I love Latina women
Veteran
@TheGregReaper @The God Poster @Craig Mack @MontanasMadness @Buckeye Fever @Penny 95 @lilaznwoo @Danie84 @TITTY__CHOPPA @CashmereEsquire @DeVanteSwing @Michael's Black Son @King Poetic


By the mid-1990s, Donald “Devante Swing” DeGrate, Jr., Dalvin “Mr. Dalvin” DeGrate, Cedric “K-Ci” Hailey, and Joel “Jojo” Hailey—collectively known as Jodeci—had established themselves as the dominant male R&B quartet on the planet. After the releases of their multi-platinum smashes Forever My Lady (1991) and Diary of a Mad Band (1993), the group redefined the standards for successful, viable R&B artists by standing out from their contemporaries in musical approach and aesthetics. As numerous R&B groups began to emerge, Jodeci raised the stakes with their third album and it allowed them to reach another level of superstardom.On July 18, 1995, The Show, the After Party, the Hotel was released by Uptown/MCA Records, and it became their third consecutive hit recording. The album spawned three singles: “Freek’n You,” “Love U 4 Life,” and “Get on Up.” For the album’s twentieth anniversary, we spoke with legendary engineer Jimmy Douglass about his role in constructing this timeless album.
How did you become involved in the making of this album?
Well, it was really a roundabout situation. There was a studio located in Rochester, New York called Dajhelon. There was this guy named Lamar Mitchell, who used to be with Bernie Worrell back in the day playing keyboards. We became very, very close. He ended up being a part of Jodeci, somehow. When they were touring after the release of Diary of a Mad Band, he was one of the people they took on the road with them. He became part of their whole package. So there was that connection, but I still didn’t know them. The drummer in the band, Reggie Young, lived in Rochester, New York. This is a long story, but it’ll all make sense eventually. In Rochester, New York, at that time, studios were flourishing, but it was hard to get into a large studio. Reggie Young knew a guy in Rochester whose parents built a great studio for him. It was this three room operation with a big board. It was great. They were trying to figure out how to get some of the New York City business. Hip hop was starting to become the best thing as opposed to rock and roll. Rochester was six hours away from New York City by car. The owner of the studio had an artist that was signed to MCA Records. He also had a bunch of people that wanted to come from New York City who wanted to record there, but he didn’t have any urban engineers located in Rochester at that time. The owner asked Reggie, “Do you know anyone who would be willing to do engineering work here?” Lamar said to Reggie, “There is this guy I know.”
So I took a trip up there one weekend, and he brought up three groups and there was nobody else up there except for me. It was a holiday too. It was the weekend that Kurt Cobain died, actually. I remember it so well because I had the TV on and there was no sound. I kept on seeing the same bite over and over again. There were five producers in the studio, and they just tag teamed me to death for three days. I thought it would be a situation where we would record and the group would be done. But no. They brought in these producers, and after one set was done, the next one would come in. This is what happened that whole weekend. I also mixed a record for him for his artist. So I did all of these things, and I barely slept the entire time. He came back to me blown away, and I was blown away at myself because I did so many things. After that, I went back home and that’s the end of that story.
A few months later, he called me and said, “Hey, I have this gig coming up to my studio. It’s going to be about a six month gig. It’s going to be Jodeci, and they need an engineer. They’re going to rent the whole place out. Devante is also going to do some producing for Whitney [Houston] and a lot of different acts. I’d love for you to come and be their guy.” I replied, “Sure. I’ll come.” This is how I got invited to party. It was from the studio owner and not the group. So what Devante did was he made a deal with the studio to do Jodeci and all of his productions—because there were three rooms available—the studio owner basically gave them a six-month fee. We came in and locked ourselves down for six months. In that six months, we worked on Jodeci’s album and all the producers and other side projects that Devante had going on. In Studio A, Dalvin was working on his record. We were doing so many things. Downstairs, K-Ci and Jojo were working on The Show, the After Party, the Hotel. This is how crazy it was back then. The house had twenty-one people there that were all talented: Missy Elliott, Timbaland, Magoo, Playa, Tweet, Ginuwine, Sugah, and when we made that album there, we found and met Stevie J. We brought him into the fold. So that is what was going on in that house. It was a boiling hot pot of talent there. It was just incredible.


