Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Tank defies hearing loss for last album

- By Gary Gerard Hamilton

R&B star Tank began contemplat­ing his final album after considerin­g pursuing other endeavors. However, that timeline was accelerate­d after losing one of his most essential tools: his hearing.

“It just made me look at time differentl­y. It just made me say, ‘Man, if I can lose an ear in three days, I could possibly lose the other one in the next three,’ ” said the crooner who recently released “R&B Money.” “You just realize you don’t have as much time as you think you do.”

Last year, he revealed he was suddenly going deaf in his right ear while losing substantia­l hearing in his left, although the left recovered.

“You start taking a medicine that’s supposed to help with your ear, but it’s hurting everything else,” Tank explained of side effects. “So when the engineer is mixing, and he’s doing real cool stuff that goes from left to right, and he’s like ‘Did you hear that?’ I did not. … So there was a moment of depression.”

But the man born Durrell Babbs, who describes himself as a competitor, worked to create a 17-track, unmistakab­ly rhythm and blues record during an era when the lines between R&B and rap are often sonically blurred. A rare self-contained artist who can pen, produce and sing, he wrote or co-wrote every song.

Singing backup during the late 1990s for R&B icons Ginuwine and Aaliyah, Tank jump-started his solo career with 2001’s “Maybe I Deserve.” He has released a score of hits such as “One Man,” as well as No. 1 hits such as “Please Don’t Go” and 2017’s “When We.” Five albums

reached No. 1 on Billboard’s Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart during his two-decade career, maintainin­g relevance through R&B’s changes.

Tank is exiting at a peculiar time; despite some questionin­g the direction of the genre, R&B is experienci­ng a resurgence thanks to young, talented artists and fans longing for more than just party music.

But the “Heartbreak­er” singer wants to focus on shaping the next generation of talent while building his own record label, and assist in keeping the genre popular while he still has “some power left.”

Co-starring in last year’s Lifetime film, “Lust: A Seven Deadly Sins Story,” Tank hopes to dig deeper into acting and even delve into stand-up comedy. But he says he’ll still perform and release songs occasional­ly but not tie himself to an entire timeconsum­ing body of work.

The music industry has traveled through various iterations during Tank’s tenure, and he has weathered all storms. But his most torrential downpour might be the one he’s currently sheltering, sudden sensorineu­ral hearing loss.

“I just refuse to let my ear win. I refuse to let vertigo win. It should have killed me, if that’s what you were looking to do,” he expressed. “But since you didn’t do that, I’m going to figure out a way to be

better and stronger.”

Sept. 11 birthdays: Actor Tom Dreesen is 83. Director Brian De Palma is 82. Actor Amy Madigan is 72. Sportscast­er Lesley Visser is 69. Actor John Hawkes is

63. Actor Kristy McNichol is 60. Musician Moby is 57. Singer Harry Connick Jr. is

55. Actor Taraji P. Henson is 52. Rapper Ludacris is 45. Actor Elizabeth Henstridge is 35.

 ?? GARY GERARD HAMILTON/AP ?? Tank, seen Aug. 16, has released “R&B Money,” on which he wrote or co-wrote every song.
GARY GERARD HAMILTON/AP Tank, seen Aug. 16, has released “R&B Money,” on which he wrote or co-wrote every song.

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