Solange has been announced as the first artist to perform at Sydney’s annual Vivid LIVE.

The shows will occur at the Sydney Opera House, where she’ll perform in the round, “offering audiences a 360° view of her cutting-edge choreography and bold staging,” according to a press release.

Her universally-acclaimed, Grammy-winning 2016 album A Seat at the Table was not only widely considered one of the best albums of the year, but one of the most important. The artist’s third full-length LP was a brilliant, beautiful and poignant statement about, and in celebration of, black womanhood.

While no other Australian tour dates have been announced, Solange will perform four nights in the Concert Hall: Friday June 1, Saturday June 2, Sunday June 3 and Monday June 4. Tickets range from $79 to $137 plus booking fee and will be available via ballot – more details can be found here. The ballot is open now until March 4.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0qrinhNnOM

Vivid LIVE will take place from May 25 to June 16, predominantly at the Sydney Opera House, amidst the wonderfully-illuminated city skyline. Each year tops previous years in terms of incredible artists, one-off performances and breathtaking music, with The Cure, Bon Iver, Brian Eno and St Vincent among the many impressive names who’ve played a big role in making Vivid one of Sydney’s premier cultural events. Keep an eye out for the full lineup coming mid-March.

Image: Supplied

The year is wrapping up, which means a few things. The weather is heating up, family we might not have seen for a while are descending upon us for the holidays and it’s time to get a bit retrospective. Overall, 2016 has been a bit of a shit-kicker and not just for all all the talent we’ve lost.

Over the past week, Triple J and listeners have copped a flack for the disappointingly abysmal representation (or rather, lack thereof) of people in their Top Ten Albums who weren’t male. For the sake of accountability, it must be noted that here at Howl & Echoes, while there was a fairly diverse spread across our individual picks, the overall top albums for 2016 only featured one female artist (Solange) – though it must also be observed that only two of the artists on the list were white. Festival lineups remained the Caucasian-male-dominated affairs they always have been and it was found that 80% of record labels registered in Australia are headed up by men while women, trans and non-white diverse artists still struggle for recognition, respect, understanding and paid work.

With all the bullshit all of that in mind, there’s still a fair bit to celebrate. Taking a leaf out of the Her Sound, Her Story book, here’s a look at a few things worth celebrating (that series is also one, if you feel so inclined to check it out) that happened in 2016!

Queens All Around

If ever a Holy Trinity existed, Rihanna, Beyoncé and Solange would be it and 2016 blessed us with albums from all members. In the very first month, we received ANTI, the long-awaited album from hardworking hit machine – the true princess of modern pop, Rihanna. After a four year wait and a whole lot of lead up, Rihanna broke with convention for ANTI, presenting perhaps her most surprising album for its tempered back, hazed vibe and down-to-earth lyricism, matched with a delightfully unashamed confidence. Needed Me and its accompanying video alone was enough to send fans and commentators into a tail spin and confirmed ANTI as one of the most surprising, but enduring pop releases of the year, just one month in to 2016.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wfN4PVaOU5Q

ANTI represents the deconstruction of the manufactured pop star and the reassembling of Rihanna as a living, breathing personality that vibes with bands like Tame Impala, and alternative hip-hop stars like SZA and deals with self deprecating thoughts and is terrified of love. She’s human now. She’s not the hit machine she was in the Umbrella era. “Rihanna the pop star” is now “Rihanna the person” – Emma Jones for Howl & Echoes

The theme of 2016 seemed to be that everything kind of happened at once. It just kept getting faster, more full on, and it was no exception when Beyoncé dropped Formation in February. The song and accompanying video, was masterful and gave foresight into what was to come. Powerful, sensual, celebratory while also rife with social commentary, it was perhaps the single most disruptive song of the entire year for all the conversation and polarising reactions it caused.

