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Sweet sounds at the Sugar Water festival

Badu, Scott and Latifah discuss owning their tour, politics and the industry

By Terry Wynn
Reporter
NBC News
updated 3:49 p.m. ET July 18, 2005

Terry Wynn
Reporter

E-mail
WANTAGH, N.Y. - In what promises to be a critically acclaimed summer concert series, three Grammy-winning performers have joined forces to create The Sugar Water Festival Concert Series.  Midway through the tour, the stars — Queen Latifah, Erykah Badu and Jill Scott — sat down with NBC News’ reporter Terry Wynn II to discuss the politics of their music, owning their work as artists and what the festival represents to them as women.

How did you come up with the name Sugar Water Festival?

Erykah Badu: Water is the most fluent element on the earth with more that three quarters of the earth being covered with water. And water also represents the mother, the earth, the womb.  And saying “sugar water” means we are the sugar in the water.  The sweetness that sweetens the water.

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Jill Scott:  It’s like sweet nectar of the gods. God created water, God created us. It just has so many meanings, but we will figure it out by the time it is over. 

You each have toured nationally as solo acts; so what was your inspiration for touring as a collective?

Queen Latifah:  It was a lot of groveling involved (laughing).

JS: Please!  When she brought up the concept of the festival, having all three of us tour together, I was like um…yea!  It was not even a thought.  I didn’t even take a breath on that one.

QL:  Honestly for some people it is a thought.  But for us it wasn’t a thought.  It was an idea I think.  I think Erykah can relate to being on a tour where the idea is hot and you are hot and you just wish you could have the same thing for your folks.  That was what was on my mind after doing the Lilith Fair.  And I am used to being on tours with people who are fantastic performers and I respect them and I love their music. But the bottom line is they got the vision for what we are trying to do.  The bottom line was let’s get the tour, and own our tour.  I am all about ownership.  And if anybody knows anything about us it’s about ownership and handling your business but having fun at the same time.  Erykah wants to do way more community activist things, so does Jill and so do I.  This is only the beginning.  They are willing women and I just thank God that they got it.

Erykah, both you and Queen Latifah have branched out into movies in addition to your music and Jill you recently released a book of poetry.  But because of your musical success, you each could have just rested on your laurels and the fruits of your past but you choose to go into other areas.  How do you continue to raise the bar for yourselves as artists?

EB:  I think I can speak for everybody when I say this is how they made us!  This thing right here.  Like, you can be a singer all day long or an actor all day long but I think the Almighty put certain things in people.  If Jill were a wrestler, she would still excel because she has that “thing” in her that makes her unique.  It’s a thing that we are very grateful for and that we don’t take for granted.  So you don’t want to do just one little thing.  God gave us the gift to do many things.  Being an artist, I would say my religion is art because I do God’s work best through my art.

JS:  You better preach!

One thing I have noticed about each of you is that your work is simultaneously social and political.  Have important is it to have a message within the music?

EB:  Is it important?  I think it is sometimes. It depends on where you are.

QL: It goes back to the same thing she said.  It just depends on what comes out of you naturally.  Some people observe life naturally and sometimes you just have to let things out and think about it later.  You have to allow your mind to create and then if you want to censor something and bring it down or point it in a different direction, then you can do it.  You need to give yourself the time to think freely.  I don’t know if that is political.  But sometimes things are political because you observe things that are right or that are wrong and you want to speak on them. 

JS:  I think if you force the issue like saying ‘Right now I am going to write a love song or a revolutionary song.’ It becomes a machine and that is not what an artist is.  You just wait and it hits you and you have to be obedient to it. 


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