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Home: Y : Yolanda Adams : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Atlantic Records)
Ask Yolanda Adams what she loves about
her music and ministry. The answer is as warm, embracing,
and reflective as her songs. "The
music brings joy. I truly believe that my songs bring the
answers and the solutions, as opposed to just talking about
the problems. My music at its core is joyful."
Joyful, uplifting, inspiring, affirmative,
exuberant, playful, and universal in its appeal and intention—that is the
music of Yolanda Adams. The message and ministry of this
Grammy-winning Gospel/Adult Contemporary superstar is abundant
with love, faith, rhythm, and wisdom. It is delivered by
one of the most persuasive and popular voices in contemporary
Gospel. Working with some of the biggest names in pop, R&B,
hip-hop, and Gospel, Yolanda Adams's career has been marked
by a string of hugely successful albums, sold-out tours,
stand-out TV appearances, and a desire to incorporate into
her music a multitude of genres and influences.
"It's vitally important to keep growing now that people
know me and my music," she says. "We've been blessed
enough to impact so many lives, both in and out of the typical
Gospel market, so on each album it's important to keep reaching
outward so that even more people can get inspiration from
what we do. Luckily, I don't have to be anybody but Yolanda,
because people don't expect me to be anything other than
who I am. For an artist, it's a great place to be."
A lifelong resident of Houston, Texas,
Yolanda grew up in a household filled with spirit, soul,
and songs. Her mother studied music, and Yolanda and her
five younger siblings heard everything from jazz to classical
to rhythm and blues. She soaked up the sounds of Gospel
legends James Cleveland and the Edwin Hawkins Singers,
jazz icon Nancy Wilson, and pop/R&B great Stevie Wonder. That wide swath of sonic
textures, combined with years in the church choir, would
guide Yolanda—both as a performer and a person.
Word of Yolanda's talent began to make
its way into the close-knit Gospel music community and
before long the former schoolteacher caught the attention
of the prolific composer/producer Thomas Whitfield. With
his assistance, Yolanda recorded1987's Just As I Am, which
was released on a small Gospel label. The album drew comparisons
to Aretha Franklin and lead to subsequent releases on Tribute
Records (now Verity Records). 1991's Through The Storm
earned Yolanda several Stellar Awards. Four years later,
the R&B-infused More Than A Melody
garnered Yolanda her first Soul Train Lady of Soul Award
and Grammy nomination. Along with the accolades, More Than
A Melody "broke" Yolanda to a wider audience and
established her as a force, in and out of the music industry.
Yolanda began to make a name as a live
act and her galvanizing concerts became the stuff of legend.
The excitement was captured on 1996's Yolanda … Live
In Washington, which brought her another Stellar Award
and another Grammy nomination, and lead to her signing
with Elektra Records. Yolanda's first release on the mainstream
powerhouse was 1999's groundbreaking Mountain High. . .Valley
Low.
A testament not only to the power of
faith but also the possibilities of collaboration, Mountain
High … Valley
Low was an album that preached not only to the converted
but also to fans of urban music. Working with A-list producers
like Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis and Keith Thomas, Yolanda
made the cross over without watering down or compromising
her message, and fans and critics took notice. Typical of
the reviews was one that stated, "much of the album
recalls Stevie Wonder or Bob Marley, where spirituality is
at the center but it doesn't limit the musical expression." The
album would go multi-platinum, receive the Grammy in 2000
for Best Contemporary Soul Gospel Album and the first American
Music Award for Inspirational Artist of the Year, win several
Stellar Awards, and spawn the hugely successful Sisters In
the Spirit Tour. That journey—also featuring Shirley
Caesar, Mary Mary, and Angela Christie—became the inspiration
for Yolanda's acclaimed second live collection, The Experience.
That same year Yolanda also released her first holiday album,
Christmas With Yolanda Adams, and gave birth to her daughter,
whom Yolanda lovingly describes as "a very good child,
in and out of the womb."
Motherhood didn't slow Yolanda down.
With baby in tow, she continued to bring her praise songs
to sold-out stages. In 2001, she entered the studio to
record the richly satisfying Believe. That album—like her newest effort, Day By
Day—reunited Yolanda with the innovative group of producers
who had created Mountain High … Valley Low. "Whenever
you work with people that you're familiar with, they know
your heart and what you like," she notes. "They
know what your message is and that you want to help people.
So it's pretty cool to be able to work with your friends,
and I've been blessed to do so in the past and on my new
album."
2005's Day By Day marks Yolanda's first
album for Atlantic Records. Due to restructuring at her
label, she found herself on hiatus for nearly four years,
though as she notes, "The
great thing about Gospel is that you don't have to have an
album every year in order to keep working." Yet despite
the time off, Yolanda was far from idle. She kept touring
and began to lay the groundwork for her Voice of an Angel
Foundation, which focuses on mentoring high school students
nationwide in order to help them find a career in education.
The foundation received its non-profit certification in the
winter of 2005 and will hold its maiden mentoring camp next
summer. "Education is one of the greatest rewards for
me—not only to instruct young people but also to mold
them into great thinkers."
Yolanda is also heavily involved in
other children's issues. She works closely with the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Resources to ensure that
kids in low-income areas receive immunizations. Along with
that nationwide program, Yolanda lends her energy and commitment
to a number of other child-based organizations, including
The Children's Defense Fund and Houston charities such
as juvenile diabetes and The Escape Center. "I'm very
involved with kids because after being a teacher for seven
years, I just can't stop loving the kids. I am a teacher
forever."
With her unerring sense of humanity
and her compassionate message, Yolanda Adams has touched
audiences worldwide, and they in turn have made their impact
upon her. "I believe
that fans enhance your career. They draw out of me what they
need and that's how I'm able to write the songs. It inspires
me to feel their love and appreciation. It's like what Sally
Fields said when she won the Oscar, "You like me! You
really like me!" I never take that for granted, and
each year and each album I am humbled that there are people
who want to hear my songs. It's truly amazing." It's
truly the grace and favor of God.
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