When you think of women in R&B today, you may be inclined to think of massive mainstream acceptance and that certain untouchable quality that we often call diva. Teedra Moses has the beauty and well rounded talent of any modern day soulstress, but shes determined to keep herself in touch with her fans on a different level. From her humble roots in New Orleans to her new deal with TVT Records, Teedra Moses keeps it real for the streets. She is the consummate homegirl with classic appeal, and she is bringing her own special style to the charts.
Her debut album Complex Simplicity is due out in April, and her video for the song Be Your Girl was directed by the incredible Hype Williams. Not bad for a young lady who has been singing and songwriting for less than three years.
Teedra took some time to speak with AllHipHop.com Alternatives about her inspiration and outlook on the industry.
AllHipHop.com Alternatives: Your style has been compared to artists like Patrice Rushen and Cherrelle. Do you ever feel any pressure being compared to people like that?
Teedra: No, because thats still just one part of my sound thats just who people pinpoint because there are so many sides to my sound. I dont feel any pressure at all.
AHHA: Does it ever bother you when people try to constantly label your sound?
Teedra: It used to the first couple of months of hearing people compare me to other people – it did, to be honest. But I understand that people need to understand what youre doing, they need to make it familiar to them, so thats the way that they make it familiar.
AHHA: Your mother, who passed away, was a gospel singer. How much of a role did gospel play in the music that you write and produce, and would you ever consider making any gospel albums?
Teedra: I think gospel has a lot to do with what I do because its all about feel. Ive only been singing and writing songs for two years, and no one ever taught me about singing or making harmonies, or how you write a song so its all just from my feeling, and gospel is all feeling. Its all emotion, theres nothing technical about it. My music and the way I write it, and arrange my songs is about how it feels, and I hope that people can take that from my music. Im interested in doing gospel, but not [for] myself I would love to work with other gospel artists because Im a writer, so I would love to collaborate. I want to kind of build my career as a secular singer before I would even indulge in something like that.
AHHA: Your bio says that you started writing your songs to Princes music. If you could go back and sing any one of Princes songs with him, which one would it be and why?
Teedra: [long pause] Thats the hardest question anyone has ever asked me in my whole life. You know what? It would have to be that song Baby {singing} Baby, what are we gonna do Its a song he wrote where its about a girl where I think the girl got pregnant, and he can barely take care of himself, and he really cant take care of a kid and her, but hes gonna try to do it anyway because he loves her. If it ends up that shes pregnant, then theyre gonna thug it out together. Thats just like heartfelt s### and I love that, so I think that would probably be it. Not that thats my exact favorite song, because thats a hard thing to do pick a Prince song thats my favorite but thats something that I would want to perform because its something I can relate to.
AHHA: How much influence vocally or arrangement-wise did Prince have on you?
Teedra: The influence is getting greater and greater every day, because his arrangement is always unorthodox. Its always less its so simple, still at the same time its so complex. Prince altogether has a huge influence on me as an artist, as a writer. Everything that he does I feel like he felt it, and you felt that he felt it. Thats what I try to put in my music.
AHHA: I read that you wanted to be an emcee when you first started out?
Teedra: When I was much younger I started out doing talent shows rhyming, but I love Hip Hop music. Thats our culture anyone thats young in America is into Hip Hop music. Hip Hop has influenced every kind of music gospel, rock, jazz its influencing everything. Even though everything has influenced Hip Hop, Hip Hop in turn influences everything. Its who I am. I cant explain it. I am Hip Hop. I grew up dealing with the same issues they were talking about when I was listening to those records I truly related. The way I write, I write like a rapper. I write from what I see situations I see my homegirls go through, situations I go through.
AHHA: Do you feel like working with someone like Jadakiss fulfills those aspirations to rhyme?
Teedra: Dealing with Jadakiss was absolutely perfect because hes really in tune with whats going on in the streets. There are some rappers that rap from a high rise, and I feel like hes coming from that level that Im on. Theres a lot of different rappers that I wouldnt like to work with, and then theres some that I would, but I would love to work with something new and fresh.
