So how come she hasn't released a studio album in 20 years though?
You would think she died right after making Miseducation. To be honest, I think that album is slightly overrated anyways but I find it odd that she never made another album. Maybe she wasn't that great as we all thought.
The album credits say the album is "produced, written and arranged" by Hill, and she is also listed as executive producer on all the tracks. The New Ark members--Vada Nobles, Rasheem "Kilo" Pugh and twin brothers Johari and Tejumold Newton--are acknowledged several times for "additional production," "additional musical contribution" and "additional lyrical contribution" on some songs.
They claim, however, to be the primary songwriters on two tracks, "Nothing Really Matters" and "Everything Is Everything," and major contributors on six others. Full or partial production credit is also due to the team on five tracks, the suit claims. The musicians also claim to have made sizable, uncredited production contributions to "A Rose Is Still a Rose," a song Hill produced for Aretha Franklin's last album.
The Legal Tangle of 'Miseducation'In their suit, the New Ark members say it was Pugh's four-year friendship with Hill that led the singer to invite the musicians to join her as she began planning her pivotal first solo effort in June 1997. The suit claims the singer and her would-be collaborators hit it off in their first meeting, making grand plans and sitting in a circle as Hill led them in prayer. Pugh and the others were giddy afterward. They had some credits to their career, but the chance to work with Hill was their "big break."
![]()
The suit also claims Hill made verbal assurances to New Ark that they would be credited and paid for major contributions to the album, but they never pinned down their role in writing--which Harvey concedes was an error.
The suit says the relationship between Hill and the New Ark musicians cooled as the album neared completion and the singer began backing off her earlier promises of credit.
Harvey says Hill's handlers tried to placate Pugh and the others in November 1997 by arranging a publishing deal with Sony/ATV, the same publisher that handled the "Miseducation" songs for Hill. The deal paid the New Ark musicians a $100,000 advance for rights to their future work. Harvey said the size of the deal supports the group's claim that they are far more than mere studio musicians, and, indeed, industry insiders said a contract of that size is unusual for unproven songwriters.
Cats are committed to misunderstanding her. Don't bother.Some of y'all do know that writing the lyrics and creating the music are 2 entirely different things amongst musicians. In hip-hop it's the producer and the writer, but in other genres writing the music primarily means the production, especially dealing with live instruments. They want full production credits.
If you've ever witnessed a jam session, the lead might hum something, or tap a rhythm and the players go from there, but eventually the band adds their own spin to it. But they're still following the vision and lead of the artist. That's why the band don't get as much credit for production. We don't really have this problem in hip-hop because of the lack of live instrumentation, only the Puffy/Dre's/Irv that fall more into the traditional producer.
Even in the past, no one questioned the lyrics. Those are like 95% Lauryn. The discussion was always that she primarily wrote and arranged and played the all of the music, in addition to the lyrics. That album is a cumulation of both, that's what made it remarkable. No one was doing what Lauryn did....not in hip-hop. And that album is still a masterpiece.
Some of y'all do know that writing the lyrics and creating the music are 2 entirely different things amongst musicians. In hip-hop it's the producer and the writer, but in other genres writing the music primarily means the production, especially dealing with live instruments. They want full production credits.
If you've ever witnessed a jam session, the lead might hum something, or tap a rhythm and the players go from there, but eventually the band adds their own spin to it. But they're still following the vision and lead of the artist. That's why the band don't get as much credit for production. We don't really have this problem in hip-hop because of the lack of live instrumentation, only the Puffy/Dre's/Irv that fall more into the traditional producer.
Even in the past, no one questioned the lyrics. Those are like 95% Lauryn. The discussion was always that she primarily wrote and arranged and played the all of the music, in addition to the lyrics. That album is a cumulation of both, that's what made it remarkable. No one was doing what Lauryn did....not in hip-hop. And that album is still a masterpiece.