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It's an old adage that where there's smoke,
there's fire. And the debut release from EMI
Gospel's Smokie Norful, I Need You Now, is proof
positive. With a voice that both soothes and
excites, and a songwriter's pen that runs the
gamut of much of modern popular music, Smokie
Norful arrives alive and on fire.
An incendiary live performer as well, Smokie has drawn great responses from
both churched and unchurched audiences for music he terms “urban/inspirational.”
“Music is a power…it's a force,” he says. “The Lord is the ultimate source of
that power and He has no limitations or boundaries. If you tap into that source,
people can't help but take notice, whether they realize it or not. I try to write
and perform songs that come out of my personal experiences, when I do that it
seems to reach the heart of people. Music is the calling card that opens the
door,” he adds, “and then once you have people's attention you can impact them
with what you have to say.”
And on I Need You Now, Smokie has a lot to say, indeed.
The album's title song, written as are a majority of the selections by Smokie,
is a gorgeous, jazz-tinged ballad that means exactly what it says. “I wrote
that at a time when my wife, my father and my grandmother were all dealing
with some serious medical issues, and I was seriously reaching out to God for
comfort and guidance and healing,” says Smokie. “I was crying out to God and
realizing my total dependence on Him, and ultimate victory through Him.”
“It's All About You” displays Smokie's comfort with a funky groove, and “The
Least I Can Do” is a worship melody that showcases his soaring vocal prowess. “Psalm
64” lets the Word, Smokie's vocals and a grand piano deliver the message, while “Praise
Him” is a rocking, hand-clapping traditional gospel arrangment that defies anyone
to sit still.
“Still Say Thank You” beautifully weds Smokie's soaring tenor voice with a soulful,
silken vocal ensemble. “Whether we're up or down, we have to tell the Lord thank
you,” Smokie says, “and if we do, we find that in that faith, bigger trials will
bring bigger blessings.”
“Same Sad Song” is offered in two mixes, the first carrying Smokie's message
of fatigue with an overload of songs of troubles and woe atop a crystalline acoustic
guitar and harmonica, and the second “Urban remix” adding some kick with electric
guitar and a punchy bottom end.
Smokie is the son of an African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Pastor, but was
given the freedom as a boy to experience some of the mainstream as well as
gospel music of his youth, and he still counts the likes of El Debarge and
Stevie Wonder as musical influences, along with Daryl Coley, Vanessa Bell Armstrong
and many other of the era's gospel greats.
Born with God-given gifts for music, by the age of two Smokie had already begun
picking out melodies on a child's toy piano, and by four he had graduated to
a full-fledged upright piano in his father's church. Singing also came readily
to Smokie. As he recalls it, “I just opened my mouth and there it was.”
Smokie was raised until his early teens in Muskogee , Oklahoma , and his parents
took him to perform in churches throughout that region of the A.M.E. denomination.
He was only 10 when he caught the ear of a his district's musical director,
who was preparing to make a custom recording with her own choir. Floored by
the youngster's talent, she gave him the opportunity to be the featured artist
on one entire side of the upcoming LP.
“I wasn't impressed with myself at all, or phased by the opportunity I was being
given,” Smokie recalls. “I just wanted to sing! They just stood me in front of
the microphone and I let ‘em have it!”
The album did well in the small sliver of the country where it was released,
and within two years Smokie was playing piano regularly in his father's church,
which he continued at age 14 when the family was moved to a congregation in
Pine Bluff , Arkansas . With a natural ear for verse and rhyme, coupled with
his prodigious musical gifts, Smokie also began writing and performing original
songs by his mid-teens.
With years of private music lessons behind him, as well as having performed
in all his school choruses and musical productions, Smokie decided not to formally
pursue music when it came time for him to enter college. By the time he was
a freshman at the University of Arkansas , he had his mind set on a major in
history, and spent four years teaching Jr. & Senior high school level history.
Smokie's vocational path took another turn in 1998 when he felt God calling
him into the ministry. Smokie relocated to suburban Chicago 's to attend Garrett
Theological Seminary where he is near completion of a Masters of Divinity degree.
But his mind and heart never strayed far from the music that had been born
in his bones. “The entire time I was in college I was president of the youth
department of the A.M.E. church for the 12th district [Oklahoma/Arkansas] and
worship leader internationally. “I never stopped singing and playing in my
local church or community. When I began teaching school I put together a 100-voice
community choir, many of whom were, or had been, students of mine.”
After his theological studies, Smokie accepted an assistant pastorate at a
large church in Chicago, overseeing music, youth and children's ministries,
where he came to the attention of Joanne Brunson, leader of gospel's famed
Rev. Milton Brunson's Thompson Community Singers. Asked by Ms. Brunson to sing
a song on the choir's upcoming album, Real, Smokie agreed, contributing one
of his original numbers, and his career as a major-label artist was underway.
In the audience the night of the concert was Edwin Oliver, director of urban
music publishing for Walt Disney. Edwin was immediately impressed by Smokie's
ministry. This interest eventually led to Edwin's spearheading Smokie's debut
album on EMI Gospel.
Seeing his future much like his past—diverse and ever-changing—Smokie is clearly
a man available for the Lord's calling. “My greatest goal is to please God
in all I do…my life, my music, my ministry,” Smokie says, “and the only way
to do that is to be a servant. My service at this point is the uplifting and
encouraging others with the gifts that God has given me.” |