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FUNK THAT!

Activist singer Martha Redbone to take the stage at Rhythm & Blues Fest

for The Brooklyn Paper

"I’m a real Brooklyn girl," says Martha Redbone, who was born, raised and still lives in the borough. She’s also one of the rising stars on the pop, soul-funk retro horizon.

On July 17, singer-songwriter Redbone will perform on a double bill with vocalist Donnie at BAM’s Rhythm & Blues Festival at Metrotech.

Some of the songs Redbone will sing will be on her upcoming (as yet untitled) CD, and some will be from her debut release "Home of the Brave." In a telephone interview from Arizona, where Redbone was on tour, she explained the meaning of her CD’s title.

"There is no song with that title," she said. "This is my first record. I want it to be known all over the world that I am an American artist. It’s the last line of the national anthem. It was not meant for people that looked like me. It was meant for white people. It would be nice to give the face of the ’home of the brave’ a brown face - mine. The face of the 21st century."

As the daughter of mixed-race parents - her father is black, her mother American Indian - Redbone certainly has a valid claim on both the heritage and the future of America. But her mixed roots have also had a profound influence on her music.

Redbone’s song "Vineyard" begins with an American Indian drum and sounds reminiscent of a chain gang. The song "Free" has a funky Creole slant blended with hip-hop beats. And the track "Heaven" has a gospel sound.

Redbone grew up in a home filled with music - from her father’s favorites (Earth, Wind and Fire; Sly and the Family Stone; and Stevie Wonder) to her mother’s choices (The Eagles, Don McLean). But she insists that her own music is something very different.

"I believe songwriting is a craft. I love a melody. I love chord changes. I love movement in a song," she told GO Brooklyn.

She is also very attentive to the meaning of her songs.

"I’m a humanitarian," Redbone says. "I write about what I see. I write about life and love, and the pursuit of happiness."

Sometimes Redbone’s material brings her into the realm of the controversial.

"My song ’Boyfriend’ is about a girl who dates a boy she later finds out is bisexual," Redbone explains. "My publisher said to me, ’This will never make it on the radio. It’s too controversial.’ When someone says that, it’s just a green light for me."

As someone who has tasted the bitter fruit of prejudice, Redbone has a well-developed social consciousness - which can be seen in her songs "Underdog" and "Unjust." In fact, her adopted name, Redbone, is slang and an insult for someone with black and American Indian ancestry.

"I decided I’m not going to blend in. I am going to be exactly what I am," says the Brooklyn Heights resident.

Redbone also decided she was going to speak her mind.

"In ’Unjust’ I talk about a lot of the injustices I see in the world between the haves and the have-nots," she says.

Redbone got her "biggest budge" toward professional singing when she was working as an illustrator for Parliament Funkadelic in London.

"During recording sessions, everyone wants to run into the studio and get on the album. I did that one day, and that was it. I knew that was where I belong," she says.

In London, Redbone teamed up with her co-writer and producer, Aaron Whitby. With the help of Walter "Junie" Morrison of the Ohio Players and Parliament Funkadelic, Redbone and Whitby founded Blackfeet Productions back in the States and recorded "Home of the Brave."

Redbone also started singing in Brooklyn’s "coffee kind of places." One of her goals these days is to appear on the stage of Park Slope’s SouthPaw.

Is anyone there listening?

Martha Redbone will perform on July 17, from noon to 2 pm, at BAM’s Rhythm & Blues Festival at the Metrotech Commons, at the corner of Flatbush and Myrtle avenues in Downtown Brooklyn. All concerts are free and open to the public. For more information, call (718) 636-4100 or visit www.bam.org.

Reader Feedback

NEMO from GUESS says:
she's just another wannabe native american trying to capitalize off the native people. i'm soo disgusted that so many black ppl are not proud of being black. always wanting to be something else. well martha, you are black, you look black, and will always be seen as black!! sorry...no native here!
Dec. 11, 2008, 11:18 pm

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