| Lisa Stansfield |
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Lisa Jane Stansfield |
| Born |
April 11, 1966 (1966-04-11) (age 41) |
| Origin |
Heywood, Rochdale, United
Kingdom |
| Genre(s) |
Pop
Dance
Contemporary R&B
House
Soul |
| Occupation(s) |
Singer |
| Instrument(s) |
Vocals |
| Years active |
1989–present |
Lisa Jane Stansfield (born April 11, 1966), better known as
Lisa Stansfield, is an English R&B
and soul
singer
from the United Kingdom.
|
Contents
- 1 Early
career and top ten success
- 2 European
stardom
- 3 Changing
labels
- 4 Personal
- 5 Acting
- 6 Discography
- 7 Trivia
- 8 See
also
- 9 External
links
|
Early career and top ten success
After releasing several unsuccessful singles
in her mid-teens (she also co-hosted a Children's TV pop show at
this time, Razzmatazz with
Alistair Pirrie), she became a major international star. Though
her UK
band
Blue
Zone saw modest success with the single "Jackie", she really came onto
the radar with her guest vocal stint on Coldcut's
record "People Hold On." She is
probably best known for her first UK
number one single, "All Around the World" (1989), which also peaked at
#3 in the United States Billboard
Hot 100 the following year. Other
worldwide hits from her solo debut album Affection
include "This is the Right Time" (featuring a house music-styled production
by Coldcut
with Mark
Saunders), "Live Together", "What Did I Do To You" and "You
Can't Deny It". "All Around the World" was the first song by a white
female soloist to hit No. 1 on the Billboard R&B
chart; "You Can't Deny It" also topped that chart.
Affection went platinum in the U.S.,
and sold a total of five million copies worldwide.
In 1990, Stansfield was among a handful of high-profile
artists to participate in the Red
Hot + Blue charity disc (which honored Cole
Porter's songwriting, and benefitted AIDS research, at a time when funding from
government agencies was insufficient to those in need). She got to show
her swing
and jazz chops on the song "Down in the
Depths", which was one of few traditional renditions to appear on the
album. Thus began an illustrious and respected tradition of Stansfield
offering jazz and torch songs to outside projects (most
recently she sang "I've Got the World On a String" for the Mona
Lisa Smile soundtrack). This is likely what got her
noticed for consideration as the female lead in the independent film Swing
(1999), where she was to sing the majority of the film's songs as well
as act.
In 1992, Stansfield won a BRIT Award as best British female solo
artist. Her second album Real Love did not quite
live up to the success of Affection, despite
selling very well. However, it did spawn four Top 40 singles on
the European charts: "Change", "All Woman", "Time to Make You Mine" and
"Set Your Loving Free". "Change" has since become one of her classic
singles: it can be heard on radio and in supermarket
playlists
to this day. "All Woman" became Stansfield's third No. 1 single on the Billboard
R&B chart, and due to the success of that song, the album went
gold in the U.S. "All Woman" is "kitchen sink soul", full of pathos and
emotion from a domestic female point of view.
European stardom
She continued recording disco-influenced
soul throughout the 1990s. Her third album So Natural
(1993) spawned three Top 40 European singles including the title track,
"In All the Right Places," and "Little Bit of Heaven," but the album
was never released in the U.S. She had continued success throughout
Europe, but her popularity in America had diminished. Her
self-titled fourth album Lisa Stansfield (1997) was
a hit in Europe with two Top Ten singles - "People Hold On"
(re-released as a dance mix by the Dirty Rotten Scoundrels) and "The
Real Thing," and the Top 40 track "Never Never Gonna Give You Up" (a
remake of Barry
White's 1973 hit); upon being released in the U.S. the album did not
receive much attention outside dance clubs where remixes were very
successful. It charted modestly peaking at #30 Top R&B/Hip-Hop
Albums and #55 on the Billboard Hot 100. The music
video for "Never Never Gonna Give You Up" was an eye-catcher featuring
a nude Stansfield strolling a city street, acquiring a few items of
clothing along the way. VH1
featured the clip and even gave it the "Pop-Up
Video" treatment. Her 2001 album Face Up was less
successful, barely charting and with a lack of publicity but featured
the singles "Let's Just Call It Love" and "8-3-1" and found her
experimenting with newer styles of R&B such as 2-step while
continuing with her established sound. Stansfield's husband, Ian
Devaney, delivered an arrangement for the ballad "How Could
You", which displayed his love of Burt Bacharach's legacy. Only one
single was officially released in the UK.
Changing labels
Following the release of Face Up, a
greatest hits collection called Biography was
released and sold well in the UK and Europe. Stansfield then parted
ways with Arista/BMG (ending an eighteen
year association with the label). Stansfield signed with ZTT
Records for the United Kingdom, and her 2004 release The
Moment was produced by Trevor Horn, well-known for
his work with Seal, Grace
Jones, and Frankie Goes to Hollywood
among others. The album would be distributed in Europe by Edel.
Featuring the singles "Treat Me Like A Woman" (released as a "double A
side" with "Easier") and "If I Hadn't Got You" a song written by Chris
Braide with ex-Squeeze
songwriter
Chris
Difford. The album found her exploring more pop-oriented
material, and focusing on lush ballads.
