Smokie Norful has been one of popular music's great success stories
of 2002. The tidal wave of critical and popular acclaim he has generated
with his gold-selling debut album, I Need You Now, and its title song
which has become an almost instant classic-for-the-ages continues unabated,
even as EMI Gospel Music proudly announces the release of Smokie's highly
anticipated new release, Nothing Without You.
Smokie, the son of an African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) minister,
grew up surrounded by the best of both Gospel and the sweet soul music
of the time, today claiming a wide range of artists from Daryl Coley
and Vanessa Bell Armstrong to Donnie Hathaway and Stevie Wonder as important
influences in his musical life.
As early as the age of two, Smokie had begun to pick out melodies on
the piano, and by the time he was four he was playing and singing in
his father's church. Smokie spent the first 14 years of his life in
Muskogee, Oklahoma, where he performed in A.M.E. churches throughout
the area. His recording debut came at the tender age of 10, when he
was asked to be a featured artist on a custom album by a regional music
director.
By the time his family moved to a new church in Pine Bluff, Arkansas,
in his mid-teens, Smokie was a musical fixture in the church, and was
also developing into a talented young songwriter.
Smokie's parents realized and nurtured his musical gifts from an early
age, with years of private musical instruction. Choir and musical productions
had also been a major part of his high school experience. Nonetheless,
Smokie entered the University of Arkansas as a history major, spending
the first four years after his graduation as a high school history teacher.
"You can chase after success and recognition all you want,"
says Smokie, "but the truth is that unless God ordains it, it really
doesn't matter. My goal has always just been to see people blessed by
the music God gives me, and that's happened beyond anything I ever imagined.
It has been a pretty amazing couple of years, but I feel very much at
peace. I believe that the same God that did all this on the first go-round
can do it on the second go-round as well."
Still at home musically in what he describes as an "urban/inspirational"
pocket, Smokie stretches into some serious, good-time funk and r&b,
stirring songs of praise and worship, pop balladry, and down-home blues.
But whatever the song, format or genre, his one-of-a-kind vocal prowess
-- from sweet and silky to edgy and urban --remains pure and unmistakably
Smokie.
"The church has been and always will be my home base," Smokie
says, "not just in terms of supporters, but in where I draw my
own strength and spiritual renewal. At the same time, it's important
to me to reach out beyond those walls. I don't want to be "There
are a lot of influences and people in this world that try to give us
false answers and phony solutions to life situations," Smokie explains.
"But once you get to know the Lord, and His Word, the truth becomes
revealed, and you know too much about Him to be deceived."
With I Need You Now, currently on top of the Billboard Gospel catalog
chart and its follow-up EP, the No.1 Limited Edition, still on the Gospel
Top 40 chart, Smokie is more than a success. I Need You Now spent an
impressive two years on the magazine?s Gospel Top 40 chart, and the
single of the same name is still perched in the Top 10 of the recurrent
mainstream R&B chart. He has become a true phenomenon. And while nothing
without You promises to only extend and expand his recognition even
further, the ever-gracious, good-natured Smokie sees his meteoric rise
to fame from a very humble and down-to-earth perspective.
Stylistically, Norful is as comfortable in wailing his smooth tenor
over infectious blends of rhythm and synths (and there's plenty of that
on this project), as he is at sitting behind the piano, eyes closed,
head raised to heaven in awe, pouring personal praise to Jesus Christ
in soaring ballad while his fingers spin a splendid glory of praise
on the keyboard.
If you've got your pen handy, you can put a star beside tracks one
through ten inclusive. Yes, every single song on the project beckons
your finger to touch that repeat button.

Writing or co-writing the majority of the album's 11 songs, and enlisting
the production assistance of some of Gospel and r&b?s biggest hit-makers
-- including jazz great, George Duke, Percy Bady, Tommy Sims, and Victor
& Cedric Caldwell -- Smokie fully delivers on the promise portended
by I Need You Now, even surpassing that already landmark work.
"Can't Nobody" and "Power" are hooky, high-octane,
horn-driven proclamations of encouragement drawn from trust in the pervasive
power of the Almighty in every facet of His creation. "Worthy"
puts a contemporary, melodic spin on rocking, Sunday-morning traditional
Gospel, while "I Know The Lord Will Make A Way" delivers the
Good News.
The showcase ballad, "God Is Able," is an unforgettable anthem
and affirmation of faith, eliciting a soul-stirring performance from
Smokie that renders it a worthy successor to -- and even extension of
-- "I Need You Now."
"That is literally the continuation of the testimony of `I Need
You Now,'" says Smokie. "My wife Carla and I had been told
by the doctor that medical complications would prevent us from ever
having children, and yet our son, Tré, was born during the sessions
for the first album, and was the inspiration for `I Need You Now.' He
was our miracle child. Then a little over a year later, Carla found
out she was expecting again, and we had our son Ashton in early 2004,
who inspired `God Is Able.' He was another miracle in our lives."
On I Need You Now, the seasoned singer / songwriter / instrumentalist
makes his solo debut on EMI Gospel with a finessed flair and distinctiveness
of style that instantly captivates from the get go. Artistry is firmly
stamped all over this disc. Combine that with the evident gift that
Norful has for ushering us into worship, and it's clear that Gospel
has found a real treasure.
The Midwest-reared artist has written for a diverse ranges of artists,
including Marvin Sapp, Dottie Peoples, The Tommies and Shirley Murdock;
his songs are often make the album highlight reel. Suffice it to say
that I Need You Now is chock full of memorable songs.
"I Understand" opens with an easy pop/R&B groove, gradually
building to a rousing choral Gospel crescendo. "In the Middle?
is a God-to-man expression of His abiding presence in the lives of His
children that rides atop a gentle acoustic guitar and percussion.
