Pas encore de compte ?
  • Increase font size
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size
 
Member Area
+ Accueil arrow Les Nouvelles arrow Wyclef Jean
Wyclef Jean Convertir en PDF Version imprimable Suggérer par mail
Écrit par Soundbeat   
28-11-2007


Del.icio.us!

Facebook!

Furl!

Image

Wyclef Jean est fier de présenter son nouvel album ''The Carnival II : Memoirs Of An Immigrant''. L'album est disponible dans tous les bons disquaires, procurez-vous le dès maintenant.

Biographie
Né Wyclef Jeannelle Jean, le 17 octobre 1972 à Croix-des-Bouquets, en Haïti, il émigre aux Etats-Unis à l'âge de dix ans et part vivre dans les lotissements de Brooklin's Malborough rejoindre sa famille. C'est là qu'il rencontre Pras Michel qui sera son grand ami d'enfance, tant et si bien qu'ils s'autoproclameront cousins.
Il part poursuivre ses études dans le nord du New Jersey, où il commence la guitare et étudie le jazz au lycée (high school).
Là bas, il aura pour camarade de classe Lauryn Hill avec qui lui et son ami d'enfance créé en 1987 le groupe The Tranzlator Crew qui deviendra The Fugees au début des années 1990. Avec les Fugees, il enregistra en 1994 l'album Blunted On Reality, puis en 1996,The Score qui est toujours l'album de Hip-Hop le plus vendu au monde.

En 1997 chaque membre des Fugees travaille sur des projets solo et Wyclef sort Wyclef Jean Presents: The Carnival Featuring the Refugee All-Stars. Il est très engagé pour son pays natal et à créé la Wyclef Jean Foundation. Il a fondé aussi, une organisation du nom de yélé Haïti le 13 janvier 2005. Il a invité Angelina Jolie et Brad Pitt pour fêter l'anniversaire de l'organisation.

En 2006, afin de venir en aide aux immigrants latino américains aux USA Wyclef Jean enregistre "Nuestro Himno", version en espagnol de l'hymne américain (The Star-Spangled Banner) avec Pitbull, Carlos Ponce, Olga Tañón, Ivy Queen, Andy Andy, Autoridad de la Sierra, Aventura & Rayito, Kalimba, LDA, Tony Sunshine, Patrulla 81, Frank Reyes, Gloria Trevi, Yamayea, N’Klabe, Reik, Kany.

Cette même année il apparait dans le documentaire musical de Michel Gondry: Dave Chappelle's Block Party, dans lequel on voit se reformer sur une scene de Brooklyn les Fugees 8 ans après leur séparation. Son nouvel album est en magasin maintenant The Carnival II : Memoirs Of An Immigrant.


Discographie
 1997 :Wyclef Jean Presents: The Carnival Featuring the Refugee All-Stars
 2000 :The Ecleftic: 2 Sides II a Book
 2000 : "911" avec Mary J. Blige
 2001 :Wish You Were Here
 2002 :Masquerade
 2002 :One Nite Stand avec Sarah Connor
 2003 :The Preacher's Son
 2004 :Sak Pasé Presents: Creole 101 (Welcome to Haïti)
 2004 : "Dance Like This" avec Claudette Ortiz pour la musique de filmDirty Dancing: Havana Nights.
 2004 : "La vie ghetto" avec Passi. Sortie en 2007 sur la mixtape de Passi Revolution
 2004 : Il chante Secret Lover avec Admiral T sur son album Mozaïk Kréyòl
 2006 : "Hips Don't Lie / Será, Será" (un remake de "Dance Like This") avec la chanteuse Shakira
 2006 : "Why Don't We (Aman Aman)" avec Tarkan
 2006 : "Nuestro Himno" en collaboration avec le rappeur Pitbull, Carlos Ponce, et Olga Tañón
 2006 : "Heaven's in New York" pour One Last Thing soundtrack.
 2006 : "Toppa De Top" avec Sean Paul pour le label "Jam 2"
 2006 : Chante en duo avec Shakira dans la chanson my hips don't lie
 2006 : Chante en trio avec les Ying Yang Twins dans la chanson dangereous
 2007 :The Carnival II : Memoirs Of An Immigrant ( Album en magasin maintenant)
 2007: Chante en duo avec PASSI sur l'album de ce dernier,sur le titre "Paris On Fire"
 2007: Single The Sweetest Girl (Dollar Bill) Feat Akon, Lil' Wayne and introducing Niia
 2007: Wyclef Feat Akon, Lil' Wayne et Raekwon (Wu Tang Clan)- The Sweetest Girl (Dollar Bill) Remix
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

With a formidable new album, "The Carnival II: Memoirs of an Immigrant," on the way, the Haitian-born Grammy Award-winning musician/rapper/producer/social activist, Wyclef Jean is entering an important new phase of his career.

"In the past few years many things have happened that have effected who I am," says Wyclef. "The unexpected passing of my father brought great spiritual reflection on what matters in life. God's gift of my daughter reminded me of how love is the greatest way to heal. I have traveled the world, seen the issues in my native land, and worked some of the most important recording artists artistically. This has given me a second wind, so to speak. Inspiration."

