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RICKY
DILLARD
& THE NEW G
"No Limit"
Approximate
running time:
82 minutes
ONLY
$13.99
+
Shipping & Handling
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Gospel showman Ricky Dillard's Crystal Rose Records CD "Unplugged:
The Way Church Used to Be" is more than just a title. It's
a return to the uninhibited, traditional type of hand-clapping gospel
music he enjoyed as a youth. Recorded live at the Apostolic Pentecostal
Church of Morgan Park in Chicago to a SRO crowd in November 2003,
this is Dillard’s first cd since 2000’s “No Limit”
– his biggest selling cd yet with over 100,000 in sales. "When
I look back over the years and think of the trials and trying times
this choir has been through, I have to recognize God's favor to
us,” Dillard confesses in a hushed baritone. “We've
been through hell, but we were not burned. We're still here and
God showed us that when we were ready to give up that there is no
limit to what we can do as a group. When we thought we couldn't
take it, God said we could."
Born in 1960s Chicago, Dillard’s father abandoned the family,
leaving Dillard’s soft-spoken but determined mother Dorothy
to chart the path for Dillard and his three siblings. She raised
them in Chicago's Mason Court Projects on the east side while also
teaching them to look beyond the pain and poverty that encircled
them. At one point, all four kids shared a single bedroom in their
small apartment, but Mrs. Dillard, who worked as a housing placement
specialist, saw it as a temporary circumstance. Dillard says that
sharing the same room forced his two sisters and brother to learn
to share and become respectful of each other's space. Furthermore,
although, they were living in a poor neighborhood, Dillard says
what clothes they had were always clean. "My mother saw to
it that we always had holiday clothes, she also took us on vacations.
She did it all by herself and she made us learn to love each other
better." By the time Dillard was in the seventh grade, his
mother had moved the family to their own house on the middle-class
west side of Chicago Heights.
Although, Dillard began to gain local notice for his musical skills
in high school, he had been performing all his life. Since the age
of three, Dillard watched church choirs. His Grandma used to stand
Little Ricky on top of his baby potty and he would direct and sing.
At five years old, he began directing the junior choir at St. Bethel
Baptist Church. In 1981 he formed the first gospel choir at Bloom
High School. "There were so many church kids there and they
liked to sing," he says. "So, I started a group called
Ricky Dillard and Company and we sang at school. One of my teachers,
Don Bondurant, said, `you should start a gospel choir' and I did."
In spite of his love for performing, Dillard thought his future
lay in radio announcing. He attended Columbia College for a couple
of years, but dropped it because "The curriculum bored me and
I was really tired of school anyway." He took a job as a front
desk clerk at a Holiday Inn and later worked as a file clerk while
performing in a professional back-up group called Love, Salvation
& Devotion (LSD) on the weekends.
In 1984, Dillard joined the late Milton Brunson's Thompson Community
Singers. At the same time, he started hanging out with renowned
club DJ Frankie Knuckles and began recording dance and hip-hop records.
Aside from a half dozen-guest appearances on various dance tracks,
Dillard recorded his own album "Let The Music Use You"
which was released in Europe and was imported into the United States.
In spite of his growing success in the club market, Dillard says,
"My heart was in the gospel. I always wanted to do gospel.
The other stuff was just an opportunity to record. I wanted to bring
a more contemporary style into gospel for choirs." It's those
contemporary innovations in gospel that have caught Kirk Franklin
and the Winans explaining their motivations to the more sanctified
members of the church at times. "I don't criticize because
I believe all music was created to praise God and all we're doing
is taking back what the devil stole from us and using it to please
God."
Dillard says God led him to found the New Generation Chorale in
1988. The next year they won the McDonald's Chicagoland Choir competition.
One day he met producer Butch McGee in a parking lot. McGee had
heard of him and signed Dillard's group on their reputation alone.
New G's first album "The Promise" was released in 1990
and won them a Grammy nomination and a GMWA Excellence award in
1991. The next year the choir was featured in Steve Martin's movie
"Leap of Faith." By the time their second live album "A
Holy Ghost Take Over" debuted in 1993, Dillard was a consultant
on Whoopie Goldberg's "Sister Act II" movie and the choir
had appeared on a PBS Television Special "Going Home To Gospel”
featuring Patti La Belle and Albertina Walker. In 1994 New G won
their first Stellar Award for contemporary choir of the year and
recorded all the background vocals for Gospel Queen Albertina Walker's
Stellar Award winning album "He Keeps On Blessing Me."
"It was a delight to work with the Queen," Dillard laughs
just thinking of the experience. "She keeps me laughing."
In 1995 New G's third album "Hallelujah" was released
and the choir had its first club hit. They collaborated with Frankie
Knuckles and Adeva on "Walkin'" from their "Welcome
to the Real World'" album. The Virgin Records single became
a Top 20 hit on Billboard magazine's club chart.
By 1996 New G had moved to Detroit-based Crystal Rose Records.
Their debut "Worked It Out" sold 30,000 pre-orders out
of the box. New G had their biggest promotional push yet. The album
premiered at Dillard's alma mater before 1,500 screaming students.
They capped the push off with a listening party/concert at the Cubby
Bear nightclub and a Record Town appearance that rang up almost
$10,000 in one day sales. The album quickly jumped to the Billboard
gospel top ten and stayed on the chart for months. Then, in 2000
the group leaped back on the charts with the scorcher “No
Limit” cd. The single “The Holy Place,” a classic
choir vocal with a subtle hip-hop rhythm, buoyed the sales. Beginning
back in 1997, the group made their first tour of Europe where they
were particularly successful in Germany. "I was surprised that
we were so embraced," Dillard says. "But years before
I told the choir that we were going to be international and God
made that happen for us." Aside from international acclaim,
the group has opened for Patti LaBelle and Bonnie Raitt among others.
However, wherever they perform, their concert is always “Unplugged…The
Way Church Used To Be.”
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