Friday, August 11, 2023

Kali Uchis

One Liner:  Mediocre R&B sounds who used to have Amy Winehouse tendencies

Wikipedia Genre: R&B, neo soul, hip hop
Home: Virginia

Poster Position: 2 (2) 
Both Weekends.
Friday.

Thoughts:  She was here in 2015 and 2019 already, so it looks like a special every four-year tradition.  I bet that has a name.  Quadrennial!  She's a quadrennial!  I most definitely did not go see either of those shows - this is not up my alley by any means.  When working on my predictions for 2019, I tried her out then because she had been a critical darling in 2018 and played Lolla.  At the time, I just simply said I tried one of her songs and it sucked so she therefore wasn't coming to ACL.  Not only wrong, but now she's back again as the top non-headlining artist.  Shows you what I know.

Saw something on YouTube calling her the "West Coast Amy Winehouse," and I suppose that fits better than anything I could come up with.  BUT, she's not nearly as good as real deal Amy Winehouse.  Come on.  I get it that there is some throwback going on here, but its a pretty watered-down musical thing compared to the bad-assery of Back to Black.  Check out "Killer" for one of the best comparisons I think I can find here to Winehouse.  The tunes kind of sound like that Thundercat dude - sort of funky, but in a looser, smeary sort of way, like old school funk was given acid.  But then "In My Dreams" sounds like The Gorillaz made the track and even sing along for a part.

4 albums include 2015's Por Vida, 2018's Isolation, 2020's Sin Miedo (which is mostly in Spanish), and then 2023's Red Moon in Venus.  As well as a load of singles.  The new album has some massive streamers, and I definitely would put away the Winehouse comparison by now.  This is more of just straight mediocre R&B now.

Her top track overall is from that 2020 album, "telepatia," with a fascinatingly large number of streams at 904 million.

I'm trying to think of what jenky ACL artist I have heard recently that has songs that sound like this.  Her voice is nice, but the underlying tune itself is super lame.  Also, I have no clue what she is talking about.  I really like that sparkly lipstick though.  Truly fascinating that this song would have almost a billion streams.

Her second-most-streamed track is from the 2018 album, and features both Tyler, the Creator, and Bootsy Collins, which is kinda funky.  "After the Storm" with 421.9 million streams.

I like the Bootsy parts.  I do not like her vamping look - just trying to hard to look exactly like something (which I know, is kind of the deal with videos, but it just seems so manufactured and too much), like her lips are actually half that size but she just keeps shoving them into the position she memorized in the mirror earlier. I don't mean to hate on looks - I try to just stick with the music here, but she is bugging me.  The song is fine, although her part is probably the weakest portion.  I will commend her for picking the album title Isolation, in 2018, before any of us knew just how isolated we woud get!

Real name is Karly-Marina Loaiza, and she is Columbian-American.  She was born in Virginia, but moved back and forth between Columbia and the States as she was growing up.  They came to America fleeing the mid-90's conflict in Columbia.  She says that her moniker was given to her by her father, but the YouTube video I just watched sheds zero light on the name at all, just that she removed the "r" from her name.  She also lived on the streets for a while, after her father tired of her being disrespectful.  She ended up parking a Subaru in the parking lot of a 24-hour market and sleeping with all of her belongings in the back, while still in high school.  According to this article, she wrote "Killer" in the back of that Subaru, playing it on her keyboard and coming up with the lyrics in the evenings.  Pretty wild.  She later made up with her pops and is cool with him, but I bet that left a mark.

She was 18 when she released her first mixtape, and Snoop Dogg found it and announced his love online, which definitely helped.

Hey!  I was right - "In My Dreams" does feature Gorillaz!  She also has one ("Tomorrow") produced by Kevin Parker of Tame Impala, one with Thundercat (damn, I'm good!) called "Body Language," and then a few other interesting add-ons like BadBadNotGood and Dave Sitek of TV on the Radio.

That article I linked to above also has a very in-depth discussion of an online kerfuffle with Uchis where she was accused of accentuating her brownness for benefit while still being a white Latina.  It is honestly a slightly confusing portion of the article, but I think that confusion is held on the parts of a lot of people in that conversation, because no one truly knows what is right or wrong when it comes to fine gradients of race.  I'm NOT trying to get into the discussion, but I found it interesting to read the back-and-forth that goes on with race identities within a single race.

One random single released June 2019, which I like and is notable to me mainly because it features Mac Miller, who passed away around then.  "Time," with 108.3 million streams.

Also has Anderson Paak's band the Free Nationals on there, and you can hear that funky, cool influence in the tune.  Again, I like the tune itself, but her parts are not the best parts on there, she's just the hook singer.

For the new album, the big hit so far is called "Moonlight," and it has 245.3 million streams.

I get the sex appeal of the tune for sure, and that funky bass line is fun, but its too whispery and precious for me.  I'm sure for some folks this is the jam of the summer, but I would prefer not to hear it again.

This one isn't for me.

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