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Home: A : Antonio Neal : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of EMI Gospel )
Antonio Neal sings real music about real life. The world
he portrays on his new, debut release, Days of My Life, is
not always a perfect place. And the people who populate it
suffer life's trials just as readily as they celebrate its
triumphs. But pervading the album's eleven songs are consistent
themes of hope, encouragement, and reasons to believe that
it's all worth the challenge.
Musically, Antonio paints on a canvass that can truly be
called his own, from a palette of musical colors as vast
and arresting as his own seemingly boundless imagination.
Understanding that this is an artist whose singularly unique
vision is as influenced by the sweet sounds of legendary
'70s soul crooner, Al Green, as it is modern, cutting-edge
hip-hop, one gets at least an inkling that this is something
altogether new, created by an artist clearly guided by nothing
but his own inner visions.
Pop it into the player and you'll know you're on terrain
that is as new and daring as it is somehow familiar and accessible.
Co-writing all the album's eleven songs, and co-producing
with studio visionary Tedd T, Antonio is clearly drawn to
smooth, quiet-fire grooves, under girded with some serious
hip-hop muscle. Sparse instrumentations, of the decidedly
less-is-more school, feature a big bass end and rhythm, often
colored with a solitary additional instrument, from slinky
electric guitar, or perhaps a crystalline acoustic, to a
grand piano or surges of strings.
Possessing a compelling, multi-octave
voice—often
buttressed by a rich, jaw-dropping background ensemble (99%
Antonio, as well)—Antonio and Tedd T are not shy about
putting their vocal mixes squarely in your face. Which is
right where they belong.
Crossing this remarkable bridge between
classic R&B
and on-the-edge hip-hop, comparisons and descriptions race
to mind, all accurate enough, but none entirely adequate. "Luther
Vandross meets Prince, meet the Almighty" is not bad
in the snappy analogy department. And even though words like "bold
and innovative" seem to contradict "commercial,
accessible, and hooky," in the world of Antonio Neal
they all make perfect sense, and co-exist quite comfortably.
The title song of Days of My Life boasts meaty bass and
drums on the bottom, and a wistful grand piano, anchoring
an irresistible Motown-flavored groove, with Antonio turning
in a stratospheric vocal that soars into and out of his shimmering
falsetto range with complete ease and grace, as he gives
thanks for all the good things that fill his life.
"The Only One" smoothly shifts gears to a gentle,
unforgettable acoustic guitar and percussion-led ballad,
with Antonio and his ensemble delivering vocals that are
nothing short of angelic. "So Good" lays down a
thick bass line that puts backbone into dazzling, inventive
strings and Antonio's silky smooth vocals.
"Our Love" is a romantic
love song written by Antonio to Sharralisa, describing
true, really meaningful love between husband and wife as
the greatest elixir of life on Earth. It's a laid-back,
mid-tempo jam, but with a serious hip-hop pocket, just
to make sure his woman truly feels what he's saying and
knows it's for real.
"I can't be a man, and a husband, and a father, and
exclude my family from my music," says Antonio. "That's
like telling the sky it can't have clouds. And the same time,
my music will never take precedence over them. I grew up
with a father I hardly ever saw. He was working hard to support
his family, which I respect, but his absence also took a
toll. If it ever came down to a choice in my life, I'd be
out of here and home in a second."
Antonio was born in Alton, Illinois, a suburb of St. Louis,
one of seven children. His father worked on long-term construction
projects, almost always out-of-town, and often seeing his
family a little as two weekends-a-month. As a result, Antonio's
mother had a strong and defining hand in raising her offspring,
and active church involvement was an important and ongoing
part of the family's life.
Antonio sang in church choirs as a
kid, but never felt a calling to pursue music beyond that.
His initial exposure to music was the traditional choral
gospel music he heard in church and occasionally on the
radio, but he was never really moved by much of what he
heard until his older brother started bringing home albums
by contemporary R&B/gospel
acts, such as Commissioned, Andrae Crouch, and the Winans.
While his mother didn't allow secular
music played in their house, Antonio still managed to hide
a radio under his pillow and absorb the mainstream hits
of the day, with acts like El DeBarge and Stevie Wonder,
as well as older artists—Al
Green, in particular—spinning his young head.
He and his family moved to Houston
during his first year of high school when his father received
a job transfer. By that time Antonio was well on the way
to his adult height of 6' 4", and a gifted athlete dreaming of a career
in professional basketball. He met the woman who would become
his wife, Sharralisa Hendrix, at church when he was 16, and
was immediately smitten, though the two became and remained
only "good friends" for a season, before their
relationship bloomed into a serious romance.
Antonio received a full basketball
scholarship to Texas A&M University in Kingsville,
about five hours south of Houston, and he and Sharralisa
wed at age 19, after his first year of college. The couple
moved back to Illinois soon after marrying, with Antonio
dividing the next four years between three colleges, all
still on full basketball scholarships, though his plans
for a career in the pros had faded in the 1994-'95 season,
when a severe knee and ankle injury permanently hampered
his ability to play at the level he had previously been
capable of. But even worse than the physical injury was
the profound psychological blow Antonio received when he
finally had to admit that his game would never again be
what it had been, and his long-held dream had slipped from
his reach.
"I was extremely depressed, and feeling totally lost," he
recalls. "Basketball had been my ticket for almost my
whole life, and suddenly it was gone. I was a wreck for a
long time before I finally pulled out of it."
But even though he felt like he was drifting aimlessly,
haplessly searching for a new direction in life, his talents
as a singer and a songwriter were starting to emerge and
grow in leaps and bounds.
In his early 20s, Antonio's talents as a singer and songwriter
had developed to a degree where he felt comfortable performing
in various venues in and around the area. Antonio released
two independent CDs, one in 1999, and a second in 2000. When
a copy of one of those projects found its way into the hands
of contemporary Christian/rap pioneer Toby Mac of the group
dc Talk, also co-owner of one of that genre's preeminent
labels, he was mightily impressed.
Mac, based in Nashville, contacted
Antonio and told him to drop by his office whenever he
was in town. That association led to Antonio landing five
cuts on an album by the hit act, the Katinas, in 2001,
and upped his visibility in the Nashville creative community
and music business considerably. More than 40 cuts by other
name artists, including Stacie Orrico, and Darlene McCoy's "Fallen In Love" from the hit
soundtrack, "Tyler Perry's Diary of a Mad Black Woman," as
well as Antonio's own finely honed skills as an artist and
produce, made an artist project of his own an inevitability,
leading steadily and surely to Days of My Life.
As Antonio steps onto the platform he's now been given,
his thoughts run to what he can do not only to help other
artists, but to broaden the range of today's musical categorizations,
and diffuse some of the definitions that put limits on artists'
creativity.
"I'd really like to help create opportunities for other
urban artists who right now might feel like they don't stand
a chance in this business," says Antonio. "Any
success I have is something way bigger than me. I don't even
want it to be about me. I want it to be about opening doors … the
same kind of doors that have been opened to me.
"I want to write and sing about the things I go through,
and a lot of people go through," he concludes. "I
know, and I think it's clear in my songs, that and at the
end of the day, Who's in control, and Who's going to get
me through. And that gives me the freedom to look at, and
live in, and write about all the aspects of His creation."
Or, you could simply say, real music
about real life.
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