Her look is supremely elegant, yet she
exudes an accessible and warm down to earth sista friend vibe. CeCe Peniston is one of
those singers who not only makes good music, but one whose soulful bursts makes you feel
the music.
And nowadays love's on Peniston's mind.
Broken-hearted love. Soul-building love. Love that makes you wanna smile and cry at the
same time. Most importantly though, self-love comes charging through on Peniston's
confident and richly diverse third album.
Four years after the springy and liberating
international Top 5 smash hit "Finally" catapulted a then 21 -year-old Peniston
into a dance music diva, the Dayton Ohio native has spent most of her time trying to show
the world that her throaty gospel trained voice can do more than just rattle dance floors
into a frenzy.
"People are still looking for another
'Finally'," Peniston says. "But I thinl~ that slowly but surely people are
coming around and allowing me to change because they realize that I like to do a lot of
things. People want to see you change anyway. If you are the same thing then it's nothing
new for them to look forward to."
After 1994's warmly greeted sophomore album,
THOUGHT YA KNEW, Peniston spent lots of time in the last year reshaping her earthy vocal
stylings and finding her musical center. That's why her new album, I'M MOYIN' ON, serves
as a bold statement about the new CeCe Peniston. Between getting a divorce and continually
delving deeper into her R&B past, the little girl whose parents encouraged her singing
and acting has changed. The once bubbling exuberance has been refined into a sleek
womanliness that is evident in the album's lyrics and tone.
"We named the album I'M MOVIN' ON
because it says a lot about me and who I am now in 1996," she says. "I'm moving
on mentally, physically, spiritually and musically in every way.
"Last To Know, " a mid-tempo ballad
written by Peniston, reunites her with friend and innovative producer Steve 'Silk' Hurley,
who helped on her gold debut album. It's also a song that's close to the singers heart.
"I guess it's personal," she says.
I think that most people have been through the experience of finding about somebody being
in another relationship while they are with you.
You always think you would be the first to know and not the
last."
Peniston's R&B roots shine even more when
Jodeci's JoJo Hailey joins her on "Before I Lay, " a lush ballad about dedicated
love. It's Hailey's first duet with a female singer and a chance for Peniston to grab a
slice of the hardcore R&B audience. "JoJo is more R&B and I like that,"
she says about the song.
Peniston's powerful voice, the one that can
sink low into a smooth scat and then rise into a dramatic boom, could be likened to a new
age Patti Labelle throughout much of the album. The funky "House Parly" and her
remake of Jocelyn Brown's tale of addictive love, "Somebody's Else's Guy, " will
definitely get the club crowd rallying behind their queen again.
And while far too many R&B soulstresses
are filtering their tracks with hip-hop flavored beats, Peniston stuck to what she does
best. "I was very careful about selecting songs," she says. "People like to
see you change, but it has to be for real. I always felt if you show that you are
comfortable with what you are doing, then I think people will vibe with you. So don't be
trying to go into left field and all of a sudden start saying 'Yo this and that."'
Peniston though is still adamant about being
herself. Her new look reveals a slender CeCe in balance and a woman not afraid to show her
B-girl essence.
Like any true artist, CeCe Peniston keeps the
critics on their toes. She's moving on. The wide-smiling diva is back, ready for new
experiences and wherever the road and her music might take her.
"Don't be afraid of change,"
Peniston says passionately. "If you feel good about whatever you are doing, then hold
your head up high and do it." |