall's Lyfe, a band that also featured Hassan Khan, to whom she was eventually (and briefly) married. She left Lyfe to sing with the Babysitters, who had just suffered the loss of singer Baby Huey, but this period was similarly short and unsatisfying.
Chaka Khan found solid ground after she was heard and sought by former American Breed members Kevin Murphy and André Fischer, who were trying to gain ground with a fledgling act called Rufus. Khan joined the band, who in 1973 made their recorded debut with a self-titled album on the ABC label. Distinguished by Khan's radiant vocals and energizing stage presence, the band released six gold or platinum albums through the end of the decade and scored three Top Ten pop hits, including 'Tell Me Something Good,' which won a Grammy for Best R&B Performance. Reflective of Khan's growing stature, the band's billing constantly evolved during these years. Simply Rufus at first, they became Rufus Featuring Chaka Khan, and then Rufus & Chaka Khan, and ultimately Rufus & Chaka.
At some point in 1978, possibly the week in July when Quincy Jones topped the R&B chart with 'Stuff Like That,' featuring lead vocals from Chaka Khan and Ashford & Simpson, it became evident that Rufus could no longer contain their singer and co-songwriter. Khan had a pile of additional extracurricular credits on recordings by the likes of Stephen Bishop, Chicago, the Gap Band, Joni Mitchell, and Lenny White, but they were comparatively modest. 'Stuff Like That,' combined with the ever-brightening spotlight in Rufus, left her truly poised for a breakout. Khan signed a deal with Warner Bros. and that October stepped out with Chaka. Establishing a lengthy partnership with producer and arranger Arif Mardin, the album featured 'I'm Every Woman,' an elegant disco anthem, written by Ashford & Simpson, that topped the R&B chart and reached number 21 on the Hot 100. While it departed from Khan's output with Rufus, the LP reaffirmed her Chicago roots with an update of 'Love Has Fallen on Me,' composed by Charles Stepney, who produced the song for the Rotary Connection's Hey Love.
Instant solo success notwithstanding, Khan rejoined Rufus for the Quincy Jones-produced Masterjam, the band's fourth and final album to top the R&B chart. Only a few months after it was first racked, Khan returned in March 1980 with her second solo album, Naughty. Another soaring Ashford & Simpson piece, 'Clouds,' was its biggest hit, peaking at number ten on the R&B chart (with two voices of the Houston family, Cissy and pre-fame daughter Whitney, heard in the background). Khan's third straight Top Ten R&B solo album, What Cha' Gonna Do for Me, was out the next April. The title song, originally recorded by Average White Band, became Khan's second R&B chart-topper. She and Rufus also reconvened that year for Camouflage.
Broader and favorable stylistic reaches were made during 1982 and 1983. First was Echoes of an Era, a set of jazz standards recorded with Freddie Hubbard, Joe Henderson, Chick Corea, Stanley Clarke, and Lenny White. Next came a self-titled solo album with a hit version of 'Got to Be There' (popularized by Michael Jackson), a slick bebop medley, and a Rick James collaboration. Last and most popular was Rufus & Chaka Khan's double live/studio set Stompin' at the Savoy. Among the new studio recordings occupying its fourth side was the band's last R&B number one, 'Ain't Nobody,' also a number 22 pop hit. Remarkably, all three of the 1982-1983 projects earned Khan a Grammy. 'Bebop Medley' took Best Vocal Arrangement. The self-titled album won Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female. 'Ain't Nobody' was awarded Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal.
Having shown a knack for recording imaginative cover versions, Khan took it to another level in 1984 with an electro-funk revamp of Prince's 'I Feel for You.' Featuring Melle Mel and Stevie Wonder, it became Khan's biggest solo single, topping the R&B chart and peaking at number three on the pop chart. Certified gold by the RIAA, the single also made Khan a repeat winner of the Grammy for Best R&B Performance, Female. There were three additional charting singles off the platinum album of the same title, including the ballad 'Through the Fire,' co-written and produced by David Foster, providing Khan with a major adult contemporary staple. Following respectively in 1986 and 1988 were Destiny, highlighted by the Scritti Politti collaboration 'Love of a Lifetime,' and CK, containing a wide range of material involving Prince, Womack & Womack, and Brenda Russell. Khan all the while had a hand in other recordings, such as Robert Palmer's 'Addicted to Love' and Steve Winwood's 'Higher Love.' (The former was recorded originally as a duet; Khan's label objected, but she did receive credit for her vocal arrangement.) Additionally, at the end of the decade, Quincy Jones revisited 'I'll Be Good to You,' the original version of which he had produced for the Brothers Johnson. The update, with Khan joined by Ray Charles, went number one R&B and resulted in Khan's fifth Grammy within the R&B Performance categories.
Khan's last studio album for Warner Bros. arrived in 1992 as The Woman I Am, the recording of which reunited her with Arif Mardin. Also on board was Scritti Politti's David Gamson, who produced 'Love You All My Lifetime,' nearly a number one R&B hit. The album earned Khan another Grammy for Best R&B Performance. During the next three years, Khan recorded a follow-up titled Dare You to Love Me. Warner Bros. did not accept the challenge. The label shelved the album, tacked a few of its songs to the end of the 1996 anthology Epiphany: The Best of Chaka Khan, and dispersed other material from the sessions to soundtracks, including the blockbuster Waiting to Exhale. This all prompted Khan to bolt from the major-label system and join up with Prince, another artist whose Warner relationship was contentious. Khan's lone album for her friend's NPG label, Come 2 My House, was released in 1998.
During the first couple years of the following decade, Khan was featured on the charting De La Soul single 'All Good?' and wrote an autobiography, Chaka! Through the Fire. In 2004, she collected another Grammy, this time for performing Marvin Gaye's 'What's Going On' with the Funk Brothers in the documentary Standing in the Shadows of Motown. Later that year, she returned to jazz standards with Classikhan, issued globally through various independent labels. Another change of direction was made with Funk This, a mixture of covers and originals with production from Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis. The album won the 2007 Grammy for Best R&B Album, while highlight 'Disrespectful' won Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals. Khan continued collaborative work and received more honors, including one from her hometown, which renamed a street Chaka Khan Way. Khan's next solo release, 'Like Sugar,' arrived in 2018. An EP of similarly upbeat, groove-oriented makeup, Hello Happiness, followed in 2019, and like the preceding single was produced by Switch and Sarah Ruba Taylor. ~ Andy Kellman

