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Rahsaan Patterson's career is proof that an artist can be progressive while firmly based in gospel and R&B traditions. After a 13-year period entailing a co-starring role on Kids Incorporated, songwriting triumphs with
Brandy's "Baby" and
Tevin Campbell's "Back to the World," and other activity behind the scenes,
Patterson finally made his solo major-label debut with a self-titled album (1997) that started an unbroken streak of moderately successful, stylistically adventurous studio recordings. He has flashed his dynamic and soul-piercing tenor voice, as well as his production and arrangement skills, across a consistently high-quality discography highlighted by independent albums such as After Hours (2004), Wines & Spirits (2007), and Bleuphoria (2011). While his LPs have been separated by two to eight years,
Patterson has been sought regularly as a collaborator and remains an active performer. His 35th year in the entertainment industry coincided with the release of his sixth proper studio album,
Heroes & Gods (2019).
Originally from New York,
Rahsaan Patterson began singing in church during early childhood. He entered the entertainment industry and moved to Los Angeles once he was cast as "the Kid" in Kids Incorporated, a music-oriented children's television program in which the main cast performed contemporary hits.
Patterson co-starred in the first four seasons, from 1984 through 1987, and recorded albums with the group. The show's first breakout artist was
Martika, whose self-titled 1988 debut -- including the number one pop single "Toy Soldiers" -- featured
Patterson among other Kids Incorporated cast members as backing vocalists.
Early the next decade,
Patterson fronted
Stanley Clarke and
George Duke's "No Place to Hide" and could be heard in the background of
Martika's
Prince-assisted second album,
Martika's Kitchen.
Patterson then appeared on the first album by
Les Pierce's
Colour Club and took part in writing sessions for the first album by
Brandy. Along with
Keith Crouch and
Tease's
Kipper Jones, he co-wrote "Baby," which in 1995 topped the Billboard R&B/hip-hop chart and went number four pop. Additional songwriting credits followed with material for
Christopher Williams and
Tevin Campbell. Beside
Jamey Jaz and
Mikelyn Roderick,
Patterson co-wrote "Back to the World," a number 16 R&B/hip-hop hit for
Campbell in 1996.
Signed to a recording contract with major-label RCA,
Patterson began working on his first solo album in 1996 with
Les Pierce,
Keith Crouch, and
Jamey Jaz all heavily involved. In a Billboard feature published that November, writer J.R. Reynolds used adjectives such as alternative, progressive, and organic in describing the artist's approach to R&B. A couple months later,
Rahsaan Patterson was racked, and as a moderate success established a consistent pattern that has continued throughout
Patterson's career. Promoted with the charting "Where You Are," a sweet ballad, the LP peaked at number 48 on the R&B/hip-hop chart. The term "neo-soul" entered the music biz vernacular beforehand, but it didn't catch on until later in 1997, after executive
Kedar Massenburg applied it as a marketing term for Kedar Entertainment artists
Erykah Badu,
Big Bub, and
Chico DeBarge.
Rahsaan Patterson no doubt would have been a fit for that label.
Between album releases,
Patterson appeared as a collaborator in varying capacities on albums by
Ray J and
Jody Watley. He also co-wrote
Chico DeBarge's "Give You What You Want (Fa Sure)," which charted around the time he also issued his second album,
Love in Stereo. Its biggest hit, "Treat You Like a Queen," seamlessly joined classic and contemporary elements like few other singles at the time.
Pierce and
Jaz remained on board, while
Van Hunt (a few years ahead of his solo debut) co-wrote and co-produced one third of the songs. It reached number 51 on the R&B/hip-hop chart.
Although the gaps between his album releases widened across the 2000s,
Patterson remained consistent artistically and commercially as he recorded for Artistry Music (with Dome as his European label). Five years after
Love in Stereo,
Patterson returned in 2004 with After Hours, his funkiest and livest full-length. A full band backed him on highlights such as "I Always Find Myself" and "So Hot," ranging from a swampy,
Voodoo-style groove to a hybrid of circa-1979
Rufus & Chaka Khan and
Slave. Three years later,
Patterson covered much more ground with Wines & Spirits, a set that within the space of three songs moved from the euphoric contemporary soul ballad "Feels Good" to "Pitch Black," a dread-filled number falling somewhere between spiritually conflicted
Prince and early
Cure. Emotional and stylistic breadth also characterized the 2011 album Bleuphoria, which featured appearances from Kids Incorporated alum
Shanice,
Jody Watley,
Faith Evans, and kindred spirit
Lalah Hathaway. As with the
MCA recordings, all three sets placed somewhere in the middle of the R&B/hip-hop chart, with Bleuphoria the first to crack the Top 40. Likewise,
Crouch and
Jaz remained deeply involved, with many other longtime associates making smaller contributions.
During this period,
Patterson became a staple of the "grown folks R&B" touring circuit and also supported numerous studio projects, including sessions for
Jimmy Sommers,
Brian Culbertson,
Trina Broussard,
Boney James,
Ledisi, and
Hathaway (highlighted by "Let Go"). Additionally, he joined
Ida Corr and
Jarrad Rogers to form SugaRush Beat Company, a group that released a spirited self-titled LP through the U.K. division of RCA.
Patterson ended an extended break between solo albums with
Heroes & Gods. Released on Shanachie in 2019,
Patterson's 35th year in show business, it mixed traditional and modern R&B, mature pop, and house music with extensive help from
Jaz and additional input from
Hathaway and
Broussard, as well as
Rachelle Ferrell, and Joi Gilliam. Although it was his first album in nearly a decade,
Patterson was active all the while with touring. ~ Andy Kellman