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Artist:Sade [ more ]
Song:Soldier Of Love
Album:Soldier Of Love [ info ]
Released:2010
Last Played:Mar 26, 2011 - 22:40
Avg. Rating:6.2  (Total Ratings: 256)
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Ratings Dist:
1 votes: 9 (3.5%)2 votes: 15 (5.9%)3 votes: 23 (9%)4 votes: 16 (6.3%)5 votes: 15 (5.9%)6 votes: 25 (9.8%)7 votes: 67 (26%)8 votes: 59 (23%)9 votes: 18 (7%)10 votes: 9 (3.5%)
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68 comments for this song:spacerLog in above to post your comment

handyrae
(Zero Point Field)
Posted: Feb 23, 2011 - 11:39 

It does get a bit boring by the end.
floydoftherocks
(Frisco)
Posted: Feb 23, 2011 - 11:37 

this is really cool!! glad to hear it on RP.
GuiltyFeat
Posted: Jan 23, 2011 - 05:19 

I remember hearing Sade for the first time when Your Love Is King was being played as a new release on Capital Radio in London circa 1984. She sounded like something from a different age then. Still does.
treatment_bound
(Duluth to Madison)
Posted: Oct 20, 2010 - 11:46 

A decent Sade article reprinted from today's Chicago Tribune. I wish I could include the photo as well, but no such luck.  Let me just say she still looks pretty good for somebody on the north side of 50.

>>>By Nelson George, Special to the Los Angeles Times
October 16, 2010

Reporting from New York - - Helen Folasade Adu, a.k.a. pop soul chanteuse Sade, had been a complete vegetarian for nine years when she spotted some lambs on her farm in England.

"I hate to say this," she intones in the warm, husky voice beloved by her fans for the last 25 years, "but when I saw these lambs gamboling through the field and I started to salivate and I thought I should get to the tandoori shop quick before I pull a leg off one of the lambs. It's weird. I just thought the natural thing to do right now was to eat meat. I went through the whole veggie period thinking that was a good thing, and maybe it was for that time."

This whimsical shift in the 51-year-old singer's eating habits provides some insight into the decision making behind one of the more enduring and idiosyncratic career paths in pop music. Since their debut album, "Diamond Life" in 1984, the band Sade, which also includes guitarist-saxophonist Stuart Matthewman, keyboardist Andrew Hale, and bassist Paul Denman, has sold over 50 millions albums worldwide, won three Grammys and had a No. 1 album this year with "Soldier of Love."

Yet after a steady stream of recordings in the '80s ("Diamond Life," "Promise," "Stronger Than Pride"), they have released only three albums in the last 18 years. The gap between "Lover's Rock" and "Soldier" was nine years.The band has retained its following, however, with particularly strong support from African-American listeners, for whom the half-Nigerian, half- English vocalist has remained both a sex symbol and an icon of elegance in a rather unrefined musical era. Dressed in black corduroy jeans and black silk blouse with her long black hair hanging loose around her shoulders, Sade more than lives up to her image during a conversation at a venerable New York hotel.

As her sudden renewed desire for meat suggests, this lady trusts, and is guided by, her impulses, and has a sense of life's priorities for which commerce is but one consideration. A prime example of her philosophy is the recently announced American tour, which begins in June and arrives at the Staples Center on Aug. 19, a good year and a half after the February release of "Soldier of Love."

When it is suggested that the more logical time to tour in support of that album would have been this summer when the album was still hot, she smiles and acknowledges "that would have been the more sensible thing to do promotion-wise. But I just wasn't ready to do that.... Sometimes I think you have to go with what you think is right as opposed to being a promotional tool for the album."

Part of the delay is practical. It will allow Sade's 13-year-old daughter Ila to travel with her mother and see her perform live in concert for the first time. But it also reflects the singer's own view of herself and how she works best creatively. "Whatever I'm doing, I'm in that moment and I'm doing it. The rest of the world's lost. If I'm cooking some food or making soup, I want it to be lovely. If not, what's the point of doing it?"

She speculates that gaps between records and tours have been one secret to the band's longevity. "Without them we probably would have been d-i-v-o-r-c-e-d a long time ago," she says, laughing. "Actually, the gaps make making a record such a special privilege."