The tender and touching "Nothing Without You" was originally
written by Smokie in the late 1990s upon his and Carla's marriage, and
first performed by Smokie at the couple's wedding reception, beautifully
expressing the divine love of both a husband for his wife, and a man
for his God.
"Continuous Grace" is a smooth, soulful expression of gratitude
to God. "Healing in His Tears" is both a delicate and dramatic
depiction of the ultimate sacrifice of the Savior, while "I Know
Too Much About Him" is a strong statement of the certainty of God's
truth.
Smokie's career path took another turn in 1998 when he felt God calling
him into the ministry, and he relocated to suburban Chicago pursuing
a Masters of Divinity degree from Garrett Theological Seminary. But
his mind and heart had never strayed far from the music that had been
born in his bones. Throughout college, he had been the worship leader
for the youth department of his local church choir and had assembled
and led a 100-voice community choir in Pine Bluff.
Upon ordination, Smokie accepted an assistant pastorate at Rock of
Ages Baptist Church in Chicago, where he came to the attention of Joanne
Brunson, leader of Gospel's famed Thompson Community Choir, who asked
him to sing a song on the choir's upcoming album, Real. Smokie agreed,
contributing one of his original numbers, and his career as a major-label
artist had begun.
Since the release of I Need You Now, Smokie has maintained an almost
non-stop touring schedule, singing and ministering across America, though
he has still made it a priority to keep his role as husband and father
first and foremost in his life. As he surveys his life from a platform
he once only dreamed of achieving, Smokie's highest goals remained remarkably
unaffected by the trappings of fame and the acclaim of man.
"One thing that keeps me very balanced and humble," he says
with a laugh, "is that when I'm home I'm changing diapers, --taking
out the trash, and looking after the house. I'm not `The Smokie Norful,
Gospel recording artist." I'm just `Daddy,' and `Honey.' And I
wouldn't have it any other way. God has truly blessed us. That's what
inspires me, and that, more than anything, is what I want to share in
my music."
"If anything I ever say, or sing, or do, just gives somebody hope
and encouragement that they can make it, and that God is faithful and
able, I'll feel like I've accomplished my mission."
On the heels of his first Grammy award for Nothing Without You, the
chart-topping follow-up to his debut release, I Need You Now, EMI Gospel
recording artist Smokie Norful has been nominated for two GMA Music
Awards (formerly Dove Awards), for "Contemporary Gospel Recorded Song
of the Year" ("In the Middle") and "Contemporary Gospel Album of the
Year (Nothing Without You);" as well as an NAACP Image Award for "Outstanding
Gospel Artist." The 36th Annual GMA Music Awards take place on April
13 in Nashville. The 36th Annual NAACP Image Awards will be broadcast
on Friday, March 25 on FOX.
Norful received a Grammy award for "Best Contemporary Soul Gospel Album,"
and his itinerary during Grammy Week included a performance at a first-ever
Grammy gospel event produced by the National Academy of Recording Arts
and Science (NARAS). On Thursday, February 10, the Grammy Salute to
Gospel Music During his time in Los Angeles, Norful also shared his
knowledge and experience with young people working on a special NARAS-coordinated
recording project at the Capitol Recording Studios in Hollywood.
"Same Old Sad Song" has Norful wistfully singing of his hope that the
world will abandon its familiar song of woe and opt instead for the
new song that Jesus brings us. The tender harmonica and guitars from
Derek "DOA" Allen puts just the right touch of reflection to the ode.
The included remix wraps a urban, nearly quiet storm cloak over the
song, with Vangoss adding her backing vocals.
A neosoul vibe comes through on "Somethin' Somethin'". Norful turns
his voice inside out to tell that Jesus is still the name, and there's
somethin' about that Man". He detours vocally to impart a very definite
brashness of color to his voice on this DOA track that persists in rocking
a steady acoustic rhythm throughout.
Norful is also preparing for the his first DVD. Filmed in Hi-Definition
with 5.1 Surround Sound, the Nothing Without You DVD features live concert
performances, in-depth interviews, an introduction of Norful's new artist
discovery, Darrel Petties and Strength & Praise, plus a bonus feature
of the singer's popular "I Need You Know" video.
The work that's earned Norful his Grammy Award and his NAACP nod, Nothing
Without You, spent five consecutive weeks in the #1 position on Billboard's
Gospel Chart and remains in the top three. The album's latest single,
"I Understand," has climbed to number two on the R&R Gospel chart and
has an anticipated urban impact date of March 28. The CD has spun two
singles -- "I Understand" and "Can't Nobody" -- that quickly shot into
the R&R Top 40. With this powerful follow up to his gold-selling debut,
I Need You Now, Norful has firmly established himself as a singer and
songwriter to watch.
On the urban jam "It's All About You", Norful wisely keeps the focus
on vocals, delivering some fantastically fashioned inflections and vocal
nuances, a mix of falsetto and near-growl musings that displays his
range. Backing vocals from the group Focus easily squeeze the hook-driven,
descending chorus into memory. Antonio Dixon plays the track and co-produces.
Other songs on I Need You Now include "Still Say Thank You", which
has the Denver Inspirational Voices adding their mass sounds to the
mid-tempo praise. There's a touch of traditional Gospel on "Praise Him",
produced by Logan Reynolds. Freddie Flewelyn's bass, Doc Powell's guitar
and Michael Neuble's drums ensure a rousing ride.
"Psalm 64" deserves attention, with the biblical poem spoken by Reverend
W.R. Norful, Sr. while his son surrounds it then expands upon the words
with echoes of tender vocalization, stacked harmonies and expressive
piano chording.
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