AHHA: How did you hook up with Jadakiss initially, and how did you hook up with Hype Williams for the video?
Teedra: I recorded the song ‘Youll Never Find’ before I even got my deal, and I knew I wanted a rapper on it, I just didnt know who. People dont really listen to the words, but its coming from a drug dealers girls point of view basically. The song can be taken in many ways, thats just the way I wrote it. My A&R told me I just worked with Jadakiss on Lil Jons album, so hes really dope. I was like thats great because I love his voice. Just his voice alone hes got great lyrics but his voice is so sick, he could say yabba dabba doo or whatever and it sounds hot. We havent even met yet. He called me though, and he was like I love the song, and everywhere I go people tell me about the song. Im really looking forward to meeting him, because I really respect what he did on my record, and I respect what he does.
As far as Hype, I used to be an assistant wardrobe stylist to my very best friend Sondra MacKenzie, and she is very good friends with Hype, and one day she calls him over and told him Hype, I want you to do the video and he was like okay let me hear the music and he was like I like the music. He just rolled with me, and hes pretty much doing me a huge favor. Its a blessing.
AHHA: Name three other rappers that you would work with if you could.
Teedra: Scarface, Nas, and Ludacris.
AHHA: Does it bother you to see the sexier images of women in music today, or does it make you more self conscious about your image?
Teedra: My image is so Teedra, that I dont think about what my image is going to be, because its just everything Ive been all my life. Its just who I am, and Im not naked all the time, but sometimes I do dress sexy, and Im not in a head wrap either. Im not bothered with what other people try to do, because Im so wrapped up with what Teedra is trying to do. I look at people like Beyonce, and I think shes amazing, and shes beautiful and I respect it. I look at someone like Goapele and her music is great and shes beautiful or whatever, but I never look at them in the sense of how they compare to me. Its like, Im doing my thing, and hopefully it pans out. I dont have to be the best, because Im not competing with anyone but myself. Thats it.
AHHA: It seems like TVT has been really supportive of you. Did you have any second thoughts going into your deal considering that its been primarily a rap label?
Teedra: It was kind of scary at first, but the thing that made me feel that this could work like I said, Im a Hip Hop chick and if you can take me that route, I can make it that route. I may not make it the Whitney Houston route, but I can make it on a street level, because thats who I am. The fear kind of went away when I thought about it. The way that they work records is on a real grimy street level, and not that Im a grimy person Im a very classy young lady but I grew up in the ghetto and Im on some real s###. If I was on a major label Id probably still be sitting on a shelf.
AHHA: Do you look down the road this year and see yourself in any particular position? You say that you dont care about being a big superstar, but if you had that opportunity, are you ready for it?
Teedra: You know what? Whatever God brings me. My life moves at speed, so whatever He brings me, Im ready for it because thats what He has in store for me but I really really see myself more as a writer than a performer. I love to perform, and I think I do it well. I love all of that side of being an artist, but I really hope that my album, if nothing else, triggers the ears of the people that create music and they want to work with me as a writer. I really love to write. I have vision for different artists, and you can make more money on the other side. I see myself this year working on as many projects as I possibly can.
My goal is to be like Missy how she just got it locked. What female is gonna come write you a hit? Missy, thats it. There is no one else. I want to get a piece of that thats all. Im moving into production I just really want to control the music. I really want to get it all out of me, because for so long Ive had so much music in my head, and I havent had the opportunity to get it out.
AHHA: What do you want people to know about you from this album?
Teedra: I want people to feel like I know her thats the chick I went to high school with or she lives next door to me or Im just like her people to relate. Sometimes I feel like people are too far away from the common person. Im just an average person dealing with the same crap everyone else is dealing with, and I dont mind saying Im broke, I dont mind saying my hearts been broken, I dont mind saying I wish somebody would just love me and stop acting like an a######, I dont mind saying I want to have sex tonight all these emotions that we all feel and may not want to deal with. I want people to just be able to relate. I want people to just say I know her, shes cool people.
Find out more about Teedra Moses at http://www.teedramoses.com