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Chaka Khan
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 17, 1982
Recorded1982
GenreR&B, funk, soul
Length39:02
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerArif Mardin
Chaka Khan chronology
Echoes of an Era
(1982)
Chaka Khan
(1982)
The Very Best of Rufus featuring Chaka Khan
(1982)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Robert ChristgauB+ [2]

Chaka Khan is the eponymous fourth solo album by AmericanR&B/funk singer Chaka Khan, released on the Warner Bros. Records label in 1982.

Overview[edit]

An excellent album from Chaka Khan, mixing tingling uptempo tunes with her characteristic soaring, glorious vocals. 'Got to Be There' reached number five on the R&B charts, but it actually wasn't the album's high point. That was the marvelous 'Be Bop Medley,' which later led hardcore jazz purist Betty Carter to proclaim Khan the one female singer working outside the jazz arena with legitimate improvising credentials.
— Ron Lynn, Allmusic[3]

Two singles were released from Chaka Khan: the Michael Jackson cover 'Got to Be There' (US Pop #67, US R&B #5) and 'Tearin' It Up' (US R&B #48), the latter also as a 12' single including an extended remix (7:21) as well as an instrumental version (8:07), both mixed by Larry Levan and included on Warner Music Japan's 1999 compilation Dance Classics of Chaka Khan. The album track 'Slow Dancin' was a funky ballad duet with Rick James. On Billboard's charts, the album reached #5 on Black Albums and #52 on Pop Albums. The 'Be Bop Medley' won producer Arif Mardin and Khan a Grammy Award in 1984 in the Best Vocal Arrangement For Two Or More Voices category.

Following the release of the Chaka Khan album and the greatest hits package The Very Best of Rufus featuring Chaka Khan, Khan reunited with the band Rufus later that year for one final album together, the double live/studio set Stompin' at the Savoy - Live (1983). Her next solo album I Feel for You followed in 1984.