In the 20 years since first meeting his fellow Fugees cofounders -- Lauryn Hill and Prakazrel ("Pras") Michel -- and 10 years since launching his prolific solo career with 1997's "Wyclef Jean Presents the Carnival Featuring the Refugee All-Stars," Wyclef Jean has effortlessly crossed genres, generations and geographic boundaries as a musical goodwill ambassador and a diplomat for positive cultural evolution.

"Everything I do revolve around music," says Wyclef. "If there was no music, I wouldn't be where I'm at. My music is the vessel I use."

His musical journey began in Haiti, where he sang in his father's church at the age of 3. 12 years later, after moving to the United States at age 6, Wyclef formed his first serious musical collaboration, the Tranzlator Crew, in 1987, with New Jersey classmates Lauryn Hill and Pras Michel (whom Wyclef calls his "cousin"). By 1994, the Tranzlator Crew had become the Fugees and the group enjoyed its first critical acclaim and moderate chart success with its debut album, "Blunted On Reality," and a pair of singles: "Nappy Heads" and "Vocab."

The Fugees next album, 1996's "The Score," fulfilled the group's promise in bigger ways than anyone had imagined, becoming a full-blown cultural phenomenon. "The Score" reached the #1 slots on Billboard's Top 200 and Top R&B/Hip-Hop albums charts, produced three hit singles -- "Fu-Gee-La," "Killing Me Softly With His Song," and "Ready Or Not" -- and earned two Grammys: Best R&B Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocals ("Killing Me Softly With His Song") and Best Rap Album. "The Score" went on to become the world's #1 top-selling hip-hop album of all-time, selling more than 17 million copies globally and still counting.

In 1997, the obvious next move for this very gifted writer and producer was to embark upon a solo project. "Wyclef Jean Presents the Carnival Featuring the Refugee All-Stars" (aka "The Carnival") peaked at #16 on the Billboard 200 and #4 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop album charts while generating the smash singles "Guantanamera" (which earned a Grammy nomination), "We Trying To Stay Alive" and "Gone Till November," which continues to be a signature classic. Guest artists on the album included Lauryn Hill and Pras as well as the I Threes (Bob Marley's backup vocalists), the Neville Brothers, and the legendary salsa singer Celia Cruz.

Wyclef branched out even further with 2000's "The Ecleftic: 2 Sides II A Book," which he recorded with a diverse range of guest artists including Youssou N'Dour, Earth Wind & Fire, Kenny Rogers, and Mary J. Blige. That same year, he was nominated for Best Hip-Hop act at the 2000 MTV Europe Video Music Awards.

His third solo album, 2002's "Masquerade," peaked at #6 on the Top 200 and reached #2 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop charts. The record featured tracks recorded with Bumpy Knuckles & M.O.P., Claudette Ortiz, and archetypal 60s mod crooner Tom Jones.

His fourth solo album, 2003's autobiographic "The Preacher's Son," drew positive reviews and featured cameo performances from Patti LaBelle, Redman, Carlos Santana, and others. His next effort, 2004's "Welcome To Haiti: Creole 101," marked his most radical artistic and musical statement. It was during this period that he had made his first visit back to his homeland since childhood. Wyclef decided that he would sing much of the album in his native language, Haitian Creole, celebrating his musical heritage.

His talents as a producer and collaborator have led to a myriad of successful projects over the past two decades including recordings with Bono ("New Day"), writing and producing Carlo Santana's "Supernatural," which won the Grammy for Album of the Year, and Whitney Houston's "My Love Is Your Love."

Wyclef most recently struck a chord in mass pop consciousness with "Hips Don't Lie," the chart-topping Grammy-nominated international smash hit duet with Shakira which was based around his own song, "Dance Like This." "No matter how much the drums may change," says Wyclef, "there is nothing new under the sun. A great song will always be a great song." The track took home Song of the Year honors at the MTV Latin Awards and went on to break the spin history records held on Billboard Monitor's Top 40 Mainstream chart. "Hips Don't Lie" also held #1 airplay chart positions around the world for 20 weeks.

For Wyclef, "Hips Don't Lie" opened up a new chapter in his ever-evolving career. "When you're having a dry period, sometimes you question your relevance, not on the music, but on the trends and how things are changing," he confesses. "So when the Shakira record came out and I was told that it broke Michael Jackson's and Elvis Presley's record for airplay, it put a battery pack on my back and reminded me that I am relevant. I became a 14-year old kid again."

Wyclef's brand-new studio album is, he says, "a continuation of 'Gone Till November.' I focus a lot on the songwriting." On his new record, Wyclef has once again called upon his friends from an extraordinary list of artists including Paul Simon, Mary J. Blige, T.I., Norah Jones, Akon, Serj Tankian (of System Of A Down), Lil' Wayne, and Shakira, to name a few. Once again, Wyclef is collaborating on production with his long-time production partner, Jerry Duplessis, whom he has worked with since the beginning of the Fugees.

