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Lead Fugees rapper and sometime
guitarist Wyclef Jean was the first member of his group
to embark on a solo career, and he proved even more ambitious
and eclectic on his own. As the Fugees hung in limbo, Wyclef
also became hip-hop's unofficial multicultural conscience;
a seemingly omnipresent activist, he assembled or participated
in numerous high-profile charity benefit shows for a variety
of causes, including aid for his native Haiti. The utopian
one-world sensibility that fueled Wyclef's political consciousness
also informed his recordings, which fused hip-hop with as
many different styles of music as he could get his hands
on (though, given his Caribbean roots, reggae was a particular
favorite).
In addition to his niche
as hip-hop's foremost global citizen, Clef was also a noted
producer and remixer who worked with an impressive array
of pop, R&B, and hip-hop talent, including Whitney Houston,
Santana, and Destiny's Child, among many others.
The son of a minister, Nelust
Wyclef Jean was born in Croix-des-Bouquets, Haiti, on October
17, 1972. When he was nine, his family moved to the Marlborough
projects in Brooklyn, NY; by his teenage years, Jean had
moved to New Jersey, taken up the guitar, and begun studying
jazz through his high school's music department. In 1987,
he also joined a rap group with his cousin Prakazrel Michel
(aka Pras) and Michel's high-school classmate Lauryn Hill.
Initially calling themselves the Tranzlator Crew, they evolved
into the Fugees, a name taken from slang for Haitian refugees.
The trio signed with Ruffhouse
Records in 1993 and released their debut album, Blunted
on Reality, the following year; it attracted little notice,
thanks to an inappropriate hardcore stance that the group
wore like an ill-fitting suit. But the Fugees hit their
stride on the follow-up The Score, ignoring popular trends
and crafting an eclectic, bohemian masterpiece that sounded
like nothing else on the hip-hop landscape in 1996. Thanks
to hit singles like "Fu-Gee-La" and "Killing Me Softly",
The Score became a chart-topping phenomenon; in fact, with
sales of over six-million copies, it still ranks as one
of the biggest-selling rap albums of all time.
Wyclef Jean was the first
Fugee to declare plans for a solo project, setting to work
soon after the group completed its supporting tours. Released
in the summer of 1997, The Carnival (full title: Wyclef
Jean Presents the Carnival Featuring the Refugee All-Stars)
was even more musically ambitious than The Score. Its roster
of guests included not only the remainder of the Fugees,
but also Jean's siblings (who performed together in the
duo Melky Sedeck), Cuban legend Celia Cruz, New Orleans
funk mainstays the Neville Brothers, and Bob Marley's female
backing vocalists the I Threes. The breadth of his ambition
was further in evidence on the album's two hit singles;
"We Trying to Stay Alive" recast the Bee Gees' signature
disco tune as a ghetto empowerment anthem, and the Grammy-nominated
"Gone Till November" was recorded with part of the New York
Philharmonic Orchestra. Those two songs helped push The
Carnival into a Top 20, triple-platinum showing, and most
reviews were naturally quite positive.
In the wake of The Carnival,
Wyclef stepped up his outside work for other artists; over
the next few years, he collaborated as a producer, songwriter,
and/or remixer with a typically diverse list of artists:
Destiny's Child ("No No No"), Sublime, Simply Red, Whitney
Houston (the title track of her My Love Is Your Love album),
dancehall reggae star Bounty Killer, Cypress Hill, Michael
Jackson, Eric Benet, Mya, Santana ("Maria Maria"), Tevin
Campbell, the Black Eyed Peas, Kimberly Scott, Sinéad O'Connor,
Mick Jagger, and Canibus. Clef also served as Canibus' manager
for a short time in 1998; prior to their split, a report
surfaced that Wyclef had pulled a gun on Blaze editor Jesse
Washington over a negative Canibus review the magazine was
slated to run (Wyclef vehemently denied the accusation,
and no charges were filed).
By the time Wyclef began
work on his second solo album, rumors were flying about
tension between individual Fugees, and despite their denials,
the fact that no follow-up to The Score was in sight seemed
to lend credence to all the speculation. Although Wyclef
had previously announced he would put off his sophomore
effort until after the next Fugees album, he was well into
the project by early 2000, giving an early release the anti-police
brutality track "Diallo" (with guest vocals from Senegalese
superstar Youssou N'Dour) via the Internet. The full album,
titled The Ecleftic: 2 Sides II a Book, was released toward
the end of the summer and entered the charts at number nine.
Besides N'Dour, guests this time around included Mary J.
Blige (on the Grammy-nominated duet "911"), Earth, Wind
& Fire, Kenny Rogers, and even wrestling star the Rock ("It
Doesn't Matter"); Clef also threw in a left-field cover
of Pink Floyd's "Wish You Were Here." This time around,
some critics suggested that Wyclef's sprawling ambitions
were growing messy, but the record went platinum nonetheless.
Shortly after its release, he also started up his own record
label, Yclef.
With no Fugees reunion in
sight, Wyclef began preparing his third solo album, Masquerade,
in 2001; he also appeared in the Jamaican gangster flick
Shottas, and, sadly, suffered the death of his father in
a home accident. Masquerade was released in the summer of
2002, and in addition to the usual worldbeat fusions, it
found Wyclef reworking songs by Bob Dylan and Frankie Valli,
and featured guest shots from Tom Jones and Israeli violinist
Miri Ben-Ari. Masquerade entered the charts at number six,
proving that Wyclef's freewheeling approach still held quite
a bit of appeal.
by Steve Huey
© allmusic.com
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