Despite its many accolades and artistic achievements the Chaka Khan album remained unreleased on CD in both the United States and Europe, and was only available as an import from Japan,[4][5][6][7] until it was finally issued on CD in the UK in 2010 as part of a Five disc set containing Khan's first five solo albums.[8]

Chaka Khan Videos

Track listing[edit]

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1.'Tearin' It Up'Bunny Sigler, Jane Lumibao6:39
2.'Slow Dancin' (featuring Rick James)Loz Netto5:22
3.'Best In The West'Dominic Bugatti, Frank Musker4:00
4.'Got to Be There'Elliot Willensky3:50
5.'Be Bop Medley: 'Hot House' / 'East Of Suez (Come On Sailor)' / 'Epistrophy (I Wanna Play)' / 'Yardbird Suite' / 'Con Alma' / 'Giant Steps'Tadd Dameron / Lou Stein / Thelonious Sphere Monk / Charlie Parker / Dizzy Gillespie / John Coltrane5:22
6.'Twisted'Colin Campsie, George McFarlane4:20
7.'So Not To Worry'Mark McMillan5:00
8.'Pass It On (A Sure Thing) (Pasalo Esta Seguro)'Lalomie Washburn, Tony Maiden5:04

Personnel[edit]

All chaka khan songs
  • Chaka Khan - vocals, backing vocals
  • Steve Ferrone - drums & hand claps track: 1, drums tracks: 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
  • Lenny Underwood - electric piano track: 1
  • Paul Jackson Jr. - electric guitar tracks: 1, 2, 3, 4
  • Sammy Figueroa - percussion tracks: 1, 3
  • Robbie Buchanan - Moog bass synthesizer, Prophet and Jupiter synthesizers track: 1, keyboards & synthesizers track: 2, 4, 6, keyboards & bass synthesizers track: 3, electric piano & synthesizers track: 5, piano & synthesizers tracks: 7, 8
  • Michael Brecker - alto saxophone solo track: 1
  • Hamish Stuart - vocal ad libs track: 1, background vocals track: 7
  • Alvin Fields - low voice track: 1
  • Rick James - vocals track: 2
  • Will Lee - bass tracks: 2, 6, 8, background vocals track: 7
  • Bob Christianson - additional OBX synthesizer tracks: 3, 4, vocoder & additional synthesizers track: 5 ('Con Alma')
  • Kenny Kosek - fiddle track: 3
  • Robert Bonfiglio - harmonica track: 3
  • Eric Weissberg - steel guitar & jaw harp track: 3; sitar track: 5
  • Hiram Bullock - guitar tracks: 5, 7, 8, rhythm guitar track: 6
  • Seyhun Çelik - darbuka track: 5 ('East Of Suez')
  • Joe Henderson - tenor saxophone track: 5
  • Ray Gomez - lead guitar track: 6
  • Anthony Jackson - bass track: 7
  • Dave Tofani - alto saxophone track: 8
  • Mark Stevens - tube voice track: 8

Production[edit]

  • Arif Mardin - record producer, musical arranger (rhythm) tracks: 1, 2, 3, musical arranger track: 4, musical arranger & vocal arrangement track: 5
  • Randy Brecker - musical arranger (horns) track: 1
  • Robbie Buchanan - musical arranger (bass part) track: 1, musical arranger (rhythm) tracks: 2, 3, 6, 7, 8. musical arranger tracks: 4, 5
  • Danne Lemelle - musical arranger (horns) track: 2
  • Chaka Khan - vocal arrangement & special lyrics track: 5

References[edit]

  1. ^https://www.allmusic.com/album/r10811/review
  2. ^Christgau, Robert. 'Chaka Khan review'. Robert Christgau.com. Retrieved 2011-10-09.
  3. ^Lynn, Ron. 'Chaka Khan (Review)'. Allmusic.
  4. ^Discogs.com entry
  5. ^Discogs.com entry
  6. ^Discogs.com entry
  7. ^Discogs.com entry
  8. ^'Chaka Khan: Original Album Series' Amazon.co.uk

External links[edit]

Chaka Khan Keep Your Head Up Download Free

  • Chaka Khan at Discogs
Chaka Khan Keep Your Head Up Download

Chaka Khan Keep Your Head Up Download Video

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