Quiet Storm: Tracing the Body and Soul of R&B

<p>Sultry saxophones simmer over velvety baselines. Candlelit vocals caress shadowy silhouettes swaying in embrace. Mood music for romance: the aesthetic essence of Quiet Storm. This soothing blend of R&amp;B, pop, soul and jazz grew from late night &ldquo;slow jam&rdquo; radio formats in the 1970s into a mainstream force through the 80s. But Quiet Storm&rsquo;s gentle musical seduction eventually faded into the background as hip hop&rsquo;s brazen beats seized center stage.</p> <h1>What&rsquo;s Quiet Storm?</h1> <p>The term Quiet Storm itself traces back to Smokey Robinson&rsquo;s 1975 album of the same name. But it was Melvin Lindsey, an intern at Howard University&rsquo;s WHUR 96.3 FM, who pioneered this musical style as a radio format in 1976.&nbsp;Playing downtempo R&amp;B ballads back-to-back for amorous listeners, Lindsey&rsquo;s late night soundscapes brought slow-jam serenades mainstream.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/1ntune/quiet-storm-tracing-the-body-and-soul-of-r-b-03c456422a5f"><strong>Website</strong></a></p>
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