The tour, which will kick off with a European leg in the spring, will be in large arenas, just as the band's 2001 tour was. Prior to that the band regularly played venues like the Greek Theatre, which seemed optimal settings for the sexy, minor-key intimacy of Sade's catalog.

"When you play arenas you can create whatever you want," she says of the decision. "At a theater the height of the stage and the limitations of the theater can make you feel more separate from the audience. I think we can create a feeling of being in a theater by the nature of the production and intimacy of the moment."

Back in '84 when Sade broke through with "Smooth Operator," color was a very contentious issue in pop music. It was the days of MTV when black artists' ability to penetrate the playlist was limited by both their R&B-based music and their dark skin; Sade's multi-culti looks and exotic heritage helped the band cross over in an era when many black artists could not.

Though there is a long tradition of mixed-race performers being identified as "black" in the United States, coming from England Sade was able to embrace both sides of her racial identity. In so doing she became a rare symbol of comfortable multi-culturalism on this side of the Atlantic.

"I noticed the reactions when I first came over here," she recalls of her early trips to America. "London was a really multi-racial city ... It's incredible how comfortable people are with race there. But I was surprised when I came to America the first time. It was very, very rare to see black and white couples holding hands."

As for her own role as a symbol of mixed-race normalcy, "I like to think that our popularity transcends that kind of caste system. But then when I was young and watched a game on the telly with my mom and brother, it didn't matter which country the person came from, if they were black we wanted them to win. The same if it was two boxers, the black one had to win. People do bask in their reflection."

When asked how she'd identify herself today, Sade ruminates. Finally she replies, "I'd probably say more black than white because I'm more like my dad or my granny and less like my mother, who's white. Maybe if I was more like my mother I'd feel differently ... I look a lot like my father and his mother. What's interesting is that I spent my life away from my dad. When I was 20 I went and stayed with him solidly for a month to six weeks. Just me and him, and it was very intense. What I discovered was myself even in his choices and taste and mannerisms. I realized I haven't just inherited him socially, but his physical attributes."

In an age of artists who blog and tweet opinions, heartaches and promotional messages on an hourly basis, Sade, predictably, demurs. She is not on Twitter or Facebook, though the band has an official Facebook page. She does, however, search the Web "looking for bricks and railing" for her farm.

One 21st century music business convention she does acknowledge enjoying is sampling. "When it comes to sample clearances, I'm probably the cheapest chick in the west," she says, quite amused by that idea. She has, however, turned down many prominent MCs, including Jay -Z, who have wanted to rhyme over her beats or do "collabos" with her singing a hook on a hip-hop track.

"I'm too scared," she says. "They'll find me out. It's like 'The Wizard of Oz.' They'll find out there's nothing there. As for collaborations, I'm collaborating with the band and do what we do. I see myself as a member of this band who does these songs that we write."

SlinkyJ
Posted: Oct 20, 2010 - 10:44 

LOVE Sade and how well both she and her music stand up to the passage of time! I think this song requires a few listens to really grow on you...give it time.
And btw, Sade requires NO autotune. Not sure what that commenter was hearing.
dyharenas
(Cerro Apoquindo)
Posted: Oct 20, 2010 - 10:43 

I think she's special in the way she conveys "feeling", but it's not happening for me here.
BowTieDad
(Stockholm, Sweden)
Posted: Oct 20, 2010 - 10:42 

female Prince on sleeping pills, extremely boring
Cynaera
(South of Neanderthal)
Posted: Aug 17, 2010 - 16:56 

I like Sade, and this is quite a departure for her. Less subtle, more "rock-band" and message-oriented. I like it, though.  It's very compelling. {#Mrgreen}
vandal
(arriving somewhere, but not here. . .)
Posted: Aug 17, 2010 - 16:55 

How Duran Duran of Sade (circa 1988's "Big Thing")  Updated to include modern hip-hop production techniques it sounds kinda cool. . .
donnyballgame
(41*53'36.29N 87*38'20.43W)
Posted: Aug 02, 2010 - 14:31 

Seems to be the point. Soldier = Army = Cadence = Drum Corps.

