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Underdogs lead the R&B pack
01/21/2007 11:14 PM, Reuters
In six short years,
songwriter/producers Harvey Mason Jr. and Damon Thomas, aka the
Underdogs, have amassed an extensive and diverse list of
credits that stretches from Tyrese ("I Like Them Girls") to
their first soundtrack project, the Golden Globe-winning
musical "Dreamgirls." The album hit No. 1 last week on the
Billboard 200.
"The most unique sensibility the Underdogs bring to their
songs is a keen sense for lyric and melody," said another
hitmaking authority, RCA Music Group chairman/CEO Clive Davis.
"Today, where so many focus on how hot the track is," he
added, "they've never forgotten that ultimately it's the lyric
and melody which are the most important elements of a
long-lasting hit."
Davis' J Records now provides marketing, promotion, sales
and distribution for acts Mason and Thomas sign to their own
label, Underdog Entertainment. The duo will continue producing
projects for other record labels as well.
Mason's and Thomas' innate sense of lyrics and melody dates
back to childhood.
LIFELONG PASSION
Midwesterner Thomas was a 5-year-old piano prodigy whose
mom fed his fervor for music by giving him sound equipment to
approximate a home studio.
"I knew then, at 13, that I wanted to be a record
producer," Thomas said.
Mason grew up with his own in-house producer, dad Harvey
Mason Sr. The well-regarded studio musician/drummer worked with
such jazz greats as Erroll Garner, George Shearing, Herbie
Hancock and Grover Washington Jr. in addition to releasing two
solo albums on Arista.
"My dad was the first producer I knew, however I didn't
know what producers did," Mason said. "But I ended up going to
work with him from the time I was 7 or 8. Growing up around the
studio and what he did, I knew that was what I wanted to do."
Thomas' production quest brought him to Los Angeles. Under
the tutelage of Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds, Thomas helped write
top 10 hits for Pink, Dru Hill, Faith Evans and Brandy.
Mason, meanwhile, was sharpening his skills as a writer for
Rodney Jerkins' Darkchild Entertainment. In addition to
co-writing Toni Braxton's No. 1 single "He Wasn't Man Enough,"
Mason penned songs for Brandy and Brian McKnight.
After interviewing with the Darkchild camp and meeting
Mason at Darkchild, Thomas suggested the two join forces. Mason
says the first hour they worked together sealed the Underdog
Entertainment partnership for him.
"The first song we wrote did really well," Mason said of
the pair's initial songwriting foray in 2001. "But besides
that, it came naturally. It was fun writing together, a total
collaboration. That first day we had a track, lyric, melody and
then recorded the demo. The next thing we knew, three people
wanted the record."
The song in question was Tyrese's "I Like Them Girls."
Among the three people who wanted the record was Clive Davis.
"I had wanted the song for (singer) RL of the group Next,"
Davis said. "Ironically, I began working with the Underdogs
right after that, and we had our first No. 1 together with
Tyrese's 'How You Gonna Act Like That."'
BUCKING THE TREND
EMI Music Publishing executive VP/head of urban Big Jon
Platt calls the Underdogs "true R&B producers in a musical
climate where everything is hip-hop R&B."
Platt added, "At a time when hip-hop was dominating radio
-- which was great for hip-hop -- a ballad came through the
middle and shut radio down. If you want an R&B song, a true R&B
ballad, there's a limited list you can go to. The Underdogs are
arguably at the top of that list."
That songwriting talent has lured a host of artists into
the Underdogs' world, notably Craig David, JoJo, Jamie Foxx,
Faith Evans, Mario, Omarion, Chris Brown, Stacie Orrico, Mariah Carey and three "American Idol" winners: Ruben Studdard, Kelly Clarkson and Fantasia.
Those collaborations and others have resulted in a string
of hits and a 2004 Grammy Award nomination for Justin Timberlake's "Justified" album.
Brown and Studdard are among the artists who have made
repeat visits to the Underdogs' eight-room Underlab facilities,
which occupies two floors in the Edmonds Building in the heart
of Hollywood.
Studdard first worked with the duo on the song that became
the first single of his career, "Flying Without Wings." A
second collaboration, "Sorry 2004," scored him his first No. 1
record. The trio has since reunited on Studdard's current
album, "The Return."
"Although I was a brand-new artist, they treated me as an
equal," Studdard said. "Working with them is like working with
a well-oiled machine. They have a gift for knowing exactly what
your talents and abilities are. Then they use that gift to
bring out the best in you as an artist."
Mason and Thomas eat, drink and breathe music at Underlab.
What started out as the home of the Underdogs and one engineer
has morphed into a full-fledged music factory with three
studios, four composing rooms, four full-time engineers and a
stable of 10 songwriter/producers.
It was that dedication -- plus the grand piano and drum set
he saw in the studio -- that convinced "Dreamgirls" co-music
supervisor/Paramount VP of music Randy Spendlove that he had
found the right producers to update the 25-year-old Broadway
musical for today's theater-going audience. Armed with a who's
who list of every producer in R&B and hip-hop, Spendlove said
he was looking for true musicianship.
"There were instruments everywhere," Spendlove said,
"making it clear that these guys could approach this music from
a real organic place. It's not about sampling; it had to be
real and soulful, respecting the roots of the film's Broadway
origins while bringing the music into contemporary production
values and sounds."
"Dreamgirls" director Bill Condon cited the pair's
brilliance at "keeping within the story as they reshaped the
music dramatically. It was fun to watch the actor/performers --
some of whom hadn't done this before -- in their gentle hands."
Reuters/Billboard
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