close
 

Anthony Hamilton Has Something To Prove

December 27, 2011

Listen

[2 min 26 sec]
 
Anthony Hamilton at the Los Angeles shoot for the video for "Woo" in November.
Enlarge Adrian Sidney/Courtesy of the artist.

Anthony Hamilton at the Los Angeles shoot for the video for "Woo" in November.

Anthony Hamilton at the Los Angeles shoot for the video for "Woo" in November.
Adrian Sidney/Courtesy of the artist.

Anthony Hamilton at the Los Angeles shoot for the video for "Woo" in November.

Hear The Music

close

Purchase Featured Music

  • "Mad"
  • Album: Back To Love
  • Artist: Anthony Hamilton
  • Label: RCA
  • Released: 2011
 
close

Purchase Featured Music

  • "Sucka For You"
  • Album: Back To Love
  • Artist: Anthony Hamilton
  • Label: RCA
  • Released: 2011
 
text size A A A
December 27, 2011

As 2011 winds down, Morning Edition is looking at music we missed over the past 12 months. R&B singer Anthony Hamilton is one artist that slipped under our noses; we just missed his album Back To Love, which came out earlier this month. Hamilton's been in the music business for two decades, during which he's had a mostly black audience. Now, with Back To Love, he's gaining even wider appeal.

Hamilton often sings about love's imperfections. In the song "Mad", he focuses on the complications of staying in love after years together.

"It's this grumpy man who's in a relationship," Hamilton says. "They've settled in. He loves her, but he wishes she would go to the store or go to her mom's house or whatever it may be."

Hamilton's characters also face temptation; many succumb to it. He says he likes to remind his listeners how close we often get to making choices with damaging consequences, as do the characters in his song, "Woo."

"There's a lot of people that have weaknesses to sex and booze or whatever it may be," Hamilton explains. "I'm not one that's too far from having any of those problems myself. I think we are all one decision away from messing ourself up."

Hamilton may best be known for his R&B songs, but the song "Sucka for You" shows off his poppier side.

"'Sucka for You' was a way of letting people know — 'You know what? I know you heard me on the R&B ballads and all these songs but this is a part of my personality [too]. I ain't too proud to beg. I ain't too tired to stay up all night. I got something to prove.'"

 

More Music Interviews

Podcast + RSS Feeds

Podcast RSS

  • Music
     
  • Music Articles
     
 
 
 

Comments

Please keep your community civil. All comments must follow the NPR.org Community rules and terms of use. See also the Community FAQ.

 

NPR reserves the right to read on the air and/or publish on its website or in any medium now known or unknown the e-mails and letters that we receive. We may edit them for clarity or brevity and identify authors by name and location. For additional information, please consult our Terms of Use.

 

First Listen

Spektor is an oddball sentimentalist whose words summon universal feelings of love, hope and desire.

First Listen: Regina Spektor, 'What We Saw From The Cheap Seats'

Spektor is an oddball sentimentalist whose words summon universal feelings of love, hope and desire.

more

NPR thanks our sponsors

Become an NPR Sponsor

Purchase Featured Music

Back To Love

Purchase Music

close

Purchase Featured Music

  • Album: Back To Love
  • Artist: Anthony Hamilton
  • Label: RCA
  • Released: 2011
 

More NPR Music

Pianist and composer Kurt Ellenberger urges musicians to "make money doing something else."

'It Can't Be Done': The Difficulty Of Growing A Jazz Audience

Pianist and composer Kurt Ellenberger urges musicians to "make money doing something else."

An online firestorm between the Met Opera, music critics and fans triggers crucial questions.

An Online Debate Of Operatic Intensity: The Met And Its Critics

An online firestorm between the Met Opera, music critics and fans triggers crucial questions.

Sufjan Stevens, Son Lux and Serengeti collaborate on a sometimes humorous but mostly beautiful EP.

By This 'Beak And Claw,' A Trio Shall Synthesize

Sufjan Stevens, Son Lux and Serengeti collaborate on a sometimes humorous but mostly beautiful EP.

The pianist's new album features etudes written by the Hungarian composer Gyorgy Ligeti.

Jeremy Denk: Playing Ligeti With A Dash Of Humor

The pianist's new album features etudes written by the Hungarian composer Gyorgy Ligeti.

more