Quiet storm

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Quiet storm is a radio format and genre of contemporary R&B, performed in a smooth, romantic, jazz-influenced style.[1] It was named after the title song on Smokey Robinson's 1975 album A Quiet Storm.[2]

The radio format was pioneered in 1976 by Melvin Lindsey, while he was an intern at the Washington, D.C. radio station WHUR-FM. It eventually became regarded as an identifiable subgenre of R&B.[3] Quiet storm was marketed to upscale mature African-American audiences during the 1980s, while falling out of favor with young listeners in the age of hip hop.[4]

History[]

Origins[]

Melvin Lindsey, a student at Howard University, with his classmate Jack Shuler, began as disc jockeys for WHUR in June 1976, performing as stand-ins for an absentee employee. Lindsey's on-air voice was silky smooth, and the music selections were initially old, slow romantic songs from black artists of the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, a form of easy listening which Lindsey called "beautiful black music" for African Americans.[5] The response from listeners was positive, and WHUR station manager Cathy Hughes soon gave Lindsey and Shuler their own show. The name of the show came from the Smokey Robinson song "Quiet Storm", from his 1975 album A Quiet Storm. The song developed into Lindsey's theme music which introduced his time slot every night. "The Quiet Storm" was four hours of melodically soulful music that provided an intimate, laid-back mood for late-night listening, and that was the key to its tremendous appeal among adult audiences. The format was an immediate success, becoming so popular that within a few years, virtually every station in the U.S. with a core black, urban listenership adopted a similar format for its graveyard slot.

In the San Francisco Bay Area, KBLX-FM expanded the night-time concept into a 24-hour quiet storm format in 1979. In the New York tri-state late night market, Vaughn Harper deejayed the quiet storm graveyard program for WBLS-FM which he developed with co-host Champaine in mid-1983. In 1993, Harper took ill and Champaine continued the program as Quiet Storm II.[6][7] Following in the footsteps of KBLX, Lawrence Tanter of KUTE in Greater Los Angeles changed his station to an all-day quiet storm format from January 1984 until September 1987, playing "a hybrid that incorporates pop, jazz, fusion, international, and urban music". Addressing the misconception that quiet storm was only for blacks, Tanter said his listenership was 40% black, 40% white, and 20% other races.[8] WLNR-FM in Chicago also changed in August 1985 to a 24-hour quiet storm program called "The Soft Touch", featuring more instrumental music and even straight-ahead jazz, a mix which sales manager Gregory Brown described as "not so laid-back" as other quiet storm shows. A notable feature of WLNR was that the four regular deejays were women.[8]

Success[]

Because of the popularity of his show, Lindsey saw his annual salary increase from $12,000 in 1977 to more than $100,000 in 1985.[9] After signing a million-dollar, five-year contract with rival Washington DC station WKYS, he left WHUR at the end of August 1985,[10] continuing the quiet storm format on WKYS for five years starting in November with a show called "Melvin's Melodies".[8] Part of Lindsey's original style was to mix different decades of music together, for instance playing a Sarah Vaughan ballad in between more modern numbers.[11] Lindsey died of AIDS in 1992 at the age of 36, but the quiet storm format he originated remains a staple in American radio programming. WHUR radio still has a quiet storm show, and many urban, black radio stations still reserve their late-night programming slots for quiet storm music. WHUR operator Howard University has registered "Quiet Storm" as a trademark for "entertainment services, namely, a continuing series of radio programs featuring music".[12]

Hughes later built on the success of WHUR's quiet storm format to found Radio One, a broadcasting company aimed at African Americans.[13]

Characteristics[]

Quiet storm was most popular as a programming niche with baby boomers from the mid-1970s to the early 1990s. During this era, it promoted a noticeable shift in the sound of R&B of the time. Quiet storm songs were in most cases devoid of any significant political commentary and maintained a strict aesthetic and narrative distance from issues relating to black urban life. Quiet storm appropriates R&B and soul "slow jams" and recontextualizes them into rotations with their peers and predecessors.[14]

Music journalist Jason King wrote, "Sensuous and pensive, quiet storm is seductive R&B, marked by jazz flourishes, 'smooth grooves,' and tasteful lyrics about intimate subjects. As disco gave way to the 'urban contemporary' format at the outset of the 1980s, quiet storm expanded beyond radio to emerge as a broad catchall super-genre."[4]

Ben Fong-Torres of Rolling Stone called quiet storm a "blend of pop, jazz fusion, and R&B ballads—all elegant and easy-flowing, like a flute of Veuve Clicquot champagne."[15]

Gender and sexuality in quiet storm[]

For some, the conception of quiet storm represented a shift in the gendered and sexualized musical landscapes of R&B and soul. Music journalist Eric Harvey claims that within the quiet storm genre, artists such as Luther Vandross were able to push the boundaries of gender normativity in both their sound and lyricism.[16]  Author Jason King notes that through the genre and his music more generally, "Vandross toys with dominant conventions of male sexuality without engaging in androgyny or any explicit forms of traditionally feminine embodiment."[17] Given the sensuality and "domesticity"[14] that the genre became recognized for, artists, particularly men, seemed to be awarded much more freedom in regards to expression of gender and sexuality, as opposed to what were viewed as more "masculine" genres.[16][18][19][20] Harvey went on to say: "This is one of the most important and overlooked aspects of the Quiet Storm format, and something that Vandross did so well: embrace a male form of domestic sensuality, a musical ideal previously exclusive to women."[14]

