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Revelations featuring Tre Williams hold their own


In a musical landscape fraught with Auto-Tune, 808s and faux strings, The Revelations — featuring Tre Williams — continue to stay true to soul. Their ’60s and ’70s inspired songs explore issues like love and poverty with heart-wrenching lyrics and rich instrumentation.

The band debuted with “The Bleeding Edge” in 2009, and recently released their second effort “Concrete Blues,” recorded at the legendary Royal Studios in Memphis.

A great sophomore effort that fuses R&B with modern blues and soul, some standout tracks include Johnnie Taylor’s “Don’t Wait,” “How Could You Walk Away” and “Until You Get Enough of Me.”

The Banner recently talked with Williams — who got his start singing hooks for hip-hop artists including Petey Pablo and Nas — about the making of “Concrete Blues,” his song-writing process and misconceptions about the music industry.

When did you first fall in love with music?

I’ve been singing in the church choir since I was five. I wanted to understand [music]. I wanted to lead.  It wasn’t until 10 or 11 years ago that I got serious. I stopped drinking and smoking and hanging out all the time, and put my whole life into making music.  I left Daytona for New York with a bag of dirty clothes and $5.00.

I know your background is in hip hop. What made you change your sound?

I had my first mainstream song with Petey Pablo, but I didn’t feel like I’d put all of my effort forth. When I did the “I-95” song with Styles-P I felt like I was on my way to the industry.  I was getting my feet wet in the business.

Later, I signed a deal with Nas. I was signed 3 to 4 years with him. I did the “Let There Be Light” song on his “Hip Hop is Dead” album. Even after all that, I didn’t know where I needed to be until I met Bob Perry. Through meeting him, the idea of a full band was born.

When we did the “I Don’t Want to Know Record,” I knew this was it. I was like, “Wait a minute, hold on, let me change course.” I felt something special. It’s bigger than me. God had a plan and I was going to follow.

What’s your creative process for songwriting?

My view is that [a process] is routine. There are times when I’m sleeping and I jump up in the middle of the night and tell my wife I got a song to catch. I just let it come natural. If I have to struggle with writing it, then people will struggle to like it. Sometimes I get the melody but not words, or sometimes I listen to a track and say “Whoa! I can write something mean to that.” Some other artists might sit down and drink black tea whenever they’re trying to write, but that doesn’t work for me. You should write whatever you feel. Write what you know about.

Tell me about The Revelations studio sessions.

With “Concrete Blues” we did something very special. We all went to Memphis to record at Royal Studios. Al Green recorded there. We called in the Hodges Brothers,  James Alexander and other musicians. We all sat down and I just started singing and everyone started playing. We recorded it live.  I told Bob that the experience is a story in and of itself.

I was in awe of these musicians. But, they were in awe of being with me. I told them that I’d done nothing compared to them. They told me I’m the future of soul. I’m the beacon.

Did you give them the music before they showed up at Royal?

No. No rough drafts or anything. I just started singing. It was very powerful. There are no synthetic sounds. Everything is as it should be.

How does one become a great artist, especially when it’s so difficult to move units?

Consistency. That’s the only way. You have to constantly give the people something that’s worth their money. It used to be that you could give people two or three good songs and they would buy the whole album.

I also think it’s important to do Facebook and Twitter yourself. First, it’s fun! But also how can someone else do it for me? This is what we (artists) signed up for. If you can’t embrace Facebook, Twitter, or whatever, what are we here for? You should have real conversations back and forth.  Imagine if we could have talked to Steve Wonder online and be on Twitter with our heroes? Imagine that. Now that we can do that, there’s no reason we shouldn’t take full advantage.  

There are a lot of misconceptions about being in the music industry. What are some of the misconceptions you had to deal with?

 Honestly, people think as soon as you get signed you’re going to be rich and famous. But there’s a lot of famous hungry people. I have seen “stars” walking down the street who are struggling to pay rent or living in their cars.  

When I got signed to Nas’ label, I thought it would be a no brainer. I’m as talented an artist as anybody else. I felt like there was no ceiling, no limit to how high I could go. But, suddenly the roof started closing in quick.

But lately people come up to me and say “Man, You came out of nowhere. You made it, you’re a star.” If they only knew how long I’ve been doing this. And, if I’m a star now, then who was I last year?       

There’s no such thing as making it. This is a job. If you work at Burger King and get fired, you can go to McDonalds and get another job. But in music, once the people have decided that you’re fired, there’s no other job.