 
RParadise wrote:
Am I the only one who thinks the drums are too far forward in this mix?
 


Netto
(Khimki, Russia)
Posted: Aug 02, 2010 - 14:24 

 gofishbish wrote:
sexy cover.  sucky song.
 
Cover sucky too. All the best Sade imho is «Diamond Life» & «Promise»

scrubbrush
Posted: Aug 02, 2010 - 14:24 

Ozzy to Sade; definition of "eclectic"
Stefen
(West Hollywood, CA)
Posted: Jun 09, 2010 - 16:52 

It took awhile to get used to that urban music feel, but now I like it a bunch.
gofishbish
(somewhere between the keyboard and the chair)
Posted: Jun 09, 2010 - 16:51 

sexy cover.  sucky song.
jagdriver
(Just a nod and a wink south of Paradise)
Posted: Jun 09, 2010 - 16:48 

She always has a set of crack musicians, but her vocals are just so flat and delivered without any enthusiasm or emotion.
Canlistener
(Ontario Canada)
Posted: May 02, 2010 - 15:32 

This sounds like a 5 year old playing with Garage Band.  Friggin' painful and WAY too long...
redfern777
(Austin, TX)
Posted: May 02, 2010 - 15:30 

 topherg87 wrote:
6 > 7
seems to get better each time i hear it
 
Agreed!  7 > 8
Though, this cd is also in the car right now...so I've heard it several times now.  This, like the entire album, took a little time to grow on me.  But now, I'm really liking it.  Groove on...

scraig
(Santa Barbara, CA)
Posted: Apr 27, 2010 - 15:45 

love Sade, but this is theme music to CSI.
topherg87
(Austin, TX)
Posted: Apr 16, 2010 - 02:45 

6 > 7
seems to get better each time i hear it
jadewahoo
(Beautiful Earth)
Posted: Apr 12, 2010 - 09:13 

What a testament to Sade's artistry, that she can address something so deep with a song that, at first listen, seems so easy-listening. But let it seep into your bones and the panorama of pain being addressed comes creeping into the forefront. Amazing.
RParadise
(Hastings-on-Hudson, NY)
Posted: Apr 12, 2010 - 09:09 

Am I the only one who thinks the drums are too far forward in this mix?
fredriley
(Nottingham, UK)
Posted: Apr 12, 2010 - 09:09 

 Rafter101 wrote:
I love Sade, but am really, really hating this song.
 
I'm a fan too, but really like this 'edgier' number in contrast to her usual smoothville material. 7 from the Nottingham jury.

Rafter101
(Davis, California)
Posted: Apr 12, 2010 - 09:07 

I love Sade, but am really, really hating this song.
unclelonghair
Posted: Apr 12, 2010 - 09:06 

 bbryan wrote:
It's the sound of Sade and an army of producers...
 
An army of producers creating a soldier of love? LOL

mandolin
(...drifting...)
Posted: Apr 12, 2010 - 09:05 

 yclept wrote:
There's so much autotune used in this that I feel like I'm strapped into a shiatsu barcalounger.  This is not a good feeling.
 

...what?..

...no, that's her voice; she's amazing...
shutter
(You can't get here from there)
Posted: Apr 07, 2010 - 05:59 

Nice groove.
Albert1967
(Leusden, the Netherlands)
Posted: Apr 07, 2010 - 05:56 

 bbryan wrote:
It's the sound of Sade and an army of producers...
 
She could've been so much more than this . . . IMO.

Poster on my 80s wall. Give her a few Amy Winehouse tunes and see what she can do with it.
rpdevotee
Posted: Apr 05, 2010 - 02:54 

How is it that a musician can look and sound the same after 25+yrs???
rdo
(DC)
Posted: Apr 03, 2010 - 08:22 

 LastChance wrote:
Huh? This is Sade?

 

Yeah, like, this is not the Sade I remember from my teens.  I'm like, what??  {#Confused}
MojoJojo
(Indianapolis, IN USA)
Posted: Apr 03, 2010 - 08:22 

128k AAC feed, sub is thumpin, surround system doin it's thing, turned up loud. Enjoying it for what it is. 
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