The visual album that followed in April, Lemonade, has since climbed to the top end of Best Of 2016 lists, earned the singer 9 Grammy nominations, and caused a whole storm of debate. Her appearance with The Dixie Chicks at the Country Music Awards sparked controversy when the show removed all traces of the performance online and removed the collaboration from the official list of performers despite the fact that their mere presence boosted ratings to an all time high. Beyoncé remains, as always, a force to be reckoned with, having become the first artist to ever receive Grammy nominations across the pop, rock, R&B and rap categories in one year.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PeonBmeFR8o

In September, it became clear that both Knowles sisters were coming for institutionalised racism, social injustice and issues of inequality in 2016. Announced on a Monday and released that Friday, Solange wasted no time in promoting her new album, an ethereal, arresting piece of art. Accompanied by a series of music videos both haunting and inspiring, A Seat At The Table was altogether surprising, subtly powerful and a thing of beauty. It has solidified Solange’s place as an truly individual artist, putting her money where her mouth is in terms of her personal ethics and ideals and artistic endeavours. It also sees her catapulting her into Best Albums lists alongside her sister, without either overshadowing the other, for they are both so uniquely themselves in their art. Nominated for a Grammy (Best R&B Performance) A Seat At The Table is the gift that keeps on giving, with some of the most memorable live television performances – perhaps none better than that on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon earlier this month. Pure. Living. Breathing. Art.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z-qHmXbkayw

Music videos, as clearly displayed by Rihanna, Beyoncé and Solange this year, are an art form in themselves and sometimes a song or concept isn’t quite complete without them. Another one that struck this year, though perhaps on a more personal than world-wide phenomenon level, was for Colombian electro outfit Bomba Estéreo’s single Soy Yo. It is the kind of thing I would have loved to see as a young, mixed, latina girl growing up. Though the song itself (which has some great self-love lyrics about the importance of what is inside rather than what everyone else sees) was released last year, the video came out in September this year and it’s everything I didn’t even know I needed. It’s a celebration of confidence and loudness, of taking up space and being one’s true self. When I first stumbled across the clip, I watched it on a loop for an entire morning: I smiled, I laughed, I felt like I might start crying with all the familiar feelings it provoked – good and bad.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bxWxXncl53U

Young girls, especially of colour, are so often taught, be it by our parents or more often our teachers and peers, to not be overbearing. Sometimes, when you’re loud and opinionated and dare I say it, don’t quite look like the people around you, it can start to feel like you’re not doing things right. This video takes that notion of ‘being good’ and behaving (read: being quite, overlooked or brushed aside) and shoves it into the gutter where it belongs. We follow 11-year-old Sarai Isaura Gonzalez (who gave some great life advice in a follow-up video) out of the salon where she’s just been given a new look she’s clearly pleased with, and rides around urban New York. She runs into two other girl, who try to stare her down to little avail. She demands attention on the basketball court despite perhaps not being very skilled at the game. She dances and moves the way she wants to and that’s the entire point. A beautiful, vibrant video that is worthy of a lot more buzz and hype than it ever did get.

Back on home soil, one of the most powerful, beautifully crafted releases of the year came from  the alluring Ngaiire. The power in her voice and her knack for crafting pulsating, enthralling, winding pieces of electro-tinged indie pop is nothing short of awe-inspiring. Live, she is perhaps one of the country’s most astounding performers; on stage with two other musicians, she fills entire theatres – a soulful, arresting talent to be reckoned with.

For all the self-reflection and criticism thrown the way of the country’s taste-maker radio station, Triple J and listeners as of late about the lack of women at the top of of album selections, there were two stand out occurrences this year and they both involved Unearthed. In August, the honey-voiced, Gretta Ray was announced as the winner of Unearthed High, her country-tinged indie pop capturing the hearts of the nation through her songs Drive and Unwind. Fast-forward to November and the utterly captivating, magnetic Tash Sultana was unveiled as the recipient of the 2016 Unearthed J Award.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vn8phH0k5HI

In Victoria, the results of the Women in the Victorian Contemporary Music Industry survey and paper prompted the creation of a new gender diversity policy. The survey, which was conducted mid-last year noted that instances of pay inequality between male and female performers were frequent and damaging. It also found there to be an imbalance in access to opportunities, a significant confidence gap, the major undervaluing of music made by women and perhaps the most unsurprisingly, that sexual harassment and assault are experienced by women in the industry on a frighteningly large scale.

The policy, which was unveiled in May, means that the state’s key body, Music Victoria is committed to promoting gender diversity across the industry (“Music Victoria acknowledges that gender is a diverse spectrum and when referring to women and men it includes those who identify as female and male, and those who are gender non-conforming.”) while encouraging “others in the industry to adopt a gender diversity policy for their organisations.There’s still work to be done, which is outlined in the policy – but we have one, voices have been and are being heard. There’s a wealth more awareness out there and now with an official piece of literature to stand with, there is a way to hold people (punters, venue owners, industry heads, other musicians, every single one of us), accountable. Hopefully, it also prompts similar outcomes in other states. 

