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Linda Villarosa Outside the Lines: Toshi Reagon (page 2)
by Linda Villarosa
, July 27, 2006
A monthly column exploring entertainment on the East Coast

 

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Now 42, Reagon grew up in the business. Her mother, Bernice Johnson Reagon, is the founder of the world-renowned a capella group Sweet Honey in the Rock. Retired from Sweet Honey two years ago after 30 years, Johnson Reagon now often performs with her daughter.

At the concert in Brooklyn, the elder Reagon was both regal and relaxed, sitting next to Toshi, a floor-length scarf draped around her shoulders like a rainbow. Singing “I Be Your Water”, which Johnson Reagon wrote, the two raise their left hands above their heads in unison. They look like two old souls enjoying each other's company, knees touching, on a screened porch.

“My mom and I have worked together for 20 years,” says Reagon. “We're major collaborators, but it's more than that. We understand each other. When she says something or I say something we always see the positive in each other.”

Reagon grew up in Washington, D.C., but moved to New York in the early 90s to find her way.Toshi Reagon After a semester at Fordham University, she dropped out to open for Lenny Kravitz on his first world tour.

“Lenny is very intuitive,” recalls Reagon, who released her first album, Justice, in 1990. “He never saw me perform. He just said ‘you want to open for me?' The first time he heard me play was to open his show. That never happens anymore.”

Next, Reagon will perform at Michigan on August 11. Her first time “on the land” was in 1980, when at 16, she tagged along with her mother and Sweet Honey. “I've enjoyed seeing the evolution of this community of women,” says Reagon. “It's always good to be in a lesbian setting. I like the whirlwind of energy and politics and the intense relationships that form between people. It's rugged but with a sweetness.”

In honor of their 10th year, Reagon and her band will perform several fall concerts in spots around the country. Then she'll go into the studio to work on her ninth and tenth albums, a live recording and a compilation of sacred music. “Sacred music is any music I find sacred,” says Reagon. “It's music that touches my spirit and my soul. It could be traditional African-American spirituals, contemporary gospel, Bob Marley, my mother's music or songs I've written.”

Reagon will write the music for her eleventh album, which she also hopes to release next year. She says her songwriting process is the same as it was when she wrote her first song, a love song, at 12 years old. “First, I tell myself that I don't have to do anything,” she says. “Then I open up a window inside myself and see what comes.”

Get more info at ToshiReagon.com

Thank you to everyone who wrote in response to my last column on black lesbian books. I really appreciate the warm welcome to afterellen. Several of you mentioned the website sistahsontheshelf.com, which is dedicated to black lesbian literature. If you haven't visited this wonderful, thoughtful, thorough site, check it out.

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