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The Brand New Heavies

The Brand New Heavies
The Brand New Heavies - Leverkusener Jazztage 2016-AL6795.jpg
The Brand New Heavies live at Leverkusener Jazztage (Germany) 2016
Background information
Origin Ealing, London, England
Genres
Years active 1985–present
Labels
Website TheBrandNewHeavies.net
Members Simon Bartholomew
Andrew Levy
Sulene Fleming
Past members Jan Kincaid
N'Dea Davenport
Siedah Garrett
Carleen Anderson
Jay Ella Ruth
Ceri Evans
Nicole Russo
Sy Smith
Dawn Joseph

The Brand New Heavies are an acid jazz and funk group formed in 1985 in Ealing in west London.

The Brand New Heavies began in the 1980s as an instrumental acid jazz group called Brothers International.

The group came up with the Heavies name after signing their first record contract, borrowing from a liner note on a James Brown single declaring the artist "Minister of New Super Heavy Funk". As The Brand New Heavies they gained a cult following in the London club scene and soon signed to Cooltempo as acid jazz replaced rare groove in clubs. The band issued a debut recording for Eddie Piller's Acid Jazz label in 1990 with Jay Ella Ruth as lead singer.

A single, "Got to Give", came out on Cooltempo before the Brand New Heavies signed to Acid Jazz Records and released Brand New Heavies to critical acclaim. The band signed to a division of Chrysalis Records in the UK, and American distribution was picked up by influential label Delicious Vinyl, and N'Dea Davenport (who had signed an artist development deal with Delicious Vinyl) joined the group. A revamped version of the first album with vocals by N'Dea Davenport was then released, and the singles "Dream Come True", "Never Stop" and "Stay This Way", all with Davenport on lead vocals, became hits on both sides of the Atlantic, with the latter becoming a music video directed by Douglas Gayeton that saw heavy rotation on MTV.

The group's appearance with MC Serch (formerly of 3rd Bass) and Q-Tip (of A Tribe Called Quest) at a performance in New York City, inspired the group to incorporate elements of hip hop music. Their next album was the critically acclaimed Heavy Rhyme Experience, Vol. 1, which included collaborations with Guru of Gang Starr and The Pharcyde, among others, but lacked any female vocals.


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Wikipedia

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