By the mid-1990s, Donald “Devante Swing” DeGrate, Jr., Dalvin “Mr. Dalvin” DeGrate, Cedric “K-Ci” Hailey, and Joel “Jojo” Hailey—collectively known as Jodeci—had established themselves as the dominant male R&B quartet on the planet. After the releases of their multi-platinum smashes Forever My Lady (1991) and Diary of a Mad Band (1993), the group redefined the standards for successful, viable R&B artists by standing out from their contemporaries in musical approach and aesthetics. As numerous R&B groups began to emerge, Jodeci raised the stakes with their third album and it allowed them to reach another level of superstardom.On July 18, 1995, The Show, the After Party, the Hotel was released by Uptown/MCA Records, and it became their third consecutive hit recording. The album spawned three singles: “Freek’n You,” “Love U 4 Life,” and “Get on Up.” For the album’s twentieth anniversary, we spoke with legendary engineer Jimmy Douglass about his role in constructing this timeless album.
How did you become involved in the making of this album?
Well, it was really a roundabout situation. There was a studio located in Rochester, New York called Dajhelon. There was this guy named Lamar Mitchell, who used to be with Bernie Worrell back in the day playing keyboards. We became very, very close. He ended up being a part of Jodeci, somehow. When they were touring after the release of Diary of a Mad Band, he was one of the people they took on the road with them. He became part of their whole package. So there was that connection, but I still didn’t know them. The drummer in the band, Reggie Young, lived in Rochester, New York. This is a long story, but it’ll all make sense eventually. In Rochester, New York, at that time, studios were flourishing, but it was hard to get into a large studio. Reggie Young knew a guy in Rochester whose parents built a great studio for him. It was this three room operation with a big board. It was great. They were trying to figure out how to get some of the New York City business. Hip hop was starting to become the best thing as opposed to rock and roll. Rochester was six hours away from New York City by car. The owner of the studio had an artist that was signed to MCA Records. He also had a bunch of people that wanted to come from New York City who wanted to record there, but he didn’t have any urban engineers located in Rochester at that time. The owner asked Reggie, “Do you know anyone who would be willing to do engineering work here?” Lamar said to Reggie, “There is this guy I know.”
So I took a trip up there one weekend, and he brought up three groups and there was nobody else up there except for me. It was a holiday too. It was the weekend that Kurt Cobain died, actually. I remember it so well because I had the TV on and there was no sound. I kept on seeing the same bite over and over again. There were five producers in the studio, and they just tag teamed me to death for three days. I thought it would be a situation where we would record and the group would be done. But no. They brought in these producers, and after one set was done, the next one would come in. This is what happened that whole weekend. I also mixed a record for him for his artist. So I did all of these things, and I barely slept the entire time. He came back to me blown away, and I was blown away at myself because I did so many things. After that, I went back home and that’s the end of that story.
A few months later, he called me and said, “Hey, I have this gig coming up to my studio. It’s going to be about a six month gig. It’s going to be Jodeci, and they need an engineer. They’re going to rent the whole place out. Devante is also going to do some producing for Whitney [Houston] and a lot of different acts. I’d love for you to come and be their guy.” I replied, “Sure. I’ll come.” This is how I got invited to party. It was from the studio owner and not the group. So what Devante did was he made a deal with the studio to do Jodeci and all of his productions—because there were three rooms available—the studio owner basically gave them a six-month fee. We came in and locked ourselves down for six months. In that six months, we worked on Jodeci’s album and all the producers and other side projects that Devante had going on. In Studio A, Dalvin was working on his record. We were doing so many things. Downstairs, K-Ci and Jojo were working on The Show, the After Party, the Hotel. This is how crazy it was back then. The house had twenty-one people there that were all talented: Missy Elliott, Timbaland, Magoo, Playa, Tweet, Ginuwine, Sugah, and when we made that album there, we found and met Stevie J. We brought him into the fold. So that is what was going on in that house. It was a boiling hot pot of talent there. It was just incredible.