Despite this, as with her previous release, the album and
supporting singles were not a success. At the time of the project's
release, ZTT was gearing large amounts of its resources into
re-marketing its back catalogue, and producing the Trevor Horn concert
for The Prince's Trust and its
accompanying double CD, Produced By Trevor Horn.
The release of "Treat Me Like a Woman" was delayed twice. The label
eventually paired it with "Easier". While ZTT did erect a billboard to
advertise the album in Stansfield's home area of Greater Manchester,
print advertising and "in store" displays were reportedly absent. Later
that year ZTT dropped her from their label.
To the delight of fans, a DVD of Stansfield's Ronnie
Scott's performance in 2003 was released in 2005.
Personal
- In July 1998, she married trumpeteer Ian Devaney, whom she
knew since her school days, and with whom she also collaborates (he is
also a composer,
arranger and producer).
- Despite having the same name and coming from Heywood (Rochdale),
Lisa Stansfield is not closely related to the famous singer of the
1930s and 1940s, Gracie Fields (whose real
name was Grace Stansfield). However, she does own a recording studio
called 'Gracielands'.
Acting
Stansfield also has a dramatic career: she starred in the 1999
film Swing
with actor
Hugo
Speer, recording covers of swing
classics and a few original songs written in/inspired by the style for
the soundtrack. She later appeared on a London stage in The
Vagina Monologues. In 2006, she gueststarred in
the series Goldplated.
In 2007 she starred in Marple (TV series) episode Ordeal
by Innocence and later joined the cast of The
Edge of Love
Discography
Albums
- Affection
(1989) U.S sales - Platinum, Worldwide sales - 5 million UK #2, US
BBHot100 #9
- Real Love (1991) U.S sales - Gold,
Worldwide sales - 4 million UK #3, US BBHot100 #43
- In Session (1992) Not an original studio
album, but a collection of mostly "demo" material from Stansfield's
early days (pre-Blue Zone). Thought to be assembled without her
co-operation.
- So Natural (1993)
Worldwide sales - 2 million UK #6
- Lisa Stansfield (1997) U.S sales -
250,000 - Gold, Worldwide sales - 3 million UK #2, US BBHot100 #55
- The Remix Album (1998) ep/remix album
- Swing: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
(1999) U.S. Top Jazz Albums: #6
- Face Up (2001) Worldwide sales - 300,000
UK #38
- Biography
(2003) Worldwide sales - 1 million UK #3
- The Complete Collection (2003) Limited
edition box set collects all five of Lisa's albums, remastered in
digipaks
- The Moment (2004) Worldwide sales -
50,000 European Top 100 Albums: # N/A
- The Moment - Gold Edition (2006)
Singles
- "People Hold On" (with Coldcut) (1989) UK #11
- "This Is The Right Time" (1989) UK #13, U.S. #21, U.S.
Dance #1
- "All
Around the World" (1989) UK #1, U.S. #3, U.S. R&B #1
- "Do They Know It's
Christmas" as part of Band Aid II (1989) UK #1
- "Live Together" (1990) UK #10
- "What Did I Do To You" (1990) UK #25
- "You Can't Deny It" (1990) U.S.
#14, U.S. R&B #1
- "Change" (1991) UK #10, US #27, U.S. Dance #1
- "All
Woman" (1991) UK #20, U.S. #56, U.S. R&B #1
- "Time To Make You Mine" (1992) UK #14
- "Set Your Loving Free" (1992) UK #28
- "Someday (I'm Coming Back)" (1992) UK #10
- "Five Live EP" (with Queen
and George Michael) (1993) UK #1
- "In All the Right Places" (1993) UK #8
- "So Natural" (1993) UK #15
- "Little Bit of Heaven" (1993) UK #32
- "Make It Right" (1994)
- "Dream Away" (with Babyface) (1994)
- "People Hold On (Bootleg Mixes)" (with Dirty Rotten Scoundrels)
(1997) UK #4
- "The Real Thing" (1997) UK #9, U.S. Dance #1
- "Never, Never Gonna Give You Up" (1997) UK #25, U.S. #74,
U.S. Dance #1
- "The Line" (1997) UK #64
- "Let's Just Call It Love" (2001) UK #48
- "8-3-1" (2001) UK # N/A
- "Treat Me Like A Woman" / " Easier" (issued by ZTT as a
"double A-side single") (2005) UK # N/A,
U.S. # N/A
- "If I Hadn't Got You" (2005)
Trivia
- As well as Razzmatazz, Stansfield can be seen in 1983
children's television show "The Krankies Klub" alongside Jimmy
Cricket and Rocky Sharpe and The Replays.
- During the promotion for the "Never Never Gonna' Give You
Up" single, Stansfield appeared on the RuPaul Show, but inexplicably, did not sing
the song (or any others, for that matter).
- In reference to her thick Heywood-ian (Rochdale) accent and working-class
background (and likely in tribute to all she had managed to accomplish)
Shaun
Ryder (Happy Mondays) once said
that Stansfield's family "makes mine look posh".
See also
- List
of number-one dance hits (United States)
- List
of artists who reached number one on the US Dance chart
External links