Through the years, Wyclef has always chosen who he works with carefully. "I have to be a fan," he says. "It has to be challenging. The worst thing you can tell me is it can't be done."

Wyclef's approach towards challenges is especially apparent in work on humanitarian causes. He is particularly focused on efforts in producing results in his native Haiti. Wyclef Jean created the non-profit foundation Yéle Haiti (www.yelehaiti.org) to provide aid and assistance to that impoverished nation. Founded in January 2005, the charity has already changed the lives of hundreds of thousands of poverty-stricken Haitians through its programs of sustainable development. It links with existing groups and/or starts programs that feed the hungry and fight AIDS, as well as providing soul-sustaining nourishment through arts and sports programs. Yéle's biggest contribution is intangible. "The greatest accomplishment is giving hope to young kids," says Wyclef. "Yéle Haiti allows kids to dream and it's been a minute in Haiti since the kids had good dreams. Their dreams have been nightmares. That's what got me here, dreaming."

Harry Belafonte, another legendary performer and tireless civil rights leader, has taken Wyclef's cause to heart. "Before I went to Haiti on a mission, Harry was the first person I sat with," Wyclef says. When Wyclef recently performed for Belafonte at actor/singer/activist's 80th birthday party, Belafonte told him, "I couldn't pass the torch to a better person."

"So much of the hopes of Haitians reside within Wyclef and within Yéle," says Yéle Haiti's executive director Hugh Locke. "We have become intertwined with the future of the country." The longtime aid worker adds, "This is one of the few instances I've come across where a non-governmental, non-profit organization is having a very significant impact on an entire nation. Wyclef is the most instantly recognized and loved non-political figure in Haiti, bar none."

While Wyclef spends much time in Haiti, he knows the future of Yéle Haiti lives far beyond Haiti's borders. "It's that Diaspora that lives outside of Haiti and other people in America and Europe that want to help Haiti who actually physically go and look and see what they want to do." After Wyclef joined forces with Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie on a trip to Haiti in 2006, hits on the Yéle Haiti website soared from 20 a week to a staggering 46,000 per day.

Part of Wyclef's enduring appeal is he remains an everyman, completely approachable and unfazed by celebrity's sparkle. "Until I see one celebrity that is able to actually rise from the dead because they had so much money and fame, I will continue to a man among regular people."

With Yéle Haiti on its feet, Wyclef now plans to relaunch Clef Kids, a U.S.-based charity he started years ago. "It was my way of saying to America, 'Thanks for everything you did for me.' We find kids with different talents, help them develop and usually that's where the geniuses come from." Helping others is simply an act of kindness that he learned from his father, a preacher. "He was probably my greatest inspiration," Wyclef says. "I get my whole swagger from him and mostly my love for others." In addition to Wyclef's humanitarian efforts in his native Haiti and his focus on children, he has been asked to be involved in many of the works on behalf of the eradication of HIV/AIDS around the world, with particular focus on Haiti and Africa. "It is great to see the many organizations that are working on eliminating poverty and HIV and AIDS around the world," says Wyclef. "I am hoping that the work I do with any of these organizations and charities can assist me in getting resources for Haiti."

Wyclef is now turning to a younger generation for inspiration. "I'm learning a lot from the new kids," he says. "I'm in the studio with T.I. and [the Black Eyed Peas'] will.i.am, who's sometimes compared to me. I love it because people used to compare me to Bob Marley. Now they see Wyclef is Wyclef. My secret is that I always think I can learn something."

These days he's looking at someone even younger as his ultimate inspiration: his two-year old daughter. "That kid did something to my life -- her energy, her youthfulness," Wyclef says. "I just have to be 50 times better than I was for her." And that drive comes through in everything he does because Wyclef knows his legacy will be his daughter, his humanitarian work and, above all, his music: "When I go into the studio and I sing a song, that song stays forever; so the secret to eternal life is a good song!"

"Fast Car," featuring Paul Simon, and "The Sweetest Girl," featuring Akon and Lil' Wayne, the first new songs from "The Carnival II: Memoirs of an Immigrant," are set for release on August 1, 2007.

Dernière mise à jour : ( 26-02-2008 )
 
< Précédent   Suivant >
Advertisement

Sondage

Pour ou contre l'obligation d'avoir des pneus d'hiver à partir du 15 décembre?
 

Inscription

Tag

album   août   après   artistes   billets   canada   cinéma   drsquoun   drsquoune   festival   films   montréal   même   première   qursquoil   québec   radio   rock   samedi   scène   soirée   spectacle   tournée   très   être   2008  


Hébergement

SoundbeatHosting.com

Media Kit

SoundbeatMedia.com

Affiliés

  • JoomlaWorks AJAX Header Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks AJAX Header Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks AJAX Header Rotator

Partenaires

  • JoomlaWorks AJAX Header Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks AJAX Header Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks AJAX Header Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks AJAX Header Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks AJAX Header Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks AJAX Header Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks AJAX Header Rotator
  • JoomlaWorks AJAX Header Rotator