The Herald - The Herald Magazine

Chaka Khan celebrates 50 years in music

- NAOMI CLARKE Southbank Centre’s Meltdown festival will run from June 14-23. For more informatio­n visit www.southbankc­entre.co.uk/whats-on/ festivals-series/meltdown

IF you are ever in a rut, a near surefire way to get back in the groove is to queue up a string of Chaka Khan’s empowering anthems. Her powerful vocals have enlivened many dancefloor­s, garnered her a legion of fans and earned her the title of the “Queen of Funk”.

The US singer superstar first rose to fame in the 1970s as a member of the American funk band Rufus, before she began to forge a successful career as a solo artist.

It was undoubtedl­y a wise move as her debut solo single from her 1978 self-titled studio album was the R&B chart-topper I’m Every Woman, which captured the world and landed her a Grammy nomination.

She supercharg­ed her stardom a few years later with the platinumse­lling single Ain’t Nobody, which she released with Rufus.

While the group dissolved in 1983, Khan carved out her own path, releasing a host of solo studio albums over the years which have branched across many genres including pop, R&B, hip hop, jazz, gospel, country and dance.

Over her five-decade career she has also worked with some of the world’s most influentia­l artists Prince, Joni Mitchell, Stevie Wonder and Mary J. Blige to name a few secured 10 Grammy awards and been inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

Even as she celebrates fifty years in the industry, Khan, 71, shows no signs of slowing down.

“I’m not nostalgic really, I’m a next girl,” she says over a video call with a chuckle.

“I don’t live in the past, I don’t remember a lot. I mean, it’s a good thing, too, I think.

“The only thing I am really interested in is what’s happening in the moment, that’s all we own is this moment right now, and what’s going to happen next, how it’s going to affect what I do next, or what happens to me next.”

She feels this forward-thinking attitude has helped propel her career as she does not waste her energy on things beyond her control

“I can do nothing about what happened yesterday but I can have some influence as to what is happening right now and how it may affect tomorrow,” she adds.

Among her plans for this year, Khan is following in the footsteps of musical titans like David Bowie and Nile Rodgers by curating Southbank Centre’s Meltdown, the UK’s longest-running artist-curated music festival.

It will feature dozens of concerts across ten days in June, with Khan opening and closing the event with performanc­es at the Royal Festival Hall.

The singer had been rumoured for the coveted Glastonbur­y legends slot in the same month, which has now been filled by country superstar Shania Twain.

Khan, real name Yvette Stevens, said she believes the music festival did approach her about the slot but says she had not given them an answer because she was being “really focused” on her work with Meltdown.

However, she kept hopes alive that she may one day take to the Pyramid Stage as she says she “would love” to perform at the festival.

During her three-month stint in the UK this summer she will also squeeze in appearance­s at

Cambridge Club Festival, Nocturne Live series at Blenheim Palace and Love Supreme Jazz Festival.

Her trip across the pond also marks a return to the country she previously called home, as she had a house in north London for about 30 years.

She has also lived in Germany, Switzerlan­d and cities throughout America.

And while she has achieved many impressive feats in her life, Khan believes her great achievemen­t has been leaving city life behind to live now in the US state of Georgia with her family.

“Getting out of the city, leaving LA - that’s the best thing, the biggest investing I’ve done, period,” she says.

“I’m communing with nature. I’ve got all of this beautiful land and a lake. I truly get to rest here, I truly get silence. This sustains me.

“I’ve got my family out here with me and it’s lovely - my mother and my sisters and my nephews.”

Finding peace and staying true to herself is a central focus for Khan at this stage in her life, but she recognises this can be a difficult thing for younger people in a fastpaced, technology-fuelled world.

An area she feels has been particular­ly hit is the business side of the music industry, which she thinks has taken a “horrific, horrendous and wrong” shift since she started out.

“This whole thing of us competing with one another, there is no competitio­n in self-expression and that is something that appears that these labels and these bigger businesses count on, is that we stay competitiv­e,” she laments.

“Which is stupid because selfexpres­sion is unique on to the individual, how can you compete there? There is no competitio­n.”

While she does like to have her finger on the pulse by working with rising female artists such as US R&B star H.E.R. and Australian singer Sia, Khan admits she does not listen to much music outside work as she gets enough of it from her day job.

So what does she advise young artists who are coming up? “Honesty is the best policy, even if it hurts,” she says, evidently speaking from experience.

“And especially if it hurts, that means it’s probably meaningful.

“But to remain honest is the best thing you could do for yourself and everyone around you.

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