Quiet Storm’s Social, Economic, and Political Discourse[]

Quiet Storm’s emergence arrived at time when the US Black middle-class populations grew and the divide between the Black rich and poor was widening. “The black suburban population doubled between 1970 and 1986, and the number of blacks attending college increased 500 percent between 1960 and 1977”[21] Simultaneously, the Reagan administration's anti-Black policies furthered socio, economic and political oppression. The War on Drugs from Reagan's presidency marked the start of mass incarceration rates that disproportionately sought to jail thousands of Black Americans under low-level crimes with severe punishments. For that reason, critiques of Quiet Storm argue that Quiet Storm was apolitical because “it represented a retreat from social reality.” [22]

Radio[]

In the 1990s, Canadian adult contemporary station CFQR-FM in Montreal aired a Quiet Storm program featuring new-age music. At least two non-commercial FM stations, the community-based WGDR in Plainfield, Vermont, and its sister station, WGDH in Hardwick, Vermont (both owned by Goddard College), have been broadcasting a weekly, two-hour "Quiet Storm" program since 1998—a 50-50 mix of smooth jazz and soft R&B, presented in "Triple-A" (Album Adult Alternative) style, with a strong emphasis on "B" and "C" album tracks that most commercial stations often ignore.

In 2007, Premiere Radio Networks launched a nationally syndicated nightly radio program based upon the quiet storm format, known as The Keith Sweat Hotel. That program, in edited form, broadcasts under the Quiet Storm name (as The Quiet Storm with Keith Sweat) on WBLS in New York City.[23]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Anon. (November 2017). "Quiet Storm Brewing". In Tune Monthly. Retrieved September 15, 2018.
  2. ^ King 2007, p. 180.
  3. ^ Ripani 2006, p. 132.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b King 2007, p. 181.
  5. ^ Todd Beamon (February 10, 1987). "Durable Radio Format Survives Shift in Tastes". The New York Times.
  6. ^ Rich Schapiro (July 9, 2016). "'Quiet Storm' DJ Vaughn Harper, longtime WBLS staple, dies at 71". New York Daily News. Archived from the original on 2016-08-17. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  7. ^ David Hinckley (May 20, 2008). "Radio: Milestone for a vintage Champaine". New York Daily News.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b c Nelson George (October 4, 1986). "Quiet Storm Sweeps Black Radio". Billboard. Vol. 98 no. 40. pp. 1, 90. ISSN 0006-2510.
  9. ^ Ruben Castaneda (March 27, 1992). "Quiet Storm Radio Host Melvin Lindsey Dies at 36". Washington Post.
  10. ^ Jacqueline Trescott (September 5, 1985). "The Voice of the Evening". Washington Post.
  11. ^ Nelson George (December 20, 1986). "The Rhythm & Blues". Billboard. Vol. 98 no. 51. p. 25.
  12. ^ "Trademark Status & Document Retrieval". tarr.uspto.gov. Archived from the original on 2012-03-21.
  13. ^ Lynn Norment (May 2000). "Ms. Radio". Ebony. Vol. 55 no. 7. p. 100. ISSN 0012-9011.
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b c Eric Harvey (May 15, 2012). "The Quiet Storm". Pitchfork. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
  15. ^ King 2007, pp. 180–81.
  16. ^ Jump up to: a b "The Quiet Storm". Pitchfork. Retrieved 2020-03-20.
  17. ^ King, Jason (2000). "Any Love: Silence, Theft, and Rumor in the Work of Luther Vandross". Callaloo. 23 (1): 422–447. doi:10.1353/cal.2000.0037. ISSN 0161-2492. JSTOR 3299570.
  18. ^ Beamon, Todd (1987-02-19). "Durable Radio Format Survives Shift in Tastes". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-03-20.
  19. ^ Hurt, Byron, 1970- Gordon, Sabrina Schmidt. Winters, Bill, 1975- (2008), Hip-hop : beyond beats and rhymes, Media Education Foundation, ISBN 978-1-932869-23-1, OCLC 221291123CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  20. ^ Clay, Andreana (October 2007). "Like an Old Soul Record: Black Feminism, Queer Sexuality, and the Hip-Hop Generation". Meridians: Feminism, Race, Transnationalism. 8 (1): 53–73. doi:10.2979/mer.2007.8.1.53. ISSN 1536-6936.
  21. ^ Harvey, Eric. "The Quiet Storm." Pitchfork, Condé Nast, 15 May 2012, pitchfork.com/features/underscore/8822-the-quiet-storm/. Accessed 19 Mar. 2021.
  22. ^ Harvey, Eric. "The Quiet Storm." Pitchfork, Condé Nast, 15 May 2012, pitchfork.com/features/underscore/8822-the-quiet-storm/. Accessed 19 Mar. 2021.
  23. ^ "Keith Sweat Joins WBLS as Host of The Quiet Storm" Archived 2010-01-03 at the Wayback Machine, Premiere Networks, December 28, 2009.

Bibliography[]

  • King, Jason (2007). "The Sound of Velvet Melting". In Weisbard, Eric (ed.). Listen Again: A Momentary History of Pop Music. Duke University Press. p. 172. ISBN 978-0822390558. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  • Ripani, Richard J. (2006). The New Blue Music: Changes in Rhythm & Blues, 1950-1999. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 132. ISBN 1578068614.

Further reading[]

External links[]

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