Overall, 2016 has been a bit of a shit-kicker and for all the hopes we had coming into the new year, a lot of them were kind of dashed. But sometimes it’s good to remember the small victories alongside the huge triumphs and perhaps set the tone for the coming 12 months – one not just of positivity but of action rather than idle commentary about what more we ‘should be doing’. 

Image: newnownext

Rapper Common found Solange‘s single Cranes In The Sky so inspiring that he has added his own verse in an unofficial remix of the track.

Dropped the same week it was announced, a good four years after her last EP, Solange’s album is an unassuming, touching, masterful and altogether powerful album. A beautiful, bold expression of frustration and self-love and pride, the album pulls influences from all the genres Solange has shown incredible flair for throughout her career – from soul to funk to electronica.

An awe-inspiring collection of 21 songs, it has amassed acclaim from both critics and Solange’s peers alike and placed her in good stead to feature on many Best Of lists at the end of the year. The album has also earned Solange her first number one on the Billboard charts, the break out single Cranes in the Sky already receiving the remix treatment from producer Kaytranada. 

Much in the way that A Seat At The Table is an expression of self-empowerment and love, social justice and the experiences of Solange as a black woman in the United States, rapper Common’s upcoming album Black America Again and single of the same title express the rapper’s frustrations with racially motivated violence and the inequality and injustices faced by black people in America.

Adding an entire verse to the beginning of the song, Common raps with a similar quiet aggression as is thematic throughout Solange’s album. “Can’t work it away, can’t drink it away, can’t laugh it away. Kept my love locked down like it was all dreaded/ wishing for wings again so I can spread it.”

Speaking to theFADER, he described the track as being timeless: “Every once and a few years, there are certain songs that come out and have the sound of forever. Cranes in the Sky is that song for me… Every time I listened to it, I keep wanting to hear it again and again,” he said. “I started mumbling some words to it and then decided I want to write a verse.”

[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/288758995?secret_token=s-OuaZ3″ params=”auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false&visual=false” width=”100%” height=’166′ iframe=”true” /]

Read more: Feature: A spotlight on Solange

Image: Billboard

When Solange (Knowles) released her EP True in 2012, there seemed to be an incredible sense of symbolism about it. Not only did it mark a shift away from her Motown soul sound towards a darker, dancier vibe, but it also cemented Solange’s artistic ideals and ethics.

Having followed the rather explosive single Fuck The Industry (Signed Sincerely), which name-checked among others her own sister, Beyoncé, (“I’ll never be the picture perfect Beyoncé/Fly like J-Lo or singing Baby like ‘Shanti) while talking about the pressures of working at the top end of the music industry, it was unsurprising that she parted ways with her label in favour of recording and releasing her music independently. True was meant to be her very first, full length, independent release.

Throughout her entire career, Solange has worked across major, corporate entities. Beginning in 2001 with perhaps the largest of them all: Disney, when she was the lead singer on the theme song for their animated series The Proud Family (backed by Destiny’s Child).

She also contributed her voice to an episode of the show when she took on the role of Chanel. Like her sister and Destiny’s Child, she was managed by her father Mathew Knowles during these early stages of her career. It wasn’t long before she was working on her debut album, Solo Star, putting to rest the rumours that Solange would be replacing Farrah Franklin in Destiny’s Child.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b3unTmWpvio

At just 14 years of age, Solo Star had Solange working with industry juggernauts The Neptunes, Timbaland, Jermaine Dupri and Linda Perry on an R&B album with pop, rock and reggae influences. While the album, eventually released in 2003 when Solange was 17, received mixed reviews, the fact that the young Knowles co-wrote and produced a number of the album’s tracks spoke volumes of her as a young artist.

As did her desire to draw from a number of influences – something which has been continually reflected throughout her career. Following the release of Solo Star though, Solange turned her focus to the screen, taking on a number of acting roles and eventually culminating in her appearance in the straight-to-DVD third instalment of the Bring It On series All Or Nothing. Arguably, she was the closest the film had to a saving grace.

It was following this run of film and television roles that she turned her attention back to songwriting, earning credits for writing the singles Get Me Bodied and Upgrade U. Her work as a songwriter continued to flourish as she wrote songs for Destiny’s Child as well as the group’s individual members Kelly Rowland, Michelle Williams and her sister, earning credits for writing the aforementioned two singles on Beyonce’s album B Day.

Her work on Upgrade U won her an ASCAP Award in 2008. It was during that same year that she went to work on her second solo album, the ’60s and ’70s-influenced, Mark Ronson and CeeLo Green-produced Sol-Angel And The Hadley St. Dreams. The album, more mature and focused, dealt with a number of issues close to the singer’s heart including personal relationships, her divorce, the deaths of her friends and wider world issues.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-8f895h6a-E

In an announcement made on her blog, Solange suggested that there was to be a series of mixtapes released to coincide with the album. None of the mixtapes were released though, perhaps due to the fact that the very first one was tellingly titled I Can’t Get Clearance… and featured the aforementioned Fuck The Industry (Signed Sincerely), which was eventually released as a single in 2010.

It didn’t take long after the release of her second album for Solange to distance herself from the trappings of a major label, quickly parting ways with IGA Records and headed to Australia to begin work on her third album. During that time she began writing and recording with Midnight Juggernauts and Solange experienced emotional, mental and financial exhaustion which eventually resulted in panic attacks and a breakdown.

While the idea of an independent release felt authentically Solange, the pressures of having to put one together with little to no financial backing were no doubt immense. Instead, she eventually released True, an EP consisting of seven beautiful tracks. True is a dark-dance album, heavy with R&B influences and recorded across five cities, it was at once cohesive and eclectic, just as Solange is.

Releasing music independently, having artistic control and being able to oversee the direction of her projects entirely, while tiring, seems to be where Solange fits most comfortably. It made sense then that in 2013 she launched her own record label, Saint Records. The same year it was announced that Solange would be launching Saint Records, the label released its first compilation album featuring, among others, Jhené Aiko, Cassie, Jade De LaFleur, Kelela, Sampha and Solange herself.

Now, three years and a website revamp later, Solange has confirmed that her third full length album will finally reach the ears of her fans. Following the website makeover earlier this week, Solange offered a special edition lyric and photobook to the first 86 people to sign up to the new mailing list. The marketing tool of offering something exclusive and personal worked, with the mailing list having 15,000 people sign up in just the first day. A digital version of the book, which toys with text placement in a sort of visual poetry experimentation, is also available to view via the website.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hy9W_mrY_Vk

 

When she performed her song Rise at a HBO-sponsored event last year, it was clear that Solange’s primary concerns artistically were issues of empowerment and activism, stemming from the racially-motivated killings of African Americans at the hands of police in Ferguson and Baltimore.

Described by Solange as a project on “identity, empowerment, independence, grief and healing”, it seems that her new album A Seat At The Table will follow along similar lines. Among the notable names of contributors across the 21 tracks include Lil Wayne, Devonte Hynes, Kelly Rowland and Kelela.

Due out this Friday, the album sees Solange pull from her experiences in expressing and exploring identity among other issues. Along with the digital release come the visuals for Cranes In The Sky (directed by her husband Alan Ferguson).

Between True and Solange’s personal activism – from supporting and promoting black-owned banks to discussing institutionalised and everyday racism – there is little doubt that Solange’s upcoming third album, which will be released via Saint Records with distribution from Sony, will be nothing less than something truly wonderful and perhaps confronting to behold.

A Seat At The Table Tracklist:

  1. Rise
  2. Weary (Additional Vocals blessed by Tweet)
  3. Interlude: The Glory Is In You
  4. Cranes In The Sky
  5. Interlude: Dad Was Mad
  6. Mad Ft. Lil Wayne (Additional Vocals blessed by Moses Sumney and Tweet)
  7. Don’t You Wait
  8. Interlude: Tina Taught Me
  9. Don’t Touch My Hair Ft. Sampha
  10. Interlude:  This Moment (Additional vocals Devonte Hynes of Houston Texas and Lu ofCarolina)
  11. Where Do We Go (Additional vocals blessed by Sean Nicholas Savage)
  12. Interlude:  For Us By Us
  13. F.U.B.U.” Ft. The Dream & BJ The Chicago Kid (Additional Vocals blessed by Tweet)
  14. Borderline (An Ode To Self Care)” Ft. Q-Tip
  15. Interlude:  I Got So Much Magic, You Can Have It” Ft. Kelly Rowland & Nia Andrews
  16. Junie
  17. Interlude: No Limits
  18. Don’t Wish Me Well
  19. Interlude:  Pedestals
  20. Scales Ft. Kelela
  21. Closing:  The Chosen